HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-01-25 - Orange Coast Pilot• • Ir Ill
Countdown u ·egins
For Apollo 14
Sunday Lann~h
17
! . ~ ~ondldoll Serious' •
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Hitchhiking Girl Shot
Trying to Flee Attacker
A San Oemente girl is bi serious
condJtion today at Hoag Memorial
Hospital after she was shot Saturday
night trying to escape from a would-be
kidnaper .
Police said Susan Spector , 19, u£ 220
La Paloma was shot at point blank
range in the left side as she attempted
to jump from her abductor's car . at
the intersection of East Coa$t Highway
and Newport Center Drive .
Investigators said the young woman
left San Clemente Saturday afternoon
to drive to Newport to visit her boyfriend.
She told them her car broke down
on Coast Highway in South Laguna,
110 she started hitchhiking.
Police said she was picked up by
a middle-aged man, heavy iset and of
medium heigh~ dr iving a new model,
dark sedan.
As the car approached Newj>r:irt Center
Drive, the suspect pulled a fill on Miss
Spector and told her she 'ould have
to come with him, deteClive Sam
Amburgey said. _
"At this point. he sl{lrted to tum
onto Newport Center Drive l!lnd she
started to jump out of the car,"
Amb urgey said. "The suspect fired at
her point blank."
The detective said the impact of the
shot drove Miss Spector out 0£ the car,
, and the suspect sped oft
Witnesses to the shooting stopped to
aid the victi m, but did not pursue the
suspect, he add ed.
Police have not been able to identify
the gun used in the shooting because
no slug was found, Amburgey said.
Truman Spends
Best Day After
Hospitalization
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Former
President HaJTy S. Truman'• doctOrt
laid. today his appetite ls impro9ing
and 'that Sunday wu his "b e 1 t d a y"
sine~ entering Research Hospital With
an i{lfiamed intestine.
Truman's condition wu described u
fair.
Dr. Wallace H. Graham, perlODal
physician for the ~year-old former
0r .. ,. «'rft ' =~t, isw~ the followiq atatemem ,
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Sporadic sunshine between patch-
es of fog and l• cbldl will dot
the Orange Coast Tuesday, with
temperatures in the 60s and up to
70 further inland .
INSuiE ToJpA Y
Mort than 70 boots are get·
ting set for the 1971 TransPl'.t-
cifi c yach' ract to HonoLufu
which will leave Los Angtltl
harbor un Jul~ 4, See Boating,
Pag e 26. ' '
0 Ytllerday was his best' day. His ap-
peUte is improving. He , had . a quiet
nl&1Jt. He was ~ to the radiology
department for the aclM*led lower m..
testinal exami""tions.
Truman's wile Bess, 85,' returned to
tho ~!I& ly today to be will!
her ~sbind. was 1ccornpapied by
Mike Wettw Truman'11 chauffeur and
boclnuard:
'I1le former !dent's ailment wu
dla-d s. y .. couua, or in-
flllnation of large intestine
..,,. medldlJ ,J>ulleliD roleued by the
hotipltal Sunday1 night said' Trumi.n "wu
placed Oii I li\'d8] llquid diet fer hil
Sunday eveniJW meol In pnpUotioo for
1°""~-·:~.
"He f~ts • ltrq«," the ltlte.
.. ,._ l 1 Ma"'-' Lk -11 menl takf •
._..., N~M " c.1.._.. • N111M11 ,.... ... The holplll:L IP.O}cesrnan uJd ~ :::,i:, u, 21.~ r= ,!.\!, PJ ~l-waa "a qulet ... 'Mr fnariln. -
t.Mk• n !r!!' ... iti ... ~ In the · nlori*lg he "drink' aome but-=-.:ic.. ~: T~ • tennilk and rud the new.paper. F<r = ,... i! :,: 1: lunCh be had_.me cbictf!D,,jello, tomato «lilwf•"'"*' ,. wti"9 ... u soup and miJr.M r :::::.. U·:: :::"'.:::'" ... J: 1 ffe pl out of tJe4 ,twice Sunda, ~
' -..-. " . d\ltbiil ~~"ho -ud dla~
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BULLETQ
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Chari .. Man-•
aon and three women membwl oi bis
hippie-style clan were comvlcted today of
fir1I degree. murder ll1d ·COf"Jl/'"11 ,In,
the savage alayJnls of •cir.., Sliaron
Tate ll1d lb ollltn. ' '
Manson wal the · oDt1· ·4~ tto•
speak.out. Atter 'till l\lrY "1u pouio! ho
shouled to Ille Judp: "We're '11111 •1no1.'
allowed to put•on a delente. You won't.
ouilive !bit Otll-" The -oat
quietly. '
The Jury of ...,.,. men ud fhle women
bid delibotaled O houri lllCI 40 mlo-
ulu lince recel~ Ibo e11e J ... II
'1ter • le\'en-~u., ~
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Militant Priest~s:
6 Arrested
In Weekend
Drug Sweep
Newport Beach police, working with
State NarrotiCa: lnvettigaton ind two
Orange County 'law enforcement agen·
cies, .med l,C*> pounds of marijuana
Sunday.
Si1: persona were arrested in a weekend
sweep that culminated a three-month
inveatigatkm. Police said the auspects
are accused of a series of narcotics
violations ranging from poausion of
cocaine and dangttoas drugs to sale
of marijuana.
Two of the suspects -Victor Venegaa
Lee, 20, of 157 Emerald Bay, and Tadashi
T. Natatsuka, 29, of 9m51 Bobbie Clrcle,
Huntington Beach -are wanted, police
sftid, in connection with the October
. raid of a Modjtska Canyon home.
The Modj<sb Canyon raid mulled
in the arrest . of '5 JMnons on variOU1
drug dlargos.
Newport Beach nareotia det.clive Leo
Konkel laid the · lnvutlpllon cm this
weekt!nd'I :cue was. begun u a result
or the jllpdjeoka Canyon Investigation.
'n.t marijuana, ~ police valued
at about !'n.IOO Oii the lllictt drug
market, wu sebed In · Tuatin. Police
said Robert Jamoa Hosle!;. 21, of Sanla
Ana WU arreilted Sunday nlght with
liboot 1oo :J)ounds ot ·the ~ 1n his
p,oaeuion . ..Koo~l said. a . subsequent
(Sot 'Bwi:, P ... ZJ
Arrest Resisting
Conviction of
Priest f)ropped
WASHINGTON (AP) -11li lapr-
Court tet .llide ~ 'tbt CCIDf .....
ol die Rev. J-&. 'G!<>Pt>! lar rwlllllll mat durtnil. the clYil ri&hla morcll
In Milwaukee In 1"17.
Will! the . 1-1 • dodlioa the comt
..W.lllbed JM~ ll!ll lrtal'....,,.
ll1ould bot ·~ l'lloc\ ...... dint'• p1u:r« dlll""'Hrt1l-loclla llmpo· tr·bocaule· Iba cr11ne inflll•ld k , • .,....,.. -· , Jn 011M!r ~IOU!, Iba-:, .
-Ruled lillt-__.. --to blre·-will! ....U -wlllle
lllllDI .... -In Ibo ..... -Bow1ter, u Aid -could be llomd fR!ll Jobi In , plonia H :Iba ,.......,..._
-"confllcllnc fA'!dly1 ....... " (llet GllOPPJ, 1'11111)
DAILY PILOT
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Banking on 11
A Chicago firm hopes to cash In on uproar created when large amoUDta
of cash stuffed into shoe boxes were found among personal poSS;eSSioDI
of the late Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell. The firm is mute~
ing this savings bank shaped like a shoe ;box and decorated in '_'money
green." It offers the possibility of "banking at any hour and is~~
hidden in a closet," according to the manufacturer. '
Apollo 14 Astronauts
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B~gin Counting Today·
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2 DAILY I'll.OT s
,,,.._ r ... J
GROPPI .. .
.,_to problem. · -!Wd !hot ..uytq 1 deleodant wbooe
first tnaJ ended by d11mlml ·ft the
jury by tl>e Juda• would pllce him
in ctouNe jeopardy, which ls un-
_.ilullonll.
-A.l'r'Md t.o hear the case of an Illinois
father denied CUBtody of bi! two children
because be never Ie.gally married tbeir
mother.
Father Gnlppi, • wblte prteat wt.
thrust hlmRlf lnto lbe civil rlgbta move-
ment, claimed he could not receive a
fair trial In Milwaukee County because
of "a potential for prejudice" among
prospective jurors stemming from biJ
activities.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court. in a
split decision, rt.1led a change of venue
was impermissible under st.ate law
because resisting arrest is classified as
a misdemeanor.
In reversing this decision. the U.S.
Supreme Court nkl a defendant ii eti-
tiile<I to consideration of a change of
venue motion bo"ever the crime is
classified. The fair administration ()(
criminal j111tice requires protection
against prejudicial publicity, said ,Justice
Potter Stewart.
The case now goes back lo a state
court in Milwaukee . JI Father Groppi
dembnstrates prejudice apinst. him in
the county. the conviction is du d and
the st&~ has the cbolce of trying to
try him agaln or dismluing the charge.
However, if lbe priest does not con-
vince 1 juda;e be could not get a fair
trial in Milwaukrae County, the conviction
may bt rtinltlt.ed.
JUll!ce 'Hqo L. lllodt clllleni.d. He
aald that since: 1 defendant always can
move for 1 new trial on the buls
of Pftjudloe there ii no need to eollblilh
the Ji&bt to a chaflCt of venue ln a
misdemeanor case.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and
Justice Harry A. Blackmun reluctantly
voted with the majority. They said in
an opinion by Blackmun that \ht CIM
wu "rather unimportant" but that the
trial judge should not have barred a
move for a chailge of venue simply
because a misdemeanor wu involved.
"Unfairness anywhere, In small cases
as well as in large, ls '-abhorred. is
to be ferreted out, and is to be
eliminated," Blackmun uid.
Court Rules IRS
Free to Subpoena
Firms' Records
W ASlilNGTON f AP) -The Supreme
Court ruled today tbat the Internal
Revenue Service ls free to subpoena
an employer's records ln investigating
almlnal lllbWty of !ndJvldwil tupayen.
The court -ly rejected •
Florldl circua wort.r's claim that
empJoyes are entJUed to challenge any
l!iUch subpoena, with full adversary hear-
ing~
Had the court niled otherwise, It might
have been poaaible in mch c.1ses for
penons to delay tax probes for up to
two ye.an merely over the isaue of
IRS summonses.
However. the opinion written by Justice
Harry A. Blaclunun held that "an
Jnternal Revenue IUlnmons may be
issued ln aid of an lnveaUgaUon. . .and
prior to a recommendation for almlnal
proeecution" without right of in-
tervention.
The peUtloo to the COW'~ brought by
Kevin Oonald8on, had contended that
the IRS wu not authoriJed to examine
his employer's records. except solely
for the purposes or determining the cor-
rectness of his ta1. return or taxes owed .
DonaldJon claimed the IRS move was
aimed instead at potential criminal ac.
tion against him. He argued that was
not authorized under laws governing the
IRS. and that he could righUully
challenge the subpoena.
Both a U.S. District Court al Tampa.
Fla ., and the U.S. Circuit Court in New
Orleans held , however, that DonaldBon
had "no proprietary intereat" in the
records of the employer, the Acme Circus
Operating Co., Inc ., and the high co urt
agreed with the lower rulinas.
DAILY PILOT
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OAAHG• CO.UT PUlllw.INO CCMPAllllY
aeMrt N. WeM
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-.-25.J971
GeUing Along
Avalanche Buries 4
Six Survivors Pulled From Was hington Snow
SKYKOMJSH. WB!h. (UPI) -A
rumbling avalanche cul a patch a:i wide
a.11 a football field down a Cascade. rnoun-
t.alnslde in lhe pre-dawn darkness Sun-
day. killing four members of families
who had driven up for a weekend of
fun in the snow.
Three bodies and six survivors were
pulled from a lotaUy demoli shed two-
15tory cabin in the palh of !he slide.
A ll·year-old girl died In another cabin
partially smashed by lhe. snow.
Jt took a rescue crew more than
ha1f a day lo dig out two teerJ.q e
girls whose parent.a had been killed by
lbe avalanche. Several others had been
pulled out of the 1now and debris earlier
in the day.
··The whole mountain came down,"
said a highway patrolman at lh~ scene .
· Mo1·e Than $4 Million Cut
In Newport Center Co sts
A City Council co rrunittee hu trimmed
more than $4 million from the con·
struction cost of the planned Newport
Beach Civic Center.
The Civic Cenler Building Committee
l.oday will tell the council the new city
hall and police building can be erected
for "less than $6 million" and a bond
election io finance: the facilities can
be scheduJed in September.
Cowicilman Richard Croul. the com-
mittee chairman, said his panel met
with architects Saturday and ordered
20 percent reductioru: In the gize Of
both buildings. pending concurrence by
·the full council.
his hands complelely , but It is the old
question of money," Croul said.
He said lhe $6 mill lin figure is a
maximum. and hopefuU y the buildings
can be constructed at a price closer
to the original $'1.5 million esUmale.
··we will work closely with the
architect through the design stages,"
he said.
Croul, in the construction bu8iness
himself, noted, "In effect. he will get
this project cost designed for nothing.··
He indicated the layout of the buildings
on the cuy·s nine-acre share of lhe
20-acre site may change considerably
from early projections.
The avalanche smnshed Into the cabins
at lhe Yodehn skt area e11st of 4.061.fool
Stevens Pass in the darkness sho rtly
after midnigh t. The pass is the northern
rno!t crossing of the Cascades between
Seattle and the Co lumbia River in
Washington.
Warminf. ten1peratures had loosened
tons of ~now clingi ng to lhe moun·
Lain.sides and numerous slides closed
several passes Sunday. The area was
covered with several feel or heavy new
snow whic h had fa llen in the past week .
Killed by the avalanche v.·ere Mr . an d
Mrs. Bart Edgars of Seattle. Kenneth
Lewis, 10. of Lynnv.·ood , W;1sh., and
Peggy Dean. 12. of SeatLl e.
The first three were ln the larger
cabin which was completel y destroyed.
Trapped for 13 hours in that wre_ckag11
were the Edgars' daughters. Debbie, 19,
and Cindy. 14..
The girl.!! were able to shout and
signal to men diggin~ them out. They
were finally pulled from the wreckage
shortly arter noon and taken by
snowmobile and ambulance to DeaCTJn-
ness Hospita l in Wenatchee where they
were examined and released.
Also in the cab in were Mr. and Mrs.
Biiiy Lewis, the parents of Kenneth ,
and their other sons. Mark, fl, and
Richard, 5, Mrs. Lewis and Mark were
treated and released from th e hopsit.a l.
Mr. Lewis and Richard were kept
overnight in satisfactory condition.
Susie Crutchfield, 4, Garden Grove, born with virtually no arms or
legs, gets around her neighborhood on an electric cart she drives her-
self. The cart was designed at the UCLA Medical Center. It can be
controlled with the chin or by the stump of an arm. Susie was trained
to operate the cart at medical center. \vhere the vehicle was deve-
loped over a lO·year period under grants from the U.S. Public Health
Service.
Croul said lhe new city hall. including
the council chambers. should be 58,500
Bquare feet and lbe poli ce headquarters
Would be 5.5,000 square feel. ·
Estimate! given the council two
months ago had put the square footage
of both buildings at more than 72,000
square feet and had placed the combined
construction cost at nearly $10 million.
The adopted master plan showa the
Clty Hall and Police building !W'rounding
circular council chambers.
"At this stage,'· Croul said, "we do
not know If the council chambers wlU
even be a separate structure.'"
Also planned in the new civic center
are the Harbor Judicial District Courts,
an art mll."leum, a new central library
and the new offices of th e Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Dean . the parents
of Peggy, escaped injury In the other
cabin , an A-frame 1Structure wh ich had
Its upper bedroom destroyed.
'Ta co Bandito'
Gets $30 Haul
1 n Costa M es<L Police Seize Countian Councilmen re a ct e d immediately,
csaytng they would dispense with the
entire project unless significant cost cu.ts
could be made. A cleancut bandito packing a big
pistola robbed a Cosla Me!ia Taco Bell
of $.10 Sunday night lhtn fled to mount
his waiting Mustang and roar away,
police said.
From Pqe l
In $1 Million Pot Haul
They named Croul and Councilmen
Milan Dostal and Donald Mcinnis to
the building committee directing it ln
begin immediately to meet with the
architectural firm. Welton B eck ett
Associates. and lhe city staff, to revise
the plans.
APOLLO ...
is a smaller military satellite set for
launch Wednesday .
Teams of lawmen Uterally followed
their noses to a light plane that reeked
of marijuana Saturday night ln Van
Nuys, arresting a Garden Grove man,
two others and seizing Sl million worth
of tht illicit weed.
Smuggling suspects Kenneth ?i,1ackJin ,
24, Thomas Hester, 23, and Kenneth
Iniber, 'll, were booked on suspicion
of, poaaession of marijuana for sale.
Macklin, of 1027& Wpodbury Road, and
bis suapected aecompli~ dra\le UJ1 to
the heavily loaded &lrcraft In a stallon
wqon to find police and U.S. Cu$toms
Family Injured
I.n Auto Crash
On Can yon Road
An' Emerald 'Bay family suffered minor
Injuries Friday evening after their auto
ran into the rear of another vehicle
at the Big Bend area of Laguna Canyon
Road.
The car, driven by Quinardo Rivera.
27, of 335 Emerald Bay. was eastbound
when a westbound auto crossed lhe
center divider of the road. The Ri vera
auto ran into the rear or another vehicle,
driven by John Zitney, 111. of Yorba
Llnda . as it swerved to avoid a collision
vdth the oncoming auto.
Rivera, his wife. Aurora . 2fi, his son,
1'1arco, I, and his mother, Flora Rivera.
'16. of 204. Cliff Dr ive. were all taken
to South Coast Communi ty Hospital,
where they were treated for minor cuts
and bruises and released. The four OC·
cupants of the other auto, all you ths.
were not injured. Damage to both cars
was moderate.
Victim of Dru g
Overdose Held
San Clemente police p at r o I m e n
discovered a man in his mid 10s wan-derinf bleeding and incoherenl along
the city's busines.1 district over the
weekend.
Officers said the man, who could only
give scant details about himaeU, was
suffering from a possible drug overdose,
a badly cut head and severe brul.!les
and other injuries to hU! back .
He was discovered at 6 a .m. Saturday
on the 100 block of Avenida Del Mar.
He is being treated at Orange County
Medlcal Center's psychiatric ward, of·
ficers said.
Brazen Burglar
Cops Cop's Cap
Thf long arm of the law went to
put on 11' $18 ca p out.Ide i..auna Beach
polict beadqlllrttrs Sunday, but went
blnhet~ed..
Officer Al McGraw aald tome bold,
bnJen thief stole It rlsht out of hi•
parbd patrol car during the noon hoot
whlle be was buly in the t laUon houte.
Whoe'fer Is cafrght wtarlnl It ii llltely
to have a taa bearing bookfnj numbers
hunc around hla neck to complete the
eruiemble.
Bil photogropb, however, w\11 not be
for • f&lhioo maaazlnc..
agents wailing.
Ingber is a resident of Inverness, whlle
Hesler Jives in the Marin County com-
munity of Corte Madera.
Investigators said the plane was stuffed
v.·it.h 950 pounds of freshly harvested
ttexican marijuana packed in duffelbags.
They were tipped off by a suspicious
operator at Agua Dulce Airport In
Saugus. ,
He said the trio landed Saturday and
began unloading the suspicious bags, so
he told them he wanted nothing to do
with them and demanded they leave.
Re-loading I.he small, slngle--engine
plane. they took off.
Notifying: customs agents. the airport
operator led them to check Van Nuys
Municipal Airport on the likely chance
that was tile SUl!ipects' second destination.
They found the plane parked on the
apron with no one around .
"You co uld smell ii 20 fee t away,"
remarked one inveBtigator.
Macklin, Hester and Ingber arrived
shorUy thereafter in a renled station
v.•agon and were advised of their righl<;
and placed under arrest on the federal
charges.
The men were scheduled to go before
a U.S. commissioaer in federa l court
Jn Los Angeles today, for arraignment
and setting of bail.
From Page 1
BUST ...
Croul said the reduction in space re·
quirements has reduced parking needs
and thereby eliminated the necessity
for a parking structure.
"In addition," he said, ''the committee
instrucled the architect to bring in a
plan as efficient, functional and economic
as possible."
Crou\ said. "This 1s a basic guideline
we gave him to work wit h."
"We to ld him we didn't want to tie
Acc used Can yon
Sla ying Suspect
Arraignment Set
A man accussed in the slaying of
Shepard, 47, dean of the astronauts, and
rookie space pilots Roosa, ':rl, and Mitch·
ell, 40, began the final week well rested
and with more training am! preparation
than .any moon crew before them.
They relaxed in their comfortable
quarters Saturday and lhen Roosa and
Mitchell took advantage of pleasant
weather to go flying in jet trainers.
Roosa later went fishing and produced
a good catch of sheepshead and trout.
Bui Shepard stayed behind and studied
a stack of flight plians and other
documents. ll will be his first spacefligbt
since his pioneering t>minute Mercury
hop nearly 10 years agn, and he admits
he has worked unusually hard to get
ready.
Fron• Page l
TRUMAN ...
a 46-year-old widow whose nude body ted wilh Mrs , Truman:' th' spoke sman
was found in a brush·chocked Modjeska said.
Clerk Michael L. Le.wis. 17. called
officers to the ta keout a! 647 \V . 19th
St.. at 8:30 p.m., after he and clerk
Lenore L. Noah. 20. \1ere certain the
gunman had gone.
Lew is said the man, in h1~ mid·!wen.
ties. waited unt il other customers' order~
were fi lled before lifting his shir t to
re.veal a revolver tucked into his hell.
"Seto this?" he asked. !hen demanded
Lewis put all the bills In a Taco Bell
bag.
Miss Noah came Qut of the back
room at that pninl and froze in fright,
but went back and lay down on the
floor as ordered.
Police said the armed robbery is
believed to have involved a vellow, lat!!
model sport coupe ~een to ·roar av.·ay
moments later.
Dress Code Se t
For Board Talk ·Caayon ravine was arraigned on murder Truman's personal physician , Dr.
charges lhis afternoon in Santa Ana Wa!Jace H. Graham. said Truman's con-Tust in Union High School District
Municipal Court . dition was listed as "fair" because of trustees will discuss ways nf reviewing
Glen Dale Ferguson, 36. of Lakewood, the "results of the tests available at the di slrict's dress code a! their meeling
was charged with the killing of Zelma present, lack of appetite and 11 restless at 7:30 o"clock tonight. 1171 Laguna Road,
Rachel Witgenstein of Norwalk in a night." Tustin.
district attorney's complaint dur ing the His condilinn was listed as "good'' The dress code presently in force was
weekend. He is held in Orange County from lhe time he was admitted to the $1dopled I a s t year following recom.
Jail without bail. hospital Thursday until Graham's state-mendations of a parent-admin1str11tor
Ferguson was arrtSted Friday after men! Sunday . review panel. I~ has been subJecl !O
a six-day investigation Into the slaying John P. Dreves, a spokesman for the mu ch controversy includ ing filing nf lega l
of Mrs. Witgenstein whose body .,.·as hospital. said "fair" meant "the patient 's action by parents of a Foothill High
found by hikers last Jan, 16. lnves tigalors vita \ sign s are stable and within normal School senior.
'.l.d her cloth•·ng had beeo torn from limits. The patient is conscious. He !11 Trustees will discuss wa)'S to prevent investigation turned up the .11dditional · 1._ her body and scattered around the area. not comfor table or may have some com· lurti11::r controversy 1n developin~ a new ~.:eund~~l know for sure where it The unemployed heavy equipmenl plicat ions. His recovery is anticipated.'' code or keeping the present one.
operator wa s arrested in Artesia near Dreves said the changing or Truman 's No slaff recommendat ion acmn1panies
comes from or ho"' it get.s here,'' he the site at whi ch Mrs. Witgenstein was condition report from .. good'. lo "fair'' the discussion i1em on t0night".~ agenda,
said. bul noted it was packed in boxes last seen alive Jan. 14. was no cause for alarm. a district spokesman said.
bearing Mex ican government stamps. ~ii;iiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillllliiiiiiiiiiiili Detectives were unclear as to the ]1
fiignilicance of the stamp.
''I'd say it's commercial grade Me1-
lcan marijuana," Konkel aaid.
In addition to Lee. Nakatsuka and
Hosier, Lhe foll owing suspects were ar-
rested:
Cheryl Suzanne Lee (unrelated lo Vi c-
tor Lee), 24 , of 197S Shertnaton Place,
Newport Beach, for possession of co-
caine.
January
Gerald John Gillim, 24, of 1060 Flamln.
go Road. Laguna Beacti. for possestion
or cocaine1 David Michael Talia, 24.. of 202~ 42nd
St.. Newport Beach. for sale of mari·
juana.
Kon kel said Miss Lee -who was
arrested with Nak.at8uka -and Gillim
-who was arrested wilh Victor Lee
-are not sU!pects in Lhe marijuana
ring .
Aiding the Newport lnvestlgatoNL In
the c•.!le were the State Bureau or
Narcotics invesligaton and lnvesticators
from the Tustin police department and
the Orange County District Attorney's
orflce.
Konkel aaJd the invest11aUon lJ con-
Unuins and rnore arrest,, are anticipated.
Boy, 10, Detects
Babysitter's Pot
SPRINGFIEU>, M,.. (UPI) -While
COME IN AND ASK FOR CLEARANCE PRICES
ON THE ITEMS OF YOUR CHOICE -IT'S FUN!
DIAMONDS GUii ARS
Always at Wholesale Prices
LADIES .97 CT •
SOLITAIRE
DIAMOND RING
SET IN 14K GOLD
ONLY$599°°
Guaranteed to Appral• 50•4 Higher Than What You P1y.
P•opl• in the ~now •••• mon•y •v•ry tirn• th•y buy-it i1 not
aesy to buy fot cash, but if you h•v• c•sh, lenltAm arlc1rd, or
M11t•r Ch1r9a you c•n sav• tr•mendous •mounts on •••rythinv
avary day.
$21.50 VALUE
Must S.. To Apprec:lat•
All Wood Guorlft!Md
VISIT OUI SOUND IOOM
l'OI NEW I. USID STD IO
IAl•AIN'-'T'S THI HAPPININ6 THIN•
~.~·~%!~:dJ'•f~~~'~.: COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN was upslalra calUng police.
"They ore smo1<1na marti•••• up 1838 NEWPORT ILVD. PHONE' 646-7741
her<," the boy told the !>Olli:< .. 1tch-d DOWNTOWN COST A MUA ---1. lrl ••••t operator. Police went to the house S.tur.
d<Y nltht ond orruled the 1>1by11ttu WE LOAN IUY ·SELL & TRADE ALMOST MRYTHING
and three male lHendL 1-------------iiiiillliimiiiiiliimiiiimiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiii _____ llll
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Ii
I
1.1
\ , I ii'
I
II
11
I -
I
I.I
' . . . ' . . . ' . . w • .-• • -,-r
Huntington Beaeh·
EDITION
VOL 64, NO. 21, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES MONDAY, JANUARY 25, 197f . .
Avalanche Buries 4
Six Survivors Pulled From Washington Snow
•
SKYKOMISH, Wash, (UPJ ) -A
rumbling avalanc;:he cut a patch as wide
as a football field down a Cascade moun-
tainside in lhe pre-dawn darkness Sun-
day, killing four members of families
who had driven up for a weekend of
fun in the snow.
Three bodies and six survivors were
pulled from a totally demolished two-
slory cabin in the path of the slide .
A 12-year-old girl died in another cabin
partially smashed by the snow. .
lt took a rescue aew more than
half a day to dig out two teen-age
girls whose parents had been killed by
the avalanche. Several others had been
pulled out of the mow and debris earlier
in the day.
"The whole mountain came down,"
said a highway patrolman at the scene.
Beach Access L
·· ~r R d W !f~ ,i,.· ,, oun on o/lf; *.;;:,~~ !
r ~tt' ·l By 4 Firms
Dorlie Fong, 17, is contestant
in Miss Chinatown, U.S.A. pag-
eant staged annually in San
Francisco as part of the Chinese
New Year Festival. This is the
year of the boar. San Francisco
festival begins Jan. 30.
Illness Causes
Ariother Delay
In ..... tpe Case
A one-week delay was ordered today
in the rape-kidnap trial or Gary Harold
Phoenix to allow the Costa Mesan 's
defense lawyer to fully recover from
a prolonged attack of Asian nu.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
William Murray sent the jury home
until Feb. l. It is expected that deputy
public defender Roderick Riccardi, weak
and pale today from his bout with the
infection, will then open his defense
<lf Phoenix.
The prosecution has rested its CHe
In the frequently delayed. illness-plagued
tria l. It will ask for the death penalty
if the jury fiocb Pboenill, 19, guilty
of the major charges in 33 felony ccowrtl
filed against him.
Nine alleged women victims have
testified apinsl Phoenix. He is 8CClUled
.,, r1pe. ... wt with intent to commit
rape, kidnapiDg, robbery and sexual
pemors!oo.
The four companies involved in the
JegaibiihJe with tbe Ctty ., Huntin(ton
Beach Oft!" p.JblJC access to \ht H~
tington Pacific beach have won the lat.ut
round in lbe court case.
Superior Court Judge Robert A.
Banyard has denied the city's motion to
prohibit the companies from using cer-
tain defenses in the case.
The defenses include claims that the
city was barred from suing the Hun-
tington Pacific Corp., the Huntington
Beach Company, Standard Oil and the
Fluor-Huntington Corp. by the 1tatute
nf limitations.
Another defense that will remain in
the case is based on the city's alleged
"unclean hands" resulting fro man alleg-
ed breach ol the 1932 contract on beach
ownership bewteen the city and the Hun·
tington Beach Company.
William Foster, general manager of
the Huntington Beach Co., commented.
"Our position in this case Is definitely
improved by the ruling that these
defenses are vaUd and will be given
full consideration.''
City Attomey Don Bonfa said that
ir the city had prevailed in its motion
the matter would have had "great
significance" because the defenses would
have been taken out of the case.
But Bonla added, "The ruling does
not mean that Standard Oil has won,
but merely that the Issues shall be
decided later by the trial court."
The case is over whether the city
should be granted public recreational
easement! over the be•ch.
41 Million See Rocks
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The IP&""
•gency sayt 41 million person1 got • lfunpoe Of moon rocU frmn. the Apollo
11 and 12 mi&sions during elhJbit.s mrund
the world last year,
The avalanche smashed into the ca~
at the Yodelin ski area east of 4,081·fool
Stevens Pass in the darkness ahortly
after midnight The pass is the northern
most crossing of the Cascades between
Seattle and the Columbia River ln
Washington.
Warming temperatW'es had loosened
tons of snow clinging to the moun-
tainsides and numerous slides closed
several passes Sunday. The area was
covered with several le.et of heavy new
gnow which had fallen in the pqt'week..
Killed by the avalanche were Mr. aftd
Mrs. Bart F.dgara of Seattle, Kenneth
Lewis, IO, of Lynnwood, W8'h., and
Peggy Dean, 12, of Seattle.
The fir st three were ln the larger
cabin which was completely destroyed.
Trapped for 13 hoW"B le that wreckage
Decision Studied
Wett the Edgara' daughters, oebbie, 19,
and Cindy, 14.
The girls were ablf: to shout and
signal to men diggirig them out. They
were fin.ally pulleil from the wreckage
ahortly after noon and taken by
snowmobile and ambuJance to Dcacon-
nesa Hospital in Wenatchee where they
ftte exuriined and releised.
Abo ln the cabin were· Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Lewis, the parents of Kenneth,
and tbeir other 3005, Mark, 8, and
Richard, 5. Mra. Lewis and Mark were
treated and releued from the hopaitll.
Mr. Lewi.I and RjcbJrd wer~ kept
overnight In satisfactory condition.
00-.. and Mrs. W. R. Dean, the parents
of Peggy, escaped · injury in the other
cabin , an A-frame structure which had
its upper bedroom destroyed.
2 Lie Detector Tests
'
K~!.~~~ ~.o?rg~~:~.f~~"',
B RllDI JlllVIZ!EI&U ~1 • t ~ ldt .,_ )'. ,_....,......... ')· . ~ ~.1, .......
Flft Hull~ BlaCh per10llDOI.-. '" i"'!Siiit~
miuionen will have \o decide Tuelday arrtSied ii 1be1 had tccepted any ~
night which lie detector told the · truth the ioodi
as they begin deliberalioru on the •ppea] ~ fUrtber testified tnt be was
of fired motorcycle officer Gilbert ll.kinr ~ during 'the ftrSt lie
Coerper · . detector ell.'mlnation and refUled to take Coe~r, 36, was fir~ l~t. Aucust another becau1e be was sUll taking the
for his alleged mishandltna: of ptlls
Montgomery Ward merchandise which ni.. commt.uk>n will retire into ex· w~s aaser:tecfJy e~~ .for Poll~e ecatile seeilon following Coerper's cross-
W1ves Guild cbar1ty activities. A he eialninatlon.. IDd aummary statements
detector test given by police inYestiptonl from both attorney•
prompted the dismL!lal police aaid. The board 11 ~posed of Wandalyn
Police Chief Earle Robitaille IUIP,lnded Hiltunen, Orange Clout College coon&elor
the veteran patrolman after be -~-and tucber· Donald Gri:m manager
ly answered "untruthfully" on whether ot ~atlon for H~ Aircraft
he had kept any of .the merchaodio< eo .. NewpOrt &..ch: c. E. Wood!, public
for bun.self or had given It away as rtlatiom diftctor for Signal Oil and
payrll!'ct f~r labor. . Gu C.O.; Walter Young, manager of
Cecil Ricks. COerper ~ • t torn e y . persmne.I for McDoooell Douglas Corp., ~wever ~r~aced a lie d.etector test and Frank P'lttln, employe relations
with conflicting . re~ults d~r1ng tbe last manager for J...o. Angeles City Schools.
personnel comm1ss1on. ~u1on. City Attorney Donald Bonfa , hearing
That test wa~ admin1~:ed br Chris officer for tlle proceeding, said the com-
Gugas, , e private cnmmologut, at mWi,..n has , the option of either re-in-
Coerper s request. The fee wu paid stating the officer with back pay and
before the results were known. btneflts or upholding the police chief's
Lie detector tents are not generally dismissal.
accepted as evidence in a court of law
unless attomeys for both sides agree
by stipulation. The personnel ho.rd,
however. is not bound by strict rule1
of evidence in its examination of the
Coerper case.
Polygraph ex.perts claim a t9 percent
reliabl!Jty factor for the inatrument
which records changes In blood preuure.
pulse and breathing rate and persptra.
tion . They concede that two different
operators of t.be instrument caukl oc-
casionally come up with different rmulb.
Coerper, who will · be croawnmlnod
by deputy clty attorney MicMel Miller
during the ~ p.m. aeaslon ln dty council
ctwnben, claims he lied 'Oll the "pollcl
deportmeot'•. li• -foll to ..-· other officers to wbom .he bad pea
some of the. men:b.andlN.
Court Rules IRS
'
Free to Subpoena
Finns' Records
View Past for Future
'Roaring Twenties Village' Idea Proposed
An llfee "" how old HuntlnJ!on Beach
ci.n tap lhe past for 1 proOtable futuie
wtll be pr..,....i to pn>perty ownen
and~Ftb.4.
The plan calls for remodeling bulldlnls
ond ,.bulldlntl streets and alleyt Into
a "Roaring Twe.otiel V!Uaae,'' dtslped
to attract the tourllt doU "r.
The suaest1on wu devised by dty
offld1l1 who make up a group called
PROFIT -PJ.annlng Review for Orderly
Future lnvestmenl Team.
tt's composed of Belches ud Karban
Director Vince Moorboule. Economic
Development Director BUI 8 a c II: ,
Developmtnt Coordinator Tom 'Severns,
Planning Director Ken Reynolds and
Public lnform•Uon Officer Bill Reed.
The prcsenUIUon will be etven at 7:•
p.m. Feb. 4 In the city council tbamben.
The area conoemed covers two blocks
I ) I• .. I
Ul'IT1 ........
'I THINK JURY GUILTY'
c.nvlcted Cult Leader Manson
Arrest Resisting
Conviction of
Priest Dropped
WASlflNGTON (AP) -Tut Supreme
Court set aside today \he CCJnvlctlon
of lbe Rev. James E. Gropp i for resisting
arrest during the civil rights march
in Milwaukee In 1967.
With the S.1 decision the court
established the princtple that trial judges
should not automatlcally reject a defen·
dant's plea for different trial locale simp-
ly because the crime involved is a misde-
meanor.
Jn other actions today , the court :
-Ruled that employers cannot refuse
to hire women with small children while
taking on men In the same situation.
However. it said women could be barred
from jobs in plant! if the employer
shows "confiict1na:' family obllgat~"
present a probiem.
-Held that ~tl'ylng ~a <lefendant wboee
first trial ' ended by di.sm~ of tbe
jury by tho judje would place hlm
in , dquble • jeopardy, which -II . 1111·
-'!tulnal. . -=-Agreed to bear the cue of an Illinois
f.ather.denled cwitody of·hi.5 two children
becaute be never legally married their
rnotfter. · ·
' Father Groppl, a white priest who
lhrust hlrnaelf Into the dvil rtghl& m~
1!*11. , clalmed t;ie, cquld n,ot receive . a
fali'. trial, in .Milwaukee County because
of "• pOh!DtlaJ' for prejudice" amoM. proopectlve JUror• otemmlng fro111 tiia
ldlvtlleo. I .
. The Wlac:riiiLp Silpre\rie ~ Jn • a,
opttt .~1 ,'li"4.~ dwlg~ of -'!It llllj!el'inliflble . Wider state llw,
bocanoe "!"!'.;, imit. II dau~ u
•·~· I ...
Ill ss· illll dee-tl>e· u.s.. lllloftiiO • llld • dt'""""•t ·11 ..... ut1e11 to'. · · · · .n oi"7.ch.n;. a1;
~ .~;ti boftnr. !ht ~' II ' ' falr ',idmllltotratlon ,of
· Ice requ1na piolte)too
jrijudlClal publftlcy, .. 1d Juitk:e
l'l>tt«Stewart.
The cue now goes back to 1 •lite
COllll I~ Mllwaut ... ' If F•ther Gropp! --.1o1 p,.judlce agalnllt lllm 1n
tho ""1'\tY, the conv.tctton II de~d .azid
tl\l ·N!t "" the' choice ol trytoC ,to , tft '~lnl !181'"1 or dtsmltst~-~tp: 11~r1 If the priest· P<!t t81n~
....,,. ,... .... cOlild 'Pt .'•_..™"
INI In Mllw1ukae OOantJ, tbe convk:tloa1
-bl-led.
~
•
N.Y. Stoelul
TEN CENTS
Girls Also
Convicted,
Of Murder
LOS ANGELES' (AP) -Charles Man.-
son and three women membefl of bit
hippie-style clan were c011vtcted today of
first degree murder and conspiracy In
the savage slayings of 1ctreu Sharon·
Tate and sit others.
Manson was the only defendant ti>
speak out. Afttr the jury was polled i.
shouted to the judge: "We're 1Wl oot
allowed to put on a defeme. You W'Clll't
outlive that old mu." Tbe womta ut
quietly.
The jury of seven men and ftve women
had deliberated 42 hours and 40 m,Ln..
utes since recelvln& the caae J111, 15
after a seven-month trial.
Five persons were slain in the home of
the actresa the night of Aug. l;-1 and on
the followtng,nilht wealthy ll'oCer Leoo
LaBianca and his wife Roeemary were
lilain iri their home aeverat miles dfltanL
Shortly afterward, Manson Ille! Illa hip.
pie band moved out of the oW SpMn
Ranch In the 51111 Femaodo Valley. Tbey
had been AIYID at the old time movie
ranch for 1everal mootJu.
'Ibe proeeceution built its Clle 1arply
on the testimony al Linda !~a
»)'e81'<11d -bom ... "I • who Mel been to both tho Tale lllll:t.
Bi,anca bomea:.
llhe ... gtttned lmmflllft)' far -tatl-
mony and told ol M.n1an'1 ordutnf the
hippie clan around. She also lingted out
Misses Atkins, Krenwlnkel and Van Hou-
ten as the killers . Alao named by Miss
Kasabian was Charles "Tex" Watson who
currently is committed to the Atascade:ra
State Hospital.
Trial began June 15, 1970 and after the
Jury was selected a month later the panel
has been oonfined to hotel rooms each
nigtit. r.
The proae<.'Ution presented 14 wlbtl r
and more than 300 pieces of e~.
'Ille defense called no wlb •et although
Maruon spoke to the COlll'I wtdla-tbe jury
wa9: absent.
Park Approved
At 'Bullet Hill'
For Seal Beach
Residents of Seal Beach's "Bullet HlU"
will get their long-awaited park through
a lease-agreement currently being drawn
up by city staff members.
The l().acres of wilderness, to be nam·
eel "Gumgrove Park,'' is owned by the
Hellman Estate and b belng made
available to the city on a five-year
lease with options to renew.
Plans call for it to be left In lb
natural st.ate with tmprcnements co.
slsting of access rotds lhd fencing of
the perimeter. Lule --Include the payment of about IS.ODO ID aonua1
proi>erty tana.
Procurtt1ent of the Jeua for
Gumgrove Part ftB c:wtlDpnt an dty P-wcbue of 2.1 acres of BIDrnln pro-
perty on the old Pacific Electric" RlCbl
of Way.
Weatlluo
Spoi"adlc illnlhlne he-. p'atd>-
"ol fol ad low ·•-will ·dot the Oranp 'Cooat 'l\raday. with
temperaturtt tni Ute IOI UNI ap to
lO turther toJud,
INSIDll 'IGDAY > • • •
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f..i.i.'r' ~ c....... J1 .....,. ....... '' r= ..... l ~ D-11
...... [ pl 1f _._. ..
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=-~~ -~ ~,, '" . ·-~·" · .. ==--·. I: -., ::.:r .. ,..: ........... .,
" . ..
H •
Pot sw eep
'
Newport Police Seize Half Ton of Marijuana.
Newpilrt -pollco, Wllllilol with
State Narcotics investigators and two
Orange County law enforcement agen-
ciea", seized 1.000 pounds of marijuana
Sunday.
Six persons were arresled In a weekend
• sweep that culminated a three-month
invea:tlgatlon. Police said the suspeeta
are 1ccuaed of a series of narcotics
violations ranging Crom possession of
cocaine and dangerous drugs to sale
of marijuana.
Two of the suspects -Victor Venegas
Lee, 20, of 157 Emerald Bay, and Tadashi
T. Nakalsuka. 29, of DI! Bobbie Circle,
Huntington Beach -are wanted, police
gaJd, in connect ion v.·ith the Octobe.r
raid of a Modjeska Canyon home.
The Modjeska Canyon raid resulted
tn the arrest of 45 persons on various
drug charges.
•
Nfwparl -nuc:oti& -Loo KMbl <Ald 'Ille invelllpUoa on lbla
weekend's cue waa becun 11 a result
of the Modje1ka canyon 1nveat.tgaUon.
The marijuana, which police valued
at about $'12,500 on the Illicit drug
market, was seized in Tustin. Pollet
said Robert• James Ho!ier, 24, of Santa
Ana was arrested Sunday night with
about 100 pounds of the weed ln hi!
pouession. Konkel sald a subsequent
investigation turned up th& additional
900 pounds.
"We ,don•t know for sure wht.re it
C?Omes from or how It gel! here," he
said, but noted it was packed in boxes
bearing Mexican government stamps.
Detectives were unclear as tll the
significance of the stamp.
"I'd 1&y it'W commercial grade Mu·
ican marijuana," K~I aaid.
In addition to Lee, Nabt.suka and
Hosier, the following IUlpecls were &r·
f'llt.ld: . •.)'
Qiql _.,,.JM (1111nlat.d to, Vle-
i« JM), II, of 1111 Sborlnlton Place,
Newport Beach, for poaeulon of co-
colne.
Gerald John GWim , 2t, of lOIO Flamin-
go Road, Laguna Beacb, for poasession
of cocaine.
David Michael ·T11la, 24, of~¥& 42nd
St.. Newport Beach, for ale ol mari-
juana. ·
Konkel said Miss Lee -who WU
arrested with Nakat.suka -aqd Gillim
-who was arreated with Victor Let
-are not llJIPed,I in the marijuana
ring.
Aiding the Newport investigatllrt1 in
the case were the State Bureau of
Narcotics investigators and invt!ltigators
from the Tustin police department and
the Orange County District Attorney's
office.
Konkel aaid the investigation is con-
tinuing and more arrestl are antklpated.
Ai1other Delay
In Bribery Case
A further del ay was ordered today
in the Orange County Superior Court
trial of a land developer accused of
the attempted bribery of former Hun-
tington Beach mayor Jack Green.
Apollo 14 Astronauts
Begin Counting Today
Presiding Judge William C. Speirs
ordered William Denny New, 66, Phoenix,
Ariz., to re turn to his courtroom March
8 for scheduling of the triaJ on bribery
charges filed Nov. 10, 1968.
New is accused of offering Green $4,000
In return for the mayor's vole and
sur.·10;-t for New's interest in I proposed
zoning change on valuable Industrial land
near Gothard Street and Slater Avenue
in Huntington Beach.
•,
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The
countdown began today for Sunday's
launch of the three Apollo 14 astronauUi
on the most dilf_icult and coally lunar
landing mission yet.
The long countdown 11larted promptly
at 6 a.m. while Alan B. Shepard, Stuart
A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell were
in the doctor's office seeking medical
clearance in .their final m1jor prefilgbt
physical examinaUoft.s.
"We're in good ~pe," reported a
YMCA INSTRUCTOR IVAN ROGERS TOSSES A STUDENT
Paul S.lver1 Take1 Hi1 Lump1 While Learning Karate
DAILY PILOJ
OllANOE COMT PUll.tst4tlrlG COMP.UV
Ro~1rt N, W1t4
J"tn.klcnl ••<Ill ~llllet"
J1clr: It. C11rl1Y
Vk.I 'ml6tnt •r.4 o.iwr11 M.Wlltw
Thom•• K •• .,a
EfliM
Tliom11 A. Murphi111
M-111\Gi t:dl:tr
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W•t Or•rwe Couruy lllllltw
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L~ hKl'I ~ m •-•A-~ ~I 2Jt W.t ..... ''"" ~ llmdll #11 ......... 11ou1 .... r-.
$011 ClllMntt: -,..,. &I CtmlM bll
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Karate Classes
Begin Today
At Beach YMCA
Youngsters and adults will "llip" over
a special conditioning, Karate and self·
defense class beginnfng today at the
Huntington Beach YMCA.
The course, open tll anyone over 12,
la held each Monday night and will
continue for the next II ~ucceedlng Mon·
days. according to Y Executive Dlrectllr
Richard Collatll. The fee: Is $15 for YMCA
members and $20 for non-member!.
Beginners work out on the mat.s from
7 p.m. to I p.m. whUe intermediates
take their fall# from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m,
An ad:dlUonll etght·week course In
women'1 ldf-driense and condlUonlng
begil'UI Feb. I at Y headquarten, 17931
Beach Blvd.
That ctasa meetl from 7 p.m. to I
p.m. each 1'mday niibL A fee of $12
is charged for membtti. Non·member1
pay 115 .
Bearded Tribe Found
BRASILIA, Brazil (UPI) -The Na·
UOMI Indian Foundation Aid Sunday
a whitNkinntd, red·burded trl.be of
lodllm lw been found In the middle
ol the -Jqle.
space agency official as engineers bt1an
work at the oceanside launch pad. Much
of today's activity was devoted to ele;c-
trical check! of the lunar landing craft
and in.sta11aUon of starters for the
booster rocket's engines.
The countdown includes 102 boon of
scheduled taW and five rest period.!
totaling ta hours.
The three astronaut.s and their backup
pilots have been living in isol1tl01. at
the Kennedy 1p1.ce ctnter for two weeks
to minimize their chances of fall ing
ill before or during the f400 million,
nine.-day e1pediUon.
Backup commander Eugene A. Cernan
unintentionally violated the u n i q u e
quarantine Saturday when his flaming
helicopter crashed in a nearby river.
He was exposed to several rescuers
before returning to the cape.
Officials reported 111 other aspects
of preparation for the mission were
going well. E1.citement mounted around
the moonport and newsmen, contractor
representaliv~ and tourist! flowed into
the area.
Part of the excitement was generated
by two communication.s satellite shots.
One is the new Intelsat 4 commerclal
craft set for launch t.onigbt after three
succeujve 24-bour delays caused by
st.rong bigb altitude winds. The other
is a smaller military satellite set for
launch Wednesday.
Shepard , ~7. dean o( the astronauls , and
rookie space pilots Roosa, ':fl, and Mitch·
ell, 40, began the finaLweek well rested
and with more training alld preparation
than any moon crew before them .
They relaxed in their comfortable
quarters Saturday and then Roosa 11nd
Mitchell took advantage of pleasant
weather tll go flying· in jet trainers.
Roosa later went fishing and produced
a good catch of !hee:p!head and trout.
But Shepard stayed behind and studied
a stack of flight plans and other
documents. It will be his first spaceflight
since his pioneering 15-ntinute Mercury
hop nearly 10 years ago, and he admits
he has worked unusually hard to ge;t
n!ady.
"It has been tough , It's been difficult,"
he said in an intervie w just before
beginning the health quarantine. "I
pressed pretty hard in the Interest of
being pretty sure that I was as ready
to go as T could be."
The mission of Apollo 14 is coslinR
the U.S. government $25 million more
than April 's ill-fated 13 moon lligh!.
Most of the extra cost comes from
additional operation eipenses due to the
longer intervals between launchings.
Not only is Apollo 14 more expensive,
but Shepard considers it the most dif-
fic ult land ing yet at tempted. And he
expects it will be the most productive.
The landings of Apollos 11 and 12
In 1969 were made on relatively easy-to-
reach flatlands, but Apollo 14 is targeted
for a lunar valley picked solely because
of ill grtat interest to acleritbta.
Reception Set
For Huntington
Superintendent
A reception for Jack Roper, the new
superintendent of tbl Huntington Beach
Union High School Diatrict, is planned
Wednesday by the Lague el Women
Voters,
The receplion, to be held al the: Com·
munity Methodist Church, 6662 Heil Ave.,
will cooclude an LWV meetiq eo local
educatUonal dl!:velopmtnta.
'l1MI aes1km will open at 1:30 1.m.
with 1 !Ilk by Fred Koeb, director
or bul1ness ltl"ices for the county'1
education departmenl He will IPUk on
unlfic1Uon -the comblninc of hlih
acbool and e:ltmentary dl1trlcta -1n
Issue that will 10 to local voters before
the 1'72 pra:ldentlal elecllon.
Roper, formu superilltendent ol the
Saddleback Junior COllep llillr1d, will
address I.he lfOUP at 10:30 a.m •
All raldenta are invited to Ute meettna: •
ReMn"ltiona for child care may ~ made
by colllna Mn. WU!iam Wlna 11 NW!n.
Banking on It
A Chicago firm hopes to cash in on uproar created when large amounts
' of cash stuffed into shoe boxes were found among perso nal possessions
of the late Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell. The firm is market·
ing this savings bank shaped like a shoe box and decorated in ··money
green." It offers the possibility or ·'banking at any hour and is easily
hidden in a closet," according to the manufacturer.
Small Business Seminar
Planned for Golden West
The Huntington Beach Chamber of
Commerce and Golden West Evening
College will co-sponsor five seminars
for the small business owner beginning
Tuesday.
The sessions, conducted by Herbert
Baughn, chamber member, are aimed
al providing the small businessman with
assistance on queslions of finance, in·
surance, purchasing and inventory,
employe selection, accounting and tax
controls.
There is no tuition. Owners may
regi ster at the seminar from 7:30 p.m.
t.o 9:30 p.m. in the Golden West Com-
munity Center. Datea, topics and seminar
leaders are as rollows:
Reday, evening ro\lege instructor and
president of Servisoft of Orange Coast.
March 30 -employe selection, reten·
tion, motivation and fringe benefits.
chai red by Walter Young, manager of
employment training and placement at
~1cDonnell Douglas Corp., Hun tington
Beach .
April 27 -sources of finance for
small businesses, chai red by Albert Ee·
c!es, financial business adv isor.
May 25 -accounting and tax controls,
chaired by Roy Schriver, chairman of
the Golden West business division and
a business consultant.
•sister~
Hai·ry Has
'Best Day '
Say Doctors
KANSJ..S CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Former
President Har ry S. Truman's doctors
said loday his appetite is improving
and that Sunday was his "best da y"
since entering Research Hospital with
an inflamed intestine.
Truman's condit ion was described as
fair.
Dr. Wallace H. Graham, personal
physician for the 86-year-0Jd former
President, i~ued the following stateinent
today:
"Yesterday was his best day. Hi! ap-
petite 1s in1proving. He had a quiet
night. He was taken to the radiology
department for the scheduled lower in-
testina l examinations.
Truman's wife Bess, 85, returntd to
the hospital early today to be with
her husband. She was accompanied by
Mike Westwood , Truman's chauffeur and
bodyguard.
The former President's ailment was
diagnosed Saturday as colitis, or in-
namation of the large intestine
The medlca l bulletin released by the
hospital Sunday night said Truman "was
placed on a special liquid diet for his
Sunday' evening meal in prepa ration for
lower gastro-intestinal tests" today.
··He fee:s much stronger," the state-
ment said.
The hospital spokesman said Sunday
was "a quie\ day" for Truman.
In the morniny he "drank son::te but.
termilk and read the newspaper. For
lunch he had .some chicken, jello, tomato
soup and milk."
He got out of bed twice Sunday and
during lhe afternoon "he dozed and ch•t-
ted with Mrs. Truman," the spokesman
said .
Truman's perso nal physician, Dr.
Wa!!ace H. Graham, said Truman's con·
dition was listed as "fa ir" because of
the "results of the tests available at
present, lack of appetite and a restless
night."
His condition was listed as "good''
from the time he was admitted to the
hospital Thursday until Graham 's state·
men! Sunday,
John P. Dreves. a spokesman for !he
hospital, said "fair" meant "the patient'•
vital si gns are stable and within normal
limits. The patient is conscious. He ill
not comfortable or may have some com-
plications. His recovery is anticipated."
Sought Jan. 26 -business financing and in·
surance programs, chaired by Steve
Holden, president of South Shores
ln!urance, Huntington Beach .
Feb. 23 -purchasing techn iques and
inventory controls, chaired by Laddie Tamu.ra School Hunting in ]npa1i
Schneider Top
Citizen of Valley
Chris Schneider, a 33-year-o!d Hughe!!
Aircrafl worker, is Founta in Valley's
Distinguished Citizen.
He was given that honor Saturday
night by the Fountain Valley Jaycees
ror his work with the youth or the
community.
Schneider, of 17101 Santa Isabel St ..
of ten C()aches teams in Little League
baseball and several spo rts for the city
recreation department. He also serves
on the Tamura School PTO And headed
the Jaycee effort in las1 year 's spe cial
olymp!cs for mentally rel.ardetl children.
He is a member of the Jaycees and
was nominated for their Distinguished
Service A\1-·ard (DSA) by the Fountain
Valley \Yoman's Club.
Runnersup were Ron Shenkman. a
Fountain Valley City Councilman, and
Edwin Arnold, a district governor for
the Jaycees.
Sixty people attended Saturday's ban·
quet held at Mile Square Country Club.
January
Tamura Elementary School in Fountain
Valley is siste r-hunting in Japan.
''\\'e may have a prospect in Toyama,
a suburb of Tokyo," Gerry Smith,
Tamura principal, said this morning.
He started the sister hunt last May
1.11hen a group of 40 Japanese educators
visited the Fountain Valley School
District
"I tqlked to Shoichi ~fochizuki, a con·
sultan\ lo the Tokyo Board of Educa-
tion," Smith exp lained. "I told him some
of our schools ha ve a Japanese
background :ind might benefit in an
exchange or ideas with a similar school
in Japan."
Last October Mochizuki wr ote Smith
to say the search had been narrowed
to the Tokyo suburb, though a specific
school hadn "t been selected.
"We're wa iting on the name of the
school now." Smith said.
The childrrn at Tamura might send
letter~ and newspapers to their Japa nese
('OUnterpart. and receive the same ba ck.
"We might even exchange tapes and
I
movies." l-lmith added . "Japan Is very
hig on tape recorders. and we"d also
like to sec our c1un1erparts."
"Our fourth graders have a thorough
study Qf Japan and it might do 111!
the children good to know they have
opposite numbers some\1-'here in the
y,•orld ."
Tamura School was named after
Hisamatsu Tamura . who was born in
Japan in 18ifi. but came to Fountain
Valley as one of the early pioneers
in sugcir beet far ming
••\\'e have S-Ome Japanese youngsters
among our 71iti students ;it Tamura.''
Smith said. "We may use them for
intepretation."
Smith said the Japanese children begin
a study of the English language in the
second grade. and their elementary
schools arc :,ibout twice the size of
Fountain Valley't1.
\Vhile rn 'ln~· rlasses have exchanged
letters with other parl.s of the country
and world , Tt1mura "'"'ill be the fi rst
Founta in Valley school lo adopt a foreign
sister.
COME IN AND ASK FOR CLEARANCE PRICES;
ON THE ITEMS OF YOUR 'CHOICE -IT'S FUN!
DIAMONDS GUITARS
Always at Wholesale Prices
LADIES .97 CT.
SOLITAIRE
DIAMOND RING sn IN 14K GOLD
0NlY$599°°
Guar1nfffd to Appral• 50% Higher Thin What You Pay.
P•opl• in +h• lrnow , ..... mon•y '"•ry tim• th 1y buy--it ii not
••sy to buy for c11h, but if you hlY • c1sh, 81nltAm1ric1rd, or
M•1tor Ch1r9• you c1n ...... tr•m•ndou1 1mount1 on o-Y1rything
OYtty d1y.
'
$21.50 VALUE
Musi s .. To Apprtcl1te
All Wolld Gu.r1nt.ecl
VISIT OUI SOUND IOOM
POI NIW • USED sm10
IAlllAIN5-IT'S THI HAIPININCO THINll
COSTA MESA JEWE,,RY ancl LOAN
,.
1838 NEWPORT BLVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA letwtM
PHONE 646-7741
H-&-w.y
WE LOAN IUY ·SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERTIHING
L I
I I .
6men
BEA ANDERSON, Edito• •
Army Needed
To Fight War
War has been predicted for Sunday, Jan. 31 , all over Orange
County and one of the major battle sites will be in Fountain Valley.
The fi ght will be against rubella and the soldiers will be armed
with supplies of vaccine, arranged through the Orange County Chap·
ter of the National Foundation, ?i.1arch of Dimes.
Volunteers will report to 40 centers throughout the county. in·
eluding Fountain Valley High School, to help administer the vaccina·
lions to children 1-12.
A ss i s ting in the _Fountain \'alley effort are mem-
bers of the South Coast Junior Woman's Club :;.nd the Fountain Valley
Woman's Club. Chairmen are Mrs. Gerald Bennett and Mrs. Robert
Moss, assisted by Mrs. Frank Fleck.
The rubella clinic will take place between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m.
and coffee and donuts wil l be ser\'ed to the volunteers.
According to March of Dimes officials, this is a major immuni-
zation program which will help reduce the incidence of birth defects
which have been associated with rubella.
Rubella, or German measles, affects unborn· children through
the mother. The mother-to-be usually is exposed to the disease through
children, the prime carriers of the virus. Therefore it is important that
every child be vaccinated.
Anyone \vishing lo help during the clinic may call Mrs. Bennett
at 968·5070, Mrs. Fleck at 962-2128 or Mrs. Moss al 847-6924 .
Doctors and nurses are needed as well as nonprofessional vol-
unteers.
X -MARKS THE SPOT -Spots are an indication of 1neasles. and
measles are a possible indication of r ube lla. a variety of measles
responsible !or birth defects in unborn children. Though it is too
late for Julie Bennett to have a vat:cination. she and her mother,
1\1rs. Gerald 1\1. Bennett, urge al l children between l and 12 to
vi sit a clinic Sunday, Jan. 31.
Fund-raising Evening a Wo;k of A.rt
An art display and auction will add spice to the
\vine-tasting party planned by the Ladies Auxiliary
of the Boys Club of Huntington Beach. The 7:30
p.m. affair will take place in lhe Peek Family Colo-
nial Terrace Room, Westminsler. Getting in an
early bid to auctioneer Pat Downey are Mrs. Torri
Neeld and Miss Marge Zander (left to right).
'Lots' of Suspense 1n Realtors' De al
\V ho \Viii the rcaltor-of-the-year be for the IIunl·
ington Beach·F'ountain Valley Board of Realtors?
Taking a snea k previev.1 before the Saturday, .Jan .
30, aw ards banquet in the Sheraton Beach Inn arc
f!efl to right) 1-Trs. Ch a rle~ Col stadt, ~frs. George
Gal kin and Gene Kado\v. Dancing lo the Hi Tones
\I ill round out the evening.
Incentive Stif.led by Parents' Guise of Generosity
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I married
while still In college. Mom and Dad
Curnl.shed our apartment and sent us
1 check evtr)' month for two years.
We had mort than enough to live on,
yet they lntl!ted on giving us money
for birthdays. anniversaries, Thanksgiv·
Ing. Chrtstma s. Fourth of Jul y -any
occasion which could be used as an
excuse.
1 have graduated from college and
1m now working. My husband is getting
a PhD on a federal grant We have
everything we need and we don 't need
any more financial help. My parents
can 'l understand lhat we want the
11tislacUon of doing a few things on
our own.
Last night my father tried to slip
ANN LANDERS ~
me some money behind my husband'.!
back. t refused to take It. My husband
saw him and the four of us got into
a terrific husle. My mother called me
"ungrateful." My dad said I was deprlv·
ing him of hb greatest pleasure. The
relaUonshlp ls becoming strained. It has
deteriorated into a contest of wills. How
can we !'lellle lhi.s once and for all ?
-POOR LITILE RICH GIRL
DEAR GIRL! Write yoar folkt 1 letter
and UM Utem you •PP"ecla&e Uaelr
Cefff'O!ltJ bat DGW YOU and your bar;band
are Abie te mua1e ctn yov own. Explain
that tlley MUST not deny you lhc
1aU1facUon of earalng ud acllle•lng.
ud thal prolotl&ed dependency Is
unhealthy and ca• be crlppl1D1.
Aak them not to send any more money
1tft1. If they dl1re1ard your wishes,
1eod ihe money back. Eventually when
they realize you mean It they'll stop
trying to bhsd you to them wltb hoops
of gold.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : The letter
from the beauliful, intelligent woman
who was married to a drunk had a
familiar ring to it. I, too, was beautiful
and tntelUgent -or so everyone said .
T made the mistake of marrying a
111'!.h, too. Whenever I ki cked him out
t always look him back -"for the
seke of !he children." Who was I kid-
ding? My chj ldr en needed a drunken
falher like the y needed a hole in the
head.
We had no social life because the
only people who will put up with a
drunk are other drunks. The childr en
often went lo school exhausted and
nervous from lack of sleep. Their father
freq uently stalked the house, ranting
and ravln~, until~ o'clock in the morning.
J stayed with that miserable man
for 15 years. I kep~ telling myself he
was a sick man and he needed me.
One day I had to admit l was sicker
than he was or I wouldn't put up with
his lying and chea ling. A woman has
to be crazy to let her husband squander
hi!'I paycheck v.•hen their children need
shoes and milk.
I don't know why ll took me so lonp;
lo gel smart !or should I ~ay well l
but I thank my• lucky stars I finally
made it. I hope you will print my
letter for the bene fit Of other WOlTIC!l
who are back where I was 20 years
:i~o. Now is the time to use your famouit
line, Ann. Tell the m to wake up and
srnc\I the coffee . -SLOW LEA RNEll
DEAR SLOW: Tbank.'J for your letter.
There's a htap o' lesson here. t hope
the student pays close 1tteutloll. ,J .. ~ •
CONFIDENTIAL TO WHAT CAif• A
MCJrHER DO?: One lhing a mot!W:t
can do is slop telling her-soa·}~t
his steady Is a tramp. The ITKI~
talk against the girl the more; )'.e:11
h'lve to defend her. tn fact, he mly
'·defend" her so vehementl y that;J!,c
of these <lays you'll end up beln{~
1nothcr-in-la w. !I~· z.
\Vbal is French kissing? ls It~..,.' "':' ,,.bo should set the necklq llm
the boy or the girl? Can a slto n
wedding !lucctt.d? Rtad Aaa ' ~ •
booklet. "Teenage Se1 -Tei .,,,
to Cool II." Stnd 50 cenls la coln "'4
n long, self·addres!ted, stamped e~ 1 In core of the DAILY PlLOT. • ~
-' . . . -·~ Y,".:
I
' I
~· ,. "'1. Jf-lillLY PILOT
. . '
MondlJ, January ~. 1971
Future Doctor Opts to Fight
By JO OUON
Of tlll IMllP , ....... "
Women'• Ub 11 no joke to
Emily Ahern, a PhD candidate
ot Come11 Untvenlty who la
1 nllldent ol Irvine whlla her
husband, Dennll completes b1I
PbD 11 UC!.
A tllm, attracUve, casual
type, Emily feela that wome.n
are upk>lted aexually by the
medla and lhat they do not
receive a fair s h a k e
employment-wlae.
up thlnklna they are only going
to be mommlu, '' ahe 11tated.
"There are other options th-an
molherllood."
Employment praCUca must
be revamped IO husbands and
wlvu can work part-time to
share the ,..ponalblllUea of
chlld rurtna.
Em.Uy, a apeclallat in social
anthropology, became in-
terested in her major area,
China, through a professor at
Cornell and she bu become
irrevocably Involved wilh her
studies because of the big In-
vestment or her lime in stu·
dying the language.
PLANS TO TEACH
pJan to teach wherever lbey
can find jobs cloae t.o1elhtr.
Emily Wll born 1n Blnn-
ln&bam, Ala., crew up 1n
Peru11ylvanla and dld her
undergrad111te work at the
1.JnJveralty of Mlchlcan, wbert
1he met her husband.
They bolb went to Cornell
for thelr PhD atudy and wbtn
her husband's adv!Jor came
to UCI, the rnove west
waa necessary. EmJly la writ-
ing her dlssenta.llon on a arant
from the American Association
or University Women and now
is in the final stages.
and ber work will be fini.!ihed
in September.
ANCESTOR WORSWP
Emily's dissert at i on
1enerally concerns Chinese
ance stor worship. She is seek·
Ing answers to questions such
as why do they do it, why
are the forms different in
different villages and how do
the Chinese solve conflicts.
She is stud ying the funeral
ceremonies or the Chlnt.!it-,
their altitude to'ft·ard spirits
and the lr marriage
ceremonies.
several more before her work
is done.
Emily's village was Ch'inan
which means .. south of the
stream," and her secllon con·
sisted of about 500 people.
She would like tc> return tG
do addiUonal rue1rcb because
she foond th1l ahe h11 ques-
tions she can't anawer without
further lime In Taiw111 .
INCREDIBLE EXPERIENCE
''It was an incredible e.1·
perience," the yo ulh f ul
scholar said. "The cli mate
"''as terrible, the food
delicious." ,._tost excitlng v.·as
"jwt the uperience or living
ln a totally difftttnt culture.
fertnt. It increases your
understanding i.n general."
The Aherns, whose UCI
apartment is decorated with
woven buketa and other
artifacts from Taiwan, enjoy
backpacking. and playing their
reeorden together.
They shire the cooking and
clean-up chores but Emily
cooks mere often than her hus-
band because she enjoys cook·
Ing, especially Chinese and
French foods. \Vhen they find
the lime. tenn is and skiing
are planned .
l
'WOMIN IXPLOITID'
lmlly Ahern
She sees several areas whe re
chanees mu.!t. be made ror
women's sake : the way in
which childffi\ art introduced
to cuJture must be 1ttered,
employment patterns must be
updated and child care centers
must be at.abllshecl .
"Uttle 1lr1J ahouldn't erow
She and her husband, a
specialist in Chinese phlloaphy
who also has studied the
Ch.inese languaa:e exten&lvely,
Many years of bard work
will be culminated when the
Ahern.s are able to call u ch
other doctor, for the four-to-
·flve-year grind hu been a
difficult one. EmUy 1"9Celved
her bachelon dearee In 1Mt
Part of her researcn 1s being
done at Stanford University
where a microfilm record
traces the ancestry all of the
people in the Taiwan village
where she dJd her year's field
work, so she has made several
trips north and must make
"You find that one after
another or your cherished
betiefs becomes entirely dir-
The future Dr. Emily Ahern
is sure to find more al the
end of bu quest thin a PhD
degree, for that wW mark
only lb• 1>e1inning ol her
journey. And she knows where
she is going.
Scouts
'.,:·ro Give
'
'~;Thanks
-..
r. Plans conUnue to lake shape
for the councll·wlde Olrl Scout
;;JlecoinlUon dlMu w h I c h
· -takes plaC9 Thursday, Jan. SI,
• in the Alrporter Inn.
' What Girl ScouUng ls ...
,..~ the theme of the event
;,which begina: with a IOCial
~Jlour at 8 p.m. and dinner
~ 7 p.m. Volunteers who
~....arked with the Orange Coun-
.. ty Girl Scouts will be honored
alon1 with the Opportunity
selectees and Campus Gold
Girls.
Various troopt In the area
e preparln1 centerpleeea to
lullrate the theme. Mrs.
-William R. Stroud is chairman
or the affair.
Sections Plan Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Art Encounters Aquarius: Express Yourself
A demonstraUon and lecture
on printmaklng will be given
for members d. the UC! Town
•nd Gown Art Group at 10
1.m. Wednesday, Feb. 3, by
Mn. Murray Krelger,
Mrs. Lyman Porter wUJ ho3t
the IN>UP In her Newport
Beach home for the lecture,
and a demon.stratk>n will
loUow in the Fine Arta Vill1ae
at UCJ.
TUESDAY, v.·ith Libra indiv idual. ~1ake AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
perlenced llthoerapher, recelv-concessions. Hold on lO princi· 18): Start proJect3 ; welcome
eel her underrrlduate lralnlna JANUARY 26 pies without being arroganL new contacts. Exp re 11
at the Art Students Leque, By SYDNEY OMAJlR Check various legal aspects. yourself· This is not the time
New York, and earaed her For Ubra, marrtase la more VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): to hold back. Give completely.
muter ol fine arts de1ree Important tbu It la for m01t Some mental conflicts per1Jst. Cycle is •uch that your efforts
at Ohlo St.ate University. penou. 11llt sodlleal •II• b Key is to make peace within bear fruit. Move wilh con •
She 1130 has •lud1ed at the uioclated w 11 b marriap, fam ily clrele. Holding out fide.nee.
is to raise hori zons and com~
pletely uUlize a5sets. Potential
truly ill greaL
To llM ovt wftl's lwkt IOI'" \1111
I" lnOMY •M IO~t, 1>r<1tr SY~
OrMrr'5 botkltl "!~••! Hln"° ""' Mt<'I tnd w-." kl\d l>lrthd•te
'"" XI c..,4 '° Oll'l•rr Auro~ !1<""• tl'lt OA.IL.'I' •1LOT, Box !2 .. Gr1fld (tn1r1I ~l1tton, Ntw Yorllo
N.Y. 10011. Le ferve Studio in Paris and perm an 11 11 t pvtnenhJpa. merely means pride is die-PISCES (Feb, lt.March 20):
taught at the University of arreement1 wblcb are blncUq. tating to logic. Message will Some secret fearll are expo1ed ----·------
llllnols before coming to ~ Ltbra does oot Uke t 0 be come increasingly clear. as rldlculoll!. Accept findings .. ::.=:-
Call!ornl1. ·J J>9Mlclpakl In 11me1 people LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): of expert. Permit sense of ..... -~
The artist has exhibited In usually pla y. Tbeite aatlvt1 Cooperate with Leo ll'ldlvldual. humor to operate. D 0 n' t bave purpose, dldlcatloa and Welcome chance to cha11e 1urppress common sense .
the Columbus Art Gallery, SUSAN KING uek 1 dlrectloa ln llfe. gloom. Emotional reponses 'Vhat was hidden can now
ex· Walker Art G11lery In Min-To Marry ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): dominate. Rom an c e is be revealed.
neapolls and the Cleveland 600 Spotlight on fuUllllng o f featured. E x p I a i n policies, IF TODAY IS y o u R Kreiger, Mrs. In
Gallery. h desires. What you seek 11 principles to young persons. BIRTHDAY you make 'Cop' Ta I ks Ulhojrophy, lb• proce ... of B t t I wllhln reach. Key I• to gain Be flexible. rt Un I h h d e ro a remarkable use of available p n g w I 1 an or new momentum . Try •ialn. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23·NOY. 21 ):
motorized press off 1 .!ilone, Start over; take initiative. A Your home can become 1 true material. You c: • n com·
..J.W-7'7H,=
HANG TEN To Chapter Is one ol the rarer art forms . Jd friend wtll provide necessary castle, but you mu5t think men:iallze on what may ap-
. Town and Gown's Music NeWS To means. or others as well as yourself. pear ta be a small op.
STRIPE'S • SOLIDS
SIZES 4 TO to I SecUon will gather In the TAURUS (April »May Some comforts ma y have to porlunity, You create, build.
Cl b A Capt. Rober Vernon, known B1\boa Island hmte of Mr1. 2QJ: f>ro'.,.I repu•a11·on. Don 't be poslponed. There now is u rra nges ""' ~ You are a natural executive. •s the Chrl.!t.lan Cop, wUJ be RohKt B. Smith tor a h1rp Mr. and "''-rs. Allred King permit 1nyone to Ute your note of greater financial
I h lk guest speaker for the CoL concert by Mrs. Eliz.abeth of Huntingtoa Harbour have name In careless manner. responsibility. Some of your ideas rep~ltllt tlic Mfll delipufnlly •mhnil
•: QF"
I Fuc sia Ta William Cabell Chapter, El1ln TUrrell, on Tuesd1y, Trust hWlch about individual SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-nonconformist thinking . But tLildrea"t1lweia1bcteuthlaad
Daushters of the American · · th J d w s qu e • s m 0 0 Dec. 21): Some, including 16877 Al I St. f Jan 29 1nnounced the enga1ement of ho 1 11 1 h you murt, 1n order to succeed,
Two evwill have be' n Mrs. Turrell, who recently er 1 u I ht er• Susan operator. Promote career In· ne lchbors and relatives, may crute your own policies. Re-•l•:itT'll'li;f:~f.'...~"
1eheduled this week Io r Revolulion Wednesday, Jan. returned from an Jntematlon1I Eli.zabet.h Klnc to Ru.!isell terests. try to manipulate you. Stick cent action now la tested-you (Tl• "6-1666
• mtmbtn of El Cimino Real 27. harp competltlon In 13rael , i! J0ieph Chldley. GEMINI (May 21.June 2Q): to facts. Avoid scattering your1,_ciiaiin ;i;lalniiiiiiwiildoiiiirecoiiiigiinliiUiioiinii· Kiieiiyimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;i,;;;i,iiiimt
Woman 's Club. Vernon's topic (or the 12 :30 a Pomona College graduate. MIS! King Is 1 graduate Good lunar 1spect promotes forces . Ideas need more com·11
On Wedneaday, Jan. 'll, the p.m. deuert meeUq ln the She has performed with lhe of the Lutheran Hlih School, journey&, h I g her learning. plete development. You may
Garden 1 n d Beautification San Gabriel SymplKtly and at Allow intellectual curiosity to be end!"" a relationship. Section will gather In the Dana Balboa home of Mrs. William UCI L~ Angeles. h 1 In A k U ·•
Point home of Mr1. Walter Bent will be Why YOU!ll Peo-· Her flance, so111 of Mr. and ave ree re · 1 quea ons : CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
Caruthers at 2 p.m. to dl3C\l111 pie Do What They Do. Mrs. Russell Chldley of La discard superficial answers. 19): A new project could
--• '"" ol f hi Dera Heights, Is 1 1m11duate Revere knowled1e. You are usult In financial windfall. care 91"" prun .. ,. uac 11· Mrs. C. E. Stovall, chairman p rt Pl d ·--duf! for real gain. Remain on top of sltua•1on. C..hosteu for the m"Uni 0 Y anne of SI. Bernard'• High School, w will be Mrs. G. B. Tallllflr. of DAR SchoolJ, will report We.9lchester and now is serv-CANCE R (June 21.July 22): Some have great ex.
On Th .... J w lb on the IChoW3, and 1ul1Ung Ing In lhe U.S. Army. review policies, bud1et. Money pectations-&nd are lmpaUent. uri.....,., an. ~. e wllb •-~ d ti Ill be •-ong •-I Th A Id I Ludershlp Development Sec· uue1U1 u u w n.ir emenu or a urs· shared with mite, partner vo care eaanes1 with !und1.
lion will atqe 1 pubUc btnerlt the Mmes. William Tritt, dtlJ• Feb. 11, Valentine Party may be highlighted. Have, =Be~~·w~.,..;;:,~o~f ~d•;ta~ll~•;:;· ==d~~~
HOW MANY THUMBS
DO YOU HAVE?
II .,... M llt'tl .,.. '" "Ill lfl~ll'IN" 11M1 ll111t "'
1111111 -....... (tllll Ill .... le! 11' '""' 'I" 111w •11'11,tlf It It t9 lnln Yl'I'' IW!i .,,,_,.llM;, 11'1 1¥111 -
't"ll 11 ltYt ltl Ytll"ll M\'t .. rtf,lr Wl~NH ....
The KNIT WIT'°~·"
,.._ 141-1112 COITA MIU
luncheon and card party Robert ~r. Marjo rie w I be made on Wednelday, Mesa League fa ct11 st hand . Thorough ap-11
I bealnninl at noon 1n the Com· Carnes, Leland Bolin and J, Jan. 27, as members of the proach could save em otional
, munlty HOUie. Proc:eedl will Harold Kellog1. Wutward Ho Chapter of the La !.«he League meets the tug~f-war. Know thls and pro-
, iupport the Eiater s e 11 Daughters of the BrlUah second Tuead1y at ?:SO p.m. ceed accordingly. ~ RehabWtatlon Center i n Empire 1ather at 12 :30 p.m. Mrs. H. W, Moort, ~9. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Lit-
• Or Silver Sa nds In the Laguna Beach home wlll answer quest io n s low Do 111 I lb
! •nae. "" ol M J W . more 1enn1 an
l . ..;.;.~"~·==·==·~Do~w~ne§r~. ==~~~~iardln~~g~loc~at§lo~n~. ========~·•~>~er~li~ng~.~Co~m~b~ln~e=f~o~r~c~•~•~11 The flrat Tuesday of each TOPS Mermaid s monlb at a p.m. members
of Sliver Sands 288, Native ~ TOPS Meralna Mermald.!i Daughtera of the Golden Weit
fl meet at 7:SO p.m. every 1ather for meeUn&1. Lake
Thul"ld1y In Woodl1nd School, Park Clubhou.se In HunUneton
Costa Meu. Beach is the meeting place. f fiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;~io;;,I
l
l Crowning Glory
.... ........ ~~~~ty salons
Curls
Are
--Our
,,.._ " Business!
.;j \ ~
PRICE PERM SALE!
SJS Ill.AL CUlL $17.50
$12.50
Ill MA•IC CUIL t UDSET P'ERM .
$10.
AlWAYS II.ti IN.,.,I H•i,)
SPECIAL SAVINGS!
SHAMl'OO-SET
STYLE.CUT
••~l!tl .. iu. ........, ........
,_,, COAST l'LUA
l•w"' a.. .. ,~ ... t• it1rt
"-14'-1114 o,.. '"•11l119t
...... f ..... w..i
2.95
1.50
..... w ...
3.45
2.00
UJ I. IM IT,. COSTA MllA
...... '4f.tt1t
O"'" 1 ..... 1~,, I S11M•,
I
THE CURRENT WHITE SALE IS IN FULL COLOR AND
INCLUDES STAY PRESSED LINEN PLACE MATS, NAP·
KINS, APRONS, TOWELS. STORE WIDE SAVI NGS OF
20 PER CENT UP TO 50 IN ALL 3 STOR ES ON
IMPORTED FURNITURE, LAMPS AND ACCESSORIES
YOU HAVt: ALWAYS WANTED FOR YOURSE LF.'
~N KEPPEJ..-GREEl\J
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
BOARDWALK SHOPPING CENTER
16841 ALGONQUIN 846-2889
FABRIC VALUES!
SOLID COLOR BUTCHER WEAVES
• buutiful "'"" of royon ond silk with tho look of
linen. Wide rtn9e of colors .
MACHIN! WASHABLE
crM" re1l1tant
44"/45" widths fl TI®
yd.
MACHIN! WASHABLE
. -. . ·-,, . . .-•••
' ... . 11 ' ..... ,1•11· ~ ... .. /fl
D
UITINGIS
BONDED "SCANDIA"
po1h collection of S111rlnt colors
on •crylic. bonded to ece+•te tricot
"TURBO" COORDINATES
1tripe1 with matching 1olid1 on
or ion •crylic, •ceftt• tricot linin9
"TURBO" MATCH-MATES
hound1 tooth chec••, f'l'l•tchin9
1elid1. Acrylic honded +o ac..tate +rlc:ot
MACHINE WASH 72. <0'l(O)oo
HANG TO Df!Y <::!) 1!)(2}
HOUse::·;.BR1cS J
s..tti c._ "--l•httl •* St11 01tt• Fwy. """' "--11th •t l rlitil c ... M--'41·11N a... A..-14J·ll11
o..tefe1r M.et-0,."Z'"'''"' •'"' H'"''' - -._,. , , 1 --• t 111• 11 St•11t•11 '911MI• ll·2JJ4 ..... '-11-IJl•JZJ
N ...... 1 .. C....r-Lli11t" •t l•••h 11 .... H•fta11u .... ._.t7.ftlJ
•
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vor. 6'4, NO. 21 , ) SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
Dorlie Foftli""'"; -is contest.ant
iD ·Mia Cbllatown, U.S.A. pag·
eant ·staged, annually· in San
FranciSco as part of the Chinese
New Year Festival. This is the
year of the boar. San Francisco
festival begins Jan. 30.
Illness Causes
Ariother Delay
In Rape Case
A one.week delay was ordered 1oday
in the rape-kidnap trial of Gary Harold
Phoenix to allow the Costa Mesan·s
defense lawyer to full y recover from
a prolonged attack of Asian nu.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
William Murray sent the jury home
until Feb. I. It is expected that deputy
public defender Roderick Ri ccardi, weak
and pale loday from his bout with the
infection, will then open his defense
of PhoenU:.
The prosecution has rested its case
In the frequently deli!yed, illness-plagued
trial. It will ask for the death penalty
if the jury rinds Phoenix, 29, guilty
of the major charges in 33 felony ccounts
filed against him.
Nine aUCged women victims have
tesUfied ap.inst PhoenD.. He ii accused
()f ra~, ass,iult with intent tc commit
' rape.. . ~ping, robbery and sexual
penei11ae.
Avalanche Buries 4
Six Survivors Pulled From Washington· Snow
SKYKOMJSH, Wash. (UPI ) -A
rumbling avalanche cut a patch as wide
as a football field down a Cascade moun-
tainside in the pre.dawn darkness Sun-
day, killing four members ()f famili es
who had driven up for a weekend of
fun in the snow.
Three bodies and six survivors were
pulled from a totally demolished two-
story cabin in the path of the slide.
A 12-year-old glrl died in another cabin
partially smashed by the soow.
It took a rescue crew more than
half a day to dig out two teen-age
girls whose parents had been killed by
the avalanche. Several others had been
pulled out of the snow and debris earlier
in the day.
"The whole mountain came down ,"
said a highway patrolman at the gcene.
Beach Access
Round Won
By 4 Firms
The four companies involved in the
legal battle with the City of Huntington
Beach over public access to the Hun·
tingtlln Pacific beach have won the latest
roUndju the cOort cue.-
Superior Court Judge Robert A.
Banyan! has denied the city'• motion t()
prohibit tbe companies from using c::er-
tain defenses in the case.
The defenses include claims that the
citY was barred from suing the Hun-
tington Pacific Corp_, the Huntington
Beach Company, Standard Oil and the
Fluor-Huntington Corp. by the statute
of limitations.
Another defense that will remain in
the case is based on the city's alleged
"unclean hands" resulting fro man alleg-
ed breach of the·1932 contract on beach
ownership bewteen the city and the Hun·
Ungton Beach Co mpany.
Willia m Foster, general manager of
the Huntington Beach Co.. commented,
"Our position in this case is dertnittly
improved by the ruling that these
defenses are valid and will be given
full consideration.''
City Attorney Don Bon(a said that
if the city had prevailed in its motion
the matter would have had "great
significance" because the defenses would
have been taken out o( the case.
But Bonfa added, "The ruling does
not mean that Standard Oil has won.
but merely that the issues shall be
decided later by the trial court ,"
The case is ()'Ver whether the city
should be granted public recreational
easemenU over the beach.
41 Million See Rocks
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The space
agency says 41 million persons got a
glimpse of moon rocks from the Apollo
11 and 12 miMions during exhibits around
the wcrld 1ut year.
The avalanche smashed into the cabins
at the Yodelin ski area ea!t ·of 4,0lll·foot
Stevens Pass in the darkness short1y
after midnight. The pass is the northern
most crossing of the Cascades between
Seattle and the Columbia River in
Washington.
Warming temperatures bad looserw:d
tons of snow clinging to the moun-
tainsides and numerous slides closed
several passes Sunday. The area was
covered with several feet of heavy new
snow which had fallen in the past wef.k.
Killed by the avalanche were Mr. and
Mrs. Bart Edgars of Seattle. Kenneth
Lewis . 10, of Lynnwood, Wush., and
Peggy Dean, 12, of Seattle.
The first three were in the larger
cabin which was completely destroyed.
Trapped for 13 hours in th&t ·wreckage
Decision Studied
were the Edgan' daughters, Debbie , 19,
and Cindy, 14.
The girls were 1ble to shout and
signal to men digging them out. They
were finally pulled from the wreckage
shortly after noon and taken by
snowmobile and ambulance to Deacon-
nesS Hospltil in Wenatchee where the y
were e:ramlned and released.
Also in the cabin were Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Lewis, the parents of Kenneth.
and their other sons, Mark, II, and
Richard, 5. Mrs. Lewis ind Mark were
treated and released from the hopsltal.
Mr. Lewi! and Richard were kept
overnight in satisfactory condition.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Dean, the parents
of Peggy, e.scaped injury in the other
cabin, an A-frame structure which had
its upper bedroom destroyed.
2 Lie Detector Tests
Key in Coerper's Fate
By RUDI NIEOZIEIMI
Ofllll ... ....... •• ,,.r:~H~~~-
night whi8h Ut ~de'tectlr told the truth
as they begin deliberations on tbt appeal
of flf<d motDttJdo offiou Gilberl
Couper.
Coerper, 36, was fired lasl Augwit
for his alleged mishandling 0 f
Montgomery W1rd merchandise which
was assertedly earmarked f()r Polict
Wives Gu ild charity activities. A lie
detector test given·by police investigators
prompted the dismi!l881 police 1aid.
Police Chief Earle Robitaille suspended
the veteran patrolman after he IMerted-
ly answered •·untnithfully'' on whether
he had kept any of the merchandise
for himself or had given It away as
payment for labor,
Cecil Ricks, Coe:rper's at t • r n e y .
however produced a lie detectcr test
with conflicting results during the last
personnel commissi'on 1U1ion.
That test was administered by Chris
Gug as, a privatt criminologist, at
Coerper's request. The fee was paid
before the results were known.
Lie detector tenl.!I are not generally
accepted as evidence in a court of law
unless attorneys for both 1ides agree
by stipulation. The personnel board,
however, is not bound by strict rule!
of evidence in its examination of the
Coerper case.
Polygraph experts claim a 99 percent
reliability factor for the instrument
which records changes In blood pressure,
pulse and breathing rate and per!plra·
lion. They concede that two different
operators of the instrument could Oc·
casionally come up wlth dltfertnt rtlQIU.
Coerper. who will be ~
by deputy city attorney Mkhtel MiDtr
during the S p.m. seaslon in city coundl
chambers, claims he lied on ·tht pob
department's lie detector test to ~
other officers lo who111 be bad stvea
some of the merchandiae.
II< .said that he hod hem told by ·~M·· • ' .. 'f:~· :> P,1:-.. ' ;, , .. ~~·fl.Id • ··~"o1 !hi! goodl.
Coerp« further testlllld ·tbal lie WAI ta&c Dfiilk!itloo . dartal Iha fll'lt lie
detector ain:dDatton and refUled to take
another btciuee lie wa1 .WJ. taking the
pills.
The conuniaaion will retire into ex-
ecutive seak>n following Coerper's cross-
examination and summary 1tatements
from both attorneya.
The boan:I Is compoeed of Wandalyn
Hiltunen, Orange Cout College counselor
and ~acber; Donald Grose, manager
of admina,traUon for Hughes Aircraft
Co., Newport .£tieacb ; C. E. WQO<ls, public
relations dJrector for Signal Oil and
Gu Co.; W~lter Youna, manager of
personnel for ·McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
and Frank Flttin, employe rel.atlons
manager for Loa Angele.!!1 City Schools.
City Atl«ney Donald Bonfa , hearing
officer for the proceed.Ing. said the com-
mission bas the ()ption of either re·in·
stating the officer with back pay and
benefits or upholding the police chief's
dismissal.
Court Rules IRS
Free to Subpoena
Firms' Records
, ... -·~ lfflNK JURY GUil TY'
COft~cted Cult LHder Manmn
Arrest Resisting
Conviction of
Priesi Dropped
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme
Court set aside today the conviction
of the Rev. James E. Groppi for resisting
arrest during the civil rights march
in Milwaukee in 1967.
With the 8-l decision the court
established the princ:pte that trial judges
should not automatically reject. a defen-
dant's plea for different trial loca le simp-
ly because the crime involved Is a misde-
meancr.
Jn other actions today. the court:
-Ruled that employers cannot refuse
to hire women with small children while
taking on men In the same situation.
However, it said women could be barred
from jobs in plants if the employer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme shows "conf1icting family ob1igatlom"
Court ruled today that lhe Internal present a problem. Revenue Servlc't Ls free to subpoena
1n emp)()ytt's recordS in investigating -Held that retrying a defendant whose
criminal IJablllty of individual ta:rpayers. first trial ' ended by dlsmisaal of the
The covt unaalrooUIJy rejtcted a jury by the judge would place blm
Fklrida circur Wlll'ker's c::lalm that In · double jeopardy; wblcb 'ii an-conslituticnaI. empio,n are ent!t1ed to challenge any -Agreed to hear the case of an Illinois
IUCb labpoa•, with full Mlvenary hear· fa~r·denied cmtody of·h~ l'to•c:hildttn
View Past for Future
ingl. becaute be never legally mai:rled their
Had the court ruled o~lse, It might mother.. · _ .
have been P'*'ble ln tueh cues for Father Groppi, a white Priest who
peraord to delay tu probes for up to thrust himself Into the clvll nghbl.move-
two )'tlrl merely over the luue of menl. claimed be· could · not recelw 1
'Roaring Twenties Village' Idea Proposed
IRS tumll'ICIOlel. fair, tr;ial in Milwaukee County beCai1se
llO'Wtwl\ the optnJOn written by~JmUce of "a, potential for prej~" · amoni
Hllt7 A. Blaclamm held · lhal "on proopective jurors stemming f-bll
IDernll Bevciue summo;m may be 1cUviUea:.
laued in aid of an inveatlptlon ••. and The -wlscons.ln Supreme Court •. tn •a1
An idea on how old Huntington Beach from Walnut to Olive avenue. on both merchants will be· able to:.nmodel and ~!.~U0a,.1J.'f ~~~ 111lit ·decWon, ,ruled a change of venue
• f rofitabl f •Ides °'-Main Street. lt will be adjactn& ... _,.u_ "'"""'" .... _. WU -~Ible l.mder aate i.w: c::an tap the put or a P i e uture to the "5~ mUUon parking Jot the city e:rpand businesses blcause they wru be ttrvintkin. becaUM relilUne: arrest Is clUli.fled •
will be propo1led to property ownen . plans to build along Cout lllghwllf. able to meet parking"'""'~. 'l'bO petWoo ·to · the·-., 'broaght by 1 ·m~nor ..
and buiDetsmen Feb. 4. The .preaentatlon, complete wttll mape, Jn the past they have riot been able Kem DonaldloG, Mtf.'c:SI~ that In meraiii1· thls ~1 the U.S.
The plan calls !or remodeling building$ drawings, and promoUonal . sµggestions. to do IO becauae fD01t of the Jotl ll'e the IRS WU. not aliharWd ·ti) aamble Supreme Cqurt'"Nld I defandlnt II 1trt--
•n<I rebuilding 1treell 1n<i alleya .Into will 1h1nr how Main S1rttt cool~ be just IS to It feef wide." • hio .....,_.,. ,_,ia, 1 ..... ,JO!oly titled fo -Iii°" ol I ,~ of.
a "Roaring TWtntl<I Vlllqe." dealgood closed and turned Into I · maU, how PROF!Tmembmhlftbrlelod-z.;.~-"rfq~:--cl.ua'"·"'·motl~.·";'.':'~~•-~~~~ oils toJttradthttouristdoUar.. IJ&l lighl.I and fountaiftl •could be put members planftinC corutldftei \IDd ;Doftlidlon '~•thefRS • 11'11 ~ ut INIJNUM"°~
The 111Uestion WH devt9'd by city up, 11r ... i. and llleya repaved and 11<>m members' of the llelllD a.'vllW-!liard . . 1'lmlDll Ju!r}!<,e rt1111ir.s • ~
oflicllls 'Wtio make up 1 groiip called '""'°"'1td. "'the project. ' . llmlll -11· polallW er-.,._ qllml prejuwclol pul>IJclty, Nid.J..,_,
N.Y. St.oeb
TEN CENTS
Girls Also
Convicted
Of Murder
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles Man-
son and three women membe.n of hil
hippie-style clan were co11victed today ()f
fir.st degree murder and conspiracy fit
the savage slayings of .actress Sha.roll
Tate and six ()thers.
Manson was the ()n!y defendant to
speak out. After the jury was polled be
shouted to the judge: "We're llill JtOt
allowed to put on a defense. You won't
outlive that old ma11." The women al
quietly.
The jury of seven men and five women
had deliberated 42 hours and .a min-
utes since receiving the case Jan. 15 after a seven·mODth trial
Five peraona were slain .in the bomt of
the actress the nigbt ()f Aug. M and an
the following night wealthy srocer Leno
Lanianca and his wife &eemary were.
elain in their home several niue. diatant.
Shorlly afterward, Mamon and bf1 hip.
pie band moved out of the old Spahn
Ranch In the San Fernando Valley. They
had been staYin at the old time movie ranch for several months.
The proseceutkm built Its c• largely
()n the testimony of Linda Kaaablan, a
»-year-<ild defector from the "family"
who had been lo both the Tate and JA.
8llnCI ~. ,
She was grained Immunity for 1-. teatJ..
mony "!Id told of M..,_'1 G!doobiS Ille
hippie clan around. Siie alJo lllllloil aat
MWes Atklno, Kmwtnkel llld v., -
..... the :mien. .\loo -by -Kasabian was Charles .. Tes" Watson who
currently is cOmmitted to the At.uc.dero
State Hospital.
Trial began Jtme 15, Ir70 and after the
jury was selected a morrth later the panel
has been confined to hotel rooms each
night
Thf' prosecution presented 14 wttDeDes
and more than 300 pieces of nideoce.
The defense called no wttneaes altlloulh
Manson spoke to the court while the Jury
was absent.
Park Approved
At~ 'Bullet Hill'
For Seal Beach
Residents of Seal Beach's ••euuet mtl''
will get the ir Jong.awaited park throu1h
a lease-agreement currently being drawn
up by city staff members.
The 10-acres of wilderness, to be nam-
ed "Gumgrove Park,'' is owned by the
Hellman Estate and is being made
available to the city on a five-year
lease with options to renew.
Plans call for It to be left In tts
natural state with Improvements co~
s1sting of access roada and fencing of
the perimeter. Lule provisions include
the payment of about $3,IXXI In annual
property ta:res.
Procurement of the lease for
Gumgrove Park was conlinl;ent on city
purchase of 2. l acres of Hellman pro-
perty on the old Pacific Electric lllibl
of Way.
Sporadic IUl1lhlne be-palcl>-
el ol 10, and I"" ctoudt will dot
the Or1111• Coal! Tueoclay, with
temperatures In the eos and up to
70 fUrtber Inland.
INSmB TODAY
PROFIT -Planning -1., Orderly The d<Nn. COllltructlon and operation Some of the ~ rlllod •t U!ooe I""' ........... "lit '""""'lllllttn • -lliewart. '
Fututt Investment Twn. ol the "'rillq•" will be 'ii· 1form ol .... 10111< Include whether ...... """"1f 'not~--~.lllo,i ~ -119"' ..... ~1..ei-=.. l: s:.-a
11•1 comW,: o1 Belcbes.ull H.1rbon pa~,4wrou llld the be odeq!aJ .__. to the '~ jet i\.t~ " ~i =~~; . ;E· 1 ~ ', ;', ·r;-·' " Dlttctor Ince _.....,.~, ~ .dft,. r».'""'" .~lot, tlb.,ltlllf,4111( ~fllii;'!lli:. ~ , , , , •' 1 ~,.,_,....,., .•"" ..,~· • • ~ • "'!! .. I , 11 Devtlopmen& OtreCtor' "*' J. Jcik ' •.: ' ---~~--.Oi.itM!tp:~\ -"' ~ • :# -. "' , ·~ .. Devel..,-t ~ . ~~' ~-'it' .,.114ilileii'iJi0'1wiWltlilfi\O'~--.: "" 1
• '11io'·lfll!l;U. . . ''.cl(. ·i., . • . :: • ' ·::
Planning Director Ken ll<ynoldr ODd .alleya," be lllol. • The dty "-~ tt-'. '.l/ tho Clrlew WI; 1iil~.lf. ' ' <tty llp!l1 ~ · r~ii\i. . o: ' 'f&.:i' " · •
Public Information Officer Bill Reed. Parking reqWrementa for molt al the ownen are tD&luAulk ~~ hid '.'ni!:"? ' I-~· j Ji · •llOftVtt: "'.tbl'r~~ ~ ~ · " ~ """' -.. .;
The preoentaUon wilt be gtmi.at 7,111 lMISln••" -Id be -by the city •lier the l!'eb., t'-l!..i •.Jlld riiiltov : +~'l!,Of:.u.1 ~ Vinet • Jilijp1..._ ~lf110Vpt ,1 lllr _ ":: .:..,.•:,':'" ••,o:
p.m. Feb. 4 In the city coundJ -Plllldlif -ty. --lltlled. form an -.......,,. Wiri-!o;ii'le.it1~."10<:1 liMITtlil lolP"&iGll trill ln MUwaul\of ~ llif"""'ftuoa' -..-n ·
The aru cone<rned coven two blocU "For the Int lime. Ill decada the -the plwilll olllL ,! ', · ~ wttll Gii low<r 1'1111mp. .may be -tllecl.
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"'°"""' January "· 1971
Pot Sweep Nets Six
Newport Police Seize Half Ton of Marijuana,
Newpcri lluch polloo, workin& will>
State Narcotics investigators ind two
Orange County law enforcement agen·
des. seized l,000 pounds of marijuana
Sunday.
Sil: persons were arrested in a weekend
sweep that culminaled a three-month
lnvtStigatlon. Police said ihe suspecta
are accu.aed of a series of narcotics
violations ranging from possession of
cocaine and dangerous drugs to sale
of marijuana.
Two of the suspects - Victor Venegas
Lee. 20, of 157 Emerald Bay, and Tadashi
T. Nakatsuka. 29, of 9081 Bobbie Circle,
Huntington Beach - are wanted, police
&aid , in connection with the October
raid of a Modjeska Canyon borne.
The Modjeska canyon raid resulted
In the arrest of 45 persons on various
drug charges.
Another Delay
In Bribery Case
A further delay was ordered today
ln the Orange County Superior Court
trial of a land developer accused of
the attempted bribery of former Hun·
Ungton Beacb mayor Jack Green.
Presiding Judge William C. SpeiMI
ordered William Denny New, 86, Phoenix,
Ariz., lo return to his courtroom March
8 for scheduling of the lria1 on bribery
charges filed Nov. 10, 1969.
Ne1v Is accused of offering Green ~.000
In return for the mayor's vote and
6Up!Jort for New's interest in a proposed
zoning change on valuable industrial land
near Gothard Street and Slater Avenue
in HunUngton Beach.
Newport !le>Ch -deWGllYI Lio
Koabl ~ Ibo m-tlptlaa 'I" thla
wtebnd't CIM WM btcwt at I ' reault
ot the Modjesk.a Canyon i.oveiltigatloo.
The marijo.ana, which police valtltd
at about f72,!IOO on the illlclt drug
market. was seized In Tuslin. Police
Hid Robert Jamee Hosier, 24, or Santa
Ana was arrested Sunday night with
about 100 pounda: of the weed in his
pouession. Konkel said a subsequent
investigation turoed up I.he additional
900 pounds.
"We don't know for 1ure where It
comes from or how It gets here," he
said, but noted it was packed in boxes
t>earing Mexican government stamps.
Detectives were unclear as lo the
1lgnlficance of tM 1tamp.
"I'd say It'• commercial grade Mex·
le.an marijuana," Konkel aaid.
In addition !o Lee, Nakatsuka. and
Hosier, the following wapects were ar·
l'llloll:
Qioryl -Lee Cuarit.lod to Vic-tor Lee), 11. el It'll Sllor1alioe Pl-,
Newport Bead!, for _.ton of c:o-
~-
Ge.raid John Gillim, 24, of 10&0 f1amin·
go Road, Laguna Bead!, for posHssion
of cocaine.
David Michael Talia. 24, of 2021h 4lnd
Sl., Newport Beach, for tale of mari-
juana.
Konkel said Mis! Lee -who wu
arrated with Nakatauk1 -f.nd Gillim
-who was arrested with Viet.or la
-are not 11.t!peCts 1n the marijuana
ring.
Aiding the Newport investigators in
the case were the State Bureau of
Narcotics investigators and investigators
from the Tustin police department and
the Orange County District Attorney's
office.
Konkel aaid the investigation is con-
tinuing and more arrests are anticipated.
Apollo 14 Astronauts
Begin Counting Today
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI ) -The
countdown began today for Sunday's
launch of the thrtt Apollo 14 astronauts
on tbe :nost difficult and costly lunar
landing miulon yet.
The long countdown atarted promptly
at 6 .a.m. while Alan B. Shepard. Stuart
A. Roosa .and Ediar D. Mitchell were
in the doctor'a office seeking medical
ciearance in thelr final major preflight
physical exantinaUon.s.
"We're in good 1h.ape," reported a
space .agency official as engineer• began
work at the octanside launch pad. Much
of today's activity was devoted to eleC·
trical checks or the lunar landing craft
and installation of 1tarl.ers for the
~ter rocket'• engines.
The coimtdown include! 102 hours of
acheduled task! and five rest period.1
totaling 48 hours.
The three astronaut! and their backup
pilots ·have been living in ilolatiOll at
the Kennedy spact center for two week!
to minimize their chances of falling
ill be.fore or during tbe $400 million,
nine-<lay expedition.
Backup commander Eugene A. Cernan
unintentionally violated the unique
quarantine Saturday when his flaming
helicopter crashed jn .a nearby river.
He was exposed to several rescuers
before returning to the cape.
Officials reported all other aspects
of preparation for the mission we re
going well. Excitement mounted around
the moonport and newsmen, contractor
representatives and tourista flowed into
the area.
Part of the excitement wa.s generated
by two communications satellite shots.
One is the new Intelsat 4 commercial
craft set for launch tonight after three
succesaive 24-hour delays camed by
1trong high altitude wind!. The othe.r
is a smaller military satellite set for
launch Wednesday.
Shepard, 47, dean of the astronauts. and
rookie space pilots Roosa, YI, .and Mitch-
ell, 40, began I.he final week well rested
and with more training aRd preparation
than any moon crew before them.
They relaxed in their comfortable
quarters Saturday and then Roosa and
Mitchell took .advantage of pleaaant
weather to go flying in jet tralner!.
Roosa later went fl.shlng and produced
a good catch of sheepahead and trout.
But Shepard stayed behind and studied
a stack of flight plans and other ·
documenta. It will be his first spaceflight
since his pioneering 15-minute Mercury
hop nearly JO years ago, and he 1dmlt~
he has worked unusually hard to get
ready.
"It has been tough, it's been difficult ,"
he said in an interview just before
beginning the health quarantine. "f
pressed pretty hard in the interest of
being pretty sure that I wa! as ready
to 110 as I could be.."
The mission of Apollo 14 is costing
the U.S. government $25 million mnre
than April's ill-fated 13 moon flighl.
Most of the extra cost come! from
additional oper.aUon expen!es due to the
longer intervals between launching!.
YMCA INSTRUCTOR IVAN ROGERS TOSSES A STUDENT
Paul Selvers Takes His Lumps While Learning Karate
Not only is Apollo 14 more e.tptnsive,
but Shepard con!iders It the most dif·
ficult landing yet .attempted. And he
expects It will be the most productive.
DAILY PILOJ
Oil.I.NG! COAST l'USLLSHIHG COMl'ANY
Rob1rt N. W11lll
l'rt5kltnl ''"' P~ill'ltr
J1ck R. Curl1y
\/kl .. A-!>111"'11 1r.4 0...oll't l MUlfDtf°
ldllor
Thorn1t A. M urphin1
M1n11ln; ldl;ot
w .. 1 Or•!V' C.Unty Mltw
Alb1rt W, 1111,
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H111tlrtt._ IHdl OHke
17t7i a.ach a.u11v1rlll
M1llinf Atlclr1111 P.O. a.. 7,0, '16'4t
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C.01 .. Mtll: .U0 W•I .. ., llrw!
NIWPO<t lttell: 2211 WM! lllMI ..... IWlrd
lll'I Cltfnllltr. »a North II Ctmlnt It.Ml
•
Karate Classes
Begin Today
At Beach YMCA
Youngsters ind adults wUI ''fiip" over
a !peclal conditioning, Karate and self.
defense class beginning today at the
Huntington Beach YMCA .
The course, open to anyone over 12,
Is held each Monday night and will
continue for the ne.1t 11 suceeeding Mon-
days, according to Y Execulivt Director
Richard Collato. The fee is $15 for YMCA
memben and no for non-members.
Beginners work out on the mats from
7 p.m. to 8 p.m. while Intermediate~
Like tbelr fills from I p.m. to 9 p.m.
An additional eight·week coune In
wt1men'1 stlf..ctefense and conditioning
beglll! Feb. a at Y headqu1rtel'!, 17931
Beach Blv<l. n.t class meell rrom 7 p.m. to 8
p.m. each n.etday nlaht. A fee of $12
Is charged for members. Non-members
pay Ill.
Bearded Tribe Found
BRASILIA, Brull !UPI) -The Na·
Uonal Indian Foundation l&id Sunday
1 whlt.-sklnned, red-bearded trlb< of
lncUans bu been found ln I.he middle
or the Auwon Jwiale .
The landings of Apollos 11 and 12
ln 1969 were made on relatively ea1y-to-
reach flatlands, but Apollo J4 l1 taraeted
ror • lunar valley picked 90Jety because
or its creat interest to aclentlsts.
Reception Set
For Huntington
Superintendent
A reception for Jack Roper, the new
superintendent of the Huntlnaton Buch
Union High Sc:bool District. is planned
Wednesday by the Leap of Women
Voters.
The recepUon, to be held at lhe Com·
munity Methodl!l Cturch. 8862 Hell Ave.,
will conclude an LWV meeUna on local
educational developmenU:.
The aeulon will open ll t :30 1.m.
wll)I a talk by !'Tod Koch, director
or business terVlcel for tht county 's
education departmenL He will tptak on
un!OcaUon -the comhinlnC of hiP
ACbool and elementary d1atr1cU -an
Issue that wtll to to loc1l Toten before
the tm presidential election.
Roper, former tuplrintendent d. the
Saddlebaclt Junior Oollep Oltttict, will
1ddrtu the group at tO:JO a.m.
AU resldenU: are Invited to Uat mteilnc.
Reae.rvatlons for chUd care may be rude
by callin& Mn. William Winn at Mf.1172.
Banl,ing on It
A Chicago firm hopes to cash in on uproar created when larjl'.e amounts
of cash stuffed into shoe boxes were found among personal possessions
of the late Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell. The firm is market·
ing this savings bank shaped like a shoe box and decorated in "money
green." It offers the possibility of "banking at any hour and Is easily
hidden in a closet," according to the manufacturer.
Small Business Seminar
Planned for Golden West
The Huntin1Jton Beach Chamber or
Commerce and Golden West Evening
College will ~sponsor five seminars
for the small business owner beginning
Tuesday.
The sessions, conducted by Herberl
Baughn, chamber member. are aimed
at providing the small businessman with
assistance on questions of finance , in·
surancc, purchasing and inventory.
employe aelectlon . .aecountlng and tax
conlrol6.
There i~ no tuition. Owners may
reg ister at the seminar from 7:30 p.m.
to 9:30 p.m. in the Golden West Com·
munity Center. Dates. topics and seminar
leaders are as follows:
Reday, eveninlJ colle1Je lnslructor and
president of Servlsoft of Orange Coast.
March 30 -employe !election, reten -
tion. motivation and fringe benefits.
chaired by Walter Young, manager of
employment training and placement at
McDonnell Douglas Corp., Huntington
Beach.
April 27 -sourcts or finance fnr
small busines9es, chaired by Albert Ee.·
cles. financial business advisor.
May 25 -accounting and tax controls,
chaired by Roy Schriver. chairman or
the Golden West business division and
a business consult.ant.
•sister"
Ha1·1·y Has
'Best Day '
Say Doctors
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Fonner
Pre!iident Harry S. Truman'• doeltlr.!
said toda y his appetite i11 improvin g
and that Sunday was his "best d • y''
since entering Research Hospital with
an Inflamed intestine,
Truman's conditlon was described as
fa ir.
Dr. Walla~ H. Graham, perton•l
physician for the 86-ye.ar.old former
President, issued the followin11 statement
today :
''Yesterday was his best day. His 1p-
petite is improving. He had a qule.t
night. He was taken to the radlololY
department for the seheduled lower In·
teslinal examinations.
Truman 's wife Bess, 85, returned to
the ho:ipilal early today to be with
her husband. She was accompa.nied by
Mike Westwood, Truman's chauffeur and
bodyguard.
The former President's ailment was
diagnosed Saturday as colitis, or in·
flamation of the large intestine
The medical bulletin released by lhc
hospital Sunday night said Truman "was
placed on a special liquid diet for his
Sunday evening meal in preparation for
lower gastnrintestinal tests" today.
"'He fee:s much stronger," the It.ate·
ment said.
The hospital spokesman said Sunday
was "a quiet da y" ror Truman.
In the moming he "drank sorue but·
termilk and read the newspaper. For
lunch he had some chicken, jello, tomato
soup and milk ."
He got out of be.d twi ce Sunday and
during the afternoon "he dozed and chit·
led v.·ith Mrs. Truman," the spokesman
r;aid.
Truman's personal physician, 'Or.
Wallace H. Graham, said Truman 's C'Oll·
dition wa! listed as "fair'' because of
the "results of the tests .avail.able at
present , lack or appetite .and a restless
night."
His condition was listed as "good''
(rom the time he was 11dmitted to the
hospital Thursday until Graham's sta~
menl Sunday.
John P. Dreves , a spokesman for the
hospital, sa id "fair"' meant "the patient's
\'ital signs are stable and wilhin norm.al
limits. The patient is consclou:i;. He i1
not comfortable or may have some com·
plications. His recovery is antic ipated."
Sought Jan. 26 -business financing and in·
6urance programs, chaired by Steve
Holden, president of South Shores
Insurance, Huntington Beach.
Feb. 2.1 -purchaslnlJ techniques and
inventory controls, chaired by Laddie Tamura School Hunting in Japan
Schneider Top
Citizen of Valley
Chris Schnelder , .a 33-year-old Hughes
Aircraft worker, is Fountain Valley·s
Distinguished Citizen.
He was given that honor Saturday
nlaht by the Fountain Valley Jaycees
for his work with the youth or t.he
community.
Schneider. of 17101 Sant.a Tssbel St..
often roaches teams ln Little League
baseball and several sporls for the city
recreation department . He also serves
on the Tamura School PTO and headed
the Jaycee effort in lelit year's s~ial
olympica for mentally retardeU children.
He is a member of the Jaycees and
was nominated for their Distinguished
Service Award (DSA) by th~ Fountain
Valley Woman's Club.
Runnersup were Ron Shenkman, a
Fountain Valley City Councilman, and
Edwin Arnold, a district governor for
the Jaycees .
Sixty pe<lple allenrlcd Sa~urday's ban ·
quet held at Mile Square Country Club.
January
Tamura Elementary School ln Fountain
Valley is sister·hunting in Japan.
"We may have a prospect in Toyam;i,
a .11uburb of Tokyo." Gtrry Srrtllh,
Tamura principal. said this morning.
He started the .11ister hunt last May
when a group of 40 Japanese educator"
visited the Fountain Valley School
District.
··1 talked to Shoichi Mochizuki. a con·
sullant to the Tokyn Board of Educ&·
tion," Smith l'Xplained. "I told him some
or our schools have a Japanese
background and might benefit in an
ex:change or ideas wilh a siml1ar school
in Japan "
Last October ~1ochizuki wrote Smith
to say the search had been narrowed
to the Tokyo suburb. though 11 specll 1c
school hadn·t been selecled.
"Wf.'·re waiting on the namt of the
school now," Smith said.
The children at Tamura mi1Jhl. send
letter11 and newspapers to their ,Japanese
counterpart, and receive the sa me back.
"We might even exchange tapes and
movies." Smith added . "Japan Is very
big on tape recorders, and we"d 1\so
like lo see nur c:unterpart~."
''Our fourth graders have 11 thorough
study of Japan and it might do 11!1
the children good lo know they h&ve
oppos11e numbers SOffi<''.l'hrre in the
world."
Tamura School was named after
Hisamatsu Tamura, whn was born In
Japan in 1876, but came lo Fountain
Valley as one of the early pioneers
in sugar beet farminl-':.
"We have snme .Japanese youngsler11
among our 766 studenti; at Tamur11.''
Smith said. "We may use them for
!ntepretation ··
Smith said the .Japanese children begin
a study or the Eng lish language in the
second grade. and their elementary
schools are aboul twice the aize of
Fountain Valley'1.
\Vhilf' many tl;i:i1srs ha ve e):changed
letler:oi with other parts of the country
and world. Tamura '.l'ill be thf' first
Fountain Valley school tn adopt a forel11n
sister.
COME IN AND 'ASK FOR CLEARANCE PRICES:
ON THE ITEMS OF YOUR CHOICE -IT'S FUN!
DIAMONDS GUITARS
Always at Wholesale Prices
LADIES . 97 CT.
SOLITAIRE
DIAMOND RING sn IN 14K GOLD
ONLT$599oo
Gwr1ntffd to Appralu so•;. Higher Than What You Pay.
Peeple I" the know 1eve money every tim e they buy-it 11 not
easy to buy for cash, bvt Jf you hevt ce1h , BankAmericar~, or
M~ster °''"' you ce11 1eve tremendoui amou11t1 on 1verythir1131
'°"''Y d.ty. )
$21.50 VALUE
NOW $1250
Must S.. To Appreciate
All Wood Guarin._.
VISIT OUI SOUND IOOM
l'OI NIW l USID STDIO
IAl•AINS-IT'S THI HAl'PININ• THIN&
COSTA MESA JIWELRY and LOAN
1138 NEWPORT ILVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWH COSTA MISA --Honor I -•oy
WE LOAN IUY ·SELL le TRADE ALMOST MRYTHING
7
7
-•
Ne rt Beaeh
voe. M, NO. 21, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
SANTA ANA MAN FOLLOWED THIS ROUTE IN DEATH FALL
From Corona dtl Mar's Inspiration Point to Rocks Below
60-foot Fall Off Cliff •
In CdM Kills Santa Anan
A Santa Ana resident fell 60 feet
to his death off Corona de! Mar's Inspira-
tion Point Sunday in what investigator's
describe as an accidental death.
Jack Clint.on Palmer, 62, of 1920 N.
Shefry Lane, was declared dead at ltJe
acene o( massive head Injuries.
Jnspiratioo Point is located on the.
Corona del Mar cliffs at the end of
Orchid Avenue.
Detect.ive Sam Amburgey said no foul
play is suspected in the death but that
the investig ation is continuing today to
determine if the fall was a suicide leap.
Witnesses told invest igators of seeing
Palmer sealed on a bench at the view
point at about 3 p.m. and lhen seeing
his body tu mbling to the rocks below.
"No one saw how he fell," the detecti ve
added.
More Than $4 Million Cut
In Newport Center Costs
A City Council rommittte has trimmed Associal~s . and the city staff, to revlse
more than $4 million from the con· the plans.
struction cost o! the planned Newport Crou! said the reduction In space re-
Beach Civic Cente r. quirements has reduced parking needs
The Civic Center Building Committee and thereby eliminated the necessity
today wltl tell th e council the new cltj for a parking structure.
hall and police building can be er.ected "In addition," he said, "the conunittee
for "less than $6 nilllion" and a bond lnltructed the arc.biteet to bring in a
eleeUon to finanei! the facilities ceit plan u efHcltnt, functional and economic
be ICbodUlld iJI Seplember. u J)Ollililo."
Cow>cllman Richard CIOul, the ccm<> er..! iOtd. ''ThiJ I! a basic guideline
ntittee c:hairm.an, aaid hls • panel met we gave lilm to work with."
with.-architects Saturday and crdered "We told him we didn't want to tie
20 pttcent .leducUoos in the me o( bia hands completely, but It is the old
both buUdlngs, pending COllClll'T"1te bf question ol money," CroW said.
the run couneu. He" aald the 16 mUU!n Hgure 11 •
C!<llll 11id the new city ball , lnclildillg , maxilnum, ud bopelUl!y the buildl!lgs
I.ht council chambers, should be 58,500 can be constructed at a price closer
ORf:NGE COUNTY, CAllFORN~
. ' . .
NB Officers
Smash Huge
Pot Ring
Newport Beach police, working with
State Narcotics investigators aod two
Orange County law enforcement agen-
cies. seized 1,000 pounds of marijuana
Sunday.
Six persons wen! wrested in a weekend
sweep that culminated a three-month
investigaUon. Police said the 1111pects
are accused of a series of narcotics
violations ranging from poW.ssioo of
cocaine and dangerous drugs to sale
of marijuana.
Two of the suspects -Victor Venegas
Lee, 20, of 157 Emerald Bay, and Tadashl
T. Nakatsuka, 29, of 9081 Bobbie Circle,
Huntington Beach -are wanted, poliei!
sa id, in connection with lhe October
raid of a Modjeska Canyon home.
The Modjeska Canyon raid resulted
In the arrest of 45 persons on various
drug charges.
Newport Beach narcotics detective Leo
Konkel said the investigation on this
week.end's case was begun as • result
of the Modjeska Canyon investigation.
The marijuana, which police valued
at about m.soo on the illicit drug
market. was seized In Tustin. Poliei!
said Robert James llosie:r, 24. of Satita
Ana w~ ~~ ~Y night llfttb
about 100 powid! of b)e weed in bia
~, ........... llllll!IQMnt
ln;.optioft lained up the iddlllooil
900 pounds.
"We don't know for sure wbln It
comes from or hotrr It gets .here," he
said, bul noted it was packed in boxes
bearing Mexican ·goorernment -..mps.
Detectives were unclear as to tht
significance of the stamp.
"I'd say !rs commercial grade Mex·
ican marijuana," Konkel a aid.
In addition to Lee, Nakatsuka and
Hosier, the following suspects were ar·
rested:
Cheryl Suunne Lee (unrelated to Vic-
tor I.ft), 24, of 1975 Sherlngton. Place,
Newport Beach, for possession of co-
ca ine.
Gerald John Gillim, 24, of 1060 Flam.in·
go Road. Laguna Beach , for possessk>n
of cocaine.
David Michael Talia. 24. of 202'n 42nd
St.. Newport Beach. for sale of marl·
juana.
Konkel said Miss Lee -who was
arrested with Nakatsuka -and Giilim
-who was arrested with Victor Lee
-are not suspeW in the marijuana
ring.
Aiding the Newport Investigators In
the case were the State Bureau of
Narcotics investigators and Investigators
from the Tustin police department and
the Orange County District Attorney's
office.
Post-party Joyride
BRISTOL, Pa. (UPI ) -Three
somewhat inebri.Ued guuta decided to
leave a weddinl ' receptk:n at a tire
house In this Plu1adelphia subtU"b for
a ride in the cold night air. They
departed in a ts&.000 fttt eoaine-
The fire engine: lidenriped. at. leut
30 cars in the fll"Sl two blod:s of the
Io.block joyride Saturday night, foltco
said.
Uf'IT ........ -
'I THINK JURY Gl.!IL T:Y'
ConvictM Cult LNd•r Mlnt0n
Arrest Resisting
Co1ivictio11. of
Pried Dropped
W ASHING'.!'ON (AP) -'!be Supreme
Court ael aa!de today ,the C<lovictioo
of the ·Rev. James E. Gropp! for m:tstln1
arrest during the civil rights march
in Milwaukee In 1967.
With the 8-1 decision tbe court
established the principle lbal trial judg.,
shou ld not automatic&tly reject a defen-
dant's plea for. different trial locale sim~
ly becaiue tbe·crlme involved ia a misde-
meanor.
In other actions today, the court:
-Ruled that employers cannot refuse
to hire women with sma11 children while
taking on men in the same si~ation.
However, It said women could be barred
from jobs In plants lf the ' employer
l!how.s "caolllotlnll ram11y obllJaUons"
present a ~m.
_:Held that ~Jnllll-~dalendanl ,._
fltol-trial eodod · by, dllmlual ol Illa
jury by Illa jallp would ' pla<:e blm
Jn -~· ~. wbid>, ii .... _ _,, .
................. ·-·al U,l!liAola
rather clealad Cllltody-of·llll .h!O -
bocaii-ba ...... llplly mmlad'11iolr -·
'J'e\lay'• 1'1•11!1
N .. Y. Steeb
MONDAY, JANUAR}' ~5, 1971 TEN CENTS ... . . -. '
'Girls' .in Family
Also Convicted·
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles Man-
son and lhree youita women be lured into
his wild nomad ic cult were convicted of
first degree murder Monday In the sava&e
and senselesl slaughter o{ actress Sharon
Tate and six other helplesa victimJ .
A predominantly middle-aged jury re-
Excise Tax
Overhaul
Proposed
Newport Beach City Manager Harvey
L. Hurlburt today issued preliminary
recommendations for a major overhaul
In the city's buildini excise tax, including
tripling the rate charges for commercial
development.
In a report prepared for a city council
study seas.Ion th.ill afternoon, Hurlburt
said under the present rate structure
the city will derive only 60 percent
of funds needed from the tax during
the rest of this century.
BuUdiog excise tax. revenues, charpd
on all oe.w conatruction, are lbt priDdpal ' cr:t.."1;s~ .. ·for .... .,,..,_ ~ :lf!lrt..t•u= 1111 sY • ::l f ti!-.--. . .,.........,:-ttlill!': JL
D112111 •to be comtdlnfbJ ......
Qi] n.t month. · '
He sugests an lncmse from tbrte•
Ur ten centa per oqilire root Jn . !Ile
commercial tax.
~lburt atld It Is apparent "lbe· com.
merdal facllftlea are not. paylna tlielr
falr abare when laldhf ·trttO accoant
the major expenditure for ftl'e f1cUIUes
and the fact that tht lilUon no•· be:tng
built (at Newport Center) and tbe nut
one i. be butll (near Orance County
Airport ) wW be of primary beDefll to
corUmercla.l f1Cllltlet."
Mia recmunendadanl aJJo cover
chan1es In 1 ... tor hotOkno1el deftlop-
rnent from a aquare footace to_ a per
unll bull ud • raldenllal cllari• baaed
o'n flat fee ph.11 tba number of bedrooml:.
Bal Isle Motel
To Get Study
A request. by prominent Balboa Ialand
re!lident Harvey D. Pease to construct
a nln~t motel at the Intersection
of Park Avenue and Agate Street on
Balboa I11and wUI bt the subject of
a Newport Bead! City Council public
hearing tonight at 7:JO o'clock In City
Hall.
Peaae is appealln& a Plannin1 Com·
mission njlcUon.ot the teq\lllt.
P..... In hll • appll<aUon, u seeldng
a variance to allow a reduction in 11et..
backa 1" !\>e feel for the IJ'OUnd floor
ud two alid'-'leat lt*'tllo-aecond
dory abuWn& .. lldjactmt .u., ud
""'I ~ ~ ·Plrlt A-Apio\;;.::;""' Illa --'"' perty line.
--al tba ... ,,_..;d tba ........ al tile Plannlllfl Commlaioa
-.. Dae.17.
turned a verdict tindinJ tbt stlf..tyltd
"Jesus Christ" guilty of tendinl bil '"~
bots" out to stab and shoot to du~ nve
persons at the Tate home and two others
at the residence of wealthy supermarket
owner Leno Labianca.
The girls -Su.sAn Atki111, 12, Patricia
Krenwinkel, 23, and Leslie Van Houten.
21 -. al.so were coovlcted of first dep:ee'
murder. Miss Van Hcuten, a former hliti
achool beauty queea, wu charted only
with the L.lBianca alaytnp.
1be same seven man, five woman jury
now will decide -starting Thunday -
the punishment for the 36-year-oki Man-'°" and the dark-haired lrio who fbllowed
hUi e•ery command from 1o~ to
homicide. '
They have a choice between IUe Im·
prisonment or death in the 1u chamber
at San ~entin.
Manson and the three girl! heard the
verdicts in absolute silence In a court-
room , In wbich 20 deputy oberllJa 1Jood
guard.
M he WU Jed out, MaDIOlt, dressed ID
a white blCIUle, black IW1 and trouaerl
called .out to the judge: "We we:ren;t al·
lowed to pCt Oil A def-, old mQ." Jiiutoo 11!9 Mid, ;,I tllllllr .Jlla ....,,,
iuni.,." . 'Ille----· Mlii .. 'jr\1!11 ..... wtll ..... w.~ iiOt lbe!r llo.dl 'i!I*
ud wtlllpered u .lbe vmllcla _..read
by Cowl Cieri< Gue -·· II toOk -18 mlautet 10 rlod'tba
'II aeponote verdlcll 11'bich Included blr
count.i .ol ·conlpJraq to commit JDardtr
as ...it u ·the· lncHvldua! ldlllllfl. '
Deleme allomey Paul F!lqe'ald aald
the deltndanll expected the gulllf-·
diets and that theJr lawyen were "dt.
appointed but not 111rpriaed.
"W! thought we lost the cue W1'e:d we
Jort tht Chan.le of venue modon. We'bld
abeut u much cbmtce Of a faJr trtaJ in
Loo Angeles u Sam Sbeppord bad la
Cleffllnd."
Tbe' Yerdlcta camt •!molt a year and
one-hall after Ille 1laylngs and, In 1he
mune of the we.rd trial, the ~
were the all but forgotten characters in
the .cue.
They included :
Miu Tate, 28, daughter of In mny
colonel who became known for her per.
formance 11' "Valley Of the Dolls." She wu married to Poliah film director 'l\o-
man Polanaki and was eight aod orJ&.hall
months pregnant at the tJme of her death.
Jay Sebriig, 35, at one time Ml&! Tate'•
fiance. Sebring was a top Hollywood
men's ha ir stylist who numbered such
customers as Frank Slutri amona: lUI
clientele.
Voityck Frykawsky, 37, 1 friend of Pol·
anski who had worked with him on·mov~
fes in Europe and came to the ·uniteCI
states u a BOrt of bancar-on known to be ...... ol drup.
Abigail FoJaer, JI, a member of the
millionaire r• coffee family. '4 ·Jrad-
uate ol Radcllfle, ohe met Fryllowally Ill
New York anil f«meid a l1a1Jon with him,
comiJlf to Loo Ancelea u .-,_to d the·PolanH!s.
.Sle>eo l'aren~ 18, the 1M d I -ttr who wu vl.lltinlf the JOdhl caretabr
(SeeMANSON,P ... 11
square feet and the polloe headqurterl ' to tbt origina1 $4.S million esthnate.
should be st,000 sqt11tt feel • "We will work closely with the
Estimates given the council two arcbnect throua:h the design stqes,"
months ago had put the square footage he said.
of both buildings at fD9"e than ft,000 . Croul. ln lhf:" construction businea:
aquare tM and had 1)11ced the comblned hunsell, noted, In ·effect, he wlll 1et
Loose Acc·ounti.D:g Lashed
•Oramfe .
construction cost at nearly ttO million. .this project cost designed for not.bing."
CoQncltmen re a c t·e d immedlatelt. , He indic~t.;<t the layoUt of the:bUlldtngs
csaytng ~ would dllpeDle with the , 'pn 1tbe city• nlne-acrt ~ of the
enUre P,tOJed unless ~lplffcant cost cub lha'e site may challle ~ldlrably
could be made from early projecUoos. . 'Ille a~ I muter plan lllowl the
They named Croul and Councilmen City Hall and Pi>lico bulldlng IWToundJng
Milin Doltal and Dmak1 Mel Mis · to .circular coecil chambera.
the blllldl.. comm-dlnctlng II to • "Al thll ..... " er..! iold, •'~ do
b<l!ln hnmedlalely to meel with the lilt !imw it. the ' coundl cbambln wW
arChltectW'al flnn, Welton B e c IE e t t aven be a .epanite atroctart."
• Also planned la the new d'1c ""1ltt
we the Harbor Jildlclal Dlltrlc\ Courta, Students Will Get an ar1 -. • .... c:en1ra1 library
ud the new o!llca of the Newport Day Off on F eh. I iww Chamber of eommeru ..
There wlll be PIO lc:boot l"tb. 1 ftlr
oludenll In the Newport.II.. UD!lled
Schciol Olltrlct. T~hen will be Involved In tl'l\ninc '
ti._ thal day. eta.... will mume
at their regular tlmti on ~. ~ml Wllllam L. Cimlngham
' r
41 Million ·See Rocks
l . 'WASHINGTON (UPI) -'Iha opaco
-,ency uys 41 million penons aot a
lllhnl"' of .,_ ""° r...,, Ille Apollo
II ucf. l2 qlllalopl cfurln& Hblbli1 around
the world lut year.
By L. Plrtmt lllllllG Of--..... ltlff Poor accounllng pral:tlca Jn tile Ne,..
port Beach buUdlng dapoa1minl ara al
leas! partially ,.._Jbla for Clty M ...
-l!amy. 1.-Hmlbol!f• --· dalloo to merte II 'with Ille pWinJq ....
parlmenl.
Hurlburt lllil lnOmlnf r.ieaied cOpleJo
ol 1 opecl!l aadllor'n~ lllatdltcloMll
-accounllnl procedum ·nmlled Ill
rennue bla ..
• ,The dty '"""""'l 1"!l!PI will be ut.
Id Jn"" 1a1tlll -lion lO -ale •. 1~ Jl!oa11menl ol ·c.mmuntly lleY1~'aill Jo bJre temporary pel'
-lo oomplile -'< "' the new "!"' ter plan el ~..,.nL -:
In a rOofl -Thunday, lf1lri.
burt tAitl ~l"'Nil= """Id •llmtnate the poalliool of
(
• •
I
30 Varying Groups Aid
Newport City Operations
By L PETER DIEG
Of .... DlllJ' J!1tH Steff
Ctty government. gener1lly the lowest and m<lSt locali zed level al ad·
minJltraUon er public affairs, is rapJdly developing into a complf!I bureau·
cr1cy.
, There are currmUy some 30 boards, commiMklns and commlttties either
steerina: the. CC1une of municipal affairs in Newport Beach it.self, or receiving
representatioo from Newport Beach officials.
lt..lf.
Of the :.>, there are 24 directly involved in helping Newport Beach govern
Thlft att the City Coundl, lhe Planning Commission. the Parb, Beaches
and Recreation Commlaion, the Civic Service Board and
' tbe Board of Llbrary 1'ruatees.
ln addition, there is a Building Code Board of Ap-
. peals, a Technical Oil Advisory Committee and the City
· Arts Committee.
Among the committees staffed by city councilmen
are the Joint Harbor Committee. the Pending LegillaUon
Committee, the Water Committee, the Land Development
Responsiblllties Committtie, the Modificalions Committee
and the Underground Utilities Coordinating Committee
" ~ and the Employe Group Insurance Committee.
There are three recently.formed panels. the Civic District and Civic
Center Building CommitteeJ, along with the Citizens Advisory Committee oo
Transportation.
There are two inter.governmental liaitoD panels involving Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa, the City Llai3on Committee, which includes a representative
from the Board of Education of the Newport-Mesa Unified School D!Jtrict, and
the Costa Mesa·Newport Beach Cooperattoo Committee, which does not.
There are city council representatives on various regional bodies. includ·
1ng the Upper NewpClrl Bay Cooperative Planning Committee, the Southern
CalUornia Association ol Governments. the Board of Supervisors Commitlef:
on Coastal Development, the Orange County MO!Cj,uito Abatement District and
the League of Cities.
And then there 11: the special councilmanic Committee for Appointment
o! Comµtlssiooers .
Apparently, there is plenty el work to keep that last committee busy.
$200,000 Federal Grant
For Upper Bay Doubted
A Newport Beach planning com-
mia:iooer doesn't think the Upper
Newport Bay Cooperative Planning Pro-
ject 11 acing to get ill '200,COJ federal
Sea Grant.
. Dr. Gtorp Brown. dtan of t.bt
graduate school of administration at UC
Irvme. said this week "the competition
Council Studies
Newport Water
Rate Hike Plan
Inatltution of a three-step water rate
for Nn-port Beach resident.I, increasing
the co.!!l of water "about $1 per month"
to homeowners, will be considered by
the City Council when It meeta tonight
at 7:30 o'clock in City Hall.
1be coundl'a Water C omm I l tee .
recommending one of two alternatives
presented by I.he city staff. b proposing
a charge of rr cents per hundred cubic
feet for the first 1000 hundred cubic
f~t ; a rate of · 22 cents per hundred
for the next 1500 and 17 cents per
hundred for everything over 2500 hundred
cubic feet.
Residents are now charged 22 cents
per hundred for the first 2.500 hundred
cubie feet and 16 cents per hundred
for qUBntities in excess of 2,500 hundrMI
cubic fee t.
Public Works Dlrtctor Joseph T. Devli n
had reported th e rate increase is n~ed
to meet a $100,000 deficit In the water
f11nd. He said the deflclt will grow by
$100,000 a year unless the hike ls ap-
proved.
DAILY PILOT
o•AMGI COAST '°UIL1SH1NCI COMPANY
lob•rt N. W•H
,~ldw!I ... '°VOl!d'w
J.cli: It. Curl•y
vie. ,,..kW!, '"" 0--11 ~"""" n.-·· k .. ...a .....
Tli•lll•• A. Murphin•
M•Mtlnt l!cHIW
L p, .. ~ Kri•t __ ......
2211 WRt 111~1 kul•11t'4
M1Tli"f All~r .. 11 P.O. a.-. 1175, f2661 .._ ......
I
e.tt MllMI -Wiit .. 't ..... l,..tluM ~I 112 ~AM\llllltlffM '9dll l111J a.di ..,,...,."' .... Clt_,.1 • N"111 •I Ctmll'lf bll
(
for the limlted amount of funds Is !IO
great, the proeepcts ef 1eutn1 the funds
are minimal."
The project is 1 joint venture of
Newport Beach, Orange County and the
Irvine Comp any iatended to plan
development of the bay -regardleu
of the final outcome of the proposed
land swap, which involves trading county
islands for Irvine uplands.
The group is seeking the gr1nt te
eover two-thirds the cost of a study
of the tidal flow characteriJtlcs of the
bay.
Dr. Brown said the new Sea Grant
program has been given such piper
thin financing , only $15 million n1-
tionwide, that local project backers
should not be C1veroptiml11tic about ita
chances for receiving any funds .
He asked George Dawes, Newport
Beach harbor and t i d el a n d 1 ad-
ministrator' what backup methods or
financing are available.
Dawes said the city is looking for
a $171,000 Department of HoUJlng and
Urban Development grant for shoreline
studies, monies from which CC1uld be
funneled into the Back Bay project.
"If we don't gel either one of ~m,"'
Dawes said, "we si mply will not get
the technical data we need ."
Dr. BrOYln asked why UCI was llOl
more actively involved and Dawes point-
ed to Lhe possibilities of iM!xpensive stu-
dent labor to carry out m11ch of the field
work .
Dawes said he had approached various
department.! of the unlvtrsity and "either
received no response or had a price
tag put on it."
He said the university was interested
in a long-range, expensive research pro-.
ject, but not a study that would deal
with specific applications.
Service Station
Worker Beaten;
Suspect Arrested
A Newport Beach manufacturer wtlW1d
up in Colt.a Mesa City Jail Sunday
morning, after allegedly beating: a busy
aas station attendant for slow service.
Gene PantuSCI. 38, of 1907 Lffward
Lant, was booked on suspicion of assau1t
and battery and freed on $31~ ball follow-
ina the. 11:30 a.m. incident.
Laverne 0. Boyd, employed at 17th
Street and Irvine AVenue, said Pantuso
was wrltina a c.hec~ for hli purthase,
so he went to begin 1erV.tna another
motorist.
PantUIO allegedly called him back
twice, UJin& a vile name.
Boyd objected, uk!nc the bullneaman
not to call him that dlrty name. ac-
cordlnl lo poll<'< ,,,porta,
Tbe response was allepdly a do&en
pmcbU lo the rice.
"J don't remember much after that, ..
80yd ..... polica.
P1ntuao mUJ<d lo tell po1lct IJl)'lbi>i,
<ayfn( be WOUid tilt lo bb lllorney lint. .
Bearded Tribe Found
BIWllLIA. Brull !UPI) -The N1-
tlonal Indian FcundaUon u ld Sunday
• whlte-alnoed, net-bearded tribe ()f
lndlonl hu been found In the middle
ef the Am.non Jungle.
~P ... J
MERGE •..
The 1udilor aid the wb resJltor lllOd
by tho boildlof depll'tmolll bu lnmllll·
deot ~ IOllunt ud tt«1111meoded
c:uhlerln( --for the .. tin! dty
to bt pllced Ulld'ir!lte -direct supimsiiin
"' tbt 11a1 ... dJrlclor,
--" tbt pll1llalJ -"' the bulJdlo& Ind finance ~. I N\)'
arate cashltt was recommended who
would be given other dutJea to make up
for slack time.
The report recommended, "this cashier
should not ha ve access to b11Udlng de-
partmftlt fllel and records:. Likewise,
building department personnel should not
have access to receipll, eollfct.ion records
er the cash regi!ter."
Add1Uonal procedures for review and
verificatioo should be instituted, the re-
port said.
Hurlburt in his report to the council
said that many Of these recommend&·
tions have already been iruitituted by
Finance Director Georie Pappu. Under
new procedures, the pen<>• CC1mputing
and collecting the building department
chara:es will nClt have acceq to the reg-
1.ster and instead I.be money will be tum ·
ed over to a second peraon who will
check the building permit to auure that
all charges computed have been CC1tlect-
ecl.
Hurlburt aJao said lhe City Attorney
Tully Seym6ur has uid that collections
or thoae fees that were aot made can
still be made by the city l! it's done
wlthin a three-year statute of limitations.
Seymour also said the possibility exilts
the city could recover any fees which
may have been lost due tCI the negligence
on any employe by filing a formal claim.
He aLlo said the city w;>UJd be liable
to the llMIUon disbict for any funds
which the city faUed to collect in behalf
of the dlrtrid.
Aid Recipient's
Threat of Bomb
Routs City Hall
Apparently furious at IJll! lit.e of his
Orange County Social Welfare allolment ,
a ma)e recipient ferctd evac11ation of the
six-story Colla Mesa City Hall today with
a bomb threat.
Confusion over which law agency to
notify led to a 11).m.lnute delay in action,
u the J?omb tbeontically ticked down
toward detonation,
No bClmb wu found, however in an
inch-byincb aeart'b of the Welf~re De-
psrtment'1 leased fourth f]()Or quarters.
A clerk in the agency'• new Harbor
Branch received the anonymous call
about 10:30 a.m., according to tnvestiga.
tors .
"Apparently he felt be wasn't getting
enough money," said stall Director Ervan
Hontz.
Since a CC1unty agency wu involved.
Weriff 's deputies were first notified of the
bomb allegedly pllllted in tbe fourth Cloer
headq11arters.
The word was relayed to Costa Mesa
poli ce, while City Manager Fred Sorsabal
ordered fire alarms activated to empty
the high-rise structure.
An estimated ISO employes and citizen~
present on welfare or municipal b11siness
streamed out the exits for a 2Q..mlnute
wait in parking lets outside. •
"Everyone stood around ma'king .littl~
funnies and then we all went back in51de,
is how Cine observer summed it u-p. .
Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride and h1.s
1nen . plus a contingent of uiiformed offi·
cers hunted U>e alle&ed bclmb.
"We searched the entire fourth noor
with neaaUve results," Sgt. McBride ex·
pl1ined .
Newport Council
Slated to Give
Street Plans
The Newport Beach City Counc:ll
tonigb\ Is expected to reco'!'m~nd the
Publlc Works Department ma1nta1n Back
Bay Drive in a passable condition only
from Jamboree Road to the water akl
area north of Bi& Canyon. The three and one-half mile road,
whleh n11111 tbtOUgh to Eaa\b1uff Drive,
is mosUy unimprOVed and Public Works
Director Jotepb T. Devlin bu told the
council the costs of l"t'pllirtnl and main-
taining the northerly two-milt stretch
during the winter make It unfeasible.
In a report ~leased today , Devlin
said that recent raiM have caused about
$15,000 in damage to the northerly
stretch.
The problem Is further compllc1ted
by the fart that CC1nslderable conatrucUoa
in the: are Is taking place, and heavy
equipment is taking IL!: toll on lhe roe.d.
''The developers will be held responsi-
ble: for any damqe to \he road as
a result of thdr oper1UoN," he: said,
noting that a large abare of the $1~.000
fiaure will be the obllgaUoo of the private
contr1ctors.
"Altbouib lbt work ol tho developers
Is compllcatlnc the immediate problem.··
Devlin 11ld, "II b fell lhll tho de"'10\>'
ment taking place will bavt a net lone·
""" benefldll effect .. Bick 8lj'
Drive."
Two Irvine Company project.a, the Bl&
aCnyon developmlnt. ~. and to the
non!>, die Blufll 1ubdlvt1lon, "" the
proJtct.I Oevlln refen to.
He polnlld out lhll tbt developm
wlll be required to mbllile the slopes
and to construct major tr1R1Vene
drainace facUiUes across the roadw1y
In conneellon with tbttr lmprave:ments.
"When lhl11 wort ts completed It ahould
be easier for the dty to natere read
8trvlee:," Devlin 11Jd.
"
Peyton Place Vacant
8ar~or Tr.ustee Won't See~ Re-election . -
000 • Iii lbe tllteo momti<rs o! the
Newport-Mesi Unlllecl School Dl•b-kl
board ol education wl>o6e terms expire
this year wlll not run for reelection.
James W. Peyton, 1863 Boa Vista Cir-
cle, Co5ta Mesa, will leav e the board
after 11 years of service. He was elected
to the Costa Mesa Elementary District
board in Jll60 and served lhat body
until unification in llM.
Peyton, who ia aecretary·treasurer of
El Morro Joveslmtnt Co .• Jnc. of Laguna
Beach, aald the reason he will not run
ag ain is "basically because I've been
on for such a long tlrne."
Citing "family reasons" as contributing
to his decision, Peyton said "l wanted
to anno11~ early enough to allo w lime
for candidates to file for my seat."
Peyten has thr~ da11ghters attending
di!trict schools including Adams elemen-
tary, TeWinkle middle, and Estancia
High School. He aatd his family wanll
him to be able to spend more time
with them.
1\vo other board members whose terms
expire JWle 30 have said they will run
again. They are:
-Board president Selim S. Franklin
of 1928 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa,
an atlorney who has served lhe Newport-
Mesa board four years and was appointed
to the Newport Harbor Union High School
board in 1965, one and a half years
pr ior to unification .
-Mrs. Marian C. Berge son. of 1721
Trade winds Lane, Newport Beach. a
housewife who has served four years
BOWING OUT
Scho0I Tru1t•• Peyton
on the Newport.Mesa board and two
on the Newport Elementary District
board, prior to unification .
Voters from throughout the NewpOrt·
Mesa Unified School Dlslrlct will vole
on the three poeiUons. although can·
dtdates must reside· in the trustee are&
they will represent.
The area represented by tbs reliring
senior member of the board l! trustee
area one.
Trustee area one is located ln tti e
northwestern portion or Costa Mesa, west
of Harbor Boulevard to tile Santa A11a
River and north of Fairview Stalf'
llospltal to Huntzµig er Avenue.
Mrs. Be rgeson represents trustee area
three including homes in the area bound-
ed by Newport Boulevard, Palisadts
Road, MacArthur Boulevard , Pacific
Coast Highway, Dover Drive, Irvine
Aven11e and 21st Strett where it in·
tersects at Newport Boulevard . The area
includes portions o[ both Cost.a Mesa
and Newport Beach and homes on both
sides of the Back Bay.
Franklin's trustee area -si1 -als!t
includes portions of the two cities. Ils
boundary coincides with Mrs. Bergeson's
along 21st Street, Irvine Avenue anrt
_Dover Drive to Pacific Coast Highway,
b11l includes the area west of these
streets to Newport Boulevard.
Deadline for candidate filing for the
April 20 election is Feb. 25. The Orange
OJunty Department of Education i.~
handling election deta ils. Filing papers
for candidates are available (rom the
district office or from the office or
Robert Matthew dire ctor o t ad-
ministrative servlces for the county
scbool.s office.
From Pqe l
MANSON ...
al the Pol~ski borne the night of Lh~
murders.
Leno LaBianea , 48, president alflt chit!
stockholder ol the Gateway S11permar·
ket11.
County Teens Arrested
In Harbor Auto ·T .hefts
Rosemary La.Bianca , 48, t-Js wife, 1
pretty dark-haired woman.
The slayings took place the nights of
Alig. S.9-10, 1969, and at first poli ce did
not connect them despite the scraw lin.i;: of
the word "pig' 'in blood at both homes.
Manson and his "family " moved from
the Spahn Hatch, an old Western movie
Jot on the outskirts Of Los Angeles, sev-
eral weeks: after the murders to Goler
Wash in Death Valley where they set up
another commune with lookouts and field
telephones.
Family Doctors
Resuming UCI
Refresher Class
Two h11ndred family doctors today
began the second week of a UC Irvine:
College of Medicine re!resher course at
Ille Newporter Inn, Newport Beach.
By week's end , a total of 400 doctor:t
will have studied the latest advances
in diagnosis and palient care under the
program Involving: all of the UCJ medical
college faculty.
"There are only live programs of this
type in the nation," Dr. Robert E. Rakel,
program chairman said. ..Registrants
represent almosL every slate. including
Alaska and Hawaii."
Most doctors laking the refresher
course e.re preparing for the certification
examination of the American Board of
Fe.mily Practice . Family practice is the
newes t medical spe ci alty recognized by
the American Medical Association .
The rigors of the ref resher course
req11ire physicians to atlend daily lee·
tures from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. "Elective"
courses are presented from 8 p.m. to
10 p.m.
This is UCl's second year for providing
such trai nina.
January
An Orange County pair, who allegedly
stole a car in Corona de] Mar to get
home on a rainy night , have been arrest·
ed by Newport Beach police on s11spicion
of stealing three more cars from Harbor
area auto dealers.
Rob Ross Latham , 19, of 1412 W. 7th
St., Santa Ana was arrested with two
companions afteor the slolen car he was
allegedly driv ing was tailed by the New·
port police helicopter.
The two companions were released by
police when it was determined they had
nothing to do with the car thefts.
Latham's gi rlfrie rid, Sheryl Ann Hol·
land, 18, of 10752 Llnne U Ave .. Garden
Grove was arrested at her home Sunday
evening as his alleged acc001plice in the
theft s.
Police ga ve this account of the lhelts :
ln Nove mber, Latham and a girlfriend
he woul d not identify allegedly took a
196/i 811ick Riviera in Corona del Mar
because it was raining aad the girlfriend
wa s "tripped out."
Latham allegedly drove I.ht. car tor a
couple of weeks and then 1oo k it to New-
port Imports , where he asked to test
drive a 1969 Tri11mph.
He left the B11ick wi th the dealer and
drove the Tri11mph off the lot.
Patriotic Club
Slates Ceremony
The Balboa Patriotic Club will conduc t
a flag ceremony T11esday at 4:30 p.m.
W commemorate the issuance or 1 new
U.S. postage stam p honoring Gen.
Douglas f.1acArth11r .
The ceremony v.•ill take place at a
flagpole in a parking lot at 505 W.
Balboa Blvd , Newport Beach, a<:C<>rding
to Rem Ray. a representative o( !he club.
Ray said the organization is 11lso plan-
ning to partici pate in the Lag11na Beach
Patriot's Day Parade Feb. 20. Persons
wishi11g to join the. club for the. festivity
may contact Ray for additional In-
formation.
Three days Tater. Latham assertedly
told police, a Costa Mesa patrolman wrote
him a ticket for not having registration
and a front license plate. He told New.
port Beach police the cllation was dis·
missed when he appeared i:i the Harbor
Judicial Court.
'l\vQ weeks after he had driven the Tri-
umph off the Newport Import! lot , he al·
legedly took It to the Chi ck Iverso11 deal·
ership where he left it while test dr ivina
a 1966 Porsche.
Two weeks later, police said the sus-
pect allegedly exch anged the 1966 sporlJ
c:ar for a 1968 model from Coasl lmport1.
The last car was spo tted S11nday by the
deale r's banker al the Corona de! Mar
Main Beach parking lot.
He notified police and the helicopter
pursued the car until it was slopped at
the corner of Marg11erite Avenue and
East Coast Highway by a patrol 11 nit.
'Taco Bandito'
Gets $30 Haul
In Costa Mesa
A cleancut bandito packing a big
pistola robbed a Cos!a Mesa Taco Bell
of $30 Sunday night then fled to mount
his waiti ng J\.1ustang and roar away,
police said.
Clerk Michael I.. Lewis, 17, called
offi cers to the takeout al 647 W. 19th
St., al 8:30 p.m .. after he and clerk
Lenore L. Noah, 20, were certain th:!
gunman had gone.
~wis said the man. in his mid·twen-
tie~. wailed 11nlil other cust.omers' orders
were filled before lilting his shirt to
reveal a revolver tucked into his belt.
"See this"?'• he asked. then demander!
Lew is put al! the bills in a Taco Bell
bag.
Miss Noah came out or the back
rCJ>m at tha t point and froze in fr ight,
but went back and lay down on the
floor as ordered.
COME IN AND ASK FOR CLEARANCE PRICES
ON THE ITEMS OF YOUR CHOIQE -IT'S FUN!
I
DIAMONDS GUITARS
Always at Wholesale Prices
LADIES .97 CT.
SOLITAIRE
DIAMOND RING
SET IN 14K GOLD
ONLT$59900
Ou1r1nt.M to Appraise 50% Higher Than What You Pay.
People In the know te'te mon ey every tim e they ._v..,..._lt i1 not
•e•y tt l>uy for ce1h, ._ut if you have ce1h, lenUmetlcatd, or
Master Charge you ceri •••• tr•mendous 1mount1 on •"•rythin9
every iday.
$21.SO VALUE
Mutt S.. To Apprecl1tt
All Wood Gu1r1ntlilcl
YlSIT OUI SOUND IOOM
l'OI NIW • USID sm10
IAl•AINs-IT'S THI HAPPINING THIN•
COSTA MESA JEWl~-RY and LOAN
1131 NEWl'ORT BLVD. !'HONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA ..... ,,. H-I •1-r
WE LOAN BUY. SELL & TRADE ALMOST EYERYTHING
j
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WHICH ONE'S BEST? -Members of the Newprirt-Costa Mesa
Branch of the American Asociation of University.Women will have
1;ome help in deciding how to put their best foot forward during
Bal Masque Review
Magnificent Years
A 'Flowery' Story
Ten magnificent years will be recreated in flowers and green·
ery when Damas de Caridad sponsor the 10th annual Bal ?.1asque Sat·
urday, Feb. 27, in the Anaheim Convention Center.
Flo rists will portray spectacular headdresses depicting a theme
from each of the past nine years while 1971 will be a look in the future
during Dix Ans l\1agnifiques.
During the 6 to 7:30 p.m. cocktail ho ur, members and guest~
in their own originally designed masques will be judged and prizes
awarded. They then \Vil\ be seated in the dining room and the parade
of mannequins will begin at 8 p.m. with dinner and dancing to follow.
The headdresses, which may not weigh more than 20 pounds,
be more than 36-inches high or 48-inches in diameter, are comprised
of 90 percent fre sh flo1.1.·ers and 10 percent foliage.
The 10 florist!'i and their mannequins, Stan Chambers, \\'ho 'vill
serve as master of ceremonies, Barney So rkin , orchestra leader and
J\1iss Virginia Kabs will meet for a dress rehearsal Tuesday, Feb. 23 ,
in th e center.
Funds from this outstanding event \Viii be used by Damas de
Caridad to complete phase three toward the purchase of $120,000
linear accelerator for St. Jude HospitaJ, Fullerton .
The only machine of its kind in the area, It will be used in the
treatment of all Orange County cancer patients.
Phases one and two, in 1969-70 raised $221000 toward the pu_r.
chase of the machine.
Participating florists will be William Coleman, Miss Delores
Sharar, Miss Mildred Gluck al).d ·Bob Heney, Morri and.ftandy Molho,
Carl Freeman, Sam Tagashira. Ed'ward Stauber. John .eorrivenu and
Keith White, Mace and Susin Taylor and. Bill Mackin.
Mannequins wil l be the Mmes. Charles H. Currier, William
Kellogg, Eugene A. Boston, John F. O'Connor, Mel F. Bullinger, Joan
Moiola, Howard Peltier. Gordon Campbell. Allen D. Hodges and 0.
Lind Jones.
a dessert ev.ent Saturday, Feb. 6. Trying various approaches to
their "sole" problem are (left to right) the Mmes. Rudy Fe rnandez,
Harold Adelman and David Hill.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
M ... d•Y. JfRU~ 21, ttn K "'"' 11
Fellowships Benefit
Frosting Put
On Dessert
• .
-,
' .
Tips for grooming more than the feet \Viii be oCfered \Vhen · :~
J\liss Diana Vance discusses the topic Put Your Best Foot For\vard for .:.;
members and gu ests of the Ne,vport·Costa Mesa Bran ch of American , :0:
Association of University \\101nen . · ,·:·.
Miss Vance 'viii ofter her sugges tions during a spri ng fellow-·.
ships dess ert Saturday. Feb. 6, at Estancia Hi gh School. Planned to :~:
raise funds for AAUW fellowships, the 12:30 p.m. event is under the '·~::.
direction of Mrs. Wade S. McClusky, fellowships chairman .
An authority on good groomin g, Miss Vance gives small classes
in homes on how to bring out the best in yourself. She will lecture on
the 24 fa cets of a woman 's image. discussing the effe ctive use of color
and how to use style and fashion to create an integrated wardrobe.
Miss Va nce \Viii ask women from the aud ience to participate in
her demonstration and \Viii \vo rk \Vith them in deciding what they
should wear. A graduate of UCLA. she majored in interior and dress
de sig n and has worked in th e fa shion fiel d tor 23 years.
F'ollowin g the program. guests \Viii be encouraged to form
foursomes for bridge. canasta or other games and those interested in
playing should bring cards wit h them.
Assisting the chairman \vith preparations are th e Mmes. Ronald
K. Arnold, Thomas B. Bigford and Stephen Salyer.
The event is open to th e p\Jblic and anyone wishing to purchase
tickels, at $2.50 each, n1ay call Mrs. McClusky at 540·1289.
NH Art Museum Receives Gift in Festive Setting
Previewing the Avco Collection of contemporary American pain-
tings and sculpture recently ~presented to the Newport Harbor
Art Museum a.re Oeft to right) Mrs. C. J. Connell, her husband ":ho
is vice president ol Avco Financial Services, Mrs. Walter·D. K.
Gibson Jr .• Trustee Rolla R. Hays Jr. and Mrs. Hays . The exhllllt.
will be on display through Feb.17. ;1•
Incentive Stif:ied by Parents' Guise of Generosity
DEAR ANN LANDERS' I married
•hllf: still in college. Mom and Did
furnished our apartment and sent us
a check everr month for two years.
We had more than enough to live on,
yet they Insisted on giving us money
for birthdays, anniversaries, ThankqiV·
Ing. Oir1strnas, Fourth of July -any
occasion wbich could be med u an
excuse.
I h1Ve graduated from college and
e.m now working. My husbe.nd is ldUna
a PhD on a federal grant. We have
everything we need and we don't need
any mort:· financial help. My parent,,
can't understand tblt we want the
1atl1(actkm of doing a few Utinga on
our own.
. LISI night my !other tried lo r~ .
ANN LA N DfRS ~
me some money behind my husb1nd'1
back. I refuaid lo tal<• It. ·MY ~nd
aaw him and lhe four ot m: got into
a ietrifk: hm.lt. My mother called me
"ungrateful ." My dad sakt I wu~deprlv·
ing him of his grealeal pleasure. 1be
relatloM!llp la becoinlng stralnid. It '"" deteriorated Into a contett of wills. J{ow
can we aettle this once and for 111?
-POOR Ll'ITLE RICH GIRL
DEAR GIRL' Wrtte }'Ollf IO!b o letter
nilll • teU Uwm '" a,pree..w •tr
1nerestty bit ... yo• ud your n~b•Dd
are Ible tt m.u1e oe yow ow1. Explal11
tat they MUST Mt deay you the
latlDdk>I tf eanla1 ud acMeY11i1.
aad tkat ,...1oa1ed depe11dmcy le
ulouttlly llld cu be c:rl,.U.&.
Ask them •t to aeld ••J more mo1ey
a1h1. U 1MJ dllrqard yow wbMI,
1tacl tk •taeJ Net. Eve1111~ly wbe•
they realtae JOtl mea1 t& tMy'tl lfAp
tryfq ,. btad yoa !O tbtm wl~ ~
of sold.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The letter
froril . tbe bf:autiful, intelligent woman
who wu nurriff to a drunk bad a
' r•n;iili&r rJng to Jt. ·'· too, ... beautlful and inteJllgent -or ., everyone said.
J made the ·mlstake ol marrying a
luah, too. Whenever I kicked him out
l always took him back - ''for the
sake Of the children." Who was I kid-
ding? My children needed a drunken
father like they needed a bole In the
head.
We had no social We beca\l.se the
only people who 'WIU put up with a
drunk are other drunks .. The chlldren
often went to school etha:usted and
nervous from lack ot alffp. 'Their father
_fr~~tl.Y allllted the booae,_ ranUng
and ra•lnc, .until I o'~lock'ln thimomlnc:
J stayed with that miserabW. man
for 15 years. I kepL telling my:1eU he
wa.11 a sick man and he net!ded me .
One da,y 1 had to admit I Watl sk:k~
than he was or I wouldn't put up with
his lying and cheating. A woman has
to be crazy to let her hW!band squander
his paycheck when their cblldren need
shoes: and milk.
I don 't know why It took me so long
lo get smart (or !hould I say well t
but I thank my lucky stars I linally
made ii. I hope you will print my
letter for the benefit of other women
who are baclt where I wlll 20 years
itr.{o. Now Is the time to use your famous
line, Ann . Tell them to wake up and
smell the coffee. -stow· LEARNER
DJ!:Ar\ SLOW: 1'baW for yow letter.
tliert'• a Hap •' kuoa IMre. I Mpe
"
the. 1t1Mkat pay1 clo.e atte1tlol.
CONFIDENTIAL TO WHAT CAN A_
MOO'HER DO!' One thln& a motbu:
can do is stop telling her *Ml that:
hlll steady lll a tramp. 'lbe men )'Oil.
talk against the girl the J;nOre he~J
hate to deCend her. Tn flct, he mat:
"dtfend" her !IO vehemently that -':
of Ihm daya you'll end up btinc' ber .
mother·in-l1w, · .
. .. •
'
~ . f DAllY PILOT
·.·
Future Doctor Opts to Fight
By JO OLSON
ol ftl.t 01ltt l'li.t Stttt
Women'• Lib is no joke lo
Emily Ahern, a PhD candidate
at C<irnell University who is
1 resident of Irvine while her
bWlband, Dennill completes hi s
PhD al UCL
A llim. attractive, casual
type, Emily feels that women
are exploited sexually by the
media and that the y do not
receive a fa ir s h a k e
employment-wise.
up thlnklng they are only going
to be mommies," llbe atated.
"'lbere are other options than
motherhood."
Employment practkel mWlt
~,.vamped so buJbands and
wtVea can work part.time to
Abare the respomlbllllles of
child rearing.
Emily, • spedalilt in social
anthropology, became in-
tereJted in her major area,
China, through a professor at
Cornell and she ha.s become
irrevocably involved with her
studies bec ause of tbe big in-
vestment of her time in stu-dying the language.
PLANS TO TEACH
plan to teach wherever they
can find jobs cloR toaether.
Emily was born in Bir»
in&hlm, Ala., l(M!W up 1n
Peonsylvania and dk1 her
undergradU11te wort •t tho
Univenlty of Michi&u, where
she met her bulblnd.
They both went to Comel1
for their PbD ltudy and wbeo
her husband's advilor came
to UCI, the move west
was neceJsa.ry. Emlly ls writ-
ing her diBsentaUon on a grant
from the American AuociaUon
0£ University Women and now
is in the final stages.
and her work will be finlahld
in September.
ANCESTOR WORSHIP
Emily's d1 11ert1tlo n
generally CODCUD.11 Chlne.11
.-wonhlp. She ts -k-
ing IDl"llt'UI te quetrtlons auch
as why do they do it, why
are the forms different in
different villages and bow do
the OUnese 10ive con!Ucta.
She is studying the funeral
ceremonies of the Chlneat,
their attitude toward 1plrits
and their mar ri ag e
ceremonies.
several more btfore her work
Is don<.
Emlly'1 vlllqe was Ch'lnan
wblcb meam "aoutb of the
aftam," &Dd her teetlon eon-
&tlted ol about 600 people.
Sha would lib lo relurn lo
do addltJoool mear<h becaUJe
ahe found that Ille bu -
tioOI lbe can't 1n1wer wltbout
further time in Taiwan.
INCREDIBLE EXPERIENCE ' "It was an incredible e1·
pertence," the yo u l hf u I
tcbolar said. "The climate
wu terrible, the f o o d
delicious." Mo.st exciting was
"just the uperience of livinf
in • totallJ different culture.
rerent. Il l.ocreues your
uoderatand.lng 1n general."
Tbe Abem1, woo.. VCl
apartment 11 decorated with
woven buk.etl . and other
arWacts from Taiwan, enjoy
baclcpacklnJ and pla)'lna lheir
recorderl together.
They 1bare the cooldnl ll1d
clean.up chores but Emlly
cook! more often than her hus-
band became she enjoya cook-
ing, especially Chinese and
French foods. When they find ~ l', the time, tennis and !kllng r
are planned.
'WOMEN EXPLOITED'
Emily Ahern
She sees several areas y,·here
changes must be made for
women's sake: the way in
which children are introduced
to culture must be altered,
employment patterns must be
updated and child care centers
must be established.
"Litt le girls shouldn't grow
She and her husband, a
speclaliat in Chlnese philosphy
who also bas 1tudled the
Ch1nese language extenJively,
Many year1 of bard work
will be culminated when the
Aherns are able to call each
other doctor, for the four-to-
·five-year grind has been 1
dllflcult one. Emily received
her bachelors degree tn 19'6,
Part of her researctl is being
done at Stanford University
where a microfilm record
traces the ancestry all of the
people in the Taiwan village
where lbe did her year'• field
work, so ahe has made aeveral
trips north and must make
"Yoll (loo that one after
1110ther of ywr cberiahed
batltb becomes .. t1nry dif.
The future Dr. Emily Ahern
is sure to find more at the
end of her quest than a PhD
degree, for that will mark
only the beginning of her
journey. And she knoWJ where
Ille ts going.
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Sections Plan Your Horoscope Tomorrow s~outs
':.:ro Give
...... Thanks Art Encounters Aquarius: Express Yourself
·~ '., ...
.~· .. .. -~ Plans continue to take shape
For the council-wide Girl Scout
Recognition dinner w h i c h
f
~ 1akes place Thursday, Jan. 28,
in the Airporter Inn.
A demonstration and lecture
on printmaking will be given
for members ol. the UCI Town
and Gown Art Group at 10
a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 3, by
Mrs. f.turrey Krf;!iger.
Mrs. Lyman Porter will host
the group In her Newport
Beach home for the ~ecture,
perienced lithographtr, reeeiv-
ed her undergraduate training
at the Art S"tudents League,
New York, and eanied her
master of fine arts degree
at Ohio State University.
She also has stud.led at the
Le Ferve Studio in Paris aod
taught at the University of
Illinois before coming to
California.
TUESDAY , wllh Llbra individual. Make AQVARIVS (Jan. :ZO.Feb.
JANUARY 26 concessions. Hotd on lo prlnci· 11): Stilt projects: welcome
pies without being arrogant. new contacts. Exp re 11
By SYDNEY OMARR Check various legal A!pect!. yourseU· 'nl.la ls not the time
For IJbn, marrlap I.I more VIRGO (AUf. :z3.Sepl 22): to hold back. Give completely.
Important tlwt It ll for DlOlt Some mental confllcta peraiJt. Cycle ii IUCb that your efforts
penons. 'l'hll sod1acal 1tp 11 Key b to make peace within bear fruit Move with con-
UHClattd w I t b m.urbp, family circle. Holdlnc out fide:nct.
is to raise horizons and com·
pletely uUllie auetl. Potential
truly is gre.at.
T• nnd ovt wh!J'• tuck1 rw you
'" mDrWI' 11'1d lov1, .,.,., 1'¥'dntl' Omlrr'I boollltt "S«r.t Hlftta IOI' Mtn Mid WOITl9ft." 5" blMhll•le
1rw1 to ,.,.,, to o"''" All•olOtlv
Secrtll. tM DAILY l'JLOT, klc J'/"3. Gr.nd C..trel l!•llon. New Yorll,
N.Y. 10017, p e r m • • en t partaenhlp1, merely means pride b die-PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcll 20):
asreement1 which ae bindblg. tatlng to logic. Message will Some secret fears are exposed 1------------
Llbra doe• not like t 0 become increulngly clear. as r1dlculoua. Accept findinp
putklpale In 1amn people UBRA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 22): or expert. Pennlt tense of1 ~::::===
• 2·Wh at Girl Scouting Is •..
rs the theme of the event
J ~:'fhich begins with a social J ~ flour at 6 p.m. and dinner
, <~·.at 7 p.m. Volunteers who
: ('·~ked with the Orange Coun-
: !r.:-ty Girl Scouts will be honored
I along with the Opportunity
selectees and Campus Gold
Girls.
I Various troops in the area
are preparing centerpieces to
~slrate the Iheme. Mrs. f -William R. Stroud is chairman
~ ol the affair.
and a demonstration will
fCJllow in the Fine Arts Village
at UCJ.
The artist tias exhibited In
the Columbus Art Gallery,
ex-Walker Art Gallery in Min·
neapolls and the Cleveland 600
Gallery.
Mc;. Kreiger, a n
SUSAN KING
To Mlrry
Betrothal
u1ua1ly play. Tbeae native• Cooperate with Leo indlvldual. humor to operate. Don' tr,
b1ve parpa1e, dedlaitton and Welcome chance to chue aurppresa common 1en1 e.
teek a dtrtctloa la IUe. gloom. EmoUonal reponsea What was bidden can now
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): dominate. Rom an c e is be revealed.
SpoWght on fulfilling o f featured. E I p 1 a in pollcles, IF TODAY IS Y O U R
desires. What you seek is prlnclples to young persons. BIRTHDAY you make
withln reach. Key is to gain Be flexible. remarkable use of available
• • • • • • • ' • • • :
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Club Arranges
Fuchsia Talk
Two events have b e e n
scheduled this week f o r
memben of El Camino Real
Woman's C1ub.
On Wednesday, Jan. 'Zl, the
Garden a n d Beautl!Jcallon
Section will gather in the Dana
Point home of Mra. Waller
Caruthers at 2 p.m. to discuss
care and pruning of fuschlas.
Co-hostess for the meeting
will be Mrs. G. B. Tanner.
On Thursday, Jan. 28, the
Leadenhlp Development Stt·
tion will stage a public benef it
luncheon and card party
beginning at noon in the Com·
munlty House. Proceeds wi ll
SUPfXlrl the Easter S e a I
Rehabilitation Center i n
Orange.
TOPS Me rmaids
TOPS Merging Mermaids
meet at 7:30 p.m. every
Thur8day In Woodland School,
Costa Mesa.
'Cop' Talks
To Chapter
Capt. Rober Vernon, known
as the Christian Cop, will be
euest speaker !or the Col.
William C.t>eil C h a p t e r ,
Daughter• of the American
Revolution Wednesday, Jan.
27.
Vernon's topic for the 12:30
p.m. dessert meeting in the
Balboa home of Mn. William
Bent will be Why Young Peo·
ple Do What They Do.
Mrs. C. E. Stovall, chairman
of DAR 1Scbools, will report
on the achoal!, and assisting
with hostess duties will be
the Mmes. William Tritt,
Robert Roper, Marjorie
Carnes, Leland Bolin and J.
Harold Kelloa:g.
Silver Sands
The firs t Tuesday of each
month at 8 p.m. members
of Silver Sands 286, Native
Daughters of the Goldea West
gather for meetings. Lake
Park Clubhouse in Huntington
Beach is the meeting place.
Crowning Glory
.... ........ ~~~~ty salons
Curls
Are
--Our
~Business!
~.
Y2 PRICE PERM SALE!
SH ll•AL CURL $17.50
SIS OLAMOR CURL $12.50
Sit MA•IC CURL $10.
IUD$ll ,.ERM.
ALWAYS SI.ti !Nem el H1irl
SPECIAl SAVINGS!
SHAMPOO.SET
STYLE-CUT
lf'ttllil ... kn tll•M~ JIWiw,
IOUTM COAST PLAZA
L..w., u .... .._.... ..... s.. r1 ........... ,, ..
°"9e hMl~1
..... T .... ·WM
2.95
1.50
L.-W ...
3.45
2.00
Lithography, th e process of
printing with a hand or
motorized press off a stone,
is one of the rarer art fonns .
Town and Gown'a Mwiic
Section will gather In the
Balboa Island home of Mrs.
Robert B. Smith for a harp
concert by Mrs. Elizabeth
Elgin Turrell, on Tuesday,
Jan. 26.
Mrs. Turrell, who recently
returned from an lntemaUonal
harp competition in Israel , is
a Pomona College graduate.
She has performed with the
San Gabriel Symphooy and at
VCI.
Party Planned
News Told
r-.1r. and 1'.1rs. Alfred King
of Huntingtoa 1-farbour have
ann0W1ced the engagement of
their daughter, Susan
Elizabeth King to Russell
Joseph Chldley.
Miss King is a graduate
of the Lutheran High School,
Los Angeles.
new momentum. Try again. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Start over : take Initiative. A Your borne can become a true material. You c an com·
friend will provide necessary castle, but you must think me rcialize on what may a~ .....sa!l~
means. of others as well as yourself. pear to be a small op-HANG TEN
TAURUS (April »May Some comforts may have to portunity. You create, build. STRIPF.S & SOLIDS
20 ): Prolect reputation. Don't be postpooed , There now is You are a natural executive. SIZES 4 TO 20
permit anyone to use your note of greater financial So f .de -" Oz-:;'" name In careless manner. re.mnnsibility. me 0 your l as represent ·~ [ thr n toil Jelitlhtfully un1ua1l Trust hunch about individual SAGlITARIUS (Nov. Z2-noncon ormist thinking. But tliildrero'• ,tore in 1he toutlilaad
who b: quite • smooth Dec. 21 ): Some, including you must, in order to succeed, create your 1· · Re 16877 Al•onquin 51. operator. Promote career in· neighbors and relatives, may own po icies. -J11•~i.~1;'tu"" •u r.n
terest!. try to manipulate you. SLick cent action now is tested-you (714) a~I666
GEMINI (May 21.J une 20 ) : to facts. A void scattering your, ';"ciiaiiniigiiaiiiniiwiiiiidiie iireciiiio;i;gniiiiitioniiii· iiKiieyiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiij
Good lunar aspect promotes forces. Ideas need more com-11
journeys, h I g her learning. plete development. You may
Allow intellectual curiosity to be ending a relationship.
have free rein. Ask questions; CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
discard superficial Bnswers. 19): A new projec t could
Revere knowledge. You are result in financial windfall.
due for real gain. Remain on top of situation.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Some have great ex-
HOW MANY THUMBS
DO YOU HAVE?
" .,. ... "•lleY• .,..., ,,, "•II lhumb1" •"11 ~IYI ne
l1l111t -l't"" c1m1 I!! •ncl It! ~• thtw y1u hGw
1111"11 fl II M kt1tl y'9r IW<1 Wini...... 11'1 IU<I -~II ""' Ill Y11,1'll 11'¥'1 on Y1t11r wtnlnbt totl
review policies, budget. Money pectations-and are jmpalient. The KNIT w11sou,'", .. ~?AST
Arrangement.! for a Thurs-:ihared with mate. partner Avoid carelessness with funds . ,.._ 141•2112 cosrUisA
day, Feb. 11, Valentine Party may be highlighted. Have Be aware of detalls. ~~~~~~~~~~~
Her Dance, so11 of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Chldley or La
Dera Heights, is a graduate
of St. Bernard's High School,
Westchester and now Is serv-
ing in th e U.S. Army.
will be made on Wednesday, Mesa L.eague facts at hand. Thorough ap-1F=====""::::;;=== =
Jan. 27, as members of the proach could save emotional
Westward Ho Chapter of the La Leche League meets the tug-of-war. Know this and pr<>-
Daughters of the Brill.sh second Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ceed accordingly.
Empire gather at 12:30 p.m. f.frs. H. \V. Moore, 54>4359, bE() (July 2.1-Aug. 22): Lie
in the Laguna Beach borne will answer q u e 1t1 on s low. Do more listening th.an
l __ o_r~Mr~•:·J~·=W~.§Do§wn~e~r·~~~~re~g~a~rd~in§g~loc§§1t~w§n~.::;::;::;::;~"~"~rt~in~g.~Co~m~b~in~e~f o~r~c~e~s11
THE CURRENT WHITE SALE IS IN FULL COLOR AND
INCLUDES STAY PRESSED LINEN PLACE MATS, NAP-
KINS, APRONS, TOWELS. STORE WIDE SAVINGS OF
20 PER CENT UP TO 5 0 IN ALL 3 STORES ON
IMPORTED FURNITURE, LAMPS AND ACCESSORIES
YOU HAVE ALWAYS WANTED FOR YOURSELF.·
~N KEPPEL-GREEN
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
BOARDWALK SHOPPING CENTER
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posh collection of Sprin9 color'
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1tripes with metc:hin9 solids on
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c ... M•• lta.1116
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TedaY'• Fial
N~Y. SIANM
VOL. 6-4, NO. 21, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . MONDAY, JANU~RY 25, 197r TEN OENTS
James Peyton
Will Retire
From Board
One of the three members or U1e
Newport-Mesa Unified School District
board of educaticrl whose terms eipi-e
this year wilf not run for reelection.
James W. Peyton, 1863 Boa Vlsta Cir-
cle, C.OSta Mesa, will leave the board
after 11 years of service. He was elected
to the Costa Mesa Elementary District
boa.rd in 1960 and served that body
until unification in 1965.
Peyton, who is secretary-treasurer of
El Morro Investment Co., Inc. of Laguna
Beach, said the reason he will not run
again is "basically because I've been
on for such a long time."
Citing "family reasons" as contributing
to his decision, Peyton said "I wanted
to announce early enough to allow time
for candidates to fil e for my seat."
Peyton ha s three dau ghters attending
district schools includ ing Adams elemen-
tary, Te Winkle middle, and Estancia
High School. He said his family wants
him to be able to spend more time
with them.
Two other board members whose terms
expire June 30 ha ve said they will run
again. They are:
-Board president Selim S. Franklin
of 1928 Santa Ana Ave .. Costa Mesa,
an attorney who has served the Newport-
Mesa board fou r years and was appointed
to tbe Newport Harbor Union High School
board in 1,965, one and a half years
prior to unification.
-Mrs. Marian C. Bergeson. of 172 1
Tradewinds Lane, Newport Beach, a
housewife who has served four years
on the Newport-Mesa board and two
on the Newport Elementary District
board, prior to unification.
Voter,s from throughout the Newport ..
Mesa UnUied School District will_ vote
on the three potitions, although can-
didates mwt reside in the trustee area
they will represenL · ·
The area represented by the retil'.ing
eenior member· of the board is trwltee
-(See PEYTON, Pap !i
Princess Anne
Escort Broke
LONDON (UPI) -The YOIJJ18
man who took' Princess AMe to
the movleS is now Oil relief, he
gald-y._
''I am down to my •last pair
ol booUI. Tbat's . how desperate
things are," said Sam Shepherd,
11. .
Sam, son of a Ox:kney stevedore,
appeared in the title role of the
'neighborhood-made movie "Bronco-
Bu11frog" lasl ,1ff' and -~ ,the q...een 's dauahter to ~ _
prenllere. It made bin\ i. ·COCknef
hero -for a few dlys.
Now he has been drawing $&.91
11 week unemployment. money for
two montba.
"When I go for a job, --le
think I just want work ufttU lhe
nut film offer comes along. J'n
thought of writing to the pr:lncNI
to let her know, but I'm no\ sure
whether · t should," Sam told
newsmen.
Del Mar Avenue
Street Widening
Hearing Slated
A hearing on the $1.28 million plan
to widen Del Mar Avenue for its an-
ticipated 40,000 car~ daily by 1981 is
!eheduled tonight before the Costa Mesa
Planning Commission.
All 39 houses and lots on the northeast
side of the quiet residential street will
be required for the right-of-way.
Rwining from Newport Boulevard to
Tustin Avenue, the route will tie into
proposed University Drive to loop around
Upper Newport Bay.
Planners foresee the link as a major
direct route to the UC Irvine campus
and plan for its completion in six years,
concurrent with that of the Nev;port
Freeway.
Cily officials have de:>ignated $94l.l ,U.S
£or purchase of the properties and some
of the money is now available.
Construction costs -will · take anot.her
$295,322 while the remainder will be
absorbed in engineering and other in-
cidental fees.
Based on current plans, existing Del
Mar Avenue will remain •• it is, serving
the residences left on the coast-ward
side.
This well leave trees and other Jand-
scapi.n& aow a feature ol the older mil·
dentlal · aecdon for beautification purpos-
e!, city officials note. •
Final approval of tbr propostd realign-
ment ~ust come from the city council
and is required by the state Division
of Highways.
All municipal or county streets which
Service Station
Worker Beaten;
Suspect Arrested
A Newport Beach manufacturer wound
up in Costa Mesa City Jail Sunday
morning, after allegedly beating a busy
gas stati<>n attendant for slow service.
Gene Pantuso. 38, of 1907 Leeward
Lane, was booked op suspicion of assault
and battery and freed on $315 bail follow-
ing the 11:30 a.m. incident.
Laverne 0 . Boyd, employed at 17th
Street and Irvine Avenue. l'iaid Pantuso
was writing a cheek for his purchase.
SQ he went to begin serving another
motorist.
Pantuso allegedly called him back
twi<:e, using a vile na me.
Boyd objected. asking the businessman
not to caU him that dirty name, ac-
cording to police reports. '.lbe rtspons~ was alleged~ a dozen
punches in the face.
"I don't remember much after that,''
Bovd told police.
Pantuso refused to tell police anything,
"-Jtying he would talk to his attorney
llraL
w1[ cross over a completed freeway
must be on file in Sacramento before
the freeway construcUon Itself can get
under way.
Plane Cra8hes
~
In Andes; 25
Reported Dead
MERIDA, Venezuela (AP) - A
Venezuelan airliner with 47 persons on
board cr11.shed in the Andes near here
Mor.day eight minutes after taking off
on a 420-mile flight to Caracas,_ officials
reported.
A survivor reported that be and
perhaps 10 other per90ns survived the
crash. The Merida itate radio utd it
received an unconfirmed report that ~
of the passengers piii~.
OUlcials said the IUl'Yivar walkedJaeat·
ly two .Ulel 14 a mWllry outpogt Ind
reported the crash. tn a !telePhone Cin
to Merida he said : '"lb!!re were many
bodies and a~ least 10 people Aeriously
injured."
The turboprop Viscount of Aeropostal
Airlines crashed into the Cruces de
Jaji Mountain in the Andes south of
Lake Maracaibo in Western Venezuela,
Army and police" teams set out for
the crash site and docton and nurse,
were summoned. Helicopters were re-
quested to fly out the injured.
Radio stations in Merida broadcast
appeals for blood donations.
Aeropostal Viscount_, ca rry a crew of
four. The airline said the pilot of the
plane was Capt. Luis Beltran Mendoza.
The airline said It cid not know if
;,,ny foreigners were on board.
Policemen Raid
Firehouse Again
Netting Nu.die
One more dancer was arres~::d at
Costa Mesa 's Firehouse bottomless bar
Saturday night when police dropl'led Into
see what the gi rls had on for the evening.
Holly D. Moore, 23, of Hollywood,
had on only a 1kimpy veil and lhe
was holding that up IO 2S patrons coold
see underneath, claimed Officer Gene
Norden ..
He and Dick DeFrancisco entued the
club at 177 E. 17th St., to arrest M.isl
Moore on IUllpicion of indecent upc>IW'e
for the second Ume around in a week.
u .. ,.,. ........
•1 'THINK JURY GUil TY"
Convicted Cult Le.idfir Mlr,Hn
Arrest Resisting
Conviction of
Priest Dropped
WASlUNGTON (AP) -1'he Supreme
Court set aside toda y th e conviction
of the Rev. James E. Groppi for resisting
arrest during the civil rights march
in Milwaukee in 1967.
With the 8-1 decision the court
established the princ!ple that trial judges
1hould not automatically reject a defen-
dant's plea for dirferent trial locale simp-
ly because the crime involved ls a misde-
meanor.
In other actions today, the court:
-Ruled that employers cannot .refuse
to hire women with small children while
taking on men in the same situation.
However, it said women could be barred
from jobs in plants if the employer
ahows "conflicting family oblj&ationl"
present a problem.
-Held that retrying a defendant whole
first trial ended by dismlssal · of the ·
jury by !hi jUdge woiild pla<e . bim
in doublf: Jeop&ri!y, which ii.' un-
(!lee GROPP~ Pip 11
'G. l ' . F ·1 Ir s In amI y
Also Convicted
LOS ANGELES CUP!) -Charles Min-
son and tbree youna women ht lured into
his wild nomadic cult were convicted of
first degree .murder Monday In the uva1e
and senseleas slauJbter of actress Sharon
Tate and sit: other helpless victims.
A predominantly middle-aged jury re-
Bomb Scare
Routs Mesa
City Hall
Apparently furious •t the size of his
Orange County Social Welfare allotment,
a ma~ recipient forced evacuati(lfl of the
six·story Com Mesa City Hall tod2y wifh
a bomb threat.
Confusion· over which law aee·ncy to
notify led to a 10-minute delay ln actiQn,
as the bomb ih<Oretlcally licked down
19ward det~tion.
No bonib was f~, im:ever, in an
Jnd>.byln<h .... c11 o1 Ille w.14,r., De-
partinenl'1 1 ... ed lourlh floor. quartors.
• . •. Ill' the •• ,,..,.. 7 1Cfiff 3 J)ir
-~ lbe _,_.,call ~11i:km, ~ .. ' ~ ._.,,, '• . ~-.
YWo: ~··" ..••• '
.. "ApparenUy be 1•11 iii 'wiiii'.~
e-b'money," Ai6llalf~it/YID
Hcmtz: ,
Since 1 QOWlty a&enc:.J' · •u ,involved,
•rtff'i deputiea were firit noUfled.-ol the
bomb allegedly plani<d Jn tile fourtll Ooor
be1dqutrter1.
The word wu relayed to ~ Mesa
police, wblle City Minager·Fred'SorMbal
ordered · fire alarms 1ct1val4!ct. to empty
the high-rise 1tructlD'e.
An estimated 150 employes and citizens
present on weUare or nruniclpal bualnesl:
streamed out the et:lb: ·for a 20-mlnu.tt
wait In· parkinc Jots outJJde.
"Eveey.one stood around making l,ltUe
funnies and then we all went back Inside,''
is how one observer summed it up.
Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride and his
tnen . plus • contingent of uijformed offi-
cers hunted the alleged bomb.
"We searched the entire fourth Door
with negative results," Sgt. McBride ex-
plained .
'He added that the incident-first of its
kind directed at the Costa Mesa Civic
Center -led to an immediate order by
City Manager Fred Sorsabal for develop-
lni;t: a procedural system.
Guidelines for what to do In case of a
bomb threat or actlal plant of explo-
i;ives will be distributed to all city depart.-
ments.
The Welfare Department will get one
too.
41 Million See Rocks ' .
WASHINGTON (lJl!I) -The opace
agency 18)'.,I ,41 million. ptl'IOOI &ot 8 llJmpoe of ,,....., . rocU from 1111! ApoDo
11 and 12 millk>ii• durinl 'n!llblll around
the world Jut year.
!urned a verdict finding tbo le!l·llJ!ed
"Je1Us Christ" guilty of sendlf11 bla···~
bots'" out to stab-and shoot to de&~ nvt
persom at the Tate home Ind two other1
at 'the residence of wealthy tupermarket
owner .Leno Labianca.
Tbe .girls -Susan Atltlnl, 22,.Patrle1*
Krenw.ln~el, 23, llld Leslifi Van Houten.
21 -also w:ere convt~ed of f1rlt dea:ree
murder. Miss Van Houten, a former bJ11i
•.~ · beauty queea, ,Wu charaed-Only
with the LaBianca slayinp. ·
·The same seven man, fl•e ~:lmJ.
now wtll decide -1tartfna Thundly .....
the punishment for the Jrryear-o)d Man-
son and the dark-haired trio who foDowld
his every command from lov~ to
homicide.
They have a choice ·between life Im-
prisonment or death in the pa chamber:
at San Quentin.
Manson and the three &irl• beard, tho
verdJcts 1n absolute ailbtce in a eourt-
r?Om 1n which 20-deputy abuiffs stood
guard.
·As be was Jed out. MansOI .. dressed in
a white blouse, black scarf and trOUIUI
called out to the judge ; ''We weren't ·aJ.
lowed to put on a defense, old man."
-•loo Aid, "f -lbe jury'• ,Uilt)'," ~ J
• Tbe lhlOI )'Otllll women, dl'el8ed In
bl'!' deolm .,..,..,,, -with darker Ill* .... aten, piJt th•li-beadt together
and whispered aa the verdleta: were read
by Court Clerk Gen< Dorrow.
It toot Darrow 16 matJtea to read the
Z7 separate verclicts which included four
counts of .conspiracy to commit mLlfder
as well as the individual Jtillinp. '
Defense attorney Pau.J Fitqerald ·llld the .defendanta expected the guiity. 'fer.
dicta and that their lawyers were "dJJ.
appointed but not surprised.
"We thought we lost the. case when we
Jost the change of venue motion. We bad
about aa much clwlce of. • fair trial in
l,ol Angeles u Sam Sheppard bad In
C:levelilod."
The verdicts came almos~ a year and
one-half after the. slayings and, Jn the
course or the weird triaJ. the victims
were the all but forgotten characters in
the case.
They included:
Miss Tate, 2fi, daughter of an anny
colonel who became known for her per-
fonnance i" "Valley <If the Dolls.'' She
was married to Polish film director Ro-
man Polanski and was eight and one·half
months pregnant at the time of her death.
Jay Se brlig, 35, at one ttme Miss Tate's
fiance. Sebring was a top Hollywood
men 's hair stylist who numbered such
customers as Frank Sinatra among hia
cllentele.
Voityck Frykow-sky, 37, a friend of Pol-
anski who had worked with him on mov-
ies in Europe and came to the United
States as a sort oC h.inger-on blown to
be 1 uaer of druga.
Abigail FOiger, 2t, a member of the
millionaire Folger'~et family. A grad.
uate al Radcliffe, ahe met Frykowsky iJt
New York and form~ a llaiaon with him,
comlag: to lAI Aagelel as house (Ut!ltl
ol the Polanslds.
Steven Parerit, 11; the eon ~ • cafll'!~
ter who was Vlsitln.!( the YD\11'1. caretaker:
(See MANBON, Pap I) I • 'Taco Bandito'
Gets $30 Haul
In Costa Mesa
Boatyard H·earing ~ropped
A cleancut bandlto 'peeking a bl1
pls14\A robbed a Costa Mell TICO Bell
ol l30 ~ay night then ·fted 14 mounl . --' . hla wai Mutang am roar away.
pollce said.
Clerk Mid\ael L. Lewis, 17, called
offfcm 14 tile takeout at 14'1 w. 19th
st., at l :!O p.m .. Iller he Ind clerk
1.enor< 1.. No111.1. lll, """ cor111n the
. ·llflmtn had '~ • Lnllpld ,...,,... In~ mid-I,....
ties. walled wrtu other c:uatomen' orders
wero ruled hefon Ufllng hia lhlrt 14
reveal a mrolnr~ into' hill belt.
"See Udl!" bo iobd, theft demanded
Lewtl pul Ill tho bllll Jn • T""' Bell
bag.
Miu Noah came out of tbo back
room, It that Point and !me ln· frli111,
but went back and lay down on the
noor a1 ordered.
A bearing on Karen Fenn'• con-
troversial boatyard, tcbecll!ei before the
a.ta Mesa Plannlni Comm' I 11 lo n
lonight, bas been torpedoed by u Im·
pending title transfer.
Misa Fenn is abandonln~lp.
Tho Joi at ..,... . 4~.
lUll been the sUbjec\ ol 'a ; ' ,bl
colnmiJSion and dly ....di•..,.....
for"rhore tbarl a.year'llOW4 ! • .• •
'A!ZCl!e ~ (>O!IDK .1110!riq l1IO
yard to operate -with a trupk1n1
lermlnal lilarlng the loll indultrlal..._,
properly -wu or~aly granted on
tbe balk II ~ with !..,,. c:on-
diUOM. ' ..
City ~men .,_, U... 'lfOb
11•, lb1t Miu Fenn bu met -of
Ulen1. .. 1••11 In oplrlt . -. ~
llndl<IPinl cu't,"ba done, tor ...a,... ·~fe'm~iekl -but ·• nqa,111;t4.ft p,
Terms of lhe. permit forbade con--
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J DAILY PllOl c
Rumbling . ,
Avalanche
Kfits Four
SKYKOMISH, Wash. (UPI) -A
rure&liftl •••llincbe. cul a patch 11 wide
as a foolball field down a Cascade mow-..
talnolde la the pre<lawn darkn& SQn.
day, ldlllnc four members of families
who .had driven up for a weekend of
fun fn the IDQW.
Three bodle!! and all survivors WU.
pulled from a totally demolillhed t....,.
story cabin in the path of tbe slide..
A 12-year-old girl died in another cabtn
partially smashed by the snow.
It took a rescue crew more than
half a day to dig oot two teen-age
girls whose p.rents had been killed by
Ute avalanche. Several others had been
pulled out of the a.now and debriJ earlier
in the cloy.
';The whole mountain came down,"
aaid a hi&hway patrolman al the scene.
The avalinche smashed into the cabins
at the Yodelin ski area east of 4,06l·foot
Stevens Pass in the darkness shortly
after midnight. The pass is the northern
most crossing of the Cascades between
Seattle and the Columbia River in
Washington .
Warmin& temperatures had loosened tons cf snow clinging to the moun-
tainsides and numerous slides closed
several pasaes Sunday. The area was
covered with several feel of heavy new
snow which bad fallen in the past week.
Killed by the avalanche were Mr. and
Mrs. Bart Edgars ol Seatt.le, KeMeth
Lewis, 10, of Lynnwood, Wash., and
Peggy Dean, 12, of SeatUe.
The flrat three were in the large.r
cabin which was completely destroyed.
Trapped for 13 hours fn that wreckage
were the Edgars' daughten, Debbie, 19,
and Cindy, 14.
The girl.I were able to 1bout and
signal to men di&ging them out. They
were finally pulled from the wreckage
rihortly after noon and taken by
snowmobile and ambulance to Deacon·
ness Hospital ln Wenatchee where they
were examined and released.
Al!o in the cabin were Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Lewta, the parents of KeMeth,
and their other sons, Mark. 8, and
·Richard, 5. Mrs. Lewis and Mark were
truttd and releaaed from the hopsital .
Mr. Lewis and Richard were kept
overnlgbt in utiafactory condition.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Dean, the parents
of Peggy, escaped llljury in the other
cabin, an A-frame structure which had
tta upper bedroom destroyed.
F..-Pllffel
MANSON •••
8t lbe Polanlkj borne the night of tht
murders.
Leno LaBianca, 48, president alld chief
1tockbolder of the Gateway Supermar-
ket!.
.Rolemary LaBianca, 48. his wife, a
pretty dart-haired woman.
The 1layings took place the nights of
Aug. B-9-10, 1989, and at first police did
not connect them despite the scrawlina ol
the word "pig' 'in blood at both homes.
MllllOll and bis "family " moved from
the Spahn Rarteh, an old Western movie
lot on I.ht outakirta of Los Angeles, sev·
eral weeks alter the murders to Goler
Wash in Death Valley wher e they set up
.another commune with lookouts and field
telephones.
Slick Mesa Bandits
Make Off With TV
A Costa Mesa man who dropped off
bis televi sion &et lo be repaired may
get. a brand new one, police said today.
One customer at Kenn R i m a
HardwaTl!, 2666 Harbor Blvd .. kept a
clerk busy while an acaimplice sauntered
out with the $240 port.able color 1et
Saturday.
l
DAILY PILOT
OUMM COAST f'IUMJIHIMG CXIMl"ANY
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Banking on It
A Chicago firm hopes to cash in on uproar created when large amounts
of cash stuffed into shoe boxes were found among personal possessions
of the late Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell. The firm is market-
ing this savings bank shaped like a shoe box and decorated in "money
green." It offers the possibility of "banking at any hour and is easily
hidden in a closet," acc'!rding to the manufacturer.
Truman Improving; Still
Listed as Fair, However
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Former
President Harry S. Truman's doctors
said today hi s appetite is Improving
and that Sunday was hls "be 1 t day''
since entering Research Hospital with.
an inflamed intestine.
Truman's coad.ition was deacribed as
fair.
Dr. Wallace H. Graham, personal
phyaician for the ~yeaN>ld former
President, issued tht followin1 atatement
today :
"Yesteorday wall his best da y, Hls ap-
petite ill improving. He had a quiet
night. ije was taken to the radiology
deptrtment for the scheduled lower in·
t.Mtinal eami:natiom.
Truma.n'a wife Beu. U, returned lo
the hospital eai:ly today to be with
her husband. She wu accompanied by
Mike Weatwood , Truman 's chauffeur and
bodyguanl .
The former Preaident'!I aliment wu
diagnosed Saturday as ailitis, or in·
fiamation· of the large intestine
The rqedlcal bulletln releued by the
hospital Sunday night said Truman "was
placed on a special liquid diet for his
Sunday evening meal in preparation for
lower gastrG-inte!tinal tesl!I" today.
"'He feels much Jtr()nger," the state-
ment said.
The hospital spokesman said Sunday
was "a quiet day" for Truman. •
In the morning he "drank some btrt·
termilk and read the newspaper. For
lunch he had some chicken, jello, tomato
soup and milk ."
He got out of bed twice Sunday and
during the af ternoon "he dozed and chat-
ted with Mrs. Truman," the spokesman
6aid .
Truman 's personal physician , Or.
Wallace H. Graham , sa id Truman 's con·
dition wa!I listed as "fair" because of
the "resu lts of the te sts available at
present, lack of appetite. and a re!ltless
nigh t."
His condition wa!I listed as "good"
from the time he was admitted to the
hospital Thursday until Graham'!! state·
ment Sunday.
John P. Dreves. s spokesman for the
hospital, said "fair" meant "the patient 's
Costa Mesa CofC
Sets Lunch Talk
Costa Mesa Olamber ()f Commerce
members will hear • talk Thursday
by a ma n none of them otherwise are
likely to meet professionally.
Ervan Hontz i.!I social service. director
of the Orange County Department Of
Welfare's Harbor headquarters, located
on the fourth noor of Costa Mesa City
Hall.
Reservations for the luncheon al the
Temple Gardens Ch inese restaurant, 1500
Adam!! Ave ., may be made by sending
$2.SO per penon to Chamber of Com·
merce headquarters.
"Welf•re or Fare Well?" ls the name
ol Hontz' <all!.
Mrs. Brintnall
Services Slated
Police called by a rtlattve •ho couldn't
reAdf an ~yur-old Coat.a Mesa woman
by telepbono -her dud In her
btd-Y·
Funeral attvlcn for Mrs. Margaret
E. Br!nblall, S2. ol 292 E. lath SL,
will be htld on Tuesday and Wednadly
ti .St. J-blm'a Cathollc Cl>Jn:h.
Reary will be Tuesday at 1 p.m ..
with Requ.iem M.u W8dnelday at 9
a.m. , acMI int.erment ln Holy Sepul cbe.r
Ceme\arf wltti Ben Broadway Mortuary
directing.
vital lips are st.able and within normaJ
lim.ita. The patient II cooaciOWI. He ls
not comfortable or may bave aome com·
plication!. His recovery is anticipated."
Drevea said the changing of Truman'!!
condition report from "1ood" to ''fair"'
was no call5t: for alarm.
Illness Causes
Another Delay
In Rape Case
A oat-week cklay wu ordered today
in I.be rape-kJdnap trial ef Gary Harold
Phoenix to allow the Costa Meaan'•
defelise lawyer to fUlly recover from
a prolonged attack of Asian nu.
Otange County Superior Court Judge
Wi!Uam Murray sent the jury borne
until Feb. 1. It is e1pected that deputy
public defender Roderick Riccardi, weak
and pale today from bis bout with the
lnfectlon, will then open his defen se
of Phoenix.
The prosecution bas rested its case
in the frequently delayed, illness·plagued
trial. It will ask for the death penalty
if the jury finds Phoenix, 29, guilty
of the major charges in 3J felony ccount.s
filed against him.
Nine alleged women victirm have
testified against Phoenix. He is accused
of rape, assault with intent to e<>mm.it
rape, k.idnaping, robbery and 5exual
perversion.
From Pqe l
GROPPI • • •
constituUonal.
-Agreed to hear the case of an Illlnols
falher denied custody cf his two children
because he never Jegally married their
mother.
Father Groppi, a white priest who
thrust himself into the civil rights move-
ment. claimed be could not receive a
fair trial in Milwaukee County because
of "a potential ror prejudice" among
prospective jurors sUm.mlng from his
.actlviUes .
The Wlscon&in Supreme Court, in a
splU decillion, ruled a change of venUfl
was impermissible under state law
because resisting arrest is classified 11
a misdemeanor.
ln reversing this decision, the U.S.
Supreme Court said a defendant is en·
titled to consideration of a change or
venue motion however the crime Is
clas!lfied. The fair administration of
criminal justice requires protection
against prejudicial publicity, !laid Justice
PotU!r Stewart.
The case now goes back to a state
court in Milwaukee. If Father Groppl
demonstrate!! prejudice agalnst him In
the county, lbe convictioo ii diead and
the s<ate h" the choice ol lrJlng to
try him again or dilm~ine the char1e.
However, U tbe priest does not con·
vlnct • judge be could not aet • fair
trial in Milwaukee County, tbe conviction
may be reinstated.
Justice Huao L. Black dlaeated. He
uld that since a dtfudant always can
move for a new trill on lhl bula
of prejudJce tbtre ls no need to eatablish
the right to a change or venue ln a
misdemeanor Cate.
Qief Ju1ttce Warren E. Burier and
Ju.st.ice Harry A. Blackmun reklctanllJ
voted wilh the majority. They u.Jd tn
an opinion by Blackmun tblt the calfi
was "rather unimportant" but tbat I.ht
trial Judie should not tiave barred a
move for 1 chant• of venue almply
because •. mbdemeanor was Involved.
•
Pot Sweep Nets · Six
Newport Police Seize Half Ton of Marijua11a
Nroport 8-b police, -ldnc With
State Narcotica investigator• and two Oran&• County law enforcement agen·
dea, telJled 1,000 pound!! of marijuana
Sunday.
Six peraons were arrested in a weekend
sweep lhilt culmlnated a three-month
Investigation. Police said the !IUSpectl
are accused of a serie.s of narcotics
vlolatlom ranging from possession of
cocaine and daDferous drugs to sale
of marijuana.
Two of the suspects -Victor Venega!I
Lee, 20, of 1&7 Emerald Bay, and Tadashi
T. NUatluk.a, 29, of 81 Bobbie Circle,
Huntington Beach -are wanted, pol.kt
uid, in connection with the October
ra id of a Modjeska Canyon homt.
The Modjeska Canyon raid re1ulted
in the arrest of 45 persons on varlOUJ
drug charge!!.
Newporl Beach narcolics detective l...e()
Konkel said the investigation on tbis
wee.i.end's cue was beaun as a rtNlt
of the Modjeaka Canyon investigation.
The marijuana, which PS>lice valued
at about m:.~ on the Illicit drua
market, was seized in TUsttn. PoUce
Apollo 14 Astronauts
Begin Counting Today
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The
countdown began today for Sunday's
launch of the three Apollo 14 astronauts
on the most difficult and costly lunar
landing mission yet.
The long countdown started promplly
at 6 a.m. while Alan B. Shepard, Stuart
A. Roosa and F.dgar D. Mitchell were
Jn the doctor 's office seeking med ical
clearance in their final major prenight
physical examination!!. , "We're in good shape," reported a
space agency official as engineers began
work at the oceanside launch pad. Much
of today's activity was devoted to elec-
trical checks of the lunar landing craft
and installation of starters for the
booster rocket's engines.
The countdown includes 102 hours of
scheduled tasks and five rest periods
totaling 48 hours.
The three a!ltronauts and their backup
pilot.s have been living Jn isolation at
the Kennedy space center for two weeks
to minimize their chances of falling
Ill before or durlng the $400 million,
nine-Oay expedition.
Backup commander Eugene A. Cernan
unintentionally violated the u n i q u e
quarantine Saturday when his ffamlng
helicopter crashed in a nearby river.
He was exposed lo several re!lcuers
before returning to th~ cape.
Officirib reported all other aspect.
of preparatioo for the mission were
going well. Ezcitement mounted around
the moonport and newsmen, contractor
repre!lentative!I and touri!ts flowed inlo
the area .
Part of the excitement wu generated
by two communications 1atellite shots.
One ill the new Intelsat 4 commercial
craft set for launch tonight after three
successive 2.f.hour delays call!led by
strong high altitude winds. The other
is a smaller military !latellite &et for
launch Wednesday.
Shepard , 47, dean of the astronauts, and
rookie space pilots Roosa . 37, and Mitch·
ell , 40, began the final week well rested
and with more training aPld preparation
than any moon crew before them.
They relaxed in their comfortable
quarters Saturday and then Roosa and
Mitchell took advantage of pleasant
weather to go flying in Jet trainers.
Roosa la ter went fishing and produced
a good catch of sheepshead and trout.
But Shepard stayed behind and studi ed
a sta ck of flight plans and other
documenl!I. It will be his first spaceflight
!lince his pioneering !:>-minute Mercury
hop nearly JO years ago. and he admits
he ha s worll;ed unusually hard to ge.t
ready.
"It has been tough, It's been difficuH,"
he said in an interview just before
beg inning the health quarantine. "T
pre si;ed pretty hard in the interest of
being pretty sure that I was as ready
to go as I aiuld be."
The miss ion of Apollo 14 ls c9stin~
the U.S. government $25 million more
than April'!! ill.rated 13 moon fligh t.
January
Most , of the extra cost comes from
additional operaUon expenses due to the
longer intervals between launchings.
Not only is Apollo 14 more exptnsive,
but Shepard considers it the most dif·
ficult landing yet attempted . And he
expec ts it will be the most productive.
The landings of Apollos 11 and 12
in 1969 were made on relatively easy·tf>.
reach flatland s, but Apollo 14 ill targeted
for a lunar v.111ley picked solely because
of il!I great interest to scientists.
Court Rules IRS
Free to Subpoena
Firms' Records
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Supreme
Court ruled today that the lntemal
Revenue Service is free to subpoena
an employer's records In investigating
criminal liability of individual taxpayers.
The court unanimously rejected a
Florida circus worker's claim that
employe!I are entitled to challenge any
&uch 1ubpoena, with full adversary hear·
in gs.
Had the cour t ruled otherw ise., il might
ha ve been possible in such cases for
pusons to delay lax probe!! for up lo
two years merely over the issue of
IRS summonSe!I .
However, the opinion written by Justice
Harry A. Blackmun held that "an
Internal Re.venue summons may be
issued in aid of an investiaation ... and
prior to a reaimmendaUon for criminal
prosecution " without right o f in-
tervention.
The pe tition to the court, brought by
Kevin Donaldson, h.ed aintended that
the IRS was not authorized to examine
his employer's records, except solely
for the purposes of determining the cor-
rectness of hi!! tax return or tues owed.
Donaldson claimed the IRS move was
aimed instead at potential criminal ac·
tion against him. He argued thet was
nol authorized under laws governing the
IRS, and that he aiuJd rightfully
challenge the subpoena.
Both a U.S. District Court al Tampa,
Fla., and the U.S. Circuit Court in New
Orleans held. however , that Donaldson
had "no proprieLary interest'' in the
records ol the employer, the. Acme Circus
Operat ing Co., In c .. and the hi gh court
agreed •,1;ith the lower rulings.
Bearded Tribe Found
BRASILIA, Brazil (UPI ) -The Na·
lions! Indian Foundation said Sunday
a white-skinned, red·bearded tribe of '
Ind ians has been found Jn the middle
of the Amazon Jungle.
'
aaki Robert J1me1 Hasler, 14. of Santa
Ana was arrested Sunday night with
about . 100 pounds of the weed in hi!!
possession. Konkel said a subsequent
investiSiation turned up the addl~ionaJ
too poonda.
"We don't know for sure where )t
comes from or how it gets here," he
said, but noted it was packed in boxes
bearing Mexican government at.amps.
Detectives were unclear as to the
significance of the stamp.
"I'd say itis commercla.J grade Mex-
ican marijuana." Konkel aaid.
Jn .addition to Lee, Nakauuka and
Hosler, the following suspect.!! were ar-
rested:
Cheryl Suzanne Lee (unrelated to Vic-
tor Lee), 24, of 1 97~ Sherington Place ,
Newport Beach, for possession of co-
caine.
Gerald John Gillim, 24, of 1060 Flamln-
lllO Road, ~gttna Beacti, for po&ael!llon
of cocaine.
David MiChae.l Talia, 24. of 202i,i, i2nd
St., Newport Beach, for sale of mari·
Juana.
Konkel said Mills Lee -who was
arres:ted with Nakabuka -and Gillim
-who was arrested with Victor Lee
-are not swpects in the marijuana
ring.
Aiding the Newport investigators In
the cast were the State Bureau (If
Narcotics investigators and investigators
from the Tustin police department and
the Orange County District Attorney's
office. ·
Ft-o• Pqe I
PEYTON ...
area one.
Trustee area one ill located in the
northwestern portion of Costa Mesa, wnt
of Harbor Boulevard to the Santa Ana
·River and north of Fairview Slate
Hospital to Hunt.zinger Avenue.
Mrs. Bergeson represents tru stee area
thret in&luding homes in the area bound-
ed by Newport Boulevard, Palisade!'!
Road, Ma cArthur Boulevard , Pacific
Coast Highway, Dov er Drive, Irvine
Avenue and 21st Street where it In-
tersects at Newport Boulevard . The area
includes porlions of both Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach and homes on both
aides of the Back Bay ..
Franklin's trustee area -six - also
Includes porti ons of the two cities. JUI
boundary coincides with Mrs. Bergeson'•
along 21st Street, Irvine Avenue and
Dover Drive to Pacific Coast Highway,
but inc ludes the area west of these
streets to Newport Boulevard.
Deadline for candid& filing for the
April 20 election is Feb. 25. The Orange
County Department of Education is
handling election details. Filing paper1
for candidates are available from the
district office or from the office of
Robert Matthew director of ad·
ministrative services for the county
1chools office.
Civil Defense
Class to Start
An eight-week class in Civil Defense
and ~d Cros s medical self·help techni·
ques will be taught al the Cos ta Mesa
Police Facility beginning next Tuesday.
Time is 7:311 p.m., and enrollees need
on ly atte nd the first session to register,
acairding to Tom Knight. assistant civil
defense director.
The. series of 2Yz hou r programs wil1
teach everything from emergency suvh·al
to sopttislicated medical care and even
childbirth procedures.
Red Cross and CO au1 horities recom-
mend that at Jea!lt one person in eacn
family complete lhe course 11s a
safeguard in case of na tural disaster
or national crisis.
. COME IN AND ASK FOR CLEAJtANCE PRICES1
ON THE ITEMS OF YOUR CHOl~E -IT'S FUN!
DIAMONDS GUITARS
Always at Wholesale Prices I LADIES .97 c;T.
SOUTA•E
DIAMOND RING
SET IN 14K GOLD '
O•IY'S99°'
Gutrantoo.i to ApprtlM 50% Hlghtr Than Who! You Pay.
PHpl• in the kriow •••• rnon1y ••try tim• they buy......ff' I• nof
•••Y to buy lw cash, but ii you hav• c•sh, lenkAmericerd, or
Me1t•r O.er;• you cen ••"• frtmsnclou1 emounh on everythlPlt
IYtry dey,
'
$21.50 VALUE
NOW ~1250
Muat Set To ApprKlat.
All Wood Gu1r1nteed
YISIT OUI SOUND IOOM
POI NIW r. UllD STDIO
IAl•AINl-IT'I THI HAIPIHIN5 THIN•
COSTA MESA JEWILRY and LOAN
1131 NEWPORT ILVD. ,HONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MW ---' ..... .,
WE LOAN IUY • SELL Ir TRADI ALMOST MRYTHING
I
r
r
•
.. -
VOL. M, NO. 21 , 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE (,'lOUNlY,,~:A&fb MONDA 1', 'JANU)<llY'' 25, 197 r JEN CENTS
' . -·.
School Days, Circa ltll3, Recalle.d in El Toro
By PAMELA HALLAN
ot Ille Deity 1'1111 ll•ft
A weathered merry-go-round, bent
from use and the burden of neglect
still lies in the weeds of the old El
Toro School yard.
But it won 't be there much tonger.
Trustees of the. San Joaquin Elemen-
tary School District are going to sell
the school site to the highest bidder
on March S.
At least one person in El Toro will
be sad to see it go, a . man who
remembers is as 11 new school in 1913.
"I had just graduated from the first
El Toro School when that ane opened
in 1913," said Raymond H. Prothero
SL
'The first school had one room and
poW:iellled wood stove · for heat. The
··new" one had two rooms, was made
of brick, and had a red tile roof and
a beUfry. .
"At first its rooms were heated by
wood-burning stoves but later It bad
butane furnaces," Prothero recalled.
The "new" school lost its fancy roof
and its belllry ln the 30's after an
earthquake.
"I was on the school board then,"
Manson, Girls
All Ruled Guilty
l
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles Man-
son and three \vomen members of his
hJppieostyle clan were convicted today of
first degree murder and conspiracy in
the savage slaying5 of actress Sharon
Tate and six others. ·
Manson was the only defendant to
speak out. After the jury was polled he
Bhouted to the ·judge: .. We're still not
allowed to put on a defense. You won't
!'·". -----------. ,.A' • :.: .. ;~·.
Down the
Mission
Trail
Parkway Link
Completion Near
MISSION VIEJO -Scheduled for com-
pletion by Feb. 1, is the Marguerite
portion of Mission Viejo wi th its southern
portion.
It will no longer be necessary to use
San Diego Freeway to get from one
end of the 16,000 acre community to
the other.
The final link will connect Oso
Parkway to Avery Parkway and run
east of ~1 ission Ridge Homes and the
golf course. .
Dedication .in a formal ceremony will
take place in February.
e Denll Claim
EAST IRVINE -Trustees of the San
Joaquin Elementary School District have
voted to deny a claim submitted by
Richard Frederick of El Toro for
1500,000,
The claim was made on behalf of
Joline Frederick, a first grader at Aliso
School, who allegedly fell fron:i a ladder
climber on lhe playground ln1urlng her
shoulder.
'I'he board voted to refer the claim
to ii& Insurance underwriter, denying
any claim of negligence.
e Post OHWe Slatell
MISSION VIEJO -C«lstructlon of
R post office branch in Mission Viejo
will begin in the spring .
The 169,000 square foot facililY, miw
under design, will be located on the
southwest corner of Marguerite and
Avery Parkways.
The interior of the. building will be
39,814 square feet with a loading platform
8pace of 2,HIO square feet. A parking and
maneuvering area of 46,000 1quare feet
ls al!O planned.
e El T-Trdk
EL-TORO -County repre1eutalive1
wi II be on hand t.o dllCUll iuuea im-
portant to the El Toro area at the
tuelday meeling of the Aliso Valley
lforrteowners' AssociatJon.
The meeting will take place at 7: JS
p.m. at Aliso School In El Toro.
l55UCS to be dJSCUSled include the
1tatOs of join: commtrcial and mllltary
use of El Toro MCAS, the ptt9er'Vltion
ltlf lower population deMity and the
nuilntenance of zone restrlcllon1 ln El
Toro area, and how the commwitty'1
eoall can be brought 10 tho C01111t,'1
A:.tentlon.
outlive that old man." The women sa t
quietly.
The jury of seven men and live women
had deliberated 42 houn: and 40 min..
ute.s since receiving the case Jan_ 15
after a seven-month trial.
Five persons were slain in lhe home of
the actress the night of Aug. M and on
the following night wealthy grocer Leno
LaB~ and his wife. Rosemary ••re
llaiajn.~1---;ijlll.~. \&hoHt1 At WRtt;~ ll!lf'W fttp.
pie band moved out of 1he old Spahn
Ranch in tbe San F•maido Valley. They
had been atayln 1t the old time movie
ranch for sever1l months.
The "family" moved to a remote desert.
area £riging California's Death Valley
and set up quarters in a deserted ranch
house.
In Oclober of tha t year Manson and
some 30 of his group were rounded up on
charges or automobile theft, not murder.
They had been stealing and reconverting
automobiles into dune buggies for desert
travel in their forsys for food .
The murder cases broke in December
..,hen Susan Atkins was being held in a
Los Angeles jail told cellm.&tes a~t the
slayings and ~ grand jury retlll'1ed ln·
dictments shortly thereafter. Miss Atkins
testified before that panel but later re-
canted.
Cl1amher Seeking
Groups to Take
Parade Duties
San Clemente's Chamber of Commerce
has taken the first step in the gradual
phasing out of its role in the. huge
Fiesta la Christianlta parade with an
attempt to moblliu local community
gr'9Ups to pitch in with the work.
Following through with preliminary
plans made public earlier this month
to chamber di rectors, the chamber will
seek active participation from represen-
tatives of service organizations, who
eventually would lake over the enUre
artivlty. An inaugural meeting will be
set soon.
An increasing burden on chamber
employes and volunteers from the board
of directors hu promoted tbe plana
to sblft the duties for the parade, one
of thi, ttate's largest.
ouUnber manager Robert Evans said
this year's proceuion h o n o r i n I
California's first Chrilti1n blpUsm will
be held on July 17.
Robert Garmon, a directOr and he.ad
of the chamber's ad-hoc commi~ &eek·
ing alternatives to the par~de operation,
said the ·community-wide fiesta" lllDCI•·
lion would ease into tbe work on the
activity. Ulllmateb<, he added, the entire
job would ... -lnlo -*" banda anc11n1o dill•-quarten. I Ourigc the, WeOU of plaMing for the
..,..it; the !'"Y' d>am6et Olfti!io. llml' beiiiiM crllliped, with· malerio1a and
crowded wlih volunteers virtually brlal·
tnc other chlmber bustnesa to 1 1tand-
atlll. '
Evant polnted out that the lllOCiaUon
concept of pairlde organliltion ll not
new Io tho South Coast.
"II bu proved llilhly ·..-lllfld In
san Juan Clp\slmlo The llllllUll Fiesta
de lu Golondrinu bu reoched ·new
bei,hU of """"" In •.-nt ,..,,,
lhrouch the «1111blned eflorU lad .. .-Of_,_ .... dtillm,
wkilc tocetber ~·-• ,... ,,_.. AuoclaUon," he Aid.
.....
aald Prothero, "And loll of _.. -..
worried about tbe we!pt· OD I ~('~'
even though It stood tl!l"OD&ll· ~'.l"i>d
ahake we bad."
So the roof wu lltered. on tbe' ICbool
board's oroen and '~-~-· chlldren in El Toro . -ms. lroav ... ,.,.
away as Trabuco' unlll UM -the school WU closed • ~ .J
"II hid ooldonr pblDlbjDl'"ood . .lo •the '
'30s a third room wu ldded to the
back ," said Prothero. "Clitldrln,•lllm1f
to school Of' rode. bteydes. 1We wu
DO buasine: then." ) '.
Prothero, -cliil<nn ....at•tbroulh
,, ' " ' .
'"•
struction and children were ·ltl'lt aa a
tii111on • baliS to the ,'1rv111e SChool 1n ~ San :1'l'!l¥in Oistflc\, ; .
Jn 1961 the El Toro District merged
with the San Joaquin District and tn
1968 lhe prope;rty.waa "1ld t.o a.churc;h.
"But there, was a quesUqn about ~e
UUe so the churtn withdrew," said San
Joaquin Superintendent Ralph Gates.
"I t apparently bad . three dllferent
de<ds golll811acll·Io18'J,.all hllold wrltttn
and with ~ dltfereut• lig~. ~lpUo~
But tbe title has·· been researched and
cleanid lad the ""1ool can qaln be
..
· Dil.ILY•PfLO'r .........
RAIN OR SHUii, PEGGY WILL SWIM MORI THAN 30 MILIS; EACH WEEK
Shown Working Out, tho Dono, Point. 01(.l Noocll to Shive Two -.ti for Notlonill1
Stroking•~ S·tardom?
Dana Point Coed Training for AAU Swimming Berth
,
\
90Jd,"-he added.
The achoo\ dlltr!cl la aaltlnf •
minimum bid of '60,000 for the 21h
acre site. The hJghest blddeir will be
required to P8)' 10 percent down IDd
the balance in \Ml days.
"Bids will lie opened Mardi I durlnl
the board meeting," said Res NeH.m.
Assi.1tant Superintendent for BmineU
Services. "But anyone wlahiq to. make
an oral bk1 · will be welcome ifter tbe
written bids are read."
The funds received will be appUed
to other district construction projecta.
Clementean
Fights foi;
Her Life
A San Clemente girl II Jn aertous
condition today at Hoag Meinorial
Hospital after the was shot SaturdQ
night trying to escape from a wouldobe
lddnaptr,
~ollce said SUlon s,oct«, II, 'of Ziii La, Poloma waa thoC 11 pOint blank
ranae tn the left aide .. w 1ttemptal
to jump frOm her •bdUctor'I car at
lbe .Jnterse<llon of Eat COeit Jllpny
ind Newport Center Ori,..
fbvestigatora 1&ld the young woman
Jett San Clemente . Saturdly alternoon
to drive kl Newport to villt her boyfriend..
She told them her car broke down
en Coast Highway In South Laguna,
10 she started hitchhiking.
Police said she was picked up by
a middle-aged man, heavy set Ind of
medium he.l&ht driving a new model,
dark sedln.
~ the car approachfd Newport Center
Drive; the IUlpecl pulled • pn on Miii
Spector and told her 1lle '""'1d have
to come with him, detedlve Sam
AniburJ!ey 11\d.
"At thi! point, he started to tum
onto Newport C.enter Drive and she
started to jump out of the car, ..
Amburgey saJd . "The 1uspect fired 1t
her point blsnk."
The detective said the Impact of the
shot drove MW Spector out of the car.
and the suspect sped off.
Witnesses to the shooting stopped to
aid the victim. but did not punue the
suspect. he added.
Police have not betn able to identity
the gun used in the shooting beCluae
no slug was found , Amburgey aald.
Post-party 'Chariot'
BRISTOL, Pa. (UPI) -Three
IOO'ltwhat inebriated loelts decided to
leave a wedding reception at a fire
house in this PbUadeJphi1 aubuib for
• ride In lhe cold night air. 'niey
depamd In 1 "18.000 fire enline.
'lbe fire engine _Jid,erwlped at · teut
30 can In the !Int : two bloclll of Ibo
Jo.block joyride 8alunlay night, poUce
Hid.
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Z DAILY PILOl SC
Fraud Can Trick All
Sham Outfiu on Rise, Says Official
-.,LUllU--or ""' _,,, ,_ ....,
"He's just as much a crook as ii
be pul • aun in your back," warns
Or-. ODuaty Deputy District Attorney
Walter Mattbews, talking about a
fraudralmt operator masquerading as a
legitimate busine&s firm.
Matthew~ wbo speaks l.G cil.Uai group&.
about dangers of bunco salesmen, Al.id
he onee &bollsbt only stupid people tall
for .mm.es offllring them free gift&,
bargakl purcbaes and quick riches .
"lt's oot true,'' he told San Clemente
Soroptimisti and Rolariaru recently, "It
happens to lntelllgent peop1e, to rich,
poor, young and old people."
The buic' problem aeem.s to be. that
tt ii becnmirw Inc:re.ain&IY lDCft diff)CU)t
to ........... Ille ......... '""" the phony. .
Fraud ... , JUI! -....s.y, -,...,._ .. ,.,,_ -. notood
services such as Alety cbecU of
furnaces, oillnt of roofJ and cleanln&
of vacuum cleaners, he aald.
· Currently, Orange County ls Oooded
with scam agencies. "Some of the1e
outfits have offices all over the country,"
notes Mattbewl, "and they U!Ulilly beloo&
to the Beller ~-Buruu."
Wben a IOOlled Hollywood castirlg
agency advertises, ;'extras n~ed", it
is likely selling 1 promotion 5ervice
or a trainine courae..
M:aubew1 tap as mo.st SUICtptible
lo the talent scout pttch, "motben who
hope lo place their chUdttn in moviea:
tit .,,,..,~ ...
lilltlbeft ..,~ ''II lbt. qincy offtn
to 1111 ,..,. u·1 JeaitliUte, u u ..a
you for mcmey, lt'1 no pod."
He relates details of one operation
In which a theatrical agency ia extracting
'859 per child from parents hopeful of
''breaking into the movies." The contract
training seldom resulll in acting offers.
The em ployment ac:e.ney also i.I a
lucrative Jield for bunco.
One auch firm offers job opportunities
overseas. The applicant is faced with
the bright prosped of e n t i c in g
employment. but be lacks a proper
resume and photograph for hiJ prospec-
1..ive employers.
Police Seize Countian
For $186 th e agency prepare& lhe
resume and sends copies of it all over
the world to firms which do not solicit
nor welcome them.
An Orange County school of law en-
forcement operated 1imllarly, em-acting
money from young men who hoped to
prepare themselves for _police joba.
In $1 Millwn Pot Haul A trap which often catches young wives
Is the sewing machine or vacuum cleaner
scheme in which tremendous price-cutll
are offered.
Teams of lawmen literally followed
their noses lo a light plane tha t reeked
of marijuana Saturday ni&ht in Van
Nuys, arresting a Garden Grove man.
two others and seizing $1 million worth
of the illicit weed.
Smuggling suspects Kenneth Macklin,
24 , Thomu Hester, 23, and Kenneth
Ingber, Zl. were booked on suspicion
of possession of marijuana for sale.
Macklin, of 10276 Woodbury Road. and
Accused Cany on
Slaying Suspect
Arraignment Set
A man accussed in the sJaying of
a 4&-year-old widow whose nude body
was found in a brush-chocked Modjesk·a
Canyon ravine was aJTaigned on murder
charges this afternoon In Santa Ana
Municipal Court.
Glen Dale Ferguson, 36, of Lakewood,
wu charged with the killing of Zelma
Raebel Wilge!'lltein of Norwalk in a
district attorney '• complaint during the
weekend. He ii held in Ora.nae County
loll without bail.
FerguJOn was ~sted Friday alter
1 lb:~y lnv•Ur;1Uon into the slayine
of Mn. Wltge.nateln wboae body WIS
found by bibrl last Jan. 16. lnvestigat.on
r;aid htr clotbiag bad been torn from
her body and scattered around the area.
The unemployed heavy equipment
operator wu arrested Jn Artesia near
the site at which Mn. Wilgemt.ein was
last seen alive Jan. 14.
Panel Schedules
Talk on Ecology
Errvirorunenlal ind ecologjcal con-
ditions u they relate to open spa~.
urban planning, pollution, population and
natural re.sources wlll be discussed by
iix Lquna speakers Tuesday evening.
The forum, titled, "A Mosaic of
Environmental Problems." is sponsored
by the Laguna Beach Coord inating Coun·
cil and will be held in city hall council
chambers al 7:30 p.m.
Speakers wiU be Indy Brewer, presi·
dent of the Laguna Beach High School
Conservation Club : Anthony
Demelriades, president of the Laguna
Beach Civic League, James Dilley, pr~i·
dent of the Laguna Beach Greenbelt
Inc.: Roy Holm, Laguna Beach city
councilman; Mrs. Luisa Hyun, chairman
of Pro-environment People (PEP): and
Dr. Phili p Runde]. UC Irvine en·
viron ment."11.sL
DAILY PILOT
N..,.n ....
L.t-• '""
................ -·-C..N MIM S. (' IS
OiltAHGE COAST "UlllSHINI CCIM"AJIY'
Ro'D•rf N. w .. 1 ,, .. ~ ... , .................
J•cli 'R. Cirrley
Vk• ..,..!Oftll •r.CI 0.-•I Mlo1W11r
1'110111•1 k•wll E~llw
'""''' A. lil wrphlM M~lnil Edl1w
fticll•rlll P. ff•ll
IOlll~ Or•tlff Qur\rr Edlltr -t•I• -.: m WW..., I""" l'f.wpor1 ... c11: n u W•t a.-. ....,11\tsl'll •
U$l,ll'lll a.dli m ,..,.,.. """"w M1111t11111111 e..t~; 17171 affdl lou1tv1 ...
"'" Clt!MMt: a5 HN11\ 11 c.mkll! 11 .. 1
bis suspected accomplices drove up to
the heavily loaded aircraft in a station
wagon to fipd police and U.S. Cwtorrui
agent.I waiting.
Ingber is a resident of lnverneS8, while
Hester lives in the Marin County com·
munity of Corte Madera.
Investigators said the plane was stuffed
with l60 pounds of freahly harvuted
Mexican marijuana packed in duffelbags.
They were tipped off by a 1u.spicious
operator at Agua Dulce Airport in
Saugus.
He said the trio landed Saturday and
began unloading the suspicious bags, so
he told them he wanted nothln1 to do
with them and demanded they leave.
Re-IOlding the •mall. slnglwqlne
plane, they toolr off.
NoUfylng tu1totn1 agents, the airport
operator led them to check Van Nuys
Municipal Airport oo the likely chance
that was the IU!pects' JeCOnd destinaUon.
They found the plane parked on the
apron with no one around.
"You could amell it 20 feet away,''
remarked one investigator.
Macklin, Helter and Ingber 1rrived
shortly thereafter in a r«tted station
wagon and were advlaed of their ri&hta
and placed under arreat on the federal
charges.
The men were acheduled to ao before
a U.S. commisaioner in federal court
in Los Angeles todly, for arralgnme11t
and aeltlnll of bail.
Family Doctors
Resuming UCI
Refresher Clnss
Two hundred family doclors today
began the second week of a UC Irvine
College of Medicine relreaher course 1t
lJle Newporter lnn, Newport Beach.
By week 's end, a total of 400 doctors
will have studied the lat.est advances
in diagnosis and patient care under the
program involving all of the UCI medical
college faculty.
"There are only five programs of this
type in the nation," Dr. Robert E. Rakel.
program chairman said. "Registrants
represent almost every state, including
Alaska and Hawaii."
~1ost doctors taking the refresher
course are preparing for the certification
examination of the American Board of
Family Practice. Family practice is the
newest medical specialty recognized by
the American Medical Association.
The rigors of the refresher courae
require physicians to attend daily lec-
tures from 8 a.m. to g p.m. "Electlve"
courses are presented from 8 p.m. to
10 p.m.
Thi& is UCI's second year for providing
such training.
The bargain is given "only to contest
winners," but it's really no bargain, and
the "winners" are any suckers who will
fall for the .acbema," Matthews said.
Or, the salesman may promise to
subtract bonus amounts from th e price
of teh purchase, for each machine sold
to fr iends or family recommended by
the buyer.
"This is basically a [raudulentJy illegal
operation," said Matthews. "People are
led to believe that their machine will
cost les:s if they provide referral sales."
One &uch pitch is aimed at older
persons who are unable to obtain regular
employment.
The ulesrnan cootract8 for weekly
paymenta on a knlttin& machine, and
offers a guaranteed market for all
garments produced according to the com·
pany'g 11pecifications.
The diligent knitters Invest their
money in machine, yams and weeks
of effort, but their work never quite
meets the "specifications."
What reaiurae do the victims have?
Very little, says Matthews, Small
crime& under $500 are not economically
worthwhile for attorntys to han~. yet
mlarepresentatioo involving more than
l20<l la grand theft.
'"Ibl.s is our job, lo prosecute," says
Matthews. "Sometimes we know an
operation is fraudulent, but we can't
even find the victiml."
For enmple, many Orange Coant1an1
hold bookinp on • beautiful 1hlp for
a round-tlJe..world cruise scheduled to
leave a W Angeles dock Feb . .U.
"We don't know wbo bought tickets,
but we know they'll be on that dock
Feb. 23 . . . One thing we do know;
there won't be a ship."
Matthews doesn't hold much hope for
clearing the fraud ~e -"Somebody
Is always thinking up a new one.''
Clementean Hit
By Car, Injured
A JS.year-old San Clemente man suf.
fered a leg fracture and other injurie11
early Sunday morning wh en he wu
hit by a car which rounded 11 comer
r;barply, police said.
Robert J. O'Hanlon of 709 B Calle
Puente, was struck as he walked near
lhe corner of El Camino Real and Calle
Granada .
The driver of the auto was Murry
F. Peeler, Jr., 24, of 201 Calle Seville,
Apartment A.
Police 1aJd the incident occurred
shortly before 2 a.m. The impact left
O'Hanlon sprawled in the gutter.
He waa taken to South Coast Com·
munlty Hoapltal for treatment. His con-
dition today wu described as satisfac-tory.
Laguna Student Will Join
Floating Campus Program
Paul Cailtia.nsm, nl of Mrs.
Evqellne Ca1itianlen ot. 1585 Vla
Conk" uguna Beach and Jobn a.ru.-
liaraen of Arcadia, hu been admitted
to the World Campus Anoet procr1m
of Chapman Collect for the comm,
semester 1t au.
ChrlsUanoen will join llOO oilier coll'tle
studenla reiir-ntlnc 1111 eolJops and
univeriltleo In maol of lbe IO Ital.
on Feb. I to i.-1 lbe BS Ryndam
In Los Anplel llorbor far • "'11dl'·YOYIP
to -In lbe ~ad Africa. Studonta carry anplar-'1
unit& wbile on h ._....,. campus.
They att.nd nplar "'-at IU
between -.. lbe -which ii equtppea wtth the c 1 a 1 1 r o o m • ,
lab<ntorlol, Ubr.,., ...ci1o, llltaler,
boobt«t and omc.. '* •• .., to the
educatlcGal .......... oa....i.
A!llore lbe aeadomlc ~ -tinuea wttb ~ neeardt projfds,
ad Held trlPI dlrectly related to oourse
-k. Ovemllht liometil)'J wllh 11111m ..
oti.n are arraJllOd, ·• an oodal """"" wilh loc:al llllf•• lilJ' -ta. Now In !ta lllUI yur, World Clampua
AODll 1' admlnlltartd by Cllapmon a>I·
lege, one of Catllorni1'1 oldMt Uber1l
..... --localad In Onnce. Calif.
ADMITTED TOl PllOORAM
P1ul Chrlatfanten
1
Beclnnln1 with the fill aematcr World
Campus Afloat will be conducted aboard
lht S.S. Soawist Uoivers1ty, formerly
the R.M.S. Queen Elizabeth.
Banking on It
A Chicago firm hopes to cash in on uproar created when large amounts
of cash stuffed into shoe boxes were found among personal possessions
of the late Illinois Secretary of Sta te Paul Powell. The firm is market·
ing this savings bank shaped like a shoe box and decorated in "money
green." It offers the possibility of •·banking at any hour and is easily
hidden in a closet," according to the manufacturer.
Apollo 14 Astronauts
Begin Counting Today
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Th•
countdown began today for Sunday's
launch of the three Apollo 14 astronauts
on the most difficult and costly lunar
landing mission yet.
The long countdown started promptly
at 6 a.m. while Alan B. Shepard. Stuart
A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell were
in the doctor's offi ce seeking medical
clearance in their final major preflight
physical examinations.
"We're in good shape," reported a
space agency official as engineers began
work at the oceanside launch pad. Much
of today's activity was devoted to elec.
trical checks of the lunar landing craft
and installation of starters for the
booster rocket's engine."!.
The countdown includes 102 hours of
scheduled tasks and five rest periods
totaling 48 hours.
The three astronauts and the ir backup
Family Injured
In Auto Crash
On Canyon Road
An Emerald Bay fam ily su1fered minor
lnjurie11 Friday evening after their auto
ran Into the rear of anothe r vehicle
al the Big Bend area of Laguna Canyon
Road.
The car, driven by Quinardo Rivera,
27, of 335 Emerald Ba y, was easlbound
when a we!tbound auto crossed the
center divider of the road . The Riv era
;iuto ran into the rea r of anot her vehi cJe.
driven by John Z4tney, 16. of Ynrba
Linda, as it s'Nerved to avoid a collision
\1•ith the oncoming auto.
Rivera, his wife, Aurora. 26. hi~ snn ,
~1arto. I. and bis mother, Flor a Rivcrfl ,
46, of 204 Cliff Drive , were all taken
to South Coast Community Hospital ,
v.·here they were treated for minor cul'!
and bruises and released . The four OC·
cupants of the other auto, all youths.
were not injured. Damage to both cars
was moderat.e.
January
pilots ha ve been living In lsolatio11 at
the Kennedy space ce nter for two weeks
lo minimize their chances of falling
ill before or during the $400 mi llion,
nine-day expedition.
Backup commander Eugene A. Cernan
unintentionally violated !he unique
quarantine Saturday when his flam ing
helicopter crashed in a nearby river.
He was ex.posed to several rescuers
before returning to tb e cape.
Officials reported all other aspects
of preparation for the mission were
going well. Excitement mounted around
the moonport and newsmen, contractor
representatives and tourists flowed into
the area .
Part of the excitement was generated
by two communications satellite shots.
One is the new Intelsat 4 commercial
craft set for launch tonight after three
successive 24-hour delays caused by
strong high altitude winds. The other
is a smaller military satellite set for
laun ch Wednesday .
Shepard, 47. dean of the astronauts, and
rookie space pilots Roosa, :n, and Mitch-
ell, 40, began I.he final week well rested
and with more tra ining and preparation
than any moon crew before them .
They relaxed in their comfortable
quarters Saturday and then Roosa and
Mitchell took advantage of pleasant
weather to go (lying in jet trainers.
Roosa later went fishing and produced
a good cat~h !>! sbee pshead and trout.
But Shepard stayed behind and studied
a slack of flight plans and other
documents . It will be his first spaceflight
si nce bis pioneering IS.minute Mercury
hop nearly 10 years ago, and he admits
he has \\'Orked unusuall y hard to get
ready.
"It has been tough, it's betn difficult,''
he said in an interview just before
beginning the health quarantine. "I
pressed pretty ha rd in the interest of
being pretty sure that I was as re ady
lo go as I could be ··
The miss ion of Apollo J~ is costing
the U.S. government $25 million more
than April 's ill-fated 13 moon flight.
~1ost of the extra cosl comes from
additional operation expenses due to lbe
longer intervals bet\\·ecn launchings,
Hai·ry Has
'Best Day'
Say Doctors
KANSl.S CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Former
President Harry S. Truman's doctors
said today his appetite is improving
and that Sunday was his "best da y"
since entering Research Hospital with
an inflamed intestine .
1'rwnan 'a condition was described as
fair.
Dr. Wallace H. Graham , personal
physician for the 86-year-old former
President, issued !he following statement
today :
''Yesterday was hi.s best day. His arr
petite is improving. He had a quiet
night. He was taken to the radiology
department for the scheduled lower in·
testinal examinations.
'fruman's wife Bess, 85, returned to
the hospital early today to be with
her husband. She was accompanied by
Mike Wes~wood, Truman 's cha uf feur and
bodyguard.
The former President's aiJment was
diagnosed Saturday as colitis, or in·
flamation of the large intestine
The medical bulle:in released by tbe
J hospital Sunday night said Truman "was
placed on a special liquid diet for his
Sunday evening meal in preparation for
lower gastro-intestinal tests" today .
"He fee :s much stronger," the state-
ment said.
Tbe hospital spokesman said Sunday
wa s "a quiet day" for Truman .
in the morn ing he "drank so me but.
lermil k and read lhe newspaper. For
lunch he had some chicken , jello, tomato
soup and milk ."
He got out of bed twice ~unday and
during the afternoon "he dozed and chat·
ted with Mrs. Truman," the spokesman
said.
Truman's personal physician, Dr.
Wallace H. Graham, said Truman 's con·
dition was listed as "fair" because of
the "results of the tests available at
present, lack of appetite and a restless
night."
His condition was listed as ''good''
from I.he time he was admitted to the
hospital Thursday unlit Graham 's state·
menl Sunday .
John P. Drevcs. a spokesman for the
hospilal, said "fair" mean! "the patient's
vital signs are stable and within oorm al
limits. The patient is conscious. He is
not comfortable or may have some com-
plications. His recovery Is anticipated."
Patriotic Club
Slates Ceremony
The Balboa Patriotic Club will conduct
a fl ag Ci!remony Tuesday at 4;30 p.m.
to commemorate the iss uance of a new
U.S. postage stamp honoring Gen.
Douglas MacArthur.
The ceremony will lake place at a
flagpole in a parking lot at 505 W.
Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach, ac cnrding
to Rem Fl.':ly, a representative of 1he club.
Ray said the organization is al so plan-
ning to participate in !he Laguna Beach
Patriot's Day Parade Feb. 20. Persons
wishi11g to join the club for the festivity
may contact Ray for additional in·
formation.
Busty Puh Waitress
Tires of Beer Leer
BOURNE~10UTH . England tU Pll
Barmaid Jane Torniainen. 18, has asked
a plastic surgeon to reduce her ampl e
mea surement s.
;.The men come tn l<'er wJ!h !hP bet.r ,''
i;aid the blushing Jan(', \\'hose 38-23-34
measurements are packing the m in the
Brighton pub.
"I'm ab6olutely fed ur with the
remarks.'' said the brunette . "Getting
my bust reduced is the only solution."
COME IN AND ASK FOR CLEARANCE PRICES1
ON THE ITEMS ·oF YOUR CHOICE -IT'S FUN!
DIAMONDS GUITARS
Always at .Wholesale Prices
LADIES • 97 CT.
SOLITAIRE
DIAMOND RING
SET IN 14K GOLD
ONLrs59900
Guar1nfffd to Appr1l1t 50% Hl9her Than What You P1y.
P•ople In tht ·~ow ••Yt money every tim• they buy-It i1 not
••'Y to buy for ca•h, but if you heve cash, 8ankAm•ricard, or
M11tl r Chtt9t you can save tre mt ndou1 •mounts on everything
every day.
$21.50 VALUE
Must S.. To Apprecl1te
All Wood Guarant-.d
VISIT OUI SOUND IOOM
FOi NIW • USID sm10
IAl•AIN5-IT'S THI HAmNINCi THIN•
COSTA MESA JEWELRY G._.d LOAN
1838 NEWPORT ILYD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA hlwNa H-• ......_.,
WE LOAN IUY • SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
I
I,
Lag1111a Beaeh N.Y. Steek• EDITl·O·N
VOL 64, NO. 21 , 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE cOUNTY, CAllFORNIA. ' MONDAY, JANUARY ·2$ .. ' t97.1 : TEN CENTS
Fleeing Kidnap Girls Also
Girl Hitchhiker Convicted
Shot by Driver Of Murder
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charla Man-
son Ind three women mmibers of his
hippiHt.yle clan were c01victed today al,
tint degree murder and eonapir1ey ht
the uvqe al1yin1s of actrea Sharon
Tate and m othei's.
A San Clemente girl Is in serious
condition today at Hoag Memorial
Hospital after she was shot Saturday
night trying to escape from a would-be
kidnaper.
Laguna Trash
Problem Gets
More Complex
Laguna Beach's Jong-standing lrash
colleclion concerns have taken on new
complexity in a new round of city hall
negotiations with a trio of rubbish col-
lectors.
After listening to all three last week.
the City Council decided to postpone
further action on its rubbish collection
contract until after its study session
on trash re-cycling Wednesday night.
At that time, spokesmen for glass,
aluminum container and waste paper
reclamation firms will explain methoc&i
of re-cycling these products.
Cooncilmen, noting that major changes
In trash collection procedures would
result from any decision to introduce
re-cycling on a citywide basis, accepted
Mayor Richard Goldberg's suggestion
that action on the contract should be
deferred to a February meeti ng.
The council had been asked to consider
a dual reqoest from John Lindley, whose
La~na Disposal Company has been
under contract to the city for the past
l I years. and Tom 'l'rulis, of So\ag
Disposal Company , who sought
permission to lake over the balance
of Lindley's contract and to extend it
for three more years.
Complicating the ·picture was a request
from Chuck Waltman of Toro Disposal
Company. who sought an opportunity
to bid on any new Laguna contract.
Lindley rev ieY:ed the history of his
attempts to obtain an extension of his
contract In order to purchase needed
new equipment. The request first was
made in March. 1969, he said. touching
off lengthy studies of the type of rubbish
collection procedure needed in Laguna
and the advisability of drawing up new
specifications for 11 contract.
1'rulis entered the picture at this pcinl,
eeeking to bid on such a contract.
Jn April. 1970, lhe council voted te
extend Lind!ey's contract for one yea r.
through December, 1971, instead of three
years as req uested, with a view le
revising the contract In that period.
Now, Lindley told the council his equip-
ment is worn out from plying Laguna'•
steep hHls and he is obliged to~ dispose
ef the bu.lines!.
Rabies Clinic Set
In Laguna Beach
The eighth annual Laguna Beach rabies
clinic, ro-sponsored by lhe Lions Club
and the Southern C8lifornia Veterinary
Medical A:oociatlon, will be held from
7 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday In the main
fire station , 501 Forest Ave.
'l1ltee local veterln1rlan1, Ors. E.
Douglas Tignor, G. R. Ekeberg and M.
W. toge wUI donate their wvlces to
administer rabies Bhola at the reduced
price of '2 per animal. Docs four moalhs of age and older
are ell&ible to JM1rticip1te. Proof of rabies
vacclnaUon b required before a city
dog I~ can be isNed. LlceDICI alto
will be available at the clinic.
The new rate for dog UceMet In
Laguna Is f7 per year for males and
fema les or $.1.50 per year for a tpayed
female, with certification by
vett'r'tUrian.
41 Million See Rocks
, WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The _.
agency NYI 41 million pe:l'IOPI pt a
gllmpoe or moon rock• from Ille Kpallo
11ond11 mllllml during nhlblU uound
lhe world last ye1r.
••
Police said Susan Spector, 19, of %lO
La Paloma was 6bot at point blank
range in the left side as she attempted
to jump from her abductor's car at
the intersection of East Coast Highway
and Newport Center Drive.
Investigators said the young woman
left San Clemente Saturday afternoon
to drive to Newport to visit her boyfriend.
She told them her car broke down
on Coast Highway in South . Laguna,
so she started hitchhiking.
Police said she was pic ked
a middl~aged man, heavy set
medium height driving a new
dark sedan.
up by
and of
model,
As the car approached Newport Center
Drive, the suspect pulled a gun on Miss
Spector and told her she would have
to come with him, detective Sam
Amburgey said.
"At this point, he started to tum
onto Newport Center Drive and 11he
'Started to jump out of the car,"
Amburgey said. "The suspect fired at
ber point blank."
The detective said the impact of the
abot dro.ve Mia Spedar eut oC tht car,
and the -sped off. Witneases to the shooting 1topped to
aid the victim. but did not pursue the
suspect, he added.
Police have not been able to identify
the gun u.sed in the shooting because
no slug wa11 found, Amburgey 1ald.
Greenbelt Plan
Draws Support
Of Jaycee Units
Jaycee chapters from 10 Orange Coun-
ty communities have voted le support
the Laguna Greenbelt.
The action was taken at a meeting
of the Jaycees District governing body
in response to a proposal put forward
by Rick Balzer and Sieve Denton of
the Laguna Jaycees.
The LagW"la group has adopted the
Greenbelt as its action program for
the year and is undertaking an intensive
fund-raising program with lhe initial aim
of purchasing the key Sycamore Hills
properly.
To boost their effort, Mayor Richard
Goldberg has proclaimed lhe week of
April 19 to April 25 as "Greenbelt Wee k.''
Other Jaycee chapters. rep resenting
a membership of 400, voting to join
the Laguna group in suppor ting the
Greenbelt are Saddleback, San Clemente,
Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Garden
Grove, Runl.ington Beach, Orange, Santa
AnA and Tustin.
The District vote wu unanimous with
one abstention, that of the Newport 1
Harbor chapter, whose representative
felt the matter wu a pollt.ical l11t1e
and u roch oot permissible for the
Jaycees.
Other repraentaUves accepted the
Laguna Greenbelt as a non-partisan
citizen eHort.
The Laguna Jaycees plan to open a
Greenbelt cam paign headqu.rters In the
World Savings building at Coast Highway
and Forest Avenue. A speakers' bureau
to provide speaker1 and slide programs
fm· interested groups also will be
established and n1Uonal support for
Groenbel! Week will be 1oll<lted.
DAILY PILOT·ltlff .....
I.Janson was the only defetldant to
tpeak out. After the jmy w111 polled be
shouted to the judge: "We're •till BOt
alkrwed to put on a defense. You won't
outlive thtt old ma11." The women •C
. quieUy.
The jury o( 1evm men and five women
bad deliberated 12 bour3 and IO Jilli>.
utes since receiving the cue Jan. 11
after a seven.month trial.
Five persons were slain in the borne of
the actress the. night of Aug. 1-1 and on
the following night wealthy grocer Leno
LaBianca and hil wife Rosemary were
i;Jain in their home several miles dlmnt.
Shortly afterward, Manson and h1ll hip.
pie band moved cut of the old Spahn
Ranch in the San Fernaido Valley. they
had been stayin at the old tilDe moVie
ranch for several months.
New Laguna Slogan .
Lagunan affixes a stop high·rise stickar to her
bumper followine r'i"ent pllf'Jlillg commlasi<ln meet· .
Ing-at nlcll ·"'811Jlall ·-c~ 1,'
' • • 1 . ' • • ' '
develppmeat in the irt colori.y. The stickers are be-. ' ' . ' . "'f ~.,u1,w~ ~·.,.,.~. ~~!" 1'"""~ • JitlilfillI" ' t'Gf'<bll oh.anfirmt ~·~~' ' . ... . . '
! •
Planners Will Review El Toro Ch_ange
To Commercial
AiIJ>ort Opposed
Six An-ested
As Half Ton
· · Of Pot Sehed
Zoning at Beachlront
LagW"la Beach planning conunission~s
tonight will review comment received
at the first public hearing on the pro-
posed C.R (commercia1 residential) zone
setting standards for beachfront hotel
development.
Tonight's meeting. a study session,
will preface the second formal public
Board Will Get
Progress Report
Saddleback College trustees w i 11
receive an updating on the progre!IS
of planning for per manent construction
al their meeting al 7:45· o'clock tonight
at 28000 Marguerite Park.way, Mis!llon
Viejo.
Ar chitects Ramberg and Lowery will
report on progress of permanent building
pl anning including the $.1.7 million library
facility which is expected to 10 to btd
in March. Trustees aJso will be uked lo approve
a payment to the architects totalling
$35,031.96 for studies . and ar$jtectural
planning complet.cl by the Orm lncllldlnf
132.oilo for wort on lhe'Ubhry bafldhlg.
Among -·~-IJy the board will be a 111perintendenl's ftCDll\.
mendatlon on renewal of membership
In the American .Association of JuNor
Coll•&" and adop!ioo i>f the 1971-n
academic c1lendar.
Trustees will ~i<le whether or ,,not
to approve a ~ by the Trabuco
Eletnentary SChool Dlltrlct. to combtne \
1 60-cent per $100 tax override with
the conege'1 trustee elecUon which has
been set for April 20.
hearing on the controversial zoning law,
scheduled for.Ft'.b. 1.
The flrtt public hearlng last week
drew a. crowd Of 250, almost all voicing
opposition to hiih-riae developments on
the beachfront.
The new ordinance, which may be
modtfied by the Planning Commission
In · it! recommendation to the City Coun-
cil, would permJt buildings up to 100
feet In height If adOpted in its present
form.
Al!IO on the agenda for study tongiht
Is the subdivision ordinance proposed
in the Daniel. Mann, Johnsor. & Men.
dentiall general plan report.
If lime permits. chairman William
Lambourne 11ald today, the planners also
will take their first official look at the
bulky general plan dOcument submitted
at the conclusion of the two.year DMJM
6tildy.
Blood DonQrs
Sought in· Laguna
The Red Crou Bloodmobil< wlll be
at South CQoat Comrmmlty'HaJPiW Feb.
1 acceptfnl ~ of bll>Od to "" used f« emqeocles in the Laguna
Beach aru.
A group t'.lf community· 1eaders Jn the
Saddleback· Valley baa taken a · stand
strongJy opposed to any ·commercial use
of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station .
The Saddleback Valley Coord.in1ting
Council, in ta king the position, criticized
the stand taken by State ·Sen. Dennis
Carpenter (ft-Newpor t Beach.)
Mike Shearar. chairman of the coun-
cil's airport committee, said Carpenter
favors commercial use of El Toro until
an airport could be built at Camp
Pendleton in San Diego County . Shearer,
an aerospace 1ystems engineer, said the
state senator's opinion that commercial
aircraft made less noise than military
airplanes. was false.
"He also said that e.conomically,. joint
use of El Toro Is the best idea ," Shearer
sa id. "But he fails to conside r tha t
runway reeon6truction would hive tD
be done (al El Toro) and as traffic
increases additional runways would have
to be. constructed. This cosll!I quite 1
bit of money."
Shearer said the coWlCil eventually
might compromise by agreeing to joint
U1e of El Toro. but not untll paaaage
of -the bond Issue to build the Clmp
Pendleton airport, estimated to cost 1200
ml Won.
Victim -of Drug
Overdose Held Donors will be accepted from 1 p.m.
to 5:30 p.m. in the lower floor auditorium
of the hoopltal, lo<aled at 11m S. Coul
Hlgllway In 90u1h [Apna. Rea Croll oftlclal• haft Nked donor• San Clemente police p 1 t r o I m e n
to make iippotntmenll!I "\11th the hospltll d'8covered a man In his mid • wan-
,to, avoid 1q ~iodl ()f wafting In une. derln« bletdlng and incoherent alohg
Appo-•m&Y be madie by callfllg :;1" .. J:.f ! ~,.. dl~trlct over the
ltlte ............. penonael department •t ·-' Olllcm llllfd a..·man:who colll<I' only ·411-ISll al. 11,4-. gl•• icut. deiloU.> aboolf hlmMff, wu
' ~ lnini •· pboithle llMlll O.ori!oit, J , ' -· . • a 11blclly,.1a.t• bud~ and Hteit: bhdlJis:'
Newport Beich police, worklnc with
State Narcotica inVestlgaton and two
Orange County law · enforcement agen-
cies, seized 1,000 pound.I of marijuana
Sunday.
Six persons were -arrested in a Weebnd
sweep that culminated a three-month
investigation. Police said the ampectl
are accused of a seriea of nli'eoticl
violaUon.s ranging from pollellion_ of
cocaine and dlngerout dru&t to Ille
of marijuana.
Twd of the 1Uspecta -Vktor V-
Lee, 20, of 157 Emerald Bay, and Tadashl
T. fjabtsuk.a, 29, .of 9011 Bobbie ctrde,
Huntington 9':ach -are wanted, police
said, in connection w!th the October
raid of a Modjesk.a Canyon home.
The Modjeska Canyon raid resaJted
1n the arrest of Ci pemna on vlrioul
drug charges.
Newport Beach narcotic• detective Leo
Konkel said the inveatlgaUon on th1s
week.end's cue was begun u a reault
of the Modjeska Canyon Investigation .
The marij uana, which police v1lued
at about $72,500 on the illicit i;lrug
market, was seized in Tustin. POiice
said Robert James Hosler, 24, of Slnla
Ana was arrested Sunday night with
about 100 pounds of the weed ill hla
possession. Konkel 1aid a IUbsequent
investigation turned up tbl add.JUonal
900 pound!!.
"We don't know for 111.n where ft
comes from or how it r!ta here," he
said, bul noted It .... pacbd In -
bearing Mexican govemmlnt llampo.
Detectfves Were unclear u to the
11gnmcance of lbe llamp. ,
"I'd uy lt'I commercial litde Ma~
lean marijuana," XonUI aid.
Players Sla-ie -·E·~e~,q~•:.'.. :~~=t~~:.~~'
• • U. lo belof frllled ~LOr .... !CWl!JJ '
Laguna TMater Groiip-St·h:ed~s ; f~ ¥~'-~+~·.~·~-· ·
Election " 10 .... dlrocton 1n 111 and DesJsn. . · 1111 '111 ,*'!f -I.,~: .cit,,. ..;.. os, ~. p .. a·rty·, · 'Char. ·i'ot' .. , 12-member board will be the cbJef order A oomlnatinr oommlt!ee hudecl )/Y, Bt11J .v.iJ;I ... ,,,. Liiaiiio· .... r ..
of bus1neu for tbc Lu1111a Communl17 Mn. Salyer will ~t '" olft<tal lliafe 1-m.il VaMilr, '
Playera at their 1nnual .,..tlnf to be incluclinl lacumbent director Tulley Se"N •wtlll 1!11·· ~ «l ',the BRIBToL, Po. <UPI> -Tbr ..
held II' a ,p.m. f'eb. H la tbc LllUlll B,.,.., wbo Will run for ..... 1tct1oo: nomln1U,,.,1<0lllllilltoo ,'llllfO _ H• 1 • n -l''lnebttaled: decided to '
ltloultoo 1'lo7-. joumallat Wllljam B. s .. uy; .OOlo M. KM!ey, Jocqule Mollett, Dr. Narmn lei.. • . weddlnl Ion •1 ... fin
flailnatlons, combined with explrln( "Sonay" Budd,·• 111e111ber of the pla1'n Nixon and Lorry~ boule 1n, 111& Plllladelphla .111Wr1> ~ '
t.nm of ofDce, ban vacated all but •lace 1119; land diveloper EYerett O.vll 'A· IOCial -. 'rib ·-· iioe-a ride In the' •cold ' llftlU • IJt•. ' two -oo !lie boon!. of Newport 8-11: Pltlllp pam, .. pres1. ~mm .... a •nrioly ~~ , cWiilttad 1zi a 111.0llO 11i'i qlne. ,
'll>e cootlnulnr-dtrectorl vt •110meJ' deo1 <I. .1anz radio: Ktrili GMda of doiOtd by lleUJ P,auI .,m Pl''""* :!lie 1 1116 •llN enilile 161nl~ ·at 1'oll 1
Glrald _,, and Rulli OllOOd lal70r, ~ Belicb, )llOl!dent ol. ~ Je, I"""""' i.:::;;.:.~llil ~~ so' earl· W.tw Qnr'two lih*b 61 lllO ·
a pi-..i artill wllo lo ,....-Joaqllln -•lion; X.nt -=:: ,,,.. mani;;:::\l!!Ni .zrif ht·~ I ~.-~• ~. n1l1U. Polic. ·.
of the Lquna Beacb School of Art rector ol N"'port Beacb . , ll)olorf." Aid. '-----------..1 , . I , -
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~ OAJ\. Y PILOT SC
Fraud Can Tr~ick ·All -
' Sham Outfit,s on Rise, Says Official
J., ---
1J LYN Boll"ll llCU ot .,.. _..,. ...... swn
"He's jwit as much a crook as if
he put a gun in your back," wams
Orange County Deputy DUitrict Attorney
Walt.er Mat.thews, talking about a
fraudulent operator oiasqueradlng as a
legitimate business flnn.
Matthew:-who speaks to citizen groups,
about dangers of bunco salesmen, said
he once thought only stupi d people fall
for schemes offering them free gifts,
bargain purchases and quick riches .
"It's not true," he told San Clemente
Soroptimists and Rotarians recently, "It
happens to intelligent people, W rich,
poor. young and old people."
The basic problem seems to be that
It is becoming increasingly more difficult
lo di ...... ,... Ibo rtpllllble hi!' tl!t
pha(ly. ~.
Fraud lm't jull _ -.y, ·-tomorrow ' ..-ollerlni ni>-pod
services such u aarety checkt of
furnaces, olting of roots and cleaning
of vacuum cleanen, he old.
Curren Uy, Orange County is flooded
with acam agencies. "Some of these
outfita have offices all over the country,"
notes Matthtwa, "and they usually belong
to the Better Buaines.. Bureau."
When a AO-Called Hollywood cutlng
agency advertises, "extras needed", it
is UkeJy selline a promotion eervice
or a training courae.
Matthews tap .., most suscepliblc
lo the talent scoot pitch, "mothers who
hope to place their children in movies
"' moMMnc ·" . llaitbln ..,i, "ll Ibo ._ Glfen
to J!&y '°"' 11'1 lesiljmate. If It mo yoo !or money, II'• nd pd."
He relates details or one operation
tn which a theatrical agency Is extracting
$69 per child from parents hopeful of
"breaking into the movies." The contract
training seldom resuJts in acting offers.
The employment agency also is a
lucratlve field for bunco.
One such firm offers job opportunities
overseu. The applicant is faced wilh
lht bright prospect of e n t i c i n g
employmenl, but he lacks a proper
r~ume and photograph for hi5 pro.!pec·
tive employers.
For $186 the agency prepares the
re~ume and sends copies of it all over
the world to firms which do not solicit
nor welcome them.
Police Seize Countian An Orqe County acbool of law en-
forcement operated• limllarly, extracting
mooey from youna: men wbo hoped to
preparo them•1',. !or pollce Jobi.
In $1 Million Pot Haul · A trap which often catcbel YOWl& wive1
11 the lewfnl machine. or vacuum cleaner
acheme ln which tremendous price-<Ulll
are offered.
Teams of lawmen literally followed
their noses to a l!ght plane that reeked
of rijuana Saturday night in Van
N 1. arresting a Garden Grove man,
tw others and seiz.ing $1 million worth
of illicit weed.
Sm 111Specl$ Kennel.h Macklin,
24, Tbomu Hellter, 23, and Kenneth
Ingber, 27, were booked on suspicion
of possession of marijuana for gale.
Macklin. of 10276 Woodbury Road, and
Accused Canyon
Slaying Suspect
Arraignment Set
A man accuaed ln the slaying of
a 46-year-old widow whose nude body
was found in a brusho<:hocked Modjeska
Canyon ravine was arraigned on murder
charges this afternoon in Santa Ana
Municipal Court.
Glen Dale Ferguson. 36, of Lakewood,
wu charged with the killing of Zelma
Rachel Wilgenstein of Norwalk in a
district attorney's complaint during the
weekend. Be jg held in Orange Coonty
lail without bail
Ferguson WU arrested Friday afttr
1 six-day investigation into the. slaylnc
of Mrs. Wltgensteln whose body was
found by hikers last Jan. 16. lnve.stigators
said her clothiag: had bee.n tern from
her body aod scattered around the atta.
The une,mployed heavy equipment
operator was arrested in Artesia near
the &ite at which Mrs. Witgenstein was
last seen alive Jan. 14.
Panel Schedules
Talk on Ecology
Environmental and Kological con·
ditions a! they relate to open space.
urban planning, pollution, population and
natural resources will be discussed by
si..x Laguna gpukers Tuesday evening.
Tbe forum, tiUed . "A L-1osaic of
Environmental Problems,'' Is sponsored
by the Laguna Beach Coordinating Coun-
cil and will be held in city hall council
chambers at 7:30 p.m.
Speakers will be Indy Brewer, presi·
dent of the Laguna Beach High School
Conservation Club ; Anthony
De.metriades, president of the Laguna
Beach Civic League. James Di\!ey, presi-
denl of the Laguna Beach Greenbelt
Inc.: Roy Holm, Laguna Beach city
councilman ; Mrs. Luisa Hyun, chairman
of Pro-environment People (PEP); and
Dr. Ph ilip Rundel, UC Irvine en-
vironmt:nta,llst.
DAILY PllOl
Nnrp«t l•lldl ......... ....
laf•M ... di .......... ..,
CelN Mne 5-Cb ""'
OllAJrKiE COAST l"VILTSHLM~ COMl"Mf't
1lob•1I N. W1.4
Pr .. IOtnt ll'AI hbll"*'
J1ck 1t. Curl1y
Vici l'nl!Mttl 1rAI G1Mr1I ~.,
11'10111•• "'"ii """ Jho"''' A. M11rphl119 M•na;lnt £dli.r
«lc~•r4 P. H11C
$fvlh Or•• c-IY Editor -"'" ~:,. Wll1 ..... ...... H...,port I••'": J:rll W.t .......... ltnl'd • l."fllN' ... t.tt1 m ,._, •-
Hunt..,.1111 ... di: 1'11J IMdl hllllMll'C
s.n c:i."""tt: »5 Nortll l!I c:.mir. R .. I
his IUlpected accomplices droVe up to
tile heavily loaded aircraft In a llatlon
wa;on to find police and U.S. Customs
agenta wilting.
J.nsber ii a miident of Inverness, while
Hester Jives in the Marin County com-
munity of Corte Madera.
Investtcaton aaJd the plane wu stuffed
with t60 pounds of frethly harvested
Mexican m&rijuana packed In dul!ell>ap.
They ...... Upped oil by • _,_
operator at Aiu& Jllllce Airport In
Sauguo_
He uid the trio landed Saturday and
began unJoadtnc the ... pidOUI bap. 10
be told them be wanted nothing to do
with them and demanded they leave.
Re-loading the ll11llll, 1tnglwnglne
plane, they took off.
Notifying cu&toms agents, the airport
operator led them to check Van Nuys
Municipal Airport on the likely chance
that wa.s the lllBpecll' ncond deailnatlon.
They found the plane parked on the
apron with no one .around.
··You could smell it 20 feet away,"
remarked one invesU,ator.
Macklin, Hester and Ingber arrived
shorUy thereafter in a l'f:llted llatlon
wagon and were advi3f!d of their rights
and placed under arrest on the federal
charges.
The men were acheduled to go be.fore
• U.S. commissioner in federal court
in Loi Angeles today, for arraignment
and setting Df bail.
Family Doctors
Resuming VCI
Refresher Class
Two hundred family doctor1 today
began tbe second week of a UC Irvine
College o[ Medicine refresher course at
the Newporter Inn, Newport Beach.
By week's end . a total of 400 doctors
will have studied the lateat advances
in diagnosis and patient care under the
program involving all of the UCJ medical
college faculty.
"There are only five programs of this
type in the nation," Dr. Robert E. Rakel,
program chairman said . "Registrant.s
represent almost every atate, Including
Alaska and Hawaii ."
Most doctors taking the refresher
course are prt:paring for the certification
examination of the Ame rican Board of
Family Practice. Family practice I! the
newest medical specialty recognized by
the American Medical AM<X:latlon .
The rigors of the refresher course
require physicians to attend daily Jee_.
tures from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. "Elective."
cour:o;es are presented from 8 p.m. to
IO p.m.
This is UCl 's second year for providing
$UCh training.
The bargain ii given "only to contest
winners," but it's really no bargain, and
the "winners" are any 1uckers who will
fall for the 1eheme," Matthews said.
Or, the salesman may promiR to
subtract bonus amounta from the price
or teh purcbU!:, for each machine sold
lo frlenda or family recommended by
the buyer.
"This is basically a ftaudulenUy Ulet•l
operation," aaid Matthews. "People are
Jed to believe that their machine will coo\ 1 ... l! they provide r<!errll l&le•-"
One such pitch ii a1med at older
pulODI who are unable to obtain re,war
employment.
The lllesman cootracta for weekly
payments on a knitting machine, and
offers a auaranteed market for all
1arments produced according to the com·
pany's 1peeifications.
The diligent ka.ltters invest their
money In machine, yarn! and weeks
of effort, but their work never quite
meets the ••apeciHcationa."
What recount do the victinui have?
Very lltUe, aaya MattheWI. Small
crimes under '500 are not economically
worthwhile fer attorneys to handle, yet
misrepresentation involving more than
$200 is grand theft.
"Thi! is our }ob, to prosecute," says
Matthews. "Sometimes we know an
operation is fraudulent, but we CM't
even fmd the victims."
For example, many Orange CoUntlans
hold bookings on a beautiful ship for
a round-the-world cruise ac.heduled to
leave a Los Angeles dock Feb. 23.
"We don't know who bought tickets,
but we know they'll be on that dock
Feb. 23 . . . One thing we do know ;
there won't be a ship."
Matthews doesn't hold much hope for
clearing the fraud acene -"Somebody
i.s always thinking up a new one."
Clementean Hit
By Car, Injured
A ~year-old San Clemente man suf-
fered a leg fracture and other Injuries
early Sunday morning w::ien he was
hit by a car which rounded a comer
sharply, police said.
Robert J . O'Hanlon or 709 B Catie
Puente, was struck as he walked near
the comer or El Camino Real and Calle
Granada.
The driver of the auto was Murry
F. Peeler. Jr., 24, of 201 Calle Seville,
Apartment A.
Police said the incident occurred
shorUy before 2 a.m. The impact left
O'Hanlon sprawled in lhe gutter.
He was t.aken to South Coast Com·
munity Hospital for treatment. His con·
dition today was described as satisfac_...
tory.
Laguna Student Will Join
Floating Campus Program
Paul Christiamen, 110n of M r •.
Evangeline Chrl1Uansen of 1565 Via
Corsica, Laguna Beach and John Chris·
tiansen of Arcadia, hu been admitted
to the World Campus Afloat program
of Chapman College for the comtnc
semester at 1t:a.
Chrlsti•nsen will join SOO ofu@r college
etudentl representing 200 colleges and
universitie:I In most of the 50 at.ates
on Feb. I lo board the SS R)'lldlm
tn Le. Angelel harbor for a 1ludy-voyqe
lo por1a In the ~t and Afrlca-
Studentl carry a regular 1e~1
unit& -on Iha lhlpboord e1mpus.
They attend rqular clautt at tea
-porla on lbe VHMI which ii
equipped with the c 1asIr0 0 ms.
Jaborlt.oqea. library, studio, theater,
booat.ortJ,..and ofOces necessary to the
tduca procram offered.
Aabott the 1c:ademlc pttll!'lm con-
ttnon with lectura, rtoem:h proje<:ta,
ad Held triPo dtnctly ttllted to courae
-IL Overnight hc•1101tayo with lunllles
often are arranced, u art aiodll events
with local un1 .. r1tty lludenta.
Now lJt ltl 1lxth year, World Cunpus
Afloal It admlnlller<d by Olapman col·
Iese. one of Ca1Uomia'1 oldest Uber1l
arta lnltltutkm, localed In Or11111<, C.ur. ·
ADMITTID TO ,ltOGllAM
Paul Chrlati.nMn
Btginnlng with the fall 1tme1ter World
Campus Afloat will be conducted aboard
the S.S. Seawbe University, formerly
the R.M .S. Queen Elizabeth.
Batiking on It
A Chicago firm hopes to cash in on uproar created when large amounts
of cash stuffed into shoe boxes wer€ fo und among personal possessions
of the late Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell. The firm is market·
ing this savings bank shaped like a shoe box and decorated in "money
green."· It offers the possibility of "banking at any hour and is easUy
hidden in a closet," according to the manufacturer.
Apollo 14 Astronauts
Begin Counting Today
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The
countdown began today for Sunday's
launch of the three Apollo 14 astronauts
on the most difficult and costly lunar
landing mission yet.
The long countdown started promptly
at 6 a.m. while AJan B. Shepard, Stuart
A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell were
Jn the doctor's offict seeking medical
clearance in their final major preflight
physical examinations.
"We're in good shape," reported a
space agency official as engineers began
work at the oceanside launch pad . Much
of today's activity was devoted to eiec·
trical checks or the lWlar landing craft
and installation of starters for the
booster rocket's engines.
11ie countdow n includes 102 hours or
11cheduled tasks and five rest periods
totaling tB houri.
The three astronauts and their backup
Family Injured
In Auto Crash
On Canyon Road
An Emerald Bay family suffered minor
injuries Friday evening after their auto
ran into the rear of another vehicle
at I.he Big Bend area of Laguna Canyon
Road.
The car. driven by Quinardo Rivera,
27, of 335 Emerald Bay, was eastbound
when a westbound auto crossed the
center divider of the road. The Rivera
auto ran into the rear of another vehicle.
driven by John Zitney , 16, of Yorba
Linda. as it swerved to avoid a collision
v.·ith the oncoming auto
Rivera, his wife, Aurora. 26, his so n,
Marco, I, and his molher, Flora Rivera,
46, of 204 Cliff Drive. were all tak en
to South Coast Community 1-lospital,
where they ~·ere treated for minor cuts
and bruises and released. The four oc·
cupanll of the other auto. all youths.
were not Inj ured. Damage to both cars
was moderale.
January
pilots ha ve been living In Isolati011 at
lhe Kennedy space center for two weeks
to minimize their chances of railing
ill before or during the $400 million,
nine.day expedition.
Backup commander Eugene A. Ceman
unintentionally violated the u n I q u e
quaran~ine Saturday when his flaming
helicopter crashed in a nearby river.
I1e was exposed to several rescuers
before returning to the cape .
Officials reported all other aspects
of preparation for the mission "''ere
going well. E1cilement mounted around
the moonport and newsmen, contractor
representatives and tourists flowed into
the area .
Part of the excitement was generated
by two communications satellite shots.
One is the new Int elsat 4 commercial
crafl set for launch tonight after th ree
successive 24·hour delays caused by
strong hi gh altitude winds. The other
is a smaller military satellite set for
launch Wednesday.
Shepard, 47, dean of the astronauts, and
rookie space pilots Roosa. 37, and Mit ch-
ell, 40, hegan the final wee k well rested
and with niore training and preparation
than any moon crew before them .
They rel axed in their comfortable
quarters Saturday and then Roosa and
Mitchell took adv antage of pleasant
\veather to go flying in jet trainers.
Roosa later wenl fish ing and produced
a good catch of sheepshead and trout.
But Shepa rd stayed behind and studied
a stack of fl ight plans and other
documents. ll will be his first spaceflight
since his pioneering IS.-mlnute Mercury
hop nearly 10 years ago, and he admits
he has v,•orked unusually hard to get
ready.
"It has been tough, it's been difficult.''
he said in an interv iew just before
beginning the health quarantine. "I
pressed pretty hard in the interest of
being pr etty sure 1hal I y,·as as ready
to go as I could be."
The mission of Apollo 14 is costing
the U.S. government $25 million more
than April's [JI.fated 13 moon flight.
Most of the extra cost comes from
additional operation expenses due to the
longer intervals between launchings.
Hru·ry Has
'Best Day'
Say Doctors
'
KANS/,S CITY. Mo. (UPI) -Former
President Harry S. 'J'ruman's doctor•
said today his appetite is improvina
and that Sund<iy was hls "best day"
slnce entering Research Hospital with
an inflam ed intestine.
Truman's condition was described as
fair ..
Dr. Wallace JI. Graham . personal
physician for the 86-year-0ld former
President, issued the follow ing slate.men!
toda y:
"Yesterday was his best day. His ap-
petite is improving. He had a qui el
night. He was taken lo the radiology
deparunent for the scheduled lower in·
testinal exa1ninati ons.
Truman's Ylife Bess. 85, relurned Lo
the hospital early today to be with
her husband . She was accompanied by
Mike Westwood , Truman's chauffeur and
bodyguard.
The former President'& ailment was
diagnosed Saturday as colltis, or in·
flama tion of the large intestine
The medical bulletin released by the
hospital Sunday night said Truman "was
placed on a special liquid diel for his
Sunday evening meal in preparation for
lower gastro·inlestinal tests" today.
"He fee:s much stronger," the state-
ment said.
The hospilal spokesman said Sunday
was "a quiel day" for Truman.
In the morning he ''drank some but·
termilk and read the newspaper. For
IWlch he had some chicken, jello, tomaU>
soup and milk .''
He got out of bed twice Sunday and
during the afternoon "he dozed and chat-
ted with Mrs. Truman,., the spokesman
said.
Truman's personal physician, Dr.
Wallace H. Graham, said Truman 's con-
dition was listed a! ''fair" because of
the "results of the tests available at
presenl, lack or appetite and a reslless
night."
His condition was lisled as "good"
from the time he was admitted to the
hospital Thursday until Graham 's slate·
men! Sunday.
John P. Dre ves. s spokesman for the
hospital, said "fair'' meant "the patient'•
vital signs are stable and within nonnal
limits. The patient is conscious. He is
not comfortable or may have some e<>m·
plications. His recovery Is anticipated."
Patriotic Chm
Slates Ceremony
The Balboa Patriotic Club will conduct
a flag etremony Tuesday at 4:30 p.m.
to commemorate the issuance of a ne.,.
U.S. postage stamp honori ng Gen.
Douglas MacArthur.
The ceremony will lake place at a
flagpole in a parking lot at 505 W.
Balboa Bl vd., Newport Beac h, according
to Rem Ray, a representative of the club.
Ray said the organization is also plan-
ning to participate in the Laguna Beach
Patriofs Day Parade Feb . 20. Per90ns
...,;shi11g to join the club for the festivity
may contact Ray for additional in-
for mation .
Busty Puh Waitress
Tires of Beer Leer
BOURNE MOUTH. England <UPI)
Barmaid J ane Torniainen, 18. has asked
a plastic surgeon to reduce her amplt
measurements.
"The men come to leer with the beer."
said the blushing Jane, whose JB..2J.34
measurements are packing them in the
Br ighton pub.
"I'm absolutely fed up v.·ith the
remarks,'' said the brunette . "Getting
my bust redu ced is the only 801ution."
COME IN AND ~SK FOR CLEARANCE PRICES'
ON THE ITEMS OF YOUR 'CHOICE -IT'S FUN!
DIAMONDS GUITARS
Always at Wholesale Prices
LADIES • 97 CT.
SOLITAIRE
DIAMOND RING
SET IN 14K GOLD
ONLT'59900
Gu.ranteed to Appr1l• SO% Higher ThM What You ''Y·
P•opl• In th• know ,, .... mon111y .... ,ry tim• th•y buy-it i1 not
•••y to buy for c1111h, but if you ht ve c11h, Bt nkAm•rictrcf, or
M11t111r Chtr9• you c•n ,, ... , tr•m•ndou1 111mount1 on tYtrything
•vtry dey.
$21.50 VALUE
Mutt S.. To Appreciate
All Wood GutrantMd
VISIT 'ou• SOUND ROOM
l'OR NIW " USID smro
IAR•AIN5.-IT'S THI H""ININ• THIN•
COSTA MESA JEWELRY a~.d LOAN
1831 NEWl'ORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA hfwHo -l .. _, .. f
WE LOAN IUY ·SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
•
I
San (;leQtente
Capistrano .. .. '
VOL 6'4 , NO. 21 , 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
N.Y. Sterk• ' . . .
. '' .ff'. -
School Days, Circa 1913, Recalled in El Toro
By PAMELA HAU.AN
Of lh• l>IHY l'llol Sltll
A weath ered merry-go-round, benl
from use and the burden of neglect
still lies in the weeds of the old El
Toro School yard.
But it won't be there much longer.
Trustees of the San Joaquin Elemen-
tary School District are going to sell
the school site to the highest bidder
on March 3.
At least one person in El Toro will
.be sad to see it go, a man wbo
reqiembers is as a new school in 1913.
"l had just graduated from the first
EI Toro School when that one opened
In 1913," aaid Raymond H. Prothero
St.
The first school had ooe room and
pot-bellied wood stove for beat. The
"new" one had two rooms , was made
of brick, and had a red tile roor and
a betlfry.
"At first I~ rooms were' heated by
wood-burning stoves but later it had
butan'e furnaces," Prothero recalled.
The "new" school lost its rancy roor
and its bellfry in the 30's after an
earthquake.
"I was on the school board then,"
Manson, Girls
All Ruled Guilty
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles Man-
son and three women members of his
hippie-style clan were convicted today of
fir st degree murder and conspiracy in
the savage slayings of actress Sha ron
Tate and six others.
Manson was the only defendant to
speak out. After lhe jury was polled he
shouted to the judge : "We're still not
allowed to•put on a defense. You won't
Down the
(I ' J Mission
Trail
Parkway. .Link
Completion Near
MISSION VIEJO -Scheduled for com-
pletion by Feb. I. is the Marguerite
portion of Mission Viejo with its southern
portion.
It will no longer be necessary to use
San Diego Freeway to get from one
tnd of the 16.000 acre communi ty to
the other.
The final link will connect Oso
Parkway to Avery Parkway and run
east of Mission Ridge Homes and the
golf course. .
Dedication in a formal ceremony will
take plac e in February .
e Deny Claim
EAST IRVINE -Trustees of the San
Jo8.quin Elementary School District have
voted to deny a claim submitted by
Richard Frederick of El Toro for
$500.000.
The claim was made on behalf of
J oline Frederick, a first grader a~ Aliso
School. who allegedly feil from a ladder
climber on the playground injuring her
1houlder. The board voted to refer the cla im
to its insurance underwriter, denying
any claim of negligence.
e Poat Office Slateol
MISSION VIEJO -Construction of
a post office branch in Mission Viejo
will begin In the slJrlng.
1\'ie 189,000 square foot facility, now
under design. will be located on the
southwest corner of Marsuerlte and
Avery Parkways.
The Uaterior of the building will be
39 814 square feet with a loading platform
,P.ce of ·UOO ~ feet. A p111king and mal!'llver,ing area of '5,000 square feet
Is also planiled.
e El '.l'c1H '.1'.ik
EL TORO -Colmty r~tativea
will be on hand to ~ iJsua im., ~t Jo Ille El Toro uu at the
Tueiday ·meeting of Ille Allio Valley
HorDeowners' AslociaUon.
~ meeting will take place al 7:15
p.m. at Aliso School rin El Toro. ""
Issues to be -Include llie' italus of joblt commmle\. and mllilar)I
•&e or El Toro MCAS, the prutnalk>n
of lower population density and the
maintenAnce of zone reitricilms in -E11
'Toro area, aQd how the communtb''•
goali•can • .,. \brougtt· to the counfy't '
atto.ntion.
• " ••
outlive that old ma11." The women 1at
quietly.
The jury of seven men and five women
had deliberated 42 hours and 40 min·
utes since r~iving the case Jan. 16
after a seven-month trial.
Five flE'lllWlS were slain in the bome 1of
the actress~ night of Aug. 8-t.aJtd on
the following nigbt weallhy grocer Leno
LaBianca and bis wile RoBemuy• were ·
slain in tneir home several miles diltanL
'Slim'tly~llf,~·Wi~ ' pie band inoved out o oJa Spil1ifi
Ranch in the San Fematdo Va\lef. They
had· been <layltl •I .!lit··--ranch tor· 9lMill ~1'. ,..,to rr~·-
Ttie ·"family .. moved to 11~ desert
area friging ·California'• DNtb Valley
and set up quartel'J in a d~ ranch
house.
In October of tbsit ye~ Manson and
some 30 of bis anuP were .rounded up on
charges of alltomobile«theft,_not murW.
They had been ttaling. and ""'"'-automobiles into OOne. buggip· for delert
travel in their forays foT food.
The murder cues brGke. 111 December
when Susan Atkins was belnt ibellt in. a
Los Angele! j1il told cellmltel -Ille
slaying!! and the grand jury l'e_Nried· .m-
dictments shortly thereafter.' Miu AtkiM
testifi ed before that psnel but later re-
canted.
Chamber Seeking
Groups to Take
Parade Duties
San Clemente's Chamber of Commerce
ha s taken the first step in the gradual
phasing out of its role in h: huge
Fiesta la Christianita parade with an
attempt to mqbill&e ~ community
grou~ In pitch In with tbe -k.
Following through with · preliminary
plans made public earlier this month
to ct.mber directors, the chamber will
seek active participation from represen-
tatives of lef'Vice organisations, who
eve.ntually would take over the entire
activity. An inaugural meeting will be
let .eoon.
An incre·Uing burden on chamber
employes and volunteers from the board
of dlrectora hail promoted the plul
to llhllt . the duties for the plll'O, one
of Ille llate'• "'1Jetl.
Chamber manager Robert Evam said
thiJJ year's ~ion honoring
C.tlifornia's flnl CbrisUan · baptl'.am will
t)e.heJd on July t'l. ·
Robert Gannon, a director a · held
of the chunber't ad-hoc ~ .....
Ing alternatives to Ille porado OJllr&liOn, .,.Id the -.illllty-wlde'.llelll -
lion lriiUid ...., Into '!bi. -,otil JbO
ectlvity. Ultlmttoly, be ldded, the eolJn
job would be· moved JrM , 'sfdltlau
-•nd)nto -..,..-. ~ .. ~w.eu..o1.p--.,,11>r the ..... . the thlY . clliihiber' btllCa: b'aV. ~ pW,' ·wi• inlllrtidt ·iind
oOl!ded with vOlunloOn Yll'lullj,triia. Ing•!!*·-............ .... stlll. . .
:flnnt· polilllld ..t -u.e _...,.
--ol J>Qlt·.~.~ ~-~t1t&~~r~-1 !f ~._·;· · ."It lilt •..-~· .
·S.1n J-C.J>bdlmiO~ _, -:
de Ju Goljlndrlliu NI , ~~ hel«htl of' -In _., 7'"" ~ ·~' --· --··llid toian"""' OLlocal.""""' 1114. -·· wmtnc ......... UVouCJI ...... PIOlla
AllOCl1ttoa," he Mid.
said Prothero, "And Iota of people were
worried about the wel&ht on tbt roof
even though it stood throu&b tblt pod
shake we had."
So the roof was altered on _tf'ie ·tcbool
board's orders and cootioued t.o aene
children in El Toro and from u far
away u Trabuoo until 1958 ,when· the
school was closed.
'11 had outdoor plumbing and In the
'30s a third room wu added to the
ba ck." said Prothero. "Cbildren Walk'ed
to school or rode bicycles: There was
no bus.sing then:" · · ·
Prothero, whoae children went threuah
eight. grades there, rememben $12,009
as the cost of construction, but wasri't
abllOlu~!y sure.
"I remembtr 'things coat :qillte ·a bit . tea then, .. be added. .
Raymond Prothero Jr-. rec8Ds 0his'time .
in the , two , room schooUlouae. ·"There
were four gr,adea · in 011e room iand lour ·
in '.the other," ·he .said. 11This was an
advantage l;o. 1•nta no were : bright.
~y·aould lilt.en· in ·~ the upper,gr1de
,....,.,. .and-fut.r,'' ,he added.
,The tchool, w:bidl houie<I 50 children
whtn it clOsed in 1951, wu finl}llly abfn.
doned ~auae of. itl . O\ltmoded . CODI'
I
struction &~ children Wef'e sent OD a IO!d,"·he added.
tuition basl,f ta the Irvine' ·School in The 9Cbool district ·iJ . uking a . . ....
the ·San JOMuln !lll.lril:t.. . . . minimum bid of 116,ootl . for the 21>
In 1961 the El Toro District merged acre site. The highest bidder will be
with the ,Ban Joaq~in District and in required to pay 10 percent down and
1968 the Jtoperty.wu ~kl -~a.cJn~~h. ~. the ~ance In 90 days.
"But there . wu . •' .,._., abolit> ,,,.. "Bids will be ·o-ned March ·3 ·."-'~ • . -· ,<Jl!"O..,,... • . •• "" -~ ·-••• title so lhe chiltcb wilhdrew,t' said San the board meeting," said Rei: Nerlaon.
Joaquirt Superintendent Ralph Gates. A.ssiltant S_uperintendent for Busineu
"It ,~apparently had ·.three different Services. "Bllt· anyone wilbing to make
deeds:golng beck to:t,110.:t11 h.and wrtt.ten u oral bid wtu be welcome after the
and ;with dilflrent.' leatl. ~lptioni. written bidl are read .'.'
But ·'the title has been researched and The funds received will be applied
cleated and the school · can again be to other district amstructioo projects.
l, I ,
'
Clementeim
Fights for
Her Life
A San Clemente girl Is In serious
eonditlon today at Hoag Nemorlal
Hospital after she was · 1hot SalurdaJ
· night. trying to eacape from a · would-be kJdnaPer·. • I
Polla; iWd t!uun S"""'~ ~ _l!i. ti ·111
' J.i ·~· -ibOt""'".t!PJIP'. 4lmit
J ra~ge In _ t!f~, . · ~ ~ ~ 'h ··~~ ·-. . .,. ~.,.~·JUlliWOl Ctnlir ...,.... '
· i ' 'Di WI t!W 1""" -
Jett· s.ii 'Cllllliente . 111""'7 ' --to drive to Newport to vlalt her haylriend.
She told them her car brob down
en Gout ffi&bway in South Lquna.
10 ahi' liarted bitc:bblking.
Police said lhe wu picked up bJ
a middle-aged mu, . hta vy set and ol
medium heipt drlv!ni · a new modlJ,
dark sedan.
Sirok~· ··">.si•rd~1D?
Dana Point Coed: Trijinilig: f~,AA:V' Swim~ing Berth
Aa tpe car approtcbed Newport ~
Drive, the. luaped ~~ ~ •• ~ Miio
Spect<r .and told '.:. ~'. i.'9
to ' !""'' 'f\l!l hlJn, . Saia Aniliurgey. lllld.
\'~I this pollJ~ he llarted ~ 111!"
onto Newport Center Drive ~ etarted to jump out of the : ' ',"
Amburgey said. "The ruapect · 1 It
By JORN V ALTERZA
Of Ille Defir Plllt fMH
.. •
her point blank." ,
The detective said the impact of' 1f1e
l!lhol drove Miss Spector out of . the Af,
and the sul!lpect aped off. ..
Witnesaes to the shooting If.op~ lo
aid the victim. but did not . pursue ,-
•t11pect, he added. .
Police have not been alM; •to ldtnttb'
the gun uaed In the ~ '*!1111!9
no 1lug was found, A.mbarf9 Aid.
Post-party 'Chariot'
··' BRISTOL, Po. (UPI) -Three
tcmewbat inebriated gues&a decided to
leave a •W.eddinl rece~ at a fire
house In this Phlledelphia ouhurb for
I ride Jn the. Cold night lir. They
diptit..i tn.1 ,131,000 fire eaahJe.
.:t'he fire eqloe tiduwlped· al Jtm a can In 1111 flraf t"" blocU of the l~hlock jo)'rlde IIllunlly Dllbt. pollce eiid. .
10rutfe I . c. ••
-.
I
I
!
•
• r
1 ,, ,,
) ,
' •
' ' ,,
·' ~
'
.~--.....
:1 DAILY PllOl SC
Fraud Can Trick All
Sham Outfi~ on Rise, Sa:ys Official
11J LYN IWUlll llJCU °' .. .,.,.., """ .....
"He's jwt as much a crook as If
he put a gun in your back," warns:
Orqe Cqunty Deputy District Attorney
Walter Matthews, talking about a
fraudulent operator m11.9QUtr1ding as a
legitimate business firm.
Matthew~ who speaks Lo citizen groups,
about dangers of bunco ale.amen. said
he once tJiouchl only stupid people fall
for IC.hemes offerinC them free aifts,
bargain purchues and quick riches .
.. It's not true," he told San Clemente
Sor optimists and Rotarians recently, "II
happens to intelligent people, to rich,
poor , young and old people."
The bulc problem setnu to be thlt
It Us becomina ic.creulngly more difficult
.. dlllllll'lllll 1M npodablo -1111
pbooy.
Fraud 1111'1 Juo! .~. .....
-··· ~'olfM'lna oo-p>d services such u ~w.y eheckl ol
fumace.s , otHna of roof1 llld clunln&
of vacuum cleaners, he Hid.
Currently, Oran1c County Us flooded
with scam agencies. "Some or thue
outfits have officei' all over the country,''
_, Matlbewl, "lllCI thoy,UIUllly beloll(
to the Bette' 8ualneas Btn1u."
WheD a .....nod HoU,Wood calllng
agency advert lies, "c1tras netded", it
is likely 1elling a promotion service
or a trainina: ~-
Matthews tap u most JUSCtptlble
to the talent _.i lllld>. "mothen who
hope to place their cbUdren in moviei
or~·t
i011*1::'~"T'tt-:: . )'OU-,_. money ,4 k'I DO pod."
H8 relates d*ib: of one operallon
In which a theatrical agency is extracting
.. per ehlld from fllN"b hopeful or
"breaking into the movies." The contract
training se.ldore resulia in acJ.ing offers.
The employment qeney also lt 1
lucrative Otld tor bunco.
One IUCh flrm offers job opport.unlllc1
overseas. The applicant b: faced with
the bright prospect of e n Ii c in g
employment, but he lacks a proper
rettJme and phototraph for hit prospcc·
tive employers.
For $18& the agency prepares the
rctume and sendt copies: of it all ever
the world to firms which do not 11'.llicit
nor welccme them.
Police Seize Countian An Orange County school of law en-
forctment operated 1imilarly, extr1ctlng
monry fr1)m Youn& men who hoped to
prepare. thermelvea for police jobs.
In $1 Million Pot Haul A trap which often catches youn1 wlve1
fs the 1ewlnj machine or vacuum cleaner
scheme in which tremcndou1 price-cut1
are offered,
Teams of lawmen literally followed
their noses to a light plane that reeked
of marijuana Saturday night in Van
Nuys, arresting a Garden GroVe man,
two others and seizin& •1 million worth
of the illicit weed .
Smuggling suspects Kenneth Macklin ,
24, Thomas Hester, 23, and Kenneth
Jngber, 'J:I, were booked on 1W1picion
of possession of marijuana for Ille.
Macklin, of 10276 Woodbury Road, and
Accused. Canyon
Slaying Suspect
Arraignment Set
A man acCUlled in the llaytnc of
a 46-year~ld widow whose nude body
was found in a brush-chocked Modjeska
Canyon ravine wa1 arraigned on murder
charges this afternoon in Santa Ana
Municipal C.ourt.
Glen Dale Ferguson, 311. of Lakewood.
was charged with the killing of Zelma
Rachel Witaenatein of Norwalk in a
district. attorney's complaint during the
weekend. He ii held in Orange County
~au without ball.
Ferguson wu arrested Friday after
a al1-day investigation into the slaying
of Mn. Wttcenateln whoa. body was
found by bibra lut Jan. 11. Jnveati&atora
saJd her clothlna had been torn from
her body and 1c:attered around the area.
The unemployed heavy equipment
optralDr wu arrested in Arteala near
the alte at which Mrs. Wltgenstein wa1
last .een alive Jan. 14.
Panel Schedules
Talk on Ecology
Environmental and ecologlcal con-
diUona u they relate to open space,
urban plannJ.n&, pollution. population and
natural resources wtll be dl!c:ussed by
six Laguna 1peakers Tuesday evening.
The fonun, titled, "A Mos ale of
Environment.al Problems," Is sponsored
by lbe Laguna Beach Coord.lnatlni C.oun·
cil and will be held In city hall council
chambers at 7:30 p.m.
Speakers will be Indy Brewer, presl·
dent of the Laguna Beach High School
Conser v at i on Club ; Anthony
Dtmetriades. pre1ident of the Laguna
Beach Civic League, James Dilley, prtsi·
dent of the Laguna Beach Greenbelt
Inc.; Roy Holm, Laguna Beach city
councilman ; Mrs. Luisa Hyun, chairman
of Pro-environment People. (PEP); and
Dr. Philip Rund e!, UC Irvine en·
vironmentl.lisL
DAILY PILOT .. ..,... ..... . .......... .... ........... " ........ ,...,
Celt. Mn• S-Clas ....
OltAHVI co.t4T l"UIL.llMIM• COMl"AXY
l o\ort N. WtH ,.,..llhl'lt_. ........
J1~k •· Cttrl" Vk• l"n~klln! l r.4 G<lrienl MIMI••
t~.'" ... ltN¥!1 ldl'91'
7ho11111 A. MurphiM
Mal\AIN Ed11or
•1c~1 rl '· H1I Joi/Ill Ori,._~ ldllllr -C.0.lrll MAI: ut Wllf lrf ~ ....,..., l .. Cllt Jt'IT Witt II ... &.oulntl"lll •
Ltflllll ... l~I Ill l"trwt ·-..... llllfMll! ... di. 11111 ....-twiw.1"111 Ion Clalnlllt1; .J0$ NwlPI II (.1111 ... ltMI
bis SUJPCCted accomplices drove up to
tile heavily loaded aircraft in a station
wagon to find police and U.S. Customs
agents waiUng .
Inaber ill a resident of Jnvernesa, wbile
Hester lives in the Mll'ln County com-
munity of Corte Madera.
lnveatlgators uid the plane was stuffed
with 960 poundl of frelhly harvated
Mexican marijuana packed tn duffelbap.
They were tipped off by a 1mpiclous
operator at Agua Dulce Airport in
Saugus.
He said the trio landed Saturday and
began unloading the suspiciot11 bags, ao
he told them he wanted nothin& to do
with them and demanded they leave.
Re-loadlni the small, 11!181Hnrlne
plane, they took off.
NoUlyb18 CUllom1 qenll, the airport
operator led them to check Van Noya
Municipal Alrport on the likely chance
that Wal the f\llPKll' teCOnd defUnaUon,
They found lhe plane parked on lhe
apron with no one around.
"You could amell tt 20 feet away,''
remarked one lnvutllator.
Macklin. Heller and lll(ber arrived
shortly thereafter in a rented 1taUon
wagoo and .re adviled of. their ri&bll
and placed Wider amot on lhe !edG&I
charges.
The men were ICheduled to So before
a U.S. commlukxier in federal court
in Loi An1elel todly, for arralpment
and lldtlll( of ball
Family Doctors
Resuming UCI
Refresher Class
Two hundred family doctora today
began the second week of a UC Jrvlne
C.ollege of Medicine refrelher courH at
the Newporter Inn , Newport Beach.
By week's end, a tot.II of 400 doctor•
will have studied the lat.ut 1dvances
in diagnosis and patient care under the
program involving all of the UCI medical
college faculty.
"There arc only five proa:rams of this
type in the nalion," Dr. Robert E. R.a.ktl ,
program chairman sald. "Regl!lranU
represent almost every ala~, includ ing
Alaska and Hawaii .·•
Most doctor1 taking the refresher
course are prep1rina: for the certification
examination of the American Board of
Family Practice. Family practice ill the
newest medical specialty rec<>gnlz.ed by
the American Med.lea! Al.!OC!tUon.
The ri1or1 of t.he refresher cou rse
require. phy1ici1ns to attend dally lec-
tures from a a.m. to S p.m. "Elective"
courses art prcaented from a p.m. to
IO p.m.
Th.is la UCI't aecond year for provldlni
such tralnin&.
The bargain Is' given "only to conte11t
winners," but It's really no bargain, and
the "winners" are any suck.era who will
faU for the: scheme," Matthews said.
Or, the salesman m•y promise to
1ubtract bonus amount! from the price
cf tch purchue, for each mtchine sold
to friendl or family recommended by
the buyer.
'"I'hi.1 11 basically a fraudulently illegal
operation," said Matthews. "People arc
led tG believe that tMir machine will
cost lesa if they provide referral aales."
One such pitch i.s aimed at older
persona who ire. unable to obtain regular
employment.
The aalemnan contracts for weekly
payment.I on a knitting machine, and
offus a guaranteed market for all
1armenta produced aceordin& to the com-
pany'• specification•.
The diligent knitters inve1t their
money In machine. yam• and week1
of effort, but their work never quite
meet.a the 0 apeclflcationa."
What recoune do the victims have!
Very little, A Y• Matthewa. Small
crime.a under $500 are not economically
worthwhile for 1ttome.y1 to handle, yet
mlarepruent.ation involving more than
PIO II sraod theft.
"'Ibll it our job, to prosecute," llYI
M1ttbew1. "Sometimes we know an
cperaUon it fraudulent, but we can't
even find the vktims."
For es.ample, many Orange Counlilll•
hold bookin11 on a beautiful 1blp for
a round-the-world crutae acheduled to
leave a Lot An&eles dock Feb. 23.
"We. don't know wno 'bought tickets,
but we know they'll be cm that dock
Feb. 23 • . . One thing we do know ;
there won't be a ship."
Matthews doesn't hold much hope. for
clearing the fraud ac.ene -"Somebody
ii alw1y1 thinking up a new one.''
Clementean Hit
By Car, Injured
A 3>year~ld San Clemente man suf·
fered a leg fracture and other injuries
early Sunday morning w:icn he wu
hit by a car which rounded a corner
sharply, police said.
Robut J. O'Hanlon of 709 B Calle
Puent.e, was rtruck as he walked near
the corner of El Camino Re.al and Calle
Granada.
The driver of the auto wa11 Murry
F. Peeler, Jr., 24, of 201 Calle. Seville,
Apartment A.
Police u..id the incident occurred
shortly before 2 a.m. The impact left
O'Hanlon sprawled In the gutter.
He wa1 Liken to South Coast Com·
munlty HOlpltal for treatment. HUI con-
dlUon todly wu dacrlbed a1 utllfac·
tory.
Laguna Student Will Join
Floating Campus Program
Paul C2lrtltianMrl. 1111 ot M r I •
EYall(-O>rlatlanHn <ii !Ml VII cont<a, Lqmla Beach and John Clirll-
tiamen of Arctdla, bu Mt adlnltted
to the World Campu Allool protram
of Chapman Colle• !or t11t comfnfl
aemuter at .... C!!rlollanMI will join IOO olhlr collet•
1tudonll ··--... collol• and -In -<ii tlle IO olalel on Feb. I lo -1111 18 1',,.iam
In Loo Anp1oo -!or' a 1C1147-ooiq1
to por11 In the ~ ancl Africa. 8todmltt carry • ncalu' ..........
unlta Wldll • Git ~ campua.
They atlend roplar -el oea
-por1I on Ille -""1cb II equtpped wtth tbt cl1a1rtom1,
lebora-. Uli<ary, -· lhulor, .._. and -_.., to lhe
educaliooal protram ol!md.
~ tbl acadtsnlc prosr1m con-
tlnues wHll -· t'llW'Ch proj-. ad field trtpo dll"edly ftlated to ,,..,..
-k. Ovem!Pt homeota)'I with famllle1i
Often art UTAftled, aa ara IOda1 event.
with local unlvenlty -ts.
Now In Ill iil•lli yur, World Campas
Alloa! 11 edmlnlNrod by Chapman col·
lep, one of Ca!Uomla'1 oldell Uboral
.... lnlll!utloo~ localed In Or-. eaw.
ADMlnlD TO ,Rdow
Paul Chrl1tl1naen
' 1
llqlnalll( with the fall Mfllelllr World
Campas Alloat wW be conduttod aboard
the S.S. S..wlM UnJveraJty, formerly
lhe R.M.S. Queen EllJabelh .
Banking on It
A Chicago firm hopes to cash in on uproar created when lar~e amounts
of cash stuffed into shoe boxes were found among personal possessions
of the late Illinois Secretary of State Paul Powell. The fi rm is market-
ing this savings bank shaped like a shoe box and decorated in "money
green." It offers the possibility of "banking at any hour and is easily
hidden in a closet," according to the manufacturer.
Apollo 14 Astronauts
Begin Counting Today
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The
countdown began today for Sunday's
launch of the. three Apollo 14 astronauts
on the. most difficult and costly lunar
landing mis11lon yet.
The long countdown started promptly
at 6 a.m. while Alan B. Shepard, Stuart
A. Rema and Edgar D. Mitchell were
Jn the. doctor's office seeking medical
clearance in their final major preflight
physical examinatlon1.
''We're in good shape.," reported a
space agency official as engineers began
work at the oceanside launch pad. Much
of today's activity was devoted to elec-
trical check! of the lunar landing craft
and Installation of 1tarter1 for the
booster rocket's engines.
The count.d-Own Incl udes 102 hours of
scheduled task.! and five rest periods
totaling 48 hours.
The three astronaut.a and their backup
Family Injured
In Auto Crash
On Canyon Road
An Emerald Bay family suffered minor
Injuries Friday evening after their auto
ran Into the rear of another vehic le
at the BiR Bend area of Laguna CanyGn
Road.
The car. driv en by Quinardo Rivera,
27, or S35 Emerald Bay, was eastbound
when a wettbound auto crossed the
center di vider or the road . The Rivera
auto ran into the rear of another vehicle.
driven by John Zitney, 16. of Yorba
Linda, a.s it swerved to avoid a collision
wtth the oncoming auto.
Rivera, his wife. Aurora. 26. his so n,
Marco. I, and his mother, Flora Rivera,
46, of 204 Cliff Drive, were all tak en
to South Coast Community Hospital.
where they were treated for minor cut~
and bruises and released . The four OC·
cupa nts of the. other auto, all youths.
were not Injured . Damage to both cars
wu moderate.
January
pilots have been li ving In Isolation at
the Kennedy space ce nter for two weeks
to mini mize their chances of falling
ill before or duri ng the MOO million,
nine-da y expedition.
Backup commander Eugene A, Ceman
uninientionally viola ted the u n i q u e
quarantine Saturday when his flaming
helicopter crashed in a nearby river.
lie was exposed to several rescuers
before returning to the cape.
Officials reported all other aspects
of preparation for the mission were
golng well. Excitement mounted around
the moonport and newsmen, contractor
representatives and tourists flowed into
the area.
Part of the excitement was generated
by tv.·o communication3 satellite shots.
One is the new Intelsat 4 commercial
craft set for launch tonight after three
successive 24-hour delays cawed by
strong high altitude wind1. The other
is a smaller military satellite set for
launch Wednesday.
Shepard, 47, dean of the 11stronauts, and
rookie space pllots Roosa, 31, and Mitch-
el!. 40. began the final week well rested
and with more training and preparation
than any moon crew before them.
They relaxed in their comfortable
quarters Saturday and then Roosa and
Mitchell took advantage of pleasant
weathe r to go flying in jet trainers.
Roosa later went fi3hing and produced
a good catch of sheepshe.ad and lrout.
But Shepard stayed behind 1nd studied
a sta ck of flight plans and other
documents. It will be his first spaceflight
since his pioneering IS.minute Mercury
hop nearly 10 years ago. and he admits
he ha s worked unu!ually hard IG get
readv_
"Ii has been tough. it's b~n diff icu11."
hf' said in an in!cr\'iew JUSl before
beginning the health quarantine. "I
preMed pretty hard in t.he interest of
being pretty sure !hat I was as ready
to go as I co uld be."
The mission of Apollo 14 ls costing
the US. government S2j million more
1han April's ill-fated 13 moon flight.
Jl.1nst of the extra cost comes lrom
;idditional operation expenses due to the
longer intervals between launchings.
Hru·ry Has
'Best Day'
Say Doctors
l
'KANSAS CITY . Mo. rUPI ) -Former
President Harry S. Truman's doctors
said today his appetite is improvin&
and that Sunday was hls "bf s l d 8 y"
since entering Research Hospital with
an inflamed inlestine.
Truman '• condition was described 11
fa ir. Dr. Wallace 1-f. Graham . personal
physicia n for the 86-year--0ld former
Pres idenl, is:iued 1he following statemen t
today:
"Yesterday was his best da y. His ap-
petite is improving . He had a quiet
night. He was taken lo the radlGlogy
department for the scheduled lower In·
leltinal examinatio ns.
Truman's wife Bess, as. returned to
the hospital early today to ~ with
her husband. She was accompanied by
Mike Westwood , Truman's chauffeur and
bodyguard.
The former President's ailment was
diagnosed Saturday as col itis, or in·
flamation of the large Intestine
The medical bulletin released by the
hospital Sunday night sai d Truman "w11is
placed on a special liquid diet for his
Sunday evening meal in preparation for
lower gastro-i ntestinal tes ts" today.
"He fee!s much stronger," the state·
ment said.
The hospital spokesman sa id Sunday
was "a quiet day " for Truman.
In the morning he "drank some but-
termilk and read the newspaper . For
lunch he had so me chicken, Jello, !GmatG
soup and milk."
He got out of bed twice Sunday and
duri ng the afternoon "he dozed and chat·
ted wit h Mrs. Truma n," the spokesman
said.
Truman's personal physician , Dr.
Wallace H. Graham . !!ald Truman 's con-
dition wa s listed as "fair'' because of
the "results of the tests available et
present. lack of appetite and a restless
night."
His cond ition was listed as "good"
from the time he was adm itled lG the
hospital Thursday until Graham 's slate·
ment Sunday.
John P. Dreves. a spokesman ror the
hospital, said "fair" meant "the patient's
vital sign s are stable and within normal
li mits. The patient is consci ous. He i1
not comfortable or may ha ve some com·
p\ic ations. His recovery is anticipated."
Patriotic Cluh
Slates Ceremony
The Balboa Patriotic Club will conduct
a flag ceremony Tuesday at 4:30 p.m.
to commemGra\e the issuance of a new
U.S. postage stamp honoring Gen.
Douglas Ma cArthur.
'I'he ceremony will take place at a
flagpole in a parking lot at 505 W.
Balboa Bl vd., Newport Beach, according
to Rem fuiy, a representative ol the club.
Ray said the organli.aUon is also plan-
nin g tG participate in the Laguna Beach
Patriot's Day Parade Feb. 20, Persons
wishing lo jol n the club for the festivity
may contact Ray for additional ln·
formation.
Busty Pub Waitress
Tires of Beer Leer
BOURNE MOUTH, England IUPI)
Barmaid Jane To rniainen. 18. has asked
11 pla stic surgeon to reduce her ample
measurements.
"The men come tn leer wilh the beer.''
said the blushing Jaoe . whose 38·2J·J4
meuurements are packing !hem in the
Brigh ton pub.
"I'm absolutel.v fed up wit h the
remarks,'' said the brunetll'. "Gelling
my bust reduced is the only solu1ion."
COME IN AND 'ASK FOR CLEARANCE PRICES:
ON THE ITEttiS OF YOUR CHOICE -IT'S FUN!
DIAMONDS GUITARS
~lways at Wholesale Prices
LADIES , .97 CT •
SOUTAIRE
DIAMOND RING
SET IN 14K GOLD
ONLY'599°°
OuaranlMd to Appraloo 50% Hl9her Than Whet You Pay.
,. .. pie In tha lm.w •••• MOl'llY •••ry tim1 +hey lwy-it I• not
••1y ft buy for~u1h, but If you heve c11h. lenlr.Amerlcerd, °"
Me•ter Chert• jo1,1 Cal'I •••• tteme nd ou• 1meunt1 on ev1rythln9 •••ry dey. •
$21.50 VALUE
Muat S.. To Appr1el1t1
All Wood Guerenteed
VlllT OUR SOUND ROOM
POR NIW I USO STDIO
IAR•AINs-lT'S THI HAlftNIN6 THIN!O
.COSTA MUA JEWELRY a '1cl LOAN
'.18J8 NEWPORT ILYD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MhA ........ -• •••wr
WE LOAN IUY • SELL & TRADE ALMOn EVERYTHING
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For the
Births
I T. JClllll'll MOIPIT.ll
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Mr-. ,,,., Mr,, C~·-W. GW'I•·
''" Anll!Mr DllY•. Hllfllh,.lon IMt~. •l•I, Jl-IY 11
N<r, I nd M'I. l!dt•• ! lt+ltv Jr,
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U'7 E, 17th 81., Cos11 Men
'"---• BALTZ MORTUARml
Coroa1 cltl Mir ... OR M&M
COili Mu. . . . ... ml M04 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broad"aj, Cttltl Meta u I-ml • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MOllTUAllV
1711 Lap•• Cuyll Rod • ........ • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAll
Ctmee.ry Mortury
CUpel
JliM PKll1c Vld Drtvt I'/..,.,. 8Hdl. c:.w.nda _ ..
" PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL ruNEllAL
HOME
7111 .... J..e.
W11t:m1nmr ... 1134111 • SMITH!' MORnJAllY
01 Malo AL
Hutln,Cnn Bud -
Record
Marriage
License•
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
DAILV l'IL6T u
Disease Hurts Fetus Denture Invention
County Doctor Describ_es Rubella Dangers For l'eople with "Uppers" ancl "Low-"
The near~ thlttc. l.O baviA&: 1ow hdl>' ~ ruma frcn brvirliar. own 1.etth .. ~bk no• W1th a You tat MOR natunllJ-.,
pbtti<: m:am dicovery that M:· aoolft. com"°""tho-ulb.
ORANG! '"A m 11 d
dbeue ill dtlldrtn -an a&-
noyin&, but not dan&tf'CIUI
di.se•se in 1dulll -yet a
bum rap for the fetus, a
devut1lin1 di.lease."
Rubella, allO knewn ••
"German mea1lt1," ls I.be
diseue tbua deacrlbed by Dr.
Edward J. T1maovlc, dlrector
of Orange County MedJcal
Ce n ter's Divl1l1n el
Pedialrics. In his 25 years
as an Army med ical officer
and his year and a half in
Orange Count y, Dr. Tomsovic
has set:n numt:rous cases of
childre n harmed by rubella
'>''hile still Uiside the mother's
body,
tu1lly holdt both "upper•" aod · P1xoot"m may Ndp 109 ..-k
"kiwut" •1 ~ ..,}«• /'OSsi.U, l'l'IOtt pe.ny, be men at-.
lt't 1 rtvolut lOCW")' diKOvery The 1pecial ~ncil·eoinl dlt-
alled flXOOl1""T. (or da~ly home pmaer Itta yQ!.l lpot P'rmDl>rf ult. (U.S. Pat. fl,000,988) With with preciMon ., . .,,.,,, ,..._,
f 11oo•NT many denture tttarrn One a~tion may '9lt ~
now eat , 1peak. lluch. with little. IM ckd. Dentum lhat 6t. .,.
trorry ol dentures ccminr ioc.. t11tnti1I to hf11lh. Stt your F1xoo1NT rorm1 all tla1tic dmtitt rqularly. Get ..,..to-
membranl that he.lpa 1hlorb the me Ft-XOOE>IT Dmttun ~ lhock ar bitinc and chrlrinc-C.ream at all drui OCIWlllm'L
Whan lhe vln11 1eta into immunile as many ch.lldren
lbe felUI, It can damage the in the populatlon agains t
htarlna celll ln the inner ear. rubella ind thus limit the
This damaae is usually severe, spread of the disease. The
Dr. Tomsovlc explains, and rubella vaccine has only been
la net I.he typt ct ,hearing available the past two years,
lou th.at can be corrected 10 there are thousands ef
aura:lcally. "We have t 0 cltlldren ln Orange Coun ty who
c1pit&lile en what.ever hearlng have not yel been Immunized
remains," he comments. "and. -~•&~al~ns~t~r~u~b<~l~I•~·------=======================:
even • hearing aid doesn't\•
Judge Nixes
Counselor's
Bid for Job
SANTA ANA -A bid for
reinstatement to his job by
a boys ranch counselor who
was fired following reports of
his excessive disciplin ing of
young inmates has been re-
jected by Orange County
Superior Court Judge Robert
A. Banyard .
Tbe jurist's ruling confirms
the dismissa l from county
employment nf Ar th u r
Thomassen nf Santa Ana,
formerly a counselor at the
Los Pinos Forestry camp.
T h 11 m assen unsuccessfully
complained that he wa s net
given a fair hea ring follow ing
his severanct ' ' e n pro-
bat ionary release'' last Sept.
I l.
Thom assen's supervisor
alleged in documenllll sub-
mitted to the cou rt that the
counselor had on more than
one eccasion abused camp
rules in the disci plining ef
young offenders.
The counly's Los Pinos
camp is a. correctional center
for juvenile offenders referred
to the facility by Juvenile
Court.
Red Barons
Schedule
Annual Beish
'"The harm is done to the
fetus while the mother is In
the firs t three months ef
pregnancy." Dr. TomM>vic ex-
plains. "It is duri ng this time
that the organs are ferming."
If the robe.JI• virus invades
the fetus. il disrupts the
formation ef all kinds ef body
tissues. The result Of Utis
disruption can be. malforma-
tions of the heart, brain and
e.ye as well as damage ht
the hearing apparatus and In-
flammation of the bone, !Iver
and bone marrow.
"Sometimes the baby dies.
but more o(len the baby
survives the insult and ls born
with the abnorm1llties," says
Dr . Tomsovic.
help the child verv much in
dislinaui!hing be~ween tones
and sounds.
"The child thus af{ecled
lives in 11 distorted world.
Even if he has not suffered
an y brain f'amage . his ab ility
In learn is still handicapped.
"For example, his hearing
loss inUrferes with learning
ts talk as well as in his ab ility
to relate to other people."
The chilrl ·with these pro-
blems usually has to be taught
In special groups.
Nol only Is there an emo·
tional impact on the child's
famil y, Dr. Tomsovic point s
out. but there is a\50 an
economic impact (In the fam i·
ly and the commu nity because
the special educational pro-
cess required for such children
can be expensi ve.
(A joint sta te ment by the
C.alifomla Medical Assoc iation
and the Cal!f~:-nia S t a t t'
Health Depart ment points out
tha t the 30.000 congenitall y
defective children born a!'i a
result nf the -;964 rubell a
epidemic are now beini;: cared
for 11t 1n estimated fina ncial
cost of $840 million in add ition
In the tremendous emotional
cost.)
The term "rubella ayn-
drome" delicribes the most
charac~ristic combi nation of
the tragic effec\8 ef the
disease on the unborn. Dr.
Tomsovic describes this syn-
drome as being cnm posed nf
c en g e n it 1 l heart ab-"When !he rescue of a
normalities. catarac t 1 , human being and his family
deafness and wually 1ome from th e effects of the disease
brain damage which is and the cost ln that famil y
manifested as mental retard11 -11nd their community are com-
tion. Sometimes a chil d will pared to the cost and the
have 1111 of these conditions; effnrt er getting an Im ·
Mlmetimes he will have one munization. It is -0bvlous th at
or more conditions, but not the old 1aying is still true :
the complete syndreme. 'an ounce t1f prevention i1i
Damage to the eyes ma y worth a rnund of cure.' I
have different re.suits such as encouraf,!e parenL~ to have
cab1racts, which are usuall v I.heir children i m m u n I z ed
evident at birth:· decrea1ied ;igain.~t ru bella. The AmeriCan
ability to s~: or crossed eyes. Academy of Pediatrics ;ind
Although cataracLc; may be. the Arverican Public HeR lth
Engines ;ire revving fo r the t1perated on during the first Assnciation recomme nd \h::it
Second Annual Red Barons monlhs or li fe. the child will rhild ren from one through
Bash in Costa Mesa Jan. 29, never have nnrma l vision, twelve years er aRe receive
when the club members frem even wilh this sur1ery. the rt1be.ll1 vaccine," Dr.
throughou t Or1nge County There are also different Tomse\'ic 111yg.
gather to break bread and types or heart abnormalities The present approach is to
swap stories. related lo rubella. Dr , ;-~-======"====~!
Highlight will be a film "The Tomsovic says that some flf
Ground Above and The these abnormalities a re
G d B , surgically correctible. in whole roun elow.' narrated by Art Scholl. whose stunt nying or in pa rt. Othe ri; cannot be:
BCademy is headquartered at corrected. If the shape of the
Flabob Airport in Riverside. heSt.rt can be. rest.cred, the child may lead a n1rmal life.
The Friday night session If il can 't be. then he faces
CHILDREN
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
11% 1111r11111111r 111111
FREE CHECKIN& ACCOUNT
Person al checking accounts sre absolute ly r ree as
lon g as your ba lance doesn't ro below $300.
Should it drop below $300, you simply pay
the normal rale lor checks written dur inr th1t
statement period. The average person pays 1 urvice
charre o! $2.50 each month, That's $30
a year. By maintaininr the $300 balance with us,
you uve $30, which Is eq ual to 10%
on your money. Btn~inr is 1 re•I pfusu rt
at Newport N1tion1I Bank.
9 CONVINllNT OfflCIS SllVINO OlANGI COUNTY
Airport Ofl lCI Mi~htl&on 11 "4tt:Ar!hur IJJ.JI 11 1 a.,.ldt Oft ia !11ylld• 1t J1mbo,H &4Z·l l• t
Colle11 P1rt Olllca Nutwood t i Commonw11lth !7l·zto0 • Sll"llf Hills Offle1H1rbot 1t lru 171·72'0 ~ptrlor DlllCI Superior 1t PJ1ctnllt 642-9511 • UR1nr1HJ Oflla £1st Ch1pm1n It S!tlt Collep 17 .. 4140
Wlltdtff Dtller1 Wtdcltlf 1t Dower '42·311 1
Sul hadl Olllcl lAlaura World, SUI let ch 596-2711 • ll,.... HMll Ollloe Ltbuit W&rid, lll'JU HHll&1D·J290
will be in the Halecrest Club . .1 reduced life expectancy.
3107 Killybrooke Lane , just eff _____ ..:_:..:....:...::::.::__.:::=========~--------------------------------
the San Diego Freeway, in I
Costa Mesa.
Officers and directors of tht:
organizati on will be installed
at the annual banquet which
begins al 6:30 p.m. with ad·
justment hour and hangar
fl ying.
The Red Barons formed to
promote and publish a history
of the rich aviation history
of Ora nge County
Reserv11,Uon~ are $.1 ~r
pe.rson and rnav be mailed
to the Cost a Mi!1i3 Chamber
of Commerce . 513:1 W. 19th
St., Cost11 Me~a
Who Cores?
Ne oth1, n•w1p1p•• '" !he
worl .. c•r11 1boul y 1111• ce,,.mu•
11lty llk1 your t.omtn unity do ily
n1w1p1p1r 4011. h'1 !111 DAILY
P'ILOT.
!VERY TUESDAY
AND THURSDAY
FROM 4 P.M. TO
CLOSING IS
"BUCK"
NIGHT
AT GRANTS
. . -·
NOWI LONG BEACH IS SHORTER
TO NORTHERN CALI FORNIA.
FAMILY SPECIALS
$ YOUR CHOIClt * least Turtiey Dinner * Golden Pried Chldita * least leef Au Jus * Ham Steak Hawaiian ................ ., .. , .. , .. .,...., ......................
Moftdly arMI We4rt 11~~11venlnp °"ly
IRADl'ORD HOUSI AK OINNI•
-wlltl -.-,., .. , 2 e3• ,.. .............. , .... ltuttw. ..,. •
B•OOKHU•ST & ADAMS
HUNTINGTON llACH
Leo Angeles (Orange County. Paloa
Long Buch to V d WI I gt T Sen Francl1eo 118 er es, lm n on, orrance, etc.),
Including tu. Long Beoch 11 llkt having your own pr1Yela
Leave Long Btoch: airport. You don"! have to tight tho fret.
Now you can ny PSA from Long Beach 7:40 tm way tr1Hic to LA. lnttmational. Thtre'e
Airport to San Franelaco. Fourtlmes 1 day. 10:41 em easy p1rklng. And tht crowd• havtn1
More on weekend~ More flights than 1 :30 pm found It yet . Next time you held north
•ny other airline. Connectlona to Sacta· 4:30 pm (or soulh), head tor Long BHoh Airport
mento. Or, avoid the freeway and fly to Mon thru Thur•&. S1L by w1y of your travel agent and PSA.
Sin Diego, If you live 1ny place 0outh of .__M_•_re_1_11_;h_1•_F_r_1&_s_u_•_. _, PIA--,.. a ..
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JI DAILY •ILOT
FAIR
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thr•• ••nit '""' 11p f1clort 111
op•rtl1111 •" Ill• DAI LY Pll01
..illt1rl1I ll•t• ,,.,,., '''
SC MondlJ, January 21 1971
LEGAL NOTICE
F111teat 1n We•t
"" tt. Sen IL ff'J tM fatttt ttlj)OllH t" ~ WHt *9-'ln1t yaul'
own clott. Tt1t 01mt·•·llnr Ads, wMrt tilt aclloll Is ln Saturda~ t
DAILY PILOT
Complete-New York Stock Li st
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J 4 DAI L V PlLOT
f'.ullLV CJRCllS "• Bii Kea•
1'Youdidn'tdrowANYTHING , PJI This is
nothing but scribbl a-sere bbl e. 11
Warning• Predicted
Crackdown by British
On Cigarettes Pressed
' LONDON (AP) -The
British government c a m e
under strong pm.sure today
to act against ·cigarettes afte.r
the RoyaJ College of Physi-
cians reported that smoldng
kills more than 'll ,000 Britons
a year .
Some sources predi~@d that
within weeks the government
would follow the U n i t e d
States' lead and order health
wamings ,printed on cigarette
packs. P'urther restrictions on
advertisin& -cigarette com-
mercials are already banned
from television -wert! con-
sidered lnevjtable.
"The government must now
take prompt action to aee that
eUectlve preventative
measures to di1 co urage
cigarette smoking are taken,''
the Guardian said in an
editori a l . Most other
newspapers agreed a n d
several urged curbs on ad-
vert Isin g, although
newspapers would bt. hit
hardest.
The Daily Telegraph warned
against a "monster horror
blitz" against s.m o k In g ,
however, and asked: "Is it
the duty or the government
to terrify Us subjects?"
"It can inform. warn. exhort
and set an example," the
newspaper said. "In restric-
ting and prohibiting it should
move ceutlous ly."
The report fro m the Royal
College of Physicians, one of
Britain's leading med i ea I
bodies. said lung cancer was
the biggest killer of cigarette
smokers, but thousands die
each year of bronchilis or
coronary afflictions.
"The chances are that two
out o! five heavy cipreije
smokers -25 OJ' more a day
-but only one out of five
nonsmokers, will die before
the age of 65," it said, "Tiif
man ol ~ ~ ,js an· a•era&t
cigarette mlOker -13 to ·24
a day -is likely on average
to Jose 51h: years of life com·
pared with a nonsmoker."
If nothing is done about the
problem, it said, smoking
could kill 50,000 Britons a year
by the 1980s.
'Jbe report called for warn-
ing notices oo cigarette
packs, a total ban on cigarette
advertising. enforcement of
smoking restrjctions in public
places, wider curbs on smok-
ing at work. removal of
cigarette vending machines
from public places and laws
limiting nicotine and tar COO·
tent or cigarettes.
The government collects
$5.2.11 billion a year from taxes
on cigarettes, a fifth of the
total it raises from income
taxes. But antismoking. groups
point out that 38 million work
days were Jost because of
bronchitis in 1969 and that
persoos with illnesses caused
by 6JTloking occupy about 8,500
hospital beds on any given
day.
·'Government and P.arlia-
ment have to decide between
an easy source of revenue
and preservation of lives,
health and the productive
capacity of the people they
serve," the Royal College cf
Physicians said.
Secrets of Earth
Revealed by Moon
CAPE K ENNEDY \UPI ) -
Studies of Apollo I u n a r
!amples during th~ past yea r
have reinforced the old idea
that man c<1n learn ffiQre
ahout tt.r. f'a rth by going lo
the moo n.
Scienll sts now know withnut
question that the m001. holds
a missing chapter in the early
history of the solar system
and they are discovering that
their unprecedented I u 11 a r
roc k iitudies are helping them
understand more about the
rocks in their own back yard.
'"Sludies or lunar rocks have
opened (JlJr eyes to what to
look for in earth rooks.·· aald
Dr. Edwin Roeddet. a
geologist from the U . S .
Geological Survey, .at last
week's loner science con-
ference In Houston. "Tttis type
ol spinoff must not be
1ninimlzed ."
Beca use of the uniqueness
of moon samples during the
first months after they were
brough t to earth. some scien-
tists felt a ' ' c I r c us at-
mosphert: ., surrounded the in-
itial studies and reports on
the lunar material a year or
so ago.
But now that lhe novelly
has worn off, said Dr. Gordon
C. Coles of the Univer1ity
of Oregon, "we are startling
to do science, we: are starting
to get somewhere."
"We now are beginning to
work out a litUe bit of the
fundam@ntal ground rules -
. . the basic way the moon
has been put together as a
planet. We can construct
hypotheses. stat@ them In fair-
ly definite ways and think
ol WIY3 to test them,
I See by T~ay's
Waitt Ads ·
e What do you pt, when
YoU put, "TONY CURTJS 6.
JOHNNY M.A"nllS" ~
~ther?! YOtl set "CUR·
TIS • MATIDS""&OO<l-loot<-
lng combo I paf aOun'l I
Sloe c1~et1 ..• rot rw-.
ther Into. e SORRY! NO "BUJ&
SKY" PROMISES! J w s t
J1ctual ''FAcr'' ••. NIXD
XTR.A $SS$! •• , OUT or
WORK! lkft'.1 a chanct W
"UNLllllT>D $11" Cl< 11111 e. ;,ro AIL MTROUXlY
LOYp\S! !'' J\Mil'Yt~ )«S
v e r y own. ''SCORPIO" caom U/J6/10l tor o m1sr •
• ~ , •• SeoJi>k1 wi.tt?'4
,o'J'be anrwe1-.J• ln clua U25.
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.San Bkg(Ji
Bw Line l
Fragrant
SAM bJEGO (AP) -The
sweet amell or city bu.sea
1weep1 San Diego'• 1treets.
Llke a' talcum uchet, 1t
wans froin Ocean Beaclt to
Linda Vista.
Il'a the result· of a clear,
new aubstance injected for the
first lime into the diesel <ill
of gaii tanks used in city
buses. '
Nikita's· ·Memoirs Lauded .-,
Writings I 1u1ei:I W drkings of Kremlin Revealed • in
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The remSE".· · of former
Sovjel • Nilrito s.
khtUahehe c:o 111 a ill fut e a
lignlficant, captivating and
mysterio41 memoir,
might have read all in-eluding formtr P r i m e
~ta of &: series in Ufe Minilter Georgi Malenkov and
magazine that inc luded the former Foreign Minister V.
M. Molotov tried to unseat main portions of the wcrk. Khrus"bchtv from power.
In the book, Khrushchev of. Similarly the memoirs give
he had been gradually losing
po wer.
A mysterious clement ln
these memoirs involves the
motives a n d personalities
behind their transfer from
Rtwia to the West.
Soviet diplomats here have
orrercd no c oherent es:-
planatio11 of the memoirs and
if anything, have appeared
baffled by their appearance.
fers · new insights into coJ.. no uplanation of the political
Jectivizatlon and famine in the maneuverings in 0 ct o b er ..
Ukraine, Stalin's dealings with 1964, which resulted in
Hitler Germany, and Stalin's Khrushchev 's ouster. although
last years, ineluding intimate he admits that 'efler the U-2
details of the deathbed scene. spy plane incident of 196ll,
Also afteclionate recoliec-1-.:.:.~--------,====---------1A.t1••rt1Yrntno tions of Stalin's daughter
A rntthanlc at lhe bus yards
said, "Malabale is ill name.
II says here that il is a clear,
odor-free solution that changeJ
the smell of diesel exhaust
fumes from 1 harsh otrensive
odor to a pleuant~elling
fragrance."
Heads Esrro1"
The 'new khru11hcliev book
·a:M:rs a'-Wlde range.o("Soviet
hlltory r.nn n i n11 from
Khrusbcbev~I youth lr1 'the
Ukraine durUtg 'the avu war
years of the post-'l'tvoluUonary
period, to the deep crisis with
the United States in ~962 over
Soviet miasiles in Cuba.
•· ntls 1s a rare, perhaps
unique, vJtW for the west of
some ol inoer workings of the.
Sovie.i Union. 'Ille Soviet
government sought to dismiss
the work u fabiication. but
at leut 90rne formerly
Mooaiw-based western cor-
respondents: it appears to have
the rin& of authenticity.
Svetlana, Khrushchev '• rise I<> Re rt 1IT ' Th £ power.~ .voyage abroad, hb Doctors po vvay. a I
relatl<a with the We.st " R li ' ltchi ' I p • • Of we11 .. wi\h such independent • e eves' ng, run L ~\':~~':,~ °':'t'. S;ollen'Hemorrhoidal\Tissues
~~~s ~i:I~ Minh and Cuba 's Fi~al Applicationa Give Prompt,(
Tom Prior. president ot the
San Diego Transit Corp., said
he thinks "motorists who
fallow a bus closely, or
pedeatrian.s s t a n d I n g at
curbside 1hOuJd be quite pleas--
ed. II
Joan T. Carney of Ntw·
port Beach has be~n
appointed senior es-
crow officer at Wells
Fargo Bank's Santa
Ana off.ice. She joined
Wells Fargo in 1968
and has had fifteen
years of escrow exper-
ience.
The 639-page boo~ called
"Khrushchev Remembers" -
published by Little Brown and
Co., or Boston -is fascinating
reading, even. for those .who
There ar~ some curious T e:mporary Relief in Many Cases\.
omi&sions, however, in this There's a moeteffectivemedi-inflammation. The-an11wer iS
broad course of hi!llory -cation that in many eases doctor-tesfed Prepa.ration Ir~ gives prompt relief for hours .. There's no othe r h@mor• notably the fa ilure to mention from such hemorrhoidal a.is-rhoidal formula like PrcparaJ
the 1956 "anti-party group sf-oomfort and actually helps li on l:J a.nd it.nee ds nGI
fair" in which a number of ahrink 1 a welling of hemor-prescr!pt1.on.1..01nlmenl._otj
Soviet political leaders In-rhoidal tia&ues caused by_lhe ,suppo&tories.r .
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The best 'way-to~~ppreciate1
.a new·Mercedes?Benz
is~tateSltrdrive .an _old~Merce_des~Benz~
AiM~Bmz. we're not afiild<l)
what one of our old cars will uy about
our new cars.
So before you buy a new Me:rcedes-
Bcnz, we invite you to test drive an old
Mercedes-Benz.
Finding a car to test is really no prob-
lem. A neighbor or a friend may own one.
(Your dealer probably has several on
hand.) But we urge you to be selective.
Pick one with a substantial accumulation
o( miles.
• Helpful hint: If you spot a Mercedes-I
'Benz Wilh one of the badges· shown be..
low on the radiator, you've: found an ex·
~c.cptioiially promisina: candidate to tesL ~
We award them to a Mercedes-Benz
·after 100,000, 200,000 and 500.000 kilomc.-1 ttt5. (The: European equivalent of62,500,
125,000 and 312,000miles .)
The 0P1e sure sip af ag11 in a
Me rcedes-Benz. Radiator badges
awarded 111 Ou J()(Jj){XJ, 100,0<JD &
S00,000 kilometer mile.staP1u. The.Jifl'I
of"" °"'"'r's "•re," a rold lllpcl pin. ·
A ''1uspen1ion 1y1tem'' for
the exhaust system
Take your test car down a potholed
road and listen for audible protests Of age.
· A journalist from Motorttcently put
·an eight-year-0ld Mercedes-Dem rwdster
to the test. "What impressed me. most,''i
he concluded, "was the solidity of the:"
body-not a squeak. or rattle: to be bu.rd.",
We're flattered. But not surprised. Be-
cause we view every part of a Mcrcedcs-
Benz as a potential rattle.
Instead of boltina body and frame ·
tasether, we fuu it with 8,000 or
more welds.
· Window 11ass rides in a ·
Chanoel that's buttreued in
three dlrectJona.
Tberadiator ia supponod
by rubber and framed In foam.
tu mttal never toucbea the retj\
of ,tha C:U • r
--~· ,. --......... Starting from tlie ln•ide\
When you finish your test driVe;" Walk·
'around the car and look at the finish.· ·
To keep the outside looking new~ we'
start protecting it from the inside. . ..~
~ ·. Bodiesaresubmergedin _
~rust-proofer. They emerge
~--Y.-_24 pounds heav ier.
~ But that's not
,,.. Cnough for Merccdes-
Benz. The inside of
_,
MotOr'1 conc/..uian about a veteran of
110,fXJO milu: "A.port from some lo.J!of
uQect the rap m4 this one f.U qtliet,
~I• 11"4 fr•• of rattles 4ltd th• oit
prUSMr• nudlc was .i_,.s lulrdon the .ttop." 1
We even designed a special sUspen·
sion system for the exhaust system. Rub-;
be:r "doughnuts" hold it under-tension. II.
rubber bumr:er is stationed at every point
of contact.
loitgevlty. So they are sliced.irlh&ll aru(
·analyzed by infrared spcc:toirJiphy.
A revolutionary old car .
Today an old Mercedes-Benz bristles'
with features that still seem revolutionary' An intriKUing contest compared to the '7 I cars of other makers.I
Accelerate onto a highway:' The: reason is simple. Our engineer·
Notice how new and tight the engine, f in"g decisions are made by engineers. Not
drivetrain and suspension feel. cost accountants. When they find a way to
Recently in the Road & Track series" make an improveqieilt, they make it.I
"After The New Wears Off," the engineer-Without waiting until it can be made as
ina: editor summed up 35.000 miles in bis ' cheaply as what it replaces.
l Mercedes·Benz by saying simply, "The Take an old Mercedes-Benz through
car is more impressive than when new.",_. ) some curves. Unless it's a pre-1930 mOOcl,1
To keep our ."new" from we:arina: < 1 you11 discover the nimble reflexes that I
·off, we engineer the run-":. ..' -come from fully indepen-
ning gear to last •s Iona:.. , dent suspension. An iJl...
as the body. A lengthy· ~ 'novationyetto bediscov-J
but intriguing contest. ered by domestic sedans.1
indc:cd. Look at the model'
To make sure it will. nameplate. If you spot anl
vital mechanisms must "E,'0 the car has some-:
pass thousands of tests. thing no American car
111 R1.1bber"dO""hnutJ" .J"'....," "e consume more .... ....,, ... _ has, an einspritzsyst~m
h tailpipu and mufflers W1dtr tnuia", 1 t an 40,000 gallons of rubbertmmpersitolatethemfrom 1(German for fuel injeo-
fuelamonth testing every the body. Theuhluut .JJ.Jtem may/ tion ).Developed for Mcr-1
engine before ins tall a.' ne\ler rattli. ...,'cedes-Benz grand pr ix '
lion. Some for as long as Jive houn. cars, it provides a substantial increase iB
After nine successive applications at power with nosacrific~ in uonomy.
135 mph in t1 "destruction" test , disc Apply the brakes. Mercedes-Benz bc-l
bn.kes turn fiery red. They tnust endure lieves the brakes should be the most pow• I
this torture: fifty different times-and suf-. erful pan. of any car. So we introduced
fer no damage. disc brakes ln 1961. Put them on all four
Even seemina;ly unimportant items wheels in 1968. ~o domestic sedan today
like dashboard knobs mwt prove their offers four disc brakes, cvs:n u an option.
Ont of our new cors. Tht 250
o ff\lt-JMISmter sedan Mth
pafOmNN;e futuru •
]"Ol4'l/ still qpredate
whm it's en a'd ca.
r
I body panels that (
were welded ai.r-
1
1 ligbt were P.ainted)
before welCling.
Outside, a Mucedcs-.
IBcnz is prote.cted.by four l
coats of paint and primer ..
The £ront gets an extra coat• .
of chip-resistant enamel. .:...(
. We even insulate Ey6n bod_y l?anels th#t a~
the side trim from weldt:d a.1rt!ght c1111 . h . corrode 1ru 1de. So b,f;;:J"
1thcbody wit a"Str1p ~wdd,we !praythem
of rubber. And sheath 'Ni.th zi11e oxide. AM ·
lheclipsthat attachit . J vitlllart:a.Jbyluuut; -
with plastic grommets, so that metal can
never bite through paint and start rust.:
The ''ave-rre'' ·~ ~ ' Mercedes-Ben:: $7, 700 .
There's nothing "average" about a
line of automobiles with an average sell·
ing price of 17 ,700. ·
Buildina automobiles you can appre.
ciate when they're "old" cars has made
ournc:w can more expensive than most.
There are ten Mercedes-Benz models
priced from 15.350 to $8,259-v,oithout op-
tions. And six.limited editions, largely
handcrafted, from Sl 2,718to129,617".
The coupon will bring a full<olor bro-
chure of the new Mercedes· Benz models.
In the meantime, be sure and test
drive an "old " Mercedes-Benz. And, just
for comparison, an old anything else.
After all, you live most of your life
with an old car. So you should know what
your next car will be like after the "new"
wears off.
•W...1C:0.1!1'0rt of.......,.. ucl111lvc ol 1 .. n1PDri;111oD, wlllie
wall1 fabo1i,.,i}, other l)!>ltoM. SUic Ind Jocai i.a.. It MJ.
eo,,ripl lfXI, ~ ..... , d North ""'"rlcll, lrK.
~-----~----~------------~ I ®'JIM SLIMONS IMPORTS. INC. l I IJO W. W~ A-•
I 5-to ...... Cefifwlllo f2707 f I ..., I
I Please' .cnd me your full-<:olor bnx.hurt ofl.he I
I Mercedes-Bcm motor ca"n. I
I N"" t
,j :: ..... ~I
I ' l~ ____ :::i:: ________ 1 I
> -Jim»Slemo:qs lmP,orfs;1Inc.~uow.w.,,,uAvcn11e,_s.n1aAna.µ11£oma92101_~on"n-'-54641u
I
l
For the
Birth
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lr~1dw1v Morlu••v, Dlrector1.
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f\Jt rv, '46-411, '°""'"'lne dlr1e1ers. O'OTT.1.¥10
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R11>1ri., ,lor9enHn1. Ot!t et 61!1 111. J 1 11-
u1,.,, 11 . Su,.,,lvtd bv wife, Mr1, Dl"'
o •o ue .. o. St•Vlct• ""n !n••rrnen• will M
"•ld In A•fen!ln1 l t ll llrOldWtV Mortu-
•rv. t11twardfn9 ~1r~c1n,..
l!XTON
Jt>i'~ lt!<lf'Ard E•ton, Aae M. ftf O?llO
lll+nc1,, P•lm Oe~orr. COii! D•'t al dftlh.
J 1<•ut rv !! Surwlvflt l!v wife . C!or1, el
l>tlm Oe•erl: d•u,n1ers, Mrs. Shk!OY
11te1lln1, w .. .r Cnvfno; ""'" M••lorl DI
WINe•. ~I V•hnCI•: •••ftdrl&uv!>ltrJ. Mr!.
Oell~j• l>•vnr, M". J~nke !onn••n.d:
Ml,. Sl•a~•nle Ot Wini er; Mlu ll•lo•I•
De Win!.,: 1i1!•,., M.,. M•d~t lllQ!IO: M" Ir""" !'.row"· Sen10 Noon!c~. 5,,.,,.
!(el, 11)!1$V, Monn•v. I PM. Mlll•I~~ C ...... •I. II:~•· Mil l• Mrm1trl•I l>•rk. wh~ Dr.
Philin (,_ "'"''~Y ~nd '"• M••~nlc l_,
efflc •&!0~9 ln1erm•nl, PftH Hl!lo M"'IT'or-
1t l P•r~ !oil! CorMt d•I Mt r Mnrtu•ry,
Dl•t <'oro.
'OWLl!I
cnor1es w<t•••m F"wlrr. Aoe JO. ol !I<
)1st SI , Nt wl>(lrt Sel&<"h. D11e or tt•1ln,
J onu8r• ll. 5.,,vlv•d bV wn, Jt me• (,
Fnwl••· O•GYHIO: d~u'"'""· Mro. 0o ..
oinv o.torr•ll, Ccito M•••; M.,. Ml!ttrl'd
P•••<e. ltl•llO' sl~l•r. Mr,, R&\f McPhOll.
(;Arden G•ove; nlno Q••ndc~f1d•e<1 : $OV· •"1••n ore•l·<t•Anttc~l!d•en; ,,.,. ortll·
!'"et!-or•ndrlllltt. Serlllttt. Tue'ld1y. '
PM. lell IJ,rnAdwOY °Cl\1P•!. ln!.,men1.
Mt•l:>e• R•'I Mt mn•l•I P.rt. lltll l ro11f.
WI¥ Mo•!Yl•V. Dl••c'M•
FURR
lt••nca Fu" A9• U , nl '11 Cl••nt•·
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Mln...,,01• S•rv!cu . Tueld••· ' PM.
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M1mo•I•! Po•k. Sm1tn• Mn••uory. DI·
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five 1r1nd<hlMren ltM4•~. lu.ld•Y. J
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"'"'~ Fomlt• (c•onll f ffll"f••I Momt ,
Ol•KIO•,,
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M1rlon l<Or!ltV Aa• .!(!, "' '31 C1cl!nl,
C'>'!•• "'''" St•vlco1 Pt ll<llnq e! llt l!
l ro~dw•• Mcrtuer•
!IMI
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O•"•'t SI , (o,o• M~• D•lt of d,I!~.
J •""'"' 1l. Survlv•d b• "'''"· Mro. l•A· t•lce S•m•. two t.nn•• P~!l lo IE Sim••
Co11t Mes"' l)(>uol•• Ho11on. Suen• P•rlt;
d~u•M••-C••lll•n M••lt l • Du•. (OSI•
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"'tMflv, 7 ""'· IJ,tll ll•oa~w•v Ch1atl.
ltil l •.,.dw•v Mnrlu•r·v. Olrecto•l-
TUl!Nl:I! J""'" !tnlorn1n Turn t r At• 7'. n! \6.1)
\/11 C111l111. L.oouno !iill\ D"t "' dt1ll!.,
J 1nu1rv 1,, Su•vl~td~rw11e,M1•v~TAO
JenY•"' II 5u..,l••d bV wl!•, MIN M,
"Tu•n•r, ion, John ~ 11! G••M ""' d•i.19 ...
tt•. Merli•" ( "'vi•, 111 Los "'"'"''" """' l 'trl!lthildrt n f'rlv111 •e•vk ts wu 1 l!t ld
I! Btll ll•O•~w•• MOrTUI"' ln!lfmef\I,
ff"'. g11>&r1n1 N41im •1 Ct mflt rv
Wl.IWICK
0 .-v•Ut H Wo•w•ck S• )lit 1A v,1
Ho"""'" W••I, Laaun• "II• Diie Ill
d••'"· J•~u1r• n ~vrvlvtn l!v wi!r. P.""'" •on•. Orvlll~ fr nl Ne•lhb•M~.
lltln•"-EClword I W""""k. ~-~'" II•" b-4•1. d•11~Mfr, Cornl "T......,o....,, al Ct •V.
!'l•.,Oi<: !1v~ arln.d(l!l!dr~n St•Y1Ct'I "'"' ~eld ~und•" •• Lv•he'•" c~.,,cn ct lf>t
c'"''· Lo1un& M•ll•. lnU•l'm•n!, PtcHk
\/[-""•merlol Pork ~omilv """'"""
'"CL•• wl•ih"o to rn•k• "'•rnodol con!rl-
~J'"'"'· o'•"'t t&f'!"b!Jlt Ill !hf Lu"'"'""
Chu•tn n! ••• Cro•1 P•c"lc VleN Mflf• tu•"' Dl••<ln"
ARBUCKLE & SON
We1tcliµ' Mortuary .
'2'7 E. 1 '7lll St., Cosll Mua f -. • BALTZ MORnJARIES •
COMM11 del !\1ar ... OR WM
Co!ta Me11 .. , ..... ml t44M • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
tin 8rudtr1J, c..ta .MIU u 8-JW • M<CORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1'715 Llpna Canyon Rod.
41M411 • PACIFIC VIEW
PtlEMOIUAL PAll
Cemetery M-~pef
S500 P1dftc Y ... Drt"
N.,.port -· Callr..ta 144-17• • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
7MI Bolaa Ave.
We1tmlllster •.. m4W • SMJTRS' MORTUARY
•T Mala It.
Bulla .... --
Record
M• Ml Mn, Mld!Mll C. c..i11 .. 1
J• . 11'!1 '-' l ut. ..... a, F-1•1" .... u.,. .•• ,.,. ,........,11
Mr. l r'll Mr1. Tl\ol'M.1 l..-l•MU, 10"11
ktr<ll .,,,....,., w 11lmln1l1r, 11•1.
Marriage
L~en•e•
MAA•IMll nst.1•• ... Cit .......
COUNTY JAN. 7
SMll>i·SITl(E--G••rv L.. n . or )ft
A,v~n!d1 P1llrM11, S.n (1...,11111• 11M1
(nr1111~1 J .. 11. of S111 (,_., ... ,
MICM.t.EL-1'11 .. Nl('S-JGl>ft P', ti . .,A
13401 C••\I srr .. r. G••Gen G•ov•
tnd Juc11n. A., 1', ol l»lt P11om1 "'"'· w .. 1 ... 1,..,.,, KEMPLIN·WEOGE-Jt•r1 E., .cl. nf
.,. (M1I M'-""-11, H......,,&ff(ll
-8-rty A.. >t, "' ......,rf •••di. IA•TOMJivittlCs--3'-'iol .t... rl, et 111' hlf .._!<Nd .............. hl l<n
-._,, 10, Ill )U, Htitl DtlW. c.,_ •• Mat.
"-"05<11AITltEE-1'4ar..., ti .. ff. ol
OM .,...,,...,...., .......... W"!m!ni tff
.,,,, Hifwo L~ 11, fl ~ w .. 1 "~ ltrMt. $ant1 AM. CltOWELL-l'ITlGEllAL~ !]. M
f7M (•-.II. ~lMI... 1-.j 1(,, ... M, n, "' II" c......,. Chiu
Orl¥t . A,,.Mlfo>,
JAW. I
(tl,,.,.OONALDSON-lctlwi I fl
Ill Ill 1!1s1 1-Sitnef, C..11 ·•MIM'
l<>d W~ I.; 11, ol (NI• MtM.
GIL.MOllllE·HAlll:lllU....0-11 J fl of 511 p..,.._ 11 .... , (0.11 "Mtu'
'"" v 1,..1nJ• I., 'JI, of 1101 V•llftClt
0•1,,., Hunt~ ·~· CONNELL-OISl~,_l>ln P.. l(I,
"' ,, .... "'"""-.,...,, l'Oltw-1 •••ell •...r Gin• M., It, ef 111111 lm~t•ltl,
Huntl119!0f0 11 .. (,.,
DRUlllY-HIHTZ-Mtnrv c:., n. "' 11)111
IC""!lllOll Ltnt, H<Jntll\tl<>n •P<h trl!I"
Stllv Ann, Jl. or -. TrlnllN
Wtv, 11..,.nt Pt••. ·
FUGATIE-llUYSER-R..n.rt l ., tS. !If
llftl 11:.,.,.er Clrc:H', HufYllf'ltl""' llucl'i
""" R~rl M., '1, t>f Hun11.,.1on llttcl>.
WALSH-Ol)(ON-0.nltl P., 1• of !Ml
Llncoln AY•., Antl'lelm tPWI Mo"lc•
M.. 11. 01 1$171 Vlt Otl Sur
Ml11len Vlt lo. '
GAZMAN-CHAVEZ-Jtwt '1, 91 70Jft
, Ct....:it 11: ... 11. IE! l ore 1 n d E•~r1n11, H, ..r l.iot Wtsl Wtlnuf
Strtt1. Stntt Ant.
CAUllLE-lllUGHT-F••n-II:, lt, ftl 3'1' l~'"" Clr<lt, Huo11.,.1,.,., l••Cll
trlCI Cl>t rltne L., !I, el nt10 Htll,
MunllntlOI' llNdl.
P E"ltlit lNO-RO~f.!.SON-S.m J .. U . of J.500.Q• Mt It• ....... , 1,..~
t nd lltu .• n ol 10J1 v1s11 CofQn. N__.t ll••tll.
TYllA-GllAY-ICe....e!h N., 11. ot Ill'!
ll1h Slr ... 1, Wt•tml~oJ"' t oo Ptultn~.
20, nl •10 S&u~ llo!lt Vl•l1 St•IMI An•llflrn. '
OONALOSON·MU ll.DON-Jt,..,.1 l 1l of 1]1 11 .. +mont ,1,,.1., L.,,,. 1~.ct:
""" JIH!ilh A .. 11. of 1\71 Gt rlltld, Hun1 /n9lon le1dl.
~A NG RE"A-SPAW-Geertt M . Ml "'
51' Collfornl1 Av• .. Munri~'"" 11.,1c11
•nd Honey J .. •& of tO?O Fu!ltrlM Av .... Ce11t Mt$8.
llROUGH·MAOOEN-J&l>n A., l7. et
ff(tl H~il .l.Y~.. Hun!l"9111n lt•tll
•nd C••11l1 A., J5, ef Hunllnt1!on llelc~. • • WE JI LE·~Afilll:E LL-l"""'•• Ill,. 10, !If
11•8 ~orbf'• .O.v~., Stnl1 Cit•• ~nd
su,~n IC ,. 70. ol II» VI• Oui111, Newc~rt lltftth.
ICOG ... rt-STUlllls-Mt urlt• It .. ,., !If
!175 Sher ln9!on Pl•C•, NtWMrl
lle1th t nd Anntltt , !'2, el IH Vtrt-!ur1. Ant ht lm.
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
Judge Nixes
Counselor's
Bid for Job
SANTA ANA -A bid for
reinstatement to his job by
a boys ranch counselor who
was fired following repcrta of
his excessive. disctplinin1 of
young jnmate.s has been re-
jected by Orange County
Superior c.oort J udge Robert
A. Banyard.
The jurist's ruling confirms
the dismissal from county
e.mpk>ymenl ef A r I h u r
Thonuissen or Santa Ana,
formerly a counselor &t lhe
Los PiMs Forestry Camp.
T h e m assen unsuccesl'!fully
complained that he was not
given a fair hearing following
his severance ' 'a n pro-
bationary release'' last Sept.
ti.
Thom asse.n 'll supervisor
alleged in document.! 1ub-
mJtted to lht court that the
counse:lor had on more than
one occasion abused c1mp
rule.1 in the disciplining of
young offenders.
The county's Uls Pinos
camp is a corre.ctional center
for juvenile offenders rererre.d
te the facility by Juvenile
Court.
Red Barons
Schedule
Annual Bash
Disease Hurts Fetus
County Doctor Describes Rubella Dangers
ORANGE "A m 11 d When lbt vlnis ptl l!llo lmmunlz.e 11 many children
dl!t•st Ui cblldren -•n •n-the felUI, It can d•mage the In the population against
noytna. but not d&q.trflUI htarln& cellt In the lnner ear. rubtlla and th us limlt lhe diteut ift •dulta -yet • I bum rap for the fetus , 1 This dlmq:e Is usually severt, spread o the disease. The ~A Dr. Tomsovic explains, and rube lla va ccine has only been '"'vaslatift& disease." ail bl h Ii not lbl type of hearing av a e t e past two years.
Rubella, also known 11 loa that can be Corrected so there are thousand! or
"Ge--an meulel," 11 tM hild · o • .,. 1ur1lcally. "We have to c . re.n in range County whn
DA!LY '!LDT jJ
Denture Invention
For People with "Uppen" aMI "Lewan"
The nearttl thlft& to ha rinr 1f!dJ' htlpt pro\.«t fUIM tr.. kuilUw·
nwn tttth ia potlible now with a l'ou nt mart nahnlly-MJof
plutic cream ditcOYtty lluit at· 1pplea, conHJO•tbl<ob.
tu1Uy hold• tit.th "uppm" Ind FIXOOINT ""1 halp ~ .....-.
"loWttt" •s """ #f ,,,, f>OAJiM1. l!IOR t lurly, be. mor~ at -· It's 1 revolutionary dllOOVery Th~ tpe(.lal pencil·ooint di,. ta\~ F1xool!1•n". lof d1ll1 home pfn9'f lelt yw lll)Dt. YWIMWf u~. tU.S. Pit. t :.J.003.988) With with precilion ••. wMf"1 """*'1
F1Ioor:NT many dfl\ture wt9rtt• OM applkl.tiatl may last touW
now eat, aoeak, lau1h. wilh little the clock, Ouitur,. lMt At. arii
•OlTY ol denlurta eomini \ooK. e11ential to health. Sf:e your
F1XOOl:NT for m• •n el attic dtnti1t rqularly. Get ..,,..i.-ll'lt'mbr1ne that flelp& 1blorb the uw P'11ooe.1111 ~ture A.W..
&hock of bitint; and che:wifts-Cream at au div& c:ouatars. dlseaat U... dua1bed by Dr. c•Pitallu ell wh•tever he.aring have not yet been immunized
Edward J, Tom10Ylc, director remains," ht comments, "an~ -•~1~1~in~•~t~'~"~be~l~la~.------=======================: of Oranae County Medical even a he.arlng aid doesn't 1~
Ce n ter's Divl1l1n if he.Ip the child very much In
Pediatrics. In his 25 years distinguishing between tones
I S an Army medic1l officer and sounds .
and his year and a half In "The child thus aHect ~ Orange C.OUnty, Dr. Tamsovic
ha s se.en numerOU!I casf!S of lives in a distorted wnrl d.
children harmed by rubella Even if he has not suffered
wh ile still inside the mot~r·s 8ny bra in damage, his ability
bod lo learn i~ still handicapped. y .
"The harm is done to the "f<"or example. his hearing
fetus wh!le tht mother is in lnss interferes with learning
the first thrtt month!'! of lo talk as we.II as in his a b ility
pregnancy." Dr. Tomsovic ex· l11 relate to other people."
plains. "ll is durin& this lime The child wilh these pro-
that the organs are forming." bltms usually has ta be taught
If the rube.Ila virus Invade..~ In 1peci:il gro ups.
the ft-lus, it disruptiii the Nol only is there an emo-
formation of all kind11 of body ti nnal impact on the child's
tiss1.11~s. The result of this family , Dr. Tom soviC' poinls
disruption can be malforma-out. but there is also an
tinns of the he.art, brain and economic impact on the lami-
eye as well as damage hi ly and the community because
the hearing apparatus and in-the special educational pro-
flammatinn of the bone. liver cess required for such children
and bone marrow. can be. expensive.
"Sometimes the baby dies. (A joint st;itcmenl by the
but more often the baby Calirorni11 Medical Assncia!inn
survives the insult and Is born and the Calirornia St a I e
with the abnormalities." says Health De.partment pninlc: nut
Dr. Tomsovic. th1t the 30,000 congenitally
The term "rube.lla ayn-defective children born As a
drome" de.scribes the most n~sult af the 1964 rubella
characleristic combination or epidemic are now bein~ carr.d
the traiil': effttt$ of the. for at •n estimated rinancial
disease. on the unbnrn. D:. rost of $340 mill ion in addition
Tomsovic describes thi!I syn-lo lht tremendous emntinnal
drome as be.log composed of cost. I
c a n I e n I t a I heart 1b-"When the rescue nf a
normalities, c 11 t a r 1 ct s . human be ing and his family
deatne!ls and u!lually 1ome from the e.ffecU! flf the disease
brain dama1e which i s and the cost tn that. family
manifested as mental relarda· and their community are com-
lion . &imetimes a child will pared to the cost and the
have all of these conditions: t"('lrt or 11:elting an im-
sometimes he will have one munizaUon. It is Obv ious lh;:i1
or more condition!I, but not the old sayin~ Is slill trur;
the complete syndrome. 'an ounce or preventinn is
Damage to the eyell may worlh a pound o( cure.' I
have different results 111uch aii; encoura11:e parent.s: tn have
cataracts. wh ich are wually their children I m m u n I z e d
l!':videnl al birth ; dec~ased against rubell;i . Thr American
ability lo see: or crossed eye~. Academy of Pt>diatric!I and
Alt hough cataract.!! may be. the Ame.r ica n Public He11 llh
11% 11111r111 11 r11r 111111
FREE CHECKING ACCOUNT
11 unique
•p•c•t•d •" d"''"° th• l•'cst A!l!l""'iation rrcommend that Engine.s are rtvving ror lhe " ... " ._ " "" ~ "" Se."cond Annual Rt:d Barons months of life. the child will children lrnm nnP thrnul!h
Bash in Costa Me.~a Jan. 29. never have normAI vision. twr lve years l)f ajlt' rereivt
when the club members frem even with lhis 1urgery. the rubella v11ccine," Dr.
Perwn!I chtc~ing accounts are absolutely free is
10111: as your balance doesn't ro btlow $300.
Should it drop below $300, you simply pay
the normal 1ate tor checks wri tte n du1inf that
state ment period. The ave rage person pay! a servitl
charge of SZ 50 each monlh. That's $30
a year. By maintainin1: th e $300 balance with us,
you save $30, which is equal to 10%
on your money. Ba nki nr is 1 real pleasure
at Newport N1tion1I Bank. throughout Orange County There are al!IO differenl Tomsovic says.
gather to break bread and lype.s or heart abnormalities The present approach is to
swap slorie.s. related to rube.Ila. Dr. ;-===========./ Tomsovic says that some. 11
Highlight will be a film "The these .!lbnormaHtie!I a re
GrOurid Above and The. Ground .Below.·• narrated by surgically correctible. in who le
Sch nr in part. Othe.rs cannot be Art 011• whose stunt nying corrected. Jf the shape. nf the
academy ill headquartered at heart can ht restored, the
Flabob Airport in R iver~ide. child may lead a nermal lire.
The. Friday night se.ssion Jf it can't be, then he faces
CHRDREN
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
9 CONVINflNr omcu SHYING OIANGI COUNTY
AJ~rt Otfltt Mich1lson •I Mtc.M:hur tJ].Jll I • hyt,W1 Dfflc:e 11,sldt 1t J_.;;.t* .. MZ-11,1
Collt11 1'1rt Olfftt Nutwood 1t Common.,111!h 171·2900 • 1111., Hllll Otta H1rW 1t lru t71·72IO
SMptrlor Olllc.s SuptrJor at Plat1nll1 MZ-151 I • U111wt111ty Otrla fltt Ch•Pll'ltn tt Stlll Celle,. 17'-4&40
WllfdlH Otlke Wartdlff 11 Dovtr 642-llll
S.11 lt1eh Offlc.t ltl1urt World, S.11 lltath 596·2711 • LAp:111 Hillt Dffill lli111r11 WGfld, LAIVM HIA• l30-Jztl0
will be in the Halecrest Club. 1 reduced lire expectancy. ~107 Killybrooke Lane, just off,-:..:.==:..:..:.:;::::;:::::;:'..:,.._=:=========::'.'..--------------------------------
the San Diego Freeway, in
Qist.a Mella.
OfficerR •nd dirt:ctors or !ht
org1n!zation will be ln1talled
at the. 1nnual banquet which
begins a t &:30 p.m . with ad·
justment ho,ur and h1n11r
fly in(.
The Red Barnns formed le
promote and publish 1 history
of the r ich aviation history
of Orange Cou nty.
Reservations are SJ ~r
pe.rson ;ind may be mailed
to thr Cesla Me11a Chamber
or Cammerce. 58.1 W. ttth
St.. Qista Mesa.
EVERY TUISOAY
AND THURSDAY
fRDM 4 P.M. TO
CLOSING IS
'BUCK'
NIGHT
AT GRANTS
NOW' LONG BEACH IS SHORTER
TO NO~TH E~N CALIFORNIA.
FAMILY SPECIALS
$ YOUR CHOICE: * Roast-Turkey Dinner * Golden Fried Chicken * Roast hef Au Jus * H-StHk tt.-n.11
Mtll ,., .......... ef , ........ .,..., ......... ,.. ......... .
MonMy •nd Wedo 111d1y lvenl• 0..ly
lltAllPOtlD HO\Jll STIAIC OINNIR
---·-.... · 2 .... . ,.,. ..... host ,..., .... ..,,,_, .. ...
..
IROOICHURST I ADAMS
HUNTINGTON llACH
(1-0.-Clll8ICYt Loe Ange les (Orang• County. Palos
1'11111 ~ J91:1 SUO 8,L~~~.~::~~ ~18 Verdee, Wii mington, Torrin~. ete.),
I 3 Mid ..... S.~ Including tax. Long BOich ls llko having your own prNote
Leave Lona !tech: airport. You don't have to fight the frM-
Now you can fly PSA from Long Bl3ch 1:•0 am way trattic to I. A. lnttmational. Thorn Al rp/l~ to San Franetaco. Four times 1 day. io:•s am ea sy parki ng. And the crowds htvtn'I
More on wukonds. M9re lllghts than 1 :30 pm lound It yet. Next llmt ycu h11d nllllh
any other al~lni. ConneCllOna to Sac re· •:30 pm (or south), h&a~ lor Long Beach AlrpOrt
m1n10. Or, 1vold the freeway and lly to Mon th ru Thur• & Sat. by way of your tr&vel agent and fSA.
San Diego. If you live any piece aouth of .__M_o_ro_1_11o_h_11_F_r1_,_s_u_n_. _, PIA Fi•,.. a 1ft.
•
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I •
•
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t
.&f DAILV PILOT
UlClAL NOTICE
FAIR
f11t, f1ir. f""tv1L Tllo••
~••• wor1h t u"' u~ f1~ .. "' 111
•1>,.•tfio11 OR tt.1 DAILY l'IL01
•ditari•I tt•9• •••N 41v.
s MO!ldar, Jiinuary 25, 1~71
LEGAL NOTICE
NEW TORONADO -ln short supply because of earlier GM strike, new &tyled
Toronado now making big entry into market. Front-wheel Olds model is com-
pletely refined for 1971 .
111 High Gear
'Do or Die' Month for Olds
By CARL CARSTENSEN
John B. Bell7., Oldsmobile's
general manager in predicting
700,000 Oldsmobi le sales for
1971 said that January could
be the "do-or-die month.''
Beltz. in a tour around lhe
country t o "re-introduce
Old s m o bile into the
marketplace" said that erders
are now "pour ing into Lans-
ing." Beltz said that as the
econoniy turns around. the
higher-ticket cars will be in
a very good position to
capitalize on the recovery.
Olds plants are now operating:
at capacity and !Kl percent
of dealer orders now coming
in for the all neY: Toronado
are pre·sold .
Bellz said that Oldsmobile
will assernble 80,000 un its in
March, an all·lirne record.
PONTI AC ENTRY
GETS NA~1E
It ha s been announced !hat
Pontiac·s new entry in the
small car field \viii be nan1ed
the Ventura II. Public in-
troduction is scheduled for
early in the spring. It will
be available in two and four
door models and will be built.
en an 111 inch wheelbase with
an everall length of 194 .5 in-
ches. While the Ventura 1\•ill
be an all·ne\V car for Pontiac
the namcpla1c ha :-> been in
the lineup since !960 as a
special tr im option on lhc
popular Catalina models_
LOCAL TOYOTA 1\-IEN
WIN AWARDS
Frank Klassefb,of Corona dcl
Mar and Dayton \Veil of Hun·
lingt on Bcoch have recently
returned rrom an elaborate
vacation trip to Hawa ii award-
. ed to them for being lhe
• • o u I s ta n d i n g Toyota
salesmen'' in this area .
Kla ssen, with Dean Lewis
Jn1ports and \!.'ell, with Bill
~laxC}', l nt. are two of 19
Toyota retail salesmen in the
western lJnited States to win
ihe vacation trip for two in
Toyota 's recent "Challenge of
the 70"s" sales contest.
PJNCHERS GE'I"TING
l\-10RE POPUUR
Pushers arc still more
popular . . . but pinchers
arc gaining fa st, especia!ly in
big cars.
This probably requires a bit
more explanation,
On cars there are two basic
kinds or braking systems: the
1radilional drum brake (where
1he shoe pushes against the
drum ) and disc brakes (where
calipers pinch the disc). While
!he standard drum brakes are
s!ill the most popular, discs
are coming on strong.
A Dodge survey indicates
that in 5 years discs have
increased lO 88.6 percent. on
ils Pola ra and Monaco bi g
cars.
On the smaller cars. where
cost is a factor, fewer buyers
select the optional, extra cost
discs.
On intermediate Otarger
and Coronet models the in-
crease is somewhat larger,
up to about 25 percent or
sales.
FOREIGN AUTO SAL.ES
CONTINUE CLIMB
The imports appear to be
unaffected as yet by the
domestically built small and
mini.cars. Latest figures show
103,000 foreign cars sold in
the U.S. last November, set-
ting a new record.
In November 1969, import
aulo registrations represented
11 percent of the total market,
while this year's total cap-
tured 19 percent of the na-
tional new car market .
Volkswagen sales declined
slightly for the third con·
secutive month but this was.
offset by gains in Toyota and
Datsun sales , an dsmaller in-
creases in the deliveries of
Me rcedes', Porsches, BMW's,
and Volvos.
Mo11ey's Worth
National TaxBiidget
Breakdown Revealed
By SYLVIA PORTER
You will be merely normal
in your irritation if. as you
are bombarded with l h e
ferleral budget statistics in the
next fortn ight. you wonder
how mu ch of YOUR OWN
tax $1 will be going to finance
lhe various programs and
obligations President Nixon
tells you are of vital im·
portance to your economy in
fiscal '72.
are a married man, father
$11,000 a year from a white
collar job. As of 1970, the
Tax Foundation figures, you
paid $1 ,525 in federal income
and Social Security taxes. The
figures below are close enough
to 1971 and 1972 to be com·
pletely illustrative.
Of your $1.525 in federal
taxes , you paid :
~or 1~11 il•m
..
dollaro
"" N8!IO"AI d~l•M•
l"!n8!1, All1lro &
SPaC11 r~•earch
Fl,,.nc• $ J2
A...-ic., 111•.i <1evtlOll.
Ne!urel '"""'c•• Comm .. .-.::e. lr•nipori,
comm<.>nltv 11ev .. 10P.,
hov•lno
£du<., m•nnr •
H""lll'I lnccfnf' ..,,~rl!V
\/el•••n• btneH»
ln!ere•t
(;-<Al OCVI
~""''"' <1l..,.,.•1>1:e•
·~ •• ·~ "'
'"
"' $1 .cl.le
1.1c
'·~ J.7C • •• ~-''
•.k >k ··'' ~?.?c ..• ••• ... 0.2,
Why It Pays to Know
BOB PALEY
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_,, h••will. Mla ttyte t. 11•1 aht
......... ., Yktw ....... Mt, .....
... ,.. .... -_,_ •• foct, .... h ,,. ...
ty t. chilM tHt CMc• ...... 11 e c1f.
,_ ........... -4 ..W.a. h • i.e ••
Fastest in West
_,,,., .. ..., .. " "'-'• "9'1; trill
....... ,. ,., "" ft ....... .._ ••
""Oflf ..... .,.., ,,.... 1--. r.-
,,.., If .,..,,. •k•I.. le tN Mlttll ,., '" """· ... ,, ,.. ..., .... ,.
Buy It. Stll It. Try lht f1stelt rt$PonSt In the Wtst .J9111nsl yi.or
own clock. Test Olmt--.ti·llM' Alh, wMr' tl'lt action Is, In Saturday''
DAILY PILOT.
&AFECD
INSURANCE
-· , .... '" ...,.., ,., ... ,, .. , ... .
....,.,.... call .. 1o-. P91ey. llt4lt01
~IM hliff"t ., et 474 I. 17tt. St .•
c" ... M .... '"-• '42.,soo
Finance
Briefs
NEW YORK -The Federal
Reserve Bank of Ntw York
and lhe San Francl sco
Reserve Bank, f o ll owi n g
similar action by other district
banks, Thursday cut their dis-
count rales from sv, kl S
percent. Only th ree banks
have nol followtd suit.
DALLAS -LTV Aerospace l
Corp. Thursday received a $20
million contract from the
Navy in connection with Navy
and Air Force version of the
A-7 attack aircraft,
In another announcement
the company said it expects
lo lose $4,600,000 million for
1970 from sh utting down its
Kid All terrain vehicle pro--
gram in Tyler, Texas,
\VASHJNGTON -McDo n-
nell Corp. has received two
additions to existing Navy and
Air Force contracts totalling
$27,900,000 and Grumman
Corp. received a $36 million
addition to an existing Navy
contract.
SYOSSET, N.Y, -Kollsman
Instrument Ccrp, announced!
Thursday receipt of nearly $2
million in Air Force orders
for test sets and ground sup-
port equipment for t h e
maintenance of high·
performance jets and an
altimeter .
NEW 'YORK E sso
Tankers Inc .. a Jersey Stan-
dard unit, announeed Chan-
tien De L'atlantiquc will con-1
struct a 250,000 ton dead
weight tanker. The ship will
be built in St. Nazaire, France
and is scheduled to be
delivered to Esso in 1975.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI )
-Americans will spend about
$124 billion for food and
beverages this year, and
meals at "lranchised fast food
outlets" will account for
between $5 and $6 billion of
the total. according to Arthur
D. Little, Inc., Cambridge,
f\.fass., research, engineering
and management consulting
finn.
"Drive-in" restaurants with
a Limited menu and little
serv ice have groY.1l from
about a half·billion dollars in
sales JO years ago, and are ex-
pected to reach $11 or $12
bi Hion in the next five years.
MONTREAL '-A Canadian
General Electric Co. Ltd.
s ub si diary, Dominion
Engineering Works Ltd., .an·
nounced $12 million in con-
tracts from Brazil and Colom·
bia to supply hydrauli c
turbines f o r hydr1relectric
projects.
SAN FRANCISCO -llyatt
International Corp. announced
it has agreed to operate a
resort hotel in C elombo ,
Ceylon. The hotel presently
has 125 rooms and there are
plans to add another 300
rooms. The agreement was
between Hyatt's .subsidiary,
Hyatt Ceylon_ Ltd .. and Ceylon
Hotels Ltd.
NEW YORK F. \V .
Woolworth Co, had an 11-2
percent rise in sales in 1970
to $2.526,262,000, Lester A.
Burcham, chairman, reported
f\1onday, December s a I es ,
after a slow start, rose by
7.2 percent over the 1969
fTl{lnth to $379.702,000.
SAN FRAN CISCO -Pacific
Gas & Electric announced it
has asked the Federal Power
Commission for permission to
import an additional 200
million cubic feet of gas a
day from Canada and for
authority to p e r f 9 r m
$82.800,000 i n construction
work.
HARTFORD, Conn .
Kollmorgen Corp. has granted
Internat i onal Business
Machines Corp. licenses on
patents related to printed
c i r c u I ts,;. inlertonnection
techniques and pr i n t e d
motors and manufacturing
methods. Kollmorgen said it
expects to receive six figure
royalUes in 1971 from lhe
agreement.
Ike Dollars
Checked Out
PHll.ADELPHJA (UPI) -
Coin exputa at lhe U.S. Mlnt'
htre were achedvled to con·
duct tests today on the
Eisenhower dollar, .. coin I
made of copper and nickel
that Is eapected to sueeted
the silver dollar.
A spokesman sald the trial
slrlkln& here is to "Me how
they're going to look and to!
perfect tht dies for the pro-I
due:tlon of 150 mUUon ofj'
lhem."
The coins probably wilt be1 manufactured for 1 c n e r a I
circulation at lbe: U.S. l!Unt 1
ln San Ji'ranclsoo.
. ---
Wbo listens
To landers?
-
SINCE
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
Does
That's Wbo
You Can 'Listen' to Ann Landers
Deily ·~ The DAILY PILOT
I
l
I
\
s DAILY PILOT 3
Here. Co1ne Be Judge~ •~r-e Co1ne :De Judge
f'flefft ..,. P•trtca o•o...11
DRUM MAJOR DENNIS KUIDAHL OF EL MONTE'S ARROYO HIGH SCHOOL GETS ONCE, TWICE, THRICE OVER FROM JUDGE JOHN HOLTRUST OF ANAHEIM
Close Inspection of More Than 40 Entrants Marks Orum Major Section of High School Band Competition During the WHkend at Newport H1rbor High. Neighbors Serenaded by Hundred• of Young Musicians.
Fire Volunteers
Vending Funds
Get Exemption
By a split 3-2 vote county supervisors
have exempted paid-call volunteer fire
stations from a recently-instituted rule
that all funds collected from vending
machines in county facilities must go
to the general fund.
County Fire \Varden Elmer Osterman
requested the exemption but it was op-
posed by county Purchasing Agent Nate
Cherry and supervisors Robert Battin
and Ronald Caspers.
Supervisor David L. Baker led the
argument in favor of Jetting the volunteer
firemen keep the "few dollars" profit
fro m the vending machines.
"ln most cases the stations are used
as community meeting places and the
proceeds from the machines have been
used to buy tquipment," Baker argued.
''These men are not county employes."
Battin argued that to exempt the
firemen was' "setting a bad precedent."
He said that although the men are
not regular county employes they are
paid for fire calls they respond to.
Vending machines in only five county
fire stations are affected by the new
ruling, according to Osterman.
''They (paid call firemen) are im-
portant to us," he said, "and we hate
to see a small thing like this become
an irritant."
Liz Taylor
A Gra1ulma?
LONDON (UPI) -Elizabeth
Taylor, 39, wilt become a
grandmother soon, Br 1 tis h
newspapers said today.
They said the wife of her son,
Michael Wilding, is expecting a
:hild in August. Michael, 18, and
his wife Belh, 19, were married
in hippie costume here in October,
Friends said Miss Taylor , actress
wife of actor Richard Burton, is
"extremely happy" about the
tvent.
Michael. son and namesake o(
Miss Taylor's second husband, is
employed as a photographer on
the Het of his mother's latest
movie, "Zee and Co."
The friends silid the young
Wildings expect the child to be
born in Mexico where the Burtons
will be working on a rn o v i e
together.
Bee1· Blast Fatal
PORTSMOUTH, England (UPI) -Beer
wagon driver Rowland Barnes, 45, was
killed Friday when a high-pressure beer
barrel he was loading in the cellar of the
11ava1 navigational school blew up, police
said, The BO-gallon tank was being filled
from Barnes' beer truck outside.
State Democrats Regroup
Moderate ~1anatt Takes Reins as New Party Leader
By BILL STAU..
AP Political Writer
SACRAMENTO -Leadership of the
California Democratic party -showing
signs of new life after sh.1tterring defeats
in the 1960s -rested today w i t h a
34-year-old party moderate f r o m
Southern California.
The election of Charles Manatt as
state Democratic chairman SlUlday
represented a boost in party prestige
and influence for new Assembly Speaker
Bob MoreUi and new Sen. John V. Tun-
ney.
Manatt, an attorney from Van Nuys,
promised that his narrow victory over
former Rep, George Brown J r., marked
"a new day in Californi a" for Democrats.
"We are going to get the party moving
in the direction of rebuilding financially
and in organization," he said after win·
ning on the second ballot 428-418.
Manatt will be the party chief through
the 1972 presidential election. Although
party rule.s require him to remain neutral
in primary contest, Manatt's tenure is
expected to renect his friendship with
Moretti , who also is 34, and Tunney, 36.
Moretti and other young members of
his legislative leadership group were "in·
tensely courted during the weekend con·
vention by three likely presidential con-
tenders: Sens. George McGovern (0..
S.D.), Edmund S. Muskie (D-Malne),
and Birch Bayh (D-Ind.)
All three indic.ated the 1972 California
primary election would play a key role
as Democrats choose a candidate tG
go against President Nixon, whG ls ex·
pected to seek a second term. Manatt
has declined to say whom he might
support for president.
Brown Jed on the first ball Gt which
was a th ree-way fight invalving Southern
California vice cha:irman Leon Cooper.
Brown had 430 votes to Manatt's 390
and Cooptr's 61 ·-with ffl needed
to win.
Tunney already had announced his au~
port for Manatt, his Southern' California
campaign chairman, when Brown -a
political ally of Sen. Eugene -Mccarthy
Surgeons Sentenced
ROME (UPl)-A court sentenced three
Rome hospital surgeons to three months
in jail Friday for leaving a pair of pine·
ers in the abdomen of an 80-year-old wo-
man on whom they operated. A later oper.
ation to remove the pince rs was held by
the prosecution to be a contributing cause
of the woman's death in 1964.
and early opponent of the war In Vietnam
-decided to enter the race.
The newly elected Tunney, a close
frit'lld of Sen, Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts, announced then that he
was morally committed to vote for
Brown because of the support Brown
gave him in hls tough general election
battle against then Sen. George Murphy
(R-Calif.) Tunne y had defeated Brown
in the Democratic Senate primary.
But many Twmey supporters, including
Mo retti , L"Ontinued to ba ck
Manatt. Moretti worked the convention
floor late Sa~urday night and Sunday
trying to change votes. He aaid be even
won one delegate over by literally arm
wre!Uing hlm.
Manatt said be will move to open the
party'• oPUation.s including policy mak-
ing, to CalUomia minority groups.
Abe Tapia, a spokesman for Mexican-
Americans, addressed the convention
Sunday, bitterly complaining that the
Democratic party bad totally alleaatcd
his people.
"We have been the slave people of
this country and we art sick and tired
of it," said Tapia.
About 200 Mexican.Americans picketed
the convention hall Saturday, aeelqng
greater particlpaUon in the party a n d
a better break ln reapportionment of
Jegi!laUve district!.
Boy Turns In
Babysitter In
For Marij11ana
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) -After
seeing marijuana on television and smell,..
ing a burning "joint" at last year'•
state police demonstration la a county
fair, 10.year-old Donald Sasen had an
idea what the stuff was.
And, he was certain, the baby sitter
and her three male companions weren't
smoking plain old cigarettes in tho
bathroom Saturday night.
So Donald, an enterprising lad who
made an unsuccessful bid for Boy Scouf
membership last summer -he's a year
sby of the mi nimum age -decided
to do his civic duty.
He gave brother Joseph, 9, a dollar
he had earned shoveling snow to snatch
the cellophane bag sitting on the
bathroom shelf.
Joseph had been warned by the sitter
and her teenaged friends about coming
downstairs, so he su~let the job to"
brother Michael, 5.
Mike snatched the bag and turned'"
It over to Donald, the eldest of 1ix
Sasen children.
Donald made an excuse to go outside
and acooted down the street to a dru1.
store and called police. His baby sitter
and her friends were 11itting on the
tub In bis home smoking what he thought
was marijuana, he told a desk sergeant.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
!Stew Beef ......... 89~
iAan cu'r" of U.S.D.A. Choke beef •.• com!'"'"• tbe quality I .
. L' 1d B ·1. ; $1 49 on on _ ro1 . . . . . . lb.
li;njoy the hearty goodn.,. of beef ••• and El Rancho'• price!
Ground Beef tor Chin .: ............................. 79:..
Lean rid. beef ••• coo.rse iround • .'.serve chili with hearty meat! . -'1 .
Fresh Beef Tongue· ................. '. .................. 59:..
Freshness makes all the difference for tenderness and f1avor!
P~ADENA:
320 West Colollllo Blvd.
ARCADIA:
s..det riid Huntin&ton Dr. (D Randlo Center)
••••••••••••
Snapping crisp! ••• Sunshine's Saltines are a welcome companion to 10 many good things to eat! Serve with a atea: ng bowl
of chili ••• or with soup, piping bot ••• or with a rich and hearty stew! But, no matter what you urve •.• you'll love El
Rancho's price on the 1 PoU:nd pack.age I -
<irapef ruit ........ 10 : $1
Texas Ruby R<d ... pink mea! ••• brl,ht way to ata rt the day l
Soup ...... ~5 ~~ ••••••• 4: $1
The·n.,.. Gnat.American Soup ,., from Hei nz •.• favorite kinda I
I Prices in effect Mon., Tllu., Wed .
Jan !5, !6, tr. No 84lu to dea!.rr.
~HI · and Beans .................................. J9e
Honne1's ••• 16 oc. can ••• heat and serve ••• and enjoy qualitJ.t
Cas~e for Dishwashers ......................... sr
Glulwart ••• chlDa ••• allvv ••• Cucade doe• 'em all I 36 oz. ' . .
Brl!Clkfut treot ff'Om our ·dtlkoterun. a.. Rolls . ... . . .... '4 11111 '1
Pllllbury'a .•• 9\,i ounce packaae , • , r.ady to bake!
NEWl!OllT IEACH: 'l111 Nwport.111111..;
2555 EllDllll Dr. (hllMlll Wlql Celllr)
SOUTH PASADENA:
FlllllGlll Ind lhonlin&lol! Qr.
fRINTIM6TON BEACll:
Wllllll llld N&wrl• (llLMlk Celllr)
'
I ,,
r
' . .
• ! I
I
I '
'$1 o· Billion '· .. SUDAN • ,.{·' ·:·:·'tJ:'.· UGANDA
P"OVINCe:S
' Deficit Set ,,
" -: . NO"TH l!RN . '
' For _Budget
·: _ ... ,.. .t"' •• • . " . THE ,.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -T h e bu<liel
Preaklent Nl100 will 1tnd to c.onaru•
Friday will total a record $229.2 billion
-including a deficit of more than
$10 bllllon, White Houst JOurces said
today.
CONllO "'-·~1 . (I-,!-, 4111ia' ...
t-·-' ••.• E ASTE"N
·: ·-"
KENYA .._: .... , BUGANOA ~
'•1 kAMPAlA 'Of coane it doun't
work. lt'1 a trao-to-life
modal!'
-· "' r 0 •J.. . : ''"'"
You Can't
" " :: " -: "
" •'
• ' • I
' • \
The $229., billion figure compares with
a W .8 billion budget tht President
proposed one year ago for tht currt.nt
fiscal year. 11uit budget was to have
produoed a $1.3 billion surplus. but
tt0nomic condlliorul worsened and an·
ticlpated rtvenue failed lo materlalll.e
forcing Nl.Ion to change his figures in
May to about $215 billion, with an tX·
pecterl deficit of $15 blllion. .. w.TrD ""''' 'W"nt,..AT .. N•l ..... , •. •l&. ... Kt ... T• "••r111tva.Co
Pass 'Go' Nixon 1lttady has said his budget
for the buslne.s1 year beginning: July
I would be an expansionary one -
"one that will help stimulate the economy
and thereby open up new job Oi>"
portunllir.s for millions of Americans."
NEWSMAP SHOWS COUP SCENE IN KAMPALA, UGANDA
Troops With Tanks Usurp Country's Reins Again
By DICK WEST
Aa a promotional gimmick, the
' Southern Railroad baa devised a new
board game, similar to "Monopoly," that
is b~ on its freight operations.
In bis State of the Union address
Friday, Nixon said the new budget would
call for the government to spend as
though the nation had full employment.
in a move designed to attack the highest
unemployment in nine years.
Road Declared Open
I doubt any American railroad would
have the nerve to devi1e a game based
an ita passenger operations. But I think
I can visualize bow it would be playtd:
Highway 4 Fight Halted;
'lbe While House also said Sunday
the President would hit the road, possibly
within the next few weeks, to try lo
"sell" the public on two of the major
goals unveUed in the Friday address
-revenue sharing and reorganization
or the federal bureaucracy.
Phnom Penh Under Alert
Each player select5 a marker designat-
tng him as a "passeiger" on the Moose
Jaw, Medicine Hat and Tampico Railroad
cAfJMH&T). liiarker is placed on space
labelled "Moose Jaw." Object cf 1ame
is to get from "Moose Jaw·• to "Tam-
pico" before the MJMH&.-T goes bankrupt
or the Interstate Commerce Commission
(ICC) suspends pu:sen1er service.
There is no point trying to get to
1iledicine Hat ~ause the MJMH&:T no
longer stops there.
A passenger's progress is determined
by drawing cards from a stack labelled
''ICC Decisions and Other Disasters."
(A pair of di ce also comes with the
game, but passengers only throw them
to pus time while waiting for trains).
Here are some of the key carda:
-Ticket office already is closed wben
you ~acb station. Remain in place.
-Station already is closed. Lose next
turn.
-When you finally board train, it pulls
onto a siding to await repairs. Remain
in place.
-Conductor tells you diner is 10 cars
le tbe rear. You walk back nine cars
and discover tbat diner has been discon-
nected at Medicine Hal Remain in place.
-Railroad reports a $3.2 billion deficit
"" passenger operations and petitions
ICC for a fare increase. Remain in
place.
-ICC appro•es $3.5 billion fare in·
crease. Go back 10 spaces.
-Railroad reports deficit has risen
to $3. 7 billion. Lose next turn.
-As train is leaving Moose Jaw, ne\\'S
11 rrives that f\.toose Jaw. Pt1edicine Hat
and Tampico has merged with the
Pocatello. Walla Walla and Winnipeg
( PWW'1:W), Return to Moose Jaw.
-Conductor announces that Tampico
passengers are being rerouted to Vt'in·
nipeg. Go back JO spaces.
-Train arrives in Saskatoon. Railroad
petitions ICC to change its n1me to
Ptfoose Jaw. f.1edlcine H•t and Saskatoon.
Go back 10 :spaces.
-Passen1er'1 baggaae arrivet in Tlr.m-
pico. Lose next turn.
-UPI
No specific plans were announced but
It was understood Nixon is planning
to alt.end rour regional Republican
meetings, the first one of them in
February. It was also expected Vice
Pre5ident Spiro T. Agnew and other
top White House officials would take
the. trail to promote Nixon's plans.
Sen . Robert J. Dole of Kansas,
Republican national chairman, said Sun·
day the President intends to make his
legislative proposals a major issue in
the 1972 election campaign.
"If the Democratic Congress turn!'!
it down, the people will have to judge."
Dole said after Sunday's White }louse
worship service.
But Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Ptfansfield and House Speaker Carl Albert
both predicted stiff congressional op-
position to Nixon's Stale or the Union
proposals.
Nixon proposed the federal government
hand out to slate and local governments
$16 billion, including $6 bilHon in new
fund!!, on a generally no-strings-attached
basis.
Syndicate Wins
Racing} ackpot
Of $730,000
AUCKLAND, New Zealand (UPI)
-A syndicate of 29 Greek im·
mierants today v.·on what was
believed a world record race track
jackpot pri:te of $730,000.
The immigrants. v.·ho live in
Wellington, won the prize when
50 to 1 longshol Gather won the
fifth and lasL jackpot race at
Ashurst race track, 2!.0 miles south
3f here.
The leader of the syndicate danc-
ed v.·ilh glee in front of the irand-
.>tand wMn Gather wo n. Hundreds
::if wellwishers mobbed him and,
with tears streaming down his fact,
he v.·as escorted by four policemen
lo the racing club secretary's of.
\ICe.
The jackpot is run at various
r:ice meetings in lhe t:cntral
district of the nor1h island. and
pool money accumulates un til bet·
tors pick five consecutive winners.
The jackpot won today began
in October v.•ith $350.
HONOM PENH (UPI) -South Viet-
namese forces abruptly terminated their
cperaUon along Cambodia's Highway 4
today, declared the road open and
v.·ithdrew their forces, m i I i I a r y
spokesmen said. The United Slates,
which provided air support for the opera·
tion, withdrew its two helicopter carriers,
Phnom Penh, a city unnerved by
three nights or terrorist attack!, re-
mained in a slate of full alert with
fighting reported as close as 12 miles
away. Two 122mm Soviet-built rockets
were fired at Pochenton Airport during
the night but fell short and wounded
two villagers.
Milit.ary spokesman said withdrawing
South Vietnamese Rangers and armor
ran into a brief skirmish late Sunday
afternoon at the town of Kkampong
Trach, 75 miles southwest of Phnom
Penh. They reported killing 30 guerrillas
a nd sei:ting four weapOns while losing
one dead and three wounded.
Highway t leads from Phnom P e n h
to the pcirt of Kompong Som, site of
Cambodia's only oil refinery, The Com-
munists cut it in mid.November, shutting
off Plulom Penh's supply of fuel. South
Vietnamese were flown in to aid the
Cambodians and the Uni1ed Stales sup·
ported the operation with helicopter
gunships and F4 Phantoms.
U.S. involvement in the Cambodian
righting brought loud protests today from
Hanoi radio. It accu.sed the United States
of intensifying the "feverish aggressive
war" against Cambodia and demanded
ii stop its "criminal action immediately
and unconditionally."
In Soulh Vietnam, the Communists'
four-day lunar New Ye ar truce begins
al l a.m. Tuesday fnoon EST) but does
not apply te Cambodia and Laos. A
Masked Gunmen
Rob Strongroo111
LONDON (AP) -Masked gunmen
broke into an Air Canada cargo terminal
at London's Heathrow Airport today,
looted Lhe strongroom and escaped.
Tht: contents or the strongroom in·
eluded gold and platinum, but police
did not know yet how much the g11ng
stole.
Carry1ni:: shotguns and c:lubs. the
raiders forced lll'Q warehousemen. a
cargo agent and a security man tr.
I he floor, tied them up and gagged
then1.
Four or five men were in the gsn~.
'l'hey forced open the strongroom, carried
out tbe loot and 81Uped in a car.
Something for Everyone
Snow, Rain, Fog, Cold a1ul I/eat Scatt.er Across U.S.
C.iltoraia
IOUTHElllN CAl.ll'OA°N lii-Mwnl"I low Clollfl ...... tl>t CO.II tM fo.
In llltl'tff lnl1M v1ll..,1 clH•lnt 1"
hlfV ·~-1un111!111 M.Gnol'' t l>ll
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rt1£VllW Of MO.U •ITtOMAl wtlTHtl S£1'flC£ TD 1:01 A M. EST I -16-'7f
11 '1 Wllfllfl FOfOCUfl)
Coatal
,.ft!IT -...... lllllf Vttll"t Wl'"91 nlmnt ft _,.IM hlolrt ""-"·
lnt -.ltttY J ,. IS lMtt Ill •tltr-t
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4 M )4, Wf tw lwl\Nt1tw. M.
Sun, ltloon, Tiiie•
MOttOAY
$tellld hltl! ' .. •11t '""· ... Ileen.I lft J . .c2' f Jn, •I.I
TUIJNY ~·"' """ ' ......... t:1t1...... • ••
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"'" 1111-6:U • m. hit t : 111.m. '°'"" 1i.1•: .. 1 m. Jttt .,01 • m,
• lltlllt
Mn'.D
U.S. Summar11
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lfM ..... t tv...1 t lln9 1111 Ctl\Hllll Mt• w 111111 1)1-...... ,... -tllff •'-
ll'Mo Q.\111,
A llnt " r1h1 tlllll '"°"""" ll<tll'Md
tfOfl'I Lovll11"' " .... ftlklio1-Alle"llc
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lll•lrt 1#11 11en. "-'"•<lflt -···· ""'' w1m ,,,.,.... IO,lrllltt 1n11N11 In 1111
"""'"'•+n1,
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Temperatures
~01111 L" fi'r'tl;.
"''1>1nv • " AIMUff•U• " v
All1nt• " .. ...
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C."lc•ff . , " C!nclnnt ll " ,,
Cl t1111ll .... " " 011111 .. " 01nvtr " " 0..Mo1 ... .. " Ot!relt " " 1t1lrM .. -• ~ ,,.
H-lwlu " • 1""11111,ol!I " ,, ,M
JU"ffU .. ". "' IC1n111 Cl" " • Lt• V"•I " " L1111ltwHl1 • " " "'-"-"'1• • " ...
Mllfl>I " ..
Mlhffuk" • " Ml"-"'l' • " .,
'"..,_ • ..
N .. Ywtl " n ,,
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••••fC:llV .. H ·-" ..
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.... ON ~ " Wltl\l~ton • " » w1,,.,1," " "'
•
U.S. and South Vietnamese one-day cease·
fire for Tet begins at 6 p.m. (5 a.m.
EST) Tuesday. Tet. ushering in the year
of the Pig, begins at the stroke or
midnight Tuesday.
The South Vietnamese said they killed
a tolal of 179 guerrillas and took 27
prisoners during the 19-day operation
that began Jan. 6. Spokesmen refused
to discuss the estimated si:te of Com·
munist forces in the area bul Cam·
boclians put the figure at around tv.·o
regiments lup to 5,000 men).
S. Viets Free
40 Prisoners ;
3 Stay in South
AT THE: DErvllLITARIZED ZONE
!LiPI) -South Vietnam Sunday released
~O North Vietnamese prisoners of war.
Vietnam, but at lhe last minute the
other three decided not to go.
The CommWlists observed a temporary
cease-fire in the Demilitarized Zone
dividing North and Soulh Vietnam unti l
the PO\Ys had crossed the Ben Hai
Riv er. Then they opened fire with eight
rounds of 82 mm mortar fire. wounding
at least one South Vietnamese in-
fantryman.
A U.S. support plane flying in th<'
area reported ground fire but the plane
was not hit.
The prisoners, many of them maimed
or considered terminal c<1ses. were flown
10 a site south of lhe old Ben Hai
Bridge, which had served as a crossini::
poinl for other prisoners returning to
South Vietnam until the North Viel·
namese blew it up in 1967.
The men v.·ere divided and put into
five large white rubber rafls carrying
Red Cross insign ia. The men paddled
the rafts across the 200-yard ~·ide river
;ind were greeted on the opposite shore
by a 3mall group of North Vietnamest.
Numerous civilians s p o t t e d across
the river with cameras. gave the ap-
pearance that news coverage was permit·
ted hy the North Vietnamese.
A North Vietnamese sampan met the
rafts in mid-stream <1nd served as an
esrort tn lhc other sirle
The 1hree prisoners '\'ho dccJdf'd 10
remain in the south said they did so
bcc;iuse "ln the north you have no right
to live."
Guinea Assembly
Sente nces 92
To Death Ter111s
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast <UPil -A
c heering crowd in a Conakry Stadium
shouted "kill them! Kill them!" Sunday
when death sentences Vt'ere annouoced
for 92 persons accused of plotting the
abortive Nov, 22 invasion or Guinea .
Sixty of those given death sentence~
by the Gu inean national assembly sitting
as a "revolutionary court" were in
custody. Tht: other 32 were sentenced
in sbsenlia .
The court, urged on during the trial
by President Ahmed Sekou Toure who
composed a poem tJtled "Goodby to
the Traitors," sentenced 72 other
'persons. including a Roman Catholic
archbishop and two Wt:sl Germans. to
life In prison.
Conakry's "Revolution Radio" reported
the trial resul13 in a broadcast monitored
in Abidjan.
f A spokesman at the Vatican sard
tM dtdalon was received there with
"conltamation." Pope: Paul VJ. in hi~
nrul•r Sunday blea!ng cf a cro\~1d in
St. Peter's Squirt shortly before learning
of the decltion, criticized the trial a!
"alnplar and stnaOonaJ."
Archbbhop Raymond·Marle Tchidimbo
w111 the second Rom1n Catholic blshl:ln
fn Wnt Afrle1 to be. sentenced tn life
imprisonment for allr:ged po!itic11I nr·
tlvlty in less t.h11n a month. Bl~hOJ'I
Albert Ndon,::mn of C.llmeroun wa~ C'On·
vleted of anligovernment actlvhy In
C11mtroun. ,
Obot.e Overthrown l
' Military Takes
Power in Uga~da
....
·KAMPALA. Uganda (UPI) -Heavy
lighUng involving tank& and armored
cars broke out in Kampala beforr: dawn
today. and Gen. ldi Amin, the British
trained army commander, said he and
E. W. Oryema, chief of tht count.ry·s
police force, had sei:ted power "in tht
interest 'of the people.''
President Milton Obo te wa.s out or
the country at the time and was due
in Nairobi, Kenya. today on h.ls way
home from the British Commonwealth
Prime Minis\ers' Conference in
Singapore. Members of hi! government
urged him to remain there until the
s it uation is "clarified ."
Thousands of jubilant Africans paraded
through the streets of K a m p a I a ,
c.:elebraling Obote's downfall. A radio
broadcast said the new government
would ··cement" friendly ties with all
foreign goverrunents.
News or the coup wa s broadcast by
!he official Kampa la radio.
Seven persons were reported killed
in the predawn fighting in lhe capital,
and a report from Entebbe Airport said
a shell exploded at the a irport terminal,
killing several Africans. Fighting also
\Vas reported on the 21 -mile stretch of
road fron1 Kampala lo Entebbe and
~'itnesses said they saw bodies there.
Obote \vas the seC'ond Afric11n leader
to be overthrown while out of his country.
'l'he Chana a rm y overthrew President
Kv.•ame N. Nkrumah on Feb. 24, 1966,
\\'hile. he v.·as paying an official visit
to l\1oscow.
Troops \vilh armored cars surrounderl
partian1ent and Obole's residence and
fired shoL~ in to the a ir to warn people
a\vay. f.1otorists who were turned back
from the areas said the. soldiers ex -
pressed · 'anti-Obote sentunents. ·'
The radio announcer. v.•ho identified
himself only as "a L.:gandan soldier,"
s aid the army "has taken over the
government because it Is to t a I ~ y
cil.ssatilOtd with Obote's econ om 1 c
policies and corruplion and trib.tl.iw
in the government."
Diplomats said the airport at Entebbt,
21 miler JOulh on Lake Victoria, was
closed.
The radio announcement declared a
curfew from 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
1be broadcast did not say who wu
leading the coup.
The radio bulletin said the new govern-
ment would seek friendly ties with all
fottign government!, but warne.d other
govemments to stay out o( the Uganda
fracas. "Any such attempts will be
crushed," the broadcast said.
The new leader will be "a Ugandan
fellow soldier," the announcer said.
A British newsman leaving the British
High Commission was ordered at cun·
point by a trooper to sit down in
the street. then questioned. "Don't think
I shall worry about killing you," the
soldier said. "Seven people have died
al parliament already."
There was no immediate confirmation
of the deaths, but reports from the
airport said a :;hell exploded at the
front doo r of the terminal, killing
"several" Africans.
Diplomats said other forces were mnv-
ing towards the city from J inja, and
there were clashes reported on the road
bet\\'een pro.and anti-Obote rorces.
Obote survived an assassination al·
tempt last October when he \~IS s h o t
in the head.
Bishop's llon1e So ld
BRIDGEPORT. Conn. /UPI) -The
16-room niansion occupied by the Moat
Rev. Walter f.1, Curtis, bishop of tht
Roman Catholic diocese of Bridgeport.
has been put up for sale to htlp ease
the diocese's $492,000 deficit.
Junior Joyrider
Boy, 11, Dri·ves for Week in NY •
NE\Y YORK (UP I) -The police pick·
ed up an .I l·year-0ld boy today v.·hom
they said had been joyridi ng around
the cily in a stolen car for the past
WN!k.
The hoy. !echnically charged \\'ilh
"grand larceny -auto." needed a pillow
to sit on Sf! he <.'ould see the road
hut rnanaged tu dri ve the car for do:tens
r.f rndcs. including trips to Kennedy
:ind LuG uard1a airports Sunday night
1n ~hppcry rain and snow.
The alleged ••scapade was uncovered
1\•hcn !!wet• broth<'rs and a cousin under
10 ~ears old rel urned to their home
e;1rly today. They had been missing
si nce Sunday rnorning, and their parents
had cal led ror µo licc help in the in-
ler~cning hours. but the boys got home
on !heir (l\vn wHh lhe explanation they
had JUSl returned from "a ride with
a man, a guy about 16."
\Vith a description or the car and
a suggeslion fro ni the four youngsters
-j • • . "¥· ••
... ~ ...
Gals 1filf Be Gab
v.'here the ir host might live, dr:teclivts
quickly located him at 3 a.m. today.
The "suspect's" parents reportedly urged
lhal their son be locked up becausa
he had a long history of crime. He
v.·as to b<' arraigned before juvenile
authorities later today.
Det. Jatnes Keenan. who investigated
lhe ca.~e . \vas frankly incredulous JI!'
he recounted the boys' adventures. "He
was a pro. I'd say. driving along wearln~
dark sunglasses at night in the snow,''
he said.
The boys we.re stopped only once,
by a parking lot attendant at Kennedy
.o\irport who questioned !he driver's age .
The II-year-old , asked if he wasn't •·a
bi l young to be driving,'' shook his
head anti drove off \l'ithout bothering
lo pa y the $1.25 parking tab. the detective
said.
··imagine. he could have been drivin.1t
next to rou or me on lhe road," Keenan
said. ·
There may be a war going on along Can1bodia·s ~fighway 4, bul to
lhflse remalc Cambodia n ~oldlers, c lean hair is \VO'rlh the risk of fly~
Ing bull cls. Women served an important part In the r ecent operalloft
to clear lhe vital link to the sc:i.
UPI T•lffll919
RESCUE WORKERS SEA
Train Hit an Open S
H FOR TRAPPEO PASSENGERS IN TRAIN
Itch, DtrailMI and Turntd Over on Side
Train W reek .Eyed
I
Sabotage Hiii,ted; 43 Hurt in Mishap
BRENTWOOD, N.Y. (UPI)
-A seven car Long Island
railroad passenger tra in
derailed Sunday, injuring at
least 43 persons. A rail road
spokesman said the FBI had
been called in to investigate
the possibility of sabotage.
Seven persons wtre trapped
in the wr~kage -two of
them for almost five hours.
Rescue workers used
;tetylene torches to c u t
tfrrough the twisted metal aJJd
~ulled the victims to safety.
Police earlier reported one
person had been killed but
later a spokesman for the Suf-
folk County police department
s~id the report had been in
ror.
The accident occurred wben
e train's diesel locomotive
ft the track and fell over,
Haven Spill at NP1111
Threatens eaches
By United Press International
Volunteers and Coas t
Guardsmen patrolled t h e
Conn~ticut coastline l h i .!I
morning watching for a 12-
mile-long oil slick that headed
for the shre, threatening some
of the state's finest beaches.
The slick. a ye llow-blue film
of light heating fuel and
kerosene. has been curling
alol18 the deeply cont.ow:ed
Atlantic Coast on Long lslan
Sound since Saturday, when
the tanker Esso Gettysbur
slashed a 600-foot gash in i
hull on a roc k led@:e at th
entrance to New H a v e
harbor. The spill, estimat
at nearly 400,000 gallons, ha
smudged some beaches an
prompted many complain
afx>ut foul odors, but
ti:erious damage has resultc
yet, according to slate o
ficia\s.
An investigation was beg~
to see U a misplaced buot
may have caused the grou~
ding.
On the other side ()f the
continent, the Ccast Guard
convened it.s formal probe ~
day of a much more serious
oil accident, the collision of
two tankers a week ago
beneath the Golden Gate
Bridge. A three-man marine
board of investigation has
been impaneled to determine
the cause of the collision, but
conservationists have asked
for a broadened inquiry to
examine the "underlylng
causes" of oil spills .
The remainder of lhe 84-0,000
gallons of heavy bunker oil
spilled on the West Coast was
being dispersed by Pacific
; Ocean currents, bul volunteers
and Standard Oil Co. workers
still were cleaning beaches
and looking for oil-coated
birds.
In Connecticut, where until
tfus weekend temperatures
have been lo"1'er than normal.
ice sheets lining much of the
roastline have protected many
areas from' the oil.
Fatal Inferno
Hutchinson, Kansas, firemen batUe smoke and
flamei lrom this downtown home fllmlahln11 store'
Sunday. Two store empJo:y;es who were doing an
invelit<>ry at lhe Ume ol blaze were burned to death .
pulling three passenger cars
off the rails. Diesel oU from
I.ht? wr~ked engine and falling
snow hampered rescue efforts.
A railroad spokesman said
an estimated 280 passengers
were aboard the train when
the accident occurred, but a
police spokesman sa1d only
about 100 persons were
aboard.
Authorities said lo d a y
"criminal tampering" with a
switchbox was responsible foc
the de railment.
At least seven passengers
were trapped under twl!ted
steel while rescuers waited
for spilled oil from the dieseJ
locomotive to be cleared away
before using their acetylene
torches. The last p e r 1 o n
rescued, Brian Unger, 15, wu
freed nearly six hours after
the derailment.
Thirty-eight persons were
treated at Soothside Hospital
in Bayshore, one at Good
Samaritan and four a t
Smithtown Ge.neral Hospital.
Fire Traps,
Kills Six
In Family
NEW YORK (UPI) -John
Tercynski Jr. and his wife
Barbara had not had a night
out in years, but they decided
to attend a church fund-raisillg
party Saturday to celebrate
Tercynski's recent promotion
at the printing plant where
he worked.
Paula Della Valle, the teen -
age high school senior who
lived next door to the family
In Flushinsr. Quee11s, said she
watched their three children
and Tercynski's father, John
Sr .• until the couple returned
home about 3 a.m, When sht
left the pitrenL'I w e r ·e
downstairs In their three-story
home. disCtJssing the party.
"I w111s the last n11e to t1ee
them alive," MW Della V111le
said a few hour!C later. Her
family was aW'akened about
5:30 a.m. bv the barking flf
the family dog and the smell
of smoke. Flames were pour-
lnlit: from front and side win·
dows of the Tercynslcl hnme,
a thrtt-!11.ory frAme buildtnr.
and the ~ix peo~Je in~de dlMI
before firemen coold red
them.
Alf~ DeltA Valle, 1hfl:
babvsitter's father. ind
11notMr Migbht'tr. Frllnk. X.
Hn«an. both off-duty firemen,
hied desoe ... telv to b~ak Into
ttoe: houH, but they were fore-
«! back by the lioat and
f]11me1.
The nelrhbol"I could hf!1tr
Te;rt"ntkl'~ voice aMvt t'1e
cr11cktlng ni;imes. 0-,111 Yalh1
ul~ he and hl1 wife "lltood !,,.,. ,1ertomlq, c a 111 n •
·them'' to come to a wtfldow
and 'Ul'm), bot Inside the bnm-
lnr horn~ the neople either ~'" lint hear tf-em or weft UJ'l•l'ilf! to respond.
Wtoitn 45 mlmM" the "."' was uni!er contrnl. Inside the.
Mule the firemen found John
Tereyl)lkt Jr .• S4. de~ In hi•
flOll:'s Hettroom. The bndlfl:1 of
the rhildJ'l"n -Joh". 10, Jon-ne. ft, Ind 1Jnd1. 3 -'ftrt
in thf!lr partnb' htdromn,
with their mnthe1" Barbara.
!2. Tereynlkt's rather was
fnund dead tn hi" bedroom
•1bove In the third noor.
Russell '
Takes Last
Trip Home
WINDER, Ga. (UPI) -Sen.
Richard Brevard Ru 1 1 e 11
came home to h1a beloved
red clay in the Georgia
foothills Sunday for the final
time. In death be was flanked
by the uniformed men he 1up-
ported so atudfull; in life,
anl cloaked in the red, white
and blue he defended 10
diligenUy.
"He was No. 1,'' Sen. John
Stennis (0-Miss.) wu moved
to say in eulogWng ~:s close
friend and colleague. ·
Thousands of mou.""ners arid
138 members of Russell's
family trudged afi.r the steel-
grey coffin down a winding,
sodden path behind the white
frame family home.
The funeral proces!!'i9n tno\'-
ed slowly in cold, lteady rain,
past lines of military
policemen, to the family
cemetery where he was buried
beside his mother and father. '
' . -. . .. -. ~
Mond1y, Janlj1rt 25, 19n DAILY PILOT f
You Work Less
You Save Money
Keeps things cleaner without
effort, eliminates bath tub riDcs
Soap and clothing last longer
Laudry Is
"""'' ,.,.""J::.,
Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans
Complete Installation Available! Just Ask!
I Sears I
..... ~ .... Dc.c>.
So. Coast Plata 3333 Bristol St. Pb. 5441-3333
Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Pb.~
Santa Ana 1716 So. Main SL Pb. 5'7-Ull
The lo~d slatesraan,
patriot and confidant o f1-------r=========================:311;;::;;--------
President.s auccumbed last
week to a reapiratory in-
fection, auravated by 1
lingering bout w i t b em-
physema.
Somebody Fights City Hall
Who fi&hts city hall? The DAILY PILOT does. That's who. And where e.lle can
you find cogent commentary on your community? Check the editorial page of
YOUR community 's daily newspaper, the DAlLY PILOT, of coW'se.
'. ..
i
/
"
I
' I
-. -uu;y-piLOI' .EDl1'0RIAL PAGE
.:j\ Vo,µc :he_r .Syste~~ No
. . '
~-2 -ilmost from the momelif.-he-:toolt over Califotnia•a
gov,morship, Ronald Reagan hu shown a serioqs pbil,:>-
sop~icaJ and emotional blind spot in his attitude toward
puJ>.li¢ educ•tion ,at. all leveJs. .
At times it has seemed as though be has some inner
compulsion. some psychological quirk, which drives him
to downgrade educators and education, the wellspring
or California's distinction in science, industry and the
arts. Indeed, the state's superiority in specialized agri-
culture and sophisticated space age industry;. to name
just ·t\\'.O ol several fields , is the product qf what ·has
been a truly superior educational system.
Gov'ernor Reagan 's feud with the univ~rsities and
state colleges, and bis failure to lead the state back to-
'vard paying a fair r;hare of school costs now ~rne m0$t·
ly by property taxpayers. are well known. Now he is off
on another tack which could bring further distress to
public schools. ·
The governor has endorsed, on a tri~l basis, a vouch·
er system to pay for the education of Cafl.for~ia chil4ren.
Under the system. parents would be paid a' sum of tnon·
ey by the state. They would be free. to use it· to send
their children to either public or private lichools.
While the system likely might ~-~nanza for non·
public schools, its constitutionality.;..;!l {ede.ral. and .litate
-is highly doubtlul. Most private:iohoot( are ·sectarian.
Apart from that aspect, however; is f;he much more
lierious matter of taking money fro.m an already under·
financed public school system.
i -..... ~. ~ . astrono1lllcll-~ 11tnn1e·~.,.a for a-governor who con-
•lantly streyes.~.need loitut down on •4mlnlatralive
· costa. ~utther.~tbe' &~:~ tc\1(!01 systems would face · 1-11
irnPQ1S1ble tast of p g more Uiao a year or so ahead,
which would 'iault D\'tremendiiia-waste of dollars, ir\4 '
disastrous results on "educl.tio1i' programS l n a growth
,area like California.
The possibility of a system of tax credit> for fami·
lies per child sent to a private school seems much more
manageable and realistic. Even here, constitutional que~
lions would have to be considered.
Wilson Riles, the new state superintenctent ol pub-
lic instruction, Ls opposed to the voucher sy1tem because
of the damage it would do to public·school finance.
Governor Reagan would serve~·ti~ state•& interests
far better if he were to devote more of his energies to
trying to help the publi~ schools at all levels.
A Contemp~I~ Strike
New York City's polic'i! Offitera, known af(ection·
ately for generations as i.tbe· meii, in blue,, the city's
finest,'' have severely da~-.a police image that in
recent times has needed all the help it could get.
• However much the officers deserve sympathy· for
any pay inequities there may be, and for .the disr~spect
and increased d~nger they have sUffered recently, the
overriding consideration remains that by striking: they
have violated the law they swore to uphold.
They aren't in the same position as other aggrieved
workers. Public safety must come first; that is why the
law forbids .them to strike.
... r ' .
A sP.?kesman for the California Teachers Associa·
lion testified be'f'Ori-the state Senlle)·Committee on Edu·
cation that the estimated cost of a VOt1clier system would
be $450 million. He ·said this would me8n getting nio,ney
from the existing public school program which he claim·
ed is already in a state of near financ.ial coll-pse, ,or new
revenue would have to be raised t.Jtroup. hJgher taxeli.
The cost to administer such a · s)'Stem would be
By violating their oath they have Jost the sympathy
and support they have otherwise deserved. 'But[ was only fo/lowinll order4/'~
For Humans:
A Hierarchy
Of Needs
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Hunting licenses should be Issued
only after the applicant haa aeen
the TV wildlife special, a Prl)found-
ly moving portrait of what man
has done and is still doing to hi!:
fellow creatures.
-D.W.W.
DANlEL YANK.ELOVICH, a leader in
the field -of attitude researr.h, talking
about the "internal environment" 0 r DR. YANKELOVICH believes that it
peoptu• attitudes, &aid that increasingly ls not going to be easy for business
workers demand work that is "more to meet these higher demands: "I don't
than just a job." At every occupational think there is anything inherently in·
level, from factories to executive offices, compatible between taking on added
there is a drastic shift of moti vation social responsibility and the pursuit or
soing on. profit, but the compatibility is not
Why are union rank-and-file aften automatic and not painless. It may re-
unwilling to settle for gaina that union quire more basic structural changes and
officials have baraained fiercely tor and iMOvations In business than ever betore
won? Why the hiah rate of absenteel$n in the history of our mix~ economy."
and . turnover in offices and factorfea! .. 1 am reminded a~a1n ~f the late
Why the cheating, the s 1 0 pp y ·· Abraham ~· Maslow s. belie~. !hat for
workmll'llhlp, the tndifferedt service to human ~inp there ~s • hierarcbf
cuatomen! of needs -first, &U': wa\er, .food;
11ille. problema, Dr. Yankelovlch aays, then shelter and secunty; then -~If·
are Indirect manifestations or ~tl\Wt.rted reapl!<:t and belongin~eas and ~ ap-{ ~ for aallsfacUons aoughl, for work provaJ of other!; fln1lly ,,the htche'J'
over and above aalary and ~ic needs -which he calls m~llneeda aecurit1 •• Workera liU muiy -1tudents -beauty, order, justice, meaning. 'What
re}ed: the ·~le'asneu'* of ~ Yankelovich's "forerwmers" want ii 919 "
In tlJe ft1tioc world. Studentl ,aay this &elf-actualization that can be 1~leVed
tort of thins dlrectly. ~ .• already only aft.er the more urgent, pnmatJ
al -. r.etlnf that 111ey· lit, trapped need1 have l?'•n met.
ill·• ""'""' that it not about to, change, ~-'the withdrawal of cooperaUon
aild 1l\lb loyalty.
oOa: '1'811 DEMAND for work that
la ........ -)Ult • job" "'""""t tbe ~ al1 ttie lu-1 Clearly Dr.
y~ )oUOvw h -. Teltini • • •
·Quotes·
PERHAPS WHAT ts true of people
Is also true of businesses. including suw •
marketa, aince busineaaes are nm bJ
people. -The first needs of a .hllliness
are for 11.1rvlval -not to lltl ·wlped
out, lo ahow 1 proflt. Then~lf~,
the bualneas needs to ~ to
dlveralfy, to enhance ita ~,of lonl"
range survival. ., . •
Then, when Ille ,.,,~ le;nally ..,
1 IOWld bolil, It ~ ···llie hicher need•. What lrt•dlo;'abillll~ctt
of the cqrnpeny'1·blrM .. Pncticea? Whit
-Iii the . f!nvlronment•f effect.I ' or its
manuflcturln& _. and its packag·
ln&! Whit t'Onlributlon ts It making
to the· education and welfare of tbt
cOmmllftlty and nation! ,,,.,, ..-Jn&, Baiclel being I blue.
chip on tbe New York Stock Exchange,
what doM the company man ta mankind
and to tbe -id?
The meetinc of tbe· Supor Market
, Institute wa 1 fucln1tlng uample of
bual11eues setkinl to meet their meta·
n<edl.
ly 8. I. "'3Ww1
Pmkle11t
S.o P'rUcllco 8111111 c.a,..
~\ '
Retroactive to January I; Payment Probable in April
Social Security Boost Now Likely ·
tied all three together in one package.
AS THE SESSION ground turbulently
to an end, Senate leaders, under a heavy
barrage af irate protests and complaints
from voters throughout the country,
finally hurriedly stripped the SoC\al
Security increase from the other two
propasals and rammed it through the
Senate.
But by then the bipartisan le.aders
of ;the House Waya and Mean! Com·
mittee, which bas ,idrisdiction over such
legialaUon; would have nothing to do
with the Senate bill.
Rep. Wilbur Mills, 0.Ark., committee
chairman, flatly refused to name a ct>n·
ference committee to meet with the
Senate to iron out differences. He
caustically pointed tllll that the House
had passed its bill months previously.
and argued there wasn't enough time
left lo adequately deliberate tbe many
divergent provisions in the Senate
measure.
MILLS ALSO strongly indicated op-
position to the Senate's 10 percent. in·
cr'ease.
But that's all changed now in the
new Congress.
AUl!s and other Ways and Means C.Om-
mittee leaders are agreeable to a 10
~rcent boost They told . this cqlumn
they now think a 10 percent increase
i!! justlfi~d by the continued ujiwaid
trend of living costs.
A poll by this column ef the 1S com-
mittee member:oi (JS DemocraLs,, IO
Republicans) re~aled no opposition to
the 10 percent rise. Some of, lhe
leg islators are critical ef other increases
in the Senate bill -notably ·a · $100
m1n1mum for Social Sec u·r it y
beneficiaries.
The argument against it ls lack of
fund! for 'the rai;se. A compromise figure
of $10 is favored.
etcAusE 'THE END of a Congress
wipfs 'the slate ·Cle.an' of all unfinLshed
legi~tlon,. lbe Social Security issue will
bav, to start all over again. But in.-
a~mfb aa ~ meuure was eJ.baustively
delilirrated anly a month ago, the
parl;,mentary machinery will be greatly
accekrated.
W ·s and Means committeemen ex.
the cpinion a new 10 percent
·ill be reported out early in
Febr ry al}d, after prompt enactmena
by th House, will be·nnt.to tbe Senate,
whe·r the aaine speed·up procedure ii
antk;· . If that. dpes happen, 1ction
on t legislation shoufd be compl4!ted
by M I.
Tha would permit the Social SecuritJ
Adm! ttation to include the JO percent
r increases -all as ef January
April checks. ·
. By Robert S. Allen,
and John A. Goldsm~
Gusto Seems Unmodish Th.e e Days
! .•. Js rather like lust. That isn't
too far away from it. Gusto Is a kind.
of lust for life. The dictionary calls
it ''keen or iestful appreciation; high
relish or enjoyment."
It's a quality that seems decidedly
unmodish these days. To show strong
appetites Is frowned
upon in the Age of
Cool. Taking life at
full tilt seem! vague..
ly in bad taste.
Gusto has nothing
to do with enthusi-
asm, tbat quality
mo.st often found in
the prophetic, and
which haa wreaked
.: 30 ·much damage in our Uvea.
To have gusto is to possess a largt
and enveloping nature, to believe t.hat
all 1>0Ulbllilies can be broughi to fruit.
to acruUilbe everything, from the Unieat
flower to the rtlOlt .portentous doctrine,
f(>r ·What ·ls the belt in It. ]\ is to
beUeve that nearly everyt.hing is either
im.e.stappln& or fln&er ilckln' 1ood.
J KNEW A Puerto Rican politician
~ce ·who'b.d this quality to a supreme
~. He IOUght and pursued a woman
11 U ahe were 10 women. He approached
l1ts lood and bis wine In the same
"ay.
He, would say: "The world ii so good
that I would feel Wlworthy if 1 dJd
not enjoy It as much as it wiahes lo
be enjoyed. To take the goodnesa of
things for granted is to be haJf-dead.
Even when you are alck there is plea!Ufe
to be found in watching the movtmenll
of a Oy."
Falstaff had the quality supremely.
So did Wlnaton Cllurchill, whose ual
work as a military and political leader'
commenced each morning, slightly after
midnight, and who was a constant tip-
pler, and none the worae for it.
THERE ALWAYS has been a lot of
It ill the theater, !or one reason or
another. Jack _Barrymore had it, and
W. C. Field!, and Louis Calhem, and
Beerbobm 'Tree, and ruchard Brinsley
Sher:ldan.
Jt's a quality which still survives in
the theater, with such distinguished prac-
titioners as Lee Marvin, Peter O'Toole,
John HustOn, and Richard Burton. These
boys know that gusto is precisely what
keeping yout cool is oot. It is an open
and inviting way of life -frankly fffl·
ing and frankly showing feelinc.
You will perhaps have observed, or
guessed, that the. quality seemed in the
Posture of Anticipation
ThoaPts at 1.areae:
Thoae who are preparing to be happy
In the future are victims of a 1lgantic
sell.delusion; for the posture of •i:'-
ticlpation renders 1 person unfit to seiie
the moment when it arrives, 'having
trained himself to keep hia eyes on of reason" evenfu.allJ drive ~
a still more distant future. (1'his ex· into a fanatical exceu of nuonablenea.
plains, incidentally, failing to recall Santiyana'a . centle
why the money.3f.rlv-reminder that "Reason tar only.a banncll1
tt never tetbl be js among irrational tmpullea."
really "rich.") • • •
• • Dotsany~ekntkP.bY.W~~
We Improperly use . "the shank of the ~ ... ~ .nd · iiqtt-
the: word "proverb-the phrase got Us meanlnc? (I can't
lal" when we feel un-find it in any of my uaill ~·)
comfortable In ex· • • •
pn!SSing a cllche: on One ot the finett UPCOnlCioua ca.
Ille car radio today, tribuilOlll to our ~ ,!lltb ~!" 1 heard an announcer say ''he lsustropc . ~ment wu ,mlde~~ IDalilb/ ipy
as the proverbial bull," but· lhtre is no Defenae Secretary t.aH, ~ Ill}~,
proverb aboUt _._!l""t ball's strength -it ,i~ red. to our reeWed bombtiC"M' ~
,i only a tired UPult. 'Vietnam 11"protect.Ive1eectioili.W;'1 ,.----...... ..,. ---·t . . . . . . . . . . ~ . -!14 ' •
'Ille btlt ~ ''"' • we)~!loc~ .• '.Jt. might, tum °"' ~ be -"""'9-
• • •
Pe<1ple who Jive rigidly by the "rule
• • • " J suppose the ulUmate-falter·than-
oound 1lrcrall wUI be ..iJtcl t11e· "Midi -··
Deor George: mind II the wbolty pnictical one .that, cer1lq ~ .l!'illf)'loc to. -•,ti.
1 have a rillier rup0nolble joli tr We Ihle llli1rtl) on tlle llOll90rY left.I. teWpnt )111,1111,olber Ila•: ,n ,!!JW
around the office aod when my we find thlt the pleasurea of' life an: • find out; .. u Goethe liiueited ~
young wife cornea in OCCNfionally neetlng. while the Ola mi llnRerina:; and .turft.aco,.thtt "t.,r pllnet ii 1111
she calls me i;y a pet name, which the development of our -intelftctUaJ '-inlUtatkn ot the untvene/' .,
is rather dl.ACOnCeftlnl to me. rm -ruoureu enables ua to reverse this • .. · • • e:
afraid some ot my co-workert ~ of pleaaure Ind palD u we 1be ·rt•I dao&er 11'1 i• nmrr'ctsUtlltlOIClll•·JO
mite fun of tt behind my blct. grow older. lhlt the modcrat.et· .. titl tntl' -
What do you lhlni, ? 1 • • • · to -10, bein&. tqua~J.• · · -bOibl -~· The lft•leat harm don< by the • •Idea, 1nd•so the ef1lil.conflld HONEY "~M PIE lnduotrtal a.volutlon 11 that. more than· tsk"' pi._ between ' , nelthtr
Oenr Honey Crum J>te: ever before tn hiatory, knowledge became of · whlch · ·sees reality undiatort.ed by
There'1 nothing wning with such enslt1ved to power, and waa-directed kleology.
a, nk:t pet Dlmt. Why do you by power to enda lncon.sllltent with .
think tlley'd be taikinc behind yoor wlldom.
back. SU{ler Poopole!
'
...
past, aiil now. too. to have been richly
pouusltl by the bibulous.
·WllY IT 8Botnm be thar tltt De:mOll
Rum sf'OOd · bring ·on relish and high
enjoymek of thin11 =is a bit of a puizler.
The doct1ell us, cqtd I'm sure they'r•
riO,it, ~i alcoM1 !iS ~ 'depreS&ant. My.
one who ~·eVer passed out doesn 't have
to be to¥ th.at.
But thf stuff data release inh ibitions,
and the l gr~atest al our inhibitions i~
perhaps fimple· fear ef life itself. That
fear puU1 ~ us b'ck frOJ!l things, and
makea lll 'denY po11ibilitie!. That fear
~~-:~~i;;;~~~
thlt ii'. the: miter ¢ the attraction ~r-lo4i'uc '""1-. of which • liiiOlinJ. li--...;otar .....
' .rlifs: ~-!'iirr.n:o . ..,end dru&• of
any -lhilll!, Iliff "'"' cm • physical l10\D'\ll <~le in that they
In-IWliit to>· -at functioning
.. mOnly to 'point oUt :· • produce • 1lnd of
. . ·. ... ...iiia-liy -F~~-. J :;.~~~, • peopl
• '-· an.! jDOl'e enjoylJ>c Wttliout~ 'Gia '~; but · ( don't ~' ~di'tiilfq-·wtth -IUlbl · IOlll,:' •IMilJDft-·iot" Df lit in a baa
el iiriiar r. WIJll!· !]I JI on .&be wa1on..
I'm,""°' A1Jlll<l!i.Jlila,. '°' ony of it; "' ,.W-.nr,~·"""' no( . ...."* tt •.. -.. ""1?". . ' ~
.,. J ' ....... • .. ~ .. , -.. -l\'L' ' ' ,,
' .
-• • • . • -· ' -
'•
CHECKING
't:"• UP •
To Lie or· Steal·
' ' . -•• • ..
By ·L. M. BOYD i; that, too. 'Pbey now say a
WIUCH IS THE WORST of-lrealeCf'-tooth at ~me distant
fense: To tell a lie lo your future da te may heal just like
Jover. lo sleal a qua rt.er t' •• .a booe.
from a wailress, to slap it CUSfOMER SERVICE -Q.
whimpering baby or to slanl "Can it·police doctor hypnotize
up an honorable date? By youi 3, conft'$Sion out of a
snswe~. say the scholar's whet.. suspect?" A. Nol a confession
devis~ this little m0ralit1 lhat Counbi for anything in
test. 1t c'"n be determine oourt , • • Q, "Were you aware .the walnut is not ac-l\<he~h~r you 're masculine oi .tually a . nut., but the inside
fem1n1ne. They do not specifY. of a fruit?" A. No, sir, was.
the gender of theSe qU<!ries~ not aware of tbat fascinating
What's your guess? I'd sa~ fa~t. Sure looks like a nut,
the lie or the thefl wou1cf· dOTeSn't ll? · · Q. "What year was it we last minted
most offend the man, the sla1:1 all-silver coins?'' A. No year,
or the no-show the woman. never ever. Last 90-percent
WHAT TllE INDIANS called
themselves beFore ColumbuS
called them Indians. reports @
kindly clienl. was Lamanites
•.. ACCIDENT INSURANCE
PREMIUMS at a private
school in New Yo rk Cfty runs
1 $6.50 for girls, $15 for the
boys .•. JU~T ABOUT HALF
of the women· widowed··at the
age or 65 car. expect to live
anpther 15 years. f
WHAT DO YOU call the
!OQman who cle~ns the nook
where the raccoon lives? The
racCoonnookkeeper. ·naturally.
No where else in English, our
Language man is prOU.d ta
report, will you find another
word with six double letters
baCk to baCk, · sO Y~.u. · ~ig'h.i.
as well just slop looking. Rac-
coonnookkeeper. is not a wor d
that lea"ps in to the con'-
versation every day, bu't. it
is .a word, it is. it is.
JT·'S NOT THE WALKlNG
that gives you big feet , am
convinced of that. The women
of 50 years ago v.'alked a
Jot more than the girls or
today, but. the av erag e
~·orhan's foot size has jumped
from 6 then to 8 now, and
that's considerable gtowtll ,
' , , WOULDN'T JT. be daw:l y
, if a tooth could repair i,tselr?
Hold on, that's not so s}lly.
It's the only part of.the human
bod y that can't. But the
science boys are working on
Who Cores?
No oih•r n•w1pep1t in tll1
world c1r11 1boul vour commu·
nity Ii~• your community deilv
n•w1peper do11. 1!'1 the DAILY
PILOT. '
silyer coins came out in 1966.
But they're all dated 1964.
IT WAS NONE OTHER than
thBt Montana li te r ary
luminary Cal lloiland who
observed: 1. ''Candy is dandy.
but sex doesn'.t rot your
Leeth." 2. ··1r I'd known I
y,·as going to live thi s lonR.
I'd have taken be tter care
of myself." 3. "College mar-
riages are all right if the
colle~es really love each
other."
IT'S STILL OFTE N SA ID
a man 's true cha~acter co mes
forth when he's under the in·
fl uence of liquor, but that has
been disproved. What's most
apt to br ing out a man's true
character, it's now known. is
adv,ancing age. If he's a
saintly soul, it \\'ill fina lly
show up in his retirement
years. And if he's a dirty
old man. he was dirty yo ung
man . too, you can co unt on
that. Or so savs a student
of behavior. ·
Your questions and com
mC'11 ts are welcomed and
will be used in CHECKI NG
UP wherever possible . Ad·
dress. letters to L. M. Boyd,
P.O. Box 1875, NetDpor1
Beach, Calif .. 92660.
ADVE•T!lEMEflT
Help• Solve 3 Bl99elf
FALSE TEETH
Worries and Problems
Ju1t 1prh1..t.ll.D.~ PABTBrnf9 on your denture• doe1 all lht•: (I) Helpa hold both uppera •nd lowera
llrm1r longer; ~l::FJ.d• them more oornton&bly: (3 Mel you •t mor• naturally. Jl'AS Dentul'9 Ad-
beelv<'I Powder IA not 1cld . There·• no gummy, KOQfl)'. puty put.<'I. Den-
tun!I thai II\ ILJ'e-ntlal to h-1th.
6:1,[!lfad•ntl•i r<'lgul•rl7. oas P •' llll 4ni.r oowi.~.
YES ,
YES' YES YES .
"'
· .
•
t . w
"Yes'' tO · a 302 loam~•eek!
We 1i1<e to make ldtin8. So if you need mone~
to pay off pited·up bills, use ours.
On approval you l"\IBY bprro~ ~o_m $100~0
$5,000 or more -with our Mo(ris Ian mone •
back guarantee {if-yett..find you c n do bett •
(Glum ~ m9"ey within 5 days at no cost tO
~·> r . . • . :i-····" ""to' ... , . ' When·you need money fof bill consolidation,
major app,llances, or any good rteius:on, · c'.lll
the friendly peOple ·at Morris Pliin. Chandes
are, you'll have the money the same day yilur
loan Is-approved. ~ · .. ~ : :
' Morris Rl:an
•
673-37ol,
Newport a..ch -3700 Newport Boulevard . ' . . . ., --
Mondu, J,.."1 25, 1971 DAil Y '1LOT f:
• . -
• ,-~
'
•
., • ' The~ fantastic buys prove it still,means,sorriettting at.Penn.vs.
Value.
Swaggery bags of
krinkle vinyl. Black,
brown, ssble, or birch
in sport or dressmaker
styles.
244
J
Value.
37.~h
Kitchen gadget
apartment
includes 12 of the
'most-used' items.
Value.
Men's and women's boat
oxfords of tough wearing
cotton duck With skid
resistant herringbone
molded ru bber outsoles.
Men 's in Loden green,
sizes 6 1/2·1 2. Women's
in navy blue, sizes S-10.
211
Value.
Seamless Cantrece>· U
stretch nylon hosiery.
Suntan, Gala or Coffee
bean. Sizes A·B·C-D
..
·.
Value
Miues' doublt knit n)'lon
pant sett..-Stripe to,. and
solid pints in sizes • 1 e.
Value.
Girts' cotton flanMt
long gowns In
asoorted coloro,
Sanforized•·
in alzw4-14.
1"
"'
'
"
~"
CHARGE THESE VALUES AT . YOUR l:OCAL PENNEY . STORE!
' "
-
•
I
'
I
l
.
! !
I
-· ---~·~ -•
I CAil V ftlLOT
Derrwcrats Ask Relaxing
Of Marijuana Penalties
Wrong-way C••R
Shots Halt LA Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys:
SACRAMEN'I'O 1UPl J -
The Democratic State Central
Committee today stood op-
posed to removing a 11
penalties for marijuan 1
possession. bul in favor of
relaxing the punishment for
holding the v.·eed.
Oemocr11.lie cunvenllon Sunday
adopted a resolution a.skina;
the Leg islature to reduce the
penalty from a felony to a
misdemeanor. CtUr..Uy It can
ht a misdemeanor at the
judge·s discretion.
those convicted or Wqal
poueaslon got felooy ten· tences aa did llO percent in
Santa Clara County.
Freeway Pursuit Our frosti.ng special
adds highlights,
Delegates at Lhl.' State
\'t .;., -tt
The measure said that In
Orange County 90 percent of
ltl1111l,ie in Front
State Democrats View
3 Leading Contenders
SACRAi\1EJ\'TO ~UPI l -
1'he California Democratic
Party has Laken a turn away
fro m ideology and toward
pragmatism to concentrate on
the election or its candidates
and the defeat of President
Nixon in 1972.
Democratic leaders gol a
good loo k at three leading
presidentia l conte nders al the
party's state ronvention dur·
ing the weekend. The con·
sensus after ward was that any
one of the three v.·ould be
acceptable philosophically -
the main thing was to settle
on a \\'inner.
Sen. Edmund S. f.tuskie of
t.1aine. most leaders agreed,
cenlented his position as the
front runner for the parly's
nomination. Senators George
McGovera of South Dakola
and Birch Bayh of Indiana
also campaigned for potential
support in next y ea r 's
California primary. ·
Delegates narrowly elected
a young political pragmatist.
Van Nu~s Att.orney Charles
Manatt . as the new
Democratic slate chairman.
Manatt, 34, a close politicaJ
all y of Assembly Speaker Bob
Moretti, narrowty u pa et
former Rep. George E. Brown
Jr .. a longtime Vietnam dove
and favorite of the ~ party':i
liberal wing. The vote after
two ballots was 41.3-411.
Electricity is v/111 to rour way ol llfe.
So is a healthy environment.
We're working to bring you both.
me
nudear
On other issues, the com-
mlltee called for:
Spying -Immediate cessa-
1.ion of "all military
surveillance of civilians in lhe
U.S."
Utilities -Public censure
of "the Reagan Adn1inistralion
for its deliberate indifference
to the public consumer in·
terest" in 1natters of regula·
tion by the state public
utilities ron1mission.
Lettuce -F'ederal legisla·
tion to prohib it the department
of defense from buying nonu-
nion lettuce from growers
struck by Cesar Chavez' Farm
La bor Union.
CRLA -An override by
the federal office of Economic
Development of Gov. Ronald
Reagan's veto of a $1.8 million
budget grant for the California
Rural Legat Assistance.
Death -Abolition of the
California death penally and
substitution of I i f e 1m·
prlsonment.
Newspaper -A legislative
investigation into the printers'
strike against the San Rafeal
Independent.Journal.
Women's rights -Adoption
of a st.alcwide program to
provide round·lhe.cloc k child
care centers for working
mothers.
Oil Spill
Probing
Launched
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
As thousands of gallons or
bunker oil were dispersed to-
day by Pacific Ocean currents,
the Coast Guard t.'onvened lts
formal probe of the collision
of hvo tankers respo11slble for
the huge spill at the mouth
of San Francisco Bay.
The three.man Marine Board
of Investigation is scheduled
to determine the cause of the
collision or the Standard Oil
Co. tanker Arizona Standard
and Oregon Standard in heavy
fag beneath the Golden Gale
Bridge last Monday. But con·
servationlsts have vowed to
broaden .the scope of the in-
vestigation.
But should they?
LOS ANGELES !UPI) -
Police chi.ltd the driver ot
a small foreta;n car over 23
miles of freeway Sunday
night, including a two-mile
stretch against traffic before
hailing him with a bullet fired
int o his vehicle .
The suspect. Viclor Rizz.o.
23. was uninjured after the
chase wb.ich led a dozen squad
C'ars aloq the Hollywood, San-
ta Ana, San Ber11ardino .and
Long Beach freeways.
The pursuit began when t'wo
police officers altempled to
It.op the vehicle for a traffic
citation. At one point, officers
said the swpect exited from
the Long Beach Freeway,
went ~veral blocb and then
entered the freeway again by
going up the orl:i'mnp.
The chase, which luted 35
minutes, ended 'fri>en an of-
ficer fired one buUet Into the
right front fen(ler §Jl4· the car
overturned, str;lklpg either .a
pollce vehicle or a guard· rail,
accordiJig to wl~;-
Police said they fired at
the driver after he alleaedly
attempted to strike ·ft v e
patrolmen with his auto aa
roadblocks were being Rt up.
Before officers coukl appre-
hend the suspeet, he got out of
the car and darted on . foot
in and out of residentiaJ back
yards. He was taken into
'
In our opinion, no. One of the
concerns is radiation. Actually,
radiation is a natural phenomenon.
Background radiation is everywhere
and always has been. It comes from
the food you eat, the ai r you breathe,
the mater ials used to build your home.
The San Onofre plant, for instance.
was constructed to withstand more
severe shaking than from any quake
ever recorded in Southern California.
Besides, the nuclear reactor can be
shut do,vn imtnc<liatcly in an
emergency.
environment. And that's after three
years of plant operation.
The San Onofre nuclear plant near
San Clemente is a source of some
radiation, too. The question is how
much additional radiation are people
exposed to li ving near San Onofre?
The answer: so little that an
elaborate monitoring program for
the area surrounding the plant has
yet to detect any additional radiation
from operation of the plant.
People may also wonder what would
happen to a nuclear power plant if
there were a severe earthquake. The
fact is, the design provisions for
llllclear power plants against
earthquakes far exceed those
required by standard building coclef .
\
I '
' \ ... . . • L
Another concern 1nay bet.he warn1
water released by nuclear power
plants. At San Onofre, sea water is
used to cool the plant condensers,
and then the \varmcd water is
returned to lhe sea.
To determine whether this harms
the marine envi ronment, Edlson
commissionccl an oceanographic
company of national stature to
monitor the offshore waters both
before and after the plant was built.
Result : n ineteen reports, rompilecl
over a seven-year period, reveal no
significant changes · --~
in the marine
• •
..
' l I ' --...-.
In addition, the California State
Department of Fish.and Game made
its own study of the same marine
area in 1969. The Department
concluded that the nuclear unit's
operation did not appear to have an
adverse effect on the near-shore
marine environment.
Based on these and other !acts, we
believe nuclear plants are a safe and
sensible way lo generate electricity.
Clean, too. Since there's no
combustion in a nuclear reactor, no
by-products of combustion are
released into the atmosphere-
At Edison, we plan to rely more
and more on nuclear power to meet
the growing need for electricity
~~;~~~4~~ty E ~ellllll
South,,rn California Edison
custody after resldenls and
p&UeJ'lbJ telephoned police or
hla locatloll.
Rizzo was: booked on suspl·
cion of assault with a dfadJy
weapon.
$2 Million
In Bogu.s
Bills Taken
PALM SPRINGS (UPI) -
Secret Service agents seized
$2 million in counterfeit $100
bills Sunday and arrested
three men in the latest in
a series of raids in Southern
California.
Special agent Robert E.
Powis said the three men were
taken into custody without in~
cident at a parking lot here
when they attempted to ex-
change the bills.
Powis said that since Dec.
1, 1970, 65 persons have been
arrested and about $2.6 million
in phony money confiscaied
in his jurisdiction.
Teachers Back
Tenure Policy
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
lively color contrasts.
And, best of all,
Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday, it's special
at 1288
1"ut.lll! .. TON HUNTtNGT°" 1-..CN .. llWPOllJ ~ Of'...,th-c .... twr H1.1111"""lan C.....-F_ .... 1 ........
2NI 11oor, 1n-43o0 2nc1 tkXW', m.1171 -,_.. """nu ar-.,. ''The Clty"' ..,,.,,,.
The San Francisco Teachers
Union Sunday criticized a
State Commission's recom-
mendation to abo!lsh teacher:/;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tenure.
A 19-mem ber governor's
commission on Educat io n
Reform recommended what
amounted to a com p le t e
overhaul or the state's school
system, including lhe abolish.
ment of tenure.
It's Leory for The Weary.
Don't gel weary. Read Leary. Bill Leary's one-line com-
rnents on lhe world around t11,.can be habit-forming. Check
today's Graffit.i by Leary.
Call Collect
(714) 523-6511
Now save 15% on custom
slipcovers and draperies.
Custom decoratl11Q.sale.for people who
llke the best ... on sale. This week only.
Choose from our beautiful 'Lemeau' collection
of smart prints and textured solids tor
coordinated slipcovers and draperies. All
reduced a big 15% for-this week only. Regular
low Penney prices for 'our finest fabrication.
-.. -... _ ,.....,. n-r.yioeot ....
-
CHP 011 the lob
Freeway Traf fie
Role Explained
LOS ANGE LES iAP) -The
need for uniform ity , says Lt.
W. C. Jones of the Californ ta
Highway Patrol. is why the
patrol assunied res ponsibility
more than a year ago for
traffic control on the entire
Los Angeles freeway system.
see what's comlng-they r~
quired orange tail li&hls.
"Los Angeles County
motorists traveling i n to
Ot•ange County were ticketed
and vice versa, The result
was the highway p1trol ."
A sim.ilar situaUion led· to
freeway traffic" enforcement
Mond1111 J.-nuary 15, il~7l OMLY '!LOT i)
TV Ca111eras ltlay Dete~t Can~er
CH I C AG 0 {UPI) described early eq>ertmtnts cameras are u sy to focus and Dr. Gerald A. Gellin, au:ls· year .
Televisk>n cameras soon may 11 "'promisin&" and aaid they television rtt0rders allow the tant clinical profeisor of Both i;aid lhty diJcovertd
be used in large scale pro-Indicated the method would bt subject \o ht studied over and dermatology al University {}{ cases earlier diagnoled J:s
aram1 to detect potential skin faiot eooll&b and lnexpen1h1e over, he said, California 's St1n Francisco vili ligo, a condition in which
Cane« vklims at an early enoucb for mus lellina. Two other dermatoloalsts Medical Center. and Dr . loss of skin color arises from
ate. a scientist said today. Earlier experiments using told how they discovered tha t Gunter Kahn, assis~nt pro-unknown causes, were cau~d
~ TV-testing program Wtrav'°1et photography were certain antloxydization agents fessor of Dermatology at the by che1nlcals.
would be similar to the mass upenaiVt and d i ff i c u It uaed in industry and in· University of Co I or ado 1he condit ion affucts all
X-ray ICl'Mnin&s employed to betauae or the problem in ltitutional cle&ning caused Medical Center. said they races. the doctors sakt. Blacks
QOt tubveulosis. fOCUllnC on the s uh j e ~ t . I01s -Of pigmentation in thr made their discoveries in· develop white skin and while•
Dr. l'ttdtrlck Urb.1eh, the1_u_rb_ac11 __ ,._i_d_.T_•_l_•_•_i_s_i_o_n __ •ldn_. __________ d_e:_pe_n_d_en_ll_:_y_w_illl_in_1_h•-'P_•_s1 __ de_,_e_lo_p_·_·iv_o_cy_'_· _P•_t_ch_•_•_·_
head Of the dennatolo17
Purthermore, he adds, the
desire for unifor mity is why
there is a highway patrol.
taUover in October 1969 by J~~~~~~~~~ tbt state agency.
department at T e m p I e
University, outlined the pro-
gram to the convention of
American Academ y of
llormatokl&Y.
He 1ald a special fil ter plac-
ed on the television camera
lt:ns permits it to show lower
layers of skin with ultraviolet
light.
Closeout savings!
Listen to this! Jones said that allhoLJgh
Jones. who directs the com-
plex communicat ions system
of the patrol's Zont F ive,
within which lies the 375 mile s
of freeway concrete over
which hundreds of tho usands
of motorists travel daily has
a favorite story about lhe
patrol's creation:
highway patrolmen ha v e
worked variow sections of the
freeways for many years,
there were "one--end twe>-mile
stretches worll.ed by various
jurisdictions."
Eacb of ~ae pol i ce:
departmenta, he added, bad
"its own type of enforcement
and it was an impoa1ible
situation." "Years ago Los Angel es
Count y passed an ordinance
requiring automobiles to have
·red tail lig hts. In adjacent
Orange County-well , you can
To illuslrate, Jones said one
police department m i a b L
ticket a motorist for drivinc
one mile over the speed limit
while another would ignore a
car whizzing by much faster.
•
So the patrol was a lo1ic1I
choice when various city and
state officials sought to stan·
dardize enforcement on the
freeways .
''It was a major un·
dertaking," Jones s a i d .
"Although we had advance
warning we had to recruit
and train extra men."
The switch in Los Angeles
req uired 300 additional
highway patrolmen, he said.
During the first ~ix months
the freeways in Los Angeles
we re under the highwa y
patrol's c h a r g t , fataliti es
dropped 53.6 percent and in·
jury accidents were down 29.6
percent. And while the I C·
cident to tal was up for a year's
period the trend in reduced
fatals and injury accidents rtr
mained constant.
Harold Sullivan, highway
patrol commissioner, says it's
because of 1 hiahwa y
patrolman's altitude.
LAST
14
DAYS
Give him your love
in a Valentine Portrait
... t•k•n Juat with him In mind!
3FORONLY495
Hurry In now and you'll receiv• ona big,
boautlful 8x10 for hlm ••• plua two SX7'1 lor
Did 1nd Grendadl Don't miu It! And ,....
member, you c1n charge it at Ptnney'a.
il'Ul.1.lllO~ lllUNlllllOlOll II•• ...... ., -.Aal 0•..,._.1r c..,_. "'""''..-,. c ... ,... '"-""-.....,. ,,_, II-. 11\.flO lflf ,.._.., ..,.mJ J1o11 ,,..,., _,,_ °"-.. , .... ~ .,..,..,,
Acadeniic
Nominees
Requested
Applications will be ac·
cepted until March 15 for
Rotary Foundation
Fellowship! for a year's study
abroad .
Ralph W. Tipping, Roh1ry
Foundation Chairman of the
Rotary Club of Newport·Irvine
said applicants are being
sought for the educational
award for the academic year
1972-73.
He said the club is seeking
an appli c an t for an
Undergraduate Fellowship. It
is open to 13 r.o 24 year old!!
with a minimum of two years
of universi ty y,·or k.
Tipping said the fellowship
winners receive funds to cover
transportalion. tuition, meals,
lodgin1. intensive language
training, if necessary, and
educational travel.
"Awardees are expected t()
act as .ambassadors or &ood
will for their country throu1h
informal contacts and through
appearances before Rotary
clubs and othe r civic .and
ed ucational groups," Tipping
said.
Detailed in formation about
the educational awards i~
available through Tippin& at
4630 .Campus Drive, Suite 21>4,
Newport Beach.
These layers of skin ha ve
patterns of pigmentation that
.show a patient's susceptibility
to severe sunbum and skin
('ancer -the most preven-
table, curable and common
form or cancer in the United
StatCl!I, Urbach sai d.
"The problem is to identify
peeople who are going to have
the biggest skin problems and
to counsel them to avoid the
sun 's ultraviolet rays or use
sun-screens.'' he said.
Urbach said this would not
mean restrict i n& such
patients to the indoors in
daylight hours, but merely
cautioning them to stay out of
the sun between 10 a.m. and 2
p.m.
Urbach •aid it would be a
year before he could aay
definitely w h e t h e r the
television method is t h e
answer for detectina th o s e
prone to skin cancer. But he
Nixon Readies
Budget Report
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Nixon will send his1 It71·n fiscol year budget tol
Con1ress 1t noon next Friday.
The bud1tt is expected to
detail $230 billion in spending
And ~ about $10 billion in
the red, •lthougl1 the actual
budget totals are a cl :sf'l y
kept secret. Tht White House
also said the President's
economic re port would be sent
to Congress at ooon P'eb. 1.
l'anisli Without Trace
San Gabriel Mountains
Can Swallow Up People
LOS ANGELES !AP) -Tilt
San Gabriel Mountains can
hide people. And they can lest
ptople.
On smogless days they can
be seen •landing Chinese-wall·
like · to tbe north ef the Los
Angeles basin.
Their b r o w n , chappartl-
covered slopes and can yons
bold secreta of the van ished.
Taitt the case of Fred
Wayne Popejoy lit of Gle n·
dale , or Tom my Bowman, 3.
or Don Baker. I! and BN!nda
Howell, 11. All have one thin~
in common-they went into
the rnoun ta ins and disap-
peared.
Po pejoy. in his early 20s.
told frie nd s he was going cam-
pi ng. He packed his suitcases.
electric shaver, radio and
s1Jme books and drove his
black forei&n·madt car up to
tilt Switz;er'a Camp area. He
wa11 never seen q:ain.
A Forest Rln1er found
Popejoy's car, his poatS.SienJ,
in the mountains. Nothlnf was
mls!!lnf, except maybe a
l(Uitar.
What happened le Fred
Popejey'! No one beWIJ. •
if thty do, they aren't 1ayinf.
It's been a month since be
disappeared. A search •••
unsuccessful.
Take the stranae disa~
pearanct of Tommy Bowman
in 1967. The youngater, on
an outing wilh his parents
in the Arroyo Seco district,
ran ahead and around • curve
,,n the trail and vanished. He
was nev'r aeen again.
Don Baker and Brenda
Howell went for a bicycle ride
up San Gabr iel Can yon in 1965.
The ir bikes were found la ter
but th&t was all.
In IMO the mo u n t a i n s
swallowed up 7 year-<1ld Bruce
Kremen. who wante red ()ff
from his famil y and other
childre n.
Milton Honow it.z wa s a seller
of Pottery in t\fonrovia before
the San Gabriels envtloped
him last June . Honowltz. 61.
did leave something behind.
hi!! wrecked car. police said.
11 w•s found MIO feet down
a canyon above Arcadia whert
it bad lain uneen lor six
montha.
Apparently human bone~
found under the c!lr could
bave. been Hon o wi ~z',
authorities said.
Not many members of hi ~
family believe ht was dead.
As ene private investigator
hired te find him esplained: j "When they'rt dead you can
usually find them."
Choose One of the Many
Coast & Southern Federal
Offices to Serve You:
*M~N~:ffl l Hltl, I.• AngtlM •128-1351
wtLIHtM II GRAlllJICY PLACl:»33 Wlltl'llr• lfYd.,LA..-.1211
L.A. CMC catnlll: 2IMI & llMdwtw • Q..1102
tHUllTltlrlTOfll-.ctl: 11 ~ Qnir • . '(ft•l•M .. ! r
' aMTA WI.OM,..,,. M•IC'l'1
1IOI .... Mainlt.• CTI4) M7.atl7
•Mllfl MONICA: 711 Meh1rt Bml. • -..0741
•&Ml PIDllO: 10th & ,aalflo • 131-2341
•WUJ COWll: Eattlalld hpplng Otr. • 331 ·2201
11'PMIOllAMl CITY; 111t Vfin Nuyt IM •. • Uf.1171
*TAllZANA: 11751 Vtntvr& BcMMw.rf • ......, .. '
'/tLOMI lllACM:trf a Loeuet•.Q7"74'1
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ASSETS OVU SIGO MILLION
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Save30.071
Orig. 79.15,,_ 49.88
Penncreat• solid state AM/FM stereo table rad io
with .. 1ntiQued~ walnut veneer wood cabinet.
Two dynamtc speakers, AFC control. vernier tuning.
stereo phono inputs.
Save 20.07!
Orig. 59.95, r.-39.88
t"'enncrest• deluxe AM/FM clock radio with maple veneer ~early American·· style wood cabinet. Features automatk;
wake--t~music or 1l1rm, 80 min. slumber switch,
repeat·e-calt. sweep MCond h.and, lighted clock face.
399.95
co\or
Special price on our
special PenncrMt"' TV!
Table model color TV with 23• picture
rneasured dlagonally. 295 sauare inchel of
viewing area, .. Quick-pie" for fast pictµre and
sound, automatic color purifier. modern styling
with walnut-grain on metal. pre-set VHF fine
luning, 25.000 volts of picture power.
Save S301
Orig. $277. now $247
Penncrest• stereo phono A~/FM!FM
stereo console has a 50 watts peak
power amplifier. Six; speaker system
includes two 1 o· woofers.
two 5"' mid·range speakers
and two 3·1/2'' tweeters
Early American," "Danish
modern" or "Spanish
Mediterranean" styles.
Llmtted quantttlea!
Shoo-1yl
Avail•bl1 at :h1 followln t itor•1: FASHION ISLAND, N1wport Oant1r
HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntin9ton 811c.h Utt P1nn1y1 tim1 p1yrn1nt plen.
Art Linkletter Shows You
a New Way to Beat Inflation
... Just Join
cWie
I Akkas
(lab
With a $2,500 bal1nce In your sa~inos
account, you are eligible lo become
•member. Sub1tantlal 1avings are
available when purchasing meny itema
Including 1utomobllet, lumlture,
1ppli1nce1, Jtwelry. Plu1 m1ny
trM urvloe1 -money orders,
sale dlpOlll bOxee, etc.
•
Coast & Southern Federal
Offers You These
Highest Prevailing Rates:
COUPOUNDID DAILY AND PAID OUAlllTE,.LY.•
5.00"t"•-5.13"1°
Paubook; No Mlnlmu'm.
5.25 "'9.5,39•1.
Three Month Certtfic1ta; No Minimum.
5.7591•-5.92°'"•
On•Yur Cer111icatt ; 11,000 Minimum.
6.00"'-•6,18•/o
Two-YtarC9'1iric:ate; $5,000 Minimum.
• Ef/1etiv. Annu•I E•rnlrlf•
'
•. INSURANCE TO $20,0oo
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Jf DAllY PILOT Ml>Ma7, Januar)' 25, 1971
•
It still means something at Penneys.
Value 7 pc. traditional atyl• dinell• &et
with <42 .. round table. ex•• to 60" with 18" leaf,
six higtM>ec:k chairs e:Mred·in floral vinyt
Value Gable otyle _, o1oroue 00;1d-
ing. 10-W x 7"d x 8'4"h; 380 cu. ft. lfOf'909 aru.
~-.ts end bKkl tor diMtt•
-~-q-vlnyl.
8999
Bladt. llYOQdo, and gold.,Renewa 2 chairs.
2.7'7
Value.
Value. Occasional chairs. Pick from
Modern, Traditional and Spanish styling. Swivel tub
and rocker plus hi-back wilh poly-foam cushions.
your choice
Value Penncratt• 1'f'te coet acrylic
interior latex. Ea!Y soap and water clean-up.
Choice or -4 colors.
Value.
Value. S~r lamps in.
Early American, Traditional and Con--
temporary styles ••• with handsome
shades and details.
2,.,688
CJ
Value.
Silvertone utility
ateel shelving .
unit. Four lhelf
unit rneuures
6Q·hx30"Wx12"d. 499
Cast iron single hibechi.
10x10x7" high. 4 positions, 7 pc. cookwara set ineh.lde9 t and 2 qt.
cOY9f'ed NUcep11n1, 10" open trypw.. 5 qt.
covered Dutch oven. Tenon 11• interiors.
AVocacto std poppy IOr)'lic COlting on
.aluminum. C11st iron double h1b1ch1
10K17x7" high. I .ff gg1
Value. It still mean$ something at Penneys.
•
u,. Penne'fl Tlrne~yrnent pt.n et these stores: FASHION ISLAND , Newport C..tw,
HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington &..ch. Shop Sunday, too, 12 to 5 P.M •
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Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
Here's here'a here'• here'•
1111 but not IN.It,
here'•
CHARLIE BROWN ••• trld LUCY ••• and LINUS ••• t.i J VtOLET ••• l nd SCHROEDER ••• and SNOOPY
Phone 642-4321 (Clreolatlon Department) to have the
whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally.
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J .f OAILV •llDf
PAlllLY CIACVS .. 8Ulrw
"Youdidn'td.,..ANYTHING, PJI This is
nothina but scribbl.-.cmbbl•."
LOll'DON (AP) -The
British 11ovenunent ~ a m t
under ab"Ofll pniaure today
to 1ct. agalnst cliarette1 alter
the Royal College ol Physi-
cians ft~ that smoking
kill! more than 27 ,D«I Britons
• year.
Some sources predicted that
within weeks the government
would folio" the U n i t e d
Stites' lead and order health
warnings printed on cigarette
119cb. Further restrictioos on
adverti.sinc -clgattlte com-
mercial! are 1lready banned
from televbion -were con-
1idered inevitablt.
"'Jbe government mmt now
take prompt 1ction to see that
efftetive preventative
measures to discourage
cigarette amoking. ire taken,"
the Guardian said in an
editorial . MO!'lt other
newspapers agreed 1 n d
several urged curbs on ad-
v er t l 1In1 . although
newspapers would be hit
hardest.
The Daily Telegraph w1med
against a "momter horror
blitz" against s mo kin I,
however, and uked: "Is it
the duty of the government
to terrify Ju aubjecta?"
"It can inform. w1m, uhort
and set an ei:ample," the
newspaper said. "In rutr~ lina: and prohlbitinr ii should
move cautiously."
The report from I.ht Royal
College of Physicians, one of
Britain's leading medic a I
bodies, aaid lung Cl.OO!r w11
the biggeJt killer or cigarette
amours, but thousands dit
uch year of bronchltiJ or
coronary olflictioas.
"11M: cbmces are that two
out al five heavy cllitf:tlt
•moktra -25 or mare a day
-but only one out of five
nonsmokers, wiH die before
the age of 65," it 11id. '"The
man of 35 who ill an averaae
cigarette smoker -15 to 24
a day -is likely on •Vf:f'lle
to 1oR 51i2 yun of. life com-
pared with a non.smoker."
Jf nothing ii done about the
problem, It said, smokinf
<OO!d klll l0,000 Britons • yw
by the 1990s.
'Ibe report ctilled for warn-
ing noticu on cigarette
packs, a total ban on cigarette
advtttislni, enforcement of
smoking restrictions in public
places, wide-curbe on •mok·
ing at work, removal of
cigarette vending macbintt
from public places and l1w1
limiting nicotine ind tar con-
tent of cigarettes.
The government collectJ
$5.28 billion a year from tue.s
on cigarettes, a filth af the
total it raises from income
las.es. But 1ntiamotin1 croups
point out that 31 million work
days wen Jolt bec1U1t <J(
bronchitis in 1911 and that
pertOOS with 1llneaea Clu.d
by nnoking occupy •bout 1,500
hospital bedJ on any fiveri
day.
''Government ind Parlia-
ment have to decide between
an easy sourct ol revenue
and preservation of live.a,
health and the productive
capacity of the peoplt they
serve," tbt Royal Colle1e of
Pbyak:iana aaid.
Secret,s of Earth
Revealed by Moon
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI} -
Studies d Apollo I u n 1 r
aamples during ~ past year
have reinforced the old idea
that man can le:1m more
about the earth by going to
the mOOn.
Scientists now know withoot
question that the men. holds
a missing chapter in the early
history of the 10lar aystem
and they are dl9COverin11 that
their unprecedented I u 11 a r
rock studies are helping them
undemand mort about the
rockl in their mm b&ck yard.
''Studies ot lunar rocks have
opened our eyes to what to
look for in earth rock.a," said
Dr. F.dwln Roedder. I
1eoloPt (rom tbe U . S.
Geo~I Survey, 1t lut
week'• lunar acienct C'CIJ-
ference In Houston. "Thia type:
fA aplnoff must not be
minimized."
Became of the uniqueness
or moon samples durinl the
first mooths after they wett
brought to earth, tome icien.
tlsts felt a ''clrcua at-
mosphert:" surrounded the in-
itial studies and reporll on
the lunar m11terial a year or
10 ago.
Bui now that the novelty
has worn off, aaid Dr. Gordon
C. Coles ol the Uniferaity
of Oregon, "we are slartlinf
to do ac:ienoe., we are startini
to get IQne!"lrbert. ''
"We now are be1hmin1 to
wort out a llWe bit of the
fundamental l""'nd rules .
. . tbe buie way the moon
hu been put tocether as a
planet. We can conatruct
by~, tlata them In fair-
ly definite WIJI and tbink
ot ways to felt them.
I See by T tXlay' s
Want Ads
• What do )'Oll ret, when
you p.n, '"POtlY CURTIS A
JOHNNY MA'l'HU" 'too..
sttkrtt You set "CUJt..
ns ~ MA'MUS'' JOOd-\ocll5-. ""-·-·-· Sert damDM ••• 1or r... --• SORRY! NO "llLJ.1E.
IXY'' PltONlSD1 J u It _, •·rJ.Cr· ••. llESD :mu...r..,.ooror
WOJlK? Htft'1 a dma h' •11NLDll"flD .... a nat e • ;1'0 NL AftllOl.OOY
LOVDtSll .. R:ctt4w )Ola'
" • r-, own. "ICOllPIO"
( ..... ll/ll/10t IW (llllm.
MAS,,.--m~ . n. .-.tr ii •>dea re\.
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San Diego
Bus Line j
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Nikita's Memoirs Lauded
The best·way·to:a1J.preciate1
a new Mercedes-Benz
is~ to testldrive,an _old.Mercedes~Benz. --.. --~--
At M~-Bem. WC•re not-afraid·Of }
what one of our old cars will say about
our new can.
So befott: you buy a new Merccdes-
Btnz, we invite you to test drive an old
Mercedes-Benz.
Andin1 a car to test is really no pro~
lem. A nei1hbor or a friend may own one.
(Your dealer probably has several on
hand.) But we urge you to be selective.
PK:k one with a substantial accumulation
of miles.
Helpful hint: If you spot a Merccdes-
'Benz with one of the badges ahown bo-
low on the radiator, you've found an a-
tceptionally promising candidate to tat. ·
We awud them to a Mercedes-Benz
'after 100,000, 200,000 and S00,000 lrilome-
1 ten. (The EurOpcan equ.ivalwtof62,500,
125,000and 312,000 miles.)
The one sure rip of 41« in a
Mercults·BPll.. Rll4Uuor badtes awarded at Ou J(J(},IXXJ, 200,000 & ..
5(}()/J(JIJ tilom•t•r '"iltstones. The sfp o/ M owncr'.s "qe," a 1old i.pc1 pin.
A ''tuspension system'' for
the exhaust system
Take your test car down a potholed
road and Uaten for audible protests of age.
" A journalist from Motor rccently put
·a eiaht-ycar~d Mercedes-Bent roadster
to U. test. ''What impressed me mos1,"
he cottcluded, "was the solidity of the
body-not a gqueak or rattle to be beard."
We'reflattered.Butnotsurprised. &
CIUJC wt view every part of a Mercedes-.
Beu as a potential nttle.
Jna&ead of bohina body and frame
tDl"'lher. wefus• it with 8,CXX>or
-.wolds.
Window al ass rides in 1.
C11&nnel that'1 buttressed in -dlrectl-. The radiator is supported
hy rubbe:rand framed ln foam.
Ju metal ocvcr toucbea the f'Cl.I\
of thecu.,
Mo10r'1 conclu..sion about a vtteran t1f
/JOJ)(JO rPlilU: "Aparl from sornt loJs t1f
td1e al /lit top oul this mlC Jt/l quitt,
fluiblt Vf4 frtc of rattles and lhc oil
prus~c "udlt wa.s alway1 hard on tht stop."
We even designed a special liwpen-Joi:agevity. So they.re s1ic:ed _in_half md'
•ion system for the exhaust ')stem. Jtub.( -,aulped by infrared spectograpby. ·
ber "doughnuts" hold it under tension. /f.·
rubber bump:e.r ts stationed at evay point A revolutionary old car ....
of contact. Today an old Mercedes-Benz bristles'
An intriKUin& contest
Accelerate onto a highway.
Notice how new and tight the enJine,,
drivel rain and suspension feel.
Recently in the Road & Track series 1
'"AfterThe New Wears Off," the engineer·
ing editor summed up 35,000 miles in his
1 Mercedes-Benz by saying simply, "The
car is more impressive than when new." ·
To keep our ."new" from wearing·
off, we engineer the run·
niog gear to last as long. ---
as the body. A lengthy
but intrigu ing contest.
indeed.
To make sure it will,
vital mechanisms must
pass thousands of tests.
with features that still seem revolutionary
compared to the '7/ cars 0£ other makers.;
, The reason is simple. Our mgineer-r ing decisions are made by engineers. Not
cost accountants. When they find a way to
make an improveqient, they make it.•
Without waiting until it can be made as
cheaply as what.it replaces.
Take an old Mercedes-Benz through
some curves. Unless.it's a prc-1930 model,'
you'll discover the nimble reflaes that!
.come from fully indepen-
. , dent suspension. An in-1 1nov1tion yet to bediscov-'
ered by domestic sedans.}
We consume more Rubbtr "doughnu1s" susperid
h I tailpipes and mllffUrs umltr ltnsion, t an 40,000 gal ons of rubbtrburn,,.usi.Jolatethonfrom/
fuel a month testing every tha body. Tht uhaust systan may
Look at the modeV
nameplate. If you spot an
"E," the car has some-
thing no American cir
has, an einsprilzsystem
1 (German for fuel injeo.
t ion ). Developed for Me,...
cedes·Benz grand prix engine before installa-11.tVtr rault.
lion. Some for as long as five hours.
After nine successive applications at
135 mph in a "destruction" test, disc
brakes tum fiery red. They must endure
this torture fi fty different times-and suf-
fer no damagr".
Even seemingly unimportant items
like dashboard knobs mw;t prove their
Orit OJ our riew cars. Tht 250
a five·pa.utriitr stdllJT. wit Ii
JHrformanct ftalurt.s
you'll 11ill apprtciarc
wht" it's411 old C411r.
cars, it provides a substantial increase ira
powerwilli 11o sacrifice in econom y.
Apply the brakes. Mercedes.Benz l»l
lieves the brakes should be the most pow-
erful part of any car. So we introduced
disc brakes in 1961 . Put them on a/l fou.r
wheels in 1968. No domestK: sedan today
offers four disc brakes,cvCn u an option.
slirtiii1 &om ti.e~e\
When you finish your test ~i'>
.'around thecarandlookat the~sb. · ~
To keep the outside looking new, we'
start protecting it from the inside •. · ~
, Bodies are submerged in ~
.... rust-proofer, They emerge ·
24 pounds heavier.
· But that's not
enough for Mercedes.
Benz. The inside of
body panels that I
1 were welded air-
tight were paint~·!
[before wdclln&:-··
Outside, a1*roedes...
'Benz is protected by.four 1 c.oats of paint and. primer.
The front gets an extra coat\
of chip-resistant enamel. ,,..
We even insulate Evt11 body panels tNJt •'J;
the side trim from weldut airtitht can
bod . b corTode inside. So b::J
1the YW1l astrlp waweld,wcspaythem
o£rubber.Andsheath 1wirhtinco.J.ldc.And •
the clips that attach it )> Wtat area.J by hand./
with plastic grommets, so that metal can
never bite through·paint and start rusL, ·
The 4'averag:e"
.Mercedea-Bem: $7,700',
There's nothina "ave.rare" 1bout a
line of automobiles with an aftnJe sell·
ioa price of $7,700.
Building automobiles you can app~
ciate when they're "old" can has made
our new can more expensive than most.
There are ten Mercedes-Benz models
priced from SS.350 to $8.259-without op-
tions. And six limited editions, laracly
handcrafted, from $12,718 to S29,6t 7•.
The coupon will bring a full-color bro..
chutt: of the new Mercedes-Benz models.
In the meantime, be liUte and test
drive an "old" Mercedes.Benz. And, just,
for comparison, an old anything else.
After all, You live most of your life
with an old car. So you should know what
your ne.xt car will be like after the "new"
wears off.
..... c-si '°""' .. tl'J .......... "' ir..poruttm. ~ _. (&bowtl) • .ca..,......_ aQd aoc..i-. If "'81·
<:anrlsll• 1970, .......-.,.__, ~ "-b, 1-=.
~----------------~ J I 0 : JIM SLIMONS IMPOm, INC, ~ t 1nw.w-•...... ~
I s-.. 4-. C..H.Nwte tJ707
J Please send me your full-color brochure of-~ ,if ~mottcan.
N'~---------~
Clty•--------->late, ____ _ • ZJp, ___ , ......... _ ..... _______ ,
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Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. 120 W. W•mtt A vtnue, Sm ta Aria, Cililomi.a 927rf1 Phont: 714-546-411C
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BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466
S p_,. II
Tour Pictures
Art Action •
1n
Art in action in on the agenda for members of the Advisory
Board of the Laguna Beach School of Art as they attend a social hour
on Wednesday, Jan. 27, beginning at 2 p.m.
Community leaders and artists serving on the board will take a
tour of the school and view classes and instructors in session. Also on
display will be paintings, sculpture and ceramics.
The school formerly known as the Laguna Beach School or Art
and Design, officially changed its name on 1notion of Rex Brandt dur·
1ng a recent session of the advisory board and board of directors.
Established in 1962, the school is a state-approved art educa·
tional institution serving approximately 1,000 students each year. Re·
cognized artists instruct classes in a variety of art fields for students
fron1 throughout the country.
Approximately 63 scholarships are granted annuall y to deserv·
ing students. The Festiv_al of Arts Board of Directors established the
Verner Beck Memorial Fund with $4,200 to be used for scholarships
as well as another $250 contributed by friends of the late Festival
director and former manager.
During the summer Festival, the staff conducts daily outdoor
art demonstrations and last year sever al thousand Festival goers
watched ceramic making and painting demonstrations.
l\1ore acco mplishment-\ lie ahead. An expanded teaching pro·
gram and scholarship expansion are planned as well as student sales.
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Members of the advisory board of the Laguna Beach School of
Art dedicated to expanding the horizon of art include Mr. and 1'.1rs.
J{ex Brandt; the Mmes. John B. An trobus, Byron H. Farewell. Fred
Forgy, Ralph Tandowsky, Charles Thomas and Will Ward; the Messrs.
J_,eroy B. Childs, Ben Deane, George Ga de, Sterling Holloway, Robert
P. Su tton, Dr. Norman ~ixon and Miss.Lorna Mills.
ADVISORS VIEW ART -Laguna Beach School of Art AdviSory
Board members Oeft to right) Mrs. Charles Thomas and Mrs.
Byron H. Farwell view students' work prior to a tea and tour of
the facility this week. All forms of art inCJudlng paintings, sculJ)"'
ture and ceramiCs will be on display. Studenls also will be work·
ing in varied media during the tour.
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Students Benefit
Theater Fete Opens
When Curtain Drops
A benefit dessert \vill be served foll ow ing an eveni ng theater
party in the San Clemente Cabrillo Theater on Friday. Jan. ·29.
Following the final curtain of •·Everybody's Girl." members of
the San Clemente·Capistrano Bay Branch of the An1erican Association
of University \Vomen \Viii stage their oWn production \\·ith benefits
going to\vard the AAU\V scholarship fund.
Las~ year, according to general chairrnan riilrs. Jan1es 1'horpe,
sc holarships \Vere awarded to grad uating students fro1n San Cle mente
High School and SaddlebaC'k College.
The plot of '·Everbody's Girl." \l'hich is be ing presented for the
second weekend and is by the area theater group . evol\ies around a
wo man who has been voted n1other-o f-the·year. n1ayor of th e town.
president of the SPA and ·is founder or a hon1c for \\'3Y\l.•ard girls and
of an organiz2tion entitled SLOBS.
Among other distinctions. she has been acclain1cd for saving
the life of the Japanese Emperor's pet duck ... plus lots of other feats
during the delightful comedy.
Reservations are necessary since seating Is limited to 59. but
specific seats will not be reserved. Reservations may be made by call ·
ing either Mrs . Thorpe at 493-3351 or her co-chairman Mrs. Carl Smith
al 496-9315.
EVERYBODY'S INVITED - A posl·theater dessert
ben-efit will fund scholarships p'rovided by mein;
bers of the Sln Clemente-Capistrano Bay Branch· of
'American\AssoCiatiOn-of University Women. Dusting of(
the: board for the-Friday, Jan. 29, event are rte!L to
right) Mrs. Jim.es Thorpe and Mrs. Nanette Senge.
Also as sisting \\1ith arrangements for the evening will be a re-
freshment committee comprised of. the Mmes. Jack Cliffo rd, Henry
Dake, Janies Smith and Jon Augustan.
Mrs. Darrel Tayfor is in charge of hostesses.
lnceptiv~ Stifled by Parents' Guise of Geherosity
lht ~ludeat pay1 clote 1tkntloD. DEAR ANN . LANDERS: I marTied
while still in college. Mom ind Dad
furnished our apartment and 1ml us
a check every month for two years.
We had more than enough to live on.
ye.l they insisted on givlng us money
for birthdays, anniversaries, Thanksgiv-
ing, Chriatrnas,1 Fourth of J uly -any
occaaion which could be Ulld u an
excuse.
I have graduate<!' from · ·collfge lllld
am now working. My hUlband is getting
a PhD on 1 federal grant. We have
everything we need and we don't need
any more flnanclal help. My parenta
can't under.!ltand that we want the
satisfaction of doing a few lhinp oa
Oii!' own.
Last night my father tried to slip
"
ANN LAND Fl?S ~
me aome money behind my h4sband'1
back. I refused to tal<t It. My hulblnd
uw blm and the four of us got tnto
.i tmlltc hUale.-Illy' -called me "ungrateful." My dad l&i4 I wu depl1¥-
ing him of hls greatest pleasure. The
relaUonlhlp ls becoming !tr8ined. It ha!
deteriorated into 1 conteat of wUls. How
can we settle this once and for aU!
-POOR lJ'CTLE RICH GUU.
DEAR GIRL' Write yov lolb o lotter
and tell tllem. 1" •ppreclale drtelr
leoerollty Hi DOW you aad )'00!' bgsbt nd m abte tt aanaie oa yow own. Explain
11111 llley MUST DOt duy Y" Ille
--· of ean1bl1 ... adde""i· ... &Ht prolonged 1delleede1ey is
-.1tb; ...i co• be crlppllJll.
Ask lbem mol lo send any more money
~fl1. U Uity disregard yoar wl1he1,
sead Ute money back. Eventailly wben
they realbe you meu tt they'll 1top
trylnc tt blod you 10 Uiem will! hoops
ef sold.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The letter
frOm the beautiful, intelligent woman
who wa's married to a drunk bad a
fa-miliitr ring to it. I, too, was beautiful
'and intellig ent -or so everyone said.
J made the mistake of marrying a
lush, too. Whene.:-;:er I kicked him out
1 always took him back -"for the
sake of the children." Who . was I kid·
ding? My children needed a drunken
father Uke they needed a hole In the
head.
We had no aocial life becaUle the
only people who will put up with a
drunk are other drunkl. The children
often went to school exhauated and
nervous from lack of 1Seep. Their father
frequently sta lked the holllt, ranting
and raving, until 6 o'ck>cll: ln the morning.
I stayed with that miserable man
for 15 years. I kept telling D'lfSelf he
WtJ a sick man and he needed ·me. CONF.IDENTIAL TO WHAT CAN ~
Orie day I had to admit I wa1 sicker MCYI'HER DO?: One thing 1 motbec-
than he was or I wouldn'.t put up with ·. can do is stop telling her son that
his lying and cheating. A woman h.llis his steady is a tramp. The more Y.O'(
to be craiy to let her husband squander talk against the girl the more h1'tt
his paycheck when their chiltlren need have to defend her tn fact, he mpt,:
shoes and milk. '!defend" her . so vehemently that ~·
I don't know why It took me so long ·· of these days :;ou•o end up being tie~
to get smart (or sh._ould J· say. well >: mother·in-law. ~' l :
but I thank 'my •Juck}' stars 1 nnalty I :
made it. I hope you will print my What Is French kiattng? ls It w~r:
letter for the benefiti ol other women Who should iet Ult ncckln1 llnlba _:
who are back where 1 wu · 20 yeari ·.tilt bey or ... ~I? Cao • -~ P~O. Now is the time to use your farn<IUI • weddlng ..coeed? Read AllD ~
line, Ann. TeJI ther'n to wake up and ibooklel, uTeenaae lb -Ten Yf~
smell the coffee. -SLOW LEARNER . · lo Cool II.'' Send • ceatJ la cfil ~
DEAR SLOW: Tb.llfks for yow lella\ 1 ii loag, aelf-edlhssed, 1tainptd ea~
Tbtre's 1 lle1p 01 1.."HOa bere. I •pe la care of Ute DAILY Pu.or. ;. ' -:
•
J
I
I
r
I
~· . . . .. . ·· . . ··~ ... . . ' ...
M Q.tll y PILOT
Future Doctor Opts to Fight
. . 'WOMEN EXPLOITED'
Emily Ahern
By JO QUON
Of ""' O.lly ""' ''-"'
\\/omen's Llb ls no Joke 10
Emily Ahern, a PhD candidate
at Corne ll Univeralty who is:
a resident of Irvine while her
husband, Denni.s completes hill
PhD at UCI.
A slim, attractive, casual
type, Emily feels that women
are exploited sexually by the
media and that they do not
receive a fair sh a k e
employment·Wi.se.
She sees several areas where
changes must be made for
women's sake: the way in
v.•h.Jch children are in troduced
to culture mu st ht: altered.
employment patterns must be
updated and child care centers
must be established.
''Little girls shouJdn't grow
up think.Jng they are only going
to be mommies," she 5tated.
"There are other options than
motherhood.·•
Employment practices muat
be revamped so buabandJ and
wives can work pari·Ume to
share the n!sportalbllitles or
child rearing.
Emily , a speclallst 1n social
anlhropoJogy. b e c am e in-
terested in her major area,
China, thf'Ollih a profenor at
Cornell and she bu become
irrevocably involved with her
studies because of the big in-
vestment of her time iD stu·
dying the language.
PLANS TO TEACH
She and her husband, a
specialist in Chinese ptillosphy
who also has studied the
Chinese language extensively,
plan to teoch whemer they
can find jobs close totlether.
Emily WU born in Blnn-
in&ham, Ala., grew up in
Penn1ylv1nl.a and dJd bu
undtrpaduate work al the
Unlver1ity ol Mlch!pn, where
she met her hUlband.
They both went to Cornell
for Utelr PhD 1tudy Nld when
her bwiband'J 1dvlaor came
to UCI, the move west
w u necenary, Emily 11 writ.
ing her dlaaent.aUon oo a grant
from the AmeriCln Auocfalion
of Unlvenlty Women and now
is in the final 1ta1t1.
Many ye1r1 of hi.rd work
will be culminated when the
Aherns are able to call each
other doctor, for \he four-to-
·five-year grind hu been a
dlfflcult one. Emily received
her bachelors ~sree 1D 1911,
and her work wi.ll be finlsbed sevual more before her wark rtttnt. I! lncreuu your
in Septembt.r. is done. undul:Landinl in general."
ANCUTOR WORSHIP Emily's village was Ch'inaft The. Ahems. whose UCl
Emily's di s 1 er 1atI 0 n which means "aouth of tbe aparlmtnt it decorated with
generally concerns Chlnese 1trum," and her teetioo coo-woven baskets and other
ancestor worship. She 11 ste.k· silted of about 500 people. artifacts from Taiwan, enjoy
ing &Il!WUS lo qutationa such Sbe would like to return to backpacking and playing their
as why do they do it, wby do addillonat research because recurders together.
are the forms different In the found that ahe baa quu-Tbey shire the cooking and
different villages and how do lions ihe can't answer without clean.up chores but Emily
the Chinese solve conllicts. fwttier tlpte in Taiwan. cooks more often than her hlJ.So
She is studying lht. funeral INCREDIBLE EXPERIENCE band because she enjoys cook·
ceremonies of the Chinese. ing, es......,.ially Chinese and
the. tt 't •· to rd '·it "It was an incredible e:r.· r-~ tr a I Uuc: wa spu s French foodl. When they fiDd and their mar ri age perience," tbe youthfu l
ceremonies. ·scholar sa1d. "The climate the time, tenDis and sk.iifll
Part of her reu.arch i5 being was terrible, the f o o d are planned. I
done at Stanford University 'Ibe future Dr. Emily Ahem delicious." Most exciting was the where a microfilm record is sure to find more at
traces the ancestry all of the "just the e:rperlence of living end of her quest than a PhD ]
people m the Taiwan village in a totB:lly differe nt culture degree. for that ·will ma rk .J
whe~ she did her year's fiel d "You find that orie after only the beilnn1ng Clf her f.
work, so ahe bu made several aoo\ber of your cherished Journey. And she knows wheje
trips north and muat make belief! becomes utirely dif. she is going.
-, ·~y~......_u...,.a.T.; L'f !.:"""°'"""'"""""""'' ....... X~llll•=Rl-ll]lrJl ____ , __ .,. __ m .. mmmm...,,:c:'&~• &SWWWW~Si&.r:m~~Z!n:~J
Scouts
To Give
Sections Plan Your Horoscope Tomorrow
' :;ihanks Art Encounters Aquarius: Express Yourself
'· Plans continue to take shape
.for the council-wide Girl Scout
Recognition dinner w h i c h
:fHes place Thursday. Jan. 28.
~in'. the Alrporter Inn.
What Glrl Scouting Is ...
.46 the theme of the event J;ru~h begins with a social
~ al 6 p.m. and dinner
A demonstration and lecture
on printmaking will be given
for members of the UCJ Town
and Gown Art Group at 10
a.m. \Yednesday, Feb. 3, hy
~!rs. i\turray Kreiger.
~!rs. Lyman Porter will host
the group in her Newpo rt
Beach home for the lecture,
and a demonstration will
perienced li thographer, receiv-
ed her undergraduate training
at the Art Stud~nts League,
New York, and earaed her
master of fine arts degree
at Ohio State Univ ersity.
She also has studied at the
Le fo~erve Studio in Paris and
taught at the University of
Jllinois before comlng to
California. lat 7 p.m. Volunteers who
WQrked with the Orange Coun-ti ·Girl Scouts will be honored
~ng with the Opportunity
Rlectees and Campus Gold
,Gjrls.
I Various troops ln lhe area
are preparing centerpieCt's !o
illustrate 1he theme . \!rs.
l'IH!iam R. Stroud is chairman
of the affair.
follow in the Fine Arts Village
at UCL
The artist has exhibited in
the Columbus Art Gallery,
ex· Wal ker Art Gallery in Min-
neapolis and the Cleveland 600
Gallery.
Mrs. Kreiger, 'n
..
'Cop' Talks
To Chapter
!club Arranges Capt. Rober Vernon, known
as the Christian Cop. \4"ill be
guest speaker for the Col.
\\'illiam Cabell Ch a pt e r ,
Daughters of the American
llcvolution Wednesday, Jan.
• 1 Fuchsia Talk I TY.'O events ha,·c tJ C' c n
f.scheduled th is week for
, members of El CamJno Jlcal 27.
• \Voman's Club. v · · f h 12 30 t On Wednesday. Jan. '!l. lht• ~man s topic or t e . l p.rn. dess~rt meeting in lhc f~:Cr;:~~ w~lng~th!:i~u:~~i:g~,~~ Balbo<i home or Mrs. \Villiarn
Point home of Mrs. Waller Bent will be Why Young Pco·
Caruthers at 2 p.m. to discuss plr Do V.1hat They Do.
ca re and pruning of fusrhias. ~{rs. c . E. Stovall, chairman
Co-hostess for the meeting of DAit S.;:hools. will report
\Viii be Mrs. G. B. Tanner. on the schools. and assisting
Lithography , the prcx.-ess of
prlnting with a hand or
motorized press of! a stone,
1s one of the rarer art forms.
Town and Gown 's Music
Section will gather in the
Balboa Island home or 1\1.rs.
llobert B. Smith for a harp
concert by Mrs. Elizabeth
Elgin Turrell. on Tuesday ,
Jan. 26.
Mrs. Tu rrell , who rf<'cntly
returned from an jntemational
harp competition in Israel. is
a Pomona College graduate.
She has performed with th!'
San Gabriel Syn1phony and al
UCL
Party Planned
SUSAN KING
To Marry
Betrothal
News Told
~Ir~ and Mrs. Alfred King
of Huntingto. Harbour have
announced the engagement o[
their d au gh te r , Susan
Eliiabe!h King to Russell
Joseph Chidley.
~1iss King is a graduate
of the Lutheran High School,
Los Angeles.
Her ftance. so11 of Mr. and
~1rs. Hussell Chidley of La
Dera Heights, is a gradu.11te
of St. Bernard's High School.
\Yes tchesler and now is serv·
ing in the U.S. Army.
TUESDAY,
JANUARY 26
By SYDNEY OMARR
For Ubn, marrlap II mare
lmpor&ul lUn It ll fw lllO&t
pa'IOlll. Tbil IOdiacaI •Ip b
us.oclaled w I t ~ maniqe,
perm 1 De• t pvtDtnhlps,
a11tiement1 whlcll are blDdJng.
Llbr• dot1 not like t o
participate la 1amu people
u1aally play. TU1e uUvts
llave purpose, dedicltloa and
lffk 1 direction la We.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll Ji):
SpoUlght on fuUW!ns o f
c:i,slre1. What you HU is
wi.thin reach. Key la to gain
new inomtntum. Try again.
s·t.art over; take ln!Uatlve. A
friend will provide neceasary
mearu.
TAU R US (April 2Q..May
20): Protect reputation. Don't
permit anyone to use your
name In careless manner.
Trust hunch about indlvidu.111
who is quite a s m o ot h
operator. Promote career in-
tereru.
GEMINI. (May 21.June 20):
Good lunar upect promotes
journeys, h I g h e r learning.
Allow lnteUectual curioalty to
have free rein. Ask quesUons ;
discard superficial anirwers.
Revere knowledge . You are
due for real gain.
CANCER (June 21.JuJy 22):
review policies, budget. Money
!hared with mate, partner
may be highlighted. Have
with Ubr1 individual. Make AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb.
conceuton.1. Hold on to prlnci· 18): Start project.s; welcome
pies without being arrogant. new contacts. Ex pr e s s
Check various lega.I aspects. yourself· This is not tbe time
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): to hold back. Give ex>mpletely.
Some mental conflicts peniiet. Cycle is such that your efforts
Key ia to make peace within bear fruiL Move with con·
famlly circle. Holding aut fidence.
merely means pride iJ die-PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
i! to raise horizons and com·
pletely utilize assets. PotenUal
"uly I! J!ffi'I.
To tin.cl Gilt who't lucM"I" for you
I" "'°""' ~ lovt, orotr SY(!'"'' Omarr1 boolutt ~s11ertt Hinh ,.,.
Mtll Mid W-." ktld blrTllWI•
•NI 50 ttfll• 10 Orn•rr AJ!to"'9"1"
kl;r1t1, ""-OAIL'I' PILOT. Bo~ J:l.j(I, Gr•"" C1nlr•I $1•tlon, N1w Yori!.
N.Y. 10011 .
tating to logic. Message will Some secret fears are e1.pose<1•1------------
become lncreaslng1y clear. as ridiculow. Accept findings ••:::".~-:;!.-*
LIBRA (Sept. 13-0cl. 22): of experL Permit sense of ""'••
Cooperate with Leo individual. humor to operate. D o n ' t
Welcume chance to chue surppress common sense .
gloom. Emotional reponses What was hidden can now
dominate. R o m 1 n c e is be revealed.
featured. Ex p lai n policies, IF TODAY IS YOUR THC
principles to young persons. BIRTHDAY you m a k e RED
Be flei.ible. remarkable use of available BALLOON
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): material. You can com-LTD. Your home can become a true
castle, but you must think: merciallze on what may ap-~
Of other• as well a1 youraelf. pear to be a JmalJ op-RANG TEN
Some comforts may have to portunity. You create, build. STRIPES & SOUDS
be postponed. There now is You are a natural executive. SIZF.S ' TO ZO
note <>f greater financial ~ • responsi'bili'ly. Some of your ideas represent thr. h!O'I tJeli1hlfnlly unu•ual SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· nonconformist thinking. But tblldn:H'• 1ton: i• 1he ... uthlahd
Dec. 21).· Some, an· eluding you must, in order to succeed, 168 5 t I. · R 77 Ala:onquin I. neighbors and relatives, may crea e your own po icies. e· "''.TTl!O"l;.fo:w •1Ar"
try to nu.nlpulate you. Stickli~ce~n~•~a~ct~io~n~no~w~as~· ~t~es~te~d~-~y~o~u~~~~(7~1~•~·~·6~1666~~~~ to flcta. Avoid scattering your can gain wide recognition• Key
forcu. Jdeu need mort com·
plete development. You may
be ending a relationship.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): A new project could
result in financtal windfall.
Remain on top of situation.
Some have g r e a t ex·
pect.aUons-and are impaUent.
Avoid careleasness with hmds.
Be aware of details.
HOW MANY THUMBS
DO YOU HAVE?
H ""' MllioYI ,.... •rt "•II tl'IU""-" '"" ~·~· ... ltittll -P19eH fl.,.. Ill .... ltl 1t1 tMw Yllt MW
t l"'jlle If II .. ~1111 t91tr -W'l"lf'"'". 11'1 fy" -)"W'll lw• ffl YWl1 n"l"I "' )'lllr WfrdAbt !Ml
The KNIT WIT'0"~t'..i!' .. T
,. ....... ,,12 COSTA MISA On Thursday, J an . 28. the ·with hostess duties will be
Leadership Development Sec· the r-.tmcs. William Tritt.
Lion will stage a public benefit ltoberl Roper. ~la r j 0 r i c luncheon and c&rd party 1 !beglnning at noon in the Com· Carnes, Leland Bo in and J.
munity House. Proceeds y,•jll Harold Kellogg.
Arrangements for a Thurs-
day, F'eb. II, Valentine Party
111ill be made on \Vednesduy.
Jan. 27. as members or the
\Yeslward Ho Chapter <lf !he
Daughters of the British
Empire gather at 12:30 p.m.
in the l.aguna Beach homC'
of Mrs. J . \Y, Do1vner.
Mesa League facts at hand. Thorouih •P-1r========= proach could save emotional
support the Easter Sc a I
Silv er Sands
La Lcche League meets lhe tug--0f-war. Know thLs and pro-
second Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ceed actordingly.
~Rehabilitation Cen!cr 1 n f Orange.
: TOPS Merma ids • •
Mrs. H. W. Moore. &45-4 359. LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22): Ue
\~ill answer que s t Ions low. Do more listening lhln
regarding location. asserting. Combine I o r c e s
The first Tul'sday of each --~======~~~~=~========~~~::'.;~~~~~~II rnonth al 8 p.rn. members
u( Silver Sa nds 2116. Native
LJaughters of the Golden \\'est
ga\11e r for meetings. Lake
Park Clubhouse in Huntington
el'ach is the mrcL1ng placr.
: 'TOPS h1erg1ng Mermaids
t meet at 7:30 p.m. every t Thursday in \V oodland School.
Costa Mesa.
Cro,vning Glo1·y
beauty salons
OPIN IEVININGS •114 SUNDAYS •
Curls
Are
Our ---~Business!
r--1
PRICE SALE!
SJI •16AL CVIL
PERM
$17.50
$12.50 1'21 llUMOJI CUJIL
SJI MAGIC CUil $10.
IUD&ET rlRM.
ALWAVS II.fl INer,..•I Htitl
SPECIAL SAVINGS!
SHAMNP·SE:r
STYU.CUT
l lyllll ..... •llOf'll(t .......
SOUTM co•n PUiA
i...w.,. Unl-Nnf 'o S.tn ......... ,,., o,." E••11i11t•
M .... T .... -We\1111
2.95
1.50
L.ter We.t
3.45
2.00
217 t. 1'Pl'tl ST., COSTA MUA
,. ... 141"'9flf o,.,..e .... 111,, a Su'"'•Y
/
TH E CURRENT WHITE SALE IS IN FULL COLOR AND
INCLUDES STAY PRESSED LINEN PLACE MATS, NAP·
KIN S. A PRON S, TOWELS. STORE WIDE SAVINGS OF
2 0 PE R C ENT UP TO 5 0 IN ALL 3 S TORES ON
IMPORTED FURN ITU RE. LAMPS AND ACCESSORIES
YOU HAVE ALWAYS WANTED FOR YOURSELF.'
~N KEPPEL-GRE£N
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
BOARDW AU( SHOPPING CENTER
16841 ALGONQUIN 846-2888
-
FABRIC VALUES!
SOLID COLOR BUTCHER WEAVES
• beeutiful weeva of rayon 1ind 1ifk with the look o f
linen. Wide range of colors.
MACHINE WASHABLE
c rHM re•l•t•nt
44"/4.5" widths fl TI@
yd.
MACHINE WASHABLE
•et
UITINl!iS
BONDED "'SCANDIA"
posh coll•ction of Spring colors
on •crylic boncl•cl to •c•t•t• trlcot
"'TURBO" COORDINATES
,trip•• with matching solidi on
orion •crylic, acetat• tricot linin g
"TURBO" MATCH·MATES
hounds tooth check1, matching
1olids. Acrylic boncltd to actt1t• tricot
MACHINE WASH
HANG TO ORY
54" /55" Wide
\
HOUSEoFF•BRICS
IMfli CMlt "--lrl1tel •t s.,. 011'1 fwy, c... ,......._. .... , •• ,
o,......, M.tS-or1rit1lh•rit• •rii H11b•1
.... ""'9.--12•·1>14
"-,,___, 1tli •' lrhtol
s-tti Aa• 141·&111 a-.,_. C••l•-l• '''"'' 11 St•11ten .......... _..ll6J2J
Sign of Spring
''vcs Saint Laurent, in his spring-summer "Rive
Gauche" collection, offers this yellow satin jacket
\Vorn over a navy blue satin Bermuda. The shoes
also are fron1 Saint Laurent.
Holly Markas Wed
In Laguna Ceremony
Tustin will be home for
Steven Asher Barton and his
bride, the former Holly Tait
Markas, who made their "'ed•
ding pledges in the Church
of Religious Science, Laguna
Beach.
The afternoon vow exchange
'vas direc ted by Dr. }lenry
Gerhard, a!'isisled by Mrs.
Vetura Papke.
Parents of 1he bridal couple
are f.1r. and f\.1rs. William
A1arkas of Corona del Mar
and f.1rs. Jack Allen of
Anahein1.
The bride was attended
f\.1iss Tina Avis as maid
honor, and bridesmaids '''ere
f.lrs. Robert Markas, her
sister.in-la\\, ~!rs. C ar o I c
Northcotl ancl the Misses
Ellen Devery. Gretchen Hagan
and Carole' Allen . MRS. STEVEN BARTON
Tustin Home
•
'
Couple T our S: Islands ,.
On Honeymoon Trip
KoneyrQOMlq 1n Hawail are
Vr. ud llln. D<vld W, Bladt . ~ ~ •'· The neW!,-acUnpd
their nuptial P1-tn the
United Methodlat Cbw-ch, 'Ill·
junga.
Conductlq tbe ceremony
linking I.be son ot Mr. and
Mrs. D<vld W. Bleck of Coot>
Mesa and the former" Wendy
Louise Gaura, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joespb C. Gaura
of 'I\Jjunga, was lhe .Rev ..
Marshall Ketchum.
Escorted to the allar by
her father for the doub.., ring
r~s. the bride asJc_ed Mrs.
John Hermanson to ierve as
her honor attendant.
Richard Rowe ¥las be3t
man. 4Dd aueats .. .,., Med
by Vr. Dan Canion, AJ!on
Niaen and l>lvld ind Tom
Gaura, btotben ol the bride.
Tbe new Ml'I. Blick iii 1
gradulle of Vetdu&o HBb
Hllh School, . Loa ·Aol••
Valley College anct II at-
tendlng UCLA. Sbe wUI llltend
the Uninroity of Clllilo'1lio
at Santa Cruz, where the
couple will mal<e their home.
The benedlct Is a aradu1te
of 'Newport Harbor lllgb
School, Orange Cout Collece,
the University e: California
at Santa Barbara and UCLA
School of Dentlllry. An of·
tiUate of the American Dmltal
AssocilUon, be now ll prac·
ticiog in Scotts Valley.
Coffee Eases Grind
With Artistic View
Sculptured wood fonns and
batik will be exhibited in the
Newport Harbor Se r vice
League's Coffee G a rd en
Gallery, Corona del Mar from
Feb. I to March IL
The works of Elizabeth and
James Fuller of Claremont
may be seen in the gallery
between 10:30 a.m. and 3:36
p.m., Monday through Satur-
day.
A me mber of the Scripps
College art faculty, Fuller
received his MA from the
University of Ca Ii fo rn i a,
Berkeley. Juried exhibits have
won him several purthase
awards at the Los Atlp1es
County Museum of A r t ,
PMadena Museum of Art,
California State College 1t Los
Angeles and ihe 1970 50th
California Watercolor Society.
Mrt. Fuller attended
Choull\ard Ari lnsUtule and
has taught clusea in batik
and stltchery to studentl from
elementary grades thr9lJgh
college. Her emtblts include
Crocker MtlleUm, De.sip X,
Pasadena Art 'MUJeWD, the
Egg and the . Eye, Raku and
the Lang art galleries.
Newport Ceremony
Sally Stevenson Wed
Christ Church by the Sea,
Newport Beach was the set-
ting for the double ring wed-
ding ceremony linking Sally
Adah Stevenson and Wayne
Edward Casey.
The Rev. Dr. Ray C. Gery
perfonned the nuptials fo r the
daughter of ?tfrs. John M.
Chipman of Costa Mesa and
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
E. Casey of Orange.
Atlendlng her sister as
matron of honor was Mrs.
Mel A. Dokken, and serving
as bridesmaids were Mrs.
Thomas A. Maxwell , Mbs
Mindy Harris and Miss Mary
Lou Scofield.
Best man was Maxwell,
while usher duties w e r e
assumed by Je!!rey H • ..,..1119· ,...,.
MRS. CASEY Stevenl!On, the bride's brother, Torrance Home
Timothy R. Holt and Brad .----""===""'-="---
Dorfman.
Following a honeymoon In
Hawaii , the bridal couple will
reside in Torrance.
The bride is a grad uate of
Costa !i.1esa High School. Her
husband attended El Ca mino
Junior College, Orange Coast
College 11.nd now is a business
major al CalHomia State
College at Long Beach.
I r---=Oiiiiiiiiiii~=i!I
Andy's Fun
Aslr: any kid. "Ask Andy'" Is fun.
Ste It !aturday5 ht lht DAILY
PILOT.
YOGA SHOWS YOU , , •
Scott Barton was h is
brother's hest man ancl ushers
wer e Glenn Smiley. P a I
1.a\vrencc. John Dorscm and
Rod Carew .
I •,.,_., or Santa Ana Valley High Send
Schoo! and Santa Ana College HOW to relcax
How to h Ylt.1 and will receive his degree
in June fro m California Slate The new Mrs. Barton is a
graduate of Corona del l\1ar
High Schoo l and attended College at Fullerton.
Orange Coast College <ind f'""liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
California Western University.I
Her husband is an alumnus I --·----1
The DAILY PILOT-1
The One Thot Cores I
Roy
Read
Alvarado's
'HAIR BEAT'
Every Thursday
•
f1om
HOW t• c•c .. trete
r1tl! DEMONSTRATION
Tun. Nl9ht, I ''"'·
sa'blha's
c11 ... 1 St1rt
Wed.-7 '·'"·
YOGA CENTER
Certi-Olti..-c.t,.,_ ~....ity ...,,, .......... ~ ...
"""'"""" ·--"-' ... ~· _,........._
4U •• 1m. ''· -·
BUFFUMS' FAMED
LAMP CUT
PLUS SHAMPOO,
FERMODYL TREATMENT,
5 .5 Q 8.50 value
If your hoir only hos tho slighf-
eot tendency to curl, our Buf-
f umo' experts will encouroga
every natural wove. Enriching
f ermodyl will help strengthen
you r hair. We'll shampoo and
comb it into on exciting new
look. Try it . . . discover why
Bulfumo' Lamp Cul hos be-
come famous.
81ouiy Studio.
Monicur•• • Pedicures • Fociol1
• Electrolysis
N•wport, •I Fa1hion lsl•nJ, Newport C•n+er e M4.2 200 e Mon., Fri., 10:00 till 9:10: Oth.t O.ya 10 till 1:10
. . . .. -· ..... ~. -~ .. . . ..
Femini·ne Touch
"The Cardigan Dress" seamed and Oared with
a feminine touch with your choice of two collars.
to be made in contrasting colors, as an added divi-
dend.
This precut, preperforated Spadea Designer
Pattern produces a better fit. Order 72950: give
&ize, name, address and zip. $1 .50 postpaid. Address
SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford, N.J . 08848.
P1ttern. Books by Classification: Coats and Suits -
'I postpoid.
Speaker Selected
Dr. Bert Schweitz, director
of phy1lcal medicine at the
Orange County M e d i c .a I
Center, will be guest speaker
when Glau Mountain Inn, Inc.
meets Wednesday, J an. 27.
The Veterans Charitable
Foundation building, Santa
Ana will be the settin for
the 8 p.m. gathering, which
will include refreshments pro.
vided by Santa Ana Young
Ladies Institute 104.
Glass Mountain Inn Is a
nonprofit organ iz a t io n
dedicated lo the housing and
employment 0 r physically
disabled adull!.
·lJ
M.....,, J ... .,, 2', l•n DAILY riurr' ~l
June Laugher¥: 1
Becomes Brid~
. ·~ June Ellzabelh Loughery
was clai{ned in marriage by
James Darryl Garcia during
double ring rites· per(nnned.
by th e Rev. Thomas J. Nevin.
in St. Joachim's Catholic
Chureh, ~ta Mesa.
Partnts of the bridal couple
are Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
l.ooghery Sr. of Costa Mesa
and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Garcia
of Al buquerque.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attended
by her sister, Miss Eileen
Loughery as maid of honor,
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Kurt
Fisher and Miss M a r i a
Bart.on. Lorraine Loughery,
the bride 's niece was the
fl owe r girl.
Serving as best man was
Glenn Hale, while ushers were
Lawrence Loughery a n d
William Loughery. Guy
Loughery was ring bearer.
The bride is a graduate of
Estancia liigh Sc hool. Her MRS. J. O. GARCIA
!1usband is a graduate of Recites Vows
Valley High School. Albu. -----------
querque, allended De Vry
Jnstit ule of Technology in
Phoenix and now is serving
in the Navy.
The newlyweds will reside
In Costa Mes a.
Nuts 'n Nibbles
Coffee Pours
An E:rpresso Club meeting
is plaMed for 10 a.m. Thtu"s-
day, Jan. 28, in the Costa
t.fesa home o! Mrs. Homer
}to ward.
t.1rs. Nonnan Watson will
Attending meetings every speak on kidney reaea~.
Frid ay at 10 a.m. are the Members are collecting food
\'.'Omen of FoWltain Valley coupons for redemption Oli a
Nuts to Nibbles TOPS Club. kidney machine.
Members have selected the',I';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. Recreation Cenler in Hun-11
tington Beach for the meeting
place.
OTEP.Y
21J II, Ulh II. c .. 1. MeW • M&·tm
,i ONE
WEEK
ONLY!
Boanlilll ·•
Training.
l"Ji~~•• end Ad.,1nc1d
Jumpln9 encl Shciwln9
S4S.9911 541.n52
Children end Adultt
•• SALi INDS JAN. JI
Frigidaire! 1-18 laundry pair:
18 lb. capacity· 54" wide!
aoth hne lo 111-'b. c.pectty ••• yet together lhey"r• onlr 54" Mdsl l!olh hllw•
p.,...rMftt Pr ... C•r• ••• •w•n remov•bl• con10/e1 for qulek, •••Y
repelr, 11 H'1 ..., nnded. And .:=iiii!!!Jill~
MOOEL OAG S
•• ~•r • . • • 17'·'5
•. IUY THI ~All i s4199s
mud!, much motel
Spacesaver! Together they're
......... ---less sloop! Opening la •
fuU 19" off the noor. L•as
grope! Huge 2'40 aq. Jn.
opening. Dacron Llnt
Screen la euy lo gel lo,
easy to clean. Tr1p1
even the tfnlest
lil"lt partk:le&.
Frigidaire 15.9 cu. ft.
Frost-Proof Side-by-Side
Fmt.flrlDll
YWM ..,.. dlfrolt llllit. llo
... bl to frott
S111Hy-Sltl1
co11•11l1nc1I lncl11dlnr • lfl.ll. ... wrtlcll heart Ylt It's tlli7 32"' wide. \
~lcklcl
EjlCtlr.
,., llo IM!,-"' ...
lh 11111•1 '''''' r1J•fckl7, -·
411 I. S.vontMnth St.
-IM4 41lly ._, Sot: M
Melt Tender
holds up to 2U lbs. ~• mut 1lmnt fmtl, ready to
cook, for W, lo I WMlJ
Door Strinp!
llutttr com,:M'"t. r1m0¥· .ow • .,. " ,l!ft'I:; .... l"ptr, .. , ....
ltMI.
.
IL TORO
L-Htll1 Pl1u
(Matte~) 1!7--dolly IIM M/, 10.t
•
--
•
I
~ -... ..,.__ __ .. -... -· ..... . . . -··.: .. ' ~ . . :· .. . . ...• ~ ' ' . . . . -. "
~ ':1"'!\..Y Pll Of
Ach ievements Acclaimed Curator
To Speak
For Club During
l'lJpeclally booored during
lllo 1111111<1 cllnner mee!Joa and
1D1Lill.1lloo of office.rs ror the
hmUy Servi~ AssodaUon ()f
Ora.nae County wu Mrs.
Do•ard A. MUil! of Newport
Beach.
Mrs. Means was the /irsl
volunteer wbo became presi-
dent of Ult ~iaUon through
bet •·ork wl\b Las Marineras
Allliliary, wblcb she also serv-
ed as president.
Other services to FSA in-cl\lled beinC a member of aiiit l h e n president -0! the
board. comprised ()f 30 area
mto and women, and member
of the Western Regional Coun-
cl comprised of delegates
Crom Washington, 0 re Ro n ,
ltlwall, Cali!miia and Utah.
1be !~year Ney,·port resi-
dent, who served as chairman
of auxiliaries for four years,
saw the rise of two new
branches of the associalion
-tbe Huntington Beach and
San Juan Capistrano aux-
iliaries.
Mrs. P.1eans, whose husband
Is in the restaurant business
in the area, is the n1other
of Sherman, 20, who attends
the University of Arizona, and
Election
Mrs. Robert Sw ick ol Los
4ngeles.
The University or Uta h
graduale and affiliate or Pi
Beta Pbl received the specia l
FSA award upon ber retire-
ment from the board , however
she will remain an active
member of the Las Marlneras
Auxiliary.
Serving as new president nf
the FSA of Orange County
will be Walter J, Koch of
Newport Beach,
Other oflicen elected during
the 16th annual dinner meetlng
in the Airporter lnn were Mrs.
William Geiger, Huntington
Beach, vice p re si d ent ;
William E. Montonna, Orange,
treasurer, and Mrs. Lyman
King. Laguna Hills, secretary.
Co mprising the board of
directors wi!J be i\irs. Thomas
Crosson J r., Newport Beach;
A. f\·Iike Monarres, Garden
Grove, and William O'Connell
and Mrs. Jackie O ld e n ,
Anaheim.
Koch, a native of Chicago.
received his BS de11ree at the
University of Illinois . A
tr.ember of the Republican
State Central Committee and
the Newport Harbor Lutheran
On the Right. Track
Dinner
SPECIAL AWARD
Mr1. How1rd A . M•an1
Church, he also scrvt.s as
president of the Marintrs
Con1mun ily Association and
chairman <>f the Citizen 's
Coordinati ng C(lmmittee. He
is a member or Tau Kappa
Epsilon fraternity an d a bo~rd
member of Jioag Memorial
llospital, Presbyterian.
Guest speaker tor
Wednesday, Jan. 21, mee llng
of the Mua Verde Republican
Women 's Club w:lll be lhe Rev.
Claude Bunul, curator or the
colonial library at Knoll's
Berry Fram.
Mn. Thomas Beck with will
host tM 10 a.m. mee ting In
her Costa Meta home and
Mn:. William CoUwn will con.-
duel the business session
wtllch will precede a noon
luncheon.
A distinguished. autho r and
lecturer, the Rev. Bum.el will
discu.sa faith and freedom.
Members are making plans
to attend the 20\h &Mual Lin·
t.'Oln Day Luncheon, sponsored
by the Orange County Federa.
tiori of Republican Women's
Clubs, to take place Thursday,
:reb. 11, in the Newport.e r Inn.
Long Look
High-necked sweaters are
great with the longuette
,jumper. •
Monet suggests toppmg the
sweater with a striking scroll.
ed plaque nectlace. 1 Com·
panion drop earrings and a
wristful of bright burrushed
Refusal
\ / bangles complete the loot.
Crops Up 1 .~·o OOOILPAINTIN•S
AT
WIT 'S
END
By t.:Rfl.IA BOMBECK
God has a special love for
program chairmen .
All of you pr ogra m
chai rmen ou t the re (you poor
devils know who you are) have
to believe Lhat to survive.
In a small way I have sens-
ed yo ur rrustration when you
have written, "Dear Mrs.
Bromback. I have been ? fan
of yours for years and wonder
ir you CTlUld address our
organizalion next f\farch on
Foot fiealth. The theme of
our convenlion is 'Can Fee t
Meet the Challenges of the i'lh;'.'' ,.
J have fell your desperation
when you pleaded, "I know
I am late in my requ est but
if you'll address our women's
group , we promise not to put
you next to the garbage
disposer that makes such a
noise when it grinds up
chicken bones."
I have even shared your
nnancial plight when yo u
st.ated firml y. "We had such
a good speaker last month
that th is month we are forced
to cut back. How about it'.'"
Alumnae
Traveli ng
Tra,·eling to Studio City to
allcnd a luncheon meeting will
be. Ora nge Coast members of
Clipped Wings, Un ited Air
How one Girl Scout program
chairm an from Detroit solved
her problem ls grist for
today's column. I
She approached me a year
or so ag1> to speak at their
polluck supper. She said if
I didn't, they would be fo rced
lo run in Mr. Burke, a tractor
salesman who would show
slides of the new tractors.
Since she spelled both of
my names correctly I was
tempted. but as my laundry
had been in presoak since ear-
ly summer, I suggest~.
"Wann up Mr. Burke. I can't
make it."
This week, I ~ceived a
report from my favorite prcr
gram chairman . Her offering
may not have been the most
inspiring . • • but it was un·
dou bte dl y lhl' mo st
memorable-one ever to be
st.aged.
The theme was "Together
\Il e Are One." which was not
altoge ther true. The reconfl
player didn't work during the
sing~a!ong. One woman drop...
ped her plate of food on
another during lhe buffet and
the program chairm an and her
committee skipped eating to
fi nish writing a tribute to the
di strict chairman to the tune
of "M 15 for the ~tillion Things
She Gave Me."
Mr. Burke appea red (with
pitchfork ) and explained how
he had sandwiched this ap.
pearance in between the
bliJlhl, September raim, auto
st rikes and rising interest
rates, and proceeded lo show
his tractor and rarm im-
plrment slides to a group of
stunned Girl Scout leaders.
There were no questions.
I got a Green Angel award
for staying away and a nolc
Invi ting me to next year's
t ines Stewardess Alurnnae. The DAILY PILOT-
Jnc. I
I WHOLIUU WAll HOUSI
ONN TO THI ru111c
pot.luck. Tf she thinks T can 50°/o OFF
follow an act like Mr Burke 's l•I• E. •01NH11. IANTA ANA j
. ~tt"9 '""""' •.. she 's crazy. :.a:o::m D•AL••• WANT•D ~
FITTING & STYLING CONSULTANT
' . ' J GET THAT
Marie LeMay
PROFESSIONAL
TOUCH IN YOUR
OWN SEWING!
Will present a 90·
minute class on
pattern drafting·
fitt ing·slyling
L•••" 1 s ;,..,p!1 5olvtion to
P•tl••n f itli119!
L11 r11 11 Much in 90°Mi11ul11 11 i11 •Pl
Exp1P11i•1 Court1!
e Ord!! p1H•rn1 wl!h only 1wo 10,,..pl1
Arntric1n m111ur1m1nl1! e M-lk1 tnV 1i11, •nv 1ty!1. fi t 1nv p1rtonl e Ad ju1t 111v p•ll•rn! Fil •nv 91rm1nt! e M11!1r P1tt1rn Fitting with no diffis.u lty,
No 1xp1ri1nc • n1c1111ry!
FREE to
Those
Attending! D1mon1lr1lion Ft• $3.00
I Hu1b1n1h 1dmill1d f r11l
S 1.00 Dlko111t wit ..
t•li ••
AU M Ul1m1nl t¥1111~1t
.r Clan
A V;luable
Gilt
2 DAYS ON LY
Tuesday and Wednesd11y
J anuary 26 •nd 27
J •m alc• Inn
2101 L c-t Hwy., .. MMA.rtlt1r l 'M ..
Comt Et rly
Lim/1,J
S1•lin9
The meeUng will take place Tops in Loca Sports al II a.m. Thursday. J an . 28;1'=".:--••••••iiil•• \l•ilh r-.trs. William Radin
presiding.
Newport a..11
Among those attending from TAKE .o FF the area ~·ill be the f\fmes.
IA UiS Abel, Charles Ball,
Peter }lorton, Richard Kee.rer,
KJmmino Johnson, J im Shat· 8 TO 22 Inches In fer, Michael Sherry and Jean St~~~rs are the Mm e •. 're:!:••t ·o NE WEEK!
Richard Slayton, Paul Salata , AYoiloblt
Marshall Stuart, Janet Leman for
I
\ ~ I.\' )c~
._11; ~ • .. "~ iP .p 11 if> l> ,,
"' ~ ~ "" '"' ~ ~ It' -!< «-t ... ~ ~ ,p
~ .... 'Ii ,..,, ;. ti' ~ rt' .e ~ .. " t" "" ! 11:.-1> ·l re ~ ~ l.~ ..
"' 1i .&< ~ ... .P ~ /,!
.,i. ,p ~ -A ce ·IP ... ~ ,,
rJ, .t' ... l;j> c! "' .!' l!l> "*' """ ~ ~ r! "' ••
.. ol1-.. ,p o!
""' •" & ~ ;!< ~"' 1;+. l"I' ~ .J> -" ~~ .,» t!z \;! ~· ~ L!> ~ ...
•f ~· I. •• ~ ~ "" 1.-" ~ .!' i} e-.a l:\ "" d .!" •! .:> <'i' J-{jg r" If> ~" \ \, .IT. .~ '-" 1.'' . ..; ,!-•" .,,
<.!> !!' "" ~ ... .... .!" I" oil-.~ I! ..,., if ;!< "" -~ ''1 <-I< r.."' • 1 •. it< ~IT. "" Qo.4 '.11/1 t ~~ ~ .,.. ,,
~ ~ i:1i~ :* J' ~!> ~ .. c4. "" 1:·1'11' "'" ...
<JI • /1" .... •" I
----
THE NEW W ORLD OF BRID ES isginghamarnd
pinafores, flowers and folklore ... A world of nostalgia, filled wilh ruffles and rib~ons,
brightened w ith calico. ric·rac and old world embroidery. And there's color.
Gardens of color or pale pastels rom anllcally replacing pristine while.
Bridal fashions, suddenly so personal, so non·lraditional, expressing
your feelings. our gown has mint. blue, m aize .or pink flowers on white, 160.00.
Matching camelot head d ress, 100.00.
YOU'LL FIND 'THE NEW WORLD OF BRIDES CELEBRATED AT OUR
BRIDA L FASHION SHOWS. WHERE A 17-DAY EUROPEAN HONEYMOON
SPONSORED BY ETHEREA COSMETICS. TWO 7·DAY BRITISH COLUMBIA
HONEYMOONS COSPONSORED BY BRITISH COWMB IA and Robert Zelsdort. Mtn REDUCE QUICICl.Y, fASltY, IEFFOltnESSLY. INCHES AWAYS fXQ.U.
SIVE EU.OPIEAN SUNDIERIZING METHOD TAICU Off THOSE lXCW
INCHES EXACTlY WHERE NffDIEDI NOW YOU CAN If INCH!$ SliM=
M.ER IN JUST ONE VISIT. Pair Gives
Lithographic
Interpretation
READWHATFANTASTICRESULTSTHESEWOMEN
HAVE HAD WITH THE EXCLUSIVE NEW FIGURE
CONTROL METHOD1 UNJ9ELll!vABLE?
AND WESTERN AIRLINES, PWS DOOR PRIZES AND GIFTS FOR THE TROUSSEAU,
ARE OFFERED TO THE SPRING BRIDES WHO ATIEND.
Art 11 • hl,ahly pe.l'lM'lnat
matter. But In the case of
lithography, It beoomes a duet
or two -the artist and the
arUurJ1>rlnler.
A fi lm, entitled "The Loo k
Q( the Lltl>olJr>pher" wlll be
""""' at the a p.m. Wed·
nadaY. Jan. %1, meeting of
t.b1 Tdrana Art WIUt.
Tbo film . ~ by tho
Tamarind Llt~oiraphlc
Woriclhop. _,.i;;., th ~
inetlculous ~ ef P""
duclnl a print odJUon. The
•rtl!t. LouiJe 11...i.oo and
ll>6 artllan-prfaler, S 1 r I e
i.oun,ot work t o 1 • l b e r
~tbeprocta. 1'hO me<Unc tom place In 8-1 M.-m and ii open
to IM' publle.
"
... __ _
A'k Patricia Dean ·•-aN .. c.o•. . , .....,...._. ... _""""""' ~ _ ...
of A••htl111, Cal if. ~·"'"'""""_......,..,,....,.JI•"""'•,.. " .......... -.... -_._........,. ...... .., ....... _ ..................... ,.,. .. .. _..,.... ____ ... ......_ •• _ ... ........, _,....,, .. ,, • ..,lr •fft.nl-atyt. ... ., ... , .... .......,-.. _...... .... "'_. . ....... ,,_ ..
• NOSTARVATIONOIETS o NOSTuNUaUSEXERCISE : ....
. o NO SAUNAS •NO CONTRACTS ·\,
~...,..,.,... .... w...,.........,., ..........
Lose Inches in Minutes
INCHES AWAY
-
Bridal Show schedule:
NeWpOrt. Friday, Ja n. 29 at 7:00 p.m. and 8:00 pm . Udo Buffet.
Complimentary tickets may be obtain ed In our Bridal salon .
Grand Prize Drawings wlll be held In our LOs A ngeles Bridal Salon,
Saturday, Feb. 13, at 3:00 pm.·
ROBINSON'S
NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 6AA.2800
VELVET TOUCH -Femininity keys the bridal
gown today. This gown of organza and lace is trim-
n1ed \vith pink velvet.
Hint of Color
Touches Gowns
SIMPLICITY -Clean
lines mark bridesmaid
dress of bisque mar·
quisetle.
Sensitivity, feminity and in-
dividuality are the new moods
or young womeo today and
these moods are more than
matched in contemporary
bridal fashions.
\Vhether the bride of 1971
chooses to look like an old-
fashioned country girl, her
great-grandmothers tintype,
the traditional Juliet or a
French impressionist painting.
she'll be able to satisfy her
individualism and express her
life style in dressing.
Color detailing is one of the
newest trends in b r i d a I
fa shions. Touches of colored
velvet. sprinklers of em-
broidered bouquets , daisy ap-
pliques and color t in g e d
fabrics are a few of the ways
that color is· reflected in the
new bridal designs.
The use of color dates back
to Biblical days. when couples
v:ore a band of blue on th eir
costumes to symbolize fidelity
and love .
New bri dal fashions wil l be
shown in the f\.1ay Co. South
Coast Plaza at 7 p.m. Wed-
nesday, Feb. 3.
Waist Watchers
TOPS 'Vaist Watchers
assemble every Thursday at
7 p.m. in Circle View School ,
Huntington Beach.
Republican Women See
Clear Sailing Ahead
All sai!s will be up and
filled when the Huntington
}{arbour llcpublican Women 's
Club. Federated. installs new
officers during a 10 a.m.
Improvement
Seminar Goal
A sell-tmprovement seminar
wlll be cond ucted in the
Balboa Bay Club Thursday
•od Friday, Jan. 28 and 29,
by Mis.s Tahtia Cardin, dancer
and model.
Miss Cardin, formerly wilh
Ute Jose Greco Troupe and
nndentudy to Cyd O\ariue,
ba." made 39 tclevi.Slon a~
pe11rnnces.
She will offt.r \nJlrucllon in
"net, exercise. technique• in
t'lsu•I pol11e, makeup ap.
pflcatlnn and hairstylinw.
meeting laking place Wed·I
nesday, Jan. 27, in the HUil·
tington Seacllff Country Club.
Taking as her theme a
quotatk>n, "Sail, Don't Drift,"
from Oliver Wendell Holmea,
Mrs. David Mayberry will be
installed as president by Dr.
Norman :nanger, Uirector of
Vocation"1 Educatloo Io r
Orange County, recent ap-
pointee of President Nixon's
to lhe NaUcnal Advisory Coun-
cil on Vocational F.ducation,
and an enthusiastic aaUor.
Others to be seated lnclude
the Mmes. Roy 8 . Hughes,
Charles Allen, Robert Brown
and Albert Bentdkt, vice
presidents ; Ronald Drewa.
recording secretary; l.k>yd
F1.11lie. corre s pondln1
secretary, and We l"CI on
)leeiley, t"aaurer.
Luncheon will bf! available
tollo wln& the installaUon.
JANUARY Storewide savings for the New Y•ar in.every department· of all stores
17 • 99 regularly 24.99
Two great all weather coots from o terrific ~ale collection. Pr#:«:I to
give you savings worth bragging about! Bo1h models shown ore wrin-
lde-resistant cotton ond polyester. Aceta te inner linings give extra
warmth. Come in and find many additional sryles, also sa vings.
0 • Single breasted safari coot. Ale. mint, ice, or olive. Size.s 8-18
b. Edwardian collar coot. White or na vy with contrast edging. S..1 S
budge! 1tore5, women'5 coots 828
SIPARATIS SALi
save on mix 'n match
blouses and flares
4.99anc15.99 ~19'.0;.~9
Get your look together With ot.rr flores a nd
blouMS. Bock zip flares of acrylic bonded to
oc•tate. UYtly ploidJ, Jmdrt solids, or novel
he"lngbone.. In sizes 5-13. Reg. 6.99 4.99
Reg . 7.99 crepe blou .. s of nylon/ocotate thot
wo.>lles boautifully, 5-13. Reg. 7.~ 5.99
bud9tt stare! [unior sportlWMr 80f -
SAVE 42%
our own
Tarleton cardigans
of lush wool and mohair
moy co so~th coast pl011, '"" diogo fwy ot bristol, c:ost1 ~. 544.tlZ 1
shop mondoy thru solurdoy I 0 om lo 9:30 pm, sunday noOn 'I~ 5 pm
..
6. 99 revvlarly 11.99
Everythin g'• big-time in this aw..._, line-up. A
fine figure of o saving ••• 42% that you con
pot&i.et for your own. A gr6ot cordigon look , • ·•
six-bvnori cardigan sweaters of wool enriched
with mohair. A whole big. range of colors •• ,
goJd; brown, blatk. light blue, electric blut, c v-
~odo, Come collect them for golflng, for bowl-
ing_ for goofiftg,Off. Small, mediu m, large, x-lorge.
MAY CO
BUDGET
STORES
. .
I
I l
·'
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• • '
I
I
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I
d
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I
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£.J DL1LY ::tC.T
'S'h:ortstuff' quartet
Irvine Group I rripressive
In Evening of One-acts
By TO~ TITUS
ot ,,.. o.11v l'lt.r '""
'Du'tt nut of four 1sn 't bad
in anybody's league, and that's
the batting average of Lhe
Trvine Community Theater 111
its evening of one-act p1a.vs
co 11 ec t ive 1 y en I it!cd
''Sharl.stuff."
Shorted from ~ schedllled
six plays to the present con1·
ptement of four -obviou,;ly
"SMOltTSTVFf""
A~ •••nir>g of onr-•c• P••o ··r~. U~Xll<l•Q•tec Memoir> of &trna•a
Me<11'1tu:leil••" br Jul•• l""t ltl•r. "In
• Cokl Ho1'1'" b• 8•n M~<ldow.
"Chuck" tov J•c-L•""" •na "M•I~ Pi.•"" ll• L•• tc•«h•lm, ai"c•ec bv itknara Oow. st•~• m~~•g., B~• T"lora, M>un<I •<>CJ i.oni."9 b• Chu<\
BMton . .el atslgn D• Gora"" Vt•IM.
l>IT$tn!ed bV •n• Ir•;,,~ Communlh
T-1•• Frl<1••~ •na satut11••• lh•w~n
Feb. 6 " lh• UC lr•lnp sr...alo
lloute•. THE c ... sT
N..,...l(G;rl/Jlll Jan• ~·•••nl NowO<>'I
B«n•r<l/ChU<-/MOrlV Tarn ThtHOY•I<'
~·l•molf••l'ler GO•dM •••'"" lal<lit r WU ICttl>lor
Mtt. Wil•on ...... ,. M•ll<-
to preserve the ::itidicnce s
tailbones -Ille Irvine l'ro-
gram offers son1e intcrest.ing
and comical insights into lht>
human condition. And even
in the instance where tficy
fail to hit the mark in1-
pressively, the Irvine playc rs
are less to blame than is
the material at hand.
The evening consists of two
aclS. each containing a brief
"warmup" playlet folloy,·ed by
a longer production. a!I clili rn-
ing separate. aulhorship. It i.:>
an entertaining concepl, and
one v•hich the Irvine theater
has used ~fore with !'Orne
r. ~ ·-·-l•· . .
t n. DA& ..... LOG ~!:.!: ~ " ,,,.. !<t \;. :li:.\< '-' -
MONDAY
JANUARY 25
I , f ~ I ", (.
l :oa II l it """ <Cl (60) Jtiry Dunptir. 0 KIWIC Nnwrvice (C) (60)
0 The Allen SN• (C) (90) Gues1s
art Tony Bennet!. Mill K1mr11, c,,
mtl Quinn, Ronny Ptulman, i nd
eo-l!ost Louis Nyt.
fJ Six O'Clock Mtvil: (C) "l 1ot111
LlllCt" (westtm) '54 -Spttlcer
T11cy, .Iran Pettr1. In Ille 1880's in
Ari1on1, a cattle tt1IOll'1 JIOW!• fir.
1in1 lo dislnterrate '' Ulnllicb
deve lop.
(J Dit• VIR llft;I (lO) m Tiit FlintltMlt (C) (30)
Q) (llj (])star TrK (C) (60)
f'D Art Studio; "Printint: Animllt." a {j) CIS Nns (CJ (30) m filhtr fnily (30) ml NMititr1 l4 (C) (60) iE Wi11p le Mnnt1111 (C) (30)
a!) U Hora F1miliu con ttns11tle m Jkwl i• tM hlrlMI {C) (30)
1:15 rii) CU1li1'1 Pad (C)
l :JO O CMdid Clow• 130) m TM flyios Jm (C) (30)
~@ MIC ,._. (C) (30)
t'D Medppod11 LMp (C) (30) !HJ (f) My Fflltrih: lil1r1i1R (JO)
tll) Stltdod f~Mt/lil11liclll (C) m TM Duert hport (C) (30) m QC Ntn (C) (]{)) mJ I.Ii Olvicladls (JO)
1:00 E C8S £weni111 News (C) (30)
Walter Cron~ilt.
0 fD NBC JOlfltly Nn1 (C) (30)
D1vid Btinklty, John C~1nctllor,
fr1nk McCu.
0 W'ut's M1 Li111! (t) f30J m@rn I LHI l•CJ (30)
ID Dret:nl'I (C) (30)
ti) Ci) J11lil (C) (30) ID Speailation (C) (60) (Rl ··~
Converution "ff1lh Godt1ey Cam·
bridie."
O @Cll f'l'ITIM RMI,.,, .. (C)
(30) Jack Bury hosls. m Dnill fro1t Sllow (C) (90)
Guests: Oli ne Cilento, Rodrtey Din·
Rtlfield, Biff Row, Dr. Wi!li1m
Nolen. m F...., 541* <C> <J01 m httm lw U.U.1 {30)
al) Miptlill Vllitz Show (301
9:00 EJ ~{i) M•1bf1TJ' R.f.lt. {CJ (30)
G1ry C1osby guest stars as Pete, •
N4SA ollici1!, whom Sam cam1inces
to 1ive Howoud 1 privtl• 1howin1
of 1 moon rock.
0 RECOMMENDED'
*WORLD PREMIERE
A FANTASTIC MOVIE
"CITY BENEATH SEA" U (231'.I) m w.tfd Pnlllftft MOY-
i1: (Cl "'City hn11tl1 tht Sc.1"
(lfrwrtl) '70-Stu1r1 Whitm1n, Roll·
ert W11ner, .k>stph Cotten. A com-
lllllldu CIC an undaru1 city pilot
!)l'oj!d: laces ho.llility from tallow
inh1bit1nb, whilt trying lo IC·
COIT!l>!iSh l~t mll'Ytmen! ol !ht Ill ·
lion's entirt nude11 and 1old sup-
ply lo Ill undersea 1111Ult 0 Till F11fitm (60')
0 @ (}) G) UC liltnda) M1vit:
"In Kim's W1J~ Conclusio11 !dr•-
rn1) '65 -John W1ynr, P1tric11
Nr1t, ltir-Oo111l1s. Nw1I carerr
man bt1dled on a technlality 1i1ht
1fter P11rl Hlfbol reb back Into
adion when Admir•I puts him in
ch1r1e of 1 top.srcrrt ope1alion.
Q)llffC1;!LIT!lnlH" WNld tf
Sports (C) (60) V1rious IPOrll
celebrities and nents 1r1 !r11ured. ED lllck Journal (C) (60)
@El 30 Mi11ut11 (C) (JO) el"°' (30) G) N1llchl (60)
':lO E ~{])Doris Dar (C) {30) Dor ii
Martin's n1,ry, printsll rieirhbor
is visited by his untie, ind lo
Ooris"s drlig/11 he is not 11 111 li~r
his Mphew. 0 C.ll6iill C1Mtf1 (JO) IE llh:liule/f'•itN's Des~ (JO)
(E C.ndrrto d1 Almas (30)
~ (j) Tf11th 01 t.nsequtnt'' (C) 10:00 O ~ 00 C.101 Bur111tt Sholl (C) e'J Ctirift the Livin1 Wotd {CJ (30) tGO) Guests 1rf [d.,.ard 1Jillell1 and
mi ltoutio (30) Marth• R1yt.
G) Si111pl1rn1nte Mari• !5~) Q 9is 5 Nt.s (C) (&Q) l';av!n ffi Movit '1111e IC) (30) Sanden. Birney Mor11s,
7:30 O ett, @ 'unJlllo~1 {C) (60) Deo I 0 l1rtei W11d Nt•s (C) (601
lily festus Haa:11n becomes Oodre m Hews (C) (60) Georie Putn1m,
City's new eltflnllr dreued bus1·1 Ha! f1shm1n.
neu ill'ltstoi to1tther wtth Tilus, IE Trt1su r1 (C) (JO) '"Tr t1sure ot
h" nt"ff shre"ffd partn11 in lllf: UllOl;..·i!· IIl!il "'Tycoon " episode. fE Ls RC!!\ I Tiit• 'lllholt World h
O COMEDY CLASSIC! :*•tcb in1 (CJ (2 hrJ A~e1ican, Bnt·
* RED SKELTON 11h 1n~ french _television ne"llS ,ov·
Ul8t IS 1nves1t1ated lo de!ermin1
HOSTS JAMES DRURY I "ffhrther nel•or~ ne"lsmen lilt prlt·
0 ID @ m lltd Skilton (C) (lO) lltin( 1 ~ind ol "MKi•I en11inee1·
J.imes Drul")' &ursl s, ' Int.'"
0 Jlfl'PO {C) (30), , mi L1cetill (C) (30)
Q @ (})CE) let 1 M•\t I Diii\ G) T1l1.Cin11111 Atstnlint {2 h1 f
(CJ (30) Monty Hal' hosts. 0 Minio11 S ""ii: "DM1t1 lt1li· IO:ln tIJ I ii! Johns Hews (C) (lO)
•n styM" (comed1l '62-Ma rcello ml l1etrticlutl'lbf1 (30)
Mastroianni, D1nltl1 Rocu. Sicililn 11:001J a@ Ill"-(C)
nol:tlem1n. thlflntd by his yount: 0 9 00 m ..... (t )
to1111n, spends rnon.lhl i11 prison 0 C.• TM y., Tltll! (C)
1fter stiootinr his wift. Ht rtlutns Q m Ntw1 (C)
lo m11ry his cousin, but :ht endln1 g ·JMtr.: (C) "Min In ttu 'r•y
has 1 twist to it. r11111et S1rit" lclr1m1) '56-i:rerory m Trlltlt tr C.....lllMll (C) (30) Peck, Jennller Jonts, f1tdf\c Muell
Q) It TM a Tllill (C} (60) Lee J. Cobb. ,
'1'i) CIMtu 30 (C) (30) m lhril: '111• lntrlllffr"' (mys1tlJ)
ti) la htft1 (30) "53-Jeck H•w\i~s.
7:S5 G) ClntiH M Sefi111MI m llwil: ''"Wdl" Ktlakl•" !mystery) '59--Grillilb .lone1.
@OO "'rJ .. ,.,.
...
measure of success.
The prhnary obstacle -and
a!so the mo s l forgivable
when one realizes that the
group was allowed no
rehearsal time at the UC
Jrvine Studio Theater -is
the sketchiness nf the settings
for the two• major plays. While
s lapdash sets are unavoidable
under the circumstance , the
backstage crew often
compounds lhe problen1 by
putting in an unscheduled ap-
pearanee.
However, the productions
themselves are, in lhe main,
quite impressive. and the o.t.ILY l'ILOT siiff ""-"'
versatility of the fi \le-mcmber BIG SALE -Tom Threadgold gives Alice Malick
cast assembled by director h is m a gazine sales pitch in "Chuck," one of six
Richard Dow is lo be highly one-acts in the Irvine Community Theater produc-
commended. Do"' utilizes di!-tion or "Shorts tuff."
ferent techn iques of staging -----------------------
in each of his four offerings,
and his players perform with
gusto.
The best show of the lot
is the curtain closer, Lee
Kalcheim's "Match Play," an
offbeat comedy which turns
midway th rough the pro-
ceedings inlo a serious ex·
'Stag Movie' Bawdy
Stage Comedy in NY
amination of a super·spoiled By WIWAM GLOVER
r ich kid facing his first taslc NEW YORK (AP) -As
of unpl~asantness . a subject for the oew stage
Tom Thrcadgold turns in a candor what could be handier
supe r ior characterization, tha n ilS undercover ancestor.
hov.'ever flaw~ by timing the blue film? The obvious
lapses._ as the cncky young became fact. and vice versa.
playboy whose evening of Sunday night at the Gate
seeking the conquest of a le~-Theater with ''Stag Movie."
gy Rockelle turns into biller Once over the vulgarity hur-
dismay when he disccovers die, which for the more sedate
his draft no11ce in the 1nail. could be a n insuperable bar-
He receives excellent support rier, there's quite a bit of
from Jana Stevens Nev.·port low, crude, dearthy and
as the luscious quarry a n d otherwise raunchy lampoon
(;ordon Yeaton as the o;ulf available, togelher with risible
nut father who appears to display.
have taken lessons from The basic plol notion would
Arthur O'Cnnnell. have you believe that ynu are
Threadgold and tl-1 i s s present in a motel rooni near
Newport are the protagonists Kennedy Airport as a
flf the opening shorlie. Jules screwball ;issortinent o r
f'eiffer's hilarious study of sex characters try to make the
and guilt called "The Unex-first musical quickie for lhe
purgated Memoirs of Bernard voyeur trade.
Mergendeiler.'' In this one. David Newburge. doing book
Threadgold plays Feiffel"s and lyrics. tosses in spoof
eternal antihero. t1rtalyzin~ eoinplications about the Mafia,
every move he or his girl doul>le agents, a ballet-nutty
makes until he finally leari1s cop and the delights of grilsS
to relax and t'njoy tiims1'lf without ovrrlooking any of the
in a typical F'ciffcriar1 fin:.il 1no re obvious variations or
panel fadeout. bt..">droon1 antic.
Another enjoyable I.lit i>f Abetting hun on 1nelody,
Adrienne Barbeau npportunity
to exercise her impressive
voe.al chords in u n u s u a I
circumstance.
Miss Barbeau, a sultry
raven-tress type lately of
"Fiddler on the Roof," may
in (act be the first leading
lady required to render -
and rather beautifully at that
-an anthem nf joy wyile
simultaneously involved in
complicated if s i mu I ate d
amative ecstasy.
She along with iod MiJ\er
and Brad Sullivan are the only
members of the cast nf nine
required lo disport tntally
d isrobed through most oE the
charade. Miller and Sullivan
also sing, less memnrably, and
go along on the sportive time
routines.
Bernard Barrow's direction
is keyed to low comedy
bluntness throughout, \\•ith
Doug Rogers supervising as
the dancing highlight a burl-
esque pas de deux by Renata
Mannhardt and Josip Elie.
The bawdy high-jinks ef
"Slag Movie" could have been
bettered with a few judicious
snips. But its r ibald hnnesty
makes it several notches bet·
ter than some equally unsubtle
but highly louted tbespic
nudies.
brevity is provided b y Jacques Urbont contributes
Threadgold l again~ as a lively sa loon·sty1e snngs that
magazine salesman and .Alif'e aren't competition for Berlin
Malick as a frumpy houSC\\'1fe or Bacharach but that allow
in Jack Larson's "Chuck." l tl--"''--===::....=================.11
should conjure up evcryone·s
1:xperiences \\'ith th e never-
say-dic periodical peddlers.
The single low po1nl of :he
e\"Cn ing, a regrettable one
considering the lalen1 and am-
bitioo which go into ii. is
•·in a Cold Hotel'' by Hen
Maddow Here a vagabond
magician meets his soldier
boy son for the first lime
just before the latter heads
off to \'t'orld "'ar L
Yeaton gives <1 yeoinanlike.
pcrfor1nance as llic u I d\
trouper and \V t!S Keebler is
fine and fun ny as the c:omcr1
EXCLUSIVE SHOWING
Two Action Pictures
for Ev•ryone
Pyle-li ke doughboy, while :i.1is.:>l'-==;;;;;;;;;;;;;~---~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~='il Ne wport appears tu be in-
cluded solely as a d1vt>rsionary
tactic. Thi"' efforts or all three
are in vaJn , however. for lht
script is as cold as the holt I
1neandcring sloppily :ind 1n-
tc.nninably through allsurdis t
style nonsense.
T\vo more weekends of Fri-
day and Saturday production
re.main for ··shortsturr," :it
the UC! Studio 'llleater. Cur-
tain lime is 8 o'clock. rather
than lhe traditional 8:30.
SHOWING
NOW!
t :OO l!I iU @ fD L1.,P-t11 (C) (6D)
Guest star M<1J Griflill1 turns b11
<.•IJ boy, cameo 1111111 ltck C1ssictrll:l0 0 5([)MrlY ''illl• (C) R.oberl TIJeT -
1u1ns lion tamei l'11mp1111 -.ith Warner, .lick .lo11ts. Arthllr T111eller. .ANVa
lion) ind Teresa G11w1returns 10 l!l alCIJ m.MllMY CW.ft (C) Dootor
htr TV ll01111 ot lait Ml!!Oll. Join Riv1r1 Is hostess. Si m Levtn-8 8 ¥qillil Ir"'-Shn (Cl (60) son, 1rty Al len, li:rukin, DI. Len· E•llllWI C'.mor 0.1mbo.M(I oy Sion• 111
a tlll rn m_,.,. ...... , '" "· !!!i-i Te , .. tfle Tl'ltll (C) (30) 0 M · : "Stnlwflll hMI" (co~ ll~~~~~~~~~~ hW PYN IC) (60) rdy) ' t-Bob Hope, lucllle 8111. '
.. f/f Ylliell (30) 0 Diel Ca9Mt (C) G11t11l1 In·
..... , lllttlla (C) (60) efllde ormu 1stron1ut rr111k 801·
Osear Robtrt"11!, 1:15. a..i Tm PatiMI (25)
t :M 8 Ill Cf) Mori'• lt1t1 (C) (lO) 12:te lHi Dici Cawtt (C)
lq --.ri "'"' lo bt • dilli-12:45 •enc. aw tlll hoae sunt ..ttti m111Y 119Kltl
._.. Whtft ht teapts htr Ill-1• IJ llilwk: ..,._llUdltu" {mysttry)
VillUM to ...,. wlttl btr while tib '4t--Oorottlt l&lllDllr, 0.11 Dllryn.
-·"""'-""· BD-tcl
TUr t..,C'hY
T ~ • ., -~· -·-.: ... 1 -'-
ALAN ARKIN
IN
"CATCH· 22"
'AUO
ALI MACGRAW
'" "GOODBYE
COLUMBUS"
IOTH I
°"" 6:41 ,.., ... .... ....... ,.. ... ,.
NOW
SHOWING
H•r .. r A,... ln .. pment
"OM ef ttlt "'"' '-"9ttthl ~•-4iy ...... I• tKfff .,......•
-TI-M .....
"A wlMer" --f't.P.,,
"ON of Hie -Jer _.,.. ""'""" •I IM ~·"
-I•• 1-4.. H.U4ey
H...,a-h •
Q.ectl•teir f4ort11•
GENE WLDER
Alto e "ZIG ZAG" -Bot~ In Color -Rated "R" ' ' -
-.. . . ' .. .. '• ~ ' -. ' ' r. !
1.
TV Series Dehts
Pearlie Mae ,Pure Sunshine'
.
By RICK DU BROW to many of us !be WIS the lovely in their polgnanct:
HOLLYWOOD (U PI ) but of them 111 -better "Mama , -. RainboW" and
Pearl BaUey arrived during even than Carol Channlnl and •' DI d n 't We ' ' (W I th
the weekend with the debut Barbra Streisand. Watching Armstrong).
•f her new, one-hour ABC-TV titlss Bailey take command Satchmo and Crosby no
variety series, and the only -whic.h she always does -longer ha\le the voices they
question is what in the world ean make you believe in rein-o.nce did, ·but each is such
took the netwark.s so long to carnation: There is no doobt a consummate showman -
g:ive her a weelly show of in my mind lhal she was and Miss Bailey was so
her own.· an ancient Middle East queen delightful -that her numbers
who somehow wandered into with theni v.·ere rich in the
The lady is simply terrific. the wrong century, 1 i k e d it very special professionalism
And so was her Saturday night and decided to stick around that many singers Ylith better
premiere, except for one and live it up -and show natural voi ces never achieve.
minor bit with Andy Williams, others how to live. It 's been said thal likeability
who joined with Bing Crosby Saturday night, producer Is perhaps the most important
Bob Finkel and director Dean s ingle quality in determining
and Louis Armstrong to help Whitmore gave Miss Bailey y,•hat makes successful vido
get her off flying . a chance lo ta~e cnmmand performers. and that is pro-
Television is a f i c k I e with a variety of her talents. bably tru e. If AB C-1V doe!
medium, of course, and one She did a showstopping dance right by Miss Bailey. it will
never knows how a new show number, she c Io w n e d profit, for there are few
will do against eompetitlon, lhroughoul the hour in her performers in show business
but this is a performer thal inimitable regal con-woman as likeable as Pearlie l\1ae.
ABC-TV should value and pr~ manner, and among her songs who let the sunshine in a
tect. Pearlie Mae is pure were two tha1 were just plain long time ago.
sunshine. r-~;;~~~:;;::=====:--:::-:=:;:;;==~::;;;;;;~-You can always tell when
• , .. 1 h•••rwe;ghl '"; • .,on Jason Kat harioo
the home screen. T h e
Hghtwe;ghts wock and wock Robard s Ross
and fuss and go through their
material and yet never give
the feeling of being able to
handle an hour. T h e
heavyweighlS fill the hour
before you know it.
Miss Bailfy is such a 100
percent. fully accredited
heavyweight that you had the
feeling she could have gone
another hour easily on Satur-
day night without e v e n
powdering her nose. She
sashayed t h r o u g h her
premiere with such con-
fidence, charm. warmth and
talent that you began to
wonder how all those
lightweights got series before
she did.
That she Is nne of our great
natural resources is no secret.
There have been numerous
Dol!ys in ''Hello, Dolly,'' but
It's 'Sher iff'
Presley Now·
l\1Etl-1PHIS, Tenn . (AP)
Entertainer El\lis Presley has
been sworn in as a sheriff's
deputy and can legally carry
a gun here, Sheriff Roy Nixon
said Sunday night in reaction
to reporls that Presley's life
was under threat.
MATINEE DAILY
...
: COl.'1 ...... U IUICM-.,,.,, :
~,._. """" ....... _
CALL 644-0760
PREMIERE £NGAGEMENT
~"000 "' •D••>. <O"• ..,,., •"°"' '••·"~' o• ""'"' .,., o•• ~"' •OUO• ••..., .. , •• '"'·
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SO<h
other
ond
let go
of the
. -~ . llW'~~I.,_,,_':
wald ooo ~d)=' -G--
11cLu51v1 t.MGAGEMENT ALSO-....,,.1Sro'"'"
NOW PU.YING j M••ry fontlo
WEEkDA'S 6·45 "CHEYENM£
SAT. J:JO ' su'N,12:30 SOCIAlClUI"
(GP)
C1,-J-e4Jur~
Jac k Lemmon
Sondy Dennis "THE
OUT-OF-
TOWNERS"
MCN,-TVES.-WEO.-THUltS.-"LOVIE 5TOltY"_..:U · 7:U ·''IS
l"ltlOAY-"LCllE STOllY"_...;0 · 1111 ·t :IJ ·11 :11 l".M,
S'°'TUllDAY-"LCllE 5TOllY"-l·J.S-1:U -t :1S · 11 l'.M.
5UHDAV-"L01/IE STCltY" l•J.J-1:1J & ,,u
Ali llac&in • lyu O'Rtal
IOlfRT mlCHAfL J.
lfDFOID POLLAID ,.no
UTTLt FAUSS AnD 11G HALSY>
2nd I-li t-Jean-Paul Belmond o, Alain Del on in"BOR SAL INO"
H•ld Over Sth Week I
ELLIOTT GOULD
'" • :l•~•O l WOlPI ~ "'""""-'••n
"I LOVE MY ••• WIFE"
...... ~ .. ...:·U"'! '"~'"" ~-
2nd Great H it-Anthony Quinn -Ann Margaret stars in "R.P.M."
""'"'°" l l'IO. AT Wll..SCIN 5T I COITA lll(SA 646·0!lll
l lllll fS I-OUT!! SAii OlfGO Nrr
All W&lT MELD ., _ DtSNrr SHOW OYEI ! "NIOK'' ANO ~0:0~: "THE HORSf ~HE GREY FLANNEL SUIT"
MATINEES DAILY
AT CINEMA WEST
1N HA.MOit IMOPPIMG ClNT£1t
NOW AT BOTH EDWAROS CINEMAS
The beauty of creating life.
The !~m to give it away. ~ '"~,l!f--------
' .'l'J NATI<l<ALGE~ERAL PICT\IRES
Yo ·~·~'" A ROllER'f WISE PROOOCT~
ft l!DWARDS ~ '
HARBOR,!.T:.1
HAlllOll 91.VO. AT Wll.SOff ST.
COSTA llllS~ 6 46·°'71
1N1 Dll(OO "1Y.
IN MISSION VIEJO
EDWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
SAii DtlMt f"ft'f, AT l.A Ml l\ntftOff
' IJO•IHO
..... -"THE BOYS IN THE BAND"
5TA•ll1HG MtCN .... L VCltK
-"'·'-·-·.,.~_," ..,,.., llml ~IU IWlllllll
(~lt~··~!.
~ _..._. •111u11
• •. ·: 11111 ..
'! ~ ll!UU
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Plus -Ala in Delon & Jean-Pa~I Belmonda In "BORSALINO" (GPI
MATINEES DAILYl-ACADEMY AWARD WINNER CONTENDER
••-FOR BEST PICTURElll-Ralad (GP)
1 "1elvyn Douglas-Gene Hackman stars in
"I NEYER SANG
· FOR MY FATHER"
2nd Hit-Jean-Paul Belmondo, Alain Delon In "BORSALINO"
•
' I
'
.
' .
•
l
DICK TllACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
........... ,r_ _,.._ ........
MUTI AND JEFF
•
.k..
l ·JS
ly Chester Gould
ly Tom K. Ryan
MEMO:
NEXTT/Mf JUST
IGNORE lliM.
By Al Smith
WELl, I W/>8 SO
TIRED-
({,._>"',,
I LAID MY
«EAD ON 'Tl1E
TABLE -
W>IEN I AWOKE
ITWAS GONE!
({j -~ -
JUDGE PARKER
~-1~!il'lll!!£i11111"'.,...,...,...,..-==::::ztr°T™OuGlfT
HAv1NG FOtLowa>
S1.M PRIVER'S CAR,
THE POLICE
STOP HIM
PRETENDING ITS OM
A Wt!TINE TU.Ff!(
VIOLATION!
i
PLAIN JANE
LET ME SEE YOIR PRIVER'So I WA.S
l l(ENSE,St R! YOU WERE WITHIN THE
EXCEEDING Tl-IE SPEED LEG,t.L !!PEEP,
LIMIT ev FIFTEEN OFFICER!
Ml t:.ES PER' HOUR~
"::"---11
PERKINS
By Harold Le Don
GET OUT OF-TMAT,
OR, MISTER .• A.WC' KEEP
YOUR MA.NDS ON YOUR
SMOULDERS!
ly Frank Baginski
!DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by' A. PO WER ' ~,"::;.';1-:. '"""" 1-'5
.AC ROSS
1 Both: Pref il(
5 Carr1a9e
9 Cut
14 Textilr-plan\
ma~h ine
JS Float
lb Spice
17 Stro~e
of stale.
3 words
l!J Port
20 C11urc h
feat1Jre
21 St ate or
surprise
23 Forme1
African leadl'I"
25 Kind or
poll ution
26 Ntar East
ke tch
29 Doctrinaire
J2 Eastern
us c ily :
2 words
)7 E. Ind ian
VIP
JB Card
Ji! Openln9s
41 Color
42 Nol s uitab le ~5 Jesters'
headgear
2 w0tds
48 Satisfy
by payment
50 Vt>nus dt ---
51 Spirlttd
hDrses
2
"
17
"
..
54 Put on
low beam
SS Imag inary
paradise
bl Type or
res m
b3 -···de lton
b4 Unsuh·
s1a11t•aled .
2 words
bb Somet hing
of value
b7 Ma 1or ·--
b8 Bt grt
b~ S111dies
70 No11t e
71 A\1a11
fe s11va l\
DOWN
11 (n!w oned
ll Le ve l
lJ Fendtr
blemish
I Orig in al 18 State of
name of N. 11bitraction
American 22 Kind of code
highwil~ 24 Edges
2 Money: 27 Yo(1ng
Slang anima l
3 Box ing 2q US thraltr
matches group: Abbr.
4 Dead tnd 30 Tldt
5 Btfo1e: 31 Certain bills
Pre lix JZ UUtrtd
b "Rio··-·" 33 D!stale
7 US 34 Mapl e ---
president JS Sault Sit.
8 Nie kt I or Marie:
copper, t .9. Informal
9 Party to an Jb Mouth :
lntrigut Pr~fi~
10 Neighbor of 40 liloved with·
S~n Francisco cul llflin9
1/25171
4J Jumped
about
44 Goals
~b More !oxy
47 Ftr\ll!Zlrl lJ
mater ia I
49 Growl
52 Tits
53 Sailboat
55 Enttr\aln -
mtnl form
Sb Bring to
bear
S7 Units in
physics
58 Mlntral
Sil Gardt ntr's
acctSSOly
bO Handlt
bl Steam:
Prtfit
b5 Contro-
versial
drug: Slang
l · II ll
MISS PEACH
M AltCIA DOl!S SEEM
TO BE. VER.'( POPULAR..
·-----
STEVE ROPER
To STEVE'S
SURPRISE, HIJ/JSOIJ
J)AJIJJEMOR HAS
OFFERED 7V JOIN
A CRUSADE
AGAINST THE SALE
OF COUNl'EllFEIT
SWEEPSTAKES
TICKETS,/
PEANUTS
yes,
M ISS PEEACH .
SHE HAS MORE
F~ENDS
'THAN SHE
N~ED~f
DAILY PILOT ~J
Ll'L AIND
, ....
iH1s P<lRK 1s 11veFF1c1em.' 1'11 Bu.t ~ ~
GOI NG TO pa~r THe WHoLe ~ .ev..&aam&n... O.h.~
THING ove .!..r-----1 ~· eo-n~. ..
GORDO By Gus Arriola
MOON MUWNS ly Ferd Jolim.
...-----. .-~-~l>oN'T'IHl!OW'..--.,
i<INl>LY T~LL. LADY
PLUfHBOTTOM 11M Goifka
I TO THE 5,AVIN<bS 8,ANK TO
Ml.KE A ~Pos1r, Mrss
SWIVJiL ... """
ANIMAL CRACKERS
WHATJ l.fKCi MOLii
YOU ,MAJZCIA, IS THAT\OU
ARE ve1<.y DISCRIMINATING.
YOU HAve 6000 TASTe:
ANO YoU ARE A GOOO
..JU06~ OF P~OPl..E !
l-7.·3-~5-
6·1·8·'i·IO !
By John Miles
YOU
KNOW
By Mell
YOL.l1RG T'M
RIG-HT.' CffOPP/NG
YOU •
' Ii
n
By Saunders and Overgard
•
ll!lE TO HM MET
YOU, ROPt~/-1
D0JrtT THJNK 'rOlJ
AHP I 'NILL MAKE
Tll<l\JBl.E F<lR
"-CJlllU/
ly Charles M. Sch•
nt1 m I WOl~D
MR.MUM
-
VOL fr' ~ f.
f\116tR·
Plll~lNG
DIV.
-
IT ,Au. />WAy_ OjjSAVINff/
By Raqer Bolen
_11w_ =r A fOUIM'Olllt'
60\lle IU SES"Ule ~~I
[(]
t
•• J 111onm1
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
I
............. .._. __ ..........
ANIMAl.egk .,_
P esticides
Decimate
Pelicans
WAS HINGTON (UPI)
AnaCapa Island, off the
California coastline, used to be
warm with brown Pelican
hatchlings each year. No
Jooger, the Jnlerior Depart·
ment says -pesticides have
decimated the floc k.
"One bird hatched
Ana ca pa this year," a
spoke~n.tan fro.m the Bureau of
Sport Fisheries and Wildlife
said. "That island used to
have about a thousa nd
breeding pairs of b r o w n
pelicans."
Interior said, "test findings
from two interior laboratories
suggest the pesticides are ¥:ip-
ing out the species.·•
Brown pelicans are not kill-
ed direcUy by DDT. the
department said. But DOE. a
breakdown product of DDT,
affects their ability to put
calcium into the eggs and the
eggs thus have "decidedly
thinner eggshells." The birds
get pesticides · from fish they
eat from coastal waters into
.. ~,.hich rivers empty.
Nesting b i rds inevitably
crush most of the eggs they
lay, Interior said.
The research work wa s done
by the Denver W i ldlife
Research Center in Colorado
and the Paluxent \Yildlire
Research Ceriter in ~taryland.
The Denver center looked at
brown pelicans' eggs from
Anacapa Island. Eggs v.•ere
considerably thinner t h a n
normal and bird remains
showed extremely high con-
cenlrations of ODE the scien·
lists reported. Many nests had
crushed eggs in them.
The Patuxent scientists on
the East Coast found the sa me
situation from nesting site s at
Cape Romain Na t iona l
Wildllfe Refuge in South
Carolina, the Interior report
said.
Only in Florida are brown
pelicans still in good breeding
condition, the report said. -
"particularly at J> e Ii ca n
Island.''
Pelican Island is the first
federal \V i\dlife P rese rve
established in the United
States, in 1903.
There is no cause for com-
placency in Florida, the report
said.
"We don 't know how long
Florida birds will be pro·
tccted, because pesticides arc
carried to distant regions by
currents and rish,'' Dr. Leslie
L. Glasgow, ass i stHn t
secretary of interior, said .
''For example. pesticides are
showing up in brown pelicans
along Jamaican and Mexican
coastlines and arc being pick-
ed up by birds in the Tampa
Bay area." ·
In the past, brown pelicans
were plentiful along the
Louisiana and Texas shores.
But not any more -they
disappeared before scienlists
could find a cause, Dr.
Glasgow said. •·sut biologist! r epo rt e d
large-scale fish kill s from
pesUcides at the time of the
decline, so t hese chem icals
may have been the crucial
(actor."
..
The brown pelican Is one of
101 endangered species in the
United States. The big bird
with the 1!1:.foot wlngsJn.lTI is.a ~I ili¢!r , ~nd etficlenl
~· dlvlng ••d scoop-il>l'up llsb in Its big pouch.
Of ·the · i pproi<bnately 500
neld lbe blnll made al
AnoCipo tbJl ·niotlrtg ...son, ' on1J ..,. eg •batd>Od. Unless
tbe -of . p<lllcldes .... baltod, 'tho _.po nock o1
btotnl pelleins 1'lll dJNppear
In w.,_., Jtm·Kelth o1 Ibo
DemW 1Jlldllfe R'e't ea r ch
cm. illld.
·--
Monda.t, January 2.5, 1971
... • .. I •
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MOIWl•Y, JlllfW'/ 25, 1971 DAILY l'ILOT n ·,
enfro's Runs Too Much for AFC, 27-6 •
MEL RENFRO 1201 OF NFC ALL-STAR S IS SURROUNDED BY TEAMMATES ON AN 82-YARD PUNT RETURN 'IN PRO BOWL. NFC WON, 27-4.
Unbelievable, . '
Says Barber
Mter Golf Win
PHOENI X (AP) -"There were some
absol utely unbelievable scores out
there," Miller Barber drawled after the
final round of lhc $1 25,000 Phoenix Open
golf tou rnament.
And his was the most unbelievable
of them all, a remarkable 261 total,
23 under par on the flat. short, little
· desert layout named lhe Ar iwna Country
Club, a par-71 course that yielded some
of the lowest scores in the history or
the pro tour.
Barber, a moon-fa ced 39-year-old
veteran. fired a solid 65 in the rinal
round Sunday to pick up $25,000 for
his fifth tour trium ph.
But eve n with his· total , one of the
lowest recorded since Mike Souchak set
the record of 257 in 1955, even with
that stunning performance, he won by
only two strokes and didn't nail it dow n
until the fin al hole.
Billy Casper, the Masters champ, who
had a season-low 62 cin the fi nal round,
and ve teran Dan Sikes shared second
at 263. Sikes had a final 64.
Dave HBI, who holed out an eight-iron
shot on the fly for an ace on the
153-yard seventh, llomero Blancas and
Rod Curl followed at ~4. Hill and Blan-
cas had 67s and Curl a 65.
Paul Harney, who held a one-st roke
lead going into the final day, still had
a shot at a share of second -at
worst -when he came to the fina l
hole; a 485-yard par-five .
He was on in two. but took fou r
putts to get down. missing from two
feet, and again from Jess than six inches.
He fini shed with a 71 for 265 and was
one of six tied al that figur e. The*
last putt cost him about $2,200.
Arnold Palmer had a 66 for 267. U.S.
Open champ Tony Jackl in a 67 for
268 and PGA title holder Dave Stockton
a 68 for 269.
"I really didn 't realize J was shooting
that good." said Barbe r. who stopped
of! to call his wife in Shennan. Tex.,
immediately arter finishing. "I was just
fortunate enough 00 make some shtU
when I needed to.
"The scores were unbeliev'able.
"The course was in good shape. The
greens were the best I've ever s e e n
here. holding good and putting good.
And the weather was ju s t marvelous
the whole time. Not. a breath of wind.
I Everybody was reaching the par-five~
in two. Put them all together and thal's
the reason for the scores."
Barber, who won almost $100,000 la st
year in his best season , overhauled
. Hamey with a fronl nine of 32, five
'under per. He wedged to two feet on
1 the 10th to go two strokes in front
and held it the rest of the wriy.
•
JERRY LOGAN 1201 RI DES PIGGY BACK IN PRO BOWL GAME.
Hard Work
Now Paying Off
For Erickson
INGLEWOOD (AP ) -He's shooting
55.2 percent in his last 11 games and
his coach calls him "the scorer we've
needed this season to give us a balanced
attack."
A few yeers ago, when Keith Erickson
was at UCLA, he'd hardly have been
called a .shooter. "Defense and re-
bounding. that wa1 my game. J've never
been a shooter," says the fi-fool-S Los
Angeles Laker forward.
UJ1til now, maybe, because it wu
Erickson's 25 points that sparked the
Lakers early in Sunday night's National
Basketball Association game again.st Cin-
ci'nnati , a game the Laker.s won 142-131
with an awesome display or shooting.
Wilt Chamberlain scored 35 and Jerry
West 32 for the rampaging La k er s .
But lt was Erickson who got the ball
rolling . His eight poinls in the first
four minutes of the game gave the
Lakers a lift at the start and they
then had the momentum lo hold ofl
a Royal team which shot 57 percent
for the game.
CIHCIHHATI LOS AHOl!LIS • ' • • • ' ·-• ,.. " Hl lroton " •• • V1nArld1!1 " .. , " Erk-'°" " .. " LICtY ' •·• " CM-l1ln " ,. " .. rchlblld • •·• " GOOOrlch • ••• • V1nlltr • •• .. Weil 1n n .11 n ·-' M • Helle! • ,., ' Paulk • " " MC[l flltf' ' .. , ' Aabln10<1 ' .. " McMllU1• ' .. • Tar1l1 JI Jl.JJ IJt Tofll1 ~JO.JI l ll
Cfftcl~~1r1 " " » Jt -Ul
CM """''" » • a " -142 F11<1led out -NO<lt .
"falll foul• -ClnclnMll "· La ·--'" .. !!e!ld•n'• -n.s.1 .
Lone U.S. Threat for 1972
Atrocious P erformer Once--Now He's No. 1
Russ Hodge, a man who developed
himself from a s-4 high jumper and
75-foot javelin thrower 00 a world record
holder, toda y looms as America's onJy
threat to .capture the Im Olympic
Games decathlon.
The 6-3, 225-pound jack of all trades
from Roscoe. NY, has upped his (irst-
ever decathlon mark of 6,600 points to
what was once a world record OOtal
of 8.230.
Although that record has since been
broken by West German CUrt Bendlin
(8,319) and ex-La~na Beach resident
Bill Toomey (8,417·~~ Hodge feels he hu
a potential of 9,000.
And looking at aome of his muM
since that atrocious high jump-javelin
performance, Hodge may well come clote
to what might nonnaUy appear1 to be
an absurd goal.
He has size, speed and agility. Look
at him and you tbJnk of. a pro football
player -not a track ind f\eld lmS&Uon.
This sea.eon he'• already run the JOO
meters in 10.2 -a decathlon world
record and equtl to about 1.3 for 100
yards.
His other besll are 25-3 ~ in the long
jump: 60-111/t for the shot put; M 1n the
high jump: 47.I In the 400 mtlen; 14.1
for the 110 meter hi&h hurdles : 174-8~ 1n
the diScUS; 13-11~ in the pole vault ; 211-1
for the javelin and 4: 12.1 In the ISOO
meters.
Alt!K>ugh he's had some help in the
past from former Occidental College
coach Chuck Coker (now a Huntington
Beach resident), Hodge has mostly
handled his own training.
He believes he can still Improve three
to rour inches in the high jump and
ls working on learning the Fosbury flop
technique. He feels he can Jn 15 feet
.___. __ -
WHITE
WASH
----------
9'.an W•HTI
or higher In the pole vault Ind !O
feet better in the javelin. And he ufs
he should be down to 14 flat or 14.2 m the hurdles.
Hodge also looks for improvement in
the 400, aylng he ahould be around
46.S by nut rear '• Olympic..s.
'M>e former UCLA f I a s h has been
hampered conUuually by iajuriea -one
of the major rtl.90nl he hasn't improved
his point total ainct whipping Toomey
durin( Mimmer lntem1Uonal competition
at the COllaeum in IMS.
"I've been hurt so much the past
four years ~that not being, Injured Is
almost • new uperience," he 1ays.
Hodge, now 31 , al30 says It's tough
to keep motivated.
eorripetltion is infrequent. There are
few workout companions, almost no
co.llchel and public interest iJ minimal.
Hedge , IOf'I of a 1938 Olympic woman
high jumper and a fatl'ler who played
semi-pro basketbi.11, Is hopeful of having
a decathlon competition and clinic 1t
UC Jrvlne sometime in the ne1r future
-perhaps as early as nen month.
In fact when reminded that only a
hundred or so aficionados came to UCLA
to 1'tt Toomey break the world record,
Hodge says, "at least a few show up
when he competes, When J go I have
a hard time e'.'en getting ofUciall· lo
come out."
However, Hodge dou intend to work
toward compelin1 ln the '\2 Game1.
He be1leva It will take I,~ lo 1,500
polnll to win the 1old med I. Yet be
alto thinka he an ICOl'e bet een a,aoo
and l.IOO If th1np io hll way.
"You alWl)'I thlnk you're 1oin1 to
do better -lhlt'a wh.at keepi you
,.11111."
If Ruu Hodge keeps goln1 -and
more Important If he can Illy healthy
-he surely flguns as a threat 00
the ravor!Usm the Eut and West
Gennan stars will hold for the '72 Olym-
pic gold med11.
'
NFC ClaintS Superiority .
Ov er Rival Conf ere nee
LOS ANGELES !AP) -Mel Renfro
ot' the Dallas Cowboys, the fOCll point
r! a controverslal tipped pau In the
Super Bowl, came to the Pro Bowl
an unhappy man, proclaiming his in-
nocence. But he left tod1y a happy
man, admitting hls guilt.
The strange transformatJoo took place
ln the Pro Bowl Sunday when Renfro
returned two punts 82 and 51 yards
for touchdowns ln the fourth quartu
while leading the National Conference
AU-Stars 00 1 convincing 27-6 triumph
over their American Conference col-
leagues.
For a crowd of 41,222 It was a.citing.
For the NFC it staked another claim
to superiority over the AFC. And for
Renfro it lessened the pain of the Super
Bowl defeat seven days earlier.
"It takes some or the bite out of
that," Renfro said afterward. "[ was
real upset when 1 got here. I felt real
bad about losing. It w11 sad coming
off the Super Bowl loss. I didn't u.y
much all week. I just stood around."
While he was standing around, still
thinking about the pass that led to
Baltimore's first touchdown in the super
Bowl and con tributed to lhelr victory
over the Cowboys, Renfro had 1n op-
portunity to kxlk at films of the con-
troversial play.
And he •dmitted he tipped the paaa,
making it a legal play.
''I didn't think I touched It," he e1-
pla ined. "But t saw the films, and the
ball changed direction, IO J must have
touched it."
In the Pro Bowl, whenever he touchtd
something, it produced point! for his
team. be1lnning in the third period.
The NFC led only lG-3 at that point
with a 23-yard pass by San Franclaco'1
John Brodie to Dave Osborn of Minnesota
the only touchdown In the. g1me .
Then Renfro lipped a pasa by
Oakland's Daryle Lamonica, Fred Carr
of Green Bay intercepted and the NFC
built Ila lead to 13-3 on a field 1oal
by Minnesota's Fred Cox . Jan Stenerud
of Kansas City got that back for the
AFC just moment! later when Cecil
Turner of Chicago fumbled a punt -
but that fumble was the turning point.
Until then, Turner and Renfro had
been aligned aide by aide on punt returns.
But when they came off the field aftu
the fumble , coach Dick Nolin called
the two returners aside.
Sport• in Briel
"After the ))l'oblem Dick told me to
·11et back and field everylhln1 l cou1d
while Cecil fielded the abort ones," Ren-
rro revealed.
The 1trateglc change enabled Renfro
to field the two punts in the f o u r lb
quarter -and breal·tbe game open.
But while it was Renfro's returns Lhlt
furnished the finishing flourish. the N~
slallstic1Dy, at least, clearly est.abliahed
its superiority In the fint test of atrength
between the all-stars of the two con-
ferences.
Overall, the NFC gained 337 yaJ'Cb
lo 146 for the AFC, 112 yard.a to t6
rushing and 225 to IO pauing.
Brodie totally oblCW'ed his AFC
counterpart, compleUng 10 of 28 paues
for 15' yards. Lamonica hit on only
four of 21. Osbom, who caught the
lone touchdown pass of the game, era~
bed four pasaes in all ff)r SB yards
and was the leadin~ ground gainer with
45 yards in IO tries.
Defensively, the NFC front four, ma"'"
ned at difftre nt Umes by Deacon Jones
of Los Angeles , Bob Lilly of Dlllu,
Cl1ude Humphrey of AUanta ind Alm
Pqe, Carl Eller al)d Gary Lanen of
Miimesota, continually h a r a s 1 e d
Lamonica and his replacement, Mil.mi'•
Bob Griese.
Wh1le .,,uher NFC qtL1rterback -
Br~le and Fran Tarkenton ol the New
York Gianta -wu dumped for a· Joa.
the AFC paaers were struck down five
times.
But what the statistics &bowed -the
AFC wun't about to buy.
'"I'here'a no conclusion about the con-
ferences to be drawn from the game,'"
aaid AFC coach John Madden. "Neither
team controlled the ball, and both
defenses were hitti ng and tack.ling ~11.
The score may look worse thin the
way the teams played."
.ltFC 0 t l I -6
NF C t J HI 14 -'7
Al'[ -ft 51...,.,UCI 11
Nl'C -111 Ca• U NFC -01ber"' U p.u ltOM Bradle (Ca• llkkJ
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Laver Pockets $10,000;
Mesa Bowler Places 2nd
DETROIT -Corona del Mar's Rod
I.aver, fresh from capturing . his sixth
straight $10,000 match in the ~10,000
Tennis Champions Clauic, fices Arlbur
Ashe Thursday In New York In another
winner-lake-all match .
Laver defeated Holland's Tom Okker,
5-7, 5-7, 1-2, fi-2 , 6-2, Saturday in Detroit
to remain unbeaten in the rich tourna-
ment.
Ashe jumped back into the winner 's
bracket with 1 5-2, 1-2, 0-8, M trtumph
over Austr1llan Ken Rosewall In the
evening's first match.
Pancho Gonzalei waa to have played
Laver but begged off because he was
out of shape and pressed with bu.siness.
•
LAS VEGAS -Barry A.sher, a 25-year-
()Jd pro from Collta Mesa, led from
the opening gun but Don Johnson of
the bowling city of Akron, Ohio, finished
th t n g 11 resoundingly In .' the S77.7'!7
Showboat Invitational bowlln1 tourna-
ment.
Saturday's match play began with
Asher leading ind Johnaon aecond and
three othera: hoplnc to challenge. JohnJon
had jumped from fourth to aecond in
Frid1y'1 .emifinaJ pl1y, during which
he WIS tops among the 11 aemlfinallltl
in match play, rlftling up a acore of
11 -S.
That match-game. ezpeienct paid off
a1alnst Asher aa Johmon rolled strikel
In eight of his lut nine framu. wound
up wi th a tit game and urned f ll,111.11
for first place.
Alber, who had averacect 235.per 1une
for the nnt ft 1amu, ftnlahed the
final-round match with sl:x conteCUttve
strikes and a 223, but he wu f'r off
and won 17, m . 77 for "'i""nd phlce. . '
G1ty COChran or Fountain Valley Ill
on elapoed limo lnlclt neon! ID top
IUel oompelllloo lo hie~ """"' Jee of tbe r--r1oe AD Pro plOnlblp
drac ractt at Oranp y lDtern.
tlonll llocoway Sunday.
Cochran reco1ded • 1.5' aecond trip
u.....p the quanennll• .. -to hit •lctory In tbe claa. Jim PIOll ol
SprtncC.e&d, tit, had a fNler UrM of
l ."55 but a driver mUlt back up ha
nin wl1h another wtthiD two pemnl
to have It count
•
LOS ANGELES -All-Siar wide
"""''" Warm Well1 ol the Oaltland Raiden wu arretted ln the Memorial
C.OllHum Jocktt room after Sunday's
Pro Bowl on a warrant char&inl pro-
bation violation.
Wells. 28, met by police after lhl
National Football Lurue'• AJ'-Star pme
in which be wu a pl1yer for the
American Conference, wu handcuffed
and taken to central jail to await arrival
of Oakland authorities. Ball wu denied.
Well.I was placed on three years' pro.
bation and fined $2,000 after ple1dinC
guilty to a char1e of attempted rape
in 1969 following 1n indictment by the
Alameda County Grand Jury.
•
MILWAUKEE -To~seeded Billie Jetn
King of Long Beach easily defeated
Rosemary Ca5als 1-3, 6-2 for the slngle1
championship, then joined her opponent
to put down a atrong bid by Franco!•
Durr and Ann Haydon Jones 3-1, &-1,
8-3, for the doubles crown Sunday In
the Sl0,000 Virginia SlilTlll Jnvltational
Women '• tennis tournament. '
We're No. 1 , '
-Irish Coach
By n. MMdlte.I Pres•
Johnny Dee was contemplaUn1 lofty
pooitlons.
"I think Wt abould be No. 1," Aid
the . Notre Dame buketbaJJ coach, mln-
cin& no word.I. Why?
"We beat UCLA ." .
\ It's a good. ugum<nl, you """' admit,
, beca~. nobody -wel11 hardly 1nyboq
-beall top-ranked UCLA 1t bllkttbalL
.)loll Dee's glanl·kllllnl IH m did Joie Ula\ l!ofore · ll,343 ltyllorical portlaaM
Soqlr:dly, aj>plytng the 1M1 eruallor belibl'd AUl!fn Can "• 41 pofntl. ,.
"Wt think we lhould ba No. I rtpriDea of any _,.loot,_.., .. 111d
D!M. wtw.e ninth-rated t,an hat loit
four 11me1 tllil )l'tar ... ~ hu come
cloae lo pla,.fnl tbe callber ol ......
wt hln to . date tbil teUOn, and 1 I
lhll* ltnocklnl oil tbe top ..... lhould
put .. lo tbll -ap>t ...
llelop •tilt UCLA -~ Noln tlollle haa'laat cloot ·-'to -·Cmlfne,
~tit and 1nc1i,.., aU "lllP Ill tho
riUfnlo at --"' -, llld *Will . l.luqaelne.
"lleoliteo tbll, ... ptaY<d hi!llilJ'ftt.I
Kei.tuCtiy -beat "-IHI ..,_ 1lo
oponod with a 9iclo<y OW I 111d11P9
team that had -nine ol 111 · IUI
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DAILY PILOT P'llf• '' l'.trldl O'DDllM"
GOLDEN WEST'S CHRIS THOMPSON DRIVES FOR BASKET AFTER GRABBING PASS.
After 72-69 Win
Anteaters Await Oxy,
Trip to New Orleans
By HOWARD L HANDY
Of ltw 0.llY ,., .. , ll•fl
Occidental College has a chance to
put the UC lrvine basketball team in
orbi t Tuesday night when the two teams
tangle in the ~agle Rock school's gym
with tipoff at 8 o'clock.
FolJowing the game, coach T im Tift
and his learn will head for Los Angeles
International Airport and a night flight
to Nevi Orleans, La.
Saturday night the An teaters defeated
UC Davis, 72-09, in a ragged game
In the All-UC tournament consola tion
finals at UC San Diego to bring their
season record to I0-6.
But Tuesday night will be sleepless
ror most of the squad and a victory
oyer Oxy \11ould pol the Anteaters in
the air on a cloud with a silver lining.
Bruins' Row e
Says Defeat
Will Aid Tea111
By THE ASSOCIATED PRE.SS
UCLA no longer is unbeaten, and their
nationally No. I ranking may or may
not be lost in this week's college basket-
ball poll.
But Saturday's 89-82 loss to Notre
Dame at South Bend, Ind., proved bit-
terly refreshing for Curtis Rowe, Bruin
forward. who says UC LA was ft!eling
as though they were unbeatablf'.
"This 1055 ha s to help U5," said R-Owe,
"We know we can be had now."
Rowe merely echoed words Of the
past -however infrequent -by his
coach, John Wooden, who has said that
defeat abake1 up his team when they
appear complacent .
A defeat eould bring about 11 feeling
of heavy fog surrounding the tw~game
trip that roncludes Saturday night In
Tallohasse, F'la. aga inst Florida Stale.
The Anleaters have sudde nly developed
a bad case of second half blahs and
Tift is worried about a remedy before
mee tin g lhe No. 2 ranked small college
team from LSU of New Orleans Thursday
night.
"We seem to play good ball for the
first half and then something happens
when we come back in the second half.''
he say! with concern .
"\Ye aren 't playing emotional basket·
ball and that is part of the rea!On.
We have to put a whol e game together
lhis week in all three game.s or we
are in for dee p trouble."
The blahs set in Saturday night in
San Uiego after tile Anteaters had opened
a comfortable 12--point halftime ad-
vantage.
ll was 36-24 at the Intermission but
the Davis Aggies ca me roaring out of
the. chute to start the second half and
closed the gap to two points at 39-37
after five minutes of play.
UC! surged when needed and held
the lead to the end but could never
wrap.up the contest for sure unlil the
final whistle.
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lJCH Falls 80·76
Bucs Plagued
By Cold Spell,
Lose, 88-71
Quest.ion: can a basketball team go
almost 10 minutes without acoring a
point and still win?
Answer: Not likely.
That was the situation that confronted
Orange Coast College Saturday night
al San Diego Mesa as the Piratell went
the first 9:30 of the second half without
gelling a point on the board.
As a res ult, the Olympian!'! zipped
away to a big lead and eventually won,
88-71.
Coach Herb Livsey's Pirates hope for
better results Saturday night when they
host San Diego in the final game of
lhe South Coast Co nference first round.
With reserve Lee Walters sparking
the OCC offensive attack. I....ivsey's crew
held a .f1·40 advan tage al the half .
But the Bucs missed their first 14
shots of the second half and when they
finally scored, Mesa had an 11 • point
lead (54-43 ). OCC got as close as 10
(58-481. but the Olympians quickly pulled
ahead to a more comfortable margin,
Walters, working out of a double low
post, got all 21 of his points in the
opening half. He saw limited action in
lhe second h.:IH after the Olympian11
dl'fensed him well in the early part
of !he going.
Forward Larry Goswiller earned praise
by Livsey, "He did a heck of a job,
getting 15 rebounds and 10 assists,"
Orange Coast shot at a 52,4 percent
cli p for the game, canning 32 of 6l
attempts rrom the field . San Diego Mesa
hit 38 of 64 (59.5 percent).
Walters took scoring honors for the
Bucs while teammate Steve McLendon
canned 17 and Tim Conroy and Chris
Lacher had 11 each.
Tim Gallagher paced Mesa with 25.
0!'•1199 CMtl 1nl S.... D• Mew CMI .. "!If• .. ft!lfl• con,..... s 1 1 n M<Cormldi ! t 1 10
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UCLA has lost only five games in •lh" iieasons but 90me of it! recent games
-. mosl not1bly Friday night's 87-62:
vlCiory ovtr Loyola at Chicago -have
belP: unartistic eUorts. i.M.ile lhe Bruins were away from
p~ Conference play, and Southern
Cllifomla wu idle for final examination&,
1 remaini"ni • the conference's only
ulbeattn team al ):f.(I -Oregon in-
c~ Its conlema mark to S-0 Satur-
dQ night. wllh a tH8 victory over
\Vlihln&t<ln State. •
Gauchos Face Cypress
1be Duckl. 1.J by Stan Love·s II Pflola qa!MI .)\/SU, Wiii try to match
Ilia U league reCordl of UCLA and
UIC toni&ht when lhey meet Wuhintf.on
.. ~ Stattft. WSU i3 1t home qalnst
ct.goo State.
W~ broke lnlo the Pac-I win
column SatunL.y with a as.as overtime
triw:nph over mu 1nd in oonconftrenct
ploy. C.Ulonola whipped Ulllvorslty ol
S.. Frand.a 11-70 llld Stanfonl fell to ll\ah IMI. . '
..
Saddleback College, fresh from an •'11 ~sketball •lctory over the UC Rlvenlde
Fimh, battles· tough Cypress Tuesday
night ln the latter team'! gym.
Coach Roy Sl.evtns' Saddleblck
Oauchoc bauJed back from an 11 polnt
def icit f2fl..9) early in the leO>nd hair
to defeli UCR at Mlssk>n Viejo Hl1h
Saturday night .
The C•uchos offRt IOrne fancy
shooting by Riverside'• Dave Wailers
with a well balanced offen1ive attack.
Six players hit In double flgureiii: and
a seventh finished with nine point.a for
Saddleback. Center Pete Henderson led
the way with 17, Tom Gardner had
t2, Eric Chriltenseo and Steve Minton
hit 11 and Bob Lilley and Rudy Holmes
canned 10 each. Rick Edwards had nine.
Walters, h.itting from all ang)eg, Canned
37,.
Saddleback, down by three at the half
(.f:.39), battled blck to take the ad-
vantage for good ($4-52) three minutes
into the aecond 20 minul.el on a ahot
by ChristenMm.
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Tough Road Test for GWC
~ustlers Get Balanc.ed Scoring in 70-60 Triumph i
By CRAIG SHEFF
OI 1M O.Uy "II" lltll
Golden West College's basketball team,
holdina: • Ilnn grip on the No. 1 spot
ln both the state JC ranking& and the
Southern Cllifomia Conference stan-
dings, has a tough task ahead of 1t
this week.
The Rmtlers, after getting by LA
Harbor'• .!!low down game (70-60 ) Satur·
day night, tangle with East LA Wed·
nelday and rugged LACC Friday, both
till!I on forelgn courts.
Golden Well holds a. 11h game bulge
ove.r il.5 neare:!lt rival (t wo games in
the loss column ) and a ~r of wins
this wee k w o u I d put it hall way
to a berth in the stale playoffs in
Santa. Maria.
Coach Dick Stricklin's Rustlers are
now IS.2 for the season and 4-0 for
the conference. The 18 vicOOries is a
Golden Wut record, surpassing the
previoll! mark of 17 set in lhe 1968-99
campaign.
In the victory over Harbor Saturd ay
night, the Rullller1 parlayed patience
with some acc urate free throw shooti ng
to subdue the pesky Seahawks.
'The .!!low down game can usually
frustrate the best of fa st break teams,
but Stricklin's crew did not panic, taking
a fl-22 1dvantage l.nto the dru!in& room
al the balftime bre.ai.:.
The Seahawks were forced to ertend
lhemselve1 defensively, ln order to get
the lead back -and the result was
a. r&!h of costly fouls in the second
half that helped Golden West stay in
it.
Harbor grabbed the lead Dack with
11:20 left in the game (43--4:2), but the
Rustle rs ripped off seven points in a
row to take a. commanding 51-43 ad·
vantage and for all intent and purpose
it wu all over.
The seven-poin t surge featured a li~1n
by a forward Jim Anderson, Br11n
Trojans Host Foe
University Higb '1 Trojans return to
basketball action tonight when they
entertain El Segundo at Mission Viejo
Hig h. Tipoff is at 7 o'clock.
Coach John Drtscoll's quintet is 6-13
for the ye ar and is seeking to snap
a two--game losing streak.
Leading the Trojan attack is jun ior
center Tom Mullinix. He'.1 averaged 11.0
point,; per outing.
' Ambrozicb's turn·around jum~, a
three-point play by Anderson and a lay.\n
by guard Chris Thompson after an
Anderson steal.
Still it was the free throws that won
il.
Golden West hit 26 of 28 cllarlty toues
for the game, including Zl of 13 In
the crucial second half.
Unheralded guard Rick Barnes con.
tributed nine of 10 gratis throw11 in
the seco nd half while Anderson acorerl
all 11 of his point.a in the second :o
minutes.
Thompson led lhe balanced scoring 111-
tack with 17 points. getting 11 ·afte r
the intermission. Barnes, center Mark
Dekker and Ambroiich canned ts to
go with Anderson 's 11.
The Rustlers hit at a .f8.9 percent
clip for the game, canning 22 of 4:i
field goal attempts. Harbo r had Z.l
of 47 (53.2 percent).
Gtl4tft WHI (7Dl
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Spoctoft
Purchase! tnatanatlon available.
16~' 1-2-3Lube
~. llh9t .. do:
• Chan~ oa (op to I Q1L
of Forema.t• ~duty
molar oil)
• lnetall new ol fnW
• Lubricl.tti ce-t1
~\ ., " . t
•, :· :I
:1 ·.
y,., yoo "">hop ll fo 5 S"'d•y• loo of '"Y of thou ''""'Y Aofo C.,fon' FASHION ISLAN D, Nowport C:.""', :!:
HUNTINGTON CENT·ER, Huntin9ton leach u,, P1nney1 time payment plan
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Cage Summaries
For Area Teams
Jut1!or V1r11!r
l!tl111rlt t'4l I .. ) I .A. V1ll1v
11._11 !•! F' jOl 01lvor
Canter Ul F' 1111 &koikv
F'<1<<1 11<11 c (II lll••luno
(;1vno• Ill =. (JI Oll!l1no
lnne• !•I C. !II H111
5c.,.-lnu ><Jin• Euonc11 -McC.rt11o•
'· JOV(e ], RcnqUlllD •; ~1nt1 Ano
V•lloY-8'Ki•<I..,, 6, ~O<>'t 6, Ro»"" le~ S.
H11111me· E1t1n<lt JI. 5.•. llt llt• JI,
l<tttllt !OI ''""'••)Oii (o) &read• !U
C.ltt>e•• !II
H•llner 1111
Loc~tn (0!
!i.<orlnu Wb51
OU Mlul6n lllilo
F Ill ll•tn•1'n
F' 110) Ladd•
C tlOI fllcrmu1<11~
G PU WllkrnM>n
G !Ill Caol1tr1n
Ml111M Vltl-MU•PllV
h1lr1<me. M•~S1cn V••lo ll·l6.
liuftlf11•ll11 i.n 111, WtUmln1r.,r
Wf\n., !71! F II! !>ol/1n ... ,ck
C.•dl"<l IS) F !01 W~•le
Ci••e!h 1111 C <•! C•••
Dr•.,I•• IQI C. n o Youn'>
Av•llon (111 C. (U •11>e•t
H8 >Ub,-AslltOt<I 1. lltllt 1 W~•··
m•n1t•r IUD\ W•l•f\ I , HI"" S. Tru·
11110 7. Cou~ln 1 . .Y.••9 1
l'<•ll!!mt W•1!m•n1tt• ?• 23.
F' ... nl•ln v.11 .. , tMI Clt ) C••I• MHI
8Utn5 (111 F ~II "r'""' Sw1n1on (Ol F ('1 f ,.chlev
suo;v•n 1101 C' (Q) N•vlll•
B. 1-ll rfield 191 c. (11 Bro ... nlnq
S R-.Oc-(•) C. 1!1 Hor.r
sc.,,lno tub• Co•t• M"'t-Oe1m" s.
l:al1m1 1, M•r•hlorl•111 !O
H~lllim•. Founld•n V1ll•v '" Cotl•
Me•d 11
Fr. V•Uev UO Oil E111ntl•
Stn Ct1m11111
F'.,.-...,.n Ii">
Hoflm•n 001
01•01n 4111
Wit•"" Pl vooor 40!
Scor!"9 •UI»:
SWffn1y t.
fOl !Ul Mh&lOfl V\111
F' (101 l owo:n
F' 114) Bltkt~
C (U ) llomm11
G fl/ Spry
G IOI Etchtbetr!•
S•n (lemrnte--H•oll 7,
H1lnlm1 : Mlulon Vleio 15, S•n Cit ·
men•• 11,
M1r1n1 Otl fSIJ Lo••• I e ... (121 F !IOJ Pa·~· .
lilMMn !01 F ( 11 l Cl'l.adWr<I I s .. 111M>n U~I C ('1 Ftynn
Ad""" (11 C. {101 Ston<ll<y
R1>11le• Il l G (!i 1 Edwotd•
ScotillO SUb• .M1tl11a-Ford }. W•q-
0""•' 3. S<>el~• I" Htl!Oll 2. LD1ra-P•r~t I, W•l•on '· RObett• l.
H1ttllme: L•><"• 31, Mltln• JO
Fl, Valle• UOI UlJ SA Valle•
Sulh••n on F 111 011.,,
s .. an14'1 on F (2J """""'
Bu•"' (al C 15 1 N1slu»d
S ll:obuc~ 1'1 C. !0) Delano
l'<•Hl<ld (11 G !l! Bo1twlc~
S<ol"\"'41 •U""" Founla•n V•ll•v-Men·
ni<r 7, 5•Putvtd• 1. J 11-.0ck 4: Sant•
Ano Volley -Wt!ker 1, WOCltl 1
"•lltlme : F'oun11in -V•ll•• 16, · 5tn11
•n1 Valle• 10
"~ Edho" (II) UOJ SA V1llly I
5CllD" !15/ F (11 AP!>lf!l>Y '
Wnllo (6) F ('1 WrlO'>!
Fora 111 ( Ill Hiii
l "W-1 1121 G 101 Jaclnon
W1loon 1171 G !01 S~rannc
5corl"g •~bl: Edi'i!ln -M•ll• ,, H••·
nond•• 1, Wil>Qlnton •· W•1nbl!•s•• l.
5• Valley -J.<1•ro1m l, Cllr~ 1. l illY
...
' PLAY CHIP SHOTS
WITH MINIMUM LOFT
A good rule of thumb on chip shots-those short
approaches from around the ereen-is to keep
them low and k!t th em roll.
Wilen ch iP.ping, select the least-lofted iron club
that will still allow you to land the ball on the
g reen without its running far past the hole.
. You want lo use the leas t.lofted club because,
with such a club, there is ~ss chance ·for error
You will be less likely to scoop under the ba11 .and
leave i~ far s hort of target. Also, the leas.l:·lofted
club will put less backspin oo the ball 10 that it
will be less likely to settle too quickly. '
B~t alway.s la_nd the ball on the green whenever
possible. This will help insure a trut bounct.
Sulll111n IUI r (/\Inn••
S"'dn•on (9/ ~ 161 C.1vnc•
Bu•n1 l&I r 1111 Font
H•l!if lci 19) (, !S) Crown
~. RoD<Jc~ In C. U J Conl••
1. Stan•D~rv l t<1ltP~ E<lioon n, 5A ·vo•'e• 1. l::=================:"':::O::":N::•:•:~=-==""=·=-~~~ l:Oii.on (10 OU lo» Al•mlto•
Sc~"" 1111 F (!J Citrl>"Mtr w n110 (l) !ll COOi< I PUT POWER BACK INTO YOUR SWING!-Witn th• tl•IP ct Arnold
F' Scorlno •ub,. £"•nrod-MCC.•eoo• l;
oun.ll ln V•ll•V-M•nn,ft l, S•P<Jlllet:I•
'· l<ilev 2.
Ford l:xl) c (lll till• P1lmer'1 iltustrat•d booklet, "TH Shots arid F•irw•y Wood•" 21•~•1 C\6 1 G (9) Mctc:iu~~ I S end 20c and a self.addresied, ~limped •l!Vt'lo,. lo Ar~
H~llJ•mf: Foonl~·n Ylllfy 7!, Ellan· (l• 17
Wil""" 1211 c. CJ! Sloll ' Palm•r. in t ar• of this ntwspo,.,.
Scorh111 •ul>i: £d•wn -M iii• I. Ht'"""~! &, to• Al~ml10$ -Bar!cn •'======================================J 111• ... Potl 4111
S~•ttn 1181
l•,.on (151
Helvie Ill
8 0W'T\an !l)
J011n•o11 !101
' ' c
G
G
f!I! WH!•rn
(Of o ...... ,
(t) Sh•llao•
Ill ADl)C!I
1111 Soa•••
Sco•ln9 1utt. Weslern !H llfafc•
-Plelu J, T1U!f11!1 l1
Hall!l'T\t" NtWPCrl JI, We•lern 11
COrOfll (H I !St) LH AJ1ml1<10
C1rhcn (1• F 161 Uvl1>11•ton
C.rit•DV 1'1 ~ l!U Balol!
W1llon !0) C 119) Ungerm1n
l t>wt••• OSI G 12) AtchiWIO
Camoton 01 c; !lll Mv•••
Scorlnq •uD• Co•ona del Mar-Con•oY
S. S1e.,art 1, Wynne l. CIOtk 1
Hell!ome Lo~ ,l,lam•lo• ll·11
Hunlln''°" UO !Ul Mtrlll• Wl\lle (?f! F (9) GA•la"<l 171 B1n
Clarelll OJ\ "' t•) Fc•d · C I!) Swan..,n A~el"'n '1DI C. (61 llO$t le•
Clar-101 G !IS! A
.. 8 l<>l>o : .. ~•bln I)) Ma.;na :~;;;,~
50f!ak'.(9\, W~ogone• ()), .. aPTon in.·
Ha1n1me. Hunlington 28.2J,
JC Hoop
Standings
$0UTH COAST
F 1111,rlon (~tri!oi;
S11n O~go M,lt
S~t>IA "'"" o'""'"~ '""" S•n D·eoo
CONF'EllENCE
W l P'F P'A
l 0 • JI() .BO
! I U lo 111 l 1 •J.o ,,,
1 l 380 101
I l)6 )60
M!. Son Anronl11 1 , J.r11 •n1
l •5 "'' S•l\lr11••'• Scotti 5.•n D·~o Mt-wi u . 0<on9~ c.,.1+ 11
• 111i.d0<1 16, C~rr110, ll
Stn DiltQO t7, Ml !Min Anlon•o 61
"•lom.,. 16, Sonit """ SI !"Oil co~ ''''nee)
l . Sc~m1!1 16, Mod•• 11.
li•lltlm•· l o1 Alam1t0\ :;9, Edl""n lS
NfflPO•I !<IOI ( .. I Santa An•
Bowm•n !•l I" Ol So•I••
Ja.llnM>n (0 F (ll I I-lemon
l<~vl• (0 C !7\ Tvl••
Sotttn 00) C. l!IJ 1<11r111..,,1>en>
LI'"°" Cllj G lll l1tr1I•
ScMlng 1utK' Ntw1><1"1-Tud<e• l. Ptl!tng/11 1.
H•lltlme-Sanl• An• 16-1•.
Min ... !•11 un LNr•
Wlll<ln 111) F (SJ G,..,,
Fick {U I r (/) Hel~n
G•1et1! !ll\ C !11 Pe,.,....,11
Mlll•r (il G (6) Jol\n50n
F•nll (•! G (2) Will•
Sce>rlllQ subs: Marin-MO<"d lOn 1. ROS~• 6, St•W•rt 2. Worwl 6. Loara-
Ja-v11 I, 5"°"maro 1, 51ewa11 +,
Nlchcl•on 2.
H6llllme; Mitrlnt J'"). L""r• ll_
811h"" Am•t !)1\ (lfl Mlltf Oef
DuH1e OJ f (Ill Ht•cld
F'ltlg,..81<1 (6) F' ~61 MurPh•
Vlctc•l8 Ul I' !01 Cucullc
V•ld~• (01 G 10 Kii•• ~antord (0) G I !2) A<l8m>
Scodng iUb•: Ma!~r 0 •1-POf!ttgen
1'. Rein l•, Outev •• Sl1nb•1 l. H•n· .. ~ ].
H•lf!•m•: M•le< o.,r J0.!1_
'" E•tt11cl• ~ .. ) ctn SA V•lltY
MrOon1ld !•61 ~ ill Thllllh
5~H'f lJ! F ~l) Hiii•
Mollo! (10\ C fll Jackson Collini no1 (. 101 wr;vnt
D! Vrlei Ill C. (0) Won::,,...ter
SCMln• sub•· !:1t1n<l•-Retd 7; T~om-T. Nellie l , Bilyeu 2. SA
Vo llev-McBame~ l. Strt•MC '· Hftf!l!Tll': EM•11Ci• 21. S,t, Vtllty 12.
Souora's Hicks
A II-Star Coach
St!lltdl •'\ Gamr1 ~an Die90 ,i O••nii-(1>11•1 FYll!rion ~r s .. n!• ,..,,1 Sonora l·ligh 's F'rank Hicks.
~~;ci~~~ ~~~°"'" •I S•n 0 1,00 Mn• nol Savanna's Bill lficks, will
SOUT14EllN (AL CONFIEtlllEHCf be the coach of the North ": ~ ~~ ~i All-Slar football team in lhe
Pro Cage, Hockey ...
1:•11un Conftf•n••
At11nllr DlwllJDn . ' 111 ... YDrl<
P~Und•lplll1
lS 11
" " n " ""'M 8uUala " n C1t1tr11 Olvlllon
••
• • lOlf1
81Hlm°"
Cl11cinn1!1
At11nt1
Clt Ytland'
» ~
" n IT JS
' "
-~ .m '
.]'17 " .llO 2S
WHlorn C011!1rlftc1
Ml~WtOI Olvl•ltn
Mil,,1u~et •I I
O•r1oit 1• 11
Chlc1ua JO 21
Photnlx JO 23
.IJT ••• ••• .>M
P1(11ic Oivhlo11
Lo• Angola• ,~ :xi
Sin Fr1ncl1co 11 2S
Startle H 71
San O!"" 1) JO
Par111nd' 11 36
.,
.Jlt ., ••• .m
S1lu"111v•1 ltHull•
Mltwouk'" Ul, Par!luld 111
New Yort 111, 80""" 107
B•lllmore 171, S•11 Oleoo 11!!
Ct.lcago ~1. 5•n F•1tnd1cD ll
Dnlf 9..mH K/ltduled.
Suncl•Y'5 llHUl!1
111-v.,.._ 111. Oelrol! !OJ
MHw1u~t11 I.fl, At11nt1 110
8 0SIOt't Ill, Cl<Vt llnd' 1\0
BUll•IO JU. Pottll'ld 111
LDI A.ll<>tlH \G. C!nc:llll\IH 1 JI
PllMnl• Ill. Cl\ktgo lU
Pnll1<Stton11 i.s. s .. n ie In
Ont• 91mn 1c)ledultd'.
Twil1ht'1 01111u
BOSIO!\ 1r Cltv&l•ncl
8ultalo •t St11 Oit QD
Only 91me• •cf\eclo.J l•d.
Tut '41Y't Otmn
M•IW•Ukft 1! New YatO
~.n F•~llCIKO II 8.oil itn<)r~
Cllic•11D al La• An11tle•
!lullalo 1t Pt>o1t1I•
•111111a fl PllllA<lelahl1
Only '""''' ..:nedulad.
' • ,,,
ll'~
s ....... IW'I lttJIOlll
Oenvc• llt. l<Mltutl v I"
llllOW Y0<1l IOI, Utth 107, ov•'11tnt
V!tt lnl1 \lQ, lndl1n1 11'
PU1>r..tr111 111. C•rolln1 101
MemPl!l5 111, Flor!<111n• 106, ov,•llm1
T9nl9'11'• 01mu
lllo llftne ICl\t(l;jlftl. 1 ......... ,.,._
New York "'· FIOl"idlfll5 11 T1mp1
l<Mlluc•y 81 Tn••
Ut111 11 Plttab\lrall
lnd'lan.t 11 M...,onlt
Onlv pm11 1cl\11<1ulfl1.
Boston
New Vork
MOlllrH I
T<>l"Mlo
Vtntouv.r
8urf•lo
Chlcaoc
SI. Loul•
Phlf1d1lllt!!a
Mlnn.tM>I•
Pltl5burt11
LO! All9tl"1 C1HIOl'nla
""' 1:111
""'
OlVl51911
YI l T P'l'I. G,-GA
ll1Sll1l5ln
lO • I .. 160 10}
,l U 11 SJ ltJ llO
»U.S 411'JUO
IS ?I l ll 171 UJ
11 Mo t J! Ult 11'
OIWlllllll
31 10 • s ., 114 io1
11 n i1 !I 171111
11 21 ' Q 171 "' l• 11 10 a 10$ lll
II 7t lJ IO 137 llS
1• 7J I ~ U4 ltl
1' JO 3 ll HI lM
s11uM11r'• 111wH•
Booton '· Cnlc•ga !
Mc>nl,e.ol '· Detroit 1
Phll•dt!!llt!lt 2. M l11nt1<>!1 7. Ii•
P lt101>1Jrg~ '· V•nc:wvtr l
St Lo.iis 1, 1!11.rfi't!o I
~o• A111111ts :s. Te>tM!o 1
Onl• "'"'" ld>tdulecl
S.J!Clt,'5 ltMUlll
111-Yorli. '· Minne.Ott 1
8o•ton _., Mani•••• 2 Oe!•oll 1, v ... couvu J
!htlf1lo 6, PtotltdtlPhll • Cllletto 5, C.Utor11l1 3
Only 1tmH ~ule<I
TMltJtt's Glft'ltl
No t •mts IC-fell
T_.tr'I eamet
cn1c100 "'' VHtC'l>U>'tt Only tll•'lt! Khtdu)td
Barons'
Wagner
Resigns
fountain Valley HI g b
wn:atling coach Vem WagJttr
has tendered his resignation
as the Barorut mat tutor ef-
fective Mareh 10, the DA I L V
PILOT learned loday.
Wagner , 34, and a resident
of Huntington Beach. has been
the Baron coach for four years
-a period in which the Foun-
tain Valley team has won the
Irvine League championship
three limes and appea rs to
be headed for its fourth
slraigh~ this year.
"I'm not sure just v.·hal I'm
going to do in the immediate
future , perhaps I'll Lake a
year's leave of absenct'.
'"What I really want is to
become a college coach." says
the ex-Pa los Verdes and
Morningside High grappling
tutor.
He also aided the Orange
Coast College football pro-
gram as an assist.ant coach.
• The sixth annual Nor th·
South Orange County All-Star
basketball game will be held
June 19 al Orange Coast
College.
The contest. which pils the
best graduating prep pla yers
from northern and southern
Orange County against each
other, ls sponsored by the
Cost.a Mesa Kiwanis Club.
Teams will be comprised
of a dozen individuals each
with no alternates.
ln prior games. the squads
have consisted of 10 player5
and two al~rnates. •
., '
DAILY PI LOT f!lJ
For .JCs, Preps
Area Wrestling Result,s
(""'IMo CJll (lll Crflltt CNll
1 !t-Moot1 10) '°'' ·~ rtll. 121-C&ttllOI won by ter ... 11.
l:U-CtlTltM """" Cl> IOdtll
io-G. _.,non 101 dee.,.,..,.,. '" 1·2. •
ISG-Ptt...ton 10! loll 11v llH.
15......Clll'l'Y 101 OK. 5Ylvtl1~r (C) l·l
ltJ'-Cerruo-WOn CIY tori.It. ' '
l »-F.i1 !01 won b• 1111.
190-M. MottllOll (0) IOS! bv di(!·
llOI!, ....
Hvv-D1vl1 !Ol Im! bY MCl>lon. 11.1,
GI""" WHI CU! Cll , .. , t•
111-8.v< \Gl pinned Cfllt•-1(),
•: 10. ll6-8t11Jl1• IGI won by torttil .
lll-FPst lGI 1>!11,,..i ~•It' !(I,
•:~.
142-Wammacll: /G) "°" bv 1ot1•it,
1.IO-M<Oa~nold !GI ... on l>v tor1<1!
l~•rteon (£! <lee. Kutil IC.J,
lS.l•. lf1-Cc• (E l won ov fo•ltll. '"--'""'""'· HO-Hllll1ra \(;I •lnne<I e rocl\n,.n
IE!. ''"· .... ,-v.,.-ono (G) at<. Mrvic"•" tE ),
'~-
"""' 1!11-11 lffl Ill ,,,,_...
u :t -Wt~bv•n U!) oec.. MtNlfl•••· '°' -l<.til•• 1£1 •illnH Foor., IMI. l.M ll5 -Aarick !fl Oo!.. L•tw•no (M~ ll, (~I O~!IOMltll ... 1 1£1 •IMICI KrauH
1~ -A•toltP !Ml 0111111<1 °"""' 4M). O:SO,
ljl -CO<"rH lM) Ot( M<lllan tf ), I? o. .
1,,J,~ •. ;-G•ll•" !El 01(. wers•v
uJf1 o'71190 . Snvatr !El olnntd 00 1•1<.h
4,,J,~ iii~· s .. vatr 1E 1 pl"nea •t~lrrt
111 -Wun! 1£1 pl11M<1 G•~• 111.fwool<lt ~"I I, O },.
!t4 -l<IHt (£~ ~l~ntd G&rV ll••tloi<I• ,;;, .}9
li•t -B•twtr !El oin~td Cf1tr11
!Ml. I l1
UCI Loses
Swim Meet
UC 1,.,1111 (Ml
Mt<1lt• llfll•
181\i'Tlkln, Occrot.
J ..... ~
!H I S• Vllllr
Sin F'or.,.nclo
leiYe. Gr1nrl1ld).
IOllO Free I M1rJI" /U(I), 1 Mr-
\11<ry (~F ), l l<•UwUl1r tSF'I. 11 :11 .l,
l(ICI F,.<' -f M1rhll IUCll l. to•
{St<I, l. Fertu• (UCI) t ·"ll,'
Kl F•tt -\ 81rk•• lSF !, I Tw1r
!Sf"l. I. Olckmtnn IUCll. 12.1.
200 Ind. Mf<llev I EJ'°" IUfll, J.
D<><IO<' ISFI.). P••kin IUC!I J 10.s
I mtttr a1vln11 -l, Coron• (5FI, I.
H~u•n11r (SFI, Pnnce (UCll 11 1.XI.
100 8ul1U!IY -J. T01>ar (SFI, 1 t "lvo (SF'!. l. C•rn•/l•n (UCll. ),Qli,i ,
100 F'rtt -I. E~•M !LICI ), 2, Kie·
,, .•. .,...,
f ll•ftC:ll ... , -fl'! ,\olt9'10!l• Yt nltf UI Atfimltet (IJ) (1"11 c .. ir. ,..._
,. -J. Mlllfl" l'I WG'f'I by •NII.
10. -J-· ( 1 *°' SIMI• IL) .,.
lt/Js-1:-S"""-ICI ffc 1.-.,
IU -O...tld Ill lie<;. Eml>r"I' iCI ....
iclr'\.ii. 81k1r !LI olMed G. l<ln•
I~ -Stoc~IOll l() <IK Harn.t• tll .. ,. H!t!>l. Toc;l!lkubo /CJ ti.cl G1111nr
cc't9s:i -:-Jull•n !Ll o.c, aowr!~•
!l1:16 .. ~ MCClolm1n 1c1 lltd 11••11•
ILlfliiµi-:-CDD'lf" !Cl doc J11wotl
!l1{lts.1. INllll•m• CCI dee Flo!cht•
It• -k hoo'ltl0< IC I pl11ntd lunb!ad
(t! l :ll Hv\> -Milli• !Cl_,. toy IOl'!tll. Jlffll•• v ... n,
Loo Ar1ml!01 (11) ld l Coot1 Mnl
ll•••llY
Mo•ln• /4l (Ul ~•"'• •no ti -8. Gr!•""" !Ml Pinneo S1•r11t
IS! a· ll. ice -Ert'dl1 fMl ol-.i 8 111.,.,..r
/SI 0:'6.
115 -frtdlt (.Ml •lnnH Moo••
1$1 0:41. in -l<rlltr IMI t lnnt'd G•r<I•
IS) 1:25.
'~ FetMndlf ,. -
!M) 1::111. ,,,
!Ml lrS.
M_ Gd5_,., !Ml He
tSl •·2.
Soro !SI pi"""" Pltk•tl
"' J:~~ -(dd•t (MJ plnn"°' Loo1t !S)
IS7 -F1l•fl• !M) ,1nn•d Toet,r
ISi I 7t.
161 -ll•lhn~ (M ) plnnea V•sqv•t
fSl '' ll . 118 -Je~nl~g, !Ml 01nnfl1 La\»oon
!SI I .~•. 19• -McC•oc~M (5) mlnntd H•r·
•!•on (Mi l :f.'.
Hv\> -l &utle (M) pinned Mll•n
lSI 1:10
Ju,.lor Vtrtltv -tl•• tSFJ, J B1rker ISF ). '9,1, ----__ Ml rilll I .. ) ()l) Anal'ltlm lOO 81Ck1h.,._t -I. f111IOOn llJCI!, 7. ;"'-----""''-'"'"-"'"''----~,
91--H•mllton (Al <le<: llr••ntv (Ml 81um~1n (SF'I, J. >:otnlg !SF!. 1;fW.I.
l-ll.Oll---M•rtln (Al olnntd °"'~" !Ml !00 F~H -1. Lee !5Fl. 1, Fergus 1·21. !UCll. l. McVOtrY JSF'l. S;U.1. IU-Hlr~o IMI won bV torMll. l'Cl3 8r••"•ol<t -1. Dodgo !SF!. J, R •• d.nhip polJ1 pro~• "P11-
THE BEST
113-liowell (M) dt<: 8u•1• (Al •-6. A•t·" (UC ll, J. Nell !SFl. 7 JO.~. nuh" ii en• of I~• world'i moot /~~~:r'l"'ll~f(Ma~'"~,,~tl:Al l-m~!ft alv1n~ -\ Coron• !SF!.'· popular comi< ''''"P•· '••" ,·1 11·~. H1ulhlt r ISFl, l. Pdn<1 t\JC!). 1:15.CI. <0 1•1-~mH (M! wc.r\ bv tO<"lelt. .C.O Fr'" lltl•• -UCI iC••llaMn, dtily in the DAILY PILOT. 1 ,~~ ~100• !Ml o;,.,ned Brewt:r ("j i;O~><~•~~~·~··~"~"~'~'"~-~·~·~-~\;. ~'~'~"~-'~-""~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IJil-McMutlno IMI ol"""" Abler tAf I: II. l~~1011tm1n IMl d<c !rwon !Al "'-VW r · . l!<E 111--G.,.-man (,t,) oln""a Tham1
IM ) l:SS. 194-Hotti• tMl o>n ... a Flore• (Al
O:fiJ,,,_pe1tft iM I won by 1<><1tl1. S P E I A L
V1t1lf"f
91-C;~w~i'l~l b!~l I L~·~~ 10.--0•Yl~•on (LI dote ~ • ..,.,on CNI
1·l1s-Brown .,-IM) pinned Hill tL!
S.<J. '" "'
,.~.7l-Schl(0 !1111
110--Zlmmer {tl
7.~. l:U.-Hov !Ll aec M. Ml•\1110 ~Ill )
11·'· •
R•lln• 4 WhHll
Machin• 4 Drum•
Ov•rhaul 4 Wh"I C'fllnd•rs
1'.IOI Mii. UM'Dlld!l191'1•1 Gl!lrl•i'H
(NOT PIO.llATl!O)
$39.95
VW SHOCKS ................ $7.95 lnstollod Ul-Moo1l~Yv (Ill\ o•nnea 1•oqet
!LI !;10, 100,000 mile guaranteed (not pro-rated).
\VF DO ALL FORElGN CARS. Stanford University alumni ~~·:;:-t "'' !Ll att M. K. 8•own
and fans will be able lo watch 4,U:-B•Ktt CLI aonntd l1v1cr 1111i
the Indians' victory over Ohio !L1{"';;,~~m1uon !Ml 01nn•d Coleman • DISC Ill.II SllC.IAUST • ~
State m· the 0 -se Bowl on 1111--See1•t1 <L> d...: Jo""' 11111 •.i COSTA MESA STORE ONLY nu " 1'~-M. J. 8•uwn (Ill) oinned Gordoo film at the Saddlebac.k Inn !t •:ut. lll1 H.W lhd. -Hvv-l<>t•• won l>v tot!tll, I t 0
in Santa Ana on Tuesday, 'Feb.
1
__ .."'.~~'~'"~"'~'~'J"~"~·~~-J~=========~·==~~n~w~,.~·~-J~J~S~t=====~~~ 2 at 6 o'clock. N•""''" (H) (14> Lw••
The Stanford triu mph 11i•ill
also be shown at tv.·o other
locations in Los Angeles dur -
ing the same week.
Sunday the Century Plaza
Hotel will be the scene of
a Stanford conference where
highlight_, only will be viev.•ed.
The full game film will be
shown a \!eek from today at
6 o'clock in the Chalon i ,art
Restaurant in Los Angeles.
Reservations may be made
w!th John Hurlbut at 835-2200.
r.01<1e" w0,1
CvPtfl'
LA H~rl>Or
L AC('
ll11>H~
LA Sw!tiWf'\I
Elsi LA.
J 1 .1111 ?'IA 12th annual clash this summer
; ~ : ~ at Orange Coast College _
i .1 J ll J.jp CoRch Phil Brown of Estan-
J l!l1 ~l1 · ]·' J 111 JC.~ c1a was se eel= as the South Virgi11l• ! llentu•kV
...
lost OIYIJIOll . ' . " " " n 16
P'ct. GI ·•' .55! I'>
Collegiate Basketball TUESDAY·WEDNESDAY PRICES
while they last •••
Special Purchase -
Slight appearance
blemishes*
sttu•d••" s • .,.., rnentor and in • the story (.ol~•n ""'" It, LA He• bor Ml Wedn11111v'1 Gomn relating to that it \1/35 cr-
voiaen we" •t E•s1 tA roncouslv_ ment ioned l h a 1
L A l<~rl!O'" •! tACC tA sou1h"'••1 .1 Ric Hc.r!ac Savanna 's fl icks \Vas the ''°''"· bv• North coach. F'r;01•'• G1mn
c.c1<1en w,~, •t tACC. Sonora won the Orange
E1~1 tA et Cv1>•e" Le t"ll d d LA Sl>Utt•w~u 11 1.A ,.1,bo, ague I e an a vanced to
Now Yor~
Pl'l .. burah
C••olino
FIO<"ldlan•
lnd11n•
U11~
Memotil•
°"""'' Te>••
" . " . . " W1•I Ol•l•lon
J? " JI II
" " n 11
11 31
.•!S 10'" .<J• I)
IH ll'~
.311 IS
.~51
'" _,.
·"' •••
,, '
ll' >
" .cr 10 H-<10. "' lh CfF AA ·r· I ~1tu•d1y'1 ltttUlh ___ -c..·c.. _________ _:_c'_:__:__:_:.:~'~':m::::1 :m:'::':· ____ ..:_•~·~"c:':"-~'~"c'''...'.'11'6· w .... A11os .... 111
Wli5T
S•n Diego 51. 100. Loyol• 11
(•I Poly !Pamon•I 17. Chlco5t, !l
We.I""°"! VJ, Cl\1pm1n 6)
VC 5•111• Barb••• w. Lcv!sl•n• Tech
il
W11h•119I011 Y.I. Oreoon SJ. JS !D•••·
!imr l
S•nl• (l1rt 80, P1clllt II (DYt •tlmtl
c11llor111• •l. USF' JO
Utfn l'CI, Sl•.,IOtd 'I
IEAS'
Ouou"ne It, S1 Bton•ventuff 61
Ph!•butllh IT. fllo'1h C1rollto• St I~
Provl<lltt'IC• 71. Ma511c11u .. n• n
~· Jo~"'' "I!, s• "••ncf• !111.Y 1 11
111110••1 n , SI Jo1~0fl·1 [P•I ''
l•S1n• 9l. l1lavent ll
P•n11 51. 65. Arm• .S
Penn 11, v;111no•• 71)
•uumPtlo<o 9J, HO!Y (•D" 11
Colu•lf 101, Bu•kn•ll l•
O~rtmoul~ 6'. 80.,on u IS
Prill(lfM 91. 01v""on 11 s•, P•1e"1 tfll.J ! n s. w1ont ' t l
5D'llon Colll!Oe ''· Conl•iu• It
Manh~tl•n to, s~ton Hfll ~· SOUTW
Ken!uc!ov 11. t~U 1•
Vifqln'~ le(" 16. Cl"""'°" M
Na•v IS. Boltlmon ll
G•o•s11 IB. Mh•tul~• 80
Wiiiiam a. M•rv 1'. E••! (frolin• •\
Wt\! Vltglni• IQ}. RhQO~ hl1nn .ii
G11>rsl1 Teo::~ IS, Flnrld• St. 11
01<1 Oominoon t!. VMl !-'
Marshall 80. 60 ... linO Green 11
Tenn•n•• 7' . .O.ltQtm• .,
Ma!"Yl•nd' 6t, Georo• wa1n111olon &7
l<enl\lc~y SI. ti, T..,,neutt SI, ti
NO<"fol~ St, 101, E ll11btllt Cl•~!!. U
Murray $1. n, Westo•n l<o:ntuc:~w 11
u .. 011 (Ntw Or!Pns) 'I, lllorlhtrn
llllncil IJ
V•nOe•lllll 101. Auburn 16
MIDWEST
Norri OalM M, UCLA 11
Ottio sr. ti, Mlnn.11Gt1 "
lndi1n1 SI, 17, V1To••1l1G 70
D•l-1 11 , Lwl••lll• II
Toi-6', Wt •Torn MlcM9f11 60
01vton I !, Ot!tCll 11
Mlfml (Ohio) IS. Ohio u l'Q
Oo.11ncm115. W•slll1191on !SI. Louh l
~
Ev111ovlll1 10), Ball S!. ••
H01111on ll , l:•n1a1 $1. n
IC•nw• tO. Okl•P!amt ~! JS
.O.kr"" n. Yc.,ng1tow11 J1
Michl••" ''· Ncrthwnter11 U M•l"Ol~tllt 1], 0 1l't YI SI
C•eisMon 104, Olil•hcm1 ~· IS
11 ... tutkv W••l•Y•n II, Soul~ .... 111
lnOil M
SOUTMYtl SY
TCU I•. T••11 Al.M 10
P•n .o.merlc•11 ' H . l"""'"~" Tech "
Ut•h SI 11, 8 YU 10
l\lt•• ft, (Ofll\ll Ch•l•U U
_.,110,.. St. 111, Nort111 r11 A•l1an• n
Art1n111 sr. n. L1m1• Toteh 1•
T""to Toteh U. Te••• ll
1tOC1<1•s
(clor..io •!, low• St. tJ
COIO<"IOO SI. ,., Wyom!no !1
SYI R1>10 ... MCMUrty 7•
Wed l e••·• St. 101, Sou!f\1rn Ml•~I•·
oiool tJ
Te••• A&I I). E••' '··~· ~! n Norlh l1•11 St. 11. Wlcl\lto St I\
S.MU 96, ee•lor 16
~;,Forte 10, Trl.,llY fY1v l 6l
ld1ho s r. •· 801\1 S• 1•
o ...... r 17. S1>Utllun Color•dD JI
AMERICAN
BILLIARD PARLOR
1411. lfttt St., CMt• Mewi
Ol'IN 24 HOURI DAIL'f
THE ROARING FORK
SKI SHOP
K-2, Lan9e, Scott,
Medico, Duofolcl,
Fischer, Lun(ber9,
Humanic
All The
Good Guys
SALES
RENTAL
REPAIR
GOOD ADVICE
M ... Tln S... -lt•.•··-~S...
DANA POINT
34141 COAST HWY.
496-4921
•
•
UNIROYAL
"Sligh! "Pl""''""'' ~l•toi1h11 whid1 In
no WO"I' 01!1<1 p1<IO"""n<1.
Reg . 2 , 156 Reg. 2 · 160
~78-1'/8 .55-..
H78-15/8.S5-15
F78 · 1 .. /7 .7.5-1.t
G78· 14/8.2.S-1.t
F78-15/7.75-15
G7 8· l 5/8,25-l S J78-1S/8.85-15
Plus Ftd. b. Ta it: from $2.55 to $3.08
DUAL WHITIWALL
ONLT $2.95 MORE
• tai. 11 ... • ·_... ,_.. •
.... ,._ ...... Wl11 .. '"· ....... """'"'"" ..... '"" -"' ... '"'""'"'"" ..... ....... -.-.... 11 .... -.. . s.i .. _. ,..,.,.,""' ....
10,DOO •"-~-fw. •-· _ ...... -.........
• MOST SIZES
IN STOCK
Every tire
carries 1 Uniroy1l
cu1st to coast w1rr1~n~ty~;:::/i1
Seaftitp Tire Stoies
.. t..!.!..1-e:.:: .. , .=tr.~ 1.=,.-::.1 ~~1 ~t:r wu-1111• ,....... • ... bL .. ""'° ·m1•·,,.. ...... ,__.~ M:c ....
...... ........ -..111 .....,,,. ....,, _ ... I _ ... I ·-~ ..... , .. ~ .......... ....." ..... tfllW.W-• 1nL1• ......... <* •&8C..... .... ....,,.. tw-" ll'MIQ fl• ... T •J a• t. • ...._ .... ....... ......., ...,,,,,
OPEN 8-7 DAILY I 8·5 SATURDAY·
I
Transpac Race Due
70 Already Set for Jul y 4th· Classic
Transpacific Yachl Club has his Interest in entering the
already started btating the race again ill an effort lo
drumi for thf: 1971 HDnolulu gain an undlJputtd first to
rlct Which geUI under w11y finish. In the 1969 race
from Los Angeles July 4. Blackfin fin ished an hour
The 2,225--mile race is tradi· behind the late Bob Johnson's
tionally started on July 4 of Windward Passage, but \.\1as
odd-numbered years. awarded the first to fini sh
Some 70 !'!kippers have honor s and credit for a new
alre11dy filed inquiries and in-record after W i n d w a rd
terest regarding the ra ce. ac-Passage was penalized two hours for a starting line foul.
cording to Gould Eddy, ct>n1-Others listed as possibl e
modore of TPYC. starters an~ Kialoa II , Arirs.
1be 26th renewal of the race Baruna , Blue Heather, Blue
Ficker May Skipper
Aluminum 12-meter
If Bill Ficker sails in the America's Cup competition
in 1973 he will be •t lhe helm of a new aluminum 12·meter.
That was the indication today as a 11eteran America's
Cup syndicate announced plans lo build 11:n aluminum 12--
mtter yacht for the 1973 trials. The new boal w\U bt called
Courageous.
The syndicate building the new boal is the same one
which owned and campaigned Intrepid in which Bull Mos-
bacher defended the Cup in 1987 and Ficker in 1970. At
the conclusion of lhe 1970 defense Ficker had an agrrement
witll the syndicate to sail any new 12-meter it might tflme
up with. .
Will iam J. Stra~·bridge , whn was manager of the \/IC·
torious Intrepid syndicates in 1967 and 1970, v.•ill have a
t1imilar role in the new group.
F. Briggs Dalzell and J . Bartram Jr .. both of the New
York Yacht Club, are others tn tht \'enture.
is expected to have a number Norther, Encore, N1l u l'J, L----------------------
of foreign entries in additiOn Ka ma 1 ii , Narragansett, Quasar, Queen Mab , Rascal,
to competitors in Past Samarkand, Tilt O The Kill,
Honolulu races. The 19611 handicap winner, Sundancer, Widgeon and Jack Scott's Lynla Takes
Among the foreign enlries Argonaut, owned by Mort Tasco l!l.
d •-S 11 Th 1· t H I I · 1~ J k s tt' L•·-la "'' the Overton Series. drew 105 a.a-f'M•• propose are lr~ t e a Andron of Santa Barbara and e 1rs ono u u in 'N'• ac co s "
P I · t. th h d t t 1 r th t · 0 .. ,,,11 a-d •laa·, B winner boats. 47 of them in the Ocean SCRATCH BOAT -John I fall 's "elongated Star boat" Ragtime sailed up to 0 aris, represen tng e sailM by his son Jon. is ali;o a a 0 a 0 ree en ries • " ... Racing Class. The othera w•re
!•-ralt·ng ''scratch boat in the California Yacht Club Overton Series Saturday Italian nav~·; the cutter Bue· -Clarence McFarlane's La in California Yach1 Club 's ~ r A kl d N an early entry in the. race. p 1 1 H I I Cha I •1 l'b T b R11ce Satur f.fORF' and PH:RF vacht! f l C· by being first to finish in the Malibu·Transbay race, first of the series. Hall cane.er rom uc litl • ew a.oma o ono u u, res "a 1 u-ranr; ay · ~ h
represented Nell'port IIarbor Yacht Club. Zealand , and Shinda, an entry Ken DtMeu.se, owner of the A. Tutt'.s Anemone and H. da y. ing for the Matt Wala ~~~--------------------l -~f,~o~m"__'.A~'~&:•n~l~in~•~·------'~':·•~oo~l~B".'.'l•~c~ld~in~.~h~•~s~t~·n~~~c~•~ted:'.'__'.'H~.:S~in~c~la~~~·a'._'.'.Lu~r~l~in~•~·-----T~h~''....'.'~':''~·_::th:•:_:fi~r•:l__::o~[~l~h•:___Tr:::;:o:ph~y~.-------~
Lehman 12s
Taken by
Mr. Clean
Tv.·enty·four Leh m a n • I 2
&kippers turned on a cold,
windless weekend for Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's Corielt
Series.
The. winner was Ro,ller
Welsh in Mr, Cle.an. Runners-
up in order or finish were
Slop Elliott, NHYC; Chris
Colby. NHYC: Jim Tyle r,
BYC and Ned Jacoby, NHYC.
Peter Wilson of NHYC top-
ped a lis! of 16 Finn sailors
for the lnslce Trophy. Second
wa.s Bob Andre of Mission
Bay Yacht Club 11nd third was
John Weiss. Alam itos Bay YC.
ll'J an unscheduled race for
Sabot.s, Hank Wagner of
NHYC was the v.'inner. Second
WIS Betty Hogan , NHY C, and
third was Janet Camlin,
NHYC.
25 Yachts
In Hot Rum
Aileen . skippered by Jt
EY1n.s won the first race of
Voyagers Yacht Club's in·
traclub Hot Rum Series Satur-
day,
Twenty-fi11e bo:it.i; turned nut
for lhe first of the four-race
series. Other races will be
sailed Feb. '17, March 21 and
April 17.
Runner-up I n S11 turday·x
race was Dan Pike's Viking.
Others in the first fi11e were
Btbotee, Bob Darnell; Lorelei.
Bob Hubbs, and Slgame,
Wayne Bloclutock and Wes
Froelich.
Pan Pacific Jammed
For 15th Boat Show
Beating enthusiuts were
jammed almost shoulder to
sbouhler ·at the Pan P1eific
Glazebrook
To Direct
State Group
Audilerium in 1.Ds An1eles
Sunday as the Seutherc
Californ ia Boat Show cllma:xed
its epen ing weekend.
Show efficials said the at-
tendance on Friday and Satur-
da y wa.s light but the en-
thusiasm of show visitors on
Sunday more than made up
for the deficit ef the first
two days.
As wa.s to be expected, long
lines queued up to inspect the
large lu1Cury craft such as
the 44 .(ool Pacifica, queen ef
the .show , with a price tag
ef 1120,000.
Represented al tht show are
builders of 14 large cruisers.
10 "hot boat" producers. 12
sailbo11 t manufacturers and 43
trailerable and r u n a bout
Ken Glazebrook wa~ in-
stalled Friday a.s the Southern
Division president of the
Cal ifornia fl.1arin a Parlu and
H a r b o r s Association, suc·
ceeding \\'alter M. Shaw who
was elevated lo state presi-den t. manufacturers.
Installation ceremonies were Familiar marquees include conduct~ at the an nu a I Trojan, Pacemaker, Bertram.
meeting of CMPHA al the Concorde. Unifl ile, Tollycraft,
Balbna Bay Club. Lachlan M. Chris Craft, J eh n s • n ,
rl.ock! Richards was master Evlnrude, Chrysler. Mercury,
of ceremonie.s. Columbia, Coronllde, Bristol.
Principal speaker at lhe af-Choey Ltt. Ma c Gregor, Hobie
fai r v.·as Col. Robert Mallev Cal and Catalina.
of the U.S. Army Corps ,;f International flavor ls pro-
Engineers who lold tbe group: vided by the huge Australian
· • E c 0 I 0 gist a , surfers, display . of boats and ac·
pleasure boatmen, fishermen ces.sorie~ from that country.
and commercial users are all It mark.! the first time the: Australians have ever ex-vying for use of the California coastline. creating something hibjted at the .!how.
of a problem fo r the Corps." Floor sales at the show ha ve
CoL Malley oullined pre-been r~1nning .!lightly ah~ad
posed end in progress projects of previous years for .the first
of the Corps from Morro Bay -three ~y~, s~w_ef~C:~I~ lla~d:
lo San Diego.
He admitted that one of
the dilemmas faced bv th e
Corps of Engineers i.s that
il is charged with issuing
permit,, for offshore drilling
Mo1t Popular
Reader surveys prove DA f.
LY PILOT comics and col·
11mni:'lts are the most popu-
lar Jn the nation .
sites along the c ea st .. ,'------------'I
Ne11ertheless, .he added, the --LEG-AL-NCTICE __ _
Cnrps 1.s d~1c11ted tn pro· ---__ _ _ __ _
t~ling and enhancing the en-0~~~=T~" 0T,"~:~==~''· vironment along the coast line. NOT1c1 o, SALi UNDI" OICllll 011 'OltlCLOIUll'
J l (I( (. llEVO. 1!•1. l"l•!l'llff, VI
f:AIL '· TIM,ICI!, •l1t, Ot l•lld1nt NO. '1'01
Where to Park~ I. Ill~ lllldt111t<lt'd. Jlmtt A. Mu1lck,
Shttlff.(O•Ofl•r, (lllUnly 'Ill Or1,,.1. SUl1
"' Colllornl,, do hi""~" cl r!lf</ fllll ~" vlr!.,. of 0.Cro• o! l'ortclotu••
1"11 Sllf In '"" MunlclPl l Cou•I "'
lh• !oultl °''"'" Counrv Judlcl1t O!llr!O.
Problem Grows for Bo(lters ,~ ..... , .. ~ .. ,. .... '"''"'"'"· ..,1 .. tt1 "" I 0 1c...,1>1r, 1'1'11, In th~
1bov• •ntlll"'ll 1c11 ..... "'h•r•ln Jock C
l tvo. Ch1r1t• A "'"""'"''°" llld Ht rNn
LOS ANGELES !AP\ -
boal owners in populous Los
Ang~l,s County are n1nning
intn !he s;ime problem 11 ~
motorists: Where do you park
lt ?
Don Wa lsh, dirf"ctnr of plan-
nlna anri research for the
Harbor Department. S8YS the
countywide demand for boat
alips can't bt met by presenl
ezpansion plans.
Walsh said the situation Ull·
eel to be far less frustrating.
Whenever additional facilities
wtre deemed nece.uary, he
sa.ld, official~ merely looked
for a marsh to dred1e or
a ta1oon tn deepen.
"But we can't do that
anymore," Wal.sh reported.
"We:ve just abcAlt run out
or such areas. In any event,
It looks like we won 't be able
to ult t.hOR ff!w which are
left. Ecolo1Jl•lf are deman-
ding, quite properly, that what
ill left be pre:served so we
won 'I completely ru n out Of
natural 1rei11."
The altem1Uve for a pro-
1pecUve bolt~wner ll to buy
a era.ft small eoooch AO t.hat
Jt can be Muled home by
trailer 111nd , for ho 11 d a y
outings. Ufted In ind out of
the water by mecban~I
hotst launcherJ.
~ bollt builders, naturally.
are unhappy . Som@ h1v11 corn-
pl•ined to Walsh th1t they
1rt belna fore«! tn 10 lo
Florida to make 1 profit.
W•lsb Indicated m ti 1 l
8. l l'1C1••111on, d01"9 bu1in~•1 11 TP•••nl•tn
l!DC1! Co, th1 1bove nomtd ~•1lnllU<. The South's Bay 's declining 111>t1tnf'O • 1""'"""' •nd <l•crH o! , lortcln•u•• •nd 1111 •••ln1I l!"ul ~ economy hasn t slowed boat Tim•~· 1nd C•ro,. Tlm11k• d,,,,..,.,,h,
sales 11s much a.s the lack "'' 1"' •um of two 11oouwrw:1. -""""'"" . nlntlV lo.ir M lloro •nd !hlr!1•n ct"" Of mooring Spa('e, he Sl'lid . ('7.!14.U l In low!11I mllr\tV of tho Unl!td
Mos\ owners he expla•'"ed s111 ... ••>d hv vlrtuo "' ~ ,...11 or in-• " ' !orcomtn! !n 11ld O<ll"" !n u•<I M ll are persons who have the.ir Otctmbtl'. itiu. 1 om <Omm•lldttl te 1111 o~·n businesses or who.'!e in· 111 '"' •'°""'' in '"' coun rv or or1n,., 31111 ol Clll!nrnlo. do1crlbttl •• lollo"'I: come has become stabilized Lor J4, l ••<' UlJ .• ., m110 ••tord••
h In lh• olflco o! rr.o Oro"" Coun•Y over I e years. •oe11<"'r; c""'"""1" k,,_n ., itiJ Survevs show Wal•h said Skvn... 0r1 .. ,, L•"'"' 1, 1 ch . J • • C1 Ui...n1,, thal the average annual in· T11111111r with 111 '"" ,r,,.,..1,, "''
r bo , t1!W'rnffll1, f\frtdlllmfnll t lld , .. t'ome O A al owner IS SS.000 • .,,,..,•net• t/lor...,nlcl .,.1_1.,.. ., In
Th •h ' bo l f 1n.,....1" •PH•lolnlM. ose v. n acquire a .s rom .. UILIC NOTICI': 15 Ml!lll!IY Cl\/l!N
26 lo 39 fe et probably eam Th11 Oft "'"'"'"· 11 F•b., n n. u 10:DO o"Clor.1, l .M of lhol doV 11 $11 ,000 and a 46-65 footer may M t ln Lltbbr. '°"'''-••· 100 c1v1c con!"
belong to someone whose in-°''"" wn1, '"' of s1nr• "'"" 1 w111 WU lllP •-oHterlbN JlrDHrlv, ulld~• come is $20.000. 111<1 w•!I •IHI "*''"· &r .. ""'c"
W '-h 'd " l ~ool 11 """ bt """"urv le t1ll1tv a.., Ul , Los Ange es 101<11 1-1 w1111 lnlt.,, .. , int ceot1.
H11rbor's 2 550 planned new to "'" M'fl'lu• .r.o.i... 104'" <••" 111 ' 19wf""' .......,. of lllt UnlllOI Sii .... slips v.·ill help. Other location• o.1H" l•n1• An•, Co11...,.n11. J111tH1rv • h I .d 1t, 1t11. 1n t e county pan to pro111 e JAMES A. Mu1 1cw,
• 200 B t S ... rlfl<-, more. u as aoon as coun1.,. " O••-· t •lttn•n•• we find new space&, the de-e, c. A. 111,.,..11, ~,.,
mand doubles." t:"w~·.~= ,.,_
The harbor department of· wi1m111111 .... cattr. .. , .. .._111t1tt•1 A.-Y ficial has a couple ideas lh•t\ '""11111111 L••-1111<.1> 0.11~ "11e1.
could ease the situation. One J•""''" 11• 11 •M ,...,,,,.., 1. "n •4·11
Ir; for a boat train with 20 LEGAL NOTICE
spaces to a flit car and two •IH'•.,to• cou•t 0pfHt--
cars for pauengers. stAt1 o' c.-L1'0'"'"
'"The boateNi could come ,.., "J .. c.::T" Of'
in on f'riday night, sail 1round JtOtK• .,-. :;:::,.. 0,. "'T!·
the oce.11n OVl!r the weekend, TtOJt ..... '•M.t.tl Of' WILL AWb then oo home •• Su·•1v," 1'011 LeT,lllS OP ADMIMllt•AtlOJt ll "'' !Kl '1 WITM-Tfll..WILL·li .. 111111110 he~aid . ,,,, .. .,Ht••••TDlltYa•.
A h , 0«.Mltd not er propo11al II for an NQT1cl: IS Hl!lllaY GIVIN Tll1t
anAf'tmenl hoUJt conctpt jn r•ll'ltrl1'19 Mtitlt 1),..,., Mt 111111 htttln r-"'1111.., '"" ,.,..... fl// wm '"" which ·1Jotilt.s wou~ ~ ttecked flot ""*' "' .....,""",..""" w 1!ft..T,... • J-~ • iJd'•• j[h Wlfl.A-N, r~rHW:t .. Wftk l> " -1n an enc l"""1 ..,u ,.,. w w ,..,,Nf ••rtk1111ni. ""' "'"' '"'
Its own mt'(hanical launchlns "-tM '1"' " """"' ~ ,,,... • l>•t ..... "' "' ,..,,,..,. s. tf11 . fa~Ullits. 11 •1• '·"'·· "' -~..._.. of
S ·11 lh Uo I 0..•""'"'' "-. ! " Ml<ll t-•· " 11 ino er auyges n !J ,. c1m '"'"' 0r1w .,..._,, 111 1111
for boats to be berthed II ClfV"' ... "'' ....... C•M"""ll , D•lt<ll JI_,.., it, ltM floa ting anchoraaes In lltll w. 1. sT JOfjlf
uted dtfl'P water are11 oi tht 110,1ah":..~ =•• , eAau."t
harhor. Heavy sprint tension ~CctT ..............
dtvltel •ould fll1'(tet the .. ...,.,. 11rt ~
It's Sears ... for All Your Automotive Needs!
SEA RS BATTERY
GUMl-\'ITEE
Free replacement within
· 90 days of purchase if
battery proves defective.
After 90 days, we replace
.the battery, if defective,
and charge you only for
the period of ownership ,
based on the regular price
less trade-in at the time of
retum, pro-rated over the II~~-· jlli! number of months of the guarantee.
,,-.4 l'E ~2'
\'\"h i1e R iding H elmel
Re,.larlll." !499
Safe, durable ridinf
helmet P'otects you.
$11.19 RldiqHelmetla co!m ... 17."
Sean Sewn Cha mo is
16 z JO.in. size. Oean
u, y1111r air with this
strul..free chamois !
99¢
"'"
~,.,,,,~,,,~-~ ........ -J Jr Auto llnr
,_,,.. ·rop Car rier
.~ir Pun1pi ~ .. , 399
''"' ~., 99¢
11117
Coolant Reeo,·er~
-
•l.Yt.--~
CO'tll•IA a • ...,. ...... l'lek'W9 .. -·-
Prices Efteetlve
Today Im 1/%1/71
., .. a..,. -·-
Sears
Tire altd A1:to Ctnter
42-Month Guaranteed
High-Voltage
Battery
-_ ..
IUft'A lillA
R•irular •23.99
Trade-In Pritt
99
w;1ti~1.
N01 •. 4S14,
dN.Ull,
""
Fits 90 '1o of All 12-Volt
American-Made Cars.
FREE SEARS BA ITERY
INSTALLATION
SAVE
·"'3, · • pair
Heavy Duty
Shock
Absorbers
Regular S7 .99 each
47
each
• Guannlfed lor u Iona 1&·
Yfl'U OWTI your car
• Ruggat sintered Iron pi ..
ton •nd chrom rDd
• Pattnted Elastomet.er
rift( M .. M no fli!llftf , , •
IOlll l11Unc cleJ>eodlbillty.
Use Sean
Revtlilvln& Cbarse
'6HAllU
l.lf'\AHI
VAUlf
.., .................. f:~OAM. .. f!lt,,11..,-..,.12 ........ , ... ...... ......... ,,, ...... .,,,,._.....,a.Jr"
........ " ,..., ....
1a1na MeHt<•
IOlml •4ST JIU.II. tMll!lviAN9 Cl.l"S ... , ... .,,
1<1m.tn feel obli1aLe:d lo tell
eu1tomen they may face
~ problenu If they blly
elM of lht laraer model•. bo •• f h fl"'91M Or._ C•.t n.11¥ fl>!l:lf • .. rem f!lvy WIVH. J • ....,.., "'ti .•. lfn l&f.71 t----------------------------------------------------------'
I
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Everyone Has
Something Tha t
Someone El.., Wents
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It ,
Fin cl It, Tracie It
With a Want Acl ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results
I -...... lf1el I ;....., ...... J~;i· --~·~-'
2629 1-larbor. C.t.1.
546-8640
Thinking of
SELLING?
Let us help, we \\'ill buy
your house today for its
full v11 luf'. The only ad-
ditional charge is I% of
the selling price. No
gimmicks and no addi-
*
General
* * * * TAYLOR CO.
DOVER SHOR ES-GREAT SACR IFICE
*
REDU CED $30.~NOW $111'1,500
Beautiful Z..story custom home w /4. lgc. bd-
rms, den, formal DR , 4 bath s & grea t kitch·
en. 3 fireplaces & lux. cptng. & drapes.
BALBOA ISLAND !
Attractive "story book" Cape Cod styled
home with 3 bdrms. Nice kitchen. Complete-
ly furnished. Call to see. $46,500
"Our 26th Y •a r"
General General
JJnJ~Jj/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
5 Linda Jal• Driv•
Just completed 4 BR ., 51h ba. home w/!arn.
rm. & study. Magnificent 39 ft. waterfront
liv. rm. w/frpl. & wet bar, $164 ,406
For Complete information on alt homa1 &.
Iota, please call:
BIL L GRUNDY, REAL TOR
133 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.I . 642-4620
Gen•ral G•ner.11
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors I;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;
2111 San Joaquin Hill s Road NHda Flxin'
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 An d plenty of it • mostly
* * * * * * pai"', elhow "'"'· haro.
wood floor polishing etc.
However . nothing too ser-General I General
NEWLY LISTED
tional expense. W• nHd 11-----------1 ----------
houffll It doesn't cost MOTHER'S DELIGHT OWN YOUR OWN.,.
ious. Great big 670 Joan you
can take ovrr. 4 Bedrms,
$26.500 and real f'asy • 10 •
Beautiful llawaiian MODERN
home in Mesa del Mar, with
HARDWOOD FLOORS &
SHAKE ROOF. Hey, don't
stop yet bf'cause it has an
enclosed PATIO ROOM &: anything to caH a nd find
out -you might even
save ~!
GET
FHA 221 ·02 $21 ,DOO
Large family r m. opening in-
to spaClous fenced rf'ar
yard. HUSBAND'S P LEAS.
ER -large, assumable VA
Joan. \Viie's dream kitchen
wilh all the B11·ins -New
Carpels and Door tile. Al!
rhis PLUS Tiirce Bedrooms
at only S26.500.
. , .Restaurant business & 4 buy.
BR Mme in ~ar; in busy Cambridv• S•ri•s
C-2 a~a. Bus1fJ('ss has been Big bedrooms . 4 ol them &
opcralln.ii: cont1nuousl.y for family rm., in this popular
over 10 yrs. Opportunity for Mesa Verde location Veter-
grea1 future. ans appraisal coming tor no
COME & SE,;: down pymnt terms. or FHA
irrms. Under $34.000. Assum{' 6-\4 '7r. GI Joan on 3
BR. h<unc in the r.1esa Ver.
d1> arr11. Conv. to aJI sho~
ping & schools. Tropical gar.
den & s"·in1n1ing pool area.
All !or $31,500. I,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.!!!!!!
SWlf.1f.UNG POOL too!! It's
a lovely 3 bedrm beauty on
a quiet street with lots of
privacy. Take over 5~%
annua! perCf'ntage rate lo.an.
payable $182 per mo. incl
taxes. Full price only $31.950.
JCa.. co:Ts
~WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
J UST LI KE NEW
J Bedrm, 2 bath Cordomin·
ium, completely redec. in·
eluding new carpeU. ln1·
med. ottupancy. Priced be-
low 1narket at
120,SOO
NO DOWN TO VETS
Lfu•ge J BR with 20x20 rttm-
pus roon1, hrd\\·d floors.
Rear ya.rd compl block .... ·all-
f'd with jumbo L"l!ment patio
area. VA appraised a t. _ ,
$24,600
EASTS IDE TRIPLEX
Sharp 1.1nlls wit h (2) 2 Bedrn1
& bachelor unit on large lot.
Obie detached garage. Try
l0'7o down, only .•.
$32,950
"' ---
i:: E ~ ;::> ::::; !\I
;J1 ....... -·~~.
642-1771 Anytime
TRl-PLEX
$39,500
(3) 2 Bedrm unils. separate
one for owner. Li\•, in and
try $600 down F1-IA.
I~
Foi.mtain V•ll•y Huntington Beach
LICENSEES, full or part NICE J Br, ,,,/lam rm. Nr:
time, I need slow a1arten & Frwy & new elementary
S\JJ'e fini shers. Mild 1an. schl. want to sell last!
grene OK. Rigor Mortis Principals Only! 854-4076
cues, dOn't apply. Huntlnston S.ach
BY' O~ 4 Br. 3 ba, lam
tn\ & a1r1u1n, crpls & drp11,
bil.flS, d!thv.•asher, 2000 gq
ft. 1 ?t1i trom Stale Beach.
968-5656.
THANK YOU , , ..••• , ---'------Huntington Harbour
\\'ATERF'RONT w/dock,
reasonable, lcrms or 'A'ill
trade equity tor ama.Ucr
hoolf', lot or Income prop.
Faithful people for yoUr
loyalty in 1970 at my new
addreu. Every li1ting with
Quintard Realty WU soJd in
1970 • and all 1eUera recei"'-
ed the flfl aireed amowitJ.
~uintard ~ aULTY Sin(• 1946
Downtown C•ta Meta
1171
HAHOl 642-2991
List with C.Q. Buy from C.Q.
Corona d•I Mar
MAJESTIC SPANISH
4 BR-2 STORY
AUthentically 11l'led lrom the _o_....,_,_. _,._,._2381 ____ _
arched courtya.rd entry 10 Irvine
adObe red tiled roels. 4 ki11K· I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
sized bedrooms, 2~11 baths. IMPORTED
Walk-in closets & vau.lted FOUNTAIN
ceilings. Massive lam. room In a trium. Mexican lite ni-
with c111.cklln11: fireplace. try; wool carpeting: profess.
\\'alls of slained mlrrottd
I C _ _. . ~ _ ll'ldacpg., & many extras.
g au. ove,o:u. patio, -.;at This is a 4 BR. 2'1ii ba. homf'
garage. Only l\I yN.. old, in the beaut. Turtle Rock
READY FOR THIS~! Only area on the Irvine Ranch.
$29.700. A 1nus1 to see Pril't'd at $49,80() with an as-Call ( TI4 I 962-5585. FOREST E. OLSON ~~:·,~~ 11::";,,
1000
• you
DUPLEX
SOUTH-OF-HIGHWAY
Tu·o 2 bedroom unit!f in one
of Corona del Mu's most
desirable locatklnll. Walk to loc. Realtors
China Covl!, shopping, and 19131 Brookhurst A\'e. (ired hill elementary school. Frt>sh ___ H_u_,u_·ogt_,,_o_o_e._a_c_h __
paint, new carpt"t and low
price make this today's
best buy.
Only $45.950
A Real Es1Ht~rs E>lclusive
Call 613-8560
ID THE REAJ, \°' ESTATP.RS
OWNER
TRANSFERRED
Really
Univ. Park Center . Irvine
Call anytime 833-0820
5 l/4 V .A. LOAN Laguna BHch
Newport I -'""""""""""""""""-DOLL HOUSE •• ,
Extra !!harp/trim 3 bedroom . 1 -~~--------
2 bath home with beautiful SPOTLESS! I j
J11.nd1CRping, complet e Con1emporary 3 BR. hofru' ·1
sprinkler system, lovl!ly cov-beamed ceiling~ -decks with
ered patio wllh ocean view, ocean view -bl1ns. Will !!ell
water softl!ner. 128,950. To or Jease/np!ion. Ask. $37,500!
sef', call IW2-2535 now. REAL.EX REAL ESTATE
Closing costs plus Im-
pounds moves you into
a clean 3 bedroo1n. new·
Jy painted doUhouse.
This \•oon't last. CALL
NOW.
F.H.A. 61/2°/o LOAN (Opt_n Evenings) Cnn1mr rri11.~ lot on Harbor $20,500 PRICE !=========~ [ Blvd, 94X350, access front & TOTAL payment for this
rear, $130,000. sharp 3 bedroom home is
at 11\a.t tM owner's fa mily has
Fairvi•w outgrown. Immaculate in ev-
ery detail. J Bdrm., l bath
in one ol CdM '1 !inest beach
areas. $54,900.
646-8811
'D THE !~EAL.
'-" f:STATERS
917 G!cnneyre SI.reel
Lag\Jna Beach 494 .856.1
Laguna Be.1ch
ACTION
BEAUTIFUL
new carpeting and paint
throughout makes this 3
bf'droom home a n out-
standlng value at $24,-
750. Seller is anxious
and \\·ill accf'pl VA or
FHA terms. Don't wail.
Evenings Call 548·3265
OWNER DESPERATE
$116. Sl1bjcct to fllA Loan
Con1mercial lot llarbor Blvd. with 6'Ai annual percentage
C·2 zone, 50XlSO. SJ0,000. rate. All appliances BUCh
This is a rorced Mle. Price I 2 rcsklcn!ial lot~ in San Ja·
is rf'dUCl.'ri and O\\'ner is j cinlo. O\\'llC'r \\ill trade or
ready 10 11.'t this 4 Dedrn1., sell, S3500 ea.
as \\'a!lhl'r, dryer, n:higera..
lor -all aJso included . WHY
RENT if you are~ Submit
your down payment _ SELL-
ER ANXIOUS. ANYONE
QUALlfol E.5.
2 story home go on any
terms. Ler'.s take a. look -
it'~ In ~ood shape and at
$25,500 it 'g a bargain!
•
co:rs
2 Duplexl's, $32,500 & $34,IXX).
Each unit has 2 BR's.
VINCO REALTY
2029 HARBOR BLVD.
6'16-0033
Walker & Lee
Realtors
2790 Harbor Bl vd. at Adams
545'9'191 Open 'Iii 9 PM
"mesNmSe
2032 KORNAT
4 Bl'droom-2 Story
Family Room
fo'ormal Dining
3 Baths
View
Clean
Vacanl
"'·""' BUY rr!
''ll!csf\ '~' ::ilrnli~
546-5990
FASTER
WALLACE
REALTORS
Open Evenings
• '62-4454 •
Eight Bedrooms FIXER UPPER
FR + DR + POOL RAN.;;io SANTA ANA--0,.1 ""1""N""c""o""M!!!!!!!!E""u""N!!!!!!!!n""s~ ly .,...,,;JOO. Big V. Acre with II•"""""""""""""""""""' I That's right • 8 full bdrms! good 'l\o.'O bf'droom homl! f'ormal DR • FR • modern and Double garage. Zoned S HOUSES on 60x305 lot,
I kilch • brealdasr area -4 for horses or dog kennels. Eamide C.flJ. Good money
WOW-What a buyl ~--------, balh! _ large LR • white A real buy in Santa Ana makers. Income $805 mo.
3 Bedroom~ a nd Family grs~~9INDEX ~1i~~~. FB~d~:~n he1_~:~ ~ ~~~~~cTXCEI..LENT FJ. Asking $69,!IOO.
Room \\'(th large !.ire.-.._ ________ ;] aviary • much more, you , •••••• llllfllr. ll UNITS near beach. Excel-
place, sliding s::l11ss door I \\'On't brlie\'c 1t1r reasonable ,;. lent yea r IU"Ollnd incomf' of ~::~ct~~=r~.n~1u;~~~~1 111 '--"""--'-'_'M_ .. _• __ JJ it! JI FOREST·;.iaQLSON M. M. LA BORDE ~~s1ea:~~~.ry 1! ;~;!~:
term!'. What (']Se? Only RrALTORS $135,000, Cla5sific•tion 100-1 49 ~ CALL 0 646 -14 14 $24,500. 129!1 llarbor, Costa Mesa ~~ ~ """'""· l•I *OCEANFRONT* ~ C.ntral 3 BR. 2 ba, home 1v/sep. din. RE ALTY
FROM & brkfst. rms. BU.in kitC"h.,,1 __ E_"_"-'~"'~'-Ca_1_1 _6'6_·'-'-"-fli,., l"l t •J•rt P••• orr1c1
t'"""'Y nTI., pnv, IIBHO. BEAUTIFUL LEASE OR
Four Bedroom
Mesa Del Mar
Lge. rumpus rm. & 'rt ba.
abov, ,·,;,, '"''"· •o Fi CLIFF DRIVE LEASE OPTION
Clas si fic ati on 200-260
$37.50 l1 hat's all Vi'ls) HoulesforRent 11 t@ j
mo\·r~ you in -Wall II''-------·
tll you sec thr lo1v ur-
kef'p pool. I hr lar,i:r
F'amily Room anrl ~hake
roof .• -all fnr S'29,950.
Cl assi fic ation 100-355
ApartrMnt11 lor Rtnt ) [ 9 ) I
Clasiific atio n 360-370
lo!. S!i5,WI. Qua\Jty cuslom construction!
Call: 673·3663 612-22'.i.~ eves Belter than new condition!
associated
IROKEAs-REALTORS
1025 W Bcalboo 673°)66]
E-SIDE COSTA MESA
J Br hon1r -'-df'ri, 2 ha,
hardll'l)Od rlnors, palio, dOll·
ble garage. Hoorn for camp..
Tn1ely 1ninimum care ynrd!
Ulcnt/>d ir1 rnuch dcslrf'rl
Ne\\·pon llrighTs! J Bed-
roo1ns, 2 full baths. Huge
Family Hoom, Priced Right
al $49.900 .• cau 646·TITI.
Ll"l us show you Lhis very
special home. today.
\D 'THEREAL
\""\. ESTATERS
rr or 1n11ler. $23,950. 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0i Roy Mccardle Realtor 1• Classifi cation 400-465
FARROW 11'.._l _•'"t·_'· _I~ . . . '
Slll per montn
total payment
Takf' over subjeet lo ex-
'--------)/ ii14 ) 181 1) Nl'Y.'JXIM Blvd., C.i\1. . AnrlOUOCemtnls . 548-7729
Cl a s s if i cati on 5 00-5 I 0 ""R""E"p"o"s"s"E"s"s"1 o"N"s""~·
FORCED SALE
In approx, 2 wreks, thi! large
~ BR. 4 balh home will ht'
sold at auction. Located on
an island in Newport Beach.
Hurry and caU! $77,950. lstini:: JnaTI. Exceptione.1 11,------~,1 ., Sparkling clean homes. some
3 broroom, Ft11mily room, Personal• newly painlcd &. carpeted. 2.
and POOL "'oilh enclosed 3, 4 &. ~ bdrms, Some wi th ~
patio. J\.fovt> In cond ition Cle siific ation 525-535 pools. F1iA-VA conv. terms, ............-----............
Lovf'ly l 8<.'droom in lop
Cos!a r.1esa location freshly
decoraled, Large extra bon.
us room, P riced a t $32,950
or owner will lease at $270
per mon!h. -Call 546-2316.
\D THE R!'.:AL
""\. J::STATE RS
OCEAN BLVD.
Corona rlrl Mar Dl111lex. 118
},.. front11ge Fabulous ocean
view. 4 BR. 2 Ba. plus L
BR. 2 Ba. plus l·BR. 1 Ba.
apt, Frplcs. & elevator,
ll'0,000.
675-3000 m II.\\ ,\ Ill' \fll
Ill' \I.I'\' l\C
f '. • , ' • )'!': 1
. -• 11potll'ss throuizhout. from $17.000 lo $40,000. r-1.&..-11 Banker
Total price. only SJl ,950, Lo1t Ind Fotnl 181 CoWns & \\'atts lnc. '-""lnall, I ;;;;;iiiiiliiiiii-•OliOlilliii
88'13 Adami Ave. 962-5523 ~·c;oll_., · U you can't believe it. II'-------'· Macnab -Irvine
call and '" it. Cla uifi<•lio" 550-555 BUILDERS ATTENTION lll-0700 644-2430 I lnslructlon J!l•) R-3, 1.7 acres, top .l~ati?n EMERGENCY SALE
REALTORS Cl•,sific.•tion 575-580 I Costa flfcsa. All uliJlties in. BMng your olfer on this prime
Can build, 31 units. Good Irv. Terr. 3 BR, ho~ w/
SerW:es ilndR..,.n ]Gifl I tenns. $'75,000. pool Ii many extru for
We have opefiings for ~ lachenmyer Rlty choice li ving. Asking $59,500
2 full tlm* salesmen t o ll'-.,c~1-.,-,7if~i-co-t7i0-,-,6°""00-699 &16-3928 Eve!!: 673-1489 by anxious owner.
comple.tl! our proresslon· [Ill COR·BIN•
al salr11 statf. If you En.,loymlllt ) i I Sell or Leas•/ option ~•nl morl! action, ft ~------~ f' 4 BR .. 2~ ba .. frlllc. 2 Car MARTIN
fa1ter pe.cl! ftnd mort Clai•ific:•tion 700-710 gar. 3 Yra, old. 2200 Sq. Ft.
as.In ca.II now and makt> A-1 Cond. Vacant quick pos-
"71" a Koocf year. I II""-J sess. Call todl.1'! REALTORS 644-7662 ~ '¥ Call Patrick Wood SCS-2300 UNDERPRICED
Clessific•tlon 800-836 • Biii H.1ven, Rftr. Spacious 2 BR. 1~ bil, E.skle
2629 Harbor BIYd.
546-8640
·OPEN EYES.
'TILL 8:30
2lll E, Coast, Cd.\f 673-32U C.M, townh!H! condo. Uke
[ Pet and._... JILi INCOME II new, all bltns, Patio, a:ar-
1 1" 2 rum_ bachelor unita. Close age. Nr pool &. clubhAt.
Classific:ation 850-858 lo beach A shoppln& in New. Adlls. 1114.000 loan, $143 mo.
port Beach. $1.8.000 • you incl principals, lntereRt Is [ -loft~=-It• ,P j own the land! lax or lf!aM> option. Vacanl. _ . ¥.. G•orge Wiiiiamson Owner M8.li607
Clas1ific•tion 900 -912 Realtor ONLY ONE LEFT
673-4350 64S..1S64 Eves Tllkt' advantag" of Jasl ~&J'S
Rea1ty Company
LIDO NORD'S BEST
BAYFRONT VALUE
Newly listed, 5 bedroom•.
beautifully decoratl!d. P ier
.l slip for latil!r boat. $1!9,-
500 -Price include• many
extras.
Macnab -Irvine
642-1235 675-3210
CORONA HIGHLANDS
S BR, I: den. Prtv. bffch.
Owner w/ct.ny. Lownt pric-
"' ln -· W.500. Home Show Re•ltors
"Armcheitr Houaehuntina·•
35.15 E. Coa1t. HW)'., CdM
675-7225
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Bte.ut trl-level borne. +
studio ap1 ., In bl!st loc.
ONLY $39,900
CAYWOOD REAL TY
6306 W, Cout Hwy., NB
541-1290 I 1"'""'t•t~ 1!•1 Colesworthy ~~~ec;:!:7n:;: ~0;~~ C1.,~ific1.f lon 9 f5 -9•i onJ)' Ol'lf' late 1970 model
le!!l F..xclusive ovtt Short• Goht Medallion 4-Plex
2629 1-tarbor, C fl.f.
[. Autoafors.J. Jt R J & Co. 4 BR.~ Ba .. pwdr nn., tam. Chclc.. Newport loc. u, dllo'n.
rm., d1nlnq: rm. Open Week-Pric• ""•-' 174 000 By Rrnltl)r M" l"" G I n... '-"CU, ' •
Cl ·1· t ' 950 990 e,.,,,. <ff"• a Uy ..,, , Owner 213. 981-70.39. e1f1 re• ton -Ncwparl Be111ch Office Roy J . Wlln!, Rltr, &411.1550 I--------'---
1028 Bn,y!dde Or . F'or hclll rewulti! &t2-567R HOUSE Huntlrc'!' Watch the 6-r....l!l.'lrl OPEN' HOUSE column.
.
(enytimt}
POOL
Sparkling 4 bedroom home
v.•i1h beautiful Roman pool.
Fully carpeted, all bltns,
family r m., covered patio,
fire pit and more. Only
$35.950. Call 545.8414 ,
Delancy Real Estate
2828 E. Coa!I Hwy., CdM
---~~~·~-1n:,;'~~-
423 POINSETTIA
One of lhe Jownt priced du-
plex~ in town. Sharp 2 BR. + 1-BR. rental. Frpl., carp.
Ii drapc11. Cov. patio. Only
$43,250.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 175-6459
Retirement In
Corona del Mar
Al a price YOU can afford.
A channing one bl!droom
house plus Income for only
132.900.
_,.-----.. tNMttV
J Bedroom "Dream Home"
on large comer wi th Undf'r.
ground utilitle1. crptd, drpd,
dish\.\•asher and large court.
yard palio with full gro\\'fl
olive tree. Top location near
1chools & shop ping a n d
check low down payment
and xlnt financlng .
Pacific Shores Realty
536-8894 Eves: SJG.9866
PRIDE OF
OWNERSHIP
LOWER
3 ARCH BAY
ls1 Time on markf'1 . A tfrri.
fie buy~ Only $51.950 for a
3 tx-droom. 2 bath hon1e.
J ust across the strE'l't b'Om
privale beach access. Call
oow for an appointment to
see!
..,JO tan
REAL ESTATE
.1190 Glenneyre S1.
4!l4·!l473 549-0316
• R-2 lot near beach I
$hops. $20,000. Owner
• 714/365-~ • PRICED AT $17 ,850 CALL NOW FOR AN
APPOINTMENT TO SEE
67].8550
Attractivl! 4 Bedroom, 2 b&th
near shopping center, and r ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;if
just mln ute1 from San Diego 11
r~r\.\'Y. $26,450 -owner wilJ
sell FHA or VA Terms.
3 Bedroom 2 balh, family
room home. Complete wi th
bllns, crplll &. drapes, db!e
garage k boa1 access. Own.
er moved to Boston and
n1ust sell immedia1e ly. Sub.
mil your terms. Call 540-1151 ,
Ht:rilai;:e R.ralton;, (open
eves.)
TEA FOR TWO
EU\J!lde 2 bedroom &: fa mily
room home. Excellent floor
plan \\'ilh extra large roonis.
Large lot with izarden p\ui
4 CAR GARAGE for hofl t
and cars. _ Call &J6.TI71 to
inspect.
D THEREAL
'."\,, ESTATERS
D THI: RF'.AL
\""\. F:STATf:RS
Count 'em 1·2.J.-4.S
842-2535.
ID THE REAL
""\. F:STATr.RS
Grad ou.! home + 4 neat ln-----------'
com,. unll.s all on 2 2/3 lotJ;
CllO l!.J, I~ biles. IO Big Cor.
ona Bf'ach. n 211,500 ' seller
will finance.
UNIVERSITY REAL TY
3001 E. Cat Hwy. 673-6510 * SHORECLIFFS * OPEN DAil Y 1-4 :30
302 Ev•ning Canyon
Calif. ranch .\lyll!. Xlnt family
home. Large patio. 4. Bd-
rr11~. 3 Baths.
DON V. FRANKLIN
REAL TOR 67:1-2222
GI NO DOWN
CUSTQM 2 story, 3 tull bath&,
Jarie lot, fruit trees.
KRAFT REALTY
1TI71 Stach Blvd., 11.B.
S42-1418 968-1178
$25,450 Costa M•••
OWNER
TRANSFERRED
51/4°/. V.A. LOAN
Extra sharp/trim 3 bedroom,
2 balh ham~ in beautiful
Huntington Beach Jocarion
\\'i th Deauti !ul tandsca riing,
complete sprinkler system,
lovely covered patio with
ocean Vil!w, water toftener.
$28,950. To ace, call 842-253;>
l'IQ\I,'.
4 BR + Den >rovJNG-TRANSFERRED-
Assume 6Y,?o apr loan . Pres. Tired o! flghtin&' w i I h
tenants! Call the prublt'm tige location, large rooms, ~Ivers -South Coa1t Real 4 Bedrooms. rlcn, bu11J .in~.
9 'Estate. Property Manage-park l\ke yard. OpPn HI ment Division. ID THC REAL
·"\,, ESTATERS pm. 540-ln>
TAR BE LL 2955 Harbor o m w f.54f,5-;c8';""i;;;c;--;;;;:;; I _'.'.~~~~~~~ e COLI.EGE Park's tno1t * DUPLEX * uolqu• hou.,, 3 b<, ,.,, 7 MONTHS VACANT
I" b N I -' I Make ofter on th.la 4 bedroom * Eastslde ,., a. ew anulClP ng, .ti l•t •-mod I·" home. Exce:llent location * :z Bedroom each ru c .. er..,r, rl! e ....,
bat•· u o ~z 5'\:. o/o VA aaumable Joan, • Fa ntastic loc•tinn '"'· .norv"" ·
• $Z5.500 * BY owner-J br, 2 ba tam onlyka$2l8 per ~~· 3
Call 546-23U rm, Appndud al S2J.7SO. Bloc from oeetn, !.OW aq,
Makt> offl!r. 920 Darrell. h. Near Edl!1on High. Com-
646-7586 or ~91lKI J>llny owni:'d, a~ki ng '0 THF: REA!,
""\. EST/\'ITRS
WOW I $24,5001
GI /FHA Term1I
or Low int VA Loan
3 Bedrm, 2 ba, crpld, fncd.
HAFF DAL REAL TY
142-4405
or Eve1: 541 -2446
$24,950
3 ldr + Den
POOL
Beauliful home. Primt: area,
J &drm + den, enlry htllll,
Open !ill 9:00 PM. 540-1710
TARIELL 2'55 Hubor
la you ad In the c.Lusltled
sttTIONr So1MOC1e I a
watchlnc fot tt. I> I a I
SC-5678 loda.)it
$.t!,000? ! ! Ali otfl'rs sub. COZY W-Slde _ 3 l Fam rm, milted.
On Oak. GI/FHA or whatever
ilL1gr, Rr.'I I .1 .. t1 S>t.995. ,~ Qu'"'""' .... ,,., 1,
Capistrano Beach
-'62-4471 C:JMMIU OW NER -Luxury Duplex,
view of new Dana Point DIVORCE
harbor &: ocean. Each unit Forces &ale, near.new 3 BR
2 BA, Ayres built homf': 3 br., 2 ba., trplc•, cptd,
ltparale utilities. 1970 arou bltns, drps, CJlll.s, frplc, blclr:
· u 800 ln wall, heated POOL, land-meotne ~. ., x t tu asstitance or beautttul home scaped, 1 mi. to ocean. A11. + income 811 -32'96 sume 79', kle.n. S32,990,
Dover Shor .. * Executive's Retreat
Summer Ir. wlntl!r privacy w/
out pioneertrw. ~ "-nlOUJ\.
taln view, 5000 tcf rt. 5 bfith.1,
4-Ctlr pr. f\lrn ror ottU-
pe.ncy, f178.<m. 543-7249
EHt llluff
4 BR. Family Room
View • • • .$41, 150
oWn"r • • • 644.-1627
Pountaln V•l!!x
X-TRA SHARP! ,
s,.nlth Ooco•I
Low clown / low lnter<11I
Le bedrms, custom ltalUttt •
only 131,900.
HAFFDAL RI AL TY
142-4405
nt Evea: Ml-2448
OOS.2929 Bin-.
TRI I' LEX
Reduced for Quick Sale
2 Bed.rooms each, kitchen
Built • lna. patlot, enclosed
garages. Shake roof, iOw
malnlen1ee thr\JOUI •• S39,950
For detai11 646-7171 ot
S<Z-2535.
O THr RP.AI.
"\. I :.'-'Tl\ "1:1«'
FOR IASY LIVING'
A$nltne VA 6% at \$1.e a
month. J Bldnnt fAmu,y
rm. water 10INner, t,e )'at'd,
clote 10 schoola, ahoppl,.-,
f:reewt.)'. Secluded cuJ-<lo.MC.
JEAN SMITH, RL TR.
400 E. 17th, C.M. 646-.3255
The "Yellow Pqes•• or
cla11ifled ... 842-5878
CLASS IFIED
HOURS
8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday thn1 Friday
9 lo noon Saturday
Adverti~ers may place
their ads by telephone
COSTA MESA ornCE 330 w. Ba'y
642~78
NEWPORT BEACH
2211 W-Balboa Blvd.
642-5678
JIUNTTNGTON BEAClt
17875 Beach 'Blvd.
540-1220
LAGUNA. BEACll
222 Fore1t Ave.
491-9·166
SAN CLF:r.tENTE
305 N-F.l Camino Real
492-4<120 •
Nonn r couNT'l'
d ial free 540..1220
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Il<'nd!fnt> for ropy &: 'kills
is 5:30 p.m. th~ day bl'•
rore 11ubl!callon, except
f o r l\1onday ¥;dition
when deadline 1.s Satur·
day, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS! Advcrtism
should ch!!Ck their ad&
dally &: report errors
immediately. THE
DAILY PILOT 8!.'SUmes
liability for thl" fiM>t In•
correct Insertion only,
CANCELLATIONS:
Whf'n klllini,: an ad be-
sure to make a record
of the KILL NUMBER
given you by your ad
taker as rece.lpt of your
cancellation, This kill
number m ust 00 pre--~cnted by the advertiser
in case oC a dispute.
CANCEtLATIO N' C>Tt
CORRECI'ION 0 1' NEW
AO BEFO RE RUNNING: Evtry tffort Is made to
kJll or correct a new ad
that tras btien ordered,
but \\'e cannot xuann-
tee to do •o until the ad
hsa appeartd in the pa. ,,.,.
DIME·A·UN!: ADS~
These •d!: are strleUy
cuh Jn ad.,.n~ by mall
or at an.v one ot our of-rlets. NO phone orders.
TIIE DAil.Y PJLOT *
strvet th" rlttht ti\ cb. ... tlfY, 4!dlt, con.or ,or re-
1\ae al'I}' •dvtrllitrment.
and to c.hanp lb ratl'S
A l"fJN)a.tlo• without
prior nolJce,
CLASSJF~ED
MAILING ADDRESS
p_ o. Bo~ 156f. ec.ta Meta. ... ,.
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i ·,., ~~~l~·-~·~·~1 ~-~~-~t~~~I ~~~ I _.,.. .. ~ f --~ .. ·~ !"~-=.':"' !lj] l.____"G:!..._-__,!liJ I lfil l.__-_ .. -____JI~ I -··-le
DON'T PIN(·HriL~.~-=o~P~.E~N:HO:;~uh~~~e9 ;;;~~:~~ ~;~ ;:;,•;:=..,;,:li ... ii0ppenii'ii' ... ••• .... iii1iityiiiiiiiiiiii200iiiii ::::,:::.::
300 ~:;-;""'; .... ;i...ton;;u;";':.;·;:;.,,;;~if~-ll
SAT, & SUit-~;. Br., ,pl(t )evel. Vacant. -,.,.,,e:~. P. O. sq. It Xlnl. bulu~ or Avail now-I.re 1 BR hw, ~I ULTRA 1harp lte 4 br, 2
YOURSELF
(You're Not Dreaming)
But You Con
PINCH YOUR
PENNIES
with a
PILOT
PENNY PINCHER
Classified Ad
3 LINES
2 ·TIMES
Any lte.111 Priced
S51. or Less
(If -. ...... -,_, .... __ _, .....
.,._. ac11d $50.)
..
642-5618
By Oii ~-• ---~--1 --• w •·m · b 11 · So OPENING Joe nr bd\.. 1 c. pr, Ni.nee. be. tam rm, bltM, elc, Near 'Nf:R: ... _.om....,.......,.. ........ rn ,...,.., ... i)l Id! or BMc 1475, Ne..,_ Beacll.. .., e po111 lt'J , . .......·m· ,,.-~ • ~,..,... I "'""'' """ v .. • -VJ.IW J)Ublk/pe.nleh S<:h!S, pat\ ~ty11ic . Hills -Pk:WrnqUe ~-M4.50U . Submit g.u..mi .._ .. na, $110.......... I 2 l 3 J Ir niajor •hop"J. SOI.Ith H.lt.
virw1 -:MJG1ii; 1Unktn'Uv rm. -DON' ·v. FRANKLIN 1Ciifn.,:,;,;;..:::m.;;./.;,r1-c-io"''1-----.,m.,...,llfl=-=~~-~ Vending ia BIG BUSIN~ 1.L;:;•::c-=.:;;..:Ba=•.::ch;:____ 3 mi to Nrwport. Avail row.
hli,:b b8m clni, ti~ trP,l.. REAL·TOR '7J..2222 ·~rty · J5I N<? betur vb lot iJI Arch is iJ'Cl'Wing 1teadlly eVttY RENTALS $265 mo. Owner, !ll!Mi."MA.
lormal din, 3 BR. 2 ~ :....a•t·•ft• COVES ... '~&c.b Hta, La&una, Reu. ~u -and is RECESSION L ~--· ol 1 t!;4 SOI) -~ -X1n fin e PROOF! ...,....., 1u1ng df!r bdrm., 3 Bil, 2 ba, crpts, drpt. tundttk. • · ·wATERFROHT EARN 150/0 OOWNt ~~ 0-:.,r:;,; MIN. untumlhd unit, lge. tam. bltnlt, Jrplc, lge yard. Nr * * * 4~3034 * * * Prime loc.·3.BR. 2 ... a.t-~1-_...,,,, .nu"0•90 bet nn., rnuslve liv. rm. w/ 1="'="=·"~·=".;;.3~1_"'-:;.c5002,'-"~· ---1
QUIET BR --... ._, -.$100,IXX> cash Dpwt1 10 'am .. alt 5. nus COMPANY .•• A: CO!)". 1 eha:J'm. story, Newly decor. tr'eht'ed Jl71i.OOO lnans at 7%.S% wood panelling, old brick Laguna Beach
i11g apt In residenilia neigh. Y<l JO-ft. boat dip. ·$79,500 "AAA" TENANTS 3 A.rcll; ~. Laguna. xlnt • 1'1 01\f' of Iii@. top vending fireplll.ce. Ocean view, just 1--=---------., bo~ CJ••• IO bea•" • Bill G .. _, D--1 ocean view lot on Sloni-on operaliona in the U.S. .. ....... '--.._beach Truly
1 '""£· to';d 1 g1 .,.·uh 833 Dov '-Y· ..... tor· -J0,000 sq ft". OC ~ Ave, J u.st l't'duced iisOO. a .. ,,,.,., UVI" ""'" • OCEAN vle1v duplex, 2 BR. 0~~· 711 11 n..,1~ ·~ ... l!r Dr., N.B. 642..f620 W .R . DUBOIS INC. OWner Box 2203, Laguna e Sel11 only lOMllality, na-an ootstandin~ re~al at pr, S180. Laguna R.ealt,,y,
11·1.t re e!'E'nces, • ....., . MUST SE;l.I.. BY OWNER • M5-n66 * Hills 9'l653. t1ol\!llly advertised and ac-S?'JO ~lo. r. ase 1277 S. Coast. 494-00TI
uul. 494-8391 . Brand. ~w . ftt . 1 1 ==='-i-=~----ttd rod 2. 2 bdm1. furnished apl. al L N' uel COZY rotfa.ge. 2 hi~ 1roni btk beach: 3 br,~t>!: :! Shopping Center Sit• MON'ARCH BAY rare oc-ean cep P uct5. Woodl Cove. 150 yd.s. 1o l "~•~g~un~•o...._,'!'-'-----·I
-.1 10 ac, c .2 dO'Wlllown San view lot. Excill!live priv. e Secw-es vending Jocalior111 beach. Lf:t>. U'tt shaded pa. 3 BR, 2 BA. view, cptd,
Crescent Bay. Large front uv.c, ~am ctil!ngs, w/w Juan CapislltnO. or can be beach community. Leasehold
• yw.n:I; t.n!'e'S,' patiO, l Bl?. ~I. bu.re dbl C: a r , ,p1,·, f·r .... ,'-pm·•L Bia. ·~ ~ 4,._..19 p'°'E •'°s"·o YNoA" LmakeSAL~~ bo. , _ .., • .,. •1 drpd, Exira paved parki Sl50 mo. UtiL pct US Cajoh, &ll-M. · · u ""¥ ,.., '"'' _.,,,....,, · i:..:> IA:alie """' "0 · for traHer .t: boat. 3 yrs
•'" OQA" '\93-Uj,J or 493-1706 eves. RMI Estat• W•ntod 1•.a CAU..S! Tiie machines do 3. 2 bdnn. & drn, furn , s Id XI o t -• -""·_,...,· _ Ca.naJ Front· By Owner -o . • rouu. .,.,.,.,. $68,000. Priv, dock, '· BR., 'Condomtniums . lhe selling. lew -stepi; 10 ttu> sand Gi} 4!154244.
I 160 SOLD Santa Ana home, Mu.st Victoria Beach. Lge. patio ~'=c-'~--~---1
2 Ba. dn. &: 2 rm, & patio ;;;;o;;'r;s;•;;'I;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; b I" L-• e Has a P""°'ram Iha! aJ. 4 Bn, 2 ba, farri rm. 3 BR.. 3 Ba., aep, Uv. rm., •pl. "P .. Call·. 6~ .~12 · uy ge nume in CM, Fnt. ·-.. dec:k w/ocean view. "' fa -s
000
" ,........, Valley or HB area $8000 lnws YOU to n1ake money 11-M y Le fireplace, crpts, drps, patio, 7~nE::~:wi :ayrm 8~· .\pp·~.' N•wport Heights . RECREATION mind~ peo-dq, Must have rear access -part·timeorfull-tlme-SMI~si~N ~AL;~ viev." SZT;> mo. 714: 557-2690
EMEllALD BAY
B'll G undy R lt pie move to ''TIBURON" -for trlt. Ohl gar, 3 BR with investment• &! little 985 So. Coast Hwy., Lll.guna Newport Beach
1 r • ea or 4 BR . & p·OQL il .,..,., have Jived "oondo-· & den + ""'est h-·,.. ~~ a. .$600 to $1500. ,,....., 833 Dover Dr. NB 642-4621 ,;.-. "y "" u• PffONE 49-i·u•.>l l BR l BA I •-min1um .style" and IQved 1t apt over ,ar. Top $31.000. --'-'-' , . arse ..... me
GORGEOUS O«"an-hill view, Cape_ Cod 2 story prestige -move up to TIBURON 542-590'J • Has liberal financing a_fter Newport Beach on channel with pier l Ooe.t,
. modern 4 BR, 2 ba, horile. Large kilchen v.·ith whert real townhouse livini: \VANTED: Older home initial investmenl to Optr-SHARP 2 BR/, cmpltly large patio, $150 Pet' mo.
playroom bl!Jl.S. cpta;·arp.s, -all--bltins. Marble frpk, i8 in Jull .swing. brokel"!L. \l'nte, Classified 11.toni ·who prove-thtmaelv· remodeled. Slep.s to ocean. 637-0634 or 6'5-3435
decks, tencec1, $54,000 ... Mmnd~ien._ Large living & u you haven'l t.ried i1 in-ad N 101 D ·1 Pil o es, AVAIL Feb. l. '"e cusl"'"' Owner 4~3412 di!1ing . rm _facing .sparkliiig -, o. a1 Y ot, P .. I 213/598-496!l. ""6 ""'
1 Pa~al vest a Jittle time lO look JI I Box 1560, Costa J\1e.sa, • Jnvesfigale it NO\V -50• watorfront \Y/dock.. 2 br. fan1ily hon1e. Spacious Yard. Li~a Isle .J:IOO • !"' ocean view over. Calif, 'J~26 S500 mo. incl. gardenel' It from covem:J balcony I ,.,.-..,.-~-~-Jenced yard. Yearly. 3507
ON ·STRATA CENTRO -$55,IXXl or local trade '· \\~iCf! ~:sal~ A~~·il Now Apt. ·Units In good location E-'I Finley. CaU 833-113'1 waler. 67Hs9;,
4 B~roorm, J% Bat.ha L I!!\. · e .spec ize in s 1ng con. wanted by pvt buyer Corni H U f 305 1 BR apt fu rn '!\I June 15th
35 i"L +Lot CALI}.:,' ~46·1•14 dom1nium!I. try .us for real not. important. 675-3Sll. NATIONALLY ouus n urn. S140 mo. 4405 Channel
Street to Strata . _ ... : ·-ac\10!1. Pt~~rtlt'.$ needed, ADVERTISED BRANDS General Place. 675-1071. t m.soo . ' 1&1(7.TY... buyen; waiting'.! I [il l275d;;:~~~r ~~ivE NWPT BCH. Jmmac 3 BR, ;
LIDO REALTY INC. l"ilt•r lf~·••rt P••t Offltt llLEAS". "TIBUROoN TOW''., fNncioll I• DALLAS, TEXAS 75247 SOUTH COAST R.E. den, dining, 21h BA: from.
3377 V • L'•-67'7'MMI ' '" .,, Pro""rty Mngement Div. SJ&;,. Delta 646--441-4 1• HIV . "'° """! Sant• Ana Hei11hfs HOUSE" -1600 .sq. ft. 3 ~------~-~I r am interested in more in· ,..
'
• , 1 1. -.. Id .f BR, former model •.•• $325 * * 40' lot • Clean l br, . . bed.rm. 711. bath. only 6 mos. orma ion a ........ t ma ng ,.~.m U • -1 p k ....... ... ,,..., ... ...., .... ,.,..,...,..,.nroo • . . b 3 BR move in now .... ..,....., n1vers1 y er ba.. Newly redeoorated.
1
v1000w"o n. ~~~= ~ old AU """I and rec~ation Business money In ihe venchng u.si· ' .,...... ..... -,, ~" G 1 . ~ 1 h -• 10 3 BR, tri-level .......... i;__.
1 Large patio. $71,500. ...........u '73; hlcililies. 'Avail approx Oppertunity 200 ness. ave 8 car 8 "" m·-ge S BR fam•IY -h k · 2 BR, no maintenance · · $185 4 BR., family -m & Kl 5-2512 alter 6 pm · ... ._ • · ""· '2.}-71 otzrs per wee .spare ume. '"" 2700 !W;J. fl. 54.>-29'l2., l . R . I I 0 I can invest S6IMJ in a 4 BR, kids/pets OK ••.. S300 din. rm. Tur1le Rock• $360
M•ia Verde S erw1n •• ty, nc. AAA route. ~ BR, vacant .......... $300 2 BR. 1 balh ......... , S230 /
,. an ·JuM Capistrano 962·6988 anyto'm• cAuoy Au C II ""8424 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.[ "' ..,.o O I can invest 0:1500 in a a ""'~ 3 BR. 2~J baths ........ $300 ,
I• . . 3 ·BR; 2~!. BA Spanish SNACK SUPPLY rou1e. l BR priv cott;ige ........ ~ 3 BR. din rm, 2 11:1 .... S325 _A_C:T FAST! townhouse, bltins, .C P ts, YENOM W£ ESTABLISH Name ....................... 1 BR priv cottage, by stream, 3 BR, plus huge bonus room ,
A&aume 5-%,~ !OM on this drpe, pool , eltt garage, Is 1vhat yoU·u ..,ave on thil! ALL ROUTES Address ..................... in Silverado Canyon .•. $100 2 ba1hs .............. $330
sparkling 3 bedroom & fam-many $1.ther ex~. $30,500. 4 ht>d'rm, 1~ b<ith with pool {No se-lling involved) City ......................... 2 BR Cl'Pls drps, kids .. $115 7 BR., 4\.1: baths •······· $4..'.()
iJy room hornt'. JmmB.t'Ultttl' 644,-nill day, 673-1028 t!\ie. &: .recreatlon fac_ilities. E:c. CA.SH REQUIRED State -. · •... · ... Zip • •• • • • • • 3 BR home.' kids/pet OK $155 WE HAVE O'ffiERS j
lafldscaping. Owner ·must cellent Investment -acro.'l!I Plan one ............ S975.00 Phone ( ) .................. 3 BR dn, pool, kids/pets S18J
i;el1 immediately. Take Over I . ·R•M &uiit. 1 l•l from propo!!ed ·Fountain Val Plan two ............. $1625.00 Dept. 29690 ST AR* LET 776--7330
payments ol $165 Per n1o incl . Genet-ii _ ley l\liracle. ~!ile. Plan three .......... $3250.00 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3 BDRM. + family rm., full
princ. im, taxes & in11. Call. ~------~ $23,500 full pric• Excellrn1 income for a few Oli'ENINGS for wholesale dining rm., built-lrnl,, brk.
"J 1 1 ··11 ' .Il l I 1•lld.
---''ll1•uli11r 51{)-1151. Heritage RealtorS, l•lllil•illl•••••-· Larwin Realty, Inc: hnur! weekly work. !Days & drycl~ng &: Jor laundry . .$300 a month. NO FEE,
!opeh evnJ,:. Acreage for". sale . 1150 .· 962-6988 anytime Evenings I. Refilling a.nd col-Ph. 64&-SUO, uk lor Chuck. Newport, 540-1120.
FOR SALE BY OWNER
C.0.-.domiiliurft, Spanisb-w/w
carpet, drapes, b 1 t n s,
fireplace, l br. 211 ba.
Beautiful grounds & -pool .
Low maint.ell8.J)CP_ Adults .
549--0977
4 Bdrm.5, lrg 12x:M game'
room, 1%. batM, bUiH -·in
kilchen, rugs & dfa~i.
.$35, 700. Fw appointment j>h.
~7-919-i.
Newport Beach
$15,IGO F .H.A.
AnYOl'll' qwilifies IJ\Jbjed to
FHA Loan with 6~~-aMuaJ
percenlage n!ll'. Total pay·
ment $148 per month. Sharp
3 bedroom home glis1enini;
with ~WOOD fl.OORS.
1 luxurious baths.: mOdern
built-in kitchen.' Ready for
immediate oc:C'tipe.ncy. Cl
buyers welcome. CALL~ 1 Walker & lee
Realtors
2790 Hubor Blvd. at Adamii
5~ Opt>n 'Iii 9 Pl\I
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
VIEW-WOW $30;700
Thari; right~ Unbelievablp ~n
Newpor1 Beach. Vie""'· Large
BR's, Formal dining ~rm.
HU£e pane-led .family rm
with cathedral beam ceil-
inl.!.ot. 2 fireplaces + BBQ.
Cherry kitchen. 2 balhR .
Lath t. piaster. Custom
ti1Jtl1 . Te.rraced rear .Yard.
Blick patio .• \Voii't lasi.
Hurry and call (TI ~) 962~
FOREST E. OLSON
Jnr. Realtors
19131 Brookhunt Avl',
Behind In P•yments
$23,000 Full P rice
ShoH distance to oce.an· and
shopping. 3 queen-sized bed-
rooms. mas\eT bedroom halt
luxurious private beth. Ideal
noor plan wilh lots" of room ,
Upgrtt~ Cllf"Pel~ .llnd
matching dn\pes, St8Ji00 VA
Loftn with payments o~ Sl:iG
per month. Anyone can b\ly!
CALL -
Walker & Lee
Rea.Hon
!790 llarbor Blvd. /It' Adllms
5"-\.S191 ()pl'n •til 9 P~1
BY Owner 3 BR, dfn. 21,l
BA, Pool .$l9.SOO. 1936
Te~1fta Ln. N.B. 836-1537 * 223 OCEANVIEW A vt for
.ta.le by awntr. View or Bay
&. Ocean. 5"3-'7983.
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR··
QUICK CAiH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANJ-.AD ·
CONOOMINlUM -Monte lecling money from coin op. Investment 3 BDRM., Family rm., park
PRlVATE PART.Y selling Cello 3 BR, 2 BA. compJ erated di.spengers wil'hin a Dppertunlty 220 like yard. Costa Mesa. Kids
land al sacrifiee price to redtt. Dbl gilrap:e, . encl qualified area. (H~les OK, brk .• S200 a month. NO
principal! only. c ·ho ice namf' bra--' ....,nd d FEE 54"1720 patio. Enjoy clubhouse !iv-· "" .... Y an p D • d · ~ · Southern Calif. acre .. , for · 2 •na•'-\ F•• -r'°nal ! t artner -1re 1ng, . pools, no outsi de " ,_....,, · u, ,.,_ n er. ..-.. $150-Pool 2 BR r/o, refrig.
appreci11!ion Ii. capita I main!, \V iii rCnsidcr 2nd view send name, address !or luxury cpls/drps, w/d, child OK.
gains. CORONA. choi<'t' 2' T.D. S2l ,9 JO, Owner and phone number to Multi-~IOBILE HOJ\tE PARK Blue Beacon* 64S.0111
ACRES. ALL USEABI..E, -833-2.';72. Stale Distributing, Inc., 1681 Development in
CALffo'"ORNIA Crn·. level ""'-'-~-------West Broadway, Anaheim, MAJOR SO. CALrF. CITY .SlM -2 BR, yard for kids/
300 1tcres, S900 per At. No. Income Pr~rty 166 ca. 92802 1714I 778·5060. ALL city Utilities & Jl("IS, Available now!?
SAN· DJEGO COUNTY, 490 81 Ba on* ""Olli .QUALITY RENTALS DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED Sewers. On ~h1jor ue ec -~ acres $650 per Ac. Beautiful C Unit, • 2 d•,....lexo• _ .. _ke Arterial. A!l Plans $llj • Nice 1 BR stove reb-ig JNDIO AREA, 160 acres. y.. . l:i<J<l .$195 per Ac. Minimum root, blli\s. incl rehig's, l'Ai 11UNT'S -WESSON -New co111ple1e. Low Interest crpUi drp1. Singles OK,
purchase . 40 acres. xfnt ba. 2 lg ·bedrms !lllndeck multi-mil.lion dollar ad-Financing Arranged. Blue B•acon * 645--0111
Jer:ffis, ~ner. will ~. ewer l>rlv tarale'A: concrete ver~ged snack pack pro-RE.ADY 10 Build! Projected Belbo• Coves
ALSO, ·~asoned 1st Trutrt' dri~s. mahogany J>al)elling ducts. NEED NOW! PROFIT $1,800,IXX>.OO!
Deeds, varied amounl!I, Otl & much inore. Shov.·s xlnt ReliabJr men or v.'OmPn in ONLY QUALIFIED WATERFRONT, decor. 3
choice Jmproved & \lrrirn. yield on S65,000 price. Top yaur area to s e l'V ice PRINOPALS BR. 2 Ba. Mo. to ~10. $l.XI
pro\1!1'.1 properties In So. IOcaUon, a I w a Y s rented. lasl-moving roin opt>rated READY !o DEAL! Bill Grundy PJtr, &42-4620
Calif. Call owner, 5;;1-9700, Bkr/0-.vnr uy1 11en F1iA & produc1s in com P' n Y NEED INQUIRE. Coron• del Mar ~206 i>ay poin!Jt. Phone: 53&.8894 St'Cun!d loc.af ions, com. 7l4/32S-4153; il4/684-5555
Apal'W*hts for iale lS2 i -'-'-"'~'-·"-"-·------I mercial or Jaclory. Part or TODAY or EVE. 3 BR. on dnublt lot . Crpt.s,
"SINCE 1946"
ls! Western Bank Bldc.
Univt>rslty Parle !
Day• 833-0101 Nlghh
Westminster
3 BK, 2 BA, yrly lease.;
$2j0 per mon1h, 1st .l last.I
New "''P' & drps. 847-6&l2
Condominiums
Unfurn. 3201 .,
Huntington B•ach ]
DELUX.E condo 10!' lea ... 21'
br, den. 3 b1. 2%-car gar.
P ools, appliances av a i 1 ••
S260}mo, Js1 &. last + ~58.1
Eves 968-5941; 530-013~1
anytime. ·
Oupl•x•1 Unfurn. 350
Prestige
Apartment
Development
TRAD"'" full time, 6 lo 12 hours SEASONED notes balaoct" rlcp•. dbl '"'"" 121,· n10. c. Equity 24xbll Olym-per week -no selling. CASH · B Ibo p · pian mobile home, located S2a,OOO & S'j(),000 l'Xecuted G. H. Robertson Realtor, a • &n1nsula
REQUIRED .$600 to $1,497.1 by rnulfi.bl!hon $ m'"'· 101. 675-2410 in beY.utiful Orange Oiunty Write for more inlonnation: yield, Call owner '67s.S259 3 BR 2 Ra!h . }'rplc. Dsh\vhr,
p11rk for equity duplex. Instant Food Supply, P.O. 3 BLKS to ocean or bay, d ispl. S290fmo. y ea rly .
trlplcx., 4--pl~x. C.~I. area. Box 315.i, Torrance, Cali!, 1 ='~"~·~3048c::.·------~ 3 BR, 3 ba. den, din"i: rm, 6TS-2S25, &ta--0662. * 545--SlU * 9050. Include phone number. Money to Loan 240 bltrui, I.Rase. 613-3477 ~~~~~~~~~~
CORONA dei Mar/4 inrorne DISTRIBlITORSHJP FRONT house, 2 Bdrms. 2 · r
unita on 2 adj Jots, open 25 to 40"1'. RETURN on 1st TD Loan ba., carp., drapes. $225 [ Ap,1rtmentsforRent ]J~]
beam ceil's, frpl:'s, under mode!!! lnvestmt'nt ol S'200 month. Agent 675-2101. ·
$59,000. oWnr 837-2947 evP. lo $600 Nrw non-electric I 1'h:iµ, INTEREST AVAIL M/U'Ch l-Neu beach.
-48 Unit~
0\VNER will trade ;,ct !'>f •1•htripool bath with 1emlic 2 d TD L 1 br Quiet pet ok No "LA'i
equity in 2 C.M. triplexes ~ales potential Salesman n oa n child~n. $18:'> mo. 67J.-i741! _A~p_t_i._F_u_r_n_. ------
f\fagnilicrnt 3 l!lOr}, pride FOR 20 or more unit.ot tn ' arKl d1Slr1hu1ors needed for
1
C t M G e neral ol O\\•nenhip developmenl, Orangr County Principals Orang!' County areas. \Vrile Terms based on equity. I _;:.:0~·~•:..:.:='~,.=------[:;.;..cc.:.;:. ______ _
brnoo "''· "' ""'•'Y •~ ooly. "19-04l1 llydm,''"'" 521 Cam" 642-2171 5-45-0611 <J69 ( WATER RENTING FURNITURE
off ramp in lhe very heart Lota for Sel• 170 Highland Dr, Corona del I Serving Harbor area 21 yrs f p US COSTS LESS
of 0 .C, Masterfully designed I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Mar, Ca 9262~' Sattl•r Mortgage Co.
for efficient, lo maintenancr AVOCADOS FRIGIDAJRE. . . 336 E. 17th Street 3 DR Freedom Home, as i~.
operation. Combined ·-..11u-1 5-1.4 Acn!J in Lge .shopping cir. s .A. S2.">00 Mon•y Wanted 250 Very lgr fncd yard, kirls CiJmple!e. I BR . Fum.
perb quality to inSUl'e '\ Exd . gross e Alpha Bet 11 • i; \ • & pets OK. i;chools near 11s low a~ $22 per mo. profitabl~ long ttrm !nvrst· \\'il~sn;ie~:te :l:ea Centrr, \\'estn11nster $300() A VERY v.·ell es1abl 1sl1C'<i Stove & relrig available: I 00 "!. PURCHASE
n1en1. Property consists or l ~ t ~ 1fQwn • Anaheim n-newed busi llf'SS in ff'i;:ional Orange 64.2.2221 anytime f>16.9666 OPTION
33.1 BR & 15·2 BR units "1 pnva e rua . lauwtr~". ca~h oul • Gard<'n County shopping c r n t er VERY SJIARP 3 bedrm, 2 Ind 11eni se]PCl\on . crop managrment ava1l11hle c I h 1"14'Ni~ ex"" sinn "ap1tal nl ~I h d dPIU:<r carpett~g. drape~, el·
1
OWNER \\"ILL TRADE rove, ge stort>, cas ou1. , ,~.n." "' hath hon-... "·Uh crpts. cir~ ~· r. riv. 11lonlh to J\1o,
evator, recreation bldg. pool, 14• 000 (l) 525-1833 $30.00J l(l $.j(l,OOJ, Exce!!enl & fenced yard. l t · ~ CUSTOM
Pal'·-. T•~f•'•'-·at•'•o, mlo-:i. IXLN 'T J I 'npporlunity. Wr1le VACANT & d F,,,,,·rurt Rtntol ..... "'''' """" " ' oppor, or coupe.' Cla.s.'\lfierl arl No 41 Dally reA Y ll(l\o.', on
utes frnin almost all the dy. . Murner Serv. & dog groom-Pilol, P.O. Box i560; Costa month lo month ro a nirc 517 \V. 19th, C.to.r. ;)4S-34Sl
na.mir. major project~ In 0r: Ing . .!erv. Most completely 1\1esa. Calif. 92626 fam ily for S2CKI. Call agenl An11hcim 714·2800
ange County, JUBf compl'et-' rqu1p, on !18.me property. l,CS4&-4.;:,,~1~4~1.~~~-~~~ Lallabra 694-3798
rd, Price $640,000, terms Reas. lea!!'. Owners will Mortgages, 3 BR. 2 Ba. Bltn~. Ftc:"hly I BR priv hou .'\f' 1railer .. ~S.':i
open, -will con.sider cash + teach. Invest, req · d ·I Trust D•9d1 260 painted. crpt'd, hrch1•d llrs, 1 BR duplex, utH pai!l ',1
trade as down payment . REALTORS 536-24-19 alt 5. drps, palio, lncd yrd, 1 BR collage, util p~ l ~t11nagement availab~. SINCE 1945 WILL. Discount Choice T.O. W/e NET RETURN garderl('r & \\'I r pd . l BR vacant, util p: -J'I
COMPUTER· for $25,000 w/option. GUARANTEED S.2:25/mo. lst "'-last, S50 I BRSl'p11.rateuni1 $~
PREPARED . 673-4400 Guaranteed. Banlc r ef •5 on PRIME TRUST DEED, dep. 557-7027 eve~ & wknds BR I
Pay.bl' $2 ~, -·othly I uti pd, •01 .• s0J1
ANALYSIS BY APPT fil4l 684-5912 Rlvenide day ·"' ""' LARGE Ranch type 3 BR STAR.LET .izr~l.3301
RICK ALDERETTE PRIVAU: P.rt:y wlshea to or eve. 111 11-P.. EMERGENCY! & family, frplc, tully crp!d,
. '. . . aell larp Emerald Bay "B~E~A'U~TY~-,.,,,~.~--,~,~ .. -i;~0-,.-. ! I S~.000 Cash Rpquirerl. ouldoor BBQ Ii covered OEL!~~ID.:' ,, 1 8,. ~II{ lot, 494-9968. air ooM, beaut decor, roon1 714t325-4l5.1; 7141684-~ patio. S225 l\fo. Perron u.tu:.
Graduale, Realtors.JnslilUle DAll.Y. ffLO'T for actiotl!
1
,0 ex.pend, xlnl Joe, FV. TODAY OR EVE Realty &iZ-1771 turn apt $ :ated pool. Plto~ 547-6469 anytime Call '642-5678 & Save! Reas. R-t6-."i000, 846-MSS Ample ri111 No children SHARP 3 BR. :? BA, quivt · no l>C'I~. !$5 Pomona,
. .
S@~<tlt<\-lt£~s·
The 'P111zle with the Built-In Chuclle
O •-~· lettws of tM ,,c;:;:::,-four .UOrnbled wordJ bft. r r:~; ~~~ ·~~ ~
I ·o u Gr E 1 1 !1 l!l ''i '
I l · ff .UDOH I ..
I I I 5, .. ! . ~ rir:nork: "t hove 0 , j · dOIW wit~ o lemdie tplrllucll" ;:~::====~~tonight. I'~ going to try out
I
R ·E H B ,J L · 1•·new -. . , .• .-
1 ' j 1 / [ • I' O Com~loll ~· •h"'kl• •""'•d _ _ , by fl!Un; 111 1"9 m\Jllng word
• ' yqu deirirelop from itep No. 3 btlow.
• "\tl .. ~~.~~nERS ~ I' I' I'· I' ·I' r I
e u~~~M~~· um•s I I I I I I J
]~ street. Now \'&cant. 1240 per C~l. fl! mo. Call LARRY, He ritage CHATEAD LAPOl.NTE '~------~·~;; Real Esta!e 540-1151. DELUXE furn 2 Br. ·apt. I MONTICELLO CONDO, 4 POol. Cl~ 10 shoJ)9, $lID.
Houwt Furnish.cf 300
1
BR&. crpli thnx>u1. $235/ A• 1 1-----'------ull !Jt, no pet~ .
G-.eral ma, ~1;.-300.~ I ~-1-•_u_rco-"c"-"'~A~·=·~·=c~.M:.::.. -1 I ~.;.;.;c.;.;._ ______ ~~~.,..::=-:= c--:;;o~~ [ 1.; block to beach -l br, ~Util pakt, comp! tum, Pa.13 BR. 2 ha unh1~11. dbl gar Jllllio. $16!'1 mo. 128 fOth St .•
lio Ideal lor student &. dshwshr. S2l5 mo, Call 7141892-4936 • ·
Bli:,_ Beacon* 645-0111 ~6--0l5S STUDIO APT. I ~.,,;..""'~-"'-"-----1 4 BR, 2 ba -S225 including $1f0.2 BR yearly at the beach cardenlng ALL UTlLITIE~ PO;
Child/pets, singles ol!, 642-59&1 3.17 E. 21st St, CM
Blue le•con * 645-0111 LOVELY 3 BR 2 BA. modPm Balbo.I Pwilnsula
8.llbCM Island home. F"rnced yat"d. Grdnr e 12.5 WK-OCEANrno-S26.'i. &42--773.'l 642--0506 ,, • lovely Bachelon, 1 -Bit C BR, turn. Avail Feb
$315/mo yearly. Ge1 A:
pd. 646-2130.
lat. .,, 2 BR. de:n, lg kl!, nrw er-pt. ~taid service. Pool. Util.
2 children OK. Sl7$, Aft e lii>n40 e · ··
5:31'.1 call 6'12--0857
C d I M ~~-Cost• Mete orona • ar 4 BR, 2 BA. $225-including
2 Bf. turn. Firepla<'t, love.ly pf'dener. Call lor into,
p1.tjo &: yard. So, or Hwy. :"~,..,,...""'=·------LeaAP.. Atlults, no pell. m:i
1
2 BR nr. everything. yard.
mo. 61l-1~1. water pd, garb. dl~p. Child
Co1te Mesa OK S1 30. !)43 Victorl11
LARGE 2 br E-aide-:-$150
EASTSIDE Cos!« ~lt1sa, COl· 1 with water p11\d. I
1~. 1 l'ledmom , •finite on-CAii M;>-26..\i
ty enclosed aarace $160 &M;...21~8 ' I ANY O.y Is tile BEST day to run an ad! D on't
CUTf:. qui.•1 1 Br. maplr delay .. cRll today, 642.-5678
furnish, pC'lol, nt\I &. lndry Item.• "'1111 e!l~e. i·r,. nail"
CASA de ORO :
CASUAL C11llt, Uv!n~ Jn j
warm Mcdl1err11.nean a~
phere. Spacious ooJor ~
ordinated "Pll -destgMd l
furni~~ for 11).'le &-~
fort • Heated pool • Kltca.
en v.·/ Indirect U;hliftf ;
Deluxe JVO. Adul ta only, Nd
"'~· 1 BR.·fl'" tam..·
SCRAM-LETS ANSW,ERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 ~.~~~--~~---'--~-~-~--~-~~--' $130/mo. liO CH-! ~lar fliln' r•~ '1r I r '" "';';'p · tm1 .mES INCLUDED I
'l'-1• V.' \\"U-.on M2:'ll'fl
·-
•.
~ -··
·.
-.
·--,.:
~ . ,•
·-
·.-
-.
r ... ---lltl r-··· ... -lltl 1 .......... ~ lltl, ....... . --11'1 ,. . . -.. SI
1
,.,.. lltJ -
1-"""-.:..;.;;;..c.F-'-unL=----'Jlll.;.; Aptt. Pum. 3'0 Q. 61£,,._ Q Apt. t.h!lvno. IN ~.-,.._~•. ;;;;;;;;:;:;Apio..;, ;:;~;_;;:;;~~ , ,_ ,.,.._,
Cone Meaa Newport lloach Con• Moaa Con a Moaa ...!"~"!!:"'-~•!_!U!!-...~:!?:.._:m!!!__Jl'~-~:,!""!:!·"'!!'~.,!!""~':;·_:m!!IJF~-~~-~U!!nfum.~~_2219!! _.!,~"""~.!er~U~••!'v~m.:!?;.._:m!!!J :::::--::::-:::::-'::==:1
l-------'I -------:---~:-:----1-------l!:!H;!l'"'"~ ...... ~~·~·~·dl~=· ~H~'!!'~!!~•j~O.~o~··~··~·==ltc..t~•~·Mo~•·~---H...il"""" a.ado e $30 WEEK & UP 2 BR tumilhed, acroK 1b"ttt $170 fAllWAY '" "' ;.;.;;;;,;;::;;;;:.:..=:=;:;_ __ I
1 BR. 04 STUDIOS furn w/ from beach, $2Zi/mo, 3 Br., l 'no Ba, ~do. bit.Ina, 8-utlf\4 l It 2 BR f\ltn 1 BR; Newly decor, w/pvt
r.ompl. kilcben rau .~.). Call 642-6478 crpt1 drpl. A&k abOut our /) n . 11 or unflp-n ~. OFFERING patio. No pet&-K1dl OK.
Free linens, heated pool, air. San Clemente dila>Unt plan. 880 Center YllA APT$. oLa '1Q{uin"4 -"'ll{nfto"' aitlf dan. ovenL D/W Cln U:".'.:::-:*-:::-.......,'ii'::':':i::-,*---1
cond, TV 6 mald w.r'Vice 1.;,S'';",.;64213«1;:;;;;;::;_, =,,--=:-o•I 2 B ) ditpls N;wport~leech ' avail lT'S like owning your Park. SEACLIIT Manor Apts. 1 2 & J IR't CUUa1 estate llTiDf. Enter LI ~ 'Jler. drpar jacuz&I i, :!. C::: 3 ·s dehm --YNG este wants 1 ar t
Daily a: MontWy rah~• One block from ocean. 1 &: 2 Br, l~ Ba. $1fS..S160. Private patio, pool. ladlw, moaa'a ltllb. &relll ............ _ 6 t1NJ1 tree-H ' ....._. ............. "TS r. •apt.ill'm-11 flt Wtllmtl • ....,. bcb apt. -•" 81 BR apt.. $140. including •~ -•-w·-+ lined ~.,... ~r---• -~ • ._ llUl\o ~a.. Unfum. r-.t. A-, blba, Wrl-·. D. ··~-•-'"""" NPWport vd., at 21lt ......, move tn auu ........ laundry fl.e. . w ..... ways &o your·apl · .,...., ..... M-. .... ,.. .,.. __. -
e 642-:m.I e utilitie1. 492-461.l reg: discount. Crpt1, ctrpa, Near Ora.nee Co. Airport It ALL UT1Lmll INCLUDID Ml!itRIMAC WOODS Swedl1h stove, 2 ea. Cloister, Whltu.r.
B/Ami!rfcard e M/Oiarge Apt. Unfurn. 365 patio, pool, Infant ok, 1525 UCI Adults only 1 llt. Unf. $150 -Purn. $110 G:i MHrimac WI":;/ ~~~ ~=· ..!~;.,n EMPL. man .. --.._--,,,,.-•
• • • • • • • • ;..G:;;.e..;no_r;..•_I.._ ___ ..;:.;:,.: Placentia, 548-2&82 ·• .ai122 Santa~. Ave, I IR. Unf. SIM -P'ut'll. $211 a.ta Me.a 902 w .. Balboa Bl;i:N.B: 4.,BR. Founl Vallity •bome .
$6 nlte up $30.00 W1t up BEALIT, Country Club TUia. Mar Mn Joachim Apt S.A 3 Spac. Or pl d ~-•··~-II 1 BR. 2 (~·-"·• or N•-va.. . /Mme. $1> Mo. ---STIJDIO & l BR Apia 2 BR, 1\.ii BA , pvt patios, . • 546-6215 ' • Ull, ecor. lu.nuaDUI.... l'I -BR, 1% BA, t~k';wa.y). SC:n&t~ ill: Alt 4 pm
•Color TV, phol'"IP. sel"V. pool c11>t. drps, blt-illll, S2(16. mo, ~~-~man,tic seWng w/fup. f>!_p!Waey. cpts, drp1, nr &hope, pool. MID=,,-~-----....,.,,-..,-1
• Linens, maid aeN RV&il. For further info ca.U Jeanne OP.EN HOUSE SAT. SUN ... maa:u. poo . pri. sunken Pl BBQ'• W/ Util pd. 1884 MOlrOvia, ~7077. ... emp. ~ .
Cilp Ad .• Good FOR $5, Edwards 9&S-63.23. 10-2, BRAND NEW Eutakk seculded Mating compl w/Jltmada • fOUJ)o MS-0336. m1 beaut. 1P:. 2 •• , apt.
Charge Cards Acc . RENTAL FINDERS NEW TOWNHOUSE 1 & 2 BR. 1 &: 2 btthl •. taln. . ATTRACTIVE 2 BR apta. I II •J No, drink « 1m•ke.
2:176 Ne1vport Blvd. MS-9755 FrH To Undlords 1 & 2 BR, 2 BR, l* BA. ~w~. !::Scl~~ !:; * Color c~ord. •It w7 inJir•cf ll1hflntJ. rum $155. Unfum $1.lS. Nr RtntM ,-MUm.
• • • • • • • • 645-0111 Crptg, drps, self cleanin& all wtr A: pa pd Htd pool *. Deluxe r•nt• A •v•n• * Ptu.i, .Ut crpt9. Harbor ,,_. ·Wlllon. C.aJ.1 l "------SHARE my wa~1b0ml
SINGLES S130 mo, iocl util 435 W. lttl, c-. M.. ga.s oven, encl. 1ar. Patios, 324 E. 20th St. 646.-9Jt1 . 1( ·lonut sfotat• lptc• * Cov. carport 6'75-118111:30 to 5 pm. w/dock Man, ·S-40 ,_..
exttpt elcc. !'>tade rn 548.3ti05 377 w. Wilson. *Sculptured mart.~ pullftien A tU• Mtht 2 BR cr,tl drpl pe.tio Rooms 400 SlSO!mio. 675-4331.
lumishings. all bltns. Adlt.'1 Just for Single Adults Ou " ~Adult Livln.. LA COSTA * Ele_9ant ,.cr•afion room. Sl50 unt. fieo. ti.u=n. Xii .FFEM'iiij•ii•J:>::ii11io.,iiuii ... ioi;.;:.;;ii8iiiii1Niiiiil
orily. 197:-:i Parrons S 1 SOUTH BAY CLUB 2 BR. ~·hag cpts bltns ~aut NEW 1 & 2 br. Bltns, IW'im· ' fURNISHID MODI LS 0,IN DAILY 0rance Aw · CM. 56-WT ·ROOK~wtb&tb in Univ Park until JqM. Bll·W.. IJM9'
<corner 01 fordJ See mgr, APARTMENTS lndscpd 1170 'incl • .: .. util. ming pool It. ~. All Blk from Huntington Center, Sm Dil"" H~ .._.. for waman · or student. 5-9 PM.".onb" : : -' No 3 N -, .,q • Ull , ·-'• F Gold ~ Coll ... Poolt, tennia .courts. kitchen WANTED _ tna fW •wocma · · ewport S.a ch Adlts only no pel1J u tiea i"'-'U.. $150 1" $1711 r.ry.. enw-• ege. .1: Jau...t-• pn· ·vl.lel'• Call -~ NB
ACAPULCO Apts. attractive, 880 Irv~ Ave. 241 Avoca~ SI. * . 646-0079 mo. Adu.Its, no pets, 35f San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd .. So. on ....... :1 • to ..... B!utta hm. M
Pool Utrl paid, Garden !iv-, A do St CM KZ 9709 n--cb 3 .,,_ lo H ON BEACH I after 5 133--1157. ha, all priv, $80. ~ \ng. 'Adults, no pets. 2 BR (Irvine and 16th) OLDER 1 br, vinyl !loon, voca ., . . .DOm l,MA8o olt; W. on Holt to'' • . • OCEAN1'RONT lite Gar-1 for Rent,
$115. 1800 Wallace Ave., C714> '4S.0550 gar. Encl. rear yd. Prof. THE GABLES. UQuinia Hermosa 714: 147-5441 •Bachelor Aptl, 1'rom $215 housekttping rooms, Elda"--·-
C.l\1. 2 BR, NEW apt., bltns, shag lndscped. $100. $35 depot;. nlE SEVILLE e 2 BR unL From • ._. Jy centleml!'R ~. Un.en IG-.-•G-E-------I
crpts, drps, polios, •ar. 1 Adult oo -111 252 B .&-t Univ ••• •~ U fu 411• ..-. &: ulil incl, $80 mo. 67'";>-7566 A.JV\ • $25 per mantb. FURN. 1 BR . apt. Sl35. Avail • ,,... · 2 nf. 11,l Ba, w/ pr. Adlts, -.. • . rn. ~ ...,..,. n rn. ~ e J BR ruzn. From $285 EuWde, Colta ~ lit
Feb I. 1922 Wallac..-e Apt ~~905 356 E. :lOl.h, Cl\t Walnut. 540-8600. crpts, drps, ranae, tned )'d, Carpet&odrJLRes-dilhwuher BEAtrr, spac rm, col TV, Ao lalt In adv 642-U89
B, Adl!s. No meo. No pets. BE AUT. 3 Br, 2~i Ba studio patio. 636_..120 East Bluff Newpert leach heated poo!.a.unu-tennia; pool, kit, priv'1, N.B. $.U ' •
Info. 838-0038 Mr. Davis apt. Bltns, new crpts, drpa 2437-0 Orange Ave •155 -.. ,.. _ _...........,_ ... __ wk. Ph: 645-3143. Office Rtntal .. 1~=;,;;;==c-7'-'-""oc"oc-ICorona del Mar ,. Ckttntron 3 BR 2 BA Child ...... ,.,,.._.,.., .,..,~. JN QUIET. 4-plex, alt, lrg k i:>&-int. Avl Feb. No pets. 2GJ9.E Santa Ana Ave SJ.!iEi 1 BR. medallion Condo; all t • • -pattO.-ampta pu1tins UPSTAIRS, pvt liv'1 rm, br
1 BR. 1mmai::, FA ht, $19S. 998 El Camino , MODERN J Br ]IL ha bltnl, refrir, entjlpatio, ren ' pet OK. Yriy $275. Secw;tv -··"""-It ba. Sep entry. No cook-
s ~6--0451 • 711 --'· quiet """ ...,. at>'t~ 575-1410 2210 W. Oceanfront. · v •--· l ·~ •-2185 dsh1vshr, gar. J\!al adlt 125. amonc pints on cul.de-sac. i"""• • "...,.,, .,........,.... HUN11NGTON rll"·...., mo. o.>.:>-
548--6956 · ~-NEWLY DECORATED Encl pr. Nr bua. Come fountain Valley 2 BR .I: den, The Marina ' e NICE rm for workinc
QUIET, studios Sill, 1 BR's "-' ~ 2 Br. wlgar. $130. \Valer aee many luxury ltems. Square Apts, PiO mo, PACIRC man w/cookinf· priv, C<>&ta
$125, No chldrn or pet.'!. ~· :i~.A~~6-B Place:n-Adults. Jl.55. Mfr, 124 E. ALL NEW * &&S-025J·* 'f1l OCEAN AVE., H.B. Mesa. 642--03l6
2135 Elden Ave, CM. See ON TEN ACRES tta ve . .,.,,.,-, 20th. VALLEY PARK LARGE 2 br, 1% ba. CJ1>tl, Cnf) 5J6.1'87 YNG colle1e or working sir! :-"~"-•~•-"-'------11 .I: 2 BR. Furn .. Urdunl * NEW LUXURY 1 & 2 Br. SPAC, 2 BR studio, l'Ai ba, APARTMENTS drp1, bltns. nr. Hoq HOlp. Ofc open 10 am-6 pm DADy Balboa I&I. Kit a: TV nn
BEAU1'. Bach &. I Br. apts. Fireplaces / prlY. patial / dwhr, •shaJ: crpt, garage.'!. New w/w cpt, drpa, bltnl, opeN new ·doors for $115 mo. 842-4387, MJ.tm., WlLLlAM WALTERS CO,. th. $65/mo a: up, 61'>3613
SlS wkly & up. Furn incl Poala. Tenals-Omtnt1Bktlt. ~~ng ~:..~Q. Quiet adult Encl patio, $165. 548--M.15 • : .YOUNG P'AMILIES 2 Br. Oceanfront S230 yriy '* SIS PER wee:11: • llP
util. f\tonthly terms avail. soo Sea Lane, CdM 64+-26ll
2
BR ••-•• + p·~'-g, Dane Point 2 IR. Apti $161 Cpts, dl;>I, bltna, pr, patio 2 Bil Sl.55 Up. • 3 BR w/kitchtna. '$2150 per week 998 El Camino. 546--04.51 CM.acAttlnD' !!!'. CD« Hwyl ...... ...., ..... ,, J BR G•rden _._.1 $17S 5009% Se.aahort 213: MS-1921 $1)) UP. Patio, pool , • up Apta. MOTEL. ~91S5
$155 . SHARP 2 BR. crpl.'1, drps, bltns. Adults ' L """'' N H 'thf chlldn!n ok. MORA KAI
Pool. Adull s, 00 pets. (teen • MARTINl"'UE • only. 22W Rutgen Or., s;:-rr level, /2 nR.:.:~.~!..~ 2 IR. TOWftlMMIMI $1U ewport • • Apts. 18Ul Mora K.ai Lane, :--l ::a ~r:n:!v:'.
ok). "*" 642-9520 T &1frli919. uc:ue or mo. mo . ....,,... .. ..,,. SPACIOUS 2 Br trpl ' tJ: % blk E. of Beach elf
Park-Like Surroundings ,m wk-l ""r, "'/kit $35. er/ciryf'r.' l&raie, fenced prl. Pre-.choo~ center. Adult pool, drpr, patio, ~. • A'::U: Garfield. 96J-39!M Phone 5f6-0f.5l
SUPER-D!:LUXE QU.ALITT
1·2-3 room, Up to !,UIO "Ii
ft. GWce l'llltes. l!UMd. °°"
cupancy, Oraiwe. Ccuntr~
J.IO'(>Ort lrvbie· ,C.,,...,=!
Qimplex, adj. Alrportl!I'
Hotel • Restaurant., banb.
San Dieiro A:' N'pt P'Wys. ·
UNCROWDED PAJtKINC
I:.OWEST RA~
Owner/mar-2112 DaPont 1:1r:
Rm. 8, Newport •BMdt
l33-J2'l3 Caurtny .. -
510 •· 29th NB Office « lbap:
• 2 nn1 neat, t:.th
bay $U5,6T.l-2'64 -·-----DLX l Br. ne w. Frigidaire DELUXE 12 3 BR .,.,...~ ..,., .. ~ va•-""ho Children• pool Prlv patloo. -& IU" •""" ?-.1aid ser, linens, TV a: tele. ic: .... • • no pets $170 146-1912 1 Ao 2 nR'1. FROM $125
appliance . Queen sz: bed. Also FURN. BACHELOR Seal.ark Motel 2301 Npt LINGO REAL EsrATE Elec kitchen1. Wall 1" wall Santa~, . Owrlookinc beaut prdenl l---------l!tl I ,, '
Co mp!. crpt"d. caU 646--9278 Prv patios * Hid Pools Blvd 64&-7445. 499-1397. 494-23211 or dOIM!ta Ao carpets. 2 pi.y. patio A: hid pool.. Adults. "6=b1wntafar.... 9 •b••lbb91111t Ill'
1-"-'-'-' -------:Nr shop'g • Adults only 2 B~ 2 BA pvt. balcony 494-4191 ll'Gaie~· Carpxu .I: ator-VILLA U•llSllLLIS 1035 12th SI., acrou from"-------..!. , .
l BR, rurn. $150 incl util. tm Santa Ana Ave, CM Cpl, drps, blt-in8. Encl. E•sf Bluff """' Lake Park. ~2692
Pool, garagf!, di s p o s a I . Mgr. Apt 113 • 646-M42 IRA.ND NEW Adul!i;, no ~Is. 642-2383 gar. 2195 ~tiner. Adulb!, no 17256 S. Euclkl St. S,ACIOUS Aptt., Apti., Aptt.,
l--==="-'---'--1 ATTR.AC. Like new. 1 &: peL<>. NEWPORT llEACH (just IOllth oi Warner 1-1 & 2 ._.,,_ _....,. P'urn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfunt. 171
2 BR. Duplex. B!tns. Pvt 2 BR apts, Dshwhr, crp!s, LRG d 2 B 2 Ba -· ••• ....-•-
yd. 368-A 16th PI, CM. $150/ drns, bltns. Htd pool. All • ean .r . ' Villa Granad• Apts. Fountain Valley) .Adult L1w1"1 Genor•I ft-noral G-'-ral .,. crpt, drp, refr11, range. Phone (714) J40.47U _ _;..;..;.;=;_----....:-::::::::.:.:_ _____ .;::·::::·-::; ______ I
mo. Children ok, S.19-3666. util pd. Only $150 & Pool. Adults. All util pd, Four bedrooms with bUcon. P'urn. & Unfurn.
BACHELOR apt, com pl furn, $165/mo. Jnq: 307 Avocado. Sl50. 54g...2407 i~s above a: ~low. Gracioua Irvine Dishwasher. color wwwdtnit.
incl util $110/mo. 2425 I ~A"'P'c_l,_'9':_. ,<>64~5-0984:CJ:Jl~----1 :.-mmm,-.~;;-,-;m ]lving &: qu1P.I surroundina ed appllaneea • plub, lhac
N
'
Bl " 0 ,0 ••~ WI' "ON GARDEN , ~s, * DELUXE l &: 2 BR. for family with children, NOW LEASIN'"-! ca111et -cboioit· ot J ~ ewpor vn. ""'..-o-<U\' i....co IU" 1 Garden Apts. Bit-ins, priv. Near Corona de! M,v Hla:h v -• 2 ..... _ • ~•
FURNISli EO I B A 2 BR Unturn. Newly dee. · _.. I ~• --~ r. pl, Ne\\' cptsfdrps. S p a c paUo, heatcu poo, '"'l"c. School. Flreplace wet bv Ir New, lamtly and adults units lhawen, ~ ~ wwd-
adult.s only, No !M'IS. Quiet grounds. Adlts, no pets. Adults. $145 mo. 546-5163. huiJt.in kitchen aPpliance:s. ¥.i th total rtereation club robe doors • indinct lllbt·
.:irea. Call art 5. 548-~ Sl40/mo. 7283 F 0 u n lain * 2 BR. elec bltns, lock. 835 AMIGOS WAY 644.2991 a nd pre-achoo!_ l, 2, I: 3 in& in, ld.idrtn .• bnaJdut
LRG, clean apts, Sl0.~$150, \Vay E. (Harbor, tum w. gar. ~lesa Verde area. BJ1 Cold11i·ell, Banker Ao Co. bdnns from $150. Nr. shop. 1*r _1bf1P Pd.vat. lenoed
tu rn or unfurn, util pd. on \\'ilsonl. closet11. $155/mo. No pell. Managing Agent 5'1-52:21 pifl&', aoll. sehooil1. Juat patio • pluM -~ •
Arlults, 548-2401 Cost• Mes a S.i7-8400 .auth of s..n OlelO F"wy. en brick a.r-B-Q'1 • 11r19 beat.
BACH. Spac. mod nr O.C.G. l ·BR. Avail. Feb. ls t . Huntington S.ach Culver Dr., Irvine. 1133-3733, llT ~ Ao lanai.
\Vkdys a ll 5, all day wknds e CORSICAN Mature only, Bltns. SlOO PARK WIST J101 S.. lrl1tel St.
Sl20 incl ulil's. 546-1152. Month. 122-D Mag m I i a NR. OCEANFRNT, ocean APARTMENTS (14 ML N. o1 So, Cou· Plaza)
New, large, deluxe 1.2.3 BR's. 494-4695 view sundttk smor he •-I •--1 BR. $125. Pool. Spacious. P . . . . _, 3 di 2 B• bl • Owned and Manapd by -n a _.. Adults, Ideal !or Bachelors. rivate pallo liVUlg, 01"Y 2 BR C t d..,.,s sto e newer " r. Ins, epts, """"-r-"'·-Com--PHONE 557 -neighbon in your bldg. . • rp s, • ., · . v • drps, lndry nr ahopa .I: pier, .,..,. .... u., ,_.., : . •.&vv
1993 Church. 543-9633 refr1g, Carport. Util pd. $165 Adi•· b by k I j"jj'i(!':;"i~i'."i;:'/i~T,::;J ;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;I Bltns, d1•"hr, forced air heat, .., a o FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. !lihag crpts, drps, frpli:: in 3 QuPI ie t la~t. .,A~i;.,,_,;"estclifi 536-lut • . 2 BR's, stove, refril', dr,.,
Except'oonally n;cel B (" , E So h I ~'""~"'~'2''~~, !:~~~~~~--l2m1-.;;;;;;:-:.-;:;;;;:;;;-;:;:;;;;I w/w, modem. Ocean View. l'llf'T BE B£AJ r, gar. 72 nn .. o! ut li.RG 1 Br t All new 2 BR, bltn1 .t retrig, erpts Adulis. $250/rno. incl utll. llM ·
2110 Newport Blvd., CM Coast Plaz:a: turn oU Sun-· a?· . &: drpe. $150 incl util'1. Also N. Lquna. HY ~28Ui t1r
Dana Point llower al Rooi.) crpta, drpio;, tile &. paint. 2 BR bltin1 Ao retrig dTJll (213) HO 5-&711 SINGLE !TORY
FROM Sl."I() Bltn.,. Sl45Jmo. 546-04!il A h •-th ' t •-·• .. S.a A-~ I 998 El Camino CM. I ag crp<& ru."u • L •---L .:llQ\lu1 .. ..,_,,,.., •• SIN~GLE, TV, pool, pet!'i ak. 540-1913 or 56-2321 ' Upstn w/ocean view .1 .:;•:ipunao:;::,..:~=:=----2 BR.. 2 SATH
$2:i &. up wkly_ DANA 1 NEW DUPLEXES Tradewlnds Realty, M1-85ll XCEPT 2 2 • c.&rpeb: Ir drpt:
DELUXE 1 2 3 BR W h /•-· hook E • nice BR, aA, 1\larina Inn 34111 Coast · · · as · er "'¥er • $140 N child Alr Ctindltloned 11 TOWNHOUSES up encl gar patio rrcd air gar, ocean w . 0 ' Privat.e Patioa · wy. 111 · V rd ' •546-1034 · ASK about our dlK'OUnt plan! no pets_ $225. 567-6360.
Huntington Beach ON NEWPORT BACK BAY I ~~·~"~;::'c;:.'_:;•:,c"::'::.' ::,::.,c:;~I 2 BR, crpts, drps, bl.tins, car-New-rt 8"dt HEATED POOL
A'ITRAC, Studio apt 2 BR. port S2S Move-In Allow-I ;.;;;.:;,:;~""-';...:;==---Pl«nty of lawn
BEAU1'1 FUL FURN. APTS. 3 & 4 BR-3 Ba. Frplc, fam 11A BA. Crpts, drps, bltns, ance, 725 Utica: 536-~. PARK NEWPORT • caft Carport I: Sronp
Sl40-SlS5. Quiet. priv, patio, room, double garage. Beaut. retrig pool. No p e t• ·I~~-~~----trH llvi owrlkl: the water. HIDDEN VILLAGE
2 wardrobes, frplc, dressing lounge, Pool. Billianls. 64fHi610 1 BR. Brand new. Priv. 7 poola, T tervli1 ct1 S7SO.OOO GARDEN APl'S.
rm, locked aep. gar. Pool. Adult & Childrens area NR new 2 Br 1% Ba patio, rugs, drp!i:, dshwhr, Spa. From $1.75 to ~ 2500 South Salta
Sauna. Rec rm. 3~ Riviera Dr. 64Ul300 cpt/drp&, atvfdshwhr, gar: d~~~· A~f:· 34n;_~a or Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Aho 2 Santa Ana. Q 5'6-1525
17301 Keelson Ln. <1 hlk \V. Av! now. 71i6 W. Wilson. c 1 ren · ' 1ty Townhou8H, Elec. kt.
ol Reac:h Bl"'d, on Slater ). VILLA MESA APTS. 642-7958 NEW 2 BR trom $ll5. Cpts, pri. pat or b&I Subtrn parka, l'!'-"'""'"'""""m!!!l••I * 842-7848· 2 BR Pliv patio Htd pool $165 LGE dlx 2 Br 1% drps, bl tN, patio, tam we-opt mail R'r' cpts, drPI Jwt Apt1,,
$155 -NE\V 2 Br:-<:rpts 2 c~ encl'd g~. Childrf'~ ba. Quiel~ aduits. G.E: Kit. ~~ay area, No pets. N. of 1'1.l'hton Ill at Jam· f'um. •r Unfum. J71
& drps, stove, hltns: gar. "'elcome, no pels please! Storage, 240 E. 16th Pl [.,;;.;:.,~~=~~=-bortt I: Sa.n Joaquin Htlls 1----------1
h::r.lcony pat. 309 Lincoln, 1 $l6.'i mo. n9 w, \Vil.son. 548-6432_ CHEZ ORO A.PTS Rd. 844-l!m tor Jeaatrw inflo. Genrlral
536-1824 646-1251. e e B GGER th ho 8234 AUant.a, 1-2 BR, pool, A New Way Te Live RENTALS NO TEE
$125-$13:'1. LGE, modern l br 1----------l an ~ m,. private garage. Wuhen, nr hc:h: crp!s. drp~. eic. HARBOR GREENS 3 Br, 2'.i Ba studio. f l90 dry'"· 536-8038; 5.16-:rm In Newport Beach 1 BR apt furn, $125
40!! Calif. 5.16-4261, 847-5169 GARDEN k STUDIO AP'T'S mo_ No pet.o;. 54S--5270,?.::::<::c::.,=:=::'..::::.='-OAKWOOD GARDIN 2 BR apt prt-tum, Sl.SO 833-35-UI BEACHBLUFF Apt1 APARTMENTS 2 nR HP unit, trpl, $160
LAR<:~: modf'J'n single s1ory 1 B;ich. l. 2, 3 BR's. [rom $110. A'ITR,\C lrg 1 Br. Crpti, NEW 2 BR, 2 ~a, dlshwaa_h· On l&th Strftt btwn * Bkr, 646-8235 *
2 Br. $150/mo. Ca ll 2100 Peterson \Vay, C.M. drps. bltns, patio, gllr, en:, pool, patio. 8231 Ella, Irvine and Dover Or. Cotta Mase
968-1-141, cve!'i 962-71/IO. I ;,.16-03i0 adults, 00 pets. $1 35. 842-8477 or 847-3957. (714) 642-1171 iiiiijiijijiiijjiijjiiiiml
bELUXJ.:: Bachelor U.nits · * COROLIDO APTS * 646-1762 1 BR Madilllon Condo, all --~c::..::.::::.:c:.::,__
Walk to 0Ct>an. Ut1J pd. 2 Br sludios & fi treet levels $!4!) _ 2 BR. New drps, crpls, bit-Ins. refrig., encl patio, * IA YFRONT * · Vlll.A CORDIJYA
LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 $185 & up. Penthouses $220: !ttove. Adul!s, 00 pell. Call pool, qul,t. flJO, 675-5034 Hia;h-rlst 2 BR'• from $295.
APT. Walk to beach. No Dshwhr, frpl, dbl carport. 64.2-5848 WALK TO BEACHll 3 side tie AliPI available. NEW NEW NEW
Summer \ncrea5"s, See mgrP ·.::"_c'::.'='~'~-33-07_8=~~~~ 2 BR Studio. Patio. Adults LOVELY NEW 1 Ao 2 BR. 6f2.%MJ2 719 15th St. 5.16-3900. ::-'"'=,,;;=~-~~~-DUPLEX, 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 New crpt.s & drps, encl pr. Crpts, dtpl. Dllhwaabus. \l.'I:S'l'CLIJT -2 Br, l 'Ai Luxury 40 Unit Muft
garages, ocean view, h1rge, $140 mo. 548-2822. 709 Palm * 8f1·3957 &, IPlit lev. Adlts, ,.., petl. Apartment Complex Laguna Beach
S285 lease. OR WILL SEW. 2 Br. Crpt., drpa, 1613 San-ADUL TS.2 br STUDIO !'!?' -~ Lb. PIO/mo. $30 WK LUXURY $1S.<m, 49<-.::2339=-~-1, AM A•" CM, 11"'/mo. "' ha, patio, balcony, 1ar· 1 .::~::-::'~=· -----
& up. Bachelors, singles 1 DELUXE 2 Br. apt. View 542-7?19, eves 543-3512. age. 2 blks from ocean. '150, YEARLY leut, Ip C br,
Bdnn, steps to bch, all u·til, windows, util pd. P riv enlr. * * UNUSUALLY 1 ..... 2 br 1401 Olive, H.B. I: 2 bL. Ocean brffaea.
hid pool, linens, rec nn, New crpls &. drps. Sl.85/mo. ·e Jtefric A dlmwuhtr. $275 restaura.o• cockla.lls, da.nc· 675-1874. 111. ha studio. No pets. $145. E•1t Bluff mo. St6-21T6 ·
., l S45-~0 833-3540 tng. 2 BR, 1 ba. frplc, garden ' • . 1 BR w/sllNe Ir rt:fric CTptl TOWERS • Water view apt
I & 2 BIDllOOMS
PUllNISH!D 011
UN,URN. .......... _ ...
• Spedal cablmt space Village Jnn •lotel Apia setting, $175 mo, gas 6' DELUXE 2 br -Adu1 ll over A: drps. Nr beach $rls mo. 2 Bil, 2 BA. Feb-June ht
494-9436 water paid, Gar a I e , 40 only. Reasonable. 263-265 Tradewlbdi Realt:;y 847-1511 '325 montb ta-DD • Lock pn.ps w/ 11' ltclr
4IM• • em cell • UMhJ' •·Padol
-.,Dwhr/dl'P.I '• Gu -WEEh"ENDER, Room A 644-2562 16th Place Apt Unfu ' JU AJA Unfurn.
bath only. Near beach, b1.11 2 BLKS from ocean, 2 Br. QUIET 1 .I: 2 BR., pr I: • m . ' ·-~ .. ·-........ ~
GAS & WATart PAID
mJ•-Aw.
k shoppini. 494-7079 2 Ba, rrpt, bltns, crpt•, pool. Cptt/dl'pl. Adults Founteln Valley P'euftt•hl V•lley
Newport BeaCh drps. $235 &. $250. 328 only, no pets. 642-8042.
Marauerite. 675-4873 COMPLETELY Redec l.ri 2
BEAUTIFULLY f'Urnlshed 2 BRAND new 2 &: 3 Br apt1. Br. blln8, new drps. crptt.
Br, full bath apt. Sheltered Sti of hwy. 322 Marrueritt. Child ok, Sl.50. MZ-7315.
11undeck. l \3 blocks oH 64~1342 or 673-22'12. 2 BR, new crplA A: drpe.
beach. Super market laun-F d I 11~ 64' -·• etrrE l BR apt, suit couple, orce a r ,JU, -..cm drama! close. Yearly lease ...,
I Uul sundck, bltns. or 96S-t6 .... on y, $250 per mo. lties "°'='""""~~==='I pd, ht It. tut monlhs re:nt. * 644-7902 * 3 BR, Ya.rd. 2 CHU.DREN
No petll. Gtlrage. 548-6342. 2 BR, t ba, frplc, am patio, OK $175. After 6 pm, call
OCEAN"f'RONT ··LoVe\7 lrg pvt pr. NO PETS. lnfant1 ,,::64:;>--085;;:::;7c__~-~~-I
3 Br, 2 Be,, Chlldre.n .It OK. (213) 431-1195 2 BR, crpt., ~. blt0lM,
good pet1 welcome . $275. 2 BR. den, ·tpl ., bltnl. New =~· V!of'p<>i!: ~~~~· no
Feb l -July 1. Showlna: carp. Patio. ~ Elm, Alt 1 -':;:;;.,;;~::r~:..Ci'ic-.-~I
evea or wknd1, 2210 W, A. t.170. Adlts 673--0510 •LOVELY 2 BR. 1 ~; BA.
Oceanfront. 675-1410 -"'-'--'---~-'---· 1 Studio. Patio, Clean. 155 W. I,-==-,=-=:--,,..,,-SPAC. 3 Br. studio, 7!,.ii ht. Sth CM 2 BDR.i", din's nn. llv'g Lrg kitchen w/ e1ec bltna.1,.;1~,.:St::;,!,' =:;,~-~=~I
rm. MON111LY or YEAR-New w/w apt, d r pa, ./ l It. 2 BR. Unfllm, heated
LY. CIOl4! to beach . freshly painted. Nr schls pool, crpt'd. No peta .
• $160/mo. A: frwyt. No pett. 54S.-tl93 $145/rno. util pd. ~21d.
a44-9108 ot 67"'~ l.RG 2 Br, l~ Ba ltudD DLX 2 Br, 1 % Ba Studio.
OCEANFRONT 3 Br,.2 Ba. apt, no pell. f.amWta only. Bltnl, CpttJdrps. No peta.
crpts, drpl, dlx. Winter. Pvt patio. 126 Joann St. Av\ Feb. 1. $160. ~1
$250. Adulta only. No pets.1 ,,:S:;l"'-o'~~~-~~= $170. 2 BR, 1% ha 1ludk),
1~'7'-ll088==-""'--,--,,,..~7.", 2 nR, l~ Ba atudk). $1 75, redec, cpt/df1JI, adj shop'&·
2. BR. v,ry prlv11te, ~ blk util Incl. Patio. :\.19 Cabrlllo. :543-8301""'=;c:;·'=1'213=.1""2->271=:,::;::...-=I
to beach, S175 winter. SDI c548::8803:::.:::::::.::°'c.::8'6-3643::.:::::::.· __ OLX 2 Br, cpl, drpa, R
yrly avt\I 211. &&6--0S2S dyw LRG. 2 A: 3 Br. crpui, drpl, A: 0, prl pat1o, encl pr.
HE Fastest dniw In the ~ahl,p Pt1nttd I d•an.. Jl55. No pet.. Heft. 646--1411
We5t ... a Dt1lly Pilot Kids Ok. M6-0627 or A lood want ad Ill • sood
Cla511\flt'd Ad. 642-56711 &4~4. investment.
. , .. 1a11111 ...:,_
..... IMll
,_!'sf a 11*1 !''I
••• t •"tOf-·--•a..~ ._.._ _..._._
.CM , .
an w • ..,.11 < """ -•Newport 1DW1i. ~ ml·M.
., 11111 •>-' '. 1 ' .-cau.-lll;eOll· ' '
oiiili!ii 1 'A 2 It'. -.,_,,~ .. """''
ITT ... 2loiol II.' Cit -
< '
HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults
Look Into ...
OPflllllt:lnCIAL-1-flOll$145!
CAS4delSOL N11r an belchn • Prtw1N 1emct •Rec 8'1ildi1t1 • SM1S
2 Pools • Billiards• Gym .. Pvttinc Green 1nd Voll.,W
lulH-;n ~!<lens• Olsl:waslllil • Dlspoub • C.rpeb/llnpa
Cl"' to 111 tfoopp)n1 • Pri'11t P11lin11nd SIO!ICI
Al.ID: 2 Bedraom w/Fi~~"' foom l20l
21151 llool:lllnt, ll111ll1111M --(714) 162-tlill
HUNTINGTON HACH -AduR lftd F1mily Soctlonl
The po881ble dream ..•
I W_ F,_ lllS-i"*-2 -F•llS
HUNTINGTON · G·RANADA'
"inti ltt'rKt • 3 Pools •/C.blftts • Bvilt-h1 Kitdllps
Di1hwlSMr1 • Clrptb/Drapn • Wtl~·il tJoHts • Dressinc ltootns
Cl"'''' $hoppin1, All lltath" 1n<t Lohun Arus
1n1t-llillSt.,'11-..-(714)14MD55
U:Iit Sooth Of Wornor)
'-'·-.
.Mmiljedlly: ' w• llWIUIEllT ce .. &
"
' '
I
' I
,1 ....................... . • ----. ' .. .. . , -. ~ -. ' ..
'
llollLY t'Jl.OT
l[g),lili;il iiiiiL,,.iiii,,,_iiiiiiil[Il]-•J I _r _L.,._, .... _,_[Il] ~I ;;;;;L,,.,mii-• ~llIIl:;••,
Found (f'" odal 550 Help Wonted, MA F 711 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710
.............. ,. 1r..-11.~_i_~ __ .. _ ... _~J ' '
OVERWEIGHT?·
SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER
6 WEEKS $20.00
UnlimJted Visits
;. INCLUDES:
:-Personalized Courses -Whirlpool ~teaffi Bath -Free Babysitter
rsauna Bath -Heated Pool
• -plus Sunroom •
When You
Want it done
right •••
Call one of
the experts
listed below!!
lJGHT bn'JwQ l'UWY· Whtte
throe.t and black tip tail.
Vic of Or9nge ~ lStti SI
1n CM. 64z..6308
CHUIUAHUA./TerTler mix,
male, yoo~. vie U.CJ. Call
1l33-fiOOli or llS-7429.
FOUND blk It: whl llhaggy
dog, Vil:!: Fountain Valley
City Hall, mal.e. 968-3052.
BRJGJIT Poodle, vie of
TOll'flE' & Monrovia.
642-4826. Llc No. 642--4826.
lRISH Setter, female, found
vie Cl ift Dr. I: Riverside
Dr .. N.B. 642-3056.
! OPEN 7 DAYS PER WEEK .. :.GARDEN Slj)UARE HEALTH CLUB 1-8-0 b-'y_ .. _ .. ,_ .. ,_ ___ ! Gordon Ing
DARK 11lriped 1tray cal Vic.
1'ukon Dr. :-runtington Bch. .. ,...., 2 GARDEN GROV& BLVD. GARDEN GROVE V~RY reliable mother \l.'OUld AL'S Landsca)llng, Tre e • ' like 10 take care ol your remo\•al. Yard ~mtldding. BRICK, block, concrete , r· 714/537-5410 baby in m}' home. lnrant-1~ Trash bauling, lot cleanup. c.arpentry, house le~lil:w,
yn. C.i-.1. area. 5.ll-3032. Repair sprinklers. 673--llli6, all types remodeling, No job too mWl. Lie. Contr. S~f. female chocola!e point \VIU.. babysit )'IJUr child in YARD Clean-up, Hauling, 962--6945. Siamese, 5 yrs old. About
I[-""] my licen&ed home, age• 1 Garden inl'. PrlceH 12123 · o. b • 'I th ~ bl C 11 Bob Pao'nt1'~ & , In ...,a ury tract, off thru "• "on ru :r ••· reasona e. a ··• Allanla. 536-8337
" --~--'~"----1 1..0sr; An Aussie 1hephenl
lost SSS
ACTION
HERE
AT THE
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;!,"~""°~"~· ruleii"Bt,..&;;;;: ,.,;,,..;;.:"""~----~-'Pa~rhanglng SLATER-BEACH Blvd area. NEW La"·ns, re-«ed. Comp! * PAPERHANGING pup at 32nd. and Newport
-~ play area. 17674 Van BUttn, or mo. Free est For info & PAINTING. * 968-242.'i Blvd. 1-15-TI, tan "1th chokt! •-BualnOll Rontol "S H.B. Playmates. hot meals, lawn cue, Clean up by job 540 6055
DESK SPACE
222 Forest Avenu•
U.gune Beech
----------·I chain. 673-1037 Apt B, Hunt. Bch. 897-2417 <>r 846-0932_ PAlNTING: Honest, gUal'lln-----------! •
E . 17th S~., Costa Mesa FULL <>r p/time, infant or AL'S Landscaping. T ree teed work. Llc'd. Local ref'•. LOST 2 wks, frostpoint
-DESK SPACE
05 No. Et C.mino
Son Cl•m•nf• .......,. Raal
Store-0!fice. $60 Mcnth girl 7. Good home &. care. removal. Yard remodelillj'. Ca11 675-5740 alt 5. Siamese female (wht. grey
Realonom1cs Co..... 675 6700 ...._ h ••uJ ' I cl points) Be.Ibo&. Pen in, -,;::c;,;c;,,.;;;;·•,·o,-,·o;;-·j :C~.~M~.~&l~&-~553:'.'.,7 _____ j ,,-as '"' 1ng, ot. eanup. PAINTING/papering. 18 yrs S42-l2':ll.
SLore-826 W, 19th St., CM BABYsrrrER, all 11.ges, 24 Repair sprinklel"!I 673-1166. in lJarbor area. Llc "-1 ~~~~~~~~~~1
$115/mo. * 646-7414 hou~. warm ml'!als. big * Residential -Apts * bonded. Ref's furn. 642-2356.
400• STORE, shop, office. back yanl. 642-1592, Ci\t. * Commerclal * FJRSI' Class Painting & ll\llrKtlon 1114' j
S95. 2340 Newport Blvd, Bu1ln1s1 S•rvlc• Complete Catt 646-985.5 paper • hanging, Free est. .
C.M. 646-2544, 54&-8333 GEN Cleanup, tree Ge. sprnk:Ir 0CaCi'i:ll~54~5-..;34-"5"'9.~~~~-
BEAUTY Salon for Lease, * BURGLAR ALAR:.\IS •-serv. RototiJ. Handyman, PAINTING-Ext-lnt. 18 yrs.
fully equipped in ,shopping Shop, home, boat & car. odd jobs. Reu. 64ij..5848 exper. Ins. Lie. 1''rtt esl
Cond, crpll, tacinr center, San O~m. 492-2979 Local & Siient. 64&-lll6 EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener Accoust. CeilinD. 968·91W.
Schools &
instructions S7S
Beach Blvd, ~IUI. Call Industrial Rtntal 450 Carpenter Com plet e G &rdeni ng Paintirw1 &
'3-4 2-2525 or ow ner Service. Kamalani, 646-4676. ··• Discover • Great New
Car"r With The , .,,~,....., Nlt1:. ---------1 CARPENTRY Paperhenging ~~~ NG Complete Yard Carel
SHA.RE design cffice, attnc NEW BUILDI .MJNOR REPAIRS. No J ob JIM 540-4837 * EXTERIOR-INTERIOR 1t
'PAO'-Archite(:t, enpittr . COSTA MESA Too Small. cablMt inbl gar-GMeral r-rvl-"'•• Won't be underbid Custom AIRLINES art:iat or desil'f1U onl}o. $150 1211() Sq, ft. at S167 mo. ages & 0 th e r ca nets. ~ ..._ work. finest pe.ints. F~
mo. 6'5-1335 6500 Sq, ft. llc Gross 545-817S U 00 lllL~ET leave ODO jobs, Spray painting est/color C"Onsul!ini;::. Refs,
CORONA EL MAR lmmtdi•t• Occupancy msg at 646-2J7l. H. O. inside-out.side, fences etc. H1., bonded. Full linancing
2 Rm aulte, pvt bl, pvt entr. U0-220 PoWH, private offices, Ander-..on Free Estim. 646-3198 avail. 492--5338, 543-WS
A natural tor young pecple
who want excitement plus!
Ticket Agent'!' Alr Fn!ight?
Station a g e n t? Reserva-
tions'!' Ramp or travel
agent'! We'U train you for
1hese and mon?, day or nite.
We include placement a&-
sistance.
Prka:. crpVdrp, utlJ pd. plenty of parking, 18th and Carpet Service AQUA TECH For Complete LESCO PaJnting Ccntractor
SUS/mo, Owner. 673-6757 Whittler. resid'I pool serv. $22.50 per Inter & Exter. 2 Story
?JEWPQRT offices, cpts, M2-1485 Agent CARPET-LAYING -Shag mo. 645-l)S() cr m-t103 Specialist. Also, accoost ~--'-"-:.:.Co'-=-'--~I Speeial Reas. Guar. Install. · L' & · drpa, ocean view, from -$65 NEW bldg, 1728-2300 sq. fl !\torn nr eve 64 5-4 3 5 9 Husband Busy? Call Moose spraying, ic · 1 n 8 ·
)>er tno. Onr Aft 6 pm: Nr Baker & Fairview, l ~Jj....{l64.i ' 545-082.() after 6-Repair I ="'=;.""23~99~·==~~=~-
615-4644 cyr~l~"~·~S~u~u~;,~an:'.'!., ~>l~ ..... ~~29~·=li~~·iri·~;-------1 Build-Se.rv Most Things PROFESSIONAL Painting.
600-1200 SQ. FT. SO. Santa Ana, approx. 5700•1··-•_•_•_"ll.=..'-------lcR~A71=N~G~u7tt7en-7I-,--,7t-•71l~•-o~.1 !';~e;-;ai~lt~fl'A~l;w;:, ~
' 011ict"s, CM. 646-2130 i;q 1t. Deluxe air corn:!. oU. PAINT Accoustical CeUJngs, Quality work. Rea.sona ble. Accous. ceilings sprayed z. Est. :U Yl'I. Approved for
Veterans. Elig1ble iruititution
under the federally in!lured
student IOd.n program,
1$00 SQ. FT. prlv. parklne. let's, ownr 495-4349. SlO ea cr lrade. 531-6927, Free est 968-220!1 coats S15. Rey, 847-1358
3800 E. Coast Hwy, Cd.M. Storage 455 or 636-3uo Hauling PRE Spring Special. X-
€an divide. 673-4:121 Cement, Concrete -Painter, now schoo l * NEWPORT BEACH Civic LARGE, lock • up. storagt? HAUL! NG teacher. AccousticaJ t'ril-Airline Schools Pacific
Ce:nttr, 300 tt to 1000 ft. Hpa.ce available, from S20. •• CONCRETE, Beat Thi! Light & 1-feavy lngs. SlO room. Cus!Dm 610 E. 17th, Santa Ane
... ._. __ • _ _,_, .__ 6't1 6f6..6395/545--9863 Bad Weather! FI oo rs. Anytime. Call Chuck r .. '2 -"r96 IUIWI &: ~'-"" ........... u, ... 1.,.,,. tioll Re Call Do house painting. 646-4519. ~
.ilR OOND., OCEAN VIEW auoned •lu1, ahop center
San Cleme.nte 492-2979
Business Rental
, TIME FOR
Rentals W•nttd 460 ~it u. n 54~3379 or 494-4438 No Wasting PIANO LESSONS
~10VING, Ga.rage clean-up * WALLPAPER * Bei;::lnne.rs, Intermediates.
Misc. Rentals 465
ROBERTS
REMODELl!'IG
Custom Remodellng
& lite hauling. ReaJDnable. When yuu call "Mac" Frtt estimates. 645-If,02 543-l#t 646-lnl Learn theory, ,ight reading etc. Call Bruce (U.C.I. mus.
YARD. Garage cleanups, INT/Exler painting. Fret? ic bkgmd) 546-4478. Mesa treea: dltt ivy removal. skip loader, backhoe. 962-8745. est. Local ref's, Lk'd & ins. Venle.
Accoustlcal Ceilings. Call COSTA MESA
HAULING, cleanup. lots etc. Chuck, 645-0809. PRE-SCHOOL
Reasnbl, Hand yman anytime you call. 645--078S. PAINTING, profes.sione.l. All !!Ith & Monrovia, ~ day ·+
work guarn , Color full day Eessions. Planned
TRASH • Ga.rage clean-up, specialist. 646-7081; 547-1441 program, hot lunches. Ages ~~~~·lm~ ~~~~i. Free esl Plaiter, Patch, Rep•lr U, hrs 6:30 AM-6:00 PM.
$18 wk-COMPARE! 642-400()
Housecleaning * PATCJ-I PLASTERING or 838-5237.
AU typt's. Free estimates
Fenced a!Drqe liPl-te SUN Brite 11alnt Clll"lJE'"t..~. Call 541).6825 PIANO Lcs~ns your home
for campen, boats, etc. Jloors, ,vindows etc. JU-sid 'l =-~-------1 certllied teachet"ll. Music
For Particular People
Balboa lsle 673-9282
Call MU500 Plumbing 0 I M H th k
QUICK CASH & '"mm'l. '"" ut.1 _~---"'"m•. '· a ooc, REFURBISH your home or 5.17-5621 . PLUMBING REPAIR 64&-1368
, apt. I will turn your sows 1 ----------
1 1['1 l I ilk I . CLEANING lady would like No job loo !mall
T'.· HROUGH A ~~~~~A.~llear~'~• a ·~pu="'· ~"~'I . h . N H h IB "2 31•0 •
_ rwoaOMls • A: out. All ,_,'Ork fully guar. J(I in £'wport g ls ay. • ,.. -"'
C. P . M. O>mtructi<>n. Free <:rrst areas. fi46.8613, Roofing
est. Call 540--2?70. EXPER. lady OY.'n tran~. By
Personals 530 MY Way, quality home j rla y or tu1y. LEE ROOFING CO; Roofing ••••••••-
~'''""-""""_l [ll]
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
"'8-l80l al 6 P•l ol all types, recover. J b W ~ M I 700 RIDE NEEDED, So. Laguna. repair. Wall!I, ceilin&. floors .,., ter i repairs, roof coatings. Lie o ant-, a e
ft! Orange Co. Airport, hrs ete. No job too 11mall. I Bay & Beach Janitorial & bonded since lg 4 7.
8 _ 5. 4gs...3573 aft 6 547-0036, 24 hr ani1. 11erv. Crp\s, y,•i ndcws, 1loors P\C 642--7222.
ALCOHOUCS •---··. LIC'D Contr.. Remodel. ;og. j Res. & Oomm'l. 646-1401. 1 ------'1~---.... ~ . .-,-.......... EASTERN' Qu lty-\Vf!stem
Pbone 5'2--72"17 or write to add~II.!, roofmg, palntin1t & HOUSE OF CLEAN Prices! All IYJ>es Roofing.
P. 0 . Box 1223 Costa Mesa. repaJrs. 540-7858, 540-7664. Complete House Cleaning Lyle, 613-i9SO.
GEN'L CONTRACTOR """"'
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
For bnt t'ffUl.ts! 642-5678 Sewing/ Alterations
l••••••••••iiilJllliililiiiiililiiiii.•IRemodeling.Room Additions i\!esa Cleaning Service Uc'd/lns 645--0991, 673-6809 Carpets. Windows, Floors P!r * C 0 NT F. M P 0 RA R Y
T1m1ng -Guidr -llound -
Llml>l'!r -MEDJUl'tt
RAndom remark: "I have a
d111e lo'.'ilh a female !';piritual·
isl 1onigt,1. I'm going to lry
out 11. new J\-1EDTU1'1." * * * * * * ne! & Commc'l. 5-JS-4111
1
DRJ-.:SSMAKJNG Additiona * Remodellna 1 ... -------------------, Gel"'Nick & Son, LJc. Income Tax Re-<les11tn1ng & cu stom 673-6041 .. 549-2170 alterations 54a..-06.1,1
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
Sml.ley Tax Serv1'ce • Demma~"". •'"""'"' Llc'd Conlr. Remodeling Special On Hems
Addition$, Plans, Layout
Karl E. Kcnrlall &18-15.17 e L'tth YEAR LOCALLY e CaJ Jo * 6'16-6446 F'C Bkpr. MatuN! Fem. Const.
WALl<ING DEC!{ Qualified _ Reuona.blr EUROPEAN dmsma.king all t>xp. rhru Inc ta.'I'.. Classified
COATINGS \V. A. sr-,ftLEY ~ custom IH!ed. Vl'!ry ~ason-' Rox #2047 Daily Pilot 3-10 W.
Of all tyJ)f's. T~e Roolillg Certified Public Accounl't ,•~b7t.~·-'~'~'-""-'-~~=~ Bay, Costa r.tcsa, Calif.
Co., C~1. 6'12--7222 for 1rtt 642.2271 anytime 6f6.9666 Alterations -647-S845 9'.£16
f'sl. Ironing Neat, attuni.te, 20 yearz eXP. GOVERNESS for hire. _E.xp,
ROOl\1 Addition:;. J,, T. Tile last P011itio:>n Palm Beach.
Construction. Single story or Jmnlng: St.SO per hr. ------.----673-4980,
2. Estim., plans &. la~ut. Bring Own J-langers * Verne, The Tile ?i.fan * AJDES-l-'or ronvalescence.
Job Wanted, Female 702
847-1511. Call 645--3091 Cust. 1''0rk. Install &: repairs. elderly C:An! or family care. l'-------------------'l'F""u=m~t'"tu=ro=-------IRONIN G my home .... 25 I No ~b too 61:"1. Plaster Homemakers, 547..(;681 . . "' per patching, Leakini 6hower --------~~ • Cabins, D'e1Ulne. sn.soo. So. Tahoe motel Jot, 4 blks ~.A r.;,_.,..,~"1 nc own Mngecs. repair. 847-1957/84&-0206. Jobs Wanted, M & F 704
Otar. TR.ADE : R-2 proper. to culnos, CQ&e to lake. FURNITURE St r ip p In I · ." ....... "''' '>'• Newport Beach, Corona. Sl0,000 equity. \Viii trade Abu, boat parts. \\'ood & I 7L-'-nd-7-'-'-71~-----CERAMIC tile new '-Hou!~leening S3 hr
J Mu. for property or t?t metal. In our 10' vat. 1 scap ng remodel. l'ree Ht, Small and Ph1mbing Repair
Cali 67:\-7799 * 644-7395 * &42-34'5. jobs Wf'ICOme. 536-2426 , • S45-29'l9 .
G I LANDSCAPING: lncludinc ~. I ~~~,T-=-i-";~~=~I "T''1ANEVTY, 1969 or LAT'ER 70 •ere• New Muico, clear •rd•n "9 P•ti<><, declti.,,. ._ te.nci ~~~~-----1 Help Wanted, M &. F 710
"" , DODGE OR FORD $56 ooo Be: titul ... • re. Tree Service \'AN. Will trade 1 ~ acreH ' · . •O ' near 10 Yn <'XP 111 Harhor are11. Reas. &'17-9300.. Accnt Clerk $575.
st Palm Springs, valu.e :::''or w;~'!' trade for prop. Avg Jwn SID-SU per mo.1 COMPLETE Prof. Se r v . TREES, Hedges, Top, Trim, Acc:nt payable., invoicing, cod.
"'llll * '" -* IJ\&, ng, u.i, ,~ ee . ·~ C I. J\I Gardenlfli: &rv. State lil''d contr&<"lor. Call I cul, removed, hailled. Ins. · you r . 0c t pd . ~ <rn""•...,.., 646-7115. ""o '""". "'~" -u1. John __ ..,.oo ~ .._ Call Loraine, Westclltt Per.
Ye ,PD0.000 fl(fuftr in
\l Walnut Gl'OYt &
.G .• 10 unttJ. WANT Or-
()lunty --· /fllflfl/lr, 16.oMl
* *
•
------• • '64 PONTIAC atn. wagon,
aU1o It '67 Renault tec:la.n,
•uto, 18,000 mi .. both xWtl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ cond. For pop.top camper Ci--------
bu1 . .,,_ '· '"·""· I ........ 1 ~ I _ lt.i 1. 1 ~
""" c;.,,.1,. ,quamarl"' ~ ._--~::;~;; '.°'t .., '"""' L::iJ 1tone• h'nm Bra.zil. cut & •
laceted. Valu $10420 ea for p I ·-Poraenoli tum. art objil'CU. 11.ntiqun,1-~··-·_ .. _._. ______ ;.;.; 5l0 fround (fr• Ms) "° or ? .,,_ SINGLE? WIDOWED?
aonl"I('] Agf!ncy, 2(M.1 West.
dlfl Dr .. N .B. &15·2770 (allK"!
f~ job~•
ANCIENT MARINER
-RESTAURANT-
e Day Bu1oboy1 • e Day Di•hwe1her1
FULL TIAIE
RAVE Slll.OOO eqWb' In D ivorced? Over 21 ? ADVENTURE RED lriAh Setter found vie
modern '&-Side triplex. Wllllt ror a &elf cJCPhtnll1ory mts-, • SAILING CRUISE ~;.1AM & 21st, C,M. Apf!ly
s to 12 unUi any cond Or-u.ae 2-1 hi"!. 8 d11.y call l:iO fl, J maat ~re Ricgf'r. """"'~~~~~---2607 W. Coa.st Hwy.
ange or s&n Diego Co·a. 496-480l cr 541 -9991 U..vlni l /lS/71 for 3 BL.ACK Cocll-a·Poo puppy Newport Bt>ach Sulllvt 646.8225. FOUND NUDE month.\. Mt'n & '4'0me.n want-found vie Newport Fwy A __________ ,
n. . td w/de1U-e for adventurl' Bakl'r. &12--052!! ApPlicanb
Unique. deluxe l bdrm .• din. A leaklni rool tn ~r ' tn~I • ability to 1twel ----------
-' •• hlah '--~ bo........ ~8. l fl'lcd II. T. Guy ,. t I . F'OUND. Pf'kil'Jiil'!&e '1c: 16U1 ..... , ""' '"''"°" ..... , Roof! c 64 ~-2780 rXfleru!t'A. or nonna.hon tor ham. OC' mlU.. Onnat ~·og~~ 0· ' mil Pam Re.Ynolm;. (21.Jl A Irvll1e, NeWpOtt Hrts. •-1 ..._. """ 548-968! to ldentUy """''"':I· 378-2605, 1-----'--'--"---•"crUn Co. W-500) l 'OU CAN DO \'(K;,\! nn.t.Y LlCEJllSEO * FOUND Poodle Vicinity 300
P>OOD equity in bf'auliful Frt't' rlt'monstratlon TurM!ay 11?.!nowned Hindu Splrltu&ll1I blocK 171h St. Coata Meaa. 1
' ' 111 8 P:.I. Yoga Cent!'r. ~ new Hunllngton Harbour F. 1 ~1 h St Co 1 :\f Advice on all matttt!l.
1
_..,_ __ w_s ______ _
wa"'1rorlt "·/lock ron sWi ·· s 11. ' rM , l..o~. },1arrl11ite, Bu8lne11
ama!H.r bof'nt, Jot. or ln. Tkadlng11 xlvtn 7 di.J's a ANY DI,)' is the BEST d1')' lo
come prop, Owl'lf'r. MS-2381 SWINGER Oranae C'1 . wet\>', 10 am -1JJ pm. run 11on ad! D on' t
Gulde. Free Info OCSG P. !JZ N. El Camino Real, delay .. c111J 1008.)', 60-M78 * O. Box ~lU. Ann.helm, San Oe.me.nte. Item.a witb eue. u.e Dally
9280-4. 5.'m-!Wllfl . 492-9136, 492-0078 Pflot Cla11drl!od. M,._5tm *
SERVICE CENTER
Employment Apncy
* * * Skllled C0un10llng
Cleric•I
Profeuion•I
Plactmenh
ltf'\en Scha.11tr SH-4!181
~ NNpOrt Center Dr., NB
Suite $.lS
WE PLACE PEOPLE
NCR OPERATOR
Make more money
with growing con-
cern. XJn't fringe
benefits. Start $400.
Sally Hart.
GIRL FRIDAY
Xln't location. Plush
new office, Accurate
typing, lite bookkeep-
ing. Call Linda Lee.
EDP
SENIOR ANALYST
Consultants needs top
staff. Leading growth
firm, terrific chal-
lenge. Start $14,000 in
a new life. Call Dr.
Rand.
GIRL FRIDAY
Great opportunity for
quick thinking person
with high SH & typ-
ing skills. Lite book-
keeping. This is for
the sharpie. Call Sally
Hart.
SALES TRAINEE
Sell to & service large
wholesalers. Work
\Vith interesting peo-
ple. Start $5700. Call
Helen Hayes.
GIRL FRIDAY
Accurate typing. stat
background desirable.
Plush area, fast grow-
ing co mpany to prog~
ress \Vith . Start $400.
Call Linda Lee.
SECRETARY
TO V.l.P.
Sharp person, good
typin g & S1"1 skills.
Some bookkeeping.
This could be you r
new leaf for '71. Start
$500. Call Sally Harl.
MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
Join a winning team.
Alert mind can get
this career job work -
ing with people. Sta rt
$5400. Call Helen
Hayes.
SALESMAN
Fed Up? Leading
Blue Chip company
wants you. Grow with
a winner. Call Dr.
Rand •
LAB
TECHNICIAN
T rained, certification
not necessary. Great
opportunity !or ri~ht
person. Work with
leading doctor. Call
Sally Hart.
KEY PUNCH OPR.
Some expu. neces·
sary. Terrific hours.
Plush location. Start
$400. Call Linda Lee.
2790 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
A.TrENTION Houaewlves: * DENTAL *
F.arn $30 1l> $S0 or man Se<.Tetuy/Rect-ptlonilt
t'Xtra a month pan time. I -----"'6-56-::-=13::-.::--:--1
Not door "' door ,..u;ng. * DRIVERS * For in forma1ion call
963--0178" pm 10 1 pm No Experience
ATI'RACTfVE woman to act
a1 tour giude fo.r exc:lusive
mode.I site. Must have typ-
ing & clerical exp. 962-7777.
Alfl'O
3 SALESMEN
Need J t-Ombination new f ·
used auto salesmen. Excel-
lent commiuion II. demo
pi.in, ho8pitallzation & medi-
cal.
SEE AL TETREAULT
SALES MANAGER
HARBOR AMERICAN
l969 llAR.BOR, ("()STA MESA
AUTO BODYMAN
Corvettt-fibre gla.ss exper
req'd. Xln't pay. Jmmed.
cpening. Call N<>w!
ORANGE COAST
EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
124 Broadway, C.M. 645-llll
BABYSITI'ER -My home
NeceHary!
Must have dean California
drivifli recoro. Apply
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E . 16th St., C.M.
Exec Sec'y $575
Top skills. Construction U:·
perienct" helpful.
Gen'l Of-c $400
Chttrlu.I & alert pL
Clerk Typist $COO
Bright bl>g1nncr
Assembler $320
Shm Jane With Go·GO
PRENTICE
PERSONNEL
AGENCY
573 No Grand, S.A.
835-0322
or yours. Near J8th & FEMA L E telephone
Balboa. N.B. 10:30 am to solicitors. Soml!' koowl. ol
3 pm M-F. 67:.-3976. boy,·ling pref'd but not nee.
BABYSITTER needed, Ph: MESA LANES C.M.
&-12:30. Eastblulf, transp. 646-3993
l"l(!C('Ssary, Good Vt' a gt! s . [ ,.iii;;iiii.;OiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiii [
644-2024 FINANCE MANAGER
BABYSI'ITF.R needed part Min. 2 yrs exper. High bt111l-
time. Referenct's, own ness aptitude. 90 Day fa.
trano;portation. 642-6159 miliarization period. Then
BEAUTIQANS Space for take over office. Salary from
rent. $25. we{!k. New $600 to S700.
jntericr, Nrwport Beach. PRENTICE
642-0844 or 96&-4622. PERSONNEL * BOOKKEEPER-Assist in AGENCY
preparat ion of trial 523 No. Grand, S.A.
bal.ances, payroll &. work 83.S-0377
Jlflpt'MI. Construction t!Xp. [ '!!!~!!!!~~~!!!!"'!!!!!!!~!
desired. Send com p I e I e GIRL FRIDAY -Crowin&
resume: company. Fast, af!cun.le
Wri1e, Cas:..ified ad No. 28 typing a must. Shorthand.
Daily Pilol, P . 0. Box 1560 gen office. Sl50 mo.
Costa !\-1esa, Cali!. 92626 ln1 ervie"-'S Mon I: Tues. * BOOKKEEPER-Accounts J3012 Ca!Je Perfecto, San
Payable. Typing, f i Ii n g, Juan C&pistrano (next to
posting. Construction exp. airpor-t)
desired. Send c 0 mp I et e * GAL FRIDA y • Typing
resume: 65, SH 100, gen'! ofc "-
Write Classified ad No , 28. secy'\ exp, mature thinker.
Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Front ofc appearance -"
Costa !\1esa, Calif. 92626 per sonal\ty. Construction
BOOKKEEPER thru trial exp. pref'd. Salary romm.
ba!Rnce. Alltomotive or w/abil. Call for •PP t
leasing eicp. desirable. Part 557-4363 Ext 28 .
time or hall days. 645-3!i61. GROOVY Model-type needed
CLOSl""RS for cassette films, tlarriton
D!stributo~hlp Sales Cori, 21 3/462-5830.
Franchise and Housewives
Experienced Only Re1ired People
Sl,000/$1 .500 wk. comm. Studenls-anyone over 11
Qualify applicants. FULL-PART TIME
With Vending Mtg., HeRvy No experience nece.WU')'
Travel. All Leads Furnished Immediate training
Thru National Adwrtising Immediate earnings
Ca11 Collect (3121 642-3757 Intervie"-'S Daily J0-8 pm
Mr. Sllnden, BFC TAXCO
Sult' 31'1 ·J OHN HANCOCK
CJ<:NTER • Chicago, Illioois NeNls Income Tax
606 11 Preparers Now
CA SHIER For fine ladies 31966 Camino Capistrano
clothing 1tore. Part-ti~. San Juan Capistrano
No phone c:alls . Backstrt!f!!, 493·U85 for app!.
No. 25 Fashion Island, N.B.
Clerical
RUTH RYAN
AGENCY
SPECIALIZING
IN
OFFICE PERSONNEL
1193 Ne"-port· Cc1ta 1\fesa
646-48>1
17931 Beach B\Yd., HB
847-9617
I IR.VINE PER.SONNEL
SER.VlCES""AGENCY
COi'.fPAN!ON • ffousekttper I
for eldrrly \\'Oman. Lux-Secretary
uric:us &yrlont 11.pt. Light I Plen.o;an! bu~y ofr, nrerl11 11.
dut1e!I S200 mo. 642-0022 OT wrU ~killed sec 'y w/mfgr
673-81"8 bckgrnd,
Companion-housekeeper
live-in or uu1 . Recept. S1crttary
•&lf,....1316 • Aeti1r. rypino:. Excepllon1I
COOK -\\"Oman. Rellreml'!n\ ;i.bihty tn reeeive guests.
hon1e in Lnguna Beach. Youthful group in local firm.
494-!W!"i."!
COUPLES NEED EXIRA
CASH? HAVE LITTLE
TIME'!' 9fi8-0024 4-7 pm.
NO matter what H ls, you
can M!ll It with a DAILY
DAILY PnDr WANT AD.
A/ P Sookkffper
Strong A/P exper. rP.Q 'd f(I
ha.nd\f' volume 11ituation ln
mfgr firm~ Plea.'lant fellow
"'orkers.
488 E. 17tti fAI !Nine) C.M.
'42-1470 Call 64Z-5678 &: chlJ'Y" ii, I ------~-~=I Help Wonted, M & F 710 I >iolp Wonted, M & F 710
WE'VE BEEN INVESTING
IN LAND FOR YEARS.
NOW WE'RE INVESTING
IN PEOPLl
Five )'f!AMI ago, our
company wa11 little
more lhAn a name on
a door, high hopes and
IOU! of ambition. Today
Wl''re a mu\Umlll fl)11
dollar ('(lmPlf!.f, public-ly held; the tutest
growing land corpora-
tion bi I.he We1L It
took r,le.nty of gweat
and a &Ir 1h&rf' of luck
lo get \\'here we 11.rt.
and Wf! lntf'nd to sll\Y
there. w~·~ Jt<>ing to
do It by 11ocklng our
compal\)' w I t h t h e brl11ht~t minds Wf' can
find.
We nttd prl'lpl(, Good
pt'OJ"ll". M11yhr you·r~
ont' of thf! petiplr we't?.
lookinll' for.
If ynu vt l!'Ol 11 w lleie
bll.ckgroi;rid. t h a t 11
!ood. But not. es.sentl.&l.
I you've had 1ome
r.alrs C?xprrlenee, you'll
find that helpful, too.
But Ir you're -Ju8t look-
ing tor a Job to k1tp
you busy 'tll the next
one romes along, for· ••t It. We'll be spending a tot or money on your
tt"Bining, 10 the only
men we want are thoee
"'ho v.'!nt to build a n~ career. U 1ou·~
J:ood, th@-fintnciAI pic-
ture cAn bf' vr-ry rl'-
\l'lll"dlnat. JJ£'allh and Ute In111.1rance.T Fririg1
bl'!nef!t!I~ Suno,
hke a lonll':. h•rl! IMlt
111 yourself bf'fnM> )'flu
r111!. tr you Uk~ wh8t
you sN!. mll.)'bt.. "'e. win too.
lAND CONSULTANTS OF AMERICA, Inc.
ORANGE CO AREA • 1714) 835-323..l
RJVERSIDE AREA -(714l 793-3580
LOS ANGELES AREA • f213l R72-3R2t"I
l[Il] I 'l[Il] I
HOUSEKEEPER., maturt. t
days, rood wqeg. Relll
req'd. Alt 5: 675"-6291 or .. ,...,,,
HSKPR-Llve in, over 40,
speak Engl. Li Me:work, 5~
da. $2Th + mo. Re.U
64;,..t66I.
ilnJNpOlt .
personnel
agency
SALES ORDER
CLERK
Accurate tYPln. 60 wpm,
electric: typewriter. ordtr
prooeulnr uperieoce
prelentt.
Call for appointment 8ll Dover Drive (714) ~9401 NeWflbrt. .Be11.ch
HSKPRS Emptyr P6Y• ''" 641-3870 ""'LONIC Georie Allen Byland AJ;ncy I u;;
106-B E. 16th. S.A. S47..Q395. Adm Assistant INDUST RIES
JANITOR, exp'd only, part· Salary Open. Work in L.A. L•9une S.1ch
time,. M~ lhru Thurs, 3-4 \Century City}. Career mlnd-Equal opJ>(lrtUnit,y employe:r
hrs/rule. 54&-9834 a.It 3 pm ed. travel, sec'ylbkkpng , SALES
KENMORE auto wuher,
J&te: modt1. >Ont cond $65.
!'l1&id&1tt dee dl')W, aood
cone:! HO. Guaranteed &
deliv. 5'1)....8ti72, 847-3115.
GE auto Wube:r &. matchin&:
elec dl')'U. Both rood OOfld
$Sl(I. Guu.nteed A dellv · 1
546-8672, 847-8115.
tll TV, R..,ilo, Hll'I, s1o ... l.>MJ>a s "' old wbll•..,.,,. Cycloo, Bibs,
U6 male Cll Allered, lhota bf.u Scooters
1895 KIMBALL.. piano, pla.y.1---------1 tnJ.ncd. Ntedl eood bom4il--------"-·'·I
-· nHds """· SU "Sil-" 1l<no ,....rd ,,;;tnunod=::;·:c-:::..:=-.--,-=·I -- - -111i UnMrwood 702 •l •c:. ~. t 1Pf'td1 tumtabl4!.,fi..oVE y you.rs w/a healthy • ...... -_....
fYl>ewriter $75, ~en! remote spttkut. Ju • t fl wk old pup cJ.rl, ot mtxW TM•
Zenith 21'' '67 color TV. reoondltiooed, 1deaJ .-ltt. ....,_,ta.,, to --t bomt:. HQ•.._•
UHF $150 Adntlral %1 " cdor $40.00 or be1t oUer. Alao ~ •"""' 1/25 ~,.~
TV, eully llJOVl.bl• l yr a Mun~ 4 track 1let'eo ll.pe •
warranty on tube .$1!KI pla,yer. 4 aets ou t put 2 Plpona. 546-Sl33 1/26 il'fRI""' ,..,_
Refrii $15 Chest of dn.Wttl tcrminala inclUdln&: sttte0 ~ ·
S7 Old fuhloned desk a.nd phoh!' jacic 4 Jn c Jud e 1 [ 11 'L.J l ._ WOI ....,... • ., , cha.U" S1 Pirc JXNll ta.ble UIOrted ta.pea $30. Phone htl .i ...,._ r. S37.m4 • .. .,.
SlO TV $211 ''""" u...i &J>-1S44. NEW-USID-SIRV. Ev"Ylhioe 117 t . lSth, CM. TV REPAIR SE RVICE
f e REPAIR man bu clean
late model wuhers &:
dryen, RsnbJ, suar. Muter
~ OK, 531-863?
REFRIGERATORS W/LG * AUCTION * RCA, Z<rutt" Motol'Ola, Ad· C•t• 152 L"" -
FREEZERS. ~$55. Fine Furniture min.I 1pe<:'iali1ta. 21"' color 1----------1 STOP!!! 646-7821 ** Ii: Applla.nee!i picture tube J79.95 lnsta11ed. BEAUTlFUL Blue Peni&n,
I A Bookk LOOKING & ACT d** M I I ••• A"<ll<>M Frlday, 7,00 r .m. An~on&• """"!.~· Radio mo!•, •boto, S mo.
J . W . ROBINSON'S 'kill"
NEWPORT BEACH
. . ••• ••per Buil Ing .... , • s -w· d ' A t• B Dispatched true .... 1 hour • 6(l..19ffi •
ha' ~m~1ale $.!;)() + Small co. S.A. Sa.lei mlnd!d per&On, see !or in Y $ UC ion arn service. Call 9li!J..ll.W. ~--.....:-'------,,154=1
operu11i" for a yourself, a real caretr op. 201:,1,li Newport, CM 646-8686 STEREO-Glltr8rd SL 95 (3) .Dog..:~'--------1
I
' Keypunchers I pqrtuniry. Xlnt ftltura for DOORS Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'!. Sh~ M 7 ~ "E · c&rtridires. TOP show qu..Iity, standard
MAINTENANCE ~$500. Will train If have right man. EarninKs com-INT ER/EXTER 11:.: PRICE &ubba equl p. Fisher TX 100, 13? watt& poodles, 21,; mo, coal black,
MECHANIC 6 mo'1 exper on key tape or· mence immediately dlould lOIXl'1 To Choose From complele, The !>Mt! J valve I: 2-AR.-OC 1peaker1. AKC re&', 42 champlonr. &:
IBM 024, 0'29. be~ eXce5s of ;250. per wk. l{).5 Daily, 11-4 Sun, regulator, 10.'tt auil, we igh ts, 549-0940 btfore 10 AM. winners. Aft 6: Pvt pty's,
FULL TIME AND XLNT Ne, canvassing or seliclting. MILLER~ORAKE spear pistol from Italy, raft. r..tUNTZ .t & JI track home ;~.,...:::;~ .. ?,-·~71~<~'~..,_,,..7:'.'7"-"";;-
COMPANY BENEFITS Gen'I Offic• Inrerviews by appointment 2406 So. Main St .. S.A. tic. This wttk-end only. unit + approx. 70 tapes. p O ODLE· M 1n i 1 • AKC.
S400 +. Work in restaurant.1 only ~3 10."eekday1. 8J5.277l {Next to Standard Brands) 1 546-5.119 $105 OR 8E5T OFFER. champ&p, Choe I: WhL
•
APPLY in person 11).5 pm Mon. Fri 10 AM.S PM. Sat. Secretary/Bookkeeper. 1 &irl 546-1032 e SKI FAMILIES Must sell, 548-5613, ask for M/F 2 mos old. $.50 &
I nNd you tf you're PtrsonneJ Dept. 11 AM.2 Pl\f. ofrice in N.B. GeneniJ ortice Reserve now! C.bin at Mam. Andy. $75. 642--0326. 673-935?
d 20 & I I •2 }'ash.ion Isl N.8 . I ~=:::Z::Z::Z::Z=:::Z::Z::Z j exp & acc1g knowled-Cameras & moth Mountain. Sipe 7. Fitt .. I G=ARRAR""""~o,---"'°"'-.c-c"•1tan--g..--.1 2 Darlin" black female toy un e r s ng • -r ... ual opportunity·,· mpl""""" • • a·· E I t IOI 8 ·~ d pl D' J ., c~~-~--~--"~,_-• 1 ttq rl . Se-nd n!Slln'M' to .S. __ q~u~pm-•_n_____ pl, etc, n ·~ per &)'. ayer, i&mond sty us, reg. Pooctie puppies. AKC reg.
soft & wi1rm -pr•f-LADY for restaurant 10.'0l'k OVERSEAS Henry, General Delivery, PENT AX Zoom, Nikon 105 531.3374 days. S39.50, 1pecia.l $27. New At· 64&-01~ or 548-1022 333 E.
••
k h exp dcs'd. Please call Balboa, 92661. tel. Cannon fX SLR & del, IRVINE Coast Country Club !antic Music 445 E. 17th . 17th St., C.M.
ty to now -ave l l ;--;..-,.--'i"~'~r~l686=,=-=~ SERVICE Sta . Att. Full t1me, Ya.sh Tit', Rollie 2.8F Kowa fam ily membership for aale 197D COLOR TV 12", like l\tALE, silky terrier, 1 yr, DAWE_S l<Hpd ~bibs,'·
goals & drei1ms _ LIVE in, any age. JOBS 3:3D·l2:3Cl nights. JI.lust be SLR, &: misc. 962-.'i278. lrom member. f'or In-new, $150. Must 1ell. AKC Champ. line, lovable, Mondia l!Hpd touring bim,
Motherless home. Care for • • ne11t ln appearance. Apply Furniture llO format.ion ca.U 673-9131, Mr. * 642-5425 * healthy, $25. 494-41ll8 el(U'emely Ille wei&ht. Cl
a re bright bright 1 child 6:30 AM 'Iii 9 AM. 2590 Newport Blvd. C.M. Smith 8 Track car tape, 20 watt SILKY FEMALE PUPPIES .E. 17th St. 6f6..7706 .I~
bright -want to
learn about the PEO.
PLE business -un·
der1ti1nd the word
O:luld have other day jOb. SERVICE Estab'd. Fuller DE CORATOR p i ece s. USED BIKE$ 11pcakers k 10 ntw tapes e FOR SALE • 68 HUSKIE 250 -is50 ot •
64&-30ll Bruah rte, $12.>-$175 wk. ID Maho&:a.ny dining set, twin!to Spd, 3 ipd Coaster Brake S70. 536-4ti69. • 644-2560 * belt. '70 % Bulta co ;
LOCAL CPA firm needs I $135 at.. alao pt. lime 546--5745. headboards, chairs, apart-in all siz.es. Al&o, have used TV Motorola Console, blk & e DALMATIANS Sherpa-S 125 -$600 !irm.'
bookkeeper-retf'pl. Musi be I Total F" Sr. Adm"ini"strative ment stove &. refngerator, parts. 642-9867. ,vht, 19 .. , Good cond. $45, AKC e 6«-6469 •
proliclent at writf!'-Up work I o;iuee tabl~. Many other 144 "'! Br fl w 54s...7116 ** 642-l93'1 ** BOY'S ~tingray bii;--' & on telephone. Please send 5 retary p1ece1. All U1 excellent con-· ece onze _at are Nu paint 1z reblt
resume to Classified &d No. l WHY PAY MORE ? ec d i t i 0 n e veryt h ing from Bankok (service lor 6' Early American maple ,._ SHERRY'S POODLES * Xlnt Cond. Bat otr. 1 ~
29, Daily Pilot, P. 0. Bo!I: reasonable 642-8368 or 1 l2), Never used.1S$325S""Y!~~~ slereo COOllOle. Yr end puppy sale, grocim-** 6'16-4)972 ** -t ''Empathy." (Thenk J560, Costa Mesa., Calif. UNIVERSAL S584 + TOP BENEFITS &16-l287. · -sacrifice for Sl . ,,,.......,.... $125. 833-2481aft6 ing Free pk-up 546-284S 1 A I 4 · after 6pm. . . . WANTED -f
You P.co Seminer )-1 1 .:926::="~·~~--~~~ 714/956 2251 t east years experi. LEAVING state, forced to • AFGHAN PUPS, AKC. 3D5 or 25llcc Honda !c:fam.. • LOOKING tor more than just 1 • ence and good skills re.. sell houseful or like-new BEAUTIFUL Black star 11.p-Pick of lil!er! Black mask· bler. Running or noL 549-1690; f
••• willi-to te•ch another job? Join the ''New Open 7 days 8 IO.'eek I quitt"d. Med . furn. Kin""ize bdnn. phire necklact', earrings &: I I!' I ed ·1 ™956 art 5 ' ' "• ... ~~~~~~~~~. ~ .. ~ ring set from Bankok. frff fa You 81 ver. · BSA 75cc Rare 4-atroR : Beau tiful ldea.s " Div. of = set, game &et. formal dining H 156
m• b.cau1e I w ant GENERAL FOODS. Help Pa.rt Time Huntington Beach rm. '"'· bunk beds, velvet Ne.ver worn. $150. 6ra-13451 '::;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;.;;;;i ;~oGrH~li;;:Ei)TiB.""'1~<I single. Clean. Lo mlleaae-; othel'll to enhance th eir ST ABLE HE LP Union H igh Schoel Dist. sota &: hi-back chairs. alter 6pn1. • REGISTERED TB. 1 7. 4 $1IO. &W-1D3.1 ;
to lei1rn -•r• n•ver personal btauty while en-I Boarding !!able. localed Jn 536·9331 by JAN. 29 Spanish coffee It end com· 1-rear humper, PI a~ form WHITE male O:>c.k•-poo. hands, 6 yrs Ke Id i ng, '70 BSA '
s ick _ n•Ytr lat• _ joying a pnifl!able busi ness. I N.B. area, seek.~ part-time l *.,--~S~U~P~E~'R~V;;l,OSO>;;;R-;L'VN""'-ll"· modes I amps. pictures, type & step vctension for med. gize, black button OO!le jumper $950, 592-Zl.97 after Royal Star 500 •
S25-$l50 wk up. No exp nee. 1tablP. help, Must be hard 7:30 a.m, relief 6'hlfl, IO.'k •le. ~111st sell this Wttk, Ford P.U. for lO' campers &: black eyes. 9 mos. 6 PM. SUOO. 64&-0«IB ,
can spa II spell s pell No door to door. Exec. posi. workinR and familiar w/ encls. call 968-9951. S25· !>4f>..0906. \V 11 t c h do i & i o od REGISTERED quarterhorscs '63 CHEVROLET 6 cyl ;s ·
tion.'I avail. 8-12-2664 I li vei;tock. Please send Jetter Park Lido Convalescent TRADITIONAL fu r n; t 11 r e CAR, 4-pos!, lilt rack, eltt w/children. MS--0813 ° r • 2 nmttll, 1 ge!d!n&:. Good ton pickup. $595. C a l l :
& write your own let· MARINE Engine Jnstaller outli ning experience: _Ir hrs. Center 642-81»4 reproductions o! the old 1595. Diesel mec ha nic , s 847-6551 bree.dinr. $400 ea. 714/,~644-~1~7~"~·--~----t
t ers _ use •n I BM wan!ed. Expe r ienced available to, Classified lld TEXAS REFINERY CORP. day:;; handcrafted in pint>, home study course $SO. ADORABLE curly black 6n-5.l38. GEMINI 80cc for atreet or :
only/apply LUHR'S BOAT • 19, Daily Pilot. P.O. Box o!fers opportunity tor high Desk!, roll-tops, slant tops, 646-2512. Poodle mix female 3 mo. dirt. $250. '.
d ictating mi1chine & CO. 1781 Placentia., C.~f. 1560. Costa r..tesa, Calif. 92626 income PLUS regular cash gallery tops, plantation, hut· CARPET Layerll have •hag Loves children, needs good Call 646-0196 ,
MAID, pert time PART time mature woman and vacation bo nus e 11, ches, dry 11inks, tressel & romm·t tweed C?Jlls. Deal home Partly tr a In e d I looU.., l(le\ ,70 lSO HONDA :
type w•ll -stay or· 540-7445 with retail exp., apply El abaundant fringe benefits to tables & benches, etc. AlllD direct, Ex.per lnataller. Can 548--0813: 8J6.....«9J 1/26 M.-N~~ $51'5 • • * ~:
Poco Candle Shop, 4 o mature man In Beach Cities pieces made to o rder . finance. 5.39-m7, 827-8740 BEA. purebred le.male G.
ganized -row w ith MAID -Steady work, Retire-Fa~hion Islanrl heTwn. lD-l2 area. Regardless ol ex· 646-9583 * * CALL SHIRLEY GRA. Shep. 2 yr, Ne-eds good • HONDA J05cc-Built to '
the punch•• cause ment hom e, Laguna Beach. noon Mon & Tues. perimce, a.ir mail Dr. K. F. ENTIRE rontentli of 1 BR HAr.f, 968-9425, Your local home 530-5399; 5J9.TI81. l ~G~·~·~·~·~·~l-----~'°°.:;.:I J38cc. All new eng • trans. Ca][ 494-9458 p 1• ~, T···• Rer.~""Y ,_ G De-' 1 ,.,,. $450. 531-2fi07. , 11.i'i'i.Fii'-';;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;--;;;-PERBOYS a "•''"'·• "-"" ....... , apartment ; ...... ntemporary SLlM YM .... er. '"° BARGAINS _ New boat,1.::=:....::=-=::...~---,"I ' • th PEO-r.1AKE fl. time ~·ages, pl PA ,.__ .. _, 71J F-Worth f • 18 Id 12700 '69 CZ '>Cl\ IV' In verv .... we re in e ....... rp .. ou • ..... • 11rn1t11re, mos o · Mt'scoll•noouo PUPPIES to """' home toilet; '60 Mere sedan: 10' _, ........ •.r •" time, be a distributor or FOUNTAIN VALLEY T 76101 p · · cond $700 Call after 5 p u
PLE'S &
PEOPLE are nice &
b•autiful, but PEO.
PLE are PEOPLE &
t h• nicest PEOPLE
l'v• m et in my life
Is the person I just
described. • • • 'You
LAUREL SHAW, my
be•utiful assistant of
th• past yea r who has
been a ll of th•••
things & more. For
thos• of you t hat
have lii1d the privl-
199• of meet ing her
you kno w, th• r•sf,
perhaps yo u will.
Onwards Up-
w a rds to you LAU·
R EL. You're joining
Air California {How
F ortunate Can They
G•t) & returning to
coll91e. You'll con-
tinue s p re•dlng jay
wher•Ye r you •r•.
You'v• w o rked h e rd,
put up w ith m• &
lhered the tears of
fun of • &mall bu1l-
nes1. Blea• You &
Thank You -
LOVE,
Ll1
_.... ""~s takes all. a 1n1 1 n gs . Want·, 920 Shop, cocktt terrier, mix a a 11 boat; 9' "•"dleboat. · · ..., pure organic cleaners, fvvu GE 1 , · I Call -u ....,... 962-4356
A 1-1'1 USED CAR SALESMAN draperies, amps. e1c. 1----------1 Mort 11nd lo ..... ha lr. Xlnt c'~'!"':;"~°'~· """"""""'--i 'iO'ii;;;;;a;<l"Traiti>;?I supplements & co.smetica. K •~ ~,, ••7 3807 "• 637-4606/6T.\.-~. • 642-4323 • en,"""""~ or "" -. CASH for tum, appliances, IO.'ilh children st()...7660. l /2JI 28' ?.10NTEREY. '701400Ka. wuakiLiko .. · ~Trai• 0:..,"""1•,;.: : ~'::'~~::_':;~"'-~~--l --.p~A~YViiR~O~LLLL-CCLL1E~RiiiK,--· i EARLY American dining tools. &: misc it em 1 . FREE pu""ies to -home. Runs -· Hull &aund mil•• $T-'69l. -,
* MEDI CAL LAB Must be t:xperienced. Straight I nd 4 h · '" Full time, hospital e:t1per_ room tab e a c airs 642-7015 or Aft 5. 548-4Zl7. Mixed breed loni &: short ~....,,....:1~1800~~54&-4~~53!5~---l -='=;:.;;;';;;:;';:;~~m--l · TECHNOLOGIST * prel'd. Apply Personnel !It'll. 70 car inventory, $125 JI drawer knotty pine Muaic•l lns trumtnts 122 hair. Xln't w I ch l J d re n . -:Bo•t•/~rlne '69 HONDA 175 ... Cali fornia licensed. Full time, H H ·1a1 NB ~ ~ cheSt of drawers $ 2 5 , "'"'1~ 1/25 Depo. oag osp1 , . . .....,.,.. """ E I _ .. •~"'· 644 5.394 eve&. PM 5hJft. Sa1a.ry comm".l-962.--0774 qu p. 7"" -NW. •
surale w i th eXpe.rience. Z1 .__Bl d ..,,.5 0466 1":;::,..::.c::_· ___ ~---DRUM SET, complete, $195. LOVING Cocker mutt oeMs Mob"I Hornet .._I PAYROLL CLERK 00 Har .... n v · .,.. · SOFA bed queen r;ize, blue Joel. hi-hat, 22" eymbaJ, good hom~. yr old, beaut. SEXTANT, ADF, Compasses, 1 e '~.,,
e WESTMINSTER COM· E 'th ll ded --====~-~-I & green plaid, hrand ne.w. hro Ex II I i.~ "•7018 all 3 1 25 •--1-;;;;;;:::::;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;:J MUNITY !!OSPITAL • Ap. xper. w1 pa:yro UC· •• WAITRESS.Must have t ne, access. ce en m"6s. 4;n-I RDF, teleacope1, DtUumeter,
1
ply Personnel, 1777'1 Beach :~· riat:~~~~~~rd:Pe! ~ ti;:!~~:i;· tnF1J~n: -~~=-'-~-'-~1~50~·~"°'.,,.-'-1~'50,_· •call=l~;'~m~""~~~~~".,=";.:::::'=,!;='=;_48_.,_"'_'_41 UJl.~~:Ji~ ~~ =-~ ~: ,:.._;:::tl10CU!an=1=,=,~p;0~·w=~=,c:::::.·-,906= ~ll:f?f11l?f!J1J1l(~ ,:
Blvd .. Huntington Beach, or ' I r-~u N w1 I c:n~n W r---t HAS~ new, •loeplog sofa $65. l cal! 17141 847-7807. ng. '-""" 0 · on Y, .,J;JJJ • ........,, wy, ACCORD ONS: Paulo Sopra. all shot1. Xlnt w/childre.n.
ORANGE COAST N.B. Surf & Sirloin. Rcfrig., $85, Color 'JV $150. ni, 12o bass, $150. Honer, 32 4\H-8285 1/25 'rT' T.S. JeUrles 1969 V-8'1 Surrounded by ~
MED I CAL OFFICE EMPLOYMENT w ANTED: l sl class chet, OJ! 64~560. e v' s : base, $75. 842. 7081 MOVED. Our do& needs new top cond, market $7500.
Need 2: Front ore, exp, gd AGENCY wry desirable situation 4-dy 645-2020. U String elec KUitar + home wlencl. yard. Very Flnt $5000 buys/ofter. For
Irvtne Or&npa! ~
Real rural llvin& yet ckm ~
typ1st. Back Ofc, exp. know. 124 Broadway, C.M. &15-Jlll \Vk ~·nil", s.dy wk awnmer. AS ne.w, sleeping sofa $65. .ampl ifier, S120 or best oUer, gefttle, part iolden It more info 68J..99l), <>.vne.r
ledge In all procedures. I l:i::Zi::::Z::Z::Z::Z::Z::Z::Zi 1 ~W~n;·~1o~Bt>~'~';;"~· ~&I;';;!~•~· :;;;;;;;: Re.frig., S85. Color TV $130. 546-8lS9 alt 5 or wknds. Chesapeake r~ tr J ever. aboard SUnday 12 to 4 .
Write, Classified ad #15, i 1 3 WOMEN needed to demon. Call 642-6560, "v e •: HAMMOND B-l wfl'R,40 &: .f.94-3186 1/24 Arches slip No. 35. 3333
Dally P ilot, P.O. Box 1560, Pay roll Clerk strate be:iut. mink oil, lro5-645-~. lnhe speaker, Like new KITrENS 4 monlh& to 11 W. Cit Hwy, Newport.
to ocean, sboppln& "' 1
recreation
ALL ELECTRIC --} -' Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Computer sysrem, some Ins. melict. mink 11ccess's. Call Never rlept in, Reveri11. Sl9!J. 540-7179 months .ame ~. «1me OWENS XL-19 All Gla&s Sid ~
claim exp.desi rable. Imm~. for apPt. K.KQRP, SJ0.3333 king 11ora bed & mate. cha.1r , -6 d e 11 ve red 836-44 93 , &. Bay Boat, 225 HP inbrd, Choose from : ~
..
MIDDLE AK;ed ·IO.•oman . 30
or over, neat appea.Nlnce,
for ASsr. MANAGER
TRAliVEE. Startini:: salary
$32:i JTIQ. Inqu ire in person,
PAY-LESS SHOE STORE.
2ZZ1 Harbor Blvd., C.l\f.
Belly Bruce
I
Gxec
opening. Call Now~ royal blue. Price $616. Sell Planos/Organa •.£ 548-0813. 1125 stereo ol full mvers, trlr • •
ORANGE COAST -$295 67~7223 loci . Sacrifi.,., 499-3702, 105 floor plans; '.
EMPLOYMENT ~ CLEARANCE LOVABLE malo Poodle end I -I~ ~· SOFA, never u&ed, quilted wire hair ~rTier mix pup. 30' GLASSPAR twin die11el. you name it! .·
AGENCY . V floral, ACO!chguarded f t25. SALE 3 mo. 546-3562 aft.er 1:00 Comn1l. po1s!blllt:les. $6750. • : 12~ Broadway, C.M. &15-3L11 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;~~ I =g loveseat $ 7 S . Over 100 Pianos l.l Orpn, or 836-449.l l/:M 675-2424, eve1. Adultt-Peh 0.K. .. .
RN !or House Supervl90r in Antlqu•s IOO Reduced for immed. sale. LONG Hair female cat ex· Boat11 Rent/Chi1rt'r 90I Priva te Club-$300,000 :
small nurs ing home. Top 8' EARLY American liOfa Buy Now & Savel peclifl&' ki~s. ne<ed good 32. Twinscrew Chrli, fully Recreation Center : \vai.-:f'~. 71 ·1: 4M-8076 for a~ COUNTRY French tuJtiques: & matching loveseat. Open Daily lO ti] 9 borne-. 530-5399; 539-7181. . C"'· ·
pointmf'nl din aet G chain;; pr. $150 833-2481 aJt 6 Sat lCJ.6 * Sun 12-5 1/26 equip'd. Fishini or •LW>-14 BEAUTIFULLY •
ROUTE Sales-$l3D IO.'k to it. Auhusso~ chairs: paintings: SOFA, 2 leather chairs, & COAST MUSIC 1 Yev old black female Ing. 548-2434. FURNISHED ~ :
Take ov estab Fuller Brush side bo&rd ; l&t.h Century custom p i f'o::es . Very NEWPORT&: HARBOR cock-a-poo, Loyei children Boat1, Sail 909 MODELS • ! ' chest; much more. Pr pty . rea.sonable .. 833-8397 c M * 642-28.Jl • · · r te In Laguna. Xl nt pt time 644--0 09 osta esa needs a 1ood home. Moving VENTIIRE Z1 SAIL No. Illl (Dlr. nus:n: ! •
IO.'k also avail 542-7573. c'-'C...:~1 ::...· --c-,-===· I * CUSTOM FURNITURE il-1USf sell. \Vurlitzer 9Pincl overseas. 646-3420 1126 N 0 rt h sa.ils-compaas·head-
SERVJCE STA ATI'. Bl! For best tt1ull~! 642-5678 RENTAL. See ad class Z60 piano, full keyboard and J BEAUTIFUL young male r un n l n1 lites-anchor-bow
GPnerai. Call 548-34RL I nd' b d t 1· f It · shift, oprn. Apply in pr~n . stee a'lll 1ng oar cats; "Snow Wh ite Bunny" pulpit· ife UltS -u y n g·
S•c r•tary Mac Arthur & 4678' Campus I II ill VERY old Sear:\ origlnsl 10."/p!a9tic coa.ted k • Y •. and brown tabby "Coco'' ged for clas.<1 racing • trlr.
I D N B [m~,,,,.,1 beautiful oek 1 e c re tar y . SpotleM walnut rtnish . Must & "Toby". 644-7"92 1/25 like new. Eves: 5"4~l188 To V.P. property develop-i _:_'~·c:.c~·~·~~~---~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~
1
Sacrificf! Sl~. 536-4419 see 1550 962-6521 14 · h mrnt. H"y typing &-SH. Es-Sell The olrl slulf • · SUGAR ca.n dump. 1.oquat HOBIE CAT w 1 t
14851 Jeffrey Rd.
In Irvine
crow, R.E-nr le~al good, Buy the new sluH Gar age Sale 112 Hammonrl, Ste In w ll Y, tree. Tall bamboo starta:. trailer. ll025 5 ml. South oi Tustin, and
I W Ml M & F 710 -'-"'-"'-'-'------·I Yamaha. New & IJ.'led piano.! 548-4305 * 67>1340 * % ml. s. o! Santa. Ana Frwy,
F /c B .. kk .. pe.. HeJp Wi1nt ed, M & F 710 ~. P ant , GARAGE Sal~Mt•• 'tt•m• f '1 ak• "-1 '" ·0 I , ... -. ...... · n mo m 1. cc~ YI 1 8 Mo. old SJ.amese female SABOT hull. New flberg u (2 ml N. ol San Die&o Frwy) . II children's clothing sizes 6 So '·ltl "·h dl M I . Yoong "nternri&ing ~up. . ~ ·at.,..._ mi usc nee dg c ood home . w/interliner, N~er In ·,. to 18, pictures, diahes, ap· "-""1 N M t Sa t ""7831 Must be ahl"' lo handle all R•steurant pliancc1, elc. 711 Costa .......... l"" .. an, n a 962-6470 1125 water. $225. ~ 832~585 ;
phalleft of bookkeeping. CPA Me.511. St, C.M. Call 645-2672. Ana. "HAIRY" lovable miniature LEARN ta ull on Columbia (..
once a year. ANNOUNCING ANOTHER EsrATE SALE! Ftne lady'-STEINWAY Grand, Artl!!t bred bela'e male c.ocfi·a· 22 with expert instructor. ~
Secr•fary
1 Girl ofc. 2 Men. Ute SH,
top grooming & looks. O.C.
A1'por1-
G•n'I Offlc•
Dlv~rsifled duties. Good head
for fi&W"". Type 40-45. Al·
tractive.
Secretary
l'yplng le SH. must be 11hle
to traviel. 2.3 Trlpa per mo.
Wlmd• !nvolV@d. Take not"
of meetinp.
410 W. Coalf Hwy.
Newport Beach
By Appt. "'-3939
NEED locll men to operate
local bl.alne11 for JEWELL
CO'S. Jtte. sal~s blq"md.
helpful CALL MR GOBP.::N
526-4744 7.9 pm.
NEWPORT Beac}l deve.k>p-
ment firm need1 F /C book·
keeper. Co~ctloc IM!CtllC
aptt mandatory, Pl.e:ue
llf"JXI resume It> P. 0 . Box
1880. Newport Bt!ach, 9aO
OPERS.SINGl.Z NEEDLE
Spec, mu:b. Ewp'd on17.
1por1S\\"e8r, rd. pay. N.B.
642.3472.
• Part-dme. Fe:male
no w. 19th St, c .M.
* il45-018I * The .. Yelklw Pages"
clusltied . . , su..5678 "'
Exciting clothes lit ~. J'J!'IO Giant model, German 1Ca.le • poo 1 yr. 53().5'45. 1126 call 557-3028 aft 4pm. Tripi• Wide Cor n•ll l-.
C Garage Sale 23rd-3bf! 425 ~:~I rei~:a:bo~ r ;~: 1 PUREBRED G. Shep. &nd * 28' COLUMBIA 1969 = : ~:::::;'-.
'
Vi&ta Flon., NB. 644-1131. 1 M&Junut• mlx.. tree to Days 713/63&-0757 , " Kimbell Grand $4Jl8. 'C'o·e• 114/646-5T24 Flarnina:o • General .·a.: OCO j BEGINS Wed. 9AM~PM WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO & eood home 897-MBO l/2S .o:.• Broadmoor e Star · 1
AND
W• will acc•pt appllcatlon1 for -
• WAITRESSES
• BUS BOYS
• DISHWASHERS
• HOSTESSES
•COOKS
• IAmNDERS
• COCKTAIL WAmtESSES
Sta rting December 1t
9:00-4:00 D•lly
24001
Apply In Perton
Av•nW• lie la Carlot•
L .. UM .Hlll1
Santa Ana or San Dl•go Frwy. lo
El Toro Rd . -Corner of El Toro
Rd. and Avenlda de la Carlota.
Owned by Far West Services, Inc.
Opera tors of Snack Shopt, Coe.o's
Reuben's, Reuben E. Lee,
The Whaler , Iu.d ore'1
1B944 Santa Madrlna Circle, 1819 Newport Blvd, 642-M&f AOORABLE pupa, Poodle/ W ierd Sefilng Class Hlllcrest •• Cambrldp -~
FV, nr Garfield&: MaFIOl.l.a MAHOGANY aploet plann It Cbcktt mix, 9 wka olll. fl5 * 673·7395 CHAPMAN
961-4161· bench by Emel'500. t OWfW!T', 548-6931. 1125 Bolts, Slips/Docks 910 MOBILE HOMES •
' CRIB $10; reb1&; $40. Misc seldom used', $250. 64f-.13l8 HAVE $ attractive older kit· 2S ll'.l6 N. Harbor, S.A..
furniture. Sunday. 846-4600. I ~-~~M'°""ch""I :-:-:--.121= te thAt need __, ho SLIPS AVAlLABLE, • to * n4/531.Sl!J5 * 4811 Sandy Ln, Ht1 Bch Sewing a net n.t •""" m•s. 40', 2602 Newport Blvd. --~~""'~~--1 _ 644-7492 1125 m.6608 A BLOCK _
: '
MOVING SALE! Som•thtog *REPAIRS* SEALPDJNT Siama<, FROM ALL SHOPPING
!or Ewryone! 3137 Sharon Clean, oil&: adj111t your ma-fent8.le I: Burmne kitten. Boatt, S~ & Ski 911 National 8X36, 1 BR, mmpl
Ln. CM. 546-6194. c:hlne In your ~· Spec. M8-51Zl 1126 WOMAN encumbered by 16' Complet:.Jy tum. ~
M.chlntry tl6 ~$3~ wot auatan· PART IQldu retriever/part siaM lkl bolt w/ Mercury United Moblte Homes '
LATHE, Sean small Home ' · toy collie. Vft)! lovable 100 HP & trtr. Sailina 6t5-31to 633--2982:
• ~ completa w I Ja w, 1970 Sinltt -~-Za&'__!..'!~· 397-5480 w/frlends trom San Dk!&o A Beeuty-NNr BMch ""'"'}' beautiful ....... nut cvi....,..... S b . 2 al t , Caribbean. Sell thla Wttk , motor, rears. drill chuck. Make• button ho t e 1 , mall reedpuppie1, me, JeSI then f!OOO 318 "L" 69Skyltne,2CIX'.Sl,2 Bft..-
Xlnt cond, t lOO or but of· overca.1t1: seams, b It nd 2 female. Very cui.. MB-9'.19 St Balboa Pen. 173.1916 2 BR, 2 Bath
ltt. Aft 6: 546--0730 hem• d~ •tc. Guar. afttr 4. ., •
911
United Mobil• Homes •
Mitcellaneout 111 $+1 . .w" cub,« small pymt:s. Youne Adult Cati. Calleo, Aircraft 845-3140 6.1.1·2961
5'5-8238. OUl!y Grey .Intl Multi-co-n.Y llE11tACl'ABLE. Full JUST A MOMENT! • ~':;""~~~ Sportl111 Good1 138 lor<d. 546-7389 1.r.11. ...,.,_, "°"'""· 24 CALL UNITI D Newporta~Yd. ~. SURF'BOARDS A.KC Beqie, tamale bi-hr liCbld~~::: lnlUJ"tld, URGE OR SMALL -
WET SUIT, Radio, Stem; Ne:w 7'4''x19 '85 Also colored. 1 year, Mu.st have ~ • WE S!:l.L 1llEM ALL ;
kit. table:•, couch, club!!. 7'7''x19 low ~ iso. Both fenced yard. ~ eves. C1mper1, S.le/R•nt 920 ~fed MOUe H=..
dre11ew 11z,e 16, 4~230. round tall•. SJ6...f689, rnEE pup, p t-t • r r le: r , 'C DODGE mall truck • 40 •
CARPORT covm lot aale. SURF Craft Hawaii.an 7'4" 846-&SU 1123 b\ltaM ttove Jct box run-COSTA M•SA ..
White :itumlnum l.OdJ, $!'A). Oat bottom IUl'fbot.rd. aood LCE Swine •t hme, 3" ntrw watar, ~to. tnni. S900 Cuual Mobile ~!e· 1.tt'c
each. Phoot 54.5-7765. eandltlon. 49t-9468 pl~. ~ 1125 ot bit ofr. Wll consicl::: I.\: i:, ~A M .. _ ~
BALBOA BAY CL U B }f.EAD Metal skis. 1td 118 f'REE Wedafwood pa ltow, tndt IO-o315l' alt S. No,.v on dllplq .. S Stv -
m<mbor>hip Im-lale. cm. Mornr biodlnp. Good 836-44113 I ' CAMPER SHI LL GRl•NLEAP PARK •
548.ow cond. 846-9518. 2 fe.mAle rats with cqe MU395 or 54S.6331 l'l!C) Whittier Avenu:: 642-l3S0 '.
19 • 10 t.ot, """ 3 ""'" TV Rodlo HI" '4$-4028 c-1o1 11101 IS6ll alx4! 6 ... '64'1. ~~l , . • • , ' r .- ' ' l2d5 dbl --a.. U) 3lx : $35 2 foldttW boat chain St•reo 136 BIG White nbbll tree kl ScoeNrt t2J .... ....._ ..... ,,-:..""'::!.
is ~ rad!: ~ m-1095 iood home . M:J...3246 1125 1 ;1tiffiPiiiin;E;;;;;:-J:;;;;H~~ffi'"liit!l-nijii'3.';o;;~ POSTURE REST -V1bnUt11 TAN09£R.G &t Upe recorde:r, l + RUPP Mini Bike. Just ":>¥ • .WAJJ, ~
molar, ote!Wlon tablet and like new, ultd only «I hn. BABY white Guinea Pl1 l e llkt new, l~ hp, w/ jlclt !'!"~12200. 81 llW'Dt!I', :
timer. S75. ~ $l30. •9&-1"36 &ft S. mother s.t&-9965 ln& Shaft. Call 67$.-05Q -
•
I
....
ilah.v PllOT .. .....,. J_, 2,5, 1911
• • 1llliii9 _,,,_ 1§1 r •· -.. -l§J I _,,,.. l§J I ---liJ I -·-1§1 1 _,,,.. 1§1 I _.... I~ I i~~H;,.;.,; ... ~~5ns~ 1-SOMC., 'P,•rtt 966 Autos: Imported 970 J !A~· --~~l!!!""""!!!rt~od!!.__2910~ Au191, Imported 910 .._, u,... Autoo, Used 990 Au191, Uood --c.;;c..;;...;.... __ _
im.oDON o0 -'°' DATSUN MOpat B er henU englne1 MG VOLKSWAGEN IUICK FORD LINCOLN OLDSMOBILE
a be9utltu1 ~ .10W $.!SO W/H OuCoU dlat. for
JD.l}ntcrwx:e and archlieaaz-. 383 Mopar, lcnltlor!. wite1
_ally tmpra&ive lbl&a.. See It ~il ~ Ir~ Vaaol ~t Cb. txclttnc Dft' "Vl.llaict ,...:J~e J.P':'1"5 for Moper B
ltowt.e" by Levitt Mobile e.~. 1nnen & oute?'l,
: ·~tiems Oii display now at alum. retainers S30 Torqu~ : • BAY HAR&OR FIJte trans, cable type, JU1t
DOT DATSUN
OPEltDAILY ANO
SUNDAYS
18835 Beai.,b Blvd.
Hunttngton Beach
mmtor~G
l9GS MG UOO Sedan. Hunter
~n. b~ket. .eata, ;431),
Prl party 6"7S--318S.
MCJI
'69 MGI
1-ge Selectiea 1962 BUICI< Sl<yla:k Copec.J,
Of VW c~. v ... auto. """"· "'•""""'•
V-K_.... ... lo. A·l ...... w Ith --. __,... rettlpts lor beW part.I , $300-luse, New & Utecl or be•t otter, phone Terry, 675-1382 aJtcr 5; 30 p.m. and lmmedl•h O.llwry weekends
'62 Econoline
Yan
B•nk Repoiae11lon
'67 Uncoln 4 dr, fUU pwr .r.
air cond. TU1e O\'tt pml!I
or will re.finance. Call di.)''
642-31U, ext 241 or 241.
MERCURY
19&4 OLDS ~al clean, runia
&OOd, good~ $525.
'65 CUTLASS 2 dr H.T.
Bucket st'ats, e-0nsole, PIS.
factory air. '555. 54!>-0503. MOBILE HOMES owrhauled, ccnverter Sl.25.
l"5 ,,..., St, "°'" Me.a :1~J':"" ""'""M" I '68 DATSUN SEDAN
-~u.at S. of S.O. Fwy •t Hartior WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
Rdstr. &.utiful canary yel-
lo"'' with rich contraati111
black interior, Chrome wire
CHICK IVER50N ··= .. ~ELECTRA==~22S.~A-~-. -.1
VW full pwr. LAndau top, Pvt
pty. S239S. n4183T-a214
e 283 Chevy V-8
e B .. fod Hydro
PLYMOUTH
1970 Mercury Montego 64 PLY. Sports Fury, like
TI4/5t0-!M'1Q FOR. TOP USED CARS
Triple Wiff Cornell U your car ii extra clean,
H1llttest • FlamiJwo ace us firsL
'Paramount e UnlVt"l"Sa.I BAUER BUICK
, Banin.gtuh • Broadmoor 23'1 E. 17th SI.
'Continental • Star Coeta Mesa 53-7765
Gtneral • lIDJcrest Autos Wi1nt9d 968 CHAPMAN
MOBILE HOMES
12S!l BMch Blvd., G.G.
.. 114/530-2930 •
YFLOWER Manor Hse.
S•Adlt PK. 2 BR, 2 bath ,
earner space, make ofr. .........
· Tr•liers, Utlllty 947
· 14' Tandem Trailer
With 4 wheels. All &teet v.-'eld.
eco. construction, % " Steel
deck plating. S.ts-4361 or
642...584.5. Will sell. Or trade
Ior pickup.
I ........ -l§l
General 950
, '61 CHEVROLET Sportsvan
8 pas, 6 cyl, auto trans, r/h,
1 ownr, priv pty, $1250.
492.746.7
Dune Buggies
'60 CORVAIR far sale, Great
for Dune Buggy. Good
rubber $275. 546-7817 alter
£ p.m.
Trucks 962
WE PAY TOP
CASH
tor llled' can A trucks just
call 11.'J; Jar free estimate,
GROTH CHEVROLET
AM tor Sales Ma naa:ei-
18711 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
847.sJ87 Kl g....nn
TOP DOLLAR
for
CLEAN USED CARS
See Andy Brown
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
ID6[l Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
642.0010
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHMOLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
'67 CHEVROLET 2h ton 8 Costa Mesa 54&1200
ilttspension, step bumper, 6 IMPORTS w ANTED
J!¥l, big 6 ply tires $1300
er best offer. 551-7315 Orange Counties TOP $ BUYER
')2 DODGE P.U. 1i> ton, 4-spd Bn..L MAXEY TOYOTA
pans, new brakes, painters 18881 Beach Blvd,
~cks, Cood shape, l 300. H. Beach. Ph. 847-855."i ~7082 1,,,:'--o-c-c-ccc-7'=.,.-= Need GOOD dependable '60 International Travel All , transportation car. Chevy or pi eng. Needs some body VW pref. 835-l!lro
work. $295, 6f2-..<H!IO. I ~~~.--.,---.--=
XLNT '59 CHEVY PICKUP Autos, Imported 970
4 bunk camp shell, r.fichelin
.QC tires, $565. 493-1271
':.,1 GMC '61 eTii;. New pa.int
'titts R/H 4 1pd 12 vt, rlms gd body. Offer 646-9159
'Ji8 CHEVY %. ton Longbom
-Custom cab, 24,800 mi,
j:&h I: !a.ct alt. 968-1390.
: FORD % TON P.U. , e FlOO, 1962 e
Aft 3 pm
'$ FORD PK-UP V..,,, $275.
Private party.
Call 67!)..~.
Auto Leasing
• WE LEASE
ALL IMKES
& MODELS
964
ALFA ROMEO
'63 ALF A ROMEO, xlnt
trans, top eng, tires, R/H,
gar. papeni: $900. 492--0520.
AUSTIN AMERICA
AUSTIN AMERICA
Saln, Servlce, Parts
Immed:ia19 Deliver)'
Allllodob
J~rtuport
~l1111.1 on~,
SlDO W. Cout H"J'., NB.
~ 54().1764
CITROEN
1964 Citroen $65() and $400.
Bo!ex Rex 16 1", 4", 6"
lens ease 494-1249. Bob
DATSUN
'67 DATSUN
Rdstr. Red 14'ilh hl.ack Inter.
4 Door. dlr. IUSD358J Must
seU ~ Wit! 1ake trade or fin-
ance prlvale party, Cal I
5-16.8136 or 4M-6811,
FERRARI
Newport Imports Ltd. Or-
ange County's only autbor-
i?.ed dealer.
SALES-SERVICE-PARTS
3100 \V, C.Oa::;t Hwy,
Newport Beach
642-94-05 541}.1764
Authoriz@d Ferra...'1 Dealer
FIAT
• Cabinets
• Ice Boie wheels with radl&l (ires, S4!.303l Ext. 68 or 67 e ·m RIVIERA. E'uil pwr,
AM /FM radio, lmmaeulate 1910 HARBOR BLVD, X1nl cond., $U50.
condition. ~-Kelly I _--..COST;rTnAiildESA,-;;:u;;;--·l--_,;*:.,.:;:"~'·:;""'~;_•~--1 :)i';,: Book relall µ:110. OW' '65 YW BUG CADILLAC $ 6 2 5 • 0 0
$1799 4 '-'·di•. AM/FM (YPT_ ,69 Cad Sod a· 'd 638-7689
CHICK IVERSON 508' Full"!'..:. ,,.. u.;,, bt";· bk.'Pvt~1,:1_='"'"'=~~~-VW ,...,., n4-838-5035 day11/TI4-646-6439 1969 LTD 2 Dr HT BARWICK .v .. & ... .,,.,_ DRIVEN ONLY 21,000 Ml. 1910 1-1.AR.BOR BLVD, COST A MESA IMPORTS INC. 1964 Cadillac . new tires l Exceptionally cle'ln through. DATSUN owner, ~ cash. ~all out, ~autilul . medium blue
* '69 MGB-GT X1nt cond, 545-292!'. metallic ex:lerior, Dark blue
S500 -T .O.P. or best offer. 998 So, Cst. Hwy, LB 494.9771 ,67 CADILLAC Eldorado, lan~au root, satin black ~n-
544-6349 '59 VW Van '64 eng recent loa.ded 13195 · ty tenor, Auto trans, radio, PORSCHE work done' on tra~. New 646-ll'65 ' ' pn. p ., heater, power steering, pow.
brake system, camper unit . er brakes, lactory air. See - - - - -'65 Poncha inside. New clutch. GOOD 1963 Black C~pe de Ville. and ask 10 drive this al·
.--..--- -I COND Best offer 54(h3118 All po~er, air cond.. $799. tractive car !Oday. ZNV540. "THINK" 356 SC Sunroof · · · 642-433' or 54&-!72'. Johmoo • Soo 2626 Harbor '66 VW Sq. baok-Smuool. .67 CAO 2 "' D'y ..,.. c M 54<J.!i6JO ' ' British racing e-reen. new tires & eicbaust. Pvt 0 ' " · · · · , Dllfl Lie YCC 52S party, 642.-1020. ~300~~·6.:~~d. 1969 LTD 2 Dr. HT
" $2899 BOUGHT Porsche, must. sell 196:8 CAD C~upe DeVille, DRIV~N ONLY 21,000 MI. CHICK IVERSON '69 VW immed. X!nt mnd. Fi Id ,_ .__ E>:cepuonally dean through-See re. go ' new tuo:I, eXutu>, UI "' ,., I _,. bl
VW $1450. 536-9454. ..~300 Pri p 61S.Jl86 o , . au 1 u . mcuium ue "FRIEDLANDER'' ~ · VB.le ty · metalhc exenor. Dark blue '68 VW Bug, radio, coco C MARO
13750 IEACH ILVD. ~9·3031 Ext. li6 or 67 mats, exhaust system, Good A landau root, satin black in ..
) 1910 HARBOR BLVD. nd $1275 548-958~ 1---------terior. Auto . trans, rad lo,) 893-1~~ ~.as24 COSTA MESA ,cc ' ' . :i 1970 Camaro. MUST SEE TO heater, power steering, pow.
70 VW Campe .. r. lmrnaculate APPREClATE. -La • b-'-ta•1·~· · s-uEW USED-SE RV 1966 Porsche 912, low miles, ..... 5500 · ;,""" e. '"""'s, .. u.;r alJ', .. "'"
'" -• s speed, radials, looks like 1_ .. _·=~. ~*~675-~"""1~t.~·~~-l-M_iradra,>MLa..-""""iiiniBelaii:o~h;--j and ask to drive this at· ~ now, mu•I Mcrifie< 13"5 '&9 YW SEDAN CHEVROLET traohvo ""' tod•y. ZNV54-0 . or best offer. May accept Johnson &: Son, 2626 Harbor, I
'68 FIAT 850 oow" VW fo tr•d• · '70 NOYA C.M. M0.5630. J
MX 2 Dr HT r1t'w, Hi-pert 383, B & M,
DEALER OWNED torquenile, lots mot!' $950.
SINCE NEW 633-5576
Dealer owned, dealer main-I "''""°"===c--;=::::-= tanced. since brand new. '66 PLYMOl!I'H Sports Fury
Driven only 10,000 mi, buy. 2-dr, air coOO, P /s. $7~-962-l.i19 er recelve1 balance ol 5 year I ,C:C.0'--'-~~~--"I
on 50,000 mi warranty. Beau-"6K Plymouth Roadrunner. 4
tifuJ powder blue finish with Spd. For information, call
·medium blUe Interior and 1..:"'::1..:5c_· ~8'::"-..:293D~=· ~~--1
dark blue landau top. Auto PONTIAC
tran!I, radio, heater, power1----------I
steering, power brakes, tac. '68 PONTIAC Executive tila
tory air cond plus tinted wgn. Fact 11ir, ps/pb/pw,
glass, w/w tires etc. Com-AM /FM radio, adjust steer -
pletely aerviced and ready 1ng whl, rack. Like new.
for delivery, OOlAGO, Clear. $2895. Owner 644-464S.
ance priced. J ohnson &: Son, '67 FIREBlRD, auto, air,
2626 Harbor Blvd,, C.M. p/s, disc brks, good t~s.
540-5630. radio CLEAN, Offer .
'71 MERC. WAGON <94-5617
ALMOST NE\V ·n '62 Tempe1t 1tn wgn, '54
Colony Park 9 passenger Ford 1~ T truck, mtr nM!ds
Wagon with only l,000 actual work. 846--0213,
milet, air l..'Onditionlng. pow. I '·o-'7C:p;,'0'-,-Ctia",'-s"'po=.rt~Co=upe, xlnt
e.· windows, 6 way power 1..'0nd, $675.
seat, power s!eering, power * Call 646-6955 *
disc brakes & much more. '62 PONTIAC-$275
Bcautilu1' W/J.Jte 14'ith walnul CATALINA 2 dr. Hd top.
wood panel, If you are fl Clean! 546-4145 or 838-1157
bargain hunter see this
weekend. No. 5l034A . John. '69 FJREBIRD 400. De.luxe
son & Son, 2626 }!arbor Int, Ps/Pb, auto, 26,000 nii.
Blvd., Costa t.1esa. 541).5630. S2400. 968-9778 or 968-4707.
'66 COMET T·BIRD
1959 FORD SPYDER 613-2211. 54&-4120. Radio &: heater. rzsn 939>
RDSTR. R ...... l th bl••k '" LATE '67 912, FM, Koni'1, $1295 2 Door Coo"". VB, automatic, 6 Ind . k cu "• ~ ... new radia111, Many eJCtras, "" cy i er sue , dlr. Radio,
'69 T-Bi.nl 4 dr Landau,
arn/fm stereo, full pwr,
beaut. cond. Must sell,
make offer. 675-29Z7 eves.
'64 AMERICAN· Overdrive.
tcrior. Like ne-1v, YQY834 40 000 " Pv 64•1,,.,... power steering. dlr. Must heater. Must sell! $495 full , mt s. t ply ,,. '-"'"· ~"II, will t·"-trndo, (ZV"' GALAXI_E, 4 door , V_8, PIS, $899 "" o.r.e .c.-P/B o. d price. (TFC057) Call 494-7744
CHICK IVERSON '68 T"ga 911, 5 '""· am/Im, 366) Call 491.7144 . A"~" ., Radoo. hoac JJ,000 mi"s, xln't cond. I=~~~~~-· ~~~I tcr. Excellent transpo.-ta.!ion MARQUIS S T AT J ON VW $5200. &!1-9428. l87ll BEACH BL. 842-4435 196~~ ~r lm_p;Ua& ~ car. $300 or make otter. WAG 0 N, l 9 69.
·70 PORSCHE 911 T, s Body HUNTINGTON BEAOf co . · ew nres_ a!-5'9-0214 JO-passenger, Loaded. $3195.
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ===-~=~-~'1-~''~"'~·~·~"~"':"":·~r=•:•~•o~. ~C~al~ll:;il:I~::;:~;:;::;~= 833-1149. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. & i11ter. 5 !!pd trans. 4,000 '68 VW Conv., 33K mi's, reblt 830-1589. ~~ ----===~~-~~-.. ""1129 LEAVING For active duty. COSTA MESA mis . .......-. eng. lst $1050 takeii:, Call 1959 FORD -=~~~~==-~ ,,.,,,n '68 Chevy Biacayne Must Sacrifice '62 Meri:ury .-.,-F-!A-T-.~124,-,..S_po_M_Co~.-.,-. '66 911 ·EX COND o'o-'-.~=-·=.,,-==o-c=I 2 dr 6 cyl 3 spe<'d Best oller 546-4232.
19 000 u 26 ~IPG 96 $3200, 645-2063 '64 VW S QUARE BACK $995 or offer 675-1045 . m es. ,. ' SEDAN Gd Mech Cond. l=~-~~=,-,..-~clGALAX,E. 4 door, VII. PIS,
}IP. 5 spd. AM-FM. 540-0024 TOYOTA • 9G2-8l4l • '69 Chevy Van VS, auto, JOB P/B. Air Con<I., Radio, heat-MUSTANG
JAGUAR ------------C7"='':'-c'---I 14•heel abse, Good cond, er. Ex<-ellent transportation TOYOTA '65 VW BUG 12195"' host o1'. "41"'616. ca>'. l300 "' mak• """·
'65 Mustang convr. Au10., V8.
Good cond_ Moving. $100 cc
offer. &12-4993. JAGUAR All •11s • ,!"",.,;, • CONTINENTAL 549-CllH
HEADQUARTERS Immediate De livery ,61 VW BUS I""""""~!'!!'~!!!!!!!!!!~ '68, Loaded, VS, Air, 1
LlNCOLN Cootioootal 196&-JEEP ow""· M"'I ""·
Thconlyauthorlzed JAGUAR $ SAYE $303.0Q JAC 1S3 Lo mi. All power, leather Make offer * 83}-3.W
dealer in the entira Harbor $599 int, air, radio & tape '61 TOYOTA L.C. \Varn hubs, VACANCIES Cost money!
Area. From window sticker price recorder. $1500. STh-5263. winch, llotation tires. $1950. Rent your 1-nuse, apt., store
•Ser 7826 Demo. R&H, aulo· CHICK IYERSON '63 Lincoln Cont'!. As is 67S.3Q77 bldg., etc. thru a Daily Pilot Compleb:i
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
"'
mallc, VW need.I mut!ler. interior like We'll help you sell! 642-5678 Classil~ ad.
fl n•M l•io~I >1~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 0<w, 1C5000· 64&-3456RVAlanR)'tim<. Autos, New 980 ,-A-ut-.. -.-1t~.-w----9=ao
tun U<a 1910 HARBOR BLVD.
TOYOTA -~CO~ST~A~MES~~A~-1 '61 CORVAIR. morooo,
'68 YW BUG """'"' ... ,., wh• "phb"'"
Must see.
$425. 646.8574 aft 4
'63 RAMBLER 4 dr. Very
good condition $350. Private.
party. &tl-5425
'60 AMBASSA~o"o"R-.~"to~m-.,1
~io, heater, air co~
MU.IT Sacrifice, '66 T-Blrd,
All pwr, Air, Michellri X
tires. 546-7972.
'64 T-BIRD, xood condition.
58,000 miles.
*Call 545-7377*
'' W H IT E ELEPHANTS"
overrunning your house?
''Cash"'. .sell !Dem thtu
Dally Pilot Classified
HO
1006 Harbor, C.M,
'71 COROLLA COSTA ME$A
234 E. 17th Stred ....7765 . =-~~~~=~~ Radio, heater, disc brakes,
'61 JAGUAR XKE C P • factory air, low, low miles!
ou.U!ta.nding cond. Lo mi'B, Take older car or lltTl&ll
4 spc!, stereo. $3300. 644-8197 down. Under fact warn.nty.
MERCEDES IENZ Call Ma""' dlr. •It 10 am
new 4 &pd tn.na, aood cond.
Immaculate! Bille wilb white1-""""'~·-:50-05030'-=;."-·--=
interior. 4 tipeed. dlr. Radio, '63 Corvair convertible
heater. Must sell! Will rm-_Xlnt cond. Orig. owner.
ance. (XEW878l. Call $350 *** 6#4632
494. 7744, 'W CORV AIR, red. Good
KARMANN Ghia, '69 tn. rubber. Good 2nd car $275 .
terior, '64 seats & lites, 546-7811 after 6 pm..
CLEAN U·P
540-SlOO 6T 494-7506. 037371.
BILL MAXEY
ITIOIYJ()!TIAJ
11U1 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt. llo•ch 147-1555
l ml N. of a.It Hwy. Gii Bda
'71 TOYOTA PICKUP
'65 trans, 40 llP, exh sys, CORYmE Koni's, new brks & tank,1 ______ ---
'67 vmE SUper clean, $6l'O. 54~2520
aft 6.
'69 VW Bug, AM/FM. Im· Futback -''.427", 4-speed,
mac. 14,000 mi's. Orig ownr, AMIF~ radio. New poty. Mu~t "Rll. 673-4.TIO. glass tires. -Excellent con-
VOLVO ••t1on. Drl$ruo"""·
Ask !or Mr. Granola 546-8640
'68 VOLVO
ON'
ALL s
t:IAUER
BUICK
In
COSTA
MESA
'"sell thls one for
Wi1h deluxe 30" camper, Full
prire ~:?251. Take small
down or trade. dlr. 494-7503·
54G-310(}, •03448.
ior, runs like new. Needs _ ._ ~
detail. ZKH080, Kelly blue ~ .-
book says this car should a THINK
11ell for $1385. Chick says ''l!,G"
$899 '69 CORONA
CHICK IVERSON ''fRIEOLAllDER'" Hordtop. Vieyl "'''· 4.,.,..:,
'57 VE'ITE, Good cond, $450
Local owner, 1ow mileage, or best oiler,
automalic transmission, ra. --~Af=l'=6'~"'c=-·-c253~1--'
dio, heater, v.•hile side wall COUGAR
tires, etc, Chick's s~clal at1---------
?\-fONTIO '69 COUGAR, PS/PB, .~. $ 1999 R&H, 1 ownr. 16.000 mi.
CHICK IVERSON Imm..,, $2850. ,.._.,.,
1969 XR7 Air. Fl\.f 27 m i
AT
DEALERS COST!
, 234 E. 17th SL VW immaculate, Sky Blue. Sac. C«ta Mesa 548-77135 ll75G •EACH IHWY. :If) rifice. Will take trade or
• n .,n.,., ""--893-1566 • 537-6824 · 54~1 1:.Af. 66 or 67 NEW-USEO-SERV. finance pvt. pty_ Call Sid.
Auto Service, Parts 966 1970 HARBOR BLVD. dlr. 540--3100 or 494-/:iO!i a.11.
COSTA t.-tESA ~, 10 a.m. XTS 343,
>-Roar ""' '"' eonrarr i '""'•5=9,...2=o=oo""""R-.d""'t,--' ------i --=T=R""1u""M'""P~H,,......-f W/auto trans $35. '61 Corvalr oa S Bf MG
;motor $50 S spd traII& &: Sales, Service, Parts
: rear end $65 Rt.ar Silver with harc1top. Pirelli Immediate Delivery, TRIUMPH
·suspension $35 545--0906. !ires. dlr, Mags. (155 AVB) All ?t!odell AtITHORIZED
$ STREET lif'e! for Jeep, JI.lust aacrlflce! Will take SALES e SERVICE
fllke new; J eep 1aft-top tor trade. or linance private FRITZ WARREN'S
! CJJ; tow bar & bumper party. call 546-8736 or SPORT CAR CENTER
, for Jeep: misc: Olevy parts. 494-6811, 7Io E. 1st St.. S.A. 541.0164
i 842-6395 or 545-6331 '66 Datsun 4 dr 11ta wag. Open daily 9-9: clued SuDda)'
<l)RVETTE Avante & Dune Good cond, Going to college. TR..J recer.t engine, clutch:
:-buggy auto body repair, $695. 968-3:505. 3lOO W. C.0..t Hwy., N.B. ne.w paint, top, rugs, car
: !l~aoM.hle:, Aft 5: 646-9146 ''·=70-D~AT=SUN=~~w.=z~.-.~,-r, IM2-9:'05 5'0-1764 cover. Flawles.s. $67S. Aft
i511Lily Pilot Want Adi have map, $(395, 5800 m.i'a, pvt '65 MG 1100 ~ 84&-9411
. bargains galore. pty. 968-7441 $500, 545-3459 '63 TR-4.. Red. New tlre1,
ccmplete, recent tune-up.
Low mile. $675. 646-4925 ' .
·. -
-': . .
VOLKSWAGEN
WANTEP
I'll pay top dollar for your
VOLKSWAGEN .today. CaU
and .uk tor Ron Plnchot,
549-3031 Ext. 66·67. 613-0000,
1963 Yolks Bus, new ti~11.
66 Yolks ena:. eoo<f eonditkln
$350 or best «rier 541--3¥1
or &t6--M34
'69 VW. Xlnt oond. New
tires, brakes. tune-up. 'T1
He. Riff. TIW. $1585 or
~.(. 546-7281
'66 vw SUnroo!, IOOd c:ond,
$850 or Best offer,
541-1.517
'65 ·VW BUO $500
• 5f9.l8SB *
VW New tiN!'!i, like iww, bf!low
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1910 l!ARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
\\tlolesale. 54~738
DODGE
1 - -..... • 1968 DODGE Van. ti cyl, W" .. ~ - -le. miles, orig, tires &
TMDCI owner. Must sell 642-3956. "'OlYO' NO "!•ity. take o v e.
' payments. 1970 Dodge Dart.
-'48-8055
"FRIEDWIDER"
,.,,. aaAc" onrr. •1
893-75&6 • 537-68'l&
NEW-US!!D-SERV •
~
'61 VOLVO
2 Dr, Sedan, Good economl-
FALCON
·50 FALCON, auio, radio,
Run11 good, Pvl ply. $125.
Sf4-4493
FORD
'68 GALAXIE FORD
ca_l transportatio~. Special Air ccnd .. power 1tccring, dlr,
ttm week only. Lie. KlB2'6. (USS489) Will take trade ot
WILL FINANCE finance private party, Call
$299 ,""'736 o'491·68U.
CHICK IVERSON '63 SQUIRE WAGON vw {FHS479) dlr, Must sell! Will
$49-3031 Ext 66 or 67 take car In tndt! or finance
191'0 HARBOR BLVD, private. party, cau 546-8736 -~-CO_ST=A-:MES=.,·==---1 or 494.sm.
f VOLVO i1FALCO=N~,-.-r-.-.~.,.~I.
Auto, new 1.bu, xlnt cond,
. 71"• An HIN $495"' "''' ""· -Sf.vlbp Up To $75• '61 GALAXlE V~. P/S,
P/B, radki, xlnt oond. $450. on mn&ln1nc 10's cu8782) 673--0661
OVERSEAS DE1.. SPEC. l=~~=~-~-'65 GALAXIE 500. \Tl, auto,
2-dr ITT. P/1, r&:h. $795 .
67J....:1743, Lee.vine Feb 1 ..DeM leuriA W VOi.VO '70 MAVERICK $1400
790\9 No. Cout Hwy, Lquna
Dch.
'6'1 VW Bug • R&H, Btllf'I 1966 Harbor, C.M. -.9303
w/black Interior. Good oon.1 ---"v~o"L"'v~o'=--'---''I dlOon, Pvt pty. 8U-S75T
*'56 FORD 2--DR•
VB* $3)0
•842-3976•
.... .. .
,J
• • '
'66 VW Alfl'HORIZED
x.lnt rond. Must ~II $950 SAL&:S e SER.VICE
• 67>2.IUI • fRITZ WARR.N'S '61VW·""· . New 181Cicc SPORT CAR CENTER
en1. muUler .. tlrtl. R.lck. no E. lit St.. S..A. 547~
Reg for 'TI . Sl750. 644-4445 ()pen dl!llly 9-9: cioMd SI.Inda)'
-
Did yuo ever tblnlc o1 nap.
Ina that White Elephant 1n
the a ttJe tor torriethtng )'OU
OU! u.seT Try the Traders
Pandbe column lD tbt Dal·
ly Pilot W&l'lt Adi .
• COUGARS •
•MERCURY ~ND MONTEGOS
EXAMPLE
NEW 1970 COUGAR
Power steering, pow• disc brakes, white side -n
tires, deluxe wheel coven, radio & heater.
Johnson
son
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL •MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR
2'26 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA