HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-01-17 - Orange Coast Pilot~ I
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. f;yele. Gang .Trio
. . . Teen ·Girl Baped~-
Held • ID Sailor~s--. . in Mesa Kidnaped
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Torture Slashing By 2 Men • ID l;ar-
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• DAILY PILOT . ' IXODS .1n um
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.· MOND:t.Y AFTERt:fOON, :JANU~RY ~.7, 11.972
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Polic~ see.king
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2 M·e·n in Rape
A widespread search !cir a forelgn car
with · out-of-state 1ioetlle plates Is under
way' In Orange County today, following
the kidnap and dual rape of a Costa Mesa
teeii8ier walking llomt ·from a morle.
The 18-year-Old •girl ·nap clown Of-
ficer David Walker about rnldnlghl Sabir-
. day and sob~ out the story of her
ordeal with two abductQrs, a big, burly ·
man and his smaller pa).
She was tiubsequenUy treated · at Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital, where ex• . ' aminatlon confirmed she had 'beeni·IU•
llllllf a""ulted. · "
Pqllce were · ioJa ·the, 'Vlitim,. a -clerk,
was walkbii, ;.,· tl)O, !l~lj!k : at : 1<0r4
Road and · Harbor·1:BoOlevard. when· tbe
late model foreign sedan P\illed'lo the.·
curb. 5hO aald the occui>ants spoke to her and
she Ignored them, at which time ute
smaller'11lan opened ,the; JIOo<: and ·drag.
· ged.hef:into ttie·veJilcleil". . ' .. · . Tl1e holklng driver 10 qwed • nnib~rOute to the deadend ol Joann street, the
victim .,.ld;'wtiere·,Slle ,...,Ollfend to
atnobe and was atripped when she !all·
ed·to respond last enough. · ,
She aaid the driver waited wlule his
Weatller .
Nigfft at!d' .i,.,.j;,g low clouda
are on the agenda again for 'TIJes.
-day,·clearillg •b7 mid-morning to
hazy '1"'!~. '.. Hjgbs Tuesday 51 at the co t risltig to 6S inland.
Lows ,toni 31 to 48. ,. •
INSIDE ./ooA.11
Th< ln4i0fflf0blenu of todav'• •oci•llf Oft bti!)t1'taclclldl bf/' 4
group of urdipact worktr•
headquarte.red, in Hunti1apton.
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eompinlon raped her, then he lllso
IWaliJted ~. •
. 111Vestigators aaid the. girl ·wu dumped
GUI of IM• car al POIDODll Avenue and
West Wllaon Street, not· far from the
point where she stopped Patrolman
Walker •
Sile descrlbed her abductors as being JI
to 23 and having close-aopP"d bait. . . .
Cycle Gang rprio
Held ill ·sailor-;s · . . .
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Death Fear
By Hughes -. . .
Alleged ·
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It's Been'. •
Paid Back,
Says 'Wife
Red Skelton. Set
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DlJLV PIUJl • s
'~ot C'oncltisiv~
New Study Links
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Dock Sti·i;ke
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TV to Violence '
On Again;
Talks Fail
WASHINGTO)I (1)1'1\ -A pant! ol 12
15eientlsts reported to Surgeoa General
Jesse L. Steinfeld today there is evide nce
thet television violence causes aggression
among children predisposed to that kind
ol behavior in the rirst place.
ln a 275-page report. stelnfeld's &eien-
tific advlsory committee on television
and social bthavior said the scientific
data were neither consi.sttnt nor dln·
elusive. But it said there was enough evidence
lo indicate a relation between violence on
television and aggreS!ive behavior among
cbUdren who already tended toward ag-
gressive behavior. .
It also said the response o( children to
TV violence depended upon t h e
fr1meWork In whlch It was presented, in-
cluding whethei-there were parental ex·
ptanatlons, the outcome and .nature of the
violence and whether it was seen as fan·
Wy or i-eality. , .
The committee wa9 given i 1..) years Ul
make the report at a cost of ti million. It
also was given instructions not to make
policy recommendations .. . " The findings. the committee said, con-
-verge in three respects : a preliminary
and tentative indication of a casual rela-
tion be t w e e n viewing violeace on
televilion and aggressive behavior; an in·
dicaUon that any such causal relation
operates only on some children (iA'ho ar.e
p-edisposed to be aggressive); and an
~!cation that it operates ooly in some
Fro• Page I
DONALD •.•
Lile maeazine. A hearing in the case
is set for Wednesday.
The McGraw·Hlll book has been
described by the publisher as Hu_ghes'
autobiography, taken from interviews
that Jrvinl , u collaboralor, taped with
Hughes.
Irving talked about the loan during an
interview with Mike Wallace on the CBS
television "60 Minutes" program.
The late columnist Drew Pearson first
reported the loan shortly before the 1960
election. Pearson said Hughes made the
unsecured loan to Donald Nixon in 1956,
while Richard Nixon was Vice Pre1ident,
and afterward Hughes' .problems with
various 1QVernmental agenci~s were ea.s-
td.
The Pearson story was tenned a
"smear" by Nll'on'a campaign manager.
envlronmental context!.
"Such tentative and limited C()nclusions
are not ·very satisfying. '1hey represent
substantially more knowledge than we
had two years ago,. but they leave many
questions unanswered, '1 I.he committee
said.
In a stalmlent released with the
report, steinfeld declined to make his
own conclusions, q'uoting the committee's
summary and saying that the report
"merits the serious attention of all
persons and groupa: C1:1ncerned about the
effects of viewing television."
The committee &aid the "key question"
is how television could be changed lo
red uce 'the possibility of causing violence.
~·The readers of this report will find in
it evidence relevant to _ answering such
ques'tions, but far short of an answer,"
the committee sald. "The state of present
knowledge does not permit an agreed
answer."
The committee said tti"e rate of violent
episodes on TV remained constant at
about eight per hour between 1967 and
!!R;9.
"The nature of violence did change.
Fatalities declined al)d the proportion of
leading characters engaged in violence or
killing declined," the report said.
However, it said. violence increased
between 1967 and 1969 in cartoons and
comedies. and cartoons were the most
violent type of . TV program in that
period.
The committe~ said that while it did
find a relationship betwee n violence on
the screen and aggressive behavior by
some children the evidence also sug·
gested that .. the effect Is small comRar.ed
with many other possible causes such as
parental attitudes or knowledge of and
experience with the real violence of our
society." .
Iu a news conference, Stei11feld wel1t
beyond his cautiously worded written
statement to say, "This -study is not a
·whitewash. For the first time it identifies
the casual connection between violence
on TV and subsequent aggressive
behavior by childien."
Steinfeld said, "If we had had this
kind of informatio11 10 or 20 years ago
we would have been far ahead or the
game.''. _ He said the ·report "should provide the
basis for intelligent acUM'' by the Fed-.
era! Communi cations Commission, the
'IV networks and Congress.
· From Page I
FROZEN .•.
Donald Ni.1.on said he sought the loan
through )Us friend, lawyer Frank J.
Waters, ~hen a lobbyist for Hughes, in -an
unauccwful effort to save his chain of
reatauraRts. He said the loan was aecured by his mother's lot in Whittler, caur. B, C, D, -and that ranged from filthy, ·
Donald Ni.Ion said he never asked his moderately dirty, dirty and moderately
brother to do anything for him or anyone clean."
else. He said that a gas station was built He said Hughes wore false beards,
on the lot and that it was worth $22.8,000 mustaches and wigs to the secret
when it wu finllly given in payment for meetings at wll.lch he tape recorded his
the Joan. autobiography. Jrving said Hughes told
Jn Beverly Hills, calif., Dietrich, him he wore disguises because "there are
former head of Hughes Tool, and an aide always people looking for me and there's
to Hughes from 1925 lo 1957, also con-a price on my head."
firmed that the loan was made but said "There's a James Bond setup here
Clifford had no knowledge of it "because that 's out of -the worst possible detective
it was handled by a laiA·yer who ·worked novel you C()Uld ever read," Irvine said.
for the Hughes Tool Co. Time Magazine published an Interview
"The Joan was made for ~·orking Sunday with Irving Jn which he was ask-
capital for the operation of the restaurant -..ed why Hughes told him his life story.
in Whittier " Dietrich said in a telephone "The man is in the last decade of his
interview. ~'It wasn 't made for a chain, life," Irving said. "He believes he has
though he (Donald Nixon) was tryin~ to been maligned, lied about. He has receiv·
build another restaurant at the time.' ed a bad press. As he said himself, he
San Francisco attorney Belli said the wanted 'lo restore the balance.' "
money was iransferred in the form of a Ted Weber, a . Wee president of
mortgage payment to Donald Nixon and McGraw·Hill Book -Co. that plans to
his mother , accordh1g to l he Journal-publish the book in March, denied Sun-
He~ald story. ,,. day a report that McGraw·Hill paid a
The newspaper reported that Belli said $750,000 advance for the book and that
he was the attorney for Phillip Reiner, a Hughes was to get most of it with Jrving
Hughes actountant whose name was used t-0 get the royalties.
on the loan and who subsequently sued Irving said Hughes. who told him his
for defamation of character over the use holdings were wort_h $2.3 bilfion, wanted
of his name. Belli said the suit was set-the money because "he did not get to be
Ued out of court. a billionaire by givJng many things away
for nothing." OlAH&l COAST
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SAN FRANGco (AP)
Langshoremen resumed a strike at 24
West Coast ports today alter negotiators
failed to reach a settlement. Negotiation
se~ions broke off but the union said they
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Shalo11i Solon
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A bundled up Congressman Paul McCloskey (R·
Cali!.) enjoys some skiing with his wile Caroline
(right) and a ski instructor at Waterville Valley in
New Hampshire. Mccloskey took time out from his
campaign swing, through the Granite Slate to bit
the Waterville slopes. •
'Sister ·E~zz' to , Fight
Suspension From Foree
GRANITE CTY, lll. (AP) -"I ccr·
tainly am going to fight this," a Catholic
nun known as "Sister Fuzz" says of a
decision to suspend her indefinitely
without pay from the Pontoon Beach
Police Department.
Sister Mary Cornelia Hawkins, whD
was a gun-toting juvenile officer with the
small force, learned of the dtciskl n at St.
Elizabeth's Hospital, where she is being
trealed-for virus pneurhonia.
"They didn't discuss this with me-. I
had no idea they were to do this," Sister
Cornelia said Friday JUght. She , earned
the nickname "Sister Fuzz" from youths
in Pontoon Beach, a ·Suburb of St. Louis.
Thursday night the village board , of
trustees issued the suspension on grounds
Sister Cornelia had violated police
regulations by attending a Nov. 9 meeting
of Ioca1 government officials and a
member of the Madison County grand
jury.
. ~ mee~g. "Was follow~ by a g~1:nd
jury investigation of.alleged 1rregular1ties
in Pontoon Beach, including charges of
High Court t? Rule
On Jet Plane Damage
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Supreme
C.ourt agreed. today to decide whether
property owners who claim their homes
were dai;naged by sonic booms may sue
the Air Force.
The case accepted for review concerns
members of a Nashville. N.C., family
who say sonic booms from military
planes caused masonry cracks and other
damage to their home. Last May, the
U.S. Circuit Court in Richmond, Va., rul·
ed the Air F"orce could be sued. The
government then appealed to the
Supreme Court for the hearing now
granted.
gambling and narcotics use. The jury ex-
onerated the village after several weeks'
investigation.
Sister Cornelia appeared before the
grand jury. She has been at Odds with
poliae officials over Jaw enforcement
practices.
Truslee Dean Rochester said the 46--
.year-old nun can appeal Che suspension.
He said a hearing would be' scheduled "as
soon as she feels she would like to
present her case to tHe police com·
mission."
Last Rites Held
For Area Pioneer
Louis Robinson ·
Funeral services we.re held ioday in
Santa Ana for (>range County pioneer
Louis P. Robinson, 8.1, who died Jan. 13.
l-.1r. Robinson waS born on his father's
1.000 acre ranch in Trabuco Canyon in
1888, one year before Orange County
became a C1:1unty.
Mr, Robinson's grandfather, A'Jonzo
Waite, founded one o( the county's first
newsp.apers, the Evening BJ ad e,
pfedecessor to the Santa Ana Register.
Mr. Robinson worked the Trabuca Can·
·yon ranch until 1966 when he goJd it to
his son, James, who recently opened it to
the public as a recreation area.
Mr. Robinson Is survived by three sons,
Marvin of Fountain Valley, Robert of
Tustin and James .of Palos Verdes ; two
sisters, Anne Robinson of Laguna Beach
"and Mrs. Alice Divor of Alhambra, and
seven grandcbildren. .
Burial was in Fairhaven Memorial
Pa'l'k, Santa Ana.
Laguna Hunting
For 2 Rapists
Of 14·y~r-old
Laguna Beach authorities today are
continuing their search for two men driv-
ing a windowless van who allegedly raped
a 14-year-old girl Thursday night.
Officers said the two suspects were
both described by the victim as being
about Tl years old and or medium build.
A police artist was able to draw a com·
posite sketch of one of the suspects from
the girl 's description.
According to investigators' reports, the
young girl was walking home through a
residential area at about 9:30 p.m. when
the two suspects oUered tier a ride. She
refused and tht>men drove off.
However, they apparently stopped a
short distance away and when the gir l
approached their vehicle, she was grab-
bed and forced inside.
She told police she struggled to escape
and kicked one of the suspects in the
groin, but was unable to gel fr~e.
Officers said she was driven to the in·
tersection of Catalina Street and Los
Robles Drive, where the men parked.
One of the suspects held her while the
other forcibly raped her, officers said.
Following the assault, she was told tD'
get out of the auto and the van drove off.
Police said she ran home frightened and
did not report the attack until the follow·
ing day after telling her parents about it.
H~iry Rebels Shorn
py Arab Guerrillas
BEIRUT (AP) -Long hair is not
revolutionary, the Palestinian guerrillas
have decided. They are rounding up shag-
gy teen-agers in refugee camps and shav-
ing them bald.
"This unmanly habit of growing Jong
hair is rapidly catching up with our
youth," said a guerrilla spokesman. "It's
very unrevolutionary and doesn't become
people fighting !or a cause."
would be resumed later a.t an w..
determined lime.
The first orders to resume picketing
came at San Franclsco and Los Angelet-
Long Beach harbors after an 8 a.m.
(PST) deadline expired.
Harry Bridges. president o! the
International Longshoremen·s and
\Varehousemen's Union, errierged froril
bargainin~ sessions that had run through
the' night to announce:
"The strike officially resumed at 8 a.m.
this morning, although we exerted all el·
forts we could at this .time to try to setUe
It. "
Pickets appeared almost
simultaneously shortly after 8 a.m. at
piers on the San Francisco waterfront
after the chief dis~1tcher at ILWU Local
10 told some 300 men in a hiring hall to
resume Picketing "and tie~! up."
About the time, John Pandora, head of
the big 2,800-member ILWU local in Loi
Angeles and Long Beach was saying: "As
far as we're concerned, the strike is on.
We're dispatching pickets now." The
Nixon administration has warned it would
ask Congress to intervene and direct a
settlement of any renewal of lhe walkollt
that ~hut ports for 100 days lei.st year.
Negotiators for the union and the
employer, Pacific Maritime Association,
met throughout the weekend a n d
overnight today in joint . and separate
se~ions with J. Curtis Counts, director o(
the Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Service.
"This Is the only strike J haven't been
able to crack," said Counts. "'Ibis is one
of the toughest ones, They've been argu·
ing this one for 14 months."
The strike began last July 1. lt was
hailed Ocl. 6 by a Tall-Hartley Injunction
providing for a -cooling-off period of 80
days which expired Christmas Day.
Attorney Named
To UCI Student
Mfairs Position
Melvin H. Bernstein, a political scien-
tist and attorney, has been appointed
special assistant to the vice chancellor
for student affairs at UC Irvine.
Allnouncement of the appointment wa1
made by Vice Chancellor John C. 11oy.
Dr. Bernstein has been a practicing at-
torney in Beverly Hills for the past six
years and an assistant professor of
political science at California State
Polytechnic College in Pomona for two
years.
A graduate of New York University in
economics, Dr. Berostein received his
Jaw degree at Harvard University and
the PhD in political science at UCLA. H1
is listed in "Who's Who in the West."
He is vice pi-esident and legal counsel
for the Southern California Center for
Education in Public Affairs, a
cooperative association of 26 public and
private universities and colleges in
California. He will be chairman of a con-
ference to be held by the organi:r.atlon in
Sacramento Feb. 27·29 at which represen-
tatives of the state legislature, executive
. branch, mass media and legislative ad·
vocates will serve on panels and
participate in exchanges with student and
faculty delegates.
In his· new position at UCI Dr. Bern-
stein's duties include three principa l
areas, management i n f o r m a t i o n ,
coordination of student affairs in-
alitutional research and special projects.
DAILY PILOT
""'*' ... . Israelis Round Up R~hels
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In Fatal Attack on Truck
GAZA CITY, Israeli-Occupied Gaza
Strip (UPI) -Israeli troops rounded up
15 Arab guerrillas for questioning today
in connection with an ambush Sunday
that killed an American nu·rse and
wounded an American Baptist minister
and his daughter.
Guerrillas attacked a Baptist hospital
truck near here Sunday night. firing a
burst of submachinegun·file that killed
~favis Pate, 46, of Ringgold, La., and
wounded Roy Edward Nicholas, -47, of
Austin, Tex., and his daughter, Carol
Beth. ll.
Spokesmen said about SO bullets were
fired at the truck.
The sus~ts were roundtd up after oc-
cupation authorities combed the Jeballya
refugee camp. The ambush took place
outside the camp's southern entrance on
the main raod through the Gaia Strip .
• Local military authorities said .they
btHeved the attack was a mistake. Guer·
rlllas. ·they said, may hive mistaken the
hospital van for an army vehicle in fog
and darkness. ·
They sald lt was the fir1l glferrltl1 ac-
Uoo ol llt killd i~ nearly a year.
Israel occupied tlt1 formerly E1YPtl1n
Gata Strip during Ul• Jun•, 1167, Mlddl•
East war •
Miu Pate had been . "" operauna
Ulullr 1lW'll II Gltl ·Cl!y'a Baptist
hospital since 1970.. Nicholas has been the
hospital's administrator since his arrival
in Ga.za City in 1958. -
The car was a Volkswagen double-cabin
truck.
The sources said the Israeli authorities
took the three Americans by helicopter to
the central Negev, hospital in Beersheba.
Miss Pate died on ttle operating table o!
head injuries. Nicholas suffered thigh and
lowtr abdomen injuries. but WJS not on
the critical list, and his daughter' w_as on·
ly slightly injured.
Hospital sources said Defense Mlnist'r
Moshe Dayan flew to the hospital soon
after learning about the incident and
chatted to the wounded minister in the
emergency ward.
They said hospital authorities c11Jed
the Baptist Center In Richmond, V1 .. to
arrange for IQliss Pate's body to be flown
for burial. in th~ United Slates.
Mllitar)' sources said ~icholas was
returning his three daughtets to the
. Amtrican school at K!ar Shmaryahu on
the Outskirts of Tel Aviv when the am·
bushers struck. Miss Pate acconipanled
hlril on the trip. ·
Th•Y said Nlchol11 e1<:aptd Injury In
almllar clrc:umstaneea 11Imost two ye1r1
110. Another Nicholas ~au~te.r, Joy, 12,
sustained UKThjurics wheti Arab RtJer-
rlllas ambl&btd a car her father drove
outalde Gltl Cily March 11, 1969.
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Why pay s150 for a 1/4 Carat
Diamond when you can buy the
Diamond from us for just 575 ?
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to lllow JOll how to SGYe
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IOI u.cm J,. .9911 .....
ti. IN•••" .. tM•••• . D'-••"tl c-cer ,.,. are .... co-t9
COii A .MESA JEWELRY & LOAN . c .... In alld B'°""t Around Oi><• Dcdlw o IO s
1838 NEWPORT ILVD.
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Phone t-46-7741
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UNUSUAl.l
DIAMOND
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COMPARI.
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DAILY PILOT :J
li'irst for North School li'unds
Segregation Set
._ .. For Court Study
J .
Bond, Overrides
Get ICE Support
WASHINGtQN (AP) -The U.S.
Supreme Court, for the first time, agreed
today to hear arguments on clai,rns of
segrega tion in a Northe rn public ·school
system.
The case accepted for review, is from
Denver where a group ot black and
Spanish-surnam ed school children con·
tend they were segregated by school
board pla nning and policy rather than by
segregation la\\'S. ·
The court will hold. an oral hearing
later this term and issue a ruling by the
end of June. The case was taken on
wlthoul comment ,except for the notation
that Justice Byron R. \Vhite would not
participate.
New' J ersey ·r:aw
For Executions
Ruled Illegal
TRENTON, N.J. (UP I) -The N'ew
J ersey Supreme Court ruled today that
the Jaw providing for the death penalty in
the state is unco nstitutional.·
The ruling lifted the threat or execution
for 20 men on the state's death row.
The court did not rule that capital
punishincnt in itSelf was unconstitutional
- a question before the U.S. Supreme
Co urt -but only that the death penalty
statute in New Jersey deprived defen-·
dants of constitutiona l rights.
The. 6-1 decision by the court reversed
one of its own rul ngs that upheld the
one of its own rulin gs that upheld the
de Cision was overturned by the u.s\
Supreme Court and sent ba ck to the
state's highest court.
The New J ersey i.'.l w pro vided for the
death-penalty only when a defend an_t was
convicted by jury trial. If a defendant
charged with a capital offense pleaded
guilty. the max.imum penalty was life im·
pr isonmcnt.
Wh en th e 1968 case went to the U.S.
Supreme c"ourt, the court ruled that the
Ne w Jersey stat ure, in effect, violated a
defendant·s right to a jury trial. The U.S.
court pointed out that a defendant might
be forced to plead guilty to ha ve his life
sp ared.
The ruling today noted that both the
New Jersey attorney general and several
coun ty prosecutors agreed tha t the death
sentence clause should be struck from
the law. But the provision for a life im-
prisonment sentence under guilty pleas
was upheld.
"We therefore accept t he c6nclusion
that the U.S. Sup reme Court has declared
the death penalty to be unconstitutional
under our statute," the decision said.
"'We see no reaso n to doubt that the
legislature would want the remainder o(
the statute to :Stand if the death penalty,
failed a\)d we .see no constitutional dif·
ficulty"fn t~king that course."
The reason for the self.-OlsqualificaUoit
was not given, although White is fro m
Colorado. He has su11ported all clv U
rights advanc~s by the'"high court.
The eight remain ing justices, including
the new men, Lewis F. Powell Jr_ and
Willtam H. Rehnquist, will participate.
While the Supreme Court has ruled that
segregation laws in Southern and border
stales are unconstitutional, it has not
reached the issue of school segregation in
states which had no such laws.
The Denver pupils said their complaint
goes even beyond the de facto, or
neighborhood school, segregation of some
Northern cities_ because they claimed it
was brought abou t by the .acts or sChool
officials. · · ·
, The suit claims that the school
authorities deliberatel y perpetuated a
seg regated school system through their
choice of school building sites and stru c-
turing of atte ndance zones. ,
· The school board adopted a desegrega-
tion plan for seve ral schools in northea st
Denver involving busing. Sub~uently,
Denver voters turned out the old school
board and elected a new one which
rescinded the plan.
The U.S. District Court in Denver ruled
that the new board a c t e d un-
C1lnstitutionally in cancelling the plan and
ordered it or an acceptable plan adopted.
The U.S. Circuit Co urt of Appeals in
Denver refused_ to approve t h e
desegregation order, which would have
~equired busi ng an additional . 10,000
pupils _besides the some 12,000 already
being bused, because it would have
mean t requiring desegregation of schools
which the district court had said were not
seg regated by official policy.
The court has acted in Northern and
Western school eases; but bas not held
hearings -in d,isputes from outside the
South or issued full-blown opinions deal-
ing with claims of segregation In
Northern and Western schools.
Laguna Beach
Hosting Bank's
Annual Seminar
I
• DAILY PILOT S'-ff .......
SUGAR THE ST. BERNARD PEERS DOWN FROM PERCH
Newport Beach Dog Makes Mount1in1 Out of Rooftops
On the House
· , $t. Bernard Thi1 1ks She's a Goat
Irvine O>uncll for Education (JCE I is
backing both the San Joaquin Elementary
and Tustin Union H1gh School Dis trict tax
overrides and the bond issue for high
school construction.
Voters throughout the Ngh school
district which serves Jrvine.111ssion Vie-
jo, El Toro and Tustni will vote Feb. I on
both a tu override and $IS million bond
Little Toivn
In Virginia
Gets Birds
RADFORD, Va . (AP) -\\'hen you're
trying to teach children respect for
ecology and the environment, how do you
spr;11g on th em a plan for the execution
-of 150,000 birds?
Kyle Roop, city man ager of this
Southwest Virginia town, is mulling that
question -· whl!n he is not answering a
telephone barrage of complaints and
questions. ·
"I wi!h I had never heard o' \hose
birds," Roop said. "It's hard to expla in
to ~hildren an<f some grownups..tbat the~e
birds are nuisances." .
The birds are part or a tremendous
flock of starlings that has taken roost in
a small wodded area. near here.
By night, the birds pac k themselves in-
to trees and, one of their nejghbors .said,
the area smells like a "steam ing
barnyard.,''
.A Saint Bernard who thinks she's a Newport duplexes a·ren't exact I y By day. the· starlings wing their way
mountain goat is becoming a fixture on spacioUs. Sugar does have the roof and, across the hills and vall eys of Southwest
_the West Newport skyline. Mrs. Beltramo said, "we. don't mind hav-Virginia Where they ra ise hav oc in cattle
And she does a bang-up job of keeping ing her around a bit." • feed lots, spoiling gra in and other food
cats -and just about everything else -She opened the screen door and Sugar th ey do not eat.
off the 33rd Street rooftops; lumbere<I inside, onto the sofa; rocking it Glen Duddei:ar, a Virginia Tech wildlife
It's just that Sugar has no other place back and forth, and Off again into the specialist, propased 8 plan tha t started . Roop's telephone 11lngtng. to go during the day when her owner, kit,chen, narrowly missing a bag of Dudderar's proposal was for th e fi re
l-.1rs. Ma rga ret Beltramo, 312'h: 33rd St.. ·groceries resting on the counter. · deparUnent to turn on the roosting birds
goes off to work 3.nd her son, Grieg, is at "She needs exercise," h-Irs. Beltramo a special detergent wh ich he said
S:Chool. · said, and, noling a new city ordinance neutralizes -the oil in the birds' feathe rs
"She usually sleeps on the upstairs "she can't go to .the beach anymore." so they cao 't fluff them to keep warm,
patio or in the yard below," Mrs. Their body temperat1.1re quickl y drops
Beltramo says , "but she gets bored and from the normal 104 degrees and they
\ivants something else to·do." Cultur } G t die.
But Sugar just Can't stay still. 8 ran Dudderar assured the city council that
Laguna Beach's Surf and Sand Hotel Sugar usually just roarps atop the the practice has been used successfully
will be the setting for the eighth annual Beltramo apartment, attracting countless A }i ti• elsewhere.
seminar for officers of the Imperial onlookers each time, amazed at her pp Ca OllS Bat Dr. Robert ~thers, a college pro.
Bank, J,..os Angeles, Jan. 21 aod 22. acrobatics. fessor who teaches children in ecology
Founded in 1963. Imperial has become "She likes to patrol the rooftop ," says M d A ii bl classes conducted by a local civic dub,
one of the country's faste$l growing Mrs. Beltramo , "she's nosy, she wants \o 8 e V8 8 e said,he was immediately swamped by his
banks, with current assets in excess of know what's going on." students.
$100 million and, according to Sur{ and More than once, however, Sugar has Laguna Beach cultural organizations "Many kl4s came to me and said,
bee ·bound' fro ~us •·'·use 'You're killing ·our birds,' " Leathers Sand owner Merrill Johnson, will be sen-n seen mg m llV e-w-uu wishing to qualify !or grants from the · 't r f 1· · t d said. "The kids feel we are l~tting them ding about 100 persons to the Laguna m pursw 0 a e me tn ru er. cityis Arts Assistance Fund in the fiscal down." seminar on modem banking techniques. "My husband went up on the roof to fi x "When they started coming here in 1963 something one day," a neighbor down t-he · year 1972-73 should apply now to city He pleaded for at least a stay or ex·
Issue.
Voters of the San Joaquin Elementary
Distr ict which serves Irvine, El Toro and
t.>tission Viejo will decide an overri~e
issue in the same election.
'"These school support measures are
essrntial to kee p our ex isting school
syote1ns in operation at a minimal level
during the next year." attorney Paul
Tonkovich. ICE cha irman, said.
Speaking for all the members or ICE .
Tonkovich sa id the Feb. I school issueen-
dorsemrnt 'M'as being made "even though
\\'e arc loo king f~r'M'a rd to the possiblit)'
Irvine 'M'ill hal'e iti;. own, ocwly formed
unified school district In little more than
a yrar."
ICE membe r s dr a w n f r om
Irvine '!rca parent -teacher organizations,
homeowners associations and c iv I c
groups. voted unanin1ously to approve the
endorsement. .
ICE also is backing . ~1rs . Elizabeth
•·Lee '' Sicoli for th'9 vacancy 011 the
Tustin Union" High School Dist ri ct board
of education. i\irs. Sicoll is oppased by
five bthcr candidates seeking the unex-
pired tenn of i\lrs. June Smith. The term
ru ns through June 1973 .
The Feb. 1 ballot includes a $1.99 ta:c
override for the high school district and a
77·ct?nt override for the elementary
di strict.
Colli11s Worker
Resigns 8ather
Tl1a11 Fire Others
CE DAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) -An
electronic .engineer for Collins Rad io Co.
says he was told to selecl two employes
who would lose their jobs, but he quit his
own rather than force someone else·out.
"I lost" my security and gained my
freedom," said David M. Hodgin, 48, an
engineer pt Collill.S;bere for 24 yea rs.
He was among 550 persons v.·ho lost
jobs ' at the plant last week in the latest
set of cutbacks.
The father Qf four children, two or
whom still live al borne, Hodgin an-
nounced his decision at the First Chris·
tian Church's Sunday worshJp aervl'be.
He said he rated the men in his group
and decided -in terms of Immediate
money-makjng potential for the radio
-manufacturing firm -that hit name
should be on the bottom of the lt..t, '
l~e said he hopes to form a c:orpot1Uan
which·would be baled on "hUl'Qlri·diin ity
and full participation by tYetyODI
associate<Lwith lt."
Dollar Hits New Low
, d th t d rt recreation director George Fowle.r, 505 ecution until the children could be con-there were only about 15 or 20," said. street related, 'an a og came a er Forest Ave. · ed th th ' vine at e starlings are the never-I Lo d E h Johnson, "but every year the delegation him." Deadline for receipt of applications is do-wells of the bird kingdom. ll ll Oll XC ange
gets bigger." Mrs. Beltramo sai d she's had no com-Feb. 21, Fowler said. Roop agreed to a postponement while
In" addition to its main offic e at plaints f~om anyone living nearby, but The Arts Assistance Fund provides in-conservationists argue that the birds can LONDON (UPI) -The dollar plunged
Western and Imperial in Los Angeles, the thinks she may have to bloCk Sugar's terim financial aid from city revenue be frightened away with noise. to ~ ne w low in Britain today under a
bank has offlces 'at Anaheim, Santa Ana, path from the patio to the roof anyway. othe r than property taxes to cultural and . They can, Dudderar agrees, but there . n~w burst of selling and fe ll back in West
Torrance, \Vest Los Angeles, Westchester "I'm afraid she's going to tu mble one artistic organizations in the community. are probably 250,000 starlings within 50 Germany and other European centers
and at Wilshire and Vermon~ in midtown of these times," Mrs. Beltramo said. In the current fiscal year, the city ts miles of Radford and there may be as because of uncertainty about the future
Los Angeles. Other offices have been Sp-She got Sugar about three months ago disbursine-· $21,000 to nine different many as 10 millioB in Virginia. . price level of the U.S. currency.
proved for Costa Mesa, Inglewood and from a friend in Holl ywood who was organizat1ons1 including the La~na It's very likely, he said, that they will The spotlight focused on the British
Orange, and the bank also has a foreign moving to an apartment that didn't have Beach Historic.al Society and the Laguna just move to another aart of town or !plit Pound, which rushed ahead to set a new
currency exchange facility at Los enough room for her. Festiva l Chorale, boUi first.year partlt-up to remain in a Pumber of smaller high since its devaluation In November,
An geles International Airport. While the grounds of typical West ipaRts in the J"'Ogram. flocks. I967, to hit $2.60.
'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--·~~"-''---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~-'-~~--~~-
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El Rancho! · '
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Buddig' s Sliced Meats ....... : .......... : ........... 33~
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Pricc1 in effect Mon., Tut1., Wed.,
Jan. 17, 18, 19. No 11Jlt1 to deal.r1.
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Hunt's, the delight ot the lunch brigade I Fruits or puddings. 4 pack ctn.
Weight Watcher's Bouillon ........... , ......... 4 ~--·1
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ARCADIA: 11." r! Jrl' Ht•Oll ••i lon 01 :n,1,1 PASADENA · 1•111 SOUTH PASADENA :'.1i111· HUNTINGTON BEACH: :':r'111, NEWPORT BEACH : 1717 New pOl l Bl.ii an~
ll Rancho Center JlO Wr:1! Cr orJ1\J ~1, 1 f ~1;ion1 .1r.t1 H11r1t1nr.1 •. r 0: IJ .1rn!'r ln1I ~1,111 1111,' R11,!l ~1'~ C1·nit' }11)~ !.1s !b1u ll Dr f a~tblu !I V1!1 aRt' Ce n1er
• I
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4 DAILY PILOT
U.S. Planes,.
Reds T1·ade
~ssile~
SAIGON (AP) '-American fighter
planes exchanged missUes Ylith Norlh
Vietnanvse antiaircraft defenses along
the Laotian border today and Sunday and
were believed to have destroyed two of
them, the U.S. Comr;nand announced. Jt
said the American planes were not hit.
"There is a lot of air activity up
there," Said one U.S. officer. referring to
the corridor along the border between
Laos and North \1ietnam where American
bombers are pounding the Ho Chi Minh
trail network. ··11 is one of the heaviest
days since the beginning of the dry
season."
North Vielnfimese missile batteries
~· • near the Ban Karki pass unleashed three
I: surrace-to-air missiles -SAMS -al U.S.
planes operating in the region 35 to 45
-miles north of the demititarized zone and
S threatened oll\ers. U.S. fighters escorting 1 the bombers fired two missiles, and the i U.S. Command said one SAM site and one
antiaircraft artillery radar were believed j destroyed. .
This brought the total of »called ~ro.. l tective reaction strikes into North Viet-
nam to 10 this year.
' '
On Saturday the U.S. pilol!i sighted
North Vietnamese MIGs nearly 291' (lliles
farther north, near the Barthelemy pass
and east or the Plain of Jars in northern
S Laos. Ont MIG crossed the border and
tried to Intercept an American flight, but
the American Phantom jets fired half a '
dozen missile!, and it fled back into
North Vietnam unhurt.
:·
l~ ::· ;:·
j:· ,.. ... ...
Paralleling the intensified air action
was a Communist "high point" of ground
activity in South Vietnam, which began a
week ago.
The South Vietnamese c o m ma n d
reported 20 . small-scale enemy ·ground
assaults, rocket, mortar, sappe r and ter·
r~ attacks, most o( them in the central
and northern provinces or South Vietnam.
This raised the total or such attacks to
190 in the past seven days.
The U.S. Command reported that one
American Wall killed when enemy ground
fire hit a light observation helicopter sup-
porting South Vietnamese operations 17
. miles southwest o{ Da Nang. Ni{lt more
Americans were wounded and three
vehicles were destroyed. or damaged by
mines on Highway 16 about 25 nules
north of Salgon,' and six other Americans
were wounded when a Vietnamese youth
hurled a hand grenade 1nto a truck in
Ban Me Thuot, in the central highlands.
Laotians Wage
Hand-to-hand
Fight for Base
VIENTIANE (UPI) -Laotian soldiers
are engaged in hand-to-hand fig.htlng with
Communist forces for control of Skyline
Ridge overlooking the key CIA-ope.rated
base ·at Long Cheng, government sources
said today.
At one point last week the Communists
claimed the base had fallen, but govern·
·,;.: ment sources said that although it may .
,... eventual)y have to be abandoned, the ·bat· f!• tie now is centered on strategic ground
around Long Cheng.
. ... .
,., .· ~ ... '· ·:·
The govern ment forces, supported by
artillery ·and air poWer, v.·ere making
slow but steady progress a.gainst an
estimated North Vietnamese battalion
dug in on the ridge that overlooked the
Long Cheng base. The base is head·
quarters £or Gen. Van Pao's Meo forces,
~--which are trained, advjsed, supported and
. , paid for by Uie.JJ .S. Centra l Intelligence
~' Agency .(CIA).
..., Today was the third day of hand-to-
• , .,
hand fighting on the ridge. the sources
said, and casualties on both sides were
described as heavy.
An esUrnated 60 North Vietnamese
were killed in fighting on the ridge Sun·
day. Sixteen government soldiers were
killed and 22 were wounded.
· The sources said government-soldiers
were able to advance only 200 yards
eastward on the ridge in fighting Sunday.
'Ctilturnl Ge1aoeide'
Ref. Alphonzo Bell (R·Calif.} and his \vife, Marian, meet newsmen in
Te ·Aviv. Bell, who jus t completed a'visit to the Soviet Union , accused
the Kremlin of "'cultural genocide" against the J ewish population.
He said that Jews told him they lost their jobs immediately il they ap·
plied to emigrate to Israel. ·
Expelled Solon Tells
Fears for Nixon Trip _ · ·
LONDON (AP) -U.S. Rep. James
H. Scheuer of New York says be hopes his
expulsion from Russia. on charges ol
subversive activities won·t adversely af·
feet President Nixon's planned trip to the
Soviet Union In May.
Scheuer denied that he had engaged in
su\lversive activities or bad ent'OUraged
Russian Jews to emigrate to Israel, as
the Soviet Union charged in ordering him
to leave the country last week.
'The U.S. State Department said after
the Soviet expulsion order that it ''would
not be helpful to relations."
Scheuer. a Democrat, told newsmen at
the U.S. Embas~ Sunday, "I would be
For mer Colorado
Govern.or Dies
DENVER CUPi l -'Teller Ammons,
whose term as governor of Colorado in
the l930's was marked by the so-called
"microphone scanda l." died Sunday in a
Denver hospital at the age of 76.
Before being elected governor. Am-
mons also had served as deputy city
clerk. public trustee and city attorney for
Denver and had been a state senator. A
Democrat, Ammons served only one
term as governor before being defeated.
The "microphone ~candal" led to a
grand jury investigation, the conviction
of three men on eavesdropping charges.
disbarment of a local attorney and
publication of private correspondence
between Ammons and his aides.
Ammons ordered a search of his office
after a Denver newspaper beg a n
reporting stories of po I it I ca I ap-
pointments before they became public. A
search revealed two microphones hidden
in ventilator shafts in his office.
horrified if the incident affected . Presi-
denl Nixon's projected trip to Russia."
He was detained by Soviet security
police for 40 min11tes last . Wednesday
after they entered a MoscOw home where
tie was dining with eight top Russian
Jewish scientists. The exj>ulsion order
followed. ·
Scheuer was in the Soviet Union with a
seven-me mber congress ion a I sub-
committee studying Russian eduCational
~s. He arrived here Saturday.
' .
2 Greek Trains
Collide; 18 Die,
50 More lnjUi'ed
LARISA. Greece (AP) -Workers were
clearing Greece1s main tajf link to
Europe today or the wreckage ot two
passenger trains that collided in north.
er" Greece Sunday, killing 18 persons
and injuring 50.
Police said about half the injured wer
ln serious condition. AU the dead were
believed to be Greeks.
Off~cials opened an invt!stigation to de-
termine why ~he southbouJtd Acropolis
Express, loaded with holidaying Greek
wor~ers from Germany. crashed into an •
other passenger train bound for Salonika
125 miles to the north.
Police were questioning the stalio•
masters at two small stations on each
side or the crash site. The police said
each station master had given the go--
ahead signal as the train passed through
his control point. ·
There was speculation that the trains
were on the same track because switches
were frozen.
• Bitter Cold -spell Ended
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Teniperatures Climb 30 l;Jegrees in Midwest
Calllor11ia
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fllnf llftllil •••••••••••.•.• f :• ·-• ., Pint '°"' ........... ,,, 2.SI'"""' t.t ~ flfM ......... 1 M:1'1.f!'I, .._,
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'W or·st Disaster -Eve:r'
Mujibur Rahman Says 3 Million Killed
•
LONDON (UPI! -Sheikh Mujlbtlr
Rahman , said Sunday three million
persons were lcllled and 2S percent of the
buildings in East Pakistan destroyed
before West Pakistani forces surrendered
in the India-Pakistan war. . '
"There might have been more deaths.
but not any less," he said. "Never in the
history of the world has anything like it
happened before."
The remark came i.n an hour-long in.
terview wiQI David Frost in Dacca on
Britain's Independent Television Network
(ITV),
The prime minister described the
eV!llls leading to the creaUoo of
Bangladeih as-the '1biggest human
disaster In the world" and said his people were 1UU aufferlng. especially in war·
shattered bospil.Jls.
"There, they have Jost thelr hands and
have Jost their legs. They have lost
everything," he sald.
Muji6 described several incidents of
troops and said o~ government
minister who ~ his movement
was tortured for 24: days before he died.
Tb• Bengladesb leader said his own
death coukl have come at any time dur·
ing his nine-m01tb confinement in West
* * * * * * Ravished Bengali W ome11
Ostracized by, Husbands
•1 .IUOCilltd l"r.M
About 200.000 Bengali wlves who were
raped by Pakistani soldiers dlfl'ing the
war are now ostracized by the Moslem
communities and have virtually no place
lo turn to. a church relief official
reported today. , -'
Returning from Da cca, the Rev. Ken.
taro Buma told a news conference that
by tradition no Moslem husband will take
back a wife touched by aoother man,
even if she was subdued by force.
•·The new authorities of Bangladesh are
trying their best to break that tradition,''
he sa id. "They tell the husbands the
women were victims and must be con-
sidered · ncitional heroines. Some men
have taken their spouses back home. but
these are very, very few."
The Rev. Mr. Bum a is Asian relief
secretary of the World Council of
Churches. He said its commission on in-
ter-church aid will meet here next week
to discuss what can be doae to help the
• '
women and, if possible, work out some -. Jong-term project.
_The Rev. f\.1r. Buma spent nearly two
weeks in Bangladesh. .
He said in addition to those who fled to
India, .an estimated 20 million Bengalis
who lost their homes and all their pro-
perty have sought re!Uge in remote areas
of Bangladesh.
He sald about one-third of the 30,000
primary schools and colleges were
destroyed and virtually all the country's
· cash hid been taken back to West
Pakistan.
He said Bangladesh urgently needs
babf food, medicine. roofing material
and about J.8 million tons of food and
transport facilities to distribute relief. He
·said Dacca authorities have asked for
1.000 trucks. SOO buses, jeeps and small
shlps for the coastal areas. to transport
both refugees and supplies.
Paii!tan.
"They . had flready decided to hang
me," he said.
At one point; Mujib said a grave was
dug in the cell next to his and the
prisoners incited to kill him. His guard!
removed him from his cell and hid him
until the danger passed, he said.
Mujib called Agha Mohammad Yaha
Khan, the former Pakistan president, ••an
evil man" who wanted Mujib killed. even
as he was handing over power lo Zulfiqar
Ali Bhutto in Rawalpindi.
"I am grateful to Mr. Bhutto. No doubt
about it,'.' Mujib said.
As Cor Yahya, Mujib said 1ihe is a
criminal. He killed my people of
Bangladesh. I don't even like to see his
picture)' _
Before surrendering . Mujib said the
Pakistani army-destroyed his country's
bridges. hospitals. schools and other
elements or its economic infrastructure
and killed the country's leadlna: in·
ttllectuaJs and civil servants.
"I remember the Nurenberg ttials, 11 he
said. "I think there should be another
trial ••. no, an enquiry.
Ralunan Given Pick
Of Pakistan Posis
By The Associated Press
President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto offered
the top job in Pakistan to Sheik Mujibur
Rahman IO<!ay if he would ·bring
.Bangladesh back to the fold. ·
Bhutto offered Mujib ••president, Prime
minister or wh~r he wants," one day
after the ua;lg!adesh leader accused
~ West Pakistani troops of slaughtering
three million people during his country's
fight fo r independence.
Radio Pakistan said Bhutto had
preyiously told Muj ib the only condition
he would set to turning over the govern·
ment to him would be that Mujib agree to
maintain the integrity of Pakislar!..
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Nothing adds more \pite to a quality sale than
a dash of Stanley's furnishin~ for girls. And our
Anniversary Sale now makes it possible tor JOU lo add
ztst and !lair to your teenager's lifestyle • , , at
signilicant $hlnas, Traditiona l stylinc, 1ccent stripes of
lem6n·lime, antique while finish •• , as feminine
as silk and lact!
~
tctdboor4
"
S'" Deubll Dr11Mr
Min• ....
.. ,. l ol• ••• ...
7'. • •• ,, .. • •• l.S9. IJt, ••• ...
I.St, ·'"'·
ANNIVERSARY SALE NOW AT ALL 3 STORES1
-. • •
•
.SANTA AN,{
Mlln •t El-th 547·1621
POMONA PASADENA
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Legisla!nre
Budget Hits
$32 Million
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
cost of ruMing the Callfomfa
l.egislature during im.73 is
budgeted at a record $3Z
million by Gov, Ron a Id
Reagan whUe his' own office's
budget has a modest lncreue
lo 11.74 mllllon.
The legislature'• original ,
budget for this fiscal year'was
under 127 million nut bu been
boosted to nearly m million
because of the tmexpectedly
record.Jong 1971 r e g u J • r
session -running through
Dec. 4 -plus a special session
later in the month .
Finance Director Verne Orr
• ' • '
Entopnhed In loo
Blaze in lfywl
Takes 13 Lives
' .
~h~ttle
Deba~
Heatedly
r
r.1ondly, JamA1r7 17, 1'72 DAILY PI LllT S
F~_ Stamp B e~efits
Restored in Full
WASHlNGTON (AP) Ute upper end ol Ute eligibility
Bowinl to public pressure, the acale would '!lave hed lo pl;'
Nllon Administration h 1 s for the stamps, thus benefiting les.5 from the program. An revised its new food.stamp estimated two million person.s
WASHINGTON (AP) -sen. ro.gulations to °""'" that ail would have received reducO<( "" sullered frostbit... and smoke Waiter F. Mondale says lhe eligible families receive at benefits: 65,000 would hove
TYRONE. P.' (UPI) -Inhalation. · least as much und Ut ~--1 ced proposed space ehutUe •·1s er e new ~1 or out or the pr~ ·
Firemen used pickaxes, tons Among the fire vJcUms were simply 8 truck 1 very, very gutdeUnes as they did under gram. ·
of salt and heavy road equip-Dominick Turiano and hts the old ones. AdmlnlstraUon 0 r { 1 c i a f 5 ment Ii1 zero temperature to-wife, Jo-Ann, owners of the expensive truck \Vhlch in my Agriculture Secretary Earl argued orlginally that reduc·
day trYlng to pl erce 10 Inches hotel, and their five children, opinion ts not worth the U:· L. But:r annoitnced Sunday ing the benefits for those at
of ice shield!ng the debris of a Christine, 14, Michael. 13, pense." that be has ordered modilica4 the upper end ol the scale
burned out hotel in wtrlch 13 Mary EUzabetli. 10, Dominick But Sen. Edward J. Gurney tlon of the new regulations "so would reduce their incenth·e
persons perished. Jr., 5, and ~1ichele ·Marie, 7 says the truck _ be a~pts that the benefits available lo for rt.malning In the program
Workers could see four months. . each household are as high or and make them th.ink harder the term -will save qwney in higher ·than they were under about taking jobs.
-bodies under the tee a! they '(:( i;:( '(:{ the space program and creat~ the old reguJations." About 10.9 million persons
chipped and smashed their• "' The I t · JO. bs in U.S. Ind ustry. new r eg u a 1 on s, are enrolled In the progr:u11 . way lo the victims. 9 n• p• d ted I t I nd h h le ~..,e The two senators engaged,in a op as year •a on g u er whic t ey pay cash ror
Seven of the. -dead were ' .u. heated debate on the shuttle guidelines set by Congress, tood stamps which :i r c.
said Reagan. under tradiUonal U,f Tlllffollote members of the family that ' will increase the benefits to redeema ble at grocery stor1'S'
owned and operated the 75-G t H e issue Sunda y on the ABC peoRle with the lowest in-for food worth much more. 't)n,. collljesy, put Ute legislature's FIREMEN SPRAY HOSES ON RAGING FIRE
own requested amouht into lhe Hohll Vlcti"11 Entom~ by 10 Inches of Ice year-bid, three-story frame ll S om broadcast '1 I S S \j e S and comes. a national average. a USl'i
budget without changing It. ---------~~--------Pennsylva nia House Hotel. Answers." But. before Sunday's an-pays $4.50 for stamps to buy
-Fl ames which began when an FLINT1 A1ich. (UPI) -An Gurney (R·Fla.), explained =mnoiiuiiniiciiemiieiiniit,iiso;;;;;miieiiper;;;;;soiiiiinsii'll;;;;;t ;;;;;lii!Oiiwmoiirth;;;;;o;;f;igiiroc-.er•ie•s• . ..ii-.;,
State of Vniota
Democrats on TV
ToAssessNixon Talk
By United Pre" InlmlaUonal
The Democrats, c a a t i n g
about for issues although cer-
tainly not for more presiden-
tial candidates, have an-
nounced they_ will go on na-
tional television Friday tp
asSess President Nixon's State
of the Union address.
The SS-minute program, to
include telephoned opinions of
viewers, will be carried on the
three commercial networks
· and the Public Broadcasting
Service starting at Noon ,EST
3 Skaters
Rescued
From Floe
-24 hours after Nilon's
speech to a joint meeJing of I
lhe 92nd Congress which starts
its second session Tuesday.
Senate Democratic Leader
~like Mansfield and House
Speaker Carl Albert said Sun·
day in announcing the plan
that the party leadership will
use the program to present
alternatives to' administration
policies on the economy,
health care, defense, educa·
tion and other matters.
Muskie, Humphrey 's vice
p r es ident ial running-mate
against Nixon in 1968, con-
tinued to lead in the polJS'. CBS
news reported Sunday that its
poll of 500 state and district
democratic leaders showed the
'-Maine~senatar already could
attract 1,199 first-ballot votes
of the 1,509 needed for
nomination.
Humphrey ranked second in
DETROIT (UPI) -Thne Ute poll wiUt 311, followed by
teenagers were rescued by a Sen. Henry M. Jackson with
Coast Guard helicopter Sun-198; Sen. George S. McG<ivern,
day when they became strand... i~. Rep. Wilbur Mills, 38;
ed on an ice floe in zero Gov. George C. Wallace of
temperatures w.h i I e at· Alabama, 29; Mayor John V.
te mpting to skate 30 miles Llpdsay of New York, 28, and
round trip across Lake S~ former Sen. Eugent McCarthy
Clair. 13.
John Jennings, 16, Harold .•
Huck, 16, and Bruce·Robb. 14;,.,Nixon Re:idies ,•
from the suburb of Grosse
Pointe Woods, were stranded
on the frigid, wind-swept lake
for more than one hour when a
sheet of ice near the shore
separated. It left an open
·ch annel of water 20 to 75 feet
wide alonf rnuch.of the lake's
western edge.
The boys skated back and
forth along the drifting sheet
of ice, then Tay down on the
ice to avoid the freezlng wind.
Union Address
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -
President N i :i on continued
work today on Ill! State of the
'Union address and speeches
he will make regarding his
lor1hcomlng visits lo Peking
and Moscow.
Nixon cut short a weekend
visit to Camp David, Md.,
returning to the White House
by helico pter Sunday evening
after watching Dallas defeat
Miami, 24-3, in the Super
Bowl.
"Every year we skate out
real far and skate back
again," Jennings said. He sald
this year's plan was to skate
to Canada and back -a
di stance of at least 30 milesf;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
both ways to th~ nearest point, During Our Stor•
Walpole Island on canada's Wide Clurance Sale
eastern shore.
After-skating a little more
tha n a mile, however, the boys
tired, greW cold and decided to
return. When they came
within 150 yards of the Jake's
Western shore they found the
·ice had separated, isolating
Uteni.
4 Plucked
·From. Sea
In Storm
PORTSMQUTll, Va. (AP) -
A merchan' ves.11eJ which
plucked four crewmen from
the stormy Atl&mic is stan-
ding by as Coast Guard rescue
cratt speed to the aid of the
Liberian tanker Plym some
200 miles southust of Cape
Lookout, N.C.
The Jacksonvillt_ _ arrived
Sunday night and J'\cked up
the lour after the Plym
radioed it was taking on water
in 10-to 15-foot seas and 45-
mile-~r hours winds.
A COast Guard 1potesman
said the 521·foot Plym, car4
rylng s crew or 63. reported
tile lour abandoned Ute vwel
in two lifeboats, leaving the
stricken tanker with just one
lifeboitt. '
"We don't know how serious
the cond!Uon Is," th e
spokesrQan said late SUnday
n)ghl.
Hammary's .
delightfully versatile
cigarette table
Enhance any d9Cat
booulllvlly, 'l1lit gracolvl
nttlt toblt of oorrd
.. hogony has a ~ch leath11
. top t~at ls hand tooled
with 24 auut gold .. , It'•
drama tic ond useful
yt/ lo k• only U' Of f1oot
space. Ste It today.
"" $21•1 A coast Guard plane on th•
11COne reporied slghling Ute
ahtp with no lights and llf one I~=
on deck. This was lnterpretedr• b7 the Co.,t Guard to mean
wa ter had reached the s~ip'a
generators, causing a loss of
po,;;:· tinker Gull Solo 1lso 11111 ..
waa re~ .near ~ area,
•hlle tb1 CO.st Guard· v.,..1 1865°Hnor BIYll. ~lula ~~=., ~: Costa Milsa 548-5131 -
.__)'
oil furnace overheated in 10. old wood .house on the city's rl Ship Grounded below zero weaUter Sunday Northeast Side burst Into Ute proposal endorsed recently I destro~ed Ute hotel and· two flames Sunday, killing nine by President Nixon •• ... A NEW YEAR fo r a NEW YOU!
ENSENADA (AP). -A adjacen t wood buildings and persons. Offic ials said it was brand new concept • • . a frM DOMOMtttitlow -.. THt: YOGA SClt:NCl"
Meiican navy destroyer ran extensively . damaged t wp the wors t blaze In the city's reusable vehicle11 ttiat will TONITt: (Mo•. Ja1. 17l 1 r.M.
aground on a sandy •-ach ru'ne' brick structures. history. "cut costs dramefsUca In this ~ T ~rso e ped by Enjo'V 8h1r1ti & K1 1id11. l11rn1 e Full Yot lc Br11lh ! fa p!1:i1· miles north Of this B.J·a, Two I hotel occupants and wo ns sea whole bus••ess sp ac·e I · t • i u• ur1 to pr1ctic1 th• ra1t of your lif1l e Why th1 rnind ii powar• California port city, officials three persons ja apartments in eapmg man ups a1rs w n4 launching." ful!' • Wh1r1 to concantr1t1! If you lik1 it -t ak1 our 8 wa1 ~
report. the blirned-out a d i 0 i n i n g do;he fire, which officials Having a manned vehicle cout'' 1
'Mexican ofiicials said The buildings slirviyed the blaze. believe began near a kitchen that can shuttle ci:ews or un-Cl_.. Start ToMon ow Moni et t 1JO •• .,, &: •••t
California, a former U.S. Navy Thirty-one Pers o n s, ip-stove being used to help heat manned satellites around in Moit., Ja11. 24 at 1 r.M.
vessel, beached about SO to 100 eluding 28 volunteer firemen, the house during the l f below space, perform maintepance "470 St11dHts I• 1971 1 ..
yards offshore early Sunday. were· treated at Ty r one zero cold, was termed "as the or retrieve experiments "is YOGA CINTll. 441 f . 11tti st .. COlte M ...
There was dense fog in the Hospital for · injuries and most devastating in human the next semible and Jogical "C.-• P• .,... .. -T-1, '46-1111
area. __ r_cl_e_ase<1 __ ._M_os_t_o_r_Ut_e_r~_e_m_e_n_1o_11_1n_Ut_e_c_i_ty_~_histo_-_ry_.'~' ~s~tep!::,"~G~lll'Dey:'.'.'..'.:!..:..,~·d:· ___ _'.!!!!""!!""!!""!!""~
a...t 1At yellew toW ...... •••tllt wftlt I
.... ...... ,... ltotR 7596. .... 1171. NOW
wa. 14kt yollow. ,.1d wt• ....,.. rlltt wtni
,,.. w~ ,.. aid J ...,.... .
It.. 111A. 109, S110 NOW
'10800
111600 ' = ~'!.:!':.'~ -=-~=· .... ,..
lfHI FAl17. lot· SJOO. NOW
Ladlot 1411r ~ toW ._ rl19 wlttt • .,.1 ,,...
..... stoH. lfHI 11. a.,. SI SO. NOW
})8900
.s6ooo
a..lios 14•t ,., ... tolcl ........ whit ' "'--..
aid o,.i trlplot. I,_ l50A.,l09, $140. NOW
....... 14kt yeflaw totcf 111a•Rtl19 wltti 5 fl•
niblOl-4'1MTM•• ...
1totR 71N. let· $165. NOW
LAMts. 1 ftt .,.n .. taW ..... ,-. wttll 1 •••
11 .. 5-ppll;Tro ...i 1 .Imo.ct.
lfHI 7102. lot. 5200. NOW
L9dlet: 1 ~ yoOow told .. ntt., """ ' ff• A..,,..
U-fire O,._ lte. 145, lot. $150. NOW
L..lAm 14't ,.tow told MOilltlltf wftti 2 flM ,..,..
~ _, 2 ....... '-U7'. • ... S7S_.~NOW
Lo4&ot: ,._,.."' INltltl19, • collocton thM ef 11
llentlhl 4lcmtolds. lf'Hl llO. lot. $500. NOW
Ledin Plotl•••/lrldl•• 1110ntlot wltli ........
IMofllld ORCI 16 fltey ..........
lf'M. 420A. lot. $650 NOW
..-. Platl••M circlet w.ddllt rl19. l4 sltlfltmtf•
119 4lciMOIMk ttroalMI rlto bcntct.
lte• 100. 1.,, $710. NOW .
lod'-1 lkt yellow tolcl •••hilt whit i..d
U!IWd lade. It.. 91, .... $171. NOW
L.:Rel 14kt yellow told oddll.d .. ...,... wltli "" ~-poorl. Im. ll444. lot. $75. NOW
IM'-14kt yiollow toJtl ......... wltli 4 ,_,
1149°0
1102°0
112800
s7900
143°0
'310°0
1420°0
-
1499'0
59900
538.00
~ loW.C ...i A.......n. Fhw iop.r, saftOO
1.-llt. 109. $165. NOW . 7~
Lodlel 14kt wtlfte t.W 4 .... rlet cOlthtl .... 11 ,._.. '46200
-..ia•11dt. 1 .... 4796. 109 •. $710, NOW
LedJos 1 lit wlltt. 9014 dllNliar rt., w1t11 I 11 .. s.,,w,., I ,._ dtaped 4-...a, 4 rond 4&.-
..-. 2 ... .._ 11,07000
ltoM 5114. lot. S1,6H NOW
Ledi.t 14't yollow .... monrl19 wttft l.ftn.
...... , ............. ·-.... -22 ·n aH ••11d1, 11•1 •o•ntllt •
ltlnl t721. bt· Siii. NOW
L.di.a 14kt wWte ......... 0 ....... 411w
rl19 ""' 21 ,.._. •••••• ila. •
It.. "79Jt. I .... $410. NOW
lodlta 14kt wtilte .. , ..... , ....... 41111H rfflt wltlt 1 CCll'tlt ., ... o ...
ltORt~9140. 109. $900. NOW
LocUIS 141it wlilte told 1111....atld ...... FIM Swhf
. ~_ ........ I .... lU7 ..... Sl75. NOW
~ 14kt yoHow ~ 26 411--" tt.lttee
w.tck. .... ten o. .... S721. NOW ........... _ ....... _H __
wltlt U c1i..o-. 1 ... tOl 1. lot. $571. HOW
·L-U. 14kt white told ... Rd .. COllfflhtl19 16
po.I& ..CS 4 HM ccne4 CONI 1 .....
lte• 102. .... Sl7S. NOW
...... ,. .. -... d ... -..... -Moltl poarf. I,_ 96. lot. S150. NOW
LadJos .14kt Jtflow told MOHtl19 wltll 2 •rfl•
llmt cat dlolROltlk .., 11 1......im.
ltet11. IJ2. lot. S450. NOW
Lodln l 4•t yollow gold 111ou11tl119 ca11tal1l11t
5 matckocl poor sltapod Jffo 'ltoNS. • ·
Ito,. 1501. • ... $250. ·NOW
Lodiea 14kt yellow told M0•11rl.. wftlt Antr9I•
In Fite o,.i met l 4~
It.. F31 IJ, ht• S271. NOW
Lodi" Plat/lrl4 w.d41ot rl19 wtttl 14 bagffffWt
ad 18 roaH 41ol'llffds. lteM 4201. 109. S671, NOW
ladln 141rt .,.., ......... -.. wM ltoalfflfaf
,.... tllopo4 ......_ ltell 71. 109. SIJO. NOW
Lodles 14kt JOKew to"-.lllOIMlrl1'1 wltll ltlM Nr9c~H 'p.arl, ,,... 14. • ... Sl40. NOW
lfflet: 1411t .,.Pow 9okl MO•Rtf.t wltli 7 flRO
llM $cspplina. lteM 75'tcC. 1.,. $131. NOW
• Lo4lel 14kf yellow fOl4 MOl ttllt CIMttt1h!i19 6 ,..... ........... 1 dlo..-cl. ''°"' 75'9CD. • ... $140. HOW
"27600
S58600
1217"
59900
59600
s279°0 ,,
'14900
115900
142000
s7600
18800
18900
•
..... ..... ..., 4 41•aob. s42900 Wies 14kt ............. Iii .. win 1 ltwo,..,,.. '5600
lfMt JttOA. lot. MIO. NOW fl• color. ltoM 16. l9t1. SfO. NOW
Wloa 141rt ,...... .. Id 4S.er rl19 wftll f ... l.odlet: 1 ~kt .,.... told lllOUlltfJlf wltll ' lllOf•
...... PrtRc.. ifJ$o, '22000 ....... 1 . ·-···· 1 ... J,.t1144. lot· SJIO, NOW 1 ... 7169CC. .... SI~ N_OW ......,r,.., """" .. hi-.. •-"1°' Jl 5819'°.. I l'ffllll ........ I,_ 4797 ..... Sl,250 NOW t..lllet 14•t yoffow tofd hltti ,_.IOll MO•llt .. wl,. 6 11 .. S.,i»'lrel 9llCI 1 4101111oH. ....... 141it rellow 9114 "ION" r1119 wltli 7 '15600 I._ 7122. 109. $141. NOW ......... lteM 4402. R09. $140. NOW •
L.a. 141rt .,....,. •• 90~ rl19 w ... t s19600 i..dlea 14kt Yollow toll 11011ftfl119 wftti 9 l•b'" nd
•••••· ltefl 7'JJ, lot. SJOO. NO'fV .a-..... 1 ... FAHJt. 11.,. SUI. NOW,~
letliot 141rt wWte toMI .._, rl1t9 ... 1 .... 11t• M• n6 Montfttt wltli l lock St., lapp•J,.
........... 4 .......... 10 149900 ... i ........... •.,:.cnw. I,_ 9712. " .... S710. NOW 1 ... 114J, 109. S321. NOW
sssoo
1144°0
1199"
........ 1Gt wWte ,.W ._, rlRt lltlf ••••"' M-14kt wWts told •••I ... .J7 ct, 41 .......
"'9 wttt1 JO ...... •••••... S366H w1t11 4 .... dl•a... s30400 I,_ tJ17. • ... Sl7S. NOW ,,_ nJJ, 109. $471, NOW
M-14lt -tol4 ::::::Z. "'°' -'-INr 1.,, ....... 10 _._ __
.,_ 1156, . .... Sl4f, NOW
M-14tt .,.now told ••llthlt wftli UMe ttw ........ 4.1••••· ..... 1157. • .... $311 ... ow
M-14kt ,.uew 1old ......... wftli ..... Stw ....... 2 _.,....
,.._ 1111. • ... $221. NOW
M..;. 14tt yellow 1old •tlqHd .,.,....,.. wltll
,J7 ct. di._... M J ro••d dl-oHt .
1 ... 1162. R99, Sli71, NOW
M-14kt wWN ..... -..Mt1t1 wltll U... ...
Stw Sopplil,. -4 J dl•o•llk. ,,_ 1554. .... SJOI, NOW
M .. 14lt ,...._ told ~ cl"* rt.t.
1 """ ............ I._ 230*. • ... ·16to. NOW
...... 14" ...,_ told ••1111 cl..._ rt.f,
1 VaMNt ........... ,.
..._ Ll21J4. In· S9SI. NOW
L.u. 1 lfrt ..... ,.111 ............. ' ,.... ___ ....... 7 ........ _J ...,...,... ....... .
lteM Sl12. .... Sl,271. NOW
lodles 1411t yelfew ,.w 11011rl11t wl" Levnd•r
Jade ...t 4-d'-woltd ..
ltnl 1566. • ... S40CI. NOW
lodMt 14lt whfte t•ld wMcH.tt rf119 whk JJ
rand d&. .... • I bogai.n ...
lttM L1J911 Ret. llJO, NOW
........ 14kt wtilte 9eld ..-ldl119 rr,;., wl.. 11
ra1H dla11t"* and 6 bclt•ttet.
,,,_ U716. ltt. $111. NOW
LM* 1~ ,.ilow told lllutr rl19 wit\ 7 ......
lll•••llt. '""" 4401. 1.,. S21t. NOW
~ 14't ........... •r11t1to1" style ....... ...
wM 10 •• ..,a.1re1 eH J IHftl~ cait
........... 1 ... FAll21. 11.,. SJ71, NOW
L.ctl" 14kt yellow t-'4 Wtli ,_..._ ..... wlftt
11 Mtt l1lt'9t ...i.2 D'-oMI.
It.. FAS.I. . .... 1421. HOW
~ 14b .... 4, .. ..,,..... ,....,,
It.ti JIZ. .... Sii. NOW
L..Het 14lt .,... .. ,.w ........ "T,.. Of Ufe ..
co,..i ...i I lwfl1f9t ......._
I,_ 1 IOH. lot. $241. NOW
'-"-141it .,.ii.. ... 4 rope ON wftll ._..
.......... .--4 .... 14.
,..,_ 210. llot• s•11. NOW
LCldlel 1~kt yellow told pll wftti .,,., .t 6 -·--lfOIW 110.A. • ... $171, NOW
Lltdlet: 14lt ,..,.,. toW cW11 brocoi.t whit 20
,..,.. -4 ..... '-ck--' Corel ·, .....
Ulltor. I,_ 1JO, .... Sl91. NOW
LedJos 14kt yeltow fOld kacolet with 6 w rttd
coktn .t ..... I,._ I 04.. .... 1116. NOW
L..u. 14b yellow .. 14 .1• ~ wttti 14'1
Yt(low lf'4d bu C9f'Cll,
.... 10. .... SIOS. NOW
·AVAILABLE ONLY AT COSTA lt\ESA STORE
I
. 1849"
. 1259"
S48900
s10900
HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER
BANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHARGE
KIRK CHARGE
.--
2300 HARBOR .BLVD.
COSTA MESA •
545-9485
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• DAILY PU..OT EDIT8'BIAL PAGE
I
'GOP '· Margin
Orange County Ls stUJ Republican territory, but not
by as wide a margin so far thiJ year. Democrats have
trimmed JO percent from the Republican edge of a year
-ago. . . -
Republican registrations now total 297,690, Demo-
.cntlc 237,482. The 60,208 GOP lead is down by 7,642
from its peak of 67,850 In January, 1971 . •
County election olliclals attribute the shift to two
factors : A heavy "j>urge" of Democratic voters who
didn 't' vote In 1970 but returned to registered status in
1971, and tlie upsurge in registration of new votel's tn
the IB·to-21 year age bracket.
Older voters who wonder what that you~ul vote
.wUI do to !he political complexion of Orange County
won't find an instant answer. The an.swer provided by
the current registration figures is only preliminary.
Early registrations of the new youn; voters are
running about 3 to 1 Democratic vs. Republican. An esti-
mated 103,000. residents of Orange County wUI ., be·
tween 18 and 21 years old this year, based on the 1970
federal census.
If their registr~on patterns are normal, about 50
percent will register for the June primary. This should
grow -agiin, if the pattern is normal -to about 75
percent before the November presidential election. But
-how many will actually vote is another matter.
Age groupings aren't shown when new registration
affidavits are recorded as received, so there can be no
estimate of how many of the new young voters have al·
rettdy registered. But there's one indication of the trend
provided by a Fullerton director of !he nonpartisan Na·
lional Student Vote (NSV) organizatio~·n the county.
An analysis by NSV o!'hundreds o signups at Cal
State Fullerton show the trend runn' g nearly 65 per·
cent Democratic and 25 to 30 percent Republican. Also,
young voters deClining to slate a party preference are
running at least double the county average of 5 percent.
This could be misleading, however, as the NSV di·
i:ector points out. He believes the more liberal young
•
men and women are quick to rep.tar but later in the
year, nearer the presidential election, there will be some
movement toward the GOP.
Total reg!stration In the COl!JltX ls now 569,230, up
100,000 from a year ago but far below the preV!Olll peak '
of 612,006 registered for !be November, 1970 general
election. Registrar of Voters David Hitchcock belleves
tntal registrati911 could reach 700,000 before next No-
vember. '1
Whatever !be total, it's clear that the Republican
Party in Oran~e County can't rely on !ls past dominance.
U the GOP !ails to "turn on" a good proportion of the
new young voters while holding i~ lead among oljler
voters -and given the uncertainties of reapportion·
ment -there could be surprises In some of the 1972 ·
races.
Check Its Impact First
Seven years ago the pros~ct of having a nuclear
desalting and power generating plant on a 40..acre island
-oif the Bolsa Chica area of Huntington Beach was hail·
ed as a prime n:ieans of meeting Orange County's future
water and power needs.
Then costs soared from the $444 million estimate
In 1965 to $765 million at the end of 1968. The project
was abandoned.
Now !be Metropolitan Water District (MWD) has
offered Signal Properties $2.5 million for 88 acres for a
switch yard and rigbt-of·way to connect with the island
when built. MWD says it is looking ahead to 1980 or
1990 when an alternative source of water supply '.'must
be found." •
County and city planners are studying an environ·
mental impact report from MWD. That Is, and should
be, the first order of business in any revival of the proj~
ect. Its need bas not gone away.
•
President Endorses His Vice Pr~sident Bispiarck
LoOTts at · Is Nixon Firm on Agnew?
WASHINGTON -President Nixon's
endorsement of Vice President Agnew is
generally accepted in the .Republicai;a..
community u authentic and irreversible.
1magination c a n
> create all kinds of
'COl'IUngencies whJch
could keep Agne.,
'off lhe 1972 Uckel.
.Nixon has been
ilrmer than this on
other commitments,
'1ncl udinR bi,, own
'arewell to politics :ti> 1962.
· But he ba1110w laid it oul that Agnew
"1fould sult him for renomihation. and
there appears to be QO aerioua obitction.
On the contrary the prospect of Agl\ew'a
renomination is regarded as inevitable.
Something over a year ago Nixon would
not go so far as to predict Agnew 's
renomination. It wou1d be well to wait, he
~Id, until all the OOrses were entered in
t~e race.
THE ONLY HORSE posted since then
ts secretary of the Treasury John Con-
nally. Nixon sal d right after the 1970 con.
gresslonal election that he would let peo-
ple know about his vice presidentia1
choice when he disclosed his own 1972
political Intentions, and he did so slightly
ahead of his own announcement.
All Republicans who vote for Nixon in
the New Hampshire presidential primary
and six more to come have been out on
potlce that he sees no need to break up a
whining team. A vote for Nixon is a vote
n r Richard
-!:" \ . ··~t
Wilsoo i !
for Nixon-Agnew.
This has had the effect or pacifying an
onl)'. slightly resUess Republican Party,
rt:nderlng the conservative effort of Rep.
John Ashbrook pointless, and making no
signi[lcant difference in the liberal can·
didacy of Rep. Paul McCloskey.
THE ABSENCE OF any prolonged
cheering from o!flclals of the Nixon ad-
minlltraUoa. senators and rank-and·file
Republlcalll linco the President's ·.en-
doraen.mt la undentandable. Agnew did
not become a household word as a lovable
figure but as a controversial one with a
sharp mind and a gift for ridicule and in·
vective. Hls saying of the unsayable that
a Jot of people were thinking won more
admiration or animus than devotion . His
approval rating seemed to run in direct
proportion to the rising public annoyance
with the content and lone of TV news
shows.
More surprising is th e absence so far of
outrage from the anti-Agnew elements.
This is harder to understand inasmuch as
the reelection of Agnew would pla ce him
in incomparably the best positlon lo in-
herit the Republican Party from Nixon.
Agnew's reelection would automatically
make him a candidate for President in
1976. The entire Republican focus from
1972 on would be Agnew's effort to
'
•
establish himself as the heir apparent of
the Nixon administration just as Nixon
succeeded in doing in the last four years
ol the Eisenhower administration.
REPUBLICAN partisans are more
preoccupied with the problems of getting
Nixon reelected, but they may discover
that the longer view of Agnew's ascen-
dancy deserved more concern . There
may be something pathological here.
Modem Republicans in their minority
status are conditioned to think it unlikely
that two Republican administrations in
succession would be elected and cannot
easil)r imagine that Vice President Agnew
:•.W4 follow Presidenl Ni:loo.
In the present state of ])l.cificaUon
following Nixon'& endor&ement, thought is
beiiig given to the shape of an ad·
ministration to come. It will not be the
same, assuming Nixon's reelection, as it
is today.-Some big names are likely to be
missing.
Treasury Secretary Connally may con-
clude he has accomplished his goals and
will not wish to serve four more years in
a Nixon Cabinet. Secretary of State
William P. Rogers may find_ his ·personal
affairs in need of repair -after long
periods in public service:
PRESIDENTIAL counselor Roberj
Finch, one of the. President's oldest and
most intimate political associates, may
leave the White House to run for senator
or governor in California, probably the
fonner.
An g,lo-Saxons . ;;
"Jtpyce
.
Brier
\
--)
Bismarck around 1880 i.s reported to
have said something like this: "The most
important fact of modem hi.story is that
the British and Americans speak the
same tongue."
His obvious mean -
fllg' W,l!a. that the
CootlnentaJ nations
...... dtilied lhe full
freedom Of_ action
because the AnglG-
Saxons coufd easily
exchange their in·
~t .and feeling. The
'circumstance be-
came Jmportant about the time Bisma rck
spoke, due to emergence of the United
States as the foremost manufacturing
nation.
The Kaiser's people did not hear their
foremost statesman, and suffered by it.
Adolf HiUer excoriated them as stupid,
then aimrrUtted the same fatal blunder.
The only British statesman of this cen-
tury the Americans remember is
Churchill. Lloyd George, a much inferior
·leader, did not leave a lasting impression
on the AUanUc community, or even on
his own people.
From a Nice to Mean Guye . .
BRITISH PRIME rnlnlslers, excepting
Churchill, have come and gone. Only
Americans now remember anything
about MacDonald, Baldwin, Attlee.
They( are singularly. gray figures, men
of dedication and good character, but
lacking in force and brilliance, failing to
lead in confused decades crying for
British leadership. ' One of the very few Americans who has
had no difficuJty whatsoever keeping his
New Year's resolutions thus .far is
Galahad Goodheart.
Galahad resolved
<never ro be nice,
kind. considerate or
'helpful to a single,
sOlitary soul during
the entire coming
year. lf not forever.
; And that's odd b&-eause Galahad used
to be one of the
nicest, kindest, ipost cons Id er a te
and h e I p f u I young men you ever t,Det. He loved chivalry and gallantry . In
fict, he secretly longed for the days when
lie could have dashed about on a white
borse rescuing fair damsels and suc-
c:Qring the oppressed. Nobody was nicer
lban Galahad. '
' -j FOR EXAMPLE, one thing he relished
Si life was lighting ladies' cigarettes.
•ugh a n~n-smoker himself, he always
! ' ' I
OlANGI COA&T
DAILY PILOT
Rol>m N. w t<d, Publuh<r
~ Ketvil, Edi!Or
Albert W. Bates
Uitorlal PDl/c &Jitor
'rile edltoritl -of lh• DAily root eteU to lnfomt Md 1Urnu•
late retdcrl by J)tClenlinr this
aewsp1per'1 opinions and com·
mcmw.,, on topics ol lntereat ahd llC:DIOctnce, by ~~&' a forum for the ~D ot our ?Udcn' ednJons. and by Ptt!IMU'l( the dlwne Y'litwpoihll ot lntorined ob--..-wn and IPOkmnen OD toplcl ol llle .,.,
llondq, Jan1JU117, 11172.
..
.......... --; __ .........., ...... -..........
' ... . . '
, · .·Art Hoppe
.J
carried two ltghters and a book or
matches.
No lady within 50 yards could open her
purse and make a rustling sound without
Galahad leaping to her side in a single
bound, name in hand. He must have lit
50,000 'cigarettes in his time -not to
mention (du e to dim lighting) a couple of
lipsticks and a soda straw.
The gratitude of the Jadies was more
than ample rewarll. But then things
began to change. • ·
Ladi es seemed more startled than
pleased by his flaming leaps. They W-Ouid
reward him with an annoyed look or even
a testy: "I can light my own, thank you."
AND WHEN HE ~allantly told his dales
how beautlful they looked, they would
respond with a frown . "Oh, Galahad,"
said one, "must you always treat me as a
sex objtct?"
The end came when Galahad sloshed
out Into the driving rain one night tO open
a cab door for a little old lady who
promplly hashed him wllh her rellcule.
"Male chauvinisl plgl" she cried.
It was Jater while nursing his swollen
ear and a ha4 cold thal Galahad n.allud
women's liberation had ended chivalry
forever. For treating women as too weak
to light '!heir own clgarelles or too
helpless to open their own doors was cer-
tainly not treating them as equals.
1'lf I can no longer be ruce to women,"
said Galahad tlioughllully, "I must then
be doubly nice to my fellow men." •
AND Ill!: WAS. Particularly around the
' office. To be kind, he complimented hi!
fellow workers daily on their Uea1 their
•uils, !heir afleNhavlns -... whatever. To be OOllSlderate, he uld
MthJna but the nl!Olest tblop •bout
l
\
each and every one or them. And to be
helpful he brushed lint off shoulders,
opened doors, changed typewriter ribbons
unasked and gave each fellow little,
Now the man is Edward Heath,
archetypical of Ute Prime Minister breed.
His . people, excepting his political surprise gifts. . parUsans, do not throw their hats in the ~,n a month he was fire~; . . air over him, and we Jn America knew
1, If°k here, Goodllear:t· satd his bo,ss. nothing of him when he took office.
We re pretty broad-mind~, bu~ '!eve J Yet he bad had an honorable career, a
no room for a man who can t keep ti~~ -solld· rational Englishman, not necessari· t.1~ -sexua~ preferences towhimself. Jy the do-p;othing which might be his
'lf,, I c.an t be nice to . omen 0 or ~ foreground appearartce from this side of men, said Galahad to himself, who s the AU II I ft'" an c. e · He met with President Nixon on 'his
THE FOLLOWING week, while passing
out candy to liWe children, Galahad was
arrested as 1 suspected child molester.
Fortunately, the unjust charges were
finally dropped for lack of evidence.
Since making hi! New Year's rfS9lu-
Uon, GaJahad has been consi!tenUy
mean, unkind, inconsiderate, unhelpful,
back·biUng, vicious and much, much hap-
pier.
j'Now both women and men treat me
as an equal ," he, says proudly. 0 And little
children evtrywhere look up to me as an
obviously mature, grown-up member of
soclely."
Dear
GIOQmy
Gus
In this Space A<• ol mlCl'IM!ito:-
tronJc miracles, shouldn't toodiU
referee. have oendlni devloM that
start and stop the 11me clocll .,.
stud ol lndiaft.llke band tlplllT
. -mor-'71
'TWI ............. ,_,, ....... "' __ . .,, ...... .. . ... ...........................
' .. •
own groun~ in Bermuda, -a lovely,
serene spot for a low-profile summit. Mr.
Nixon had just come from talking with
President Polhpldou of Franco in the
Azores.
NIXON AND HEA'l'H discussed Anglo-
America.n relations, political and tra.,_
and naturally the recenreconomie agree-·
ment devaluing the dollar, altering the
international monetary world.
From this summll em~rged • an ·odd
mood touching Anglo->.nierican relaUonJ :
they ·were changing from the polilion of
1917·1r11, aim~ an eslrangetnent, like
thooe superaopbisU~ated marital separa-
Uons in which the prlnclpa!J, thougtt
going their own way, remain the most_af·
fectionate or chums. ·
Mr. Ni:lon end Mr. Heath hastened to
say it wu not an lntmlcal divls!On. The
Am0ric1111 111C1 Britl8ll had, 1DC1 ftllld
always hive, a "spec~" relation. British
entry on the Eurvpeoli Commbn Markel
Wll nol a c:rllls, but a pull of IJ'l'Ytty,
lllCI their lnteratl were dlvergln& """'
ours. Would you like to bet It will turn ·out
cunning old Bimnuck 90 year1 ago waa speakinl for the ..... not for 1he'lt'rol!
Quotes'
• • .
'
PAYLOAI:>
Illusion of 'Time
Was' Dies Hard.
What are they coming to, these
children of ours? They just seem to get
worse all the time.
A couple of days after Halloween, l
picked up the small-town Wisconsin
newspaper I sub-
scribe to, and read
the following item ;
"The usual praaks
were perpetrated on
the public HaJJow.
een eve, consisting
of tearing up side.
walks, knocking over
small hcuses, tear·
ing down fences, etc.
Time was when only hannless jokes were
indulged in, but of late years it appears
that the juvenile population are not con-
'\tent unless they can innict damages that
entails a monetary loss on the victims."
BEFORE YOUR middle-aged hackles
or indignation begin to ri&e, let me hasten
to. add that this item was in a column
called "Traveting Back." It was a reprint
of 60 years ago, from the paper of Nov. 2,
1911.
And the good burghers of 1911 looked
back upon that golden era of 1850, when
kids were still kids, and indulged in only
"harmless jokes." But "of late years''
things are indubitably getting worse. No
doubt, if we could find a paper of 1850, we
would learn that juvenile conduct has
shockingly degenerated from the golden
era of 1790.
AS WE BEGIN the year ol' 1972, let us
go back even further -to the
Shakespearean era of some 400 years
ago. H.is plays are replete with fathers
complaining that children aren't what
they u,sed to be, that the old rules of
behavior have gone by the boards. that
4 elders are ,no longer respected -"the
b;1by strikes the nurse and quite athwart
goes all decorum."
(Amusinglf enough. the same com·
plaints are made about s e r v a n t s
throughout the ages ; in "As You Like
It," (c.1600) one of the old family re-
tainers is praised as the last of the
vanishing ''true servants" of the kind
they used to have in :!lnliql,\ity but can
hardly be found "now.'·)
W CHILDREN ARE "worse" today
than they were in the past, it is only
because society has given them more
things to be worse about ; not because
their natures are any more corrupt. As
we multiply our material benefits,.
children have more .access to more im·
plements, and children have always used
whatever implements were at hand to
strike back at the irrationa l
repressiveness of adults.
Comparing the post-Halloween paper of
1911 with the same issue or 1971, it ap-
pears ·as if there were Jess vandalism
now than then, despite the growth in
population. But the illusion of jltime was'"
dies hard among the old; it may be one
of the things that keeps them alive -and
kicking.
Fender Bender Dilemma
The minor "fender benders" accident
may present a dilemma to the car owner.
He wants to get his car fixed with the
least expense or trouble. Often his own
insurance carries a $100 deductible. The
repair bill may be a little more than that.
But BSking hts own insurance company to
-pay for part of the repain may .cause his·
own rate& to rile. The "accident-free
diseount" may be lost. The increased
rates could equal the Coot of the repair.
If another car was involved, it might be
hard to cOllect from the driver, even if he
was at fault.. If the other driver denies
Uablllly, his lnsllrance company will
usQally not pay. His interest iii keeping
hJs own record clean with hJ1 own
insurance , company, and lower rates, is
jll!t as strong u that of driver nwn}/er 1.
EVEN IF THE minor accident Is
l'nvestigated by the police and the other
driver is given a citation, it Is nQl • sure
bet driver number 1 can establish fault.
If the other driver mereJy forfeits baU,
ple~ds no contest &r la found guOty lifter
trial, that detenninatlqn docs not
establish clvll liability, becalise this Is a
almiltal proceeding end It o n I y
d<termlnea whether · a · law bas bien
violated -not whether th& driver ls
liable for ilie ctamagea. Only U he pleads
gullty..._81lmlta lault con lhil be used in
civil courts.
The driver can sue In anall da1ml
court. Disputes Involving lelo than $lllO
·, may be beard In small clalma "°""• 1Dd
. neither party can bavo an attomoy.
Evidence ii produced lnlormlllY. U
offers 1 chtlp, Jut remedy., llt1ng
dl1gram1 lJld have •-tbett • Brin& In allo 'f'IAJt' damap esllmala. Bo Prllllttd lo ... ,_ ........ of the
ii<cldeol a l>rlelly and • oaaW1cinll1 lll
podlble. 'Ille other drttlfl' will have the
-·-· . ..,.,, __ , '""' -•
1 Law 1n Action
'---
. i
l ;
same opportunity. He might. a I s o
counterclaim, saying that you are at fault
and request a judgment against you.
IF YOU A!\E THE~alnU!f and you
lose in small claims court that's the end
of the line. There is no right lo appeal.
Only the defendant may appeal if he
Joses. If you lose you then must pay for
your own damages or have your .
insurance company pay, subject to the
deductible.
If you. win a judgment, there may still
be a problem in collecting payment. U
·the defendant haS-insurance., h I 1 •·
insurance comjlany will usually pay thft
. judgment,lmmedlately. JI no~ the aheri!!
tn•Y have t~ attach wages or ~r assets. ,
Note: California la1Dt1tr! 'ot1tr thlt
enlumn so JIOU may 1cnow about ouf'
laws. -
B11 Geerge---
1... Dear Georg':
•
My husband ia • !ootball·w•lch-
lng nul. Tho other Sunday when 1
trlod to tum off the set he actuolly
thmr 1 bag of pretzels at m'\J
Whal sbould I do!
MRS. E.
0.ar llln. E.:
Did he hil you! I may be able to
pt him 1 ooolrlCI with the -(Loi Geori• give hit full .~
lelllon to )'VIII' pn>blems. lie .....
centra!"' well lo his llW• cell.)
,f
•
. ..,_
•
,.
' •
•
•
-,
Mond11, January 17, 1~72
'
Fill up yo~r closets Without
emptyi,ng yo·ur pockets. At Penneys.
••
t-''·
Snip ahoulder
polo ehlrta.
Long sleeve. cotton shirts
in solids CG.patterns.
Lots of colors. Sizes 1 .. 4,
Special
2for1 33
Cotton·corduroy
~oxer waist pant..
Comfortable corduroys have warm
·cotton fleece lining. In assorted
colors, for sizes 1T to .~T.
Special
133 '
Women's potyuter pullover 1we1ter1.
Long or short sleeves In assorted solid
co lors or stripes. Misses sizes including
'extra large.
Closeout
299
'
Glrl1' Penn Preite
knit Iopa. ~olyester/
cotton in assorted
solid colors and
stripes. Mock turtle
or bound crew neck
with short sleeves.
Slzeo 7l<l s, 1.99
S p ~cial 1 77 Sizes 3-6x
. Glrla' tl1ra l•a
panta. Cotton and
polyester/cotton ·in
stripes, prints and
solid colors.
Slzoo 7·14, 2.~
Special
177 Sizes 4-6x
JCPen ney
The values are here every day.
I . I Shop Sunday no~n to 5 p.m; at the following stores: · ·
NEWPORT BEACH1 Fa.hion Island. HUNTINGT~ BEACH, Huntington Center. COSTA MESA, Herbar Center. All other .tores open th70o-gh Saturdey
DAILY 'llOt 7
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• i
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)
' .. I DAILY .iLOT . . .. f M .·LaW1llen Se .. ek County an
•.
'!•" Mile Square Park
Stocked for Fish
:In $31,250 Bail Jump ~ase
.. ·:
..
P'l'ff recrutionaJ fi!hin£: for
tid1 and their parent! will
be&ln Wednesdiy In a thr<e-
acre lake It Mile Square
County 11egion8J Park In
Pountaln Valley.
f'int DiJtritt Supervisor
Trial Slated
Over Fraud
SANTA ANA - A iawyer .
charged with fraud and per·
• jury after he alleged .ly
transferred a Lido I s 1 e
woman's home into his own
name In 1 move to 'prevent ·
bank Aelmrt bas been ordered
to f ... trial April 12.
OrailgeO:Mmty Su per !or
e.ourt Juc11e ·William MtDTay
at the trial dlte for Orange
1ttomey Ward C. Mikkelson.
A pretrt.l heaiing was set for
Jin. 21 anct a bearing on a mo-
Uon for diltnissal on Martji 3.
Mikkel~, 4.1, ••• indicted
by Ute ·0t:1nge County Grand
Jury ollet-be 1Jlege'dl y
tnmferred Ute borne of Mra.
Gleoni Heller, 22f Via Nfce,
into hit own ,name ahortly
after Ut ·received a demand
for lmm.dllte' payment1of a
flOO,llOO book loin.
I Robert W. Ballin .. id the .
county and the Fish and Game
Commission have each con-
tributed $2,500 ror !tocking the
lake with trout, catfish ..and
bluegill on a one-year trial
ba..is.
He warned tf\at slate fish
and game l~ws will apply for
all those fishing . Licenses and
trout stamps are required for
those over t6. Size and quan·
lily limitJ will prevail.
A truckload of trout ranging
from eight to 14 inches will be
put into the lake at 3 p.m. on
opening day , Battin sa id.
Within a few days, more trout,
plus catfish and bluegill will
be ready for anglers.
A 51).cent charge is made for
all vehicles usin' the parking
Jots. ·
Mile Square Park. which
ultimately will be developed to
345 acres. Ls bounded by
Waroer and Edinger Avenues
and Euclid and Brookhurst
Streets, north of the San Diego
Freeway. The park entrance i.s
on Euclid, north of Warner.
To date, an lS.hole golf
course and IO acres of
parkland have been developed.
The county holds a 30-year
lease with the U.S. Navy on
507 acres of the 64().acre
layout. The center 133 acres
are used by the U.S. Marines
as. a helicopter practice field.
New VCI Facility
'
SANTA ANA -Lawmen The boy testified against
throughout the nation and in Heater In West OrMge County
Cuada ·arr on the lookout for municipal court. Kidnaplng
a l"ountaln Valley man who charges were dismi&.sed. but
Oed to Canada four years ago Heater .was ordered to face
rather than face trial on &eJ· trial in Superior Court o n
ual molestation charges and multiple sex p e r v e r s i o n
t.&tn allegedly repeated the of· counts.
fenHs when he was returned He then jumped bail and
to Orange County. .. was not heard of for four
, Leotis Let Hea ter, 40, has years until Canadian police
already forfeited mdre than caught up with the fugitive
-'""2,000 ·.in ball on the. initial · and sent him back to Orange
charges filed against him on· County where a motion for
June 25 19'7. He fled to dismissal of the charges was
Caf!lda tjefore be could be put -denied and a motion for new
on trial Nov. 1 that<iyear and bail granted.
tain Valley police with car.
·ryin1 out last April 11 and 20 a
series of sexual offenses
against an 18-year.ald hippie.
It is also alleged that ht
furnished hashish to a minor.
Superior COurt clerks last
week gave Mrs. , Kathryn
Hayes, a receipt for $.11,250
ball . The woman, identified as
Heater's aunt, was ordered to
forfeit the bond-by Judge
William Murra y. .,
This architect's model shows the ~3.7 r;nillion admii'listration building to be.
erected during 1972 in UCI's Gateway Plaza on the ~ing Mall. Moving the Id·
ministrative" offices out of the library will free a third more space for use by
tha,t fa cility. The Donovan Construction Company was the apparent low •. bid4er
on the project which should be finished by 1973.
remained at large unt ll early Heater jumped bail again
1'71"' after beiiig charged by Foun·
lf the second nationwide
search for Heater again ends
with the Fountain Valley
man's return to Orange Coun·
ty, his bail will be set. at
$500,000,
,Investigators said ·'-Heater, ,---------,-.. -,-,"-,H---., ..... -------
financed by a wealtJ'y aunt, .
.... freed o• 131,200 bail ~~ M Th H I S~despite ,the· ract that he had l.IJU'IC'S ore an e p
Actress Aiding Fund -
SANTA ANA -Headed by research programs," she ex·
Newport Beach film actress plained.
and painter Claire Trevor. the These are conducted 'at
1972 Or~nge County A~hrltis . Orange County Medical Center .
Foundation campaign 1s get· and Children's Hospital.
ting into high g'ear. Volunt~ers may contact the
Miss Trevor is chairman of organization by calling MZ·
the fund drive, aimed at 8274, according to t h e
aiding 130,000 arthritis vie· Academy Award-winning ac·
tim~hildren as well as tress. a 14-year county
adults-in Orange County. resident.
"We need volunteers to walk The county goal is $140,000
door-to-door in February to in ftinds to help defeat the ail-
collect funds that will help ment, which is present in one
support tr ea t m en t and out of every four homes.
Diabetes Unit
Slates Meet
earlier forfeited $1:100 hail. He S Uin Of H h "da} hired famed trial lawyer w~ g . emorr 01
Gladys Towles Root to defend · • •
him on lhe four-y•ar-old Tissues Due To Infection·
Heater was accused in 1967 Abo Gives PromJ?t, T e~por~ry Relief in Many
allegationa.. 1 ...,_ • t
wllen be: lived at 701 Rockford __)..Cues from Pain1 Itching an Such Tissues.
SANTA A~ The Orange ~~· Corona del Mar, of Doeton have found i remark· and itching in these ti11ues.l
County -t1i'iipter of the Pl~king up 1 1 3 ·Y e a r • 0 Id ably aucceuful medication that Tests by doctors proved thi9
Diabetes As ~o c i at i 0 n of Brill~ .schoolboy who was .actually helP. shrink swelling: true in ma.ny~85Cll. •· ~
Southern Ca1ifomia will meet vacattorung In Seal Beach, and of. hemorrhoidal tissues when 'Themec::hcalLonusedwu_P~P<i driving the youngster to the jnfeded and inllat-ed. And i~ aration H. And no p~r1pt1ort
on Tuesday at I p.m. at the Laguna Hills area where he (l~e• mo_re,. In many cases _it is. needed for Pre~ra~1onp
Santa . Ana Co"m m·u.n It Y alleged.1y committed a series 11ves relief for hours from paJn Ointment or 1uppo1utor1eL .i
Hospital, 600 E. Washington 1 ~o~f~se~rual~1._0~f~fe"1naes~.:_ __ __.!:==================== Ave., Santa Ana. I·
Frank Aba re of the
Division of Motor Vehicles will
speak on "Diabetics and
Driver's Licenses." Th.i s
meeting Is open to the public.
Clean Ul> on · the coolest
val~es in;.,town. Penneys
On Sale now.
Penncrest ®
·r' Sal•• prtce1 effecUve through S•tunl8J. manual zig
• zag sewing
machine. /
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Sale $198vour~c•
Reg. 219.15, Pen..cr..to 15 cu. IL
YtrtfclJ or 11 CU. ft.
chelt freezer. Vertical freezer features 541-pouncl
cap~city, slide-out storage basket. Chest type freezer
has 828 pound capacity, movable basket. Botti
have. 'power on' warning lights, tumbler type lock,
Interior .Hght. White, avocado or -gold ••• color
costs no .more ·at JCPenney .
Sale 44 90
Rog. 41.15. --UpitgM Clo-r "belts, sweeps, and cleans" all at once.
Four height adjustmenta for 1hort, Jong lhag,
and Indoor/outdoor corpeta, Three poeltlon
hendle Ind tuU zippered outw vtny! bag.
Sale 39 88
Rog. +I.ts. flbt pltce Cua-C.llllaL
Clolntt. Feoturwo OonY9rtlent liott ~
right lneidl cl1....,, white t9Q1 canter
k09P!I tqols In -.r. -· Large "OIH>ll"
foot i>ecial ~ 111'99 whllll for -mobility.
JCPenney
·.. The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 PM at the following ltorea:
NEWeClRT BEACH, Fashion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACA , Huntington Center
u,. Ptnnoys ti.,. poyment plen
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I PEMVCRESJI
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R••· B4.115; Sive 15.95. Blue/white Manual Zig Zag.
Sewa forward and revefse with push of a button. '
• Sele prlc11 effective through Saturday
•
JCPenney
The values are here evecy day.
•
ShoffSund1y noon to 5 P .M. 1t the followlng 1tore1:
A•1il1bl1 11: NEWPORT BEACH, F11hion l1!1nd
HUNTIN6TON BEACH, Huntington Confer. u .. Ponn1y1 lfm1 payment pl1"'
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QUEENIE . By Phil lnterlandi
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Un employed • •
Lon g Hairs
Suppor~ed
LOS ANGELES (AP.)
Most Loa Angeles a r e a
employers don~ object to long·
haired empJQyes and a Gallfor·
Dia Department of Human Re-
iources admlqiatrator feels
thil rileans that unemployed
workers with hair· an inch be--
low their coUan can be paid
_M~~;:.::.:~~h~"""';=;.,11~,~1'~n"--'_,,~~~~_;_OAl~L~V~"~L~"'~•
• t I ' ,, \ I .~ritain· Faces Grim Fate, M..11tJ•1 •
' . Why Do
f.~ . -.8;ps Doom-Scientisis
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Y 011:Reat;l
So ~lowly?
and lltrillullon •nd aborlkln . epidemlcs, ,.Ctil . crtses and A ftdUd publlalllr ill C'lll-
on demand. wars; 0r becou.e wo want ft CllflO r.,,ortr tlMT• la o rinlplc
'Ille .lfOUp orgued that ttie to, "because we wish lo croate kchntquc of rapid "'adjng
indultrlal 9'>Ciety with , 1is a s~iety which will not im-which '•fWuld cnablfo '°" to
kteology of expansion cannot · poSe hardships , and cruelty fncrea.1e 1/0iir. f'tadfno tptcd
...... · , .... :r be, austaJ.ned and added i "Its upon ou( children." and vet ntat1' tnuc" ·more • sl · .: _:;.:~~?=:-'·~.our' 'children,"· a Croll~ or 1etinlnation withln tbe llfetlm'e The aiU'cle add~: "The Most people do 'W>I ttdliz•
· ~oeflta.
e:~.;;:;. ;:~-.·~~,~l . ,1 .. 1d~l!~ ·· eininent s c I en t I ··ts~ and fJ! aomeone born ~ ll in-'p,-ospect ct severe .food ~::Ir";,~~=11 ;;:':,!: ~J-~h ·~~<}t\..~:t'·\~~t ecoJ...m"'s have warned evitable. We can be eertai.n ~es within the next 30 b · -~· -~ -:~,.;Wt'. · .:~~;..:~~lH£..~ : ,...... . -· •that sooner or later it will .years l.s not so much a fantas come II. f'tuumg fa.atn uno ····~·~'!.~.':'..;'-. ~-"" ~fiE. . In an article wbhshed by · • 1 . more <1CCUrattl11. • -.-·f. :v.-,i:.:~!1 . the magazine EcOlogiat, the tJ;ld1 It ":Ul ~ ao J.n one of 1~0 as that of the .continued abun-Accw,ding to thil pubriahtr, Fred D. Bremner, area -ad-
ministrator of l J3 1 u ran c e
benefits for · the department,
aid the recent ruling by the
-a 11 fornia Unemployment
Insurance Appeal! Board ap-J dge Raps plies only to tho¥ µnemployed ll
workers with Icing hair in
areas where surveys show R t
employers objecl lo long-epo:r; ers
gfoup, headed by 'Sir Julian ways. Either agaipst our will dance prom.~ u~1 by so many many ptople, reoardleii of
RU.xii)' and nat~rallst P.eter in 1 succession of famines, of our polltictaris. , their vresent reading 1kUl,
Scott, urged the creation 'bf a can use this simple technique
national doomwatch move-to improve ·their rradi11g abU·
ment which could become a En' z; "tmen t Level ·ty to a: remarkabl• degree. political party to f;ghlfor an-a-o . S I <tiler r • o d i n f lloriu,
tiplluUon legislation. bo :s, tech~icol matter, it be·
·haired employes. . , ,!:;~:::!::::i.....!:"!.:'::'·:.:• ';·:::-::.!"'::'::"':::"·:.!'~::;·:,!":!"!;.· !;"'•::•'!;' ·:••h::;".:;-::;:"~/ The board ·ruled . 4 . 1 SAN JOSE (UPI) -After
u n e m p I o y e d · insurance an ang'ry exchange · In which
payments would not ,·be made · the 'press wu blamed for
The group wants-to halt the F ll Sh , • '71 comt!s pos.s1ble to·,.~ l~n-conslanl expansion .of highly a ort in ' tenets ot a.glanc• and •nhr.•
industrialized societies. , :Ut~sod~n seconda totth thJS
It warned : 1 'Govern· WASHINGTON (AP) December period, about· 17,000 To acquaint the reoder1 of "\Ve have a joker around here."
~ying Blink
Slayer Sent to Jail
SACRAMENTO !UPI) -A blink ol the eyes by a dying
man bas helped send Mary Louise Davis, 40, to prison for a
one-to-15-year term . "
Edward E. Alcarcon, 45, a bartender, was found stabbed
last Aug. 11 in his Sacramento apartment where he had been
living with Miss Davis in a common -law relationship, police said .
While being rushed to the hospital, attendants asked him if
his girl friend stabbed him. They said he told th~m no. Miss
Davis claimed "'someone broke in and stabbed him."
Police Sgt. Eugene Camper .. who went to Alcarcon 's beside
to get a dying declaration, asked him to blink once if Miss Davis
stabbed him and twice If she didn't. Camper S:llld Alcarcon gave
one blink. He died shortly afterward.
A1iss Davis pleaded guilty to a charge of involuntary man-
i;laughter reduced from murder.
In sentencir\g her to prison, Superior Court Judge Robert
• W .. Colt? said he will take another look at the sentence in four
., months.
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
Sale! 253 off
to long-haired workers'in areas frightening the public and at-
wbere long hair .is frowned ' tempting: to intimidate the
Upon by emplOyers. . court, onetime · accUled am-
"If a worker came into an bush killer Elmo Hattoo has
employment office dressed· on-been returned to Agnew State
ly in a sheet, would you think 1Hospltal.
he was really interested in a A parole for ·Hatton . was
·job?" 1'renner asked. t.emporarily re\' o k e d by
'·'In a W!l1i the same thing Superior Court Judge Brudge
applies to tong h a I r s . F. Allen, who had granted it
Employers have a right to set earlier last week~ Alle1 alSo
standards, and if workers threatened contempt of Court
won't meet those standards, proceedings against twO' mem-·
then they A.re not really look-bers of the Santa Clara County
ing ror work." Districf"Attorney's office and
Brenner said each HRD of-news media.
fice "must, determine stan; "The stories so scared ' the
dardS of dress and groominR public that I would not dare
within the area it services." turn (him)· ~atton t dose ,
Luxembourg
Thi¥s Voting_
because his own life would be
in ~~nger," Allen. ·said.'
ments -ours is no ex-• Voluntary en1istments f e 11 fewer than their objective. this 11ewspapn 1Dfth the ccsy:,.
eeptioo-an either refusing to ·below the armed services ob-Selective Service calls total· to-follow rule.s /or Jevtlop-
. face the relevant facts or· are jectlves during the last ball of ed only lO,OOO during that i1111 reading . skill, the C0':71-·
briefing their .. scientists in · 1971,· a time when the draft same six-month span, so there pa1~y ~as pn~ted full d~ta11$
such a way that their was taking very few .men. was only light draft pressure of its int~res£ing self-training
seriousness is played down. This COU]d spell trouble for on young men to enlist in the ~thod in a new booklet,
· "U we · plan remedial ac-Nixon Administration hopes of service of their choice. flow to Read Fmter and Re--
lion with our eyes on political ending the draft and changing Some senior military officers toin 1'1ore," maiicd fr.et to
rather than e co Io g I ca I to ari all·volunteer force • by and congresslonaJ critics of any.one. who reqittsU it. No
re a Ii ties , then Very mid-1973. the concept contend an all-Qbltgatwn.. Send 11our nam1:
reasonably, very practically The coming months should ·Volunt eer force is an im· addr~ss, and z!P code to.
and very surely, we will indicate whether about $.'J practical goaJ. that more Readrllg, 555 E. Lang! St ..
muddle our way to ex-billion ,in ne.w military pay money and improve ments in Dep!, 5o9.so, Mii~~ltui, I ll
tinction." boosts will attract enough ad-the quality of service life will 60060. A postcard 1Dfll do.
National population services ditional v~teers. T h e s e not do the trick. '-==========:;
are suggested to publicize tl\e boosts be(Srte effectiv~ too . The Navy led the way1'
links between population, food late to have any significant toward improving military life Who Ceres?
supply, quality of life and impact on recruitment totals by relaxing rules on hair and
diminishing resources . The in 1971. dress. eliminating make-work
~roup said no couple should Pentagon figures show that practices and otherwise up.
have more than two children the services recruited 195,300 dating conditions under which
anWurged free contraceptives new men in the Ju I y • sailors Jive and wort.
No"other newtpaper ln tht world cares a baut ,.,.ar com-
munity like your oommunlb'
dally ·--It'• the DAILY PILOT.
LUXEMBOURG !UPI) -
The Luxembourg Parliament
has voted to lower the voting
age from 21 \to 18. The vote, by
54--0 with twq abstentions, was
on.a constitulional amendment
that also lowered t h e
minimum age for parliamen-
tary candidates from 25 to 21.
Our everyday low prices will ~ot
b~ seen at this time, so th.at we ·.
can -bring you this sale. Save s100.
Sale $895 .
Fashion ~nP.r,~c_y;s~PO\
upholstery faBr1cs. · i. i ·
~.71PM:-
Reg. $1115. Pon...-
"lotor' enlortolnmont .......
· Thi• color TV, radio, canette tape player..f8COl'der
and ~no combo has al' these feetures: 2s• ecr11J!"l'I
mNt.ured diagonally, Chr~ to help maintain
. pro~r flesh tones. 6 ~era. HardWood cabinet
with llldlng doon:"'Medlte,,.,,_)!llytowttlroolc
\1e""1f·or "Ear1y American" with~ vilnei;.
":,
Call collect (714) 523-6511 i
Reg. $7 $9 $1Q yard
Now
52s 51s 7~?d
Sensational savings on a selected .
group of designer fabfics. in a stun-,
ning spectrum of decorator patterns .
and color combinations. Most
patterns are woven of Vectra ·.the
miracle olefin fiber that is stain-.
~~sistant and color-fast. Qon'.t miss
these fabulous savif19S. . .
Regul1r low Penney p~ on our finest
wor'lllMl'llhlp.
JCPenney
The values ire tiere ~day.
' Decorate now, -l"enn•r• uma payment plan.
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Savesao
Reg. 211.111, lolo 221.15.., ........ -
Pwincs_. port.ble color TV
wtth 12" ..,_, mo.....ci dl-llJ. Cll roma-1.oc .. .
.for proper balance of ~lor end tint, automatic fine .. .
tuning, bUU~ln automatic color purifier. Walnut gral11 ..
fin I oh on high Impact plastic cabinet
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Save!9.Q.
Reg. Hl.95, 8alo 3$1.15.
Pemcrnte por\lble color lV w'ith rllitote controL
1e• screen meuured diagonally, remote contrOI
for volume tnd channel selectfon, automatic fine
tuning, automatic color purifier. Earphone for
private' llstenlng.
8•1• prtcn oltoctlff tlwough lllturdlf, ' 'This· amount represents the reQulred minimum monthly payment under,.,....,. 'tiMlt PPIOl_JIWWIO•ot
Pl•n for the purchue of the related Item. No FINANCE CHARGE will bl lncu.wd ff tM baAlnce
Qt the tcCOUftt In the first blltlng II paid In ft.ill by the closillg dale of tht nnt bl9l1Ag perldd.
Whc!n lncu~ FINANCE CHARGES will bl determined by 1pplyl ng per1ocMa ~ If 13
'(ANNUAL:'P1ERCENTAGE ~TE f4.4%) on tM" first $500 •nd 1% (ANNUAL ~,(QE ,
RA1'! 12")'°" tM i)ortlon owr $500 of tht previous b11•nct wlthovt aduct~O ......
or ct9dhL ·
JC Penney
The Values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to· 5 P.M. at the following stores:
\
NEWPORT .BEACH, F~•hion l•land. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntincpon 'c.ittar.'
' UM1 Pennoy• tima P'IYm•nt plan.
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J f DAILY PILOT MondlJ, ""'"'" 17, 1972 ' \:
Foulup Revealed
On School Bill ,
SACRAMENTO (UPI) . -
GOY. Ronald Reagan algned a
meuure setting guidelines for
-lntqraUon while be mistakenly believed the Board
ol Education endorsed II, stale
ICbooll cble[ Wlllon Rllea maintains. .
Riles told tile board he
mlltakenly Informed Reagan
prior to hli 11gn!ng the legllla-
llon that both be and the board
111pporled II.
After realizing his trTOt1
LIB GROUP
PICKS BO(VE
Riles said be sent t h e
governor a letter thla past
week lelllng him !hill "due to
an unfortunate breakdown in
our oorm8.i bill referral pro-
cedures," the board never
formally· considered the ~ill.
Reagan signed the bill Dec. 17.
"We are taking e v ~ r y
precaution" to prevent such a
sltuaUon from happen inc
again, Riles said in the letter
to Reagan. "I earnestly hope
th.i& unfortunate situatio n will
not cause you any serious con-•
cern."
Assemblyman William T.
Bagley, (R·San Rafael), has
said the measure which he
authored would provide an
"orderly" so!Ution to school
integration and avoid in-
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -'l11e tervention by tl.e courts.
'
women's llbbert have a bone The guidelines contained in
\ to pick with the City Council the !eglslallon are almost
for doubling the tax on female identica1 to 8 proposal adopted
dog1. by the 1tate Board of Educa·
A lfOUP of them marched tion but later rescinded when
down to a council meeting and a UJs Angeles judge used
called the •10 tax-designed to them as a basi.5 to order bus.
reduce the dog popuJatlon -ing of pupils to achieve in-
cUscriminatory. tegration. •
So the council made an ex-A s s e m b I y m a n Floyd
ceptloa. Women dogs who Wakefield, (R-South Gate),
Rcure a veterinarian's note · asked the Board of F.ducation
showing they're past the to support a bill he l! author ..
olwi&e of Ule will pay the 15 Ing which would repeal the ·
license fee just like the men Bagley guidelines. The board
_dogs. voted to study Wake.field's re-
quest "in depth."
Penneys
presents.
The Wide
One.
Ground Gainer
78serles
polyester cord
tire.
$
. (871-13)
Plusl.81 Fed. Tax
and old tire
Blacliwall Tubele11
Slzo Fed. ·tax Price
878-13 ... 1.81 ... $17
E78-14 ... 2.21 ... $22
F78-14 .. • 2.38 ... $22
G78-14 ... 2.55 ... $27
H78-14 ... 2.74 ... $27
560-15 ... 1.74 ... $17
G78-15 ... 2.64 ... $27
·H78-15 ... 2.80 ... $27
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Needa % Hots
If New York City
Mayor John Lindsay
coul d be two persons
at once it would solve
his problem of recent
criticism he's neglect·
ing his city duties
w hi 1 e on campaign
trail.
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3 Day ~ervice Special
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Monday, Tunday, Wednesday
Your Choice . Wh111 a1r11nm1nt Includes a complete
W1.-1 Alignment front end check; adjue11 ng the caster,
,,.. camber and toe-In; cerlterlng the steer-Whtll Balance Ing wheel positi on; adjusting the 1orsion
bar heig ht. -6 95 ~ Whttl b111'nce. B1l1nc1 oil lour wheala. ·--
JCPenney
auto center
Shop S11nd1y noon io 5 P.M. 11 the followlng Auto_ Cent111:
NEWPORT BEACH, F .. hion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center,
U1t Penney• time P.•ymtnt' f.ltn.. •
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IH1ma1ed . 1Jtt Cut'IHu!Jc':
Reefs Losing · 'Imperialist Enemy'
By 1l'ILLIAM L. RYAN
AP Sped.II Corr<l ...... 111
An odd sort of picture beglna
to emerge In Indochina. From
what the N-Vtelnameae
regime says and does, one can
get the Impression that tt
views a druUca1ly reduced
U.S. military presence with
some dismay.
The U.S. troop level bu
been cut from 540,000 to
139,000 In 1hree years with
NEWS
ANALYSIS
further reductions t 1 k. i n g
place now and the ground
combat role has vlrtuaUy end·
ed. The North Vietnamese 41
not seem to have reaped any
significant mllilary or political
gain from all that. Now, by
mid-year, the American force
may be little more than a gar.
r ison of 30,000 or so.
For Hanoi this rould be too
much of a good thing. It may
be in tbe awkward position of
having to worry about losing
too much of its "imperialist"
enemy. For aeven year Hanoi
haJlheavily propagandized iti
people about the menace of
Special
Buy
s155
' that enemy.
JI tt were not for U.S. air
powtr, t be admlnlstratloo
might make a cue for a claim
that for the Americans tile
war la Just about over. But It
Ian 1t. Air power remains a
highly visible 10urce of sup.
port for the South Vietnamese
regime and of punishment for
the North.
Hanoi now could find a
leS!ening U.S. role far from
welcome and thua want to
moW1t enough a!'tlon to keep
American planes busy in
retalJatory action o v e r
norµtem targets. That might
sound paradoxical, but from
the way it bas been reacting to
developmenb In the So.uth1 the
Hanoi government seems to
fear a PfOSpect of drastically
Jowered American visibility.
Their propag'IJl(la bas In-
dicated that ttie· main targets
or the North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong In the South are
'•Vie t ft.fl mi zation" and
"pacification."
Lots of KP The southern effort a t
pacification ot the countryside
is pictured as the slyest · and
most dangerous of imperialist
tricks. The Vietnamiu.Uon ls
described as a be1nous ~esign
to make Asians fight Asians
for ih.e benefit of Americans.
HEPOERT l. MILLER
TIRE CO. INC.
Ex-colonel Turns To
SANTA ANA
709 Bu sh St.
S47 ·S68S
NEWJ'ON, Mass. (AP) ~
Five years ago B r y c e
Evert!on was an Air Force
Colonel in command of an air
base. Now he's· making beds,
cleaning bathrooms a n d
sweeping floors at a hotel, tak·
ing hi!: orders from the head
houseman who was once an
Army sergeant.
The e:i:planatlon ts that the
retired colonel ha·s joined an
execuUve training program in-
tended to teach new employes
every facet of the hotel
business.
For the next 12 weeks he'll
be a houseman, then move on
to something else.
11He's really something,"
said Ro"ntl'hebado, the former
sergeant who ls Evertson's
boss at the Marriott Motor
Hotel. "If I were marking
him, he'd get an A-plus ln
everything."
Evert.son, &O, joined Mar·
riott four weeks ago alter
completing 28 years in the Air
Force and says he's enjoying
the change.
He said he choSe the hotel
business "because 1 wanted to
get as ~ ..away from what I
bad been doing as possible.
And I guess you can't get
much further away than this."
COSTA MESA
1739 SUPERIOR
,., '10 ' ..........
Ph. 642·3384
PLACENTIA
144 So. Bradford
I Hlo• le ~ QI (h11pmon
524-9280
Hanoi seems appalled at the
notion that Vietnamization,
whatever its imperfections,
might work even to some
degree. It could mean that the
South, with logistic help and
perhaps air support from the
Americans, might hold its own1 l~=========j
indefinitely. .
No matter what its pro-
paganda may say, Hanoi
doesn't have all th e time in 1
the world. This is reflected' in .
what Hanoi is saying nov•,
\li'ben the observance of the I
Tet lunar new year holiday is
at hand. · .
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SAT.URDAYS IN
THE DAILY PILOT
I ;
Storage building sale.
Specials for your yard.
Salo' price• ellocllve lhrough SalllrdaJ
Sale $99
• Rog. $119, 10' x r chalot-sty!e lteol otoragi building.
Steel pane~ are chemically treated, electrogalvanlzed,
painted and sealed for rust-retardation. SttJrdy, rlb1?9<1
o~erlapping wall and roof p~nels, double interior sliding
doors on nylon rollers, hot dipped galvanized steel foun-
dation.
Ponncralt* garden Ullor with 5
HP Brlgg1 and Stratton engine.
Has throttle and cl6tch con1rol
on handle1 forward and reverse
power. 26" wldo 1111ing width.
14395
Mlnl·Mac I aufomatli;. choln oaw: 14" bar and chaln.,,..tureo
!lgh!l'!elght engine that provides
ssfe u• with lot1 fatigue.
'
Gordon tool ao1ortm1nt.
Moat wanted tools lnoludo:
raund point shovel, bow rake,
garden hoe, leaf rake, cultlva·
tor, grass whip. .
Special buy.
166
~CPenney I • ,
50 ft. nylon rolnlorced gonion
1'01•. Super value. Reinforced
vlnyl hose has a 275 lb, bust
strength, solld brass cou·
pllngs, 1/2 Inch diameter,
Special Buy.
2!~
$hop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores:
Av•~ble at: NeweoRT. BEACH, Foshlon lslond~ HUNTINGTON BEACH, H!IJlllnglon Center. u .. Penneys timo ~ym.ent plan
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New . U.S. Repprt Sa_ys
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Sex·u(ll Bim Widespread
, By M'ARGARET SCHERF
WASHINGTON (AP) -From college
campuses to doctors' offices, women are
disc'rlmlnated against ln vlrtuJlly every
aSpect or' American llfe; says a federal
report. .
Prepared by the Department of Health,
Ed11cation and 'Welfare, the report ac-
cuses HEW' ltaelf of widespread seIUal
bias. ·
Among Its findings:
-Although Women make up &.1 pereent
of the HEW work force, they bold only 14
· percent of the top jobs.
-Physicians are more likely to dismiss
1'r'Olllen's symptoms as neurotic or as
norn:iaJ female problems -"sometimes
Roral Poetry Read
TOKYO (UPI) -The annual poetry
party was held at the Imperial Palace
here and Emperor Hirohito presented
a poem about his trip to Europe last year.
Translated into English, it reads as
follows:
Over the vast sky
Of Europe
I SOfred wp and high
Catching a Glimpse of
Alpine Ridges
Rising above the sea
Of Clouds
until physical diseases are beyond treat·
ment.'.. · .... ·
~The proportion of women among
graduate-school enrollments and can.
didates rec'eivlng degreea was IeSs tn 1970
than in I~. . .
"Based on academic achievement, the
women selected for graduate training are
on the average more highly qualified than
th!!' men," th~ report said.
-The median income of women 65 and
over is less than half the median income
of men in this group, $1,397 compared to
$2,828. -
-"Women are encouraged or even
forced to retire earlier than men, despite
the fact they have a longer lif.e ex·
pectancy."
The report was Issued by HEW'S
Women's Action Program, created In
February 1971 "to improve the status of
women who work in the department and
to_ evaluate the impact of HEW programs
on women in society,"
0 To date," it states, •~the most active
and effective efforts to combat sex
discrimination have come from the
departmen t's contract-compliance
division of1be Office for Civil Rights."
During the past two years, the report
said, more than 300 complaints of sex
discrimination in employment on college
campuses have been filed with the ofiice.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-o
!ft,.
.
Permit . Eyed
For Aque.fuct .
Construction
'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Federal
Power Commission examiner Ernest 0 .
Eisenberg has recommended that a 51).
year license be granted for the con·
stfuction of .the $1.5 billion catifornia
Aqueduct Project.
Approval of the project, which would be
one of the largest hydroelectri c
qevelopments in the United states. is
subjeCt to review by_ the full commission.
The project is being built by the State
Department oI Water Resources and.the
Los Mgeles Department of Water and Poiru.
The . aqueduct will start at the Italian '
Slough in the Delta of the Sacramento
and San Joaquin rivers and extend 475
miles to· Los Angeles, Ri verside and San
Luis Obispo counties.
The aq ueduct is a major portion of
California's $2.7 billion State Water Pro-
ject designed to carry water from the
Sacramento and Feather river basins in
the north to water-short Southern
California.
Th'e huge project will eventually
generate more than 1.5 million kilowatts
of power and carry nearly 3.9 million
acre-feet ·of water annually from the
Delta to the San Joaquin Valley, the
California central coast region and
Southern California.
Eisenberg said in his recommendation
that the environmental impact of the pro-
ject would be "generally benefici41."
SUPER BOWL SP·ECIAL!
\
B&D 7-Speed 1/4-lnch Drill Kit
New.from Slack CJnd Decker ••• on excep tion al value
he 'll want to get his hands on! This handy two-sp_eed
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h~ndle a variety of household jobl. Model N~. 7012
' ...
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Dynamic Homo lottery Charger
Gtt ,_,,,,00 (n · t1Mce fram o 2Sc:
battery! Mont')'"wting unit safely o~d 388 eo Mly rechorgU" oQ populOMtt&
• 'botttriesr indudinQ expen1ive
ironslstor batftries. Hanclles up to "' _
botttriU at a time.
Paragon Plug-In Timer From AMF
At lost, o horM protective lighting
control witll look' yov con live withl 799 Hondt0me woodgroin•d Guard-Iii.
tvrns lights ort ond cff outgrnoticoily,
2-4 hours 0 day. aiw your horn• h•
normal "lived-in"' look. · •
Versatll• 111/rgesi Electric Pencil
"'Nilghborproof:" )'Cl.If belongingsl
Handy tool .makes cW:.$1fi, permanent ....
tnorkings on hundrtds of ifetns •• ,
eosyaswritingyournomelPicltit up,ft 499 f\/rn s on , •• Joy it down, it lhu1• off,
Mod<! V·69, · •
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1614 NIW MMAITHUI IOULIVAID
-Vlow C:--Nowpert '-Ii
HIMnl ' ..... ' ,..., Meft. -a.t.: 11 ... , lvMey
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MIX
'-.
•
' Monday, J,.u.vy 17, 19n DAllY 1'11.0T JJ
Beach'. 'Y" Slates Breakdown
Of Budget
Reported
FOR CRb'ftYI
LIVING .
Oasses for . 1972 H•w nciti.., •!NI Mthfyhtt
life b. ""•'¥ 4•-i h•lcf1r •• 11111•
llMl+.4 •pport11111ity fer t rMtor
tb11N1nt 11 ... 11191 lf e111ly •" I•
1w1'\e te it.
. From Yoga and creative
dance to speed reading and
'pre-school day classes, "the
H u ntington Beach-1-... ountaln
Valle)' YMCA schedule of 1m
cla~s is about to get under
way.
Classes in 17 subjects will
begin next week, YMCA ex·
eeutive director R i c b a rd
Collato has announced,
Membership in the YMCA is
not requ ired for enrollment;
he said.
Highlights of the schedule
include :
-Speed reading class that
should increase reading ability
three to ten times over.
-Judo and karate self·
defense classes taught by ex·
perts.
.
-~aUve arts and crarta
for children und,er a d u I t
supervision. -\
-Baseball clinic designed
as preseason conditioning for
prospective little leaguers.
-Women's ''sllmnasUcs" to
help adults 'trim a n d
redistribute weight.
These classes meet once or
twice a week and requlr"-an
enrollment fee ol $1 to $25.
other programs I n c I .u~
beginner gymnastics, C'Ta'iy
modeling, yoga, s e v e r a 1
general lilnes.! programs for
all ages, women's dance and
conditioning, sew and slretch,
and guitar.
Further inlonnatlon may be
oblained by calling 847-9622.
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Here's bow the taxpayer's
dollar would be spent under
Gov. Ronald Reagan's 17.6
billion· budget:
Human relation! .. (includes
health and welfare) 28.4 cents,
elementary and secondary
education 26.1 cents, htgher
e~ucatlon 10.9 cenis,
tramportation 10.1 cents,
shared f'evenue with 'tocaJ
government 9.4 cents, pro-
perty tax relief 6..4 cents,
natural resources l. 7 cents,
agriculture 1.5 cents, other 5.5
cents.
Here's how the dollar would
be collected :
Wh1n on• 11 f11Uy 1w1le ho
h not only 1w1r1 of ceitdltlo111
•round lilm, but ,.c.,ni1e1
1om•thi119 "••le wHhiit ..... ,.,
concUtlon1 1om1fhlnt th1t 11.
••'l't ,,, • ., •• tow114 • 11ot11r1I
ordor. Tli1t 1omoifiln9 h Cre•·
tivo l ife . Y111 1 r1 1 11•rt of
CreotlYe lifo olld tlie More you
or• 1w1re of it the more yov
c111 work In h1uno11y with It
ind produco e•cltifMJ, t1tl1f'tln9
r11ult1, Aw1•11t yo111111f full'I'
t1ch -'•Y to 1'y11t mlc Cretfi.,o
lif1 Wolthin you.
Start now by ...... , ...i
"'l"'I the CllATlv'I THOUGHT for ,.,, wHlr
-646°7757.
4l-JuJH.~
Society Raps Contempt Ruling
N•wport U•lty C:..tor
of ·
c. .... 1 •• Livi ..
1127 We1tclfff Dr.
plot by members of the
Nowport INcll
'~'·1111 LOS ANGELES (UPI) ~
The chairman of Nati9nal
Freedom of Information Com-
mittee of Sigma Delta Chi, the
professional j o u r n a I i s m
society, says a contempt rul·
ing against a newsman for a
story on the Charles Ma nson
case was "nonsensical." ·
Oak1and Tribune, wrote a let·
ter to an attorney f or
newsman William T. Farr,
criticizing the decision or the
state appeals court on Dec. 17
which upheld a co ntempt cita·
tion agajnsl Farr.
Charles Manson "family" toi-==========~ kill severe! Ho 11 y w Oo dlr
celebrities. KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
Dick Fogel, ass is t a n t
managing editor of t h e
Farr, then a reporter ror the
Los Angeles Herald-Examiner.
wrote a story of an alleged
He was cited for contempt
by Los Angeles Superior Judge
Charles H. Older last Juiy for
refusing to give the court the
name of the attorneys who
Saturdays in
The DAl.L Y PILOT
\Vere his source. '----------'
(
Warehouse
clearance! -
Save up to 42%
Overstock and discontinued carpeting.
Hurry in! Quantities are limited.
'
.
Nowa~.Yd. . . Qtlg.µt_ ,
. 'Nylobllg' 1.o'!ll Wearing nylon al1ag pie...., lll1'm1tnt
. twlltlOk"t!'fbepilngytextllre.~14ColorL • • •
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Orig.I.SO
·. 'SoUth SHI' long, lu1h patyHter pile keep• Ila rnlll·
\ ence1nd aott, lu1urlou1 touch. Tweed1. 3 colora.
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Orig.I.ff · · ~
'Camot' fem0u1 DuPont I0111> nylon 111YM ......,_
Mulll·l•v•I loop pll• llldeo footmorkl. lolllle •H
tweeds. 8 oolor1.
Nows=.Yd.
Orlg.l.!O
.'lnlln.Hy' IClllpturod •fleet 1111~ of AClll111$ WI., tip
'" ehtoredfarlntorHllng1urf1~Satk11.looi-
\
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Broadloom carpeting re·mnants bound on all fo ur
sides. In an assort~ent of premium fibres lncludlng
wool, nylon, polyester. Tweeds, solids, shags, pluah·
es. Terrific reductions of 1/2 to 2131
Group 1: 4' x 8', 5' x &',
8'18',S1 x8', 811 ea.
Group II: 3' IS', 4'. 6'~ ....
5'Xl',·3'17',4117', -~ 11.
JC Penney
' .
Paddlno •IHI ••P•rl In•
1tall1t1on •w•ft•llt• .,
1
low P••MJ prtceo. lllng In your floor •eilaur ..
m•nll for• 110-elltll••
Dan cerpet .-....
Shop Sunday noon ti?_ 5 P.M at the fi>/lowlng atorea: ' ,
NEWPORT BEACH , Fuh ion hltnd, HUNTINGTON BEACH, Hunlin9lon Ctnlor
u,. Penn1ys t ime p1ym1r.t plan
•
,
•
.. _. .•
I
j .
.Four Shot;
·Boyfriend
Arrested
I!>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
)µled iullot has been booked
•
·-
•
Girl Held
In Grisly
Pet Deaths
Budget. Fight Also Looms
Wild Rive1·s Battle Brewing
ConservaUonl!ts want the
Eel protected so that Its
waters will continue to now
unimpeded through about 150
mlles of gorges to the sea.
, !or lnv .. tlgallon ol alt.mpted L.-;t.l;~
murder In the shooting of blJ r
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Police have anaounced that a
JS-year-old high school girl un-
~er hospital care ls a "prime
suspect'' in the torture bang·
tngs of two dogs and two cats
in the Forst HUI Extension
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The legislature, armed with
details of Gov. R o n a I d
Reagan's proposed $7.15 billion
c;tate budget, launched the
third week of Iii 1972 se!llllon
today with a new battle brew·
tng over wild rivers design&·
\loll!I.
Sen. Peter Behr (R·MiU
Valley) was certain to
rekindle i. controv~sy with
his planned introduction thls
w«k of leglslaUon designating
the North Coast's Eel River as
one of the atate•s protected
wild rivers.
Behr said his bill, similar to
a measure killed last year,
would make the Eel the
"'heart of any catl!ornia Wild
rivers sjstem" that also would
Include the Smith, Klamath
Md Trinity rivers.
With that controversy yet lo
gain steam, the lawmakers•
state bu d g e t deliberations
were com_pllcated by a dispute
between the R e a g a n ad·
mlnistralion and the
legislature over how much
money~the state will have dllf'o
ing the lf72..73 fiscal year.
I
former glrl!rleod and three
members of her family, police
oatd.
Officers idenli!ied the man
a.s Fred Worthy, 26, who was
1bol and wounded Sunday by
police aent to aMwer a
dlsturbance call tn south<tn-
tral Los Angeles.
Dettctives said Worthy shot
F1ora Stewart 211 his former
girlfriend; Shirley Mae Amie,
20. the woman's sister, and
their parents, D. C. France,
58, and bis wile, Miland, 52. ·
Officers gave this account:
resldeollal district. h M B
Lt Clem Do Arnlcls of the Hug es ystery oat
police operations center said
Friday tMt two homicide .tn. fJ 0
,pectors received lnlormallon To Mine Sea Floor?
late Tbursday that the glfl, . •
. whose name was withheld, I
stated she was responsible for SAN DIEGO (UPI) -.,A . . Howard Hughes mystery the hanging of the pets to vessel was launched during
trees between ~· 31 and last the weekend.
Tuesday. "I christen 1!Jee HMB-1''
They and two other officers
obtai'ned handwriting zamples
which the crime laboratory
found to be similar to that in
two notes fowid with the dead
pets, he reporte~.
aaid Mrs. Raymond Holliday,
wife of a Hughes Tool Co. vice
president, a.s she did the tradi-
Uol)al honors with champagne.
What HMB-1 was, • she
wouldn't say and neither
would anyone else involved
with the launching.
His rneasuu clashes with
one introduced on the opening
day of the new ses'sion by Sen.
JlJlndolpb Collier (0.Yreka)
which excludes the Eel from
such protection but applies it
to the Smith, Klamath, Sbasla,
Scott and Trinity rivers.
Gov. Ronald Reagan wa:s ac-
cused by legislative analyst A.
Alan Post o[ underestimating
tax revenues. Post told lhe
Assembly Ways and r.teans
Committee last week that
Reagan's spending package
would mean a $250:8 million
tax surplus at the end oi Jwit
1973.
Worthy waited ou!side the
Stewart home until the family
left for a rummage sale at
about 1:30 p.rn.
The parents were shot all OFFICER PEERS INTO VICTIMS' BLOODIED CAR
they entered their car but the Four Shot In Loi An9el11; Jilted Suitor Held
The notes included such
statements as, "I kill because
of varied reasons, but I'm not
going to kill animals any
more. Just people. I hate peo-
ple. People are so stupid. For
now, I'll just wait."
New, Study
Backs IUD
The 324-loot red and black
barge slipped into the water in
a· blanket of secrecy, but an
unauthorlzed explanation was
finally given by a spokesman
for the recluse billionaire.
Collier, chairman ol the
Senate Finance Committee, Is
reported to have played a ma·
jor role in rejection .of Behr'•
legislation a year ago. •
The governor COlDltered al a
news conference by charging
Post with using 0 some rather
exotic new math" in arriving
at his estimate.
girls ran into the house. ___ _::.:_::.:_::.:_::.:_::.:.:..:.~:_...:_ ________ _
Worthy followed, sh o o t J n g
Mrs. Amie inside and chasing
Mrs. Stewart as she climbed
out a window leading to an ad·
joining back yard where she
was Shot.
When police arrived Worthy
was reloading a small-caliber
rifle. Officers opened fire,
they said, when be pointed the
rifle toward them after being
warned to drop the weapon.
Ross Bagdasarian Dies;
Creator of 'Chipmunks'
The officer said it waa round
that the girl's paJ"enll placed
her in a hospital ,Thursday
night and obtained counsel for
her and that it would be
several days before she could
be interviewed. Her father is a
businessman.
The five were repotted in
critical condition at County.
USC MeCl.ical Center, where
Worthy was booked into the
jail ward.
Fruit Packs
Still on Way
COMPTON, Cal~. (UPI) -
If you haven't received your
Christmu package of
California citrus from Cousin
Elmer In Long Beach, doo'I
worry. It's on its way.
James Hensley, president of
Mission Pak Industries, which
takes orders for such holiday
gifts, said' a computer fou1up
put the company one week
behind schedule OD Its first
holiday B!llpments.
"You send trucks out every
day, but you can never catch
up," he lameated.
BEVERLY HJU.S, Calli.
(UPI) -Ross Bagdasarian,
the zany Armenian songwriter
who became an overn ight
millionaire with bis invention
or the "Singing t:hiprnunkl,"
died Sunday at the age o/ 52.
The composer and ·television
executive died at his home of
natural causes. Authorities
said an autopsy would be
performed today.
Bagdasarian. once a poor
raisin farmer and bit-part ac-
tor, experimented in a
Fire Contained
SAN BERNARDlNO (AP)
-More than 2lO fire-lighters,
three air tankers and a
helicopter were used to con·
tain a Ure on Arrowhead Peai:
in the San Bernardino Moun-
tains.
The blaze, which charred
about 200 acres, w a s
'discoveffii by a motorist early
Saturday about two miles
north of San Bernardine nl!ar
California 18. The U.S. Forest
Service declared the fire con-
tailled Sunday night.
• Act Now!
Give him your love
in a Valentine Portrait
••• taken just with him In mind/
3 . 495
FOR ONLY
Hurry In now and you'll receive oae blg,
beaulllul ax 10 !orhlm ... plus two 5 x 7'•
for Dad and Grandadl Don't miss Ill And
l'emember, you can charge Jt at· Penney's.
JC Penney
The values are here everyday.
NEWPORT BEACH . HUNTINGTON BEACH
H1111tii1gto11 Ct11t•'
2114 Fl.., 192°7771
Hollywood recording studio 16
years ago seeking ;LChristrnas
gimmick. He hit u p o n
speeding up an ordinary holi·
dily tune until the funny, fran~
tic song sounded as if a trip o(
chipmunks had re a 11 y
·harmonized.
The,small, brash singing trio.
-Alvin, Theodore and Simon
-were jnstant beroes a;nong
the young record public and
their uchipmunk Song" sold
four million records in the"
first seven we.eks. One day
just before Christmas, .1958,
more than M0,000 copies were
sold.
Bagdasarian, who played the
straight man to fWTY little
comedians, cashed in by not
only writing and arranging the
songs, but by leading the
orchestra, doing all the voices
and narrating it under the
name David Seville.
The small, dark-halnd com-
poser years beforJ had, ~
!uthored the mllli~,; ae1linl
"Come Onna My UoUsefl. with
his cousin, playwright WlDlam
Saroyan. . .
While callnng her a prime
suspect, he said, ''We are not
stating at this point that she i-'
responsible for the deaths, but
there appears to be some
complicity.
"Patrols will continue, as
there is the possibility that
other people are involved," be
said.
He said the girl was not an
only child and that the
household included a dog and
a cat, both healthy.
Hiker Murdered
SAN JOSE (UPI) -Tbe
lx>dy of a hiker who had been
backed to death with either an
ax or a machete was found
Sunday at lhe base o f
Almaden Dam, an earthen
structure in a remote area
&0uth of San Jose.
The Santa Clara County
Sbl'filf'S o!ficj! Identified the
victim is Kehoeth A. Holden,
21, ol Mountain Vlew, a junior
art major al Sao Jose Slate
College.
'Balsam Plus' perm sale.
Just 8.88 buys
the works.
This week ·only,
-our 12.50 '13£\lsam Plus perm
is reduced to 8.88.
• •
Balsam. Peri:n includes
"Heart of Balsam"
treatment to give hair
more body. •. .
Shampoo; cut, and set
included.
..
No-'-·-· Charge.RI ·
JCPenney
beauty salon
NEWPORT BEACH
PCltMon 111•
tftCI Row 6'4-23 IS I HD• n1cm11 JEACll
Hvnflnt'911 ~ ""'-""f'
•
LOS ANGELES IAP) -
New studies by University of
S.outhern California
researchers appear to support
what probably is the most
widely accepted theory of how
the intrauterine device (IUD)
prevents conception.
Dr. Dean L. Moyer, a.
pathologi~t and professo,p in
the USC medical School's
obstetrics a n d gynecology
department, and o t h e r
researchers examined tissue
from 369 women who had used
IUDs for blrtb control for up
to five years. They conluded
that the changes they saw in
A Hughes official said the
barge would be a support-
vessel for a deep-ocean mining
operation involving a 565-foot
ship currently under con-
struction at Chester, Pa.
He said Hughes was in·
volved in an operation in
which the ships would vacuu,m
magninese nodules contalning
nickel, copper and cobalt from
the oceanbottom "somewhere
in the Pacific" about rnid-1973.
Freighter Safe
the tissue cells support Ibis LONG BEACH "(UPI) - A
theory: Duth coal lrelghter, crippled
The IUD Works because it last month off the Me:r:ican
causes an irritation in the coast with an englne room
cells that line the uterine wall. Jeak, arrived here Sunday
The irritation is like the reac-· after being towed 1,200 miles
tion to a small scratch to the by sea tug. ·
skin. The s.f&.foot f r e I g b t e r
Researchers say the ir· Dordrecht, bound <-t"or Japan
ritation attracts white blood with 42,000 tons of coal, was
cells which break down and taken under tow 11 days ago
shed""substances that are toxic by the tug Pacific Ranger oil
to both sperm and ovum. Baja California, Mexico.
* * * * * Solons Watch Court
For Decision on Remap
SACRAMENI'O (AP) decision could come within
Lawmakers are watching the this week, sources said.
state Supreme Court closely Republicans and Democrats
this week for a possible reap-battled in the legislature much
portlonment decision. of 1971 over reapportionment
Majority Democrats are of the 80 Assembly, 40 Senate
pushing for approval of the and 43 Congressional district
three redistricting bills they boundaries.
passed. All three were vetoed They failed to pass any bills
by RepubUcan Gov. Reagan. during the regular session
.fRepublicam have urged the' which ended Dec. 4: but
court to reject the Democrats' Demoerats managed to put
bills and accept GOP plans or through their pattisan bills
let a special state Reap-during a special session that
portiorunent Co rn m i 111 1 o n ended Dec. 20.
redraw the legislative and The bills would probably
congressional lines. maintain the 21-19 Denocratic
The eourt achedultd oral margin in the &!nate and
arguments for Wednesday but boost the current 4 2 -3 7
some sources said the issue Democratie•majority, with one
might be seUled on the basi!I: vacancy, in the Assembly to
of written briefs atlone. A 4f.J6 or more.
~ .
Sparkle more, pay less. All
Penney diamonds 20% off.
-·
Sollta1111, lllldll 11eta, wedding ..._cocktall rtngs, Mn1ng1,
pencfanlt, not to mention a handsome collectlon of men'a Jewelry. Ewiy
diamond cerr1es Penneya own guarantee of quaJltY and IXl:llltnca.
Come ln800ll, though. 011/nondl .,.forever, but tliete eavtnga-'t
•
' JCPenney
fine jewelry
lbe ..... nhere Mltday.
Shop SUncllJ noon to 5 P.11 It the followlng"ltorN:
" . . . •
NEWPORT BEACH, Fo.hion Island. HUNTINGt ON BEACH ,
Huntington Center. Use Penne~'s time p.y~t iii·~· •
• •
'
•
•
For the Record
Dissolutions Of Marriage
Death Notices
a11tNAltD ClltHet P, ltrnar<I. ltn N..,.llOrt fl l....:I.,
Co-.r• M.w O.lt ol dt11lh, J1n111ry 15, 1972. S1,1rvlvl'd 'I! two nlK tl. MC1. ~vtlvn
Funt •nd Mr1. 111 COlll'll'llY, bQlh ol New Clly; D•Q1her, Mti. John 8trn.itrd, ,.,,.,, of lllt MtturrKllon, IOdl Y,
v, t A..M .. SI, JDllchl"11 C1111ollc 5t111rch. Enrombmef\1 , Gooo 511t'PN!ro orr:t:;:v· 8111 8roadw1v MO!'lutr v.
t« I. COllGltOVE
Dontld lilkllty Col"rove.t 22lt Prlvllolt
Ro.ct, NewPorl !11t h. utlt QI fflfh, JIJ'\Wlfl' u, ltn. UrYIVed DY wilt, Ne1t1; w: Robtrt W of ComUt; PnlUt R. 19rovr. Ct1>l1lrtno 6ffeh1 •leptOn,
l•I Hvt11t1. P1Jmcul1; brOllWr, Dr.
Ktnnltlh Col"9fOV., N-YQl"k l 1l1ters. V•Yltrd FtrrMWi, P~; Ml11 C1tri.rlne Cole-arove, New York. Strvlc•l. Wtd-f!ISdtY, I P.M.1 P1cll!c Vltw Chtptl. lnltrment, Ptcll c Vl-MtmQrl1I Ptrk. F1mlly M.ll~ls tllOH w111111111 10 mtk• m.morlll conlrlbutlon1, plN~ conlrit1u11 11 'he Amerk tn f.•nu< Socltl'f. Ptc:lffc
ltw Mort1,11ryGo°L~'fJ...°rtH
Myr!t1 B. Goldsmltfl, ""'' 11. of •?O Meo· doll Ttrr1c1, (Ofon1 dtl Mtr. Otlr ol dutll, J1nutry lt, itn. Survived br !.00, Edw1rd N. Goldt.mllh, Ohio; tflrtt_ sisters, Mtude Futk1, Te11nesH'tl; Dorthul• AfldeM'on, of Belt. ~Ill.; Gtne G1r11nt1r.
Coront di'! Mfr; -1r1ndchlld ~lctt 111d lfl1'rmff!t will DI held In Loul1vH11. Olllo. 8tll 8rotctw1r Mor I u 1 r y, torw1rdln11 dlr..ctor1. · HCLLA/\10 Cto!t Htlllncl, Alt •t, of 27023 Stonewood "°'d. P1tcs v1rd11. oa.11 of de•t"I J1ninorY 1s, ltn. Su•vlYect by'°"' Ctrl, a •r,1os VerOH; 11111r, Mrs. Htrrltt Mon-t i o, Hunl ln 1 1on 8ttc:ll1 two t-r1nd<hildrff!. ServlcH, Tuouo1y, 3 P.M., Prince of Pnt't LutlWrln Church, with 1n11rmtnt 11 Ol!vl Ltwn Mrmorl11 Ptrtr., lS~ Mlr..O.. 81'1 BroallwtY M«tut rY,
rtc:lor1. JASP~lt
HlrrY A. J11per. All" 11, of lCMoll S11>l1 ~ Ave Stnt1 AM. 01tr ot llHlh, Jtn111ry Is. itn. Survived 11'1' wife, Ptullne· son, M1rf'I G. J11.111r, knt1
Ant; il1ueht1r1 Gr{;' P. Led!Of'd, of N-btrv .P•r~ 1111; two s!llt" Ctrollflt Brtmll Ind IUltn OooM, bolh ol l!UflClllL f'l!r 11r1ndchlh:1r.n. S1rvlc1s, to-t:'' MOnGfY, l P.M,~ P1cllk Vltw hi I. lt11trr•11111, PtC!I,.; View Ml!fl'IOfltl trr. 8111 Brot"wl v m.-••u1ry, OlrKl«S.
KD•HLElt
Wtllfl' W. ICblflle< . .,ge /J, ot :JOll!n S. Cotll MiVhw1y, ~th LlllUl'\I, Otte ol dfflfl, J1n1.1trv 14, 1972 Services plondln1 11 McCormick Lteunt Betch Morlu1ry, MC KIN NEY Lltl.I MclClnnev, A" 95, of lMO Newport, No. SI, Cosll Mtst. O.t1 ol oetlll,
J1-rv 1• 1tn. SUrvived bV '°"\ '°"'" of Cost1 ~i. 1l1ttr, Ml11 El tlbelh EbY. of (OSll Mlll1 !WO 1r1ndchlldrl'f1; thr" 1r111-11r1ndchlkk1n. P r l v 1 t t 11rvlcff w.re htld 11 Bit BrotdWIY MorllnlrY wllh lnttr~I 11 H1rmow CtmtlitrY, Collon. Btll B r a Id w I Y
Mor!UIY. OlrKt~tilGHT
Ernell ""' Kni9hl. UO\ Bryan SI .. T115!tn, 0.11 of rulh, J111U1f'I 11 itn. s.r ... 1c .. ...-ndllll t i Wnlcllll Cha1>1( Mor!utry, Ud--. MC MINN
Ex1 McMinn. Aot lol. of :!O&S Or1noe Ave,. Cosll Me..,,. a.re of detth. Jlf>Utrv I , lt12. Survived bv lllree sons. w. C. McMIM, Arktns'\; Georoe 1nct Joh,. MC:Mlnn. bollr of tx11; IWO otuahter1. Oelor" M. 8rtQman, Co111 .Mft•J M1ro1rt!11 C. Mlfllllt. Norlll C1rollna; ll or1ndchlldr.n. S1rvlce1. Tuelda.v Noon, H•rbor TrlnltY B101111 Church' 1nttrmet1!, Peclflc Vl1w MffTIOl'llll Irk. Bell
llrotCIWIV MOl"IUl'ili:if~<Klor.l.
t)IVld Mkhlllt Neft. Aot 74, of li&S S. Cotll Hkal'IWIY, llOUlll 8"Cll. Cite ol
dfftfl, Jt!MlllrY 1~197?;.., ~rv!ved bv .,.,"'~· ~~c .. ~1'-1u. Jfriiir1ci1~TP~! lii:Yirc Vltw Chllotl. flWrmtnt, P~lflc ~ltw M~llj P~ Pacific Vlllw
MOl"IUffl, •K :JlsoN
Alltn L. Nthon. ;:,. 1l5, Of 11 «>cnn Av• .. Hunth111lon l.Hdl. 0.11 ~f dffth. J1n111rv U. nn. Survlvect bv wlte, Norm•; IOf\I, Al;) f . at We1rm!n1r1n 0t1111r1. of G1r q Grove; Elrov A. N1l!.00. Huntlf\Clt Betchi dtuohtrrs. Lorr1IM OOU11tt1s, AlNombr1: Nordine 1111nl1. Art111C1!l'i:'.1 Tn1s: 1lto01y..,,rtr. Norm• Pt<k, ""~' 1ls1tr. El1r1brlh Yl11fldl. Mitwn "' 20 or1nc1Chlldr1n1 u -<tll-ctrllfldth ar.n. Se>rv!cn. Tllur~v . Jl·JO AM. HilllJH C/1-1. flo.t Hiiis Miomorl1I Pfl'k, WhlUier, Sm 11 h I
Mor1u1rv• 01rtc1:1·As
J1mn L. Ptt ... Aot: 1,, of 116'2 Blossom
l,f .. Gardin Grov•. 0.11 of det!h. Jl!lUo"i' .. 1972. ~ktl H ndlno I I I ll
BrOldw1v Mot1u•qosE -
Cl>erl•s W!ttltrn 111-. ADI 5,, al U3 Y«~lowfl L1.W, CM11 Mffl, Otte ol 0t1lh. J1111110• \6, 1972. Survlwd bv wife: Eloul1e; ateoltauahttr, JOYCI Hendricks. teoson W1vne Botlwrlohl: 1ls!1rs. 1iv1lyn' Johnson Ind Vlrolnl1 Schwtl1er:
!loht or1ndchlldrtt1. CMof-1 11rVIC1: Ind tillrmenl, Twldlv. 3 PM. Wnlmtnst!I'
Mtmorlt l P1rk ~['Etnd Gotml1tf'Y. -•rd M. s-i.. Alie u. of "°3 81ker SI .. Coslt Mtfl. 0111 of det!li, J111111rY 13 1tn s.rv1e11 .net lnt.rment will bt he'ld 11. Rost HI 11 Mtrnorl1I P1rk. Bell
BrotdWtv MOl'llll~o'i!keclori.
Wlllltm J. Sltclll<. Diie of clfeltr, Jtnuarv ll. ttn. Survh<ed tnr wlte, Pt ttlcl1, of tht homf· two '°"'' ltobert J!mn 5ltdlll;. ol Stn Fr1ncbco1 1/llf1m homfl 51.clek. H1w1!l; mother, r1. •nn1 So1cek, of lhe1 t>ome· sltltr. '!em•rY H•mm. o
MonrOv11. 5-ervJcrs. uesdlv. t AM,. ",,,.'"' LI P1lm1 Cllloel ol B1Ckl· Ill n M~N'j"" 1,17 W. LI P1lml AVI .. Anthem lnllrmtnl, P1cttic V I e w Memorlti Ptrk. F1mllY I II 0 0 e I I s
"""'°'Il l contrlbutlOM to be mtde lo !he
Mnrt F11f\CI. SMITH
kurtJs A Smith •at 17. of l'IOl Blossom. G1rdtn GrO'ft. ~It of d~rh. J1nu1rv 16. 1972. Slf\llcU otnctlno ti 8111 8rotd'WIY
Mortu1rY. SOllElolSOM ""I Sorenson Aot n . of 22• RQthlll'lr 'I °"' MtH · o.1e of ,,..,h. J•-,.,. 11:· 1,n. s...Vk n Dendino t i 8ell
8rOlldWIY MorlU~'l'LsoN
Melen LOU!W WlllOll. 21D 'EJ 1$111 St .. Cosll Mnt. Oii• ot dttffl. 1n1Hrv 14• 1m Suntvtd tw · h\ISblnd, JOll!llhhtld wn~.1~rlv~\L ~serJk;',;r."11nter-
1t 1"Nicnr 'GO.-h.m Cemtltrv, orfltm, "":f · Y.mttY J/OO!!rll memor11i con· t'1bu":fiiN bl lflf to-Int Heir;,,.,. I >~ thl Arthrlll1 OU!ldltlon. m I
Morlllirv. Ol,.,.w'f'N~t:MELL
J-h W. Wlndllll. 1116 N ..... Dorl lllvdf Costi ""61 Dll!f! of dellh, J!nutrv 1 • ltn SitrY!cH Dtfldlnct t i Wnlc Kl Ch-I
Morkit rY • ...._.':-JttOMT
C-•I Wflohl oii. 111 clfath,•J1rw1~v 1,, ~ Str I . Jlll'ICllllCI II For•~! i-lwn J:I~tle .... cl~11 ·Biwdvnlv MortvtrY•
ol:'Ktor1.
ARBUCKLE & SON
. WESTCLIFF·MORTUARY
111 E. 17111 St, <:oil<' Mesa ...... • BALTZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona dtl Mar m..Nse
Costa Me11 '46-Z-Uf • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
Ut Broadway, c..la Mtu
LI I-SIU • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
l'llS Lapa• Canyoo Rd. ·-15 • PACIFIC V1E1l
MEMORIAL PARll •t:.mtttry -..,
CU pd
3Stll P1cllk: View Drift
N...,.n Bad. Cllllonll -• PEElt FAMILY
COLONIAL FIJNEl\AL
BOMB
lltll!oltlA ... w----• SM1'1'113' MORTUARY
11'1 Mlbi SI.
ll)mUlgteo --
Ttm,111on, Joan' L11tr•ltlt _,_ ltallilrl ltwr~ • ~"" G9orM O. tl'ld fUUllllh A. wtrot, 1.ylf lrwln ttld l.ol'111t
Cl flll!MAl"I WYnn I/Id J~ Ellw1rd
Whl"' llldltl A, Mod II ~L ~""' klrflll IC end o.v trlll$, GM.Ml!.•i;JI Victor 11m111rtt r~•'j=~"Jj.~.:.J't=-~j~r• A. ~~: a" ~ q. ::::: "-"--"I.I Htr= , ~ 8. 1n:i'Nd11:. ,......,...,, -fo'try Ind GrllOf'/
R1m1v, Ernl• W1m1 11111 Mlldrtel Greet Schw1rn, Br'11dt Avl$ t nd J1m11 Wlllltm
T1rr1ll, Joslth L. and A!blrt1 E. W1rntr Mfry AM and Etrt Thomll Frv1. M.lrtha Alln tnd l illy E1191n1 H4'll!lll, Jlr'flYn L.orr1!n1, lltld 11-11
Ltfw:, SOttt G1ylll tl'ld GrlCI c..'!r1:~'~•c111111rne J.,, 1nd RJCllllrd L/M Mc 11rdw, Tosllklo tnd Don,ld !flrov Tou1.,u, I ON'119 J, t_nd Rldlerct l . Ct).,11""1. JOYCI C:lltn. llnd . Jtrry
H•rr=. Huldl t nd LloYd Hlrold 6lr'"l Johll W1lttr lltld Mlklll ArW'I , L ~ J tnd IUchlrd. V. , vle11111, Ju)J1 tlld Raber! L. P ickford, N!cholt5 JollPh a n d cu':'l~~·J~~. Ar.n11 AM •net R1Ymorrd
AIDtrt Simms, Glorl1 11. tnd How1rct ftlk, FI01'"1CI Wtber I nd kvrnour $~~rltr L •nd Betty f· R.111111, PtQIY•L, lllO Mlrll . Rlld~er1. K1fhlttn .!i tnd·OtnN John ~11fo. L~1~hn:-e. ~~ 1."~· Pflll!Vd. 9'tll•""' Ind H! P. •11nton, t!llon G. tnd W II m II, II ,111r"-'.. JOMPll Horman 1nd OorOlhY Jun
R•nt•I, O~t r.UMI I~ Gii~ ,,~~,.~~~~. '. :~ 0:~73'~. ~''"' C1rol ne ind 811111 Frink C1rt1r. Jtn tnd T"9t!Ws W1rr"'
Glllrlne, Au•• Alic• •nd R-H111'1' Wty1nd, AMetlt Mllrlt Ind It-,,_
Cll'lerlev. Lynn An!) 111d SColl Curll• Elfa""''"· Otnl LU•oe•h Ind ll-ICI
lw 0~~~ .. Mllurttll O. 1nd llobert C. m,lhion. J,..rY Lee tnd K1r1n Elt lnt
llftlntlt, TllOmls ""' 1nct Lvndl G. Hfll, JO AM Ind LICIYCI Otvls M1rvev. Judllh A. tnd Chrl1!0Phe< M, MCGlnnls, Doiorff ind R1u1 8•1,s, J1mff ThomlS •net LyM Amt ~M~j~', 'A='G~~JIJ~~/:S~ trlltnltf'I Mllf'I C. Ind 01111111 E, n,tf, Lout A tlld Nll'IC'f P. us)o, Pt!« ll!lfOln 1nd Anlll Doklfllf =v~l:li'it•t:;·,,~.=nA11~11ul,~,; u. Mulvtllil, $;ndrt • tnd ltoltrld IEllllNf llTlller' Wood, Alblrtt J1'111'1d Robert GIOl'll'I 8rown, Jo Jo Ind "rthur Abrthlm H1mm 811t'f J. tl'ld Frid MCMtlltft. Otrltne 5. 11111 JOI\ M, Vttlll'ICll, Rollllflde O. tnd T11lllo f ,
Gr1vn. L'l'dlt AM Ind Gtor1t Clifton Gothlrd, Lolt B. tnd Jolvl H, Kiii'.!,, Hllrold H. 1nd~ell'f Et1l!lt M...Wkt, MllrY L tnd !""9n J. Lfnde11rnuth, Ruillll IVfle Ind Eltlne ,_,
G1rcl1, Mllrv Elll'I 1nct flll(lo!p.ti AmKkrr, k•thlet:n A, tnd Rotllrl H. Wtl!tr. Stndr1 J11n tnd Ben!Oll Let Sl.rllor\, Alene •1111 Donald 0 . Tuck«. Hollv L. 1nd Jtrokl V. CObent. Ern1st Arthur tllll B1rb1r1
suwn Sc1rpe!I/, J-h 0 . end MllrY It. Urfll'$, l.oulM! F, tnd 8tnl1m1n J. Mosley, Ktnn1th E. tnd E1r1 0 .
81llttlo, LOrr1lne and "'":1." I. Fulkll'IOll. Jt1l,Flnts • .shlron M F1vro. flOl\lld . tnd P1 1 $UI Mtr-rlll, E Loui~ 1nd Frid L•roY ., Wollllltmufh, C1rl Wl'lfll t nd 8eckY
C,M EM>!,..,._, Ad1lt It. I nd JHM McH1tt, Elt'Gl't Ind L.....U M!llOll P1rker. Rlcfltrd S. tnd Judv 0. Htrl'I, Nlll(_Y L Ind Bill~ fl. ~dlmtn, Ollf A, t nd Frink J. ,...artln, Mldltll• Dl1n1 tnd Dlvid ,,....,
11•«-ett, Perry 0. ind 8trt1 f'. fl oblnson, Htdllll A, tnd Gl'Ol'll W, Mlkfftll, Mer9GY1he tllll Adrl111 C. ktrn, Mtudt P, I nd John K,
t!':,..llf~~.;.~f~ITld-Pttricl1 Ann
C!evotn. Arll• M.lrle tnd Mllrtln R!clltrd Wv11111t, Oort!tt V. ind Wl11i1m C, MUl!IUlltllY. 5111ron E. Ind H1rold J, ~m!lh. Lucrellt tnd OIVld M. 11rus, 1 ~• V. •lld Joyce L. lefrowYI, lltrblrrl J. trocf JOllOll L
"lothO, llluri. L. 1rocf Jol'ln A, Miies, Shlrltv L. Ind kovne L c;untrw. Pvt!• (filMHJ •nil Aol'll
INMNI
llttmtl", Mallltlf A. 1nd'Fi'ecttrldl: M. ••1~· J1111 lltld Edward WI 11.fnK, Olvld•llon tnd Jfflnlflf' Ann A,,..., Judlltl A, MCI ll.-111 M, Chlt.rn, Nt.f'I Jo Ind Jollnny R.. HG<w•rd. 11....,1 M. and v.m.1 P. Elke,,,._ M. tnd Jiimn 9, Wllt1. Jo Ann Mlrll Ind KtMtth E-M Cltmmtr. J,.11 OttrMr M. tnd Ptltr O. Rk hlrdi.on, TrtVI E. llld Mllrv A. Rut1, Dolores c. tlld Al~•,. CGnll(hO 8rCIWll, Ktnnl'llr Elbfrt •nd Ctrol ...... ~ !•· A~lf JOHPh t nd hllle lou1w I, RkkY Outlle Ind Mtr9ffrt M, m. Ectw1rd . f , 1nd f'1rnelt M. W1fcson, Christine tnd lellnd Prtncls Collier, Gl f'I G. Ind J\ldy C. Broo1t1, Ml•itn Olrltrie_and Jll'ry J1dl Wiiker, H1rold and Url---......... v ......... w. RoblflMin. IH; .iOln and JoM W#IW Nolrlct. Anl'\I Lou lltld Mofrlt Newmtn. Lindi l , Ind 11111 J. MUii'!', Rl ndlll Anne and Richard Ken· nt_lh . Mt;Otonltls. P1lrlcll: E". Ind Mtl"l'-l• TltdftNll, Mttv'tn E. Ind Strtlr WeJI. Jefll'ey Dtwlcl Ind Dttlortll Lrnn $~111, 81rblr1 JN-tnCI UrrrY
eor:.'1:.n. Norm• Lui;llle -' Thoml1
chfi'lth. Hlllll A. and """1 c. BIUtrfMISltl', Mlrl•n v. t nd Gllbtrt •• r~it~:@J: fn:':'J>'6:':.ld 1t1111 Andr~_,, K-1'1' ll<ld Fr'"1Cb Milt,~ Ricky •ncl ltotitrf E. S.-.C1r, KJ1lherln11 •net Arthur O. S1ndovtl, Dorl C.1lt Ind lloberl
Jann. JOSICll! ~ tnd !•l'ldrt Ctfel Avulrre, Vlr1J111t •"° c;.br el 8=! , LlhY J. llld Jt!l'Mll K. L , Wl'llle , alld Ntllc:Y C. GUmN, JOllll A. Ind llitlclrd C. Aubrey, 11111 Pttrkll A, ll(l(I Alcl\lrll·O. Wellman, leNrll L. •IM!. Ct~lsl!ne A. Yout10. JO Elltn tnd Phlllo Etrl Stew~rl. Jtck K11tll tnd Y~e Altne Lt M~t. Shelly Mtrlt tnd Roee< Ottn S~~(11f:,. ~= ~~F;e-
R:1nehlrt, Rkhlrd 8 .... '"" ford, "''""' II. t<10 Oltlel"I J , Ello!. Oltlll LDUIM llnd J1m111,0rurv Gotrtlck, fl abtt'I Sltnley Ind Shirley Jun1
Thltle, Rlndll1 C. Ind Mfflllfl! M.
JolmlOll, ChtdwVn Svt Ind Mtrtr; Charl1S P~nllrd, 00!11 JHn tnd HltrWY E. WNllc'fid• Shervl Rlt .,.a HOllh Pr!111te~ettr Mldltel I nd 81rblrt
'"" Pt11111er, low11t l redf«d nd Oorlfll
M"° (lililltllO, Chrlt''"' z. Ind Gullltrmo Ollttv. JosrPh . trod Vkk! J. Wllkff', Tho!TIH L, Ind $1\lrlty M.
Lntr•. Tl'dtl.1 C. tfld MlrlM M.
Gulley, Btllv Jetnne tnd Thomtl
Wlll1rd
8 oe1rr, J1nlct Erle tnd WUllirn
Edmori<le
Jooie1, Judith J, Ind Gtry M.
GtrW, Ktrontltl A. Ind JHfllllt C.
Nino. Ptler Cl..,..OI Ind R-Vtt1t11r1
O-n1, Artllur W. •nd Tornrnl1 A,
Ctsloro. Bl11Y J, Ind Doneld A . H1ti, EleaflOr Miry tlld fl obtrl
8owtlne, OIW!I R11 Ind JDel 'Robfl'IMHI
IClnMI. EIJNflf M. Ind St!ll'lwJ M,
M.lrtln. Peier II. Ind J•-L.
Vtllt'!o. Chlf'll LH irvl Gtttor'I' .... ....
Dorsey, P1trlcl1 A. •nd 81rton E.
Dnltrdln1, Rontld P1ul el1d Annt E.
Sooh11, Wlnllre-d G. 1nd lloblrt L.
Sd'ltJ>tr, <•lherlt11 Miry tnd Eric
'"" Mtlone, IC•111trlne OYIOll ,,,., l arry
Pttrldr.
Hoeue. "'*Y Alfi tnd L10\'d A,
lltrlhO!, LIWfflf R. Ind Eldtn
ForA1ttn, O!rli V. •lld fhlth An"
r1rkln$, Mlr11yn ld1 tl'!d D1nitl A ... • ·-Oion, Ptlrlcl1 Jtln tnd flobtrt Atllrur
khull, Kiri All.n Ind Oebr• l ..
Oi1tn110rt. ''"""'" Wnt11 • n d 1(1llltrlt11 M1ry
Slront, 81YtrlY Ann •nd ~ 1t!ch1rd
llllckwtll, G«11d 11, Ind f1YIN F.
Gllt'k1, K1rl G. Ind MlrY 0.
Nlvtl'Mn. Cltrt D, •nd Rotleft I:.
,
' .. ,
\ .. .. \
\ ·-custom drapery event
1.99-3.99 yd.
labor in'cluded •
tique s, dama sks, casement
Choose from one of the
Southl and 's fines t collections
of decorator fab rics in an-'l
clofhs , sheers, textures and
more in hundre ds of fashion
colors. O rder yours now, \at
great big savings. Our cus·
tom deluxe workma nship -as-
sures you of complete satis-
faction. Prices based on 70''
m1n1mum fi nished len gth.
Drapery hardware and ~
staloltion ot odd i t ion o I
charge. C ustom Draperies,
Reupholstery.
for
Shop Al Home
custom draperies,
reupholstery,
slipcOvers, cus tom wind ow
shade s. We br ing samples to
you .•. no obligation, no
charge for estimates· ..
cus-
custom tom
"" ~./l//V#~•• .. # ,~_..-..........
•
inid-season
hoJDe
sale
•
6.99
tri-tone nylon
sq. yd. instaled
Reg. 7.99 continuous filament
nylon pile in kiscious space-dyed
tri-tone colrs. "Cestle MNdow''•
8.99
multi-toned shag
sq. yd. inst.
·"Trico" Kodel@ polye ster shog
pi le in 1nteresling color combos. \
••
. ..
DAil Y l'ILOT J 3
-·
save 1.004.00 sq. yd. deep, de,nse carpets
2-ply shag
7.99 • sq. yd. inst.
Reg. 9.00 "Semi.Prec~u~·· polyester
pile shag. Your choice of :plush colors. --'
--
plush cable textured
9.99
lmperio le" nylon in o plush pile thof .goes
~nywhere. Rich colors . •
Price incluCles nor'T1ol insto\l otion over 56-
oz. sponge rubber podding, with door pa n-
els. Corpeh
.jt'.s at· the hroadWay
ANAHEIM
444 ,N, l:uell4
171 41 IJl·l ll l
NEW>OltT '\,-. HUNTIN5TON HACH
41 F1t!ti•1t 1111114' 1777 ltll•' A••11••
17141 644·1 211 17141 19J.JJJI
O/tJl~G!
)JOO No. l1oti11 Str•et
1714 1 991°1)11
SHOP' 10 A.M. I• t 1JO ,,M, MONDAY TH-OUGH •fllDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M ... t• 6 P',M, SUND.Alf tl NOON t• I PM, -• •
CEUITOS
100 lo• C.rril•• M.R 121)} 160.Q.411
•
l.f DAILY PILOT Monday, Janiary 17, 1972
L. M. Boyd
TV's Rutl1 Buzzi
'\
A Beauty Qi1ee11
' '1Wbat's a proposal? A girl llstenln g lasler than a
man cu Uilk."
Lest~r V. Berrey
E 1actly how long it takes the romantic bachelor to
propose matrimony to his ladyfriend is another matter
that has been su rveyed. Average time: 90 seconds from
the opening line to the kiss. That's the start or the kiss.
From the opening line to the end of lhe kiss , it would
average out about five minutes.
IT'S NOT enough to say a man 's fingernails grow
... faster than a woman's. Be precise.
Say a man's fingernails grow .l-08 mil-
limeters daily while a·woman's grow
only .104. Got Jt? • -CLOSER AND CLOSER they come,
thoset. research scientists, lo the find-
. lng of a pill that will give you natur-
ally curly hair, if such be your de-
sire." At least that's the claim of a
manufacturer of hair Conditioners.
THAT AILMENT known in the vernacular as "the
nervous breakdown" is still about fi ve times more prev-
alent in Britain than in the United States. Why?
QUERIES -Q. "Wasn't Ruth Buzzi , the TV come-
dienne, a Miss America runnfirup?"
A. Not that. She was Miss Wequetequock River of 1954.
Q •• "WHAT do you call it if you kill your mother?"
A. Matricide. Your father, patricide. Your broth~r.
fratricide. Your sister, sororicide. Your guardian, parri-
cide. Youf king, regicide. Your wife, uxoricide. Anybody
else, homicide. A tapeworm, vermi cide.
WOULD YOU like to wager a whatnot that submarin e
hulls someday will be made mostly of glass? Not a bad
bet, that. The longer glass stays under water, the stronger
tt gets. The naval researchers say nothing else is like
tllat, nothing.·
HIBERNATE -Consider a hi bernatin g bat. As op-
posed to some similarly sized mammal that slays active
all year. The bat will live 20 times longer th~n the other
little beast. Noting this, some theorists believe that if you
and I could hibernate, we too could live as long as 20
lifetimes. To 1,400 years maybe. I think or this sometimes
when the Blann goes off.
WHEN YOU buy cigarettes from a vending machine
in West Berlin, a tape-recorded feminine ' voice inside it
says, "Many thanks." Nifty.
THE SAD FACT is one o;ut of every 23 FHA mortgage
loans is delinquent. At this time .
YOU CAN pawn just about anything in New York
City, except the United States flag. No broker there will
accept same.
A BREEDER of canaries insists he can bring his
hoarse birdJ back into voice by spiking their drinking
water with gin. Officer, is that "Contributing •.. "?
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875,
Newport Beach, Calif. 92660.
'Doolittle'
Criticized
As Racist
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -
"Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory" and "Dr. Doolittle"
were among several br!oks
criticized as racist by Northern
Califor nia's chi Id r e n 's
librarians. t·
More than 100' of the
librarians and their associates
met to talk about
"reevaluation" of such family
favo rites as "The Story of Dr.
Doolittle" and "Mary P•p-
pins."
Spokesmen frequently
stressed that they were not
advocating removal of any
books from library shelves.
Co-chairman Nancy Schim·
me! of the Social Concerns
Committee said they wanted a
"calm, ·l n t e 11 e ct u a I
discussion" or the possibility
that long-accepted b o o k s
should be reconsidered from
time to time .
"Dr. Doolittle" was con·
dcmned by se veral speakers
as •' patronizing'' and
sometimes offensive in its
treatment of blacks.
It was pointed out that the
Word "nigger" appears in
some of the Dr. Doolittle
books.
But the strongest terms
were used for "Charlie and
the Chocolate Factory,'' one of
the most popular of all
children's books.
Various speakers de scribed
~"Charlie" as "revolting,"
11sadistic;• and "racist\".
FOR
ADVERTISING
IN
OUT 'N' ABOUT
PHONE
NORM ST AN LEY
642-4321
THE AMAZING
HEALTH OF
HUNZA lAND
H11nro elders o"' 1 00 Y"· old.
LEARN THE SECRETS
OF THE WORLD'S
HEALTHIEST PEOPLE
"HU NZA-an Isolated Shan-
grl-la in the l-lima layas,
where th e inhabi lanls live
to be 100 to 120 years old.,'
(Ameri can Weekly)
''There Is evidence that men
In llun za land, a remote re·
gion in the Hirnalayan
mountains, live to be 120 or
even 140 ycarS old, the AMA
said In its currt>nl journal.''
(N.Y. \Vorld-Tclegram)
•Hunza is truly a Utopia
whrr,i [X'op!P live \vi thout
disease and di!' or old age,
YOU TOO CAN LEARN JHE
SECRETS OF THE WORLD'S
HEALTHIEST PEOPLE .
•f,11phon• or writ• for th•
FREE HUNZA HEALTH COURSE
w, h,.,, nothing to ,all. Th;,
i1 a fra• publlc 1arwic•.
Tele1tlto11e 54l·lSf5, or 1t1ell tile
co11po1t 1*ow, HOWi
HlALTH II CHAllACTll
IDUCATION INSTITUTE
P.O. 6002 Or .... , ~·· tJ667
M•il m• vour FR.EE HUNZA
HEALTH COURSE. , , •
N1me , •• , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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STOREWIDE: I 5A VINGS FOR THE 'NEW YEAR IN
EVERY DEPARTMENT OF ALL BUDGET STORES
-
\
dress shirts in all
the favored colors
1. 99 value 3.99
A windfall. Meticulously tailored dress shirts for a
tiny $1 .99. Long sleeve permanently press~ dress
shirts. Bright colors, deep tones, muted shades. Sol-
ids with French c uffs; stripes with 2-button cuffs.
Spread or long-point collar. Sizes 14 1 /2-17.
men's furnishing s 806
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S·dve on our bandsome
double knits for men
' Tarleton sportcoats. The polyester
doubleknits that feel so free and
easy .•. refuse to wrinkle. The now 3·4.99 woy•to-go. Wide range. Checks,
geometrtcs, stripes, solids--novy,
brown, blue, more.~36-46 reg., short, reg.40.00
long. \ ,,
' Tarleton slacks. Belt.loop flares, con-
tlnental or belt.loop stralghtleg.
Ooubleknil polyesters In solid block,
navy, medium blue or brown. 29..38.
men'• sportswear 817, clothing
814-except wilshite
m1y co. IOU!h COii! pl1u, Hn ditiro fwy. I I brlllol, COlll ,,,..., 546-9321
shop mondey thru frld1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m .. Hlurdey 10 1.m.18 6 p.m.
1und1y noon 'Iii 5 p.m.
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10.99
reg.13.99-15.99
MAY CO
BUDGET
STORES.
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Mondu, Ji1nu.,,. 17, lm DAILY PILOT Jf
Sales .Ju11ap
Cigarette Firms
' I MID-WINTER DECORA TOR
May Not Need TV
By ROBERT GORDON
RALEIGH, N.C. (UP!) -
The tobacco industry ex·
ecutive is almost as calm ~
day as the Marlboro man used
to be on television, settling
back for a smoke after a hard
day in the saddle.
Industry that the government
eventually might make it un-
profitable to make cigarettes,
or to advertise them, 8ut in-
dustry leaders are breathing a
bit easier. .
On'! year ago this month,
the Industry appeared in a
virtual panic becausethe Marl·
boro man and his suave reJa.
tives from other cigarette
firms were ruled off television.
Etf ~a~~~~~~~:~i~~~ l~.-~ .. !t~·~ -~~~ ~r:~2.Y'V £ .":! ~-I~tt~.Q Fs>~~: .. :. :.~2~.~~ L<lM9!~"¥''nl-!A N ·_~YE ~-~· ' .
Anti smoking advertise-
ments had been almost
as frequent as cigarette com-
mercials on the networks, and
tobacco companies w e r e
searching far and wide for
other business ventures, fear-
ing the worst.
In North Carolina, tobacco
farmers were being urged
r;trongly to diversify, or to
stop growing leaf altogether
for fear the market would dry up.
What happened instead was
that even without television
"We have found
out, to our dell9ht,
that 11>e can 9et
alon9 without tel•
e vlsion."
marketing for Liggett &
Myers.
In 1970, the tobacco industry
spent about $300 million for
advertising, with the broad-
casting industry getting about
two-thirds .
This money has now been
diverted primarily into the
newspaper and mag az In e
advertising, but the companies
have found other ways to
spend their money. · ""'
R. J. Reynolds has made
major investments in stock
car racing promotion, and in
sponsoring or bowling, skiing
and rodeos. while other tobac-
co money has gone into golf
and even into a balloon race.
Reynolds, the largest P,r<>-
duce.r, produces the best.-sell-
ing brand in the nation in
Winstons. and with its other
brands claims about 32 per-
cent of the JUflrket.
The anti-snloking drive in
past years has moved all the
major tobacco companies into
diversification, wit~ ,Reynolds
advertising, cirgaretle sales now offering Chun King .Orien-
jumped by a healthy margin, ta! dinners, Hawaiian Punch,
estimated from 2.3 percen\ to aluminum products, and a 1970
4 percent, and 1971 turned out addition of Ame t ic an
to be the best year on record Jndependent Oil Co., as well as
for tobacco farmers·. a .containerized s h i p p l n g
"When you can come up service.
with an increase of about 4 But the industry still fea•
percent in sales, you've had a the health issue.
good year,'' said Bi 11 Another worry is the rising
Anderson, an of£icial of the taxation ot cigarettes. States
Tobacco Growers Information and cities have found smokes
CommJttee. a good source of revenue.
A respected source for "Cigare~es have doubl-
cigarette statistics in or out of ed since 1964, said Galloway.
the industry is John C. Max-"Today, the average retail
well, an analyst for the Wall price of a pack of cigarettes is
Street brokerage house of Op-half taxes."
penheimer and Co. For the tobacco farmer, 1971
A1axwell estimates 1 9 7 1 was a record year in flue-
sales at 536.3 billion cigar-cured areas~ with the average
ettes, an increase of 2.3 per-on gross sales running about
cent from 1970 sales of 524 . .f $72 Per 100 pound s, a record
billion and one of the largest and' almost $5 per hlindred-
increases since the U.S. sur-weight over the 1970 sales
geon general's 1964 r eport on average.
smoking and heallh. In addition, tobacccHlungry
There was a small increase buyers snapped up 95 percent
in cigarette sales in 1969. and 0£ the 1971 crop, with only 5
a jump by 1.5 percent in 1970. · percent goi ng under price sup-
Maxwell sees part of the part by the FI u e -Cu red
reason for the increase in Stabilization Cooperative.
sales in the growth of the age 1-----------1
group 20 to 40, which ha s the
highest consumption record,
and part as a backfiring of the
anti-smoking drive.
''The rest of this growth we
must relate to government
overkill, wherein many voices
In Washington suggest that
everything we eat or drink is
harmful," said Maxwell.
There still are rears in the
Defenda11t
Flips Wi g
--Literall y
NEW CASTLE, PA. (AP):_
David M. Ca r I e en or
Bricktown, N. J., was long
haired and wore his clothes rTiod. when arrested here July
15, 1970, for wearing the
American flag sewn to tbe
seat of his pants.
When he appeared i n
Lawrence County Court for
sentencing, he stood before
Common Pleas Judge John F.
Henderson iri a conventional
suit and tie and short hair.
Carleen's attorriey, calling
the court's attention to his
Client's appearan ce, noted that
the young man was now a col-
lege graduate and had a job
waiting for him in New York
City.
Apparently unswayed by the
defense's plea, the J u d g e
sentenced Carleen to 30 days
in jail and fined him $100.
Carleen fainted and as he hit
the floor a wig was jolted
from his head and curl! of long
hair spilled down past his
neck.
At Sean •••
Automatic
Water
Softenero .
Planned for
Ea1y
Do·it·
Younelt
Inatallatlon ., ...............
Cell Your
Nures& Sears Store
m
MAVCO
fun and beauty
works hops
For hi~h school gi rls
and youn·ger girls too.
Beauty Workshops: the
Model's workshop fo r
high,school coeds, the
Young beauty work-
shop fo r girl s 8 to 13.
All geared to your
needs by a professiona l
modeling school. Tips
on modeling, make-up,
grooming. Lots more. In
five weekly classes in-
cludes gifts and a fa sh-
ion show all your own.
Sig n up now (or th e
Yo ung Beauty Work-
shop 7.50 in children's .
or pre-teen shops.
Model's ·w o rkshop
8 .SOsign up in coed·
campus shops.
Bueno Park class
schedule
Yo ung Beauty,
Jarruary 29 to Feb-
nlary 26, 1 p.m.
·Model's group,
February 2 to
March-1, 7 p.m.
Soulh Coasl Plaza dass
schedule
Young Beauty,
January 29 to Feb-
rua ry 26, 3:30
p.m.
Mode ls group
February 1 to Feb-
ruary 29, 7 p.m.
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5-pc . ni ode rn bed r~om
has roon1 y t ripi e dresser
PeCan finisl1 requires so little care tt) reta in itc;; lus-
trous good looks. The grouping in cludes dresser
plus mirror, king-s ize headboari:! and two ni g ht
stands. Bl ock fro nl styling adds a !ouch of ta ilored
style to any room . Bu y na.w at this big saving.
·$ 5 8 9 reg. $755
same group with queen headboard
chest also avai !able
reg. $735 $559
reg. $400 $319
8-piec e mod ern dining
roon1 ... w.ipe clean fini sh
Interplay., .making a firm statement about the con-
temporary look in d ining iurniture. Includes ova l
table, 4 side chairs, 2 arm chairs and a generous
buffet. Pe can fi ni sh wipes cle-n with soap an d wa-
ter, stubbornly resisls most all househo ld hazards.
$ 6 7 9 reg. $880
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reg . $500 $415
reg. $400 $325
reg . $270 $225
:• ·;
' ' I
m1y co. south <•HI plan, Hn dl1go fwy. 11 bristol, cost• mow1546.9321
shop mond1y thru frld1y IO 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., 11turd1y IO a.m. to 6 p.m,
sund1y noon 'tll 5 p.m.
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' Ill DAILY PfL OT Monday. January Tl'. ml!
Attit...ie• Change
Bachelors Melt
lndustl·y Freeze
LEGAL NOTICE
PICTlllOUI •U11Na11
•AMI nATSMIWT
TM foilloWN --. .,.. fotl!I MINH••: JtiAJtflH fl•Of'E•Tlll COMll'~V.
cl• Mtrt111 AVS.tloft, ll'IC.. Ho. 10
Or-C-ty Ak,_,, hllft Alla. ' Cttlfornll '2701.
H. 1111-~. n Tr-1 5l•eel, No. IOM. fOtlOll. MMSKhuwtl• onm
H. H1t1ttt WllltMtin, 10 IEtlt O.te
ll:oH, HUflll"'llft. ....... Yor11
Th" bu.rlltl.1 II ~JM (oi"dvclld br •
Mnw1t Nl'hlll'W'l!t
H. Htlllll 'WllllnVn
By JUARTE KAztCKAS Ray Kusor f2 and presi Tiii• "''~ 111M w1111 ttw c-rv • • I • Clerk of Or-lllN CWMY .. JM. 7 ltn bw ..,,.,.,., ,,, .. wrtrw dent ot Jku.lington Jtouse for ,..,""'Y J , Mtddolr. Dtovrv ca.miY c~k
Tht path to the executive the put 10 yean, remembers Publ1111ec11 °''• eo.1 o.v, "~r:.
suite has been dotted with when the chairman of the ,..,.l'Y "· 11• 24 21• '""' N·n
LEGAL NOTICE boardt now dectued. Used to roadblocks for the single man send him ~· on yellow
ovtr 35, whose bachelor status pape• say!•• m think ~.1 -----------1 ~ # •o0• ' ~ ~ ll .... L NOTICI often provokes whispers about should go out with Mary NOTICE IS Helll!IY GIVEN tMI the
h Is mascullnlty, questions Smith. 'She's btautlf\11 and =:w:~':': ':, ~ P":;:V-0.:::Z
rich." ol n... CllY of Cotti ~ tot • Wlod In about his stability and the Ill-"''"' °' "1nelY tNI dl-Y-=
..
WHITE
.JANUARY ·£
' Prlcft off«tlvo thru Sun., Jon. 23 _:,, Co1t1 Mell Sl•rt Only " . \ ••''·ble kiddm' g about his sun. "And then, I would date her o... D1M1r; ..-., '-"Dlue blkn, lhl"1t .. w • nd th" Id of il ,. 1rHn bllln. -rid blk1, two 1111rplll a no 1ng wou come , blkn. -wfllfl 1>1111, Cini rlVoiwr •nd pasedly swinging lifestyle. recalls Kassar. "So later I'd hOll'''· "'· •v• ••IUft. -tlr• n · ~ • tl11911!1Mr. But bachelor businessmen get another yellow 1J o t e NOT1cr:. is FUllTHE1t GIVEN ""' u
ho f'nd • bs • g "Wb do 'J ~· t no --IPNl<I lflll Pl'O'tft tlll and the experts w 1 JO saym , Y n ~., .. go ou ownerlhl• °' "--_1y ""'"'1" 1wtn
for them CUIV the old attitudes With carol Jones? She's poor C1) • ..,.. fol10Wllll .... llUblJctllol'I Of tfth ~ but br'ghJ " Notlcl, the tlUe therfto "1111 Wil In tM are slowly disappearlng and very I • tlndlr, ff ""'' bl ont, « In tM CJIY Of SAVE37%
NOWI
ENS WEAR
be·mg a bachelor is maki"" ' "But he never once said I ~:~ :-:, ':t :ii~::,;~ ·~ s'· .. 'd gel mam'ed " says 1nd di!• 111 bl 1Mm,1nc:to:1. llUW • DATED· MilnOIY Jll'IUll'Y 17 Jtn Jess and less of a difference. ,Kassar, who joJned BurlioQ:ton 11: E. NETH '
I t I Ith d n • •· •· J9 nd sl CHIE" DF POLICE n erv ews w a ore x· Wm::n1~ ~as • a wu pre · .,.llbl!lhf'4 0,11.,.. ca.11 0111y P11<11,
ecutive recruiters and persOn· dent of a division by age 26. J1r.,..1ry 11, 1t~ • t1.n
nel officers, pro au-c e d .ISasS~r Who ha's b.e~e n
unanimous claims thjlt nothing described by some society col. LEGAL NOTICE
matters but the man • s umnists as one of New York's •-,-~-,-,-,,-.,-,-,-.,-,.-,-"-.-,.--,.-.,-.,-,-,,,.-•
business record. most eJirrl.b)e bacheloi-s ad 11xjurft 1nc1 fllrnhhlrits 10C11111 11 1t1e e• ' • 5111itr Slftk Houff 11ttmlsf1·11 HIU1•tn But some have lingering ded: "Cotnpaniea. have t0 SQu•r• $hpslplnl ctnter, "' E. 111t1
questions. adapt to the realities of life in ~::;:::en't!(.;; ~!11:"~/11~ ~CllJ":
"You wonder why this guy order to survive. I think we jll tv snerrtt on o.c.,,,. '• 1t11 •nc:I 11 . , . rtc1i9f9CI bY SYl'ltn er-11 Cuslodl111 hasn'.t settled down yet. You see vastly (Hanging .athtudes. w111bl101c1tetM111"*1 blddfr tw c.1111
m1nht want to ' have a B·us'-· -~-good trained on.Tr,oet11rr, J111111ry 25. 1tn 11 2:00 P.M. '6 '"""""' 1~ , • on fllt Pf'tmllff 11 2H E. 11tll SlrMt, psychologist talk to him. Of and efficient men , cot11 Mfft, c1111ornt1. .
~ ~ 'th bach ) Jik " IM~I'¥' of ftle prOPel'IY lo be &Oki course you it: concemcu w1 e ors e me. w111 bl 1\lilll4'l*I 00.~'"""''"' :i:s. u12 ffl:lfn
h". -1·a1 life I mean does he n ... 1· gto House -10:00 A.NI., to• time "' Hiii. ........ • • .vw-m n 1s a 511, ..-111 bl 1:" bulk « pltt1111e•1 go-'With boys or girls?" said division of Bur Jing t 0 n whlcMwr b 1t1e 1r111ht.
Ro K1ssa 'dent of . . . $YLV/4N Y. '/4LLEN n . m, pres1 Industries, giant textile firm. At'""""' "" "'· L GlndHnt , d 11, Deane and r . execut1've Th 1 · th · 't bl ,111n1111 In°"'"" coumv """·• ere a so IS e mev1 a e Sl/lleflol' CC11Jr1 Kllon No. 115175 personnel consultapts, in Los kidding their swinging social Ind I« ""' cus1od11n.
An I . Sylv•n Brim, gees. Ji ves. 704 s. s,,,,,, S1rHt
From \Valler Raleigh, preSi· . Lo1 "'""I••· c1 mu Tom Richmond. 38 and Publlltled O••"" cus1 oa11v Pilot, dent of Boyden Associates an boyishJy handsome 8 partner J1nwrt ,,, 11. u, 10, 21, n. 2~. 1912
executive recruiting firm in in the New York Public rela-11&.n
New York: "We try to find tions firm o( McDavid , Rich· LEGAL NOTICE
some good solid reasons for mcfnd, Rudd, !aid "I really re-l----~-;;:,-----1
his not having been married. ject that typical ·role most NoT1c .. TJS't1111!01To11s
In a big city it really doesn't Pe 0 P1 e project 8 b 0 u 1 svP•111011 cov11r o" THI It b t It Id be a ITATI 01" CALIFOllNIA ma er, u cou bachelors. I know so many FOil Tffl! COUNTY o .. OllANGE serious factor If the man were married men who spend more N•. A·11m going to a small town in Iowa, do' h th th' O:,•'•!!, of GLADYS c E RN I c H.
say." time mg w at . ey ink N~~1cE IS HEREeY GIVEN to llie bachelors do. Throwing money cr1c111°" of 1t1e 1bov1 n1rned decedent "It's not always a correct around pursum· g beautiful ,,.., 111 P'•llOnl 111v1n1 c111m1 1111n11 111e " that j t because ' Hid otc.oent 1r1 requlr<fd 10 tllll 1111m, assumpwon us women." wilt! the neceswry vovc:t..•1. In 11te·ott1ce a man is married It means o1 '"' cr.rk of the 1bove tn1111ec1 coun, or
he's more ~-bfe, but that's .But bachelors and their 10 P"ft4!nt ltlft!\. .... 11t1 11ie ~Hl'Y •~ ied bo lik vOU'dllrs, lo the undersleneo ti It!• ottlc• what most people think," said marr sses ~ e agree ot hi• 11torl!fY, ROGER"'· SAEv1G, l97
otto Mo)ldar' an .xecutl·ve that the business world is gel· Mottn Avfflllt, Clfn•r111o, c1utorn11 no10. • . . Wiiiet! 1, tne Pltce of buslnen OI the recruiter with c 0 n J e y ting far · too sophisticated to underilontd In 111 m•tte•1 per111nrne to
Associates in Chicago. "~1ost' \vorry about a suitable hostess :.:n:!'1~1! ~\! ~":;~;1;nn~~ ',:;
people dol·ng the "·i·n.,. are for entertaining or a talented no•lc:•,.· 1~ • nd b·•: , da•: 0.1 Ole4fnDtr 211, 11n, married, happily or not, and a am 1uo~ mans ung .). M. CAMPBELL
they look for people with the habits. !i~m of tne
same Ii f e 11 t y I e as Dudley Darling of Ward aooiit'~u.~~ clktdent
themselves." Howell associates in New York ,,1 MHll A•1111111
But there are advantages to sum.med jt up: We're J~g ~':'~:S~ ~it 9•1•
hiring bachelors and executive for the excepllonal person. lo-"'".,....,, fir t:x~
d. Id ·'· 'th . b bu-'.:... l"lltlllllted Or""8 Cotlt Dilly P11ot. recruiters point to job! that iv u-w1 lllper .-ss J1nu1ry 3, 10. u, u, 11n 3.al-11
reQuire a Jot of traveling. track records. "The most lm· LEGAL NO'JlCE •
Bachelors are also able to portant thing is what this man I---;;;;;::=-;:::-;-,,~-=--· I
k rt. weekends ~ accomplished on the 1'ob. Hot1CE o" SALE o" wor ove tme or llt:AL l"fl:OPlllTY AT l"lllVAT .. SALll without worrying about alented men are scarce. ~ N1. swp 1MI
neglecting a wife or children. Marital status in the long run ~¥:~:1g: c~t~::_:r._ -::
Ma1·or companies like IBM, just doesn 't really· matter.'.' THI COUHTY OJ' LOS AHGILES In ltle Mlllfr of 11'11 E1hll1 tnd Mobile, Esso and the larger LEGAL NOTICE conse .... •lonhlP of ELrZAeETH R. ba ks ' ''•) ANDEllSOH (ConMNllff). n say a man s mar1... Notice 11 herHw 111ven """ the un-status has no bearing on his FICTITIOUS IUllNESS de•slilntd wfll ~II ,, Pl'IYate "'''·on or
f fifl.MIE STATIMINT t!!tr 11'1• 27111 daV of Jtn.; 197l, If the of· corporate status and is o no The tollowlnt perJOftl ••• doln<1 11c1 ct J1rt H. FtUCett, 21ns so. relevance in the hiring or pro-hll1IM"Ss 11· H1w111or..,. e1Y11., s11: l0211,"1orr1n«, WATTIE'•• MIO Westmlnsl1r, N"""'°r! County of LOI /4ltttln. ' Sf1!e of moting process. &eKI!, c111forni.. c1n1orn1 •. to the 111tnnt Md best bidder, Bachelors questioned don 't M.41ry MtC•une, 1"91 EIOn Pl .. S1nt1 •nd sublKI to C'Otlllrtn1tlol'I bY uld Ant C•ttlornl• t:zm. $uptrlor Court, 1!1 fM rltftt, titre 1nd lro-necessarily see it that clearly. WYthlNI LUd'llu, 1ot l11t s1:, NewP011 11...st of Hid COnM!'Vltle w. _, to 1n
I •-'ed 'Jh 8Ndl, "'60. ltHI tHllfn RNI Pl'OPertY sltultt. In the "Had uoc:cn marr1 WI This bu•lneu I• blln• C*ICklc:tld by , counrv. of Or•M•. s1111 of Glllfon'IJ1, kids J RTQbably would have Ptl"lnerMIP. 1>1rt1cu11r1y Ontrlbtd 11 1o1io-Jo.wit: ' · . Mlf'I' McClune Lott 31 Ind 3l' In elotk '1 01 An;ll been making $32.000 rather This .i1tftnenl fllH •1111 111e cCMJnl'I' a.Kl! H•llll'lts. in 111e ccuniy of than Mi: 000 ,, said 0 n e tl«k or Or•"" county on Jin. 1, lt12 bv Drlfl9f, s1111 of c1111orrn.., •• ,.., M•P ~· · Beverly J. Mlddorl, DePllfY CCMJnly Cler-. recorded Jn !lodr; 7, P"'1 9 Ind lD of bachelor who used to be in ,.,,1,J MJ1<:e111.-i1 Mtict, 1n tt11 ofllel I/If 1111
d rtl . F'ublllhed er.,... ca.st Dirt'!' Piiot, cou,,tv Recprdef of Hkl COU/llY. a ve sing. J11'1U1ry 10. 11. 2~. JI, 1112 "'-n T.,m, of w11 c1s11 111; i.wt.l•m«Wf" of Several others said if two th• un uec1 s111e1 on toriflrm1t1on of Hie,
LEGAL or Plr! tllll Ind b111nd, nldtnced by men were due for a raise, and NOTICE note HCured b~ Mor1,._ or Tnnt DHcf
th 'ed dd ) h d on IM properf'I' IO told. Ten perJ:enl ot e marr1 one SU en y a l"ICTITtOUS IUUNISS amount bid lo be d-ltld •lltl bid. a new addition to the family, NAME STATEMINT Bids or offers 10 be In wr111,,. 1nc1 w111
he'd probably get the rai'se. The fcllllwlne Pfl'llOll 1a doln1 busJ~n be •ecelvl!d 11 rhe 1h!ret.11ld offlt1 11 1nY 1s: · 11m1 11!1r lh• flrll P1Jbllatloll lltrtof 1nd HEINZ FOREIGN CAR SEllVICf, 796 before d1t1 o! ~le.
Suit Filed
In Disney
Parodies
W111 '°'" Slreet, Co111 M 1, 41 , 01lld Jin. 11, ltn , C1Ulornl1. MA RGIJEIUTE 14. MAfl:XMILLEll . Htlnz $k1trnowikl. Ull Wrtnll•ld Contervttor of 11'11 E•ltlt Or., Hunll119fet1 Buch, C1!Uornl1 12 ... 1. of hid Conwrv~IM
Tiii• MlnlU II beln1 tollducifd by 1n Jtck H. ""Kl'IT lndlYldu1I. 2HIJ SI. H-flllrlll 11'111., Sit, 1 .. H1ln1 Sk•lrnowikJ T1rr1nce, C•Jlf. llSIJ Tlll1 t11lirmMT lllfd wllh tll1 county AIMrntr flt ClllMl'Yllw clerk of Ottll9t Counfv on Jen. 7, !tr.I, by · fllU.OC e-1y J. Middoll, Dftlvt1 County Cl1rll. Pub!lshtd Ort"111 CNll Dilly Pllot, · .. 11Ut J1....,1ry 17, II, 24. 1972 lOll-12 Published O•lnte Ca.JI 01 it1 Pllo1.l----.,.,::-:--7-,----J J1111Nry 11, i1, 24. 31, 11n .u.n LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE;;---/--::.,::,::-"::.-.... ,-,-,-,-,,:-.-.","-;..""'t•"·:-.. -1
TllUIT HO, •M4 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -"ICTITIOUI IUSINllS Ott J1nu1ry a. 1t12, 1t 11:• o'(lotk
D. Prod ct ' h NAMI STATIMINT 14.M. THE f'IRIT AMElllCAN FINAN· 1sney u ions as gone The followtn• penom 1r1 11o1.., ctAL COllPOAATION, fon!Wrty Flr•t into federal court here with a buJJM11 111: · AmerJc•n T1111 IMur•11a 1. Trutt com-, . . AN UNUSUAL PlllNT SHOP, JORI f!'llY• •i tn11I", Of' 111«tllior INtlM or suit <"!iargmg a comic book Rid Hiii "'"·• EsPliMd• VI, suue 1D1, 1Ubltllutfd '""'"· ..., 111t C11111n Otld of
firm with trying ~ destroy it. ci:::,.,.~HK., 0~~:,"'~1 sierr1 Cillo l~:Lcic'~;a''llfMi.I br E ~~~~ el:
Hell Comics, Jn a comic Rd .. r .... 1ne. AIUIVCICLE, tius111nd ll'MI ~ •nd book ·called Air P1·rates F'llflo fl:lnd•lt fl:. Mcllw1tn. SICl7 e1rlf"1ncl rec:ordfd Ft0nl1ry '· ,,., 111 ,lopk ..... Ave .. Enc:lno. NOi 31t of Ofllcll.I fl:ICOl'dl of1Drl"11'1 nies. is accused of turning Tlll1 buslMU II 1>111n1 conductld bv • County, C1Ulo!'n11 11111 pursu.nt to lll•t
h f ·1· h Pll"lntt1hJp, cert1I" Nollt1 ot Dlflutl 41nd Ellctlon to sue am1 1ar c aracters as Rldl1rd IC. sese _ .. 11 itiertunder r.con1f!d se..Mrnbllr 3 f..Iickey and Minnie Mouse into Thi• -1Tatemtt11 !!ltd wilti the coun!v 1n1 1n eoo11: tm, P•e• 11• of 01t1c111 , . cllrll of Or1n11 Counlv on J1n. 7, ,,,, bY Rtcofd• of Ora1191 coumv. will under •nO ~ex cxh1b1tionlsts and Donald 81Verl1 J, M41ddox, Dtlluiv CCMJnlY c1ert:. 11Ur11111nt to HlO oeec1 of T•u11 11t11 11 Duck into a Peeping Tom . fr1su4 11Ub11c 1uct1on 1o, ui11. 11w1u1 m-r of . · PubJl1hed Or•rtt• Co1tt D1Uy PU~!. ltle IJ"ll<fd Stain ot Amerlc•, 1t 1111 m1ln This 8 SS8UJt UJXln t h e J1nu1ry 10, 11, 24, 31, ltn J5·n Weit entr1nC1 to tilt Flrsi Amerlc1n Tiiie
• ' i m a g e 0 r I n n 0 c e n t LEGAL NOTICE •1t•ur11K1 COl'fttllnv b\llld1n1 10C111c1 ,, Ille 10Ulhe11t torner of Flf'lh •nd Mlln delight rulness. •• Disney has StrMtJ hi fM clly of S1nl1 AN,
sought lo build up over the FICTITIOUS llJSIM•ss ~.::~:~··)0·1~1141~111 .. t.~rt,• ... ·~ ~~ Hfl.MI STATEMIHT ,,.... ....._ "' years is calculated to !'in-The 1o11ow1111 pertcm -c1o1111 Tru11 in .,,. P~ 111u1tar 111 tne
t r 'th nd ·r lb) to bu1lnns ••. CovnlY Ind St1!1 dlsulbld 11: . er ere WI a ' I poss e, THE HEEOLEWOllKS. 3011 VIII• Lot 10 of Trl(f No. H7l ••• lllown on
destroy the busines.ci of plain-W1y, Hewcort &ffdl, C•l"-1•. • M.11 rlCOnlld In 9ook "' Pl'" :», 31 t "ff . Alla PW!enon. NO Gretf'll Gl"Mll ltld 11 of MlKll1intou1 Mltll. rteat'lll 1 . and the assets of said wn. L• fl.Riil., '°°"· of °'""' ceuntr. c1n1orn11.. busmess " said lhe suit v1o111 WIWr', 1131 DILCll: Ave •• Los Excesit1111 thlrtfrom .i1 1111 on, 111 ' • Al'!MIH. t01nJ lftd atMr ll~drac1ft)ons Ind fftllllfllt At last reparf. in Oct. 1970, Tttll M lltffs ·rs bll"" tond11<ted 1w 1 -•nd Ml"e111., 111, .,_ 1nc1 unc1« ""'' Dimou assets were )'isled at ~• ••rTnerlftlP. "''of Mid l•nd IYlne bllow, oe.,i~ °' ., • .,., A!kl Pell!'-.500 Ylfllcll lftt bllow flll WrflCI pf $267.6 million. Tiiis .iatll'nfltl lllN wlll'I tile ceunl'I' ••Id 11nc1, llllt lllllllloul •MY rllllt or entry
N med d r'I' ni• cllftt 01 Or'..,,. Ctvnlv on Jin. 7 lt1J by -Said llnd ot wltllln Hid too SCIO a as e 1 1ng 1:1ney h v«IY J. ~ Deputy Coull;... Cler~. IHI flllrwol, 1w "'' • 1,1 , • a, e ·characters ""'re Hell Comics ,111•1 ¥!tilt~.,. is ruerwct '" the 1tee11 to
U.1.. ' • • PlltlU!lllld Or'tnff COISI Dlrtr Piiot, Tiit H1l1 Com11111Y, rKOrdld Jffvtmblr the publDl tt:"rs, four artists and Ji'l'llllrr 10, 17, 2.., 31, 19n ... ,1 ~-=~..,. a.1, "'"2411 or OlfJclal
fiO John Does. -· ~ ,c.,,monrr trew.11 11: 1~11
haThelr ·pro~ayal of Disney LEGAL NOTICE t"k."!! .. "'~mu'iit ~!:. ~f'c':i
c racterl In a degrading, ITATfiMI'" °' WITNDftAWAL ... .,, .. ty, ~HMCI « llflPtlff. .. 9o lewd and offensive manner" ,..,. P.Untl•hllP ..,,...,,,,.. 1111 11111, "'"Mklll or tflClllNl'lnca to UMDI• PKTITIOUS IUSHllll •AMI Mtlttv Jiii NM1lnlnt lllril'ICIHI IUl'll due OUlbt to be WOrth $5,000 each TM flolloWll'll. Hrtoft Mt 'WOltdttwn 11 on ""-l'IOll secvrtd bY' 111d Deed ot Trull ror aeven a I I e g e d in-~~,: ~ ~"'7rw"r1ou~'7.:I:!: ~0:1j~1:\1,"'t:1r ,1•~1h0.;~~'u':',:
frlngementl of copyright and n1rnt of WHEfi.utOUSI COMPASS. It tOlllhr wllll '"" dlll'ffl, ""' Ill""'"
_J:
f>IEN'S PRE.SPRI NG
JACKET
CLEARANCE
ll9hl·w1i9hh, cordt,
bush j1clr1ft efc, Sorn•
Wint1r W1i9lth.
Ret. te 9.t7 Now
MEN'S ASSORTED
KNIT
SHIRTS
••
A11or.l1d t t y I 1 1
frpm w.11.c.
B11ry'1 to ''" Loni,
Ant. Si111. a.,. to l .t7 Now 2/3 00
MEN'S ASSORTED
DRESS
'SHIRTS
~ A1sort1d 1lrip11,
1olid1 •nd Oobbi1s
-A1sort1d Si111. a.,. to 4. t 7 Now 2/3 00
MEN'S ASSORTED
C.ASUAL ·
PANTS
Choose from flares and
straight legs. A ss o r I e d
stripes, solids, cartoon -looks
etc.
R~. to 7.97·NOW
$
..
I MEN'S VROUR 8HIRJS
FAvlliE Lill•uvE mrB -
Soft and toasty 100%
cotton velour in a wide
selection of stripe pat-
terns and bold colors.
Long sleeves, . crew
neck; sizes S, M, L, XL
s
11111· B. PRICE 7.17 EA.
111S 11111 IYllUllI If STUE • USl!D lft.n 11111.Y
BLANKETS
ASSORTED
BED PILLOWS
1oax90 1oo y;
Acrylic
RO<J. 9.00 Now
499 Assorted
· fillings.
RO<J. to 2.97
NOW
2/)00
T. V. LOUNGER PILLOWS ~~~~~~~--...,, KING flTTED SHEETS
Colofftd,
,."•-" tld; .... .... 1.U NOW ·
VELOUR AND
TERRY WASHCLOTHS ...... ,
100 "" ...... ......
ht·,. SI.to NOW
"CAROUSfi" RUGS
313
=-:..-..::.· 20%
.._..... 0 °'' Now 4/]00
LG VEtOUR BA 1H Towns-FURHITURE lHROWS ,,,..;. ... 2/300 !:~"."' 2/300 z~ 2.JI NOW 1.,. te ),ti • HOW
ASSORTED TOSS PR.LOWS BRAIDED RUGS ... .-
......... t
...... l.t7 NOW 100 Ooo7t" I--
Jfd4 ..i .. lhJI.
' .... Jt.tt. NOW 21 99
tr-•·marU "'"•'!JM 000 o~h 7101 WM! co.t.I Hlth••· NfWWt IHd!, OI' the Tru11tt Ind •IKll '""' wmt ••
INC , r-Ylll, ""-C1Uforfll• ~. n'llY llflYI bMn ld\ltnctd bY' tllf CNl'l'ttf'1j·~----------'--------------------------------------, from the· four 1rtlsts the suit TM lk!lllOUI IMltWIJ NIM tl•ltmt~• Ind l!oldtr of Mid nott. Wiit! lnltl" .. t, IS
The ·~•anta; tto tor tM 111rtntnhlp 'W•• llltd M Mir 17, wovldld In wld Dttf of Tru11.
'
•YI· UIQCHU a mey lt71 ·~ ""' (Ol/l'llY of °''""' D1'90: Olc:1mtltr 2 .. lt71
JoRpb c. Rblne. argues tbat wf~,.~~ 1n.s Addreu ot ttie Ptrto.11 ~~: ... =~~ll ~~=~~~~ION,
copyrtcht Mil trademark laws JOMlft ai.uw. tm '"' Oc••n lomlll'IY "'r•t 14mtrkln t1111 -= be-.ct ~~ pmllt..~~~ eeu~=-·~=111• tw1, ~~"'~l~i· 1.~tf'r.'lc~ us..,. """'Q' P.nsJ 14ullllrinf Oltker .a.. I _ ...... ., P!JMI..... Cf.oil* <iMlf Dlll'I' Pilot, l'ullll"'" °''"" (Nit 0.llY l"llot,
.. r-'VOV• ~.,.,...,. M. 1~14. ~. 1tn a.n J....,..,~1~1~1tn ~·'-------------------------------------------------' COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST.
S.n Diogo f•-•r •I Brlstol
t • • i
•
• • r
)
• • • ' '
•
Battle ·.Front on ' Lines
.
A woman st11ndin9 shoulder ,to shoulder
with an American sold ie r on the frG>nt
lin1es of battl e? It's impo $s ibl e
now but equa lity, as demanded
by some wom en, could make it a
reality .
-
..
sroRIES Sy JO OLSON
CM ..• Ofil"t Pll9t $left • •
Y"'."11 !!lell fmn the UnHed States •rt
·1-at the battlef"90t In Southellt Alla ""1 military bue1 tllrOuihl>Ut Ille .United ,
States, aboahl Navy. ahlpo at aea and In
. mtlltai'y l>ospitals afflicted wltb battle
wouhds. • ·
Young American women, may be 1em
by mere handfuls in comparison wearing
the military uniform of the~ country, and
then only because they have volunteered
to do sa. They do notJive with tbe ques-
tion, "What If lam drafted?" _
Is UU. a fair system U women want to
be liberated and have equality with men!
Is military service part of t h e
· esponsiblli\y of equality?
While 1be qliestion ol voluntary service
iys. the draft is being discussed in
..inllitary and government offices, the
"1.uesUon' of. draft for women is being con-
sidered by college women and those w~
are concerned with liberation for women.
' one group of college coeds [eels that
women should ~ subject to Ute sa.me
draft laws as men and has made a
fonnal statement to that effect.
!J'he Intercollegiate A~sociation of
Women Students, composed of college
women throughout the United States,
testified to this effect at a spring hearing
bn tbe Equal Rights ,t.mendment at the
fJniversity of Kansas.
"Those women students o( draftable
~ge who testified at the hearings felt that
as long as a draft existed, women as well •s men s)!ould be equally eligible for the
draft," i8id Karen Keeslµig , executive
director of IAWS during 197G-71 , and
Xatherine Eike, 1971·'12 nationil presi·
dent. ,
NATIONAL SERVICE
'.They added that "none of the women
students were in support of the present
draft system, · suggesting s e v e r a I
altefnatives, such as a volunteer army or
a national service system for everyone
lrnmediately following high 1 c ho o I
graduation.'"
The coeds further said that "concern
was also expressed at the bearing that
the Army bas set higher qualifications
for women volunteers than for men."
Women!s Liberation groups. favor the
Birch Bayb (D-tnd.) amendment to the
Constitution, whicb wa.s discussed ai;td
defeated by the Senate Subcommittee on
Constitutional Amendments last fall. It
' sought to outlaw all laws -federal. state
r or local -that discriminated between
the sexes. 1
According to a UPI atory, Sen. Sam J.
Ervin .Jr. (0-N.C.) 11argued that · some
laws, protecting women· should be
preserved. He sild his substitute amend·
ment simply reco'gnized lhat ~re .were
physiological. and. functiooal distinctions
between the' se:ies and the Constitution
should' not ignore them."
WO~UABLE .
The · story fqrther said , that ·though
uwomen's liberation groups favored -ttfe
Bayh amendmept, Er.v~-contended it
would leave women u,ble ·for infantry
combat duty ahd invalidate la"!'s p~
tecting woments rights ·as wives, widows
and mothers, as well •as ~tecti•e labor
Tip Hat t~ .G.ua .rd .. Wives ' .. ,,,
.
The Calllohll8 Air National Guard can
be a blessing or a bust. It a.II depends on
how you see it.
For the airmen, it-ls a way to earn a
little eitri money, flllfill military obHga-
tk>ns or show an extra measure . of
dedicatiOn to their country.
') ' . For theif :wives, it can be a way to get
their hus~ds out or the house and out of ' their hair one weekend a month, or it can
compete for their spouses1 attention and
get in lhe way of weekend plans:·
The 222nd. Mobile Communications
quadrbn, bi:sed in Costa Mesa, has a
currtnt contingent of 1M airmen and
eight officers, representing 48 different
"cities. All men spend one Saturday and'
one SurKlay a. month with the guard
without fail, and all are obligated to at.-
tend !I two-week summer camp.
Some drive from as far away as San
Diego for the weekend, some corrie from
the Uls Angeles area and others com-
mute fklm San Luis Obispa and China
Lake.
They report in. at 0145 the third Satur·
day and Sunday o! each month and
depart for home at 1700 both days. l'here
are no vacations or paid holidays.
Under lbe ~ectton of Lt. Col. F.dlnund
M. Petracek, the unit maintains $214
million worth of military and com-
munications equipment, all of which may
be' used, upon command of the governor
of'tbe President in case of disaster.
·Tlie.ooit's mobile switchboard can ban--
' ·-
die up to 300 te1ephobe lines at once, and
its telet.v.pe and radio facilities can be set
up swifUy in an emergency.
FEMININ~ "WILES :.... Staff Sgt. Carol Goudy, one
of two women in the 222nd Mobile Communications
Squadron of the Air National Guard, finds no lack
of cooperation from M/Sgt. Alex Carrassi nett) and
M/Sgt. Robert Derelield . as she carries out 'her
duties as a training technician· for the Costa Mesa·
based un!L L To strengthen lhe unit's bond with the
·civllian community, the base dining hall
is loaned ' to civic groups for meetings,
and tbe guard asalst! Scout troops with
lheir projects.
Guard activities ll)ay betp lbe com-the guard weekend, she said, but Ibey visit l\fl"'J>ITMts In Tuslln whlle·her hus-
munlty as 1 whole, but do Ibey keep the plan everything else around those two band is away during the summer. "Ira
mme fires burn)ng or slowly smother days. good to be aplrfonce In 1while,"11>< ad-
tbem? "She stays wllh her folks while I'm ded. "It's good to be by yourself."
catherine casey of Westminster hu gone." Roo said, "and that's a real treat BREE WEEKEND ·
btM "putting up" with-the ,Air-National----ior-ber." -----· .... ·
Guard for all eight years of her m·-'··e · -"It Ii~ me-a free weekend," &aid -·-. Alex carrus1 .• publlc lnfonnaUon. of-w111 •• 1-t--n.-1. _, c.o!-t ... • Ana,' whose to Chuck Cosey, 1 real estate appralaer 11 r ..... t Iba Uil<WUPO ~ "' -·-
who his 20 years or guaid service behind ~-"~;:"' ""':~be ~~ oual 1 ..,,.the., busballl Nonnan is 1 physician. ''We alao
bim. '°"~~ can -°"' 00 .... not to .... "'-· .. ~ · rd • tr 0 • U ii•• it bere M/ • ,...n Mm ... Oil ~ 11111 • • summer auung."' ~ near a c y w weekend." 111 don 't mind," she uid. 0 1 Ny at
home and take cart of our five chlldrtn. they can stay wblle Ihm but-. ~ Glenda s f Mf !(,;, Vi Jo ~·-the field. . pero o u. . e , •,!Kan:
They think ti's great. They get to wut o! 1 year and. 1 ball, feels Ille weekend bis bit and' they're proud of him. 0 'His wife Q)lleen uld, "'It11 pd for
BUYS GROCERIES them to get away !or two weeltl. It keep1
"Jt doeln't bother me at all /' aakl Pat.. the home fires burnlng."
ty Galvin o! tu1Un, who h11 been mar-'l1lelr eoo, 'l'bny, 711, loves h, lbe 111]111,
rled t.o her husband Ron for a.llttle over I becauae be .can Mt his dad In his
year: .. I do my mother's hair, buy v.nlfonn: 11Parades ire fun, toot'' she ad-
poc.ries and do other ohoppln(." ded. •
'l1lelr weekend trips to the 1DOU11tains Barbara .Rlunniet, wile of 1 new
1et pat ufclo ...,. In 1 wblle becaoae ol. 11CTUI~ Joo Rummel, says 1be piano to
'
. . .
maneuvers are a wute of time.
"He's not leamini 1nyth!n1 or dotna:·
anythlnc/' she commented~ "I catch up on my housework and lhop. It won't
bpther me until we have dllldrtn."
Site aaid they ... missed ..-11 theater
datet ... Loi Aligelu -·.t. Ille
• ....,. 11111 n cot mad thea.
llulll l'lllacn, wlft .t. Ille com-,
•
said, '°For u1, it's been .. really tremen-
dous.",
Her husband his been 'in the 11111rd !or
lf ,.;1r1 .and saw active military duty
prior to that. The extra pay tlie men earn
be!~· her two 10ns, both airmen,
throuah college and gave ... or them
·another career option in tbe airport. con-
trol tower.
••u (U..eatra·pay) ~ .. hefpec! as out of
men Woe• lhlll I can think of,.., •he ad-
ded. •1 was like a lot of other Wifts when
World W4r II was OVe(. I wun't too
enthusiastic ,about my buablnd 1etlinC
back Into lt. Wheo my llO!l• CllllO aloni I
realiztd what 1 tmnendous thtna: It •
The auard"s medical plan bu -• lloalll ' for them In unexpected W..1tt
and ICddttitJ, ahe added.
lhe GROWING PONDBR, ..... II)
' .
laws."
The subcommittee finaUy voted, M , to
outlaw legal distinctions between men
and wmt.en except thos'e based on
"phystqloglcal or functional differences.,..
But 1hould women really be sent to
war?
IAWS members feel that women should
be allowed to have combat duty if they
wtsh, though military regulations now
specify which jobs a woman may and
may not have and women are not permit·
ted on the front lines.
Said Mls1 Keesling and Miss Eike :
"The consensus was (during the spring
dlscu1Sloo on .!ht Equal Rights Amend-
.· ,.
ment) that there are many women who
Would like to suve In combat duty, eithtt ~
as infantry line:men or as pilots, and 1tp.J .
these women should be given that Op-
portunity.
"Again, if men and women are a~
cepted and drafted into the armed ,
services ()n an equal basis, they could ~
assigned to the duUes they are most
capable and willing to handle , regardle1s
of sex."
How do men feel about women staying '
home while they go off to combat or qt(·
to serve at so me other military ba~e, ·
often interrupting careers ~r college ?
(See FRONT LINE BA1TLE, Pqe JJ) •
, · ..
. .
J
' . '
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
MMMy, .,......, 11. 1'71 _, .. -.
·Ann Landers
Coating of Love
' ..
Covers Tatters
.. ' .. ....... .. : .. . . ·:;
°'" DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several weeks · something wro!ll wllh fish you can aniOI
•IO you printed a. letter !rain a·Wyomlng .It or •taste it »lirunedlatety. Everyone ·.,;. atfl who wouldn't accept 1 date. becauae joyed my creamed·IOle and there waiti1
lhe wu aahlmed to let the boys at 'IChoot a anidge left oo any o! the pi,tes. ..:
-her shabby home. Her ·widowed This morning I hid three calls froio
mother worked u a hotel maid and it people who wanted to know if we ""
wu a struqle to keep body and soUJ · sick last nlght because Mrs. So-and-"'
tolether. . had called them to uy she was dea~
My mother was in the same boaL Our ill and sbe "88. 1111e It waa tbe fish. tlii
home wu the nOit !bing to 1 allacft but It bqinn!ng to tblolt this woman made ;op
never occurred to ,me to be uhamed of ••• ~ tt. lfa kept it spot.lea and rri1de it as #::~
altnetlve u ahO could. JM -of all -:·
bom ,. + .. • our e wu filled with love and • t-,,_ • ~ughttt' and Mom 'taught me to make. · :::¥
everyone feel welcome. ·:. :.• ...
Now I am married to a fine man and ... ! ••.
we have 1 lovely place.,Mom II 1 aemi· u,.; story jllll to underlniile my abllii;iii ~d and we tnade an apartment for a 1hostes.s. Is tb1a pos.sJble? _.,tJCt
hPl>n the aecond floor. Whenever my~.AifANAPOLl.S. • · :-.:!
friends from the old day1 come over the~ ---~ ·.~ .. ,·
nevor fall to ask If they can 10 upatalrs DEAR INDY: 11'1 poollllle !lot 1111 ~
to aee Mom. lan'.t that 1 warm com-IJ. I ... •t lmqlae 1 -fa~
pliment? . Hdl I flM lllry JUI fw .. Mllbat. ; •••
I hope every young girl who Is aahamed Since no -else bec!-11 N's 1 ..
ol l!'e place sbe Uva in wtll-my letter anumptloo It wu oot .,.,.; oolo i.;, ""If tab heart. Prlenda ~ hiving ma<le lier old<, 1'ul ...wa, "' llt
don't care about fumllure. -LUCKY ellewbere. (Maybe at....._) ·• •'
DEAll WCKY: Yt.-1re more ... •
lacty. Y• ,.... -ilJ a -wllo DEAR ANN LANDERS : Alter 1 fP.
W laMr .....-JIJ, ud ... , /ar --..onths of IDltrlage our If.year,...
illporlul tllu -Ill -1· Tllo daughter WU boclaered into I WilHW:
la9' 1eal a ea • 1fMt ·W.. cwtalM a ping arrangement by bet husband wlll>ji '
wwld 11 ..-.·Enr)' atrl wlla Is -really craay. Lucile fell [or tbe otberm.6
--•te •-., ,._ * """ la and wllhln we<b she left her husband to" .._.. dip II llt ud tape 11 to lier live with him. I am not de!eqdlng ·llel' •
hik'-mlnw. · becauae I think they all need piycblatrlc
help. ., DEAll ANN LANDERS: Whal do yOIJ
think about 1 P<rlOll who has dinner in.
your home and the nexl day "IJ oo'the
phone and calls up the other IUtlll to uk
If they threw up all nlch~ too! ii this 1
friend !
My hvlblM al)d I entertaiil !requenUy
and !"have 1 reputation for bolna 1 goOd •
cook. So lar, u . I know I have never
poiloned anybody. The other ntlhl I aerv-·
eel I flah' courae u Ille -Iller. 'nlli II
'!bal my IHalled friend claima .-her
lf<t. You -vory well 1ltol If tben'1
The problem II lbal 1111 busblnd Wiii
not let Lucllo In our home llAloll. 1•i
COltlel alme. Siie wants to bring ilor
gentleman friend. (Neither ts divoiotd)~
Tltm .,.. -,...ger chlldnn ..
mlu the~ alstor larribty. I belleve 119'
mcnll art her bumea. What do 1'I
say? -TORN. • .,
DEAR T.: I MJ If,_ welc1a1 I .....
rle4 foqloler -...... ,, •••
'°1frt.I, ,... 1r1 t'af 1>1 .. -' ......... .IAdl ........ _ ..... ,.
l·
I
1 ... ,.
I.
-
.,.
•
•' • •
JI DAILY PILOT
r .. ··--
UPI Ttl9fllltlo
Denim Sported ~-·
Sp~ing sportswear suggests the 41good old days" of
chilcµtood. . For her, engineer stripe denim jeans
have patch pockets and her •hirt features bright
stripes. For him, denims come alive with stars,
planets, stripes, checks and dots.
From Page 17
• • • ~
Growing Fonder
For Marilyn Viers, the
guard has provided a n
:. automatic monthly. reunion
· with her son, Mark, who
serves in the 222nd Squadron
with his father, Lyal:
The Vierses live in Chiba
Lake and their 'son Jives in San
Luis Obispo, so they meet in
Costa Mesa on g u a r d
weekil¥J,s. Marilyn stays in a
~ motel during the day reading
: br writing letters or goes
: shopping, then the three get
' together in the evening.
OTHER FOOT
Now that the Air National
Guard is accepting women,
.; the shoe is on the other foot
: for some husbands a n d
· fiances.
· Marv Schoenrock of Glen-
·: dale. whose fiancee, Carol
· Goudy was the first "Warne"
" to be accepted in the 222nd
·: Squadron, says Carol's enlist-
; ment is "kind of groovy."
: They met in the Air Force
when her enlistment was up
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
THE DAILY PILOT
and he was processing her
termination papers. They now
"work around" her weekend
obligation. He is a student at
Glendale College and plans
ultimately to study law.
"It gets a little rough," he
admitted, "but it's one of
lhose things you have to put
up with. It's like if I had to go
to a business conference."
The guard checks (four
days' pay for two days' work)
come in handy for a multitude
of things for the alnnen and
their families -new drapes,
new cafs, stock investments
and other luxuries -and the
retirement benefits are an ad-
ded bonus for those who com-
plete the obligation.
To most families, the
California Air National Guard
becomes a "three-weekend
and free weekend" way of life,
and everyone gets used to the
Idea that nothing spec ial Is
planned fiir Guard weekend.
It gives husbands and wi ves
a breather, boosts the budget
and provide s lasting
friendships, and when it's all
wrapped up, It seems to be a
pretty attractive package of
benefits for those who are so
inclined.
. ' . • •
j
\
Your Horoscope Tpmorrow
Aquarians Should Not Take Risks
!ewels by joseph
searches for jewels
~ ...... ........, .. IMMllll-,,, u• lt\' .... " • flllll ._. ~ ................ ~
t•MN r*! ctNhll e¥tllillflli fl .. ...... ,,..,... ....... .
Wt Wiii ................... ""'"' ,
TUESDAY
JANUA'RY 17
By SYDNEY OMARR
Accent movea to goal, career.
profesaional standing a n d
prestlie In general. Study
Taurus message. Be ready tor
beneficial changes -at top
levels. Prove to supe:rtor that
you a.re flelible .
Is going plac'5. There Is qiore figure j>romlnenUy. Straighten purchase~ Be sure you get
pressure, ruponslbtlUy. l3ut out Jamlly misunderstanding. what :you pay for -don't be.
you'll thrive on it. Question of Make ,concession. shy A.bout lnqulries. Pay and
marriage, partnership ls para-CAP..RJCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. collect. Cod\"Olldate g a In 1.
""" -_.... ,...,... ...... .... ......
C.11 Mr, .S..-et Mr, hltl-•1 ,.. -
A Cancer wom.an'1 family
simply could not survive
wlthout her. lf you don't
believe It, simply ask the
woman herself.
mount. Take no unnecessary rl!U.
LIBRA (Sep!. 23·0cl. -i·. 19): Close relallvtll vlsil, Le 1 llo •• th u. ave specu a n w o ers.
Don 't attempt to go too far, make requests, challenge your PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
, CANCER (June Zl.July 221: too fast. Key ls to maintain credulity. Malntaln sense· of
b I M ·11 '-· CY c 1 e m o v e 1 u p ; a ance. essage w1 uo;:Come humor . Voicing complalnt.s circumstances turn \n your increasingly clear. Remember now would do no good. You I Good Junar aspect now em-
phasizes benefits I r o m
ARIES (March 2I·April 19): journeys, additional studies. h Ith I t. G t 'd r avor. Timing Improves. You ea reso u ions. e r,. o find things out -and t I bl It lo r r burden not rightly your own. ultimately you will '-·nelit. ge avora e a ent n or e -
South Co11t '1111
l rhtol 1t tti1 S1rt 01190 ~. Many around you now seem TaW111, Libra persons are in·
subdued. Key is to keep smil-volved. Family member will
lttg. Don 't permit moods of want to be included in travel
others to affect you. Steer plans. Accede to special re-
clear of typical gloomy Gus. quest.
N [ I · II uo;: fort!. Str~ss new contacts. Be o a se sentimenta ty. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Independent in thought, action.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 2l ):;lirl~9~)::C~hec~k~de~lai~·1~s3ln~makln~·~gL~M~o~ve~ah~ea~d~;ll .. ~d~w~ay~.::~~~~~~~~~~
Codi M11• 1540.9066
:You have much to accomplish . LEO (July 23-Aug. %2 ):
-and meeting behind scenes Questio~ concerning legacies,
favo rs your effort!. policies, invest men l pro-
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): cedures can be answered.
One who is friendly IJ;)ay not Perfect techniques. R i d
have all facts. Means be yourself of wasteful methods.
amiable, but get agreement in Plug loopholes. Get what's
writing. Search for hidden coming to you, and put.a halt
clauses. Don't sell short. Your to brooding.
cycle Is on upgrade; situation VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
will change in your favor. Go ahead with contract. You
GEMINI (May 21-Jun e 20): can unite forces with one who
From Page 17
• • • Front Line
Creative urge is dominant.
Giv~ ol yourself and you wtll
receive benefits beyo nd e:r·
pectation. Deal with persons
~ho have young ideas. Don't
Pull punches. You deserve
plenty -and you are on way
to obtaining it.
SAGmAR!US (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Check property
values. You could obtain
legitimate offer, bargain. Rise
above petty details, an·
noyances. Aquartan could
Battle
fabhwn. fABRIGS .................. ' ......... ..
Watch for the
GRA,ND OPENING
of our newest store In
FOUNTAIN. VALLEY
16185 BROOKHURST IAT EDINGER)
WESTHAVEN PLAZA
531-0103 .
P.S. COME IN NOW. SHOP & SAVEi
A poll near a busy Orange
C:Ounty s h o p p i n g center
brought answers from several
combat veterans.
as physically strong as .men, strument of government. 1 \~;::;:::=;:=;:=;:=;::;::::;::::;::;::;::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::;::;::;::;::::;::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::;::;::;::~
John Boisseranc, an Army
Vietnam veteran, said, "No
one should be drafted. If there
is such a thing, we should all
give equal time."
Walt Newell, a resident of
Ridgeland , Miss., also a
veteran, agreed that "no one
shou!d be drafted."
Steve Adams, a graduate
student at UCI, said ''They
(women) shouldn't be in a
combat situation." He said
that females should give a
similar amount of time, but
there should be no draft.
Sharon Bullock, an employe
or Fairview State Hospital,
said if women want. equality,
they should be drafted. "If
they can train a woman to be
they should fight," she added. don't like the pressure it puts
"People should do what they on people}'
want," said Mrs. Kath y Miss Shannon Bees 1 e y ,
Morgan of Santa Ana Heights. Golden West College "Bran-
Lori Bekas, director of ding Iron" staff writer and
publicity for Orange Coast representative of the student
College, said. "Obviously, the central committe~ to the col·
question . 'Should women be Jege affairs council, stated
drafted?' otiginates from the that "drafting women would
current women's lib con-be a lot more trouble than it's
troversy. Don't men un-worth.
derstand that the women of "It would advocate a situa·
the world aren't madly obsess-lion for a 24-hoor orgy and
ed wilh the idea that they long government administration of
to be entirely and whollt' birth control. It would end the
equal ? romantic life and role playing,
"Men and women are not and would seem to pit men
equal and as long as the sexes against women .
remain separate, never shall "I don't even agree with
be. Women are women, and drafting men. The individual
men, men, each maintaining ~hould have the ri ght to
their individual distinctions choose his life. I think the
and purposes. military should be voluntary.
"Women are mere I y An individual shouldn't have to
pleading for the ultimate male be forced into a siiuation he is
realization that women can be totally aga~t ."
intellectually equal. Sgt. Betty, Allen,.a counselor
'
JUDSON SCHOOL
IN ARIZONA
. FOUNDED 1921 ."'>
Coed Boarding and Day School
College Pr1~r1tory & General Courses
Developmental Reading, Remedial Math, Art,
Music, Drama
Boarding Grades 3· 12
Small Classes. Excellent Staff, All Sports including
Riding, Swimming, Riflery & Tennis
Mr. Thomn J. $tobs, Ad111lulo1t Dl~tor, •Ill be h1f.rTlewl .. pore1th In ttio Newport ArM
Jo11uory 19th Ii 20th. For •ppolntinent or Information coll Los Anteld. 121ll 670·0775
l'or 91'1Khu,,_, -ii• JUDSON' SCHOOL
Box U"· Scothdalo, Arll•"-
1nel Sorn.tltr Bqln1 J1nu1ry 2lrll.
Phone: 602-947-nJl Fun Profits
Ebel/ Fund
"To answer the original In the WAC office in Orange,
question, 'Should women be said, "I can't believe In draf-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;:;~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~;:;J~~;;;~;;;;;;;~;;:;~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~ drafted?' No, not normally, ting women. I'm sort _o( old·
especially not in times of fashiooed in my ideas. I'm
peace. However, If a very perfectly happy with the cur-
urgcnt 'national emergency in rent arrangement -men as
Brunch, a fashion showing, which it is mandatory for all aggressors." ..
Cards and an antique and able-bodied persons to unite, The question, it seems, of
golden elephant silent auction why not? I believe even Susan whether women should be
are planned by past presidents B. Anthony would h a v e drafted into the military
of the Ebel! Club of Newport agreed." service must remain
Beach for thj!ir fund-raiser ~1<\J'ine Sgt. Ace Maline, unanswered, because each
Thursday, Jan. 20. serving at the Marine Corps person has an opinion and they
Proceeds from the 11 a.m. Recruiting station in Costa are not the same.
event in the clubhouse will Mesa, said women should The army still Is not a
benefit the club's continuance "definitely not be drafted. It volunteer army, and there still
fund . should be on a voluntary basis. are no women on the combat
Scholarships have been I hope someday it is all lines.
presented for nursing, music, volunteer." But it seems time for
education, Indians, law en-Dana Pierce, Orange Coast . women to start se riously
forcement and p o I i t l c a I College student body vice thinking about the Possibility
science by the Ebells, who president, said, "In my opi-and decide whether or not
started Newport Beach's first nion, drafting women is -as they wottld go, because this
library in 1919. wrong as drarting men. I can't could be one of the con-
Mrs. William B. Tritt ts, 'r•agri;;;ee;;;;w;;it;;h ;;th;;e;;dr;;i;a;;ft;;a;is;;a;;n;;i;;n-;;;;;;;'eq,;;u•;;;n;;;ces~o;;;f ;;;lo;;;ta;;;l;;;li;;;'b<;;;r;;;a;;;ti;;;on;;;.;;;.
general chairman or the11
benefit, while the Mmes. (Ii)
Clayton Thompson and c g GI Edwanf Rogers are responsi· rown1n or.y
ble for the brunch and Mrs.
Lewis H. McBride is taking h I
reservations. eauty Sa ODS
DrlJI M.llNGS MD SU•DAY$
•
ONE WEEK ONLY! JAN. 17th to 22nd
LIVER TABLETS = ~·';:;-~;';..::,' ···--············-............... 2 for S 1,60 = ~·~:r;.~2r --·· . .. .. -. 2 ,., •3.30
VITA STRESS-B wilh C-Top Formul1
SilEETS -KING SIZE 100 Tatt1 2 $2 76 $2.75 · lottlff lo• • ·
lllACIN "' M••· ... '""n "' .............. 2 ,,. s1 DD · NO .IRON ·
FAMOUS .MAKER
FLAT OR FITTED
WltH•t Mote .... Piiiow Cosu-$5.97
Wlrll lftotchl .. C:CIMI 11t SJ. 97 • pair
54.97
Also -Queen -Full -Twin -Sheets, on Sale
BLANKETS ~::
•a·.97 THllMAL.--fAMOUS MA.Kil
FULL SIZE $5. 97
BED PILL·OWS
i '5"'"'·" v·''"9· 7 llD UHL DACRON s 2•"· "."-9"·" ""'7· IY FAMOUS MAKJI
........ e 11•111a1• • S,.WtM • SMwtf C1,,.. e l1wewNleW1 • .... • ....,,... ...... " u.... • c...i. • ,...... • s..,.
Jl!.d l9i Bath fashl0Qur~0o9RS
-IM 11591 Main St,. Huntlnglon Buch
Main 11 Bucf>-(5 Points Cenhr)
FREE
CONDITIONING TREATMENT !1
Revitalize your hair with our
famous protein formula. Gives new life
and lustre. Usu ally $2.50,
WITH $15.00 PERM '9'.75
WITH CUT AND SET '.4.45
BUDGET PERM (Normal Hair) •595
W.11111 W1• l.t1•Wttlc
!OH AMPOO-SET ZH 341
CUT' · 160 200
Stylist PficH 1liftltly hlghtr
IOUTH COAST 'LA.J:A -PhOM 146-.7116 "'""uwl~N .. 1-. """' °"" .........
2'7 I.17th IT. COSTA MUA-PheM541-'91t o... • .....,....,..~.,
.. U.1111...., ,..1 ....... ...., ...,,
•
NIACINAMIDE '" M••· ... """' "' 2 ,., s1 DD
VITAMIN C-150 mgs WITH
BIOFLAVONOIDS & RUTIN
250 5 110 ......... •4~99 or 2 ••• •s.oo
XTRA·B VITAMIN C
Clled nit ,_,.,,_, Ut MO, 111 T~ll,
lttf, II.ft • , ......... u.,.
SPICIAL 2 for $2.99
• 2..,•1.10
VITAMIN C lttT•., .... k.tl
IPIC!AL 2 I« 1Ae99 Uf MG, 11t t•, .........
! 21or •2.40
COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS
TUsTIN-)1194 IRVINE BLVD.
,_~,
5#7134 ....,,,_,. ...
•
COSTA MESA-270 Ii. 171h ST. H_,._
S4t.9537 "-c-
. .
..
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~= . ,• : ~· • • •
. '
• •
Community Property
Beyond Their Li ni·its
By ERMA BOMBECK
I have this recurring dream
In whlcb my husband and I
wake up in a world where
everyone has entered 1 com·
mune. ••• and no one wants us.
The two of us wander from
one group to another begging
to join their free society only
to be rejected for one reason
or another.
ft..l one commune, we almost
make It. The leader looks YI
ovf.f closely ' and says, "In a
commune, we all work in
various c'apacities. S o m e
women tend children, others
cook, .others clean house,
others do laundry. In what
capacity would you like to
w~rk?" she asks, turning to
me.
AT
WIT'S.
END
Waiting for tht SWu'ise' on a
five s::-ing ukulele," he says.
"Don't be modest," I in-
terrupt. "He can also watch
200 televised football games in ·
a single weekend without fain-
ting. He can re.seat a com-
mode with Play Doh and he
can make himseU invisible
when it comes time to take out
the ,garbage."
place for you two. You are
compatibly incompaUble."
"Which means?" asks my
. husband.
"Which means ,you art too
married to live in peace and
harmony."
The rest of tho' dream is a
nightmare. We are the la~t
two married squares on the
face of the earth living in a
swinging, free , marriage-less
society.
When we check in at a hotel,
bellhops snicker when they .see
we have luggage. Managers
stiffen when we sign our
names Mr. and Mrs. and say,
"We don't want your kind in
our hotel." !
Our children are taunted by
cruel playmates who chant,
"My Mommy says your Morn·
my a'nd Daddy are living in
wedlock. Yea! Yea!"
•'
Additions
At least lit percent of the
appliances -on "" market
wtre ilot avallable ,10 years
ago, aocordlns to Mary Dale
McGreior, utenplon hou!inc
'l
DAILY PILOT JJ
Marketed • .
speciallsl at tht University ol
Ne-.Ltncoin.
The' addiUoM· loclude oleel
trtc can opener•, alectrto
knlves and temperatur~
trolled foodue pots. ·
"
STARTS MONDAY, J).N. 17TH
•
MANY, MANY LOVEL Y1 ITEMS.....
ALL FROM. OUR REGULAR STOCKI
'
S.rry: Ht Lty .. 1y1
All Sales 1"1nal
Graduate Corsetieres
Specializing in D and DD Cups
250 E. 17th ltrMt
Co1ta Mtsa-Hlllgr.n Square
-642-5430 -
''Do you ~ve any openings
for sex objects?" I ask.
''Hah!" snarls my husband,
"With that line you could get
the Nobel Prize for humor."
Turning to my husband, the
Jeader asks, "And you, sir,
what · are some of your talents
that could be considered con-
tributions to our group? Chop-
ping wood? Building fires?
Harvesting crops?"
"We are a sharing society, ..
aays the leader in a soft voice.
'"Did you hear that,
Harlow?" I say, nudging my
husband. "A ·sharing society.
That's not going to be easy for
a man who sleeps with his car
keys."
"You should talk," he barks,
"We were married 12 years
before you let me drink out of
your Shirley Temple mug."
I wake up suddenly from the
dream to the voice of my bus-[~"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"" band who is saying, -"For For Your Valentine ------, crying out loud,· what's that 1~------
car doing parked in our Color portra"it driveway? They're just sitting New Captain at H~lm
A nautical theme will prevail during the annual installation and awards ban-
quet of the Orange County Association for Retarded Children Saturday, Jan. 22,
in the Golden Pheasant restaurant, Anaheim. Buddy Clyde, radio disc jockey,
will be master of ceremonies. Launching plans are George Cavour, president,
and Mrs. Del Suydam, banquet chairman.
"Please," says the leader of
the commune, holding up her
hand in a. sign of peace, "I
don't think a commune is the
there looking." f h"ld 1 49· "Well who do you think the~ 0 your c I ' • . are?" I shout. ''They're
tourists from the commune Truly professional portraits. here to look at the married
0 1 can play 'Th'e World Is freaks." Select from several poses. _,
Variety of ·r epics Spice Coast Agendas
A variety of topics will spice
the agendas of Orange Coast
gatherings planned this week.
Architecture, pre-natal care,
br,eastf~, income taxes,
. happy m · ge and astrology
will be jecls for discussion.
.. Architects
Arthur Gallion, fellow of the
American Institute Of
Architects will speak on the
wife's role · in architecture
\!I'hursdily, Jan. 20, at the 10:30
a.m. meeting of the Women's
Architectural League ·of
Orange CoUnty.
Mrs. Thomas Moon, newly
electtd president, will conduct
the· first meeting of the year in
the . Saddleback Inn, Santa
Ana .
M ·arch of Dimes
MB .. Charles A. Hess will
open •her Laguna Bea eh home
Th~ay, Jan. 20, !Or a-coffee
)· (ia. Ebel/ Sale
for March of Dimes Mothers
March volunteers. The 10:30
a.m. meeting will feature a
film on good health for
w o m e n • Helping are the
Mmes. Joseph S w e,e n e y ,
Charles A. Hess, George L.
Kemp and William Roley.
Laguna BPW
New· members will be in·
itiated by the Laguna Beach
Business a n d Professional
Women's Club Thursday, Jan.
20, at a· dinner meeting at 7:30
p.m. in Hotel Laguna.
lnltiated will be Georgeanne
Daugherty, Barbara Maier
and Dorothy Musfelt. Three
delegates attended the San
Oreo District BPW winter COD·
ference fn lndlan Wells last
weekend.
•
la leche League
La Leche League of Hun·
tington Beach will' discuss the
advantages of breastfeeding
Thursday, Jan. 20, at an 8
p.m. nleeting in the Fountafu
Valley home of Mrs. MalcOlm
Murray. Mrs. Donald Walker,
Huntington Beach, will host a
Wednesday, Jan. 26, session at
8 p.m.
Accountants
Pearl Scherer and Jeannie
Hankins, CPAs, will conduct
an income ta1 seminar at the
Thursday, Jan. 20, meeting of
the Orange County Chapter of
'the American Society o f
Women Accountants in the
Jolly Rog er Inn, Anaheim.
The paneJ will discuss state
and federal tax forms.
lawyers
Mrs. Robert H. Kuehn of
Lawytrs' Wives of Orange
County will offer a guide to a
happy marriage to members
of the group Thursday, ,Jan .
20, at a luncheon meeting in
the Saddleback Inn, Santa
Ana .
Mrs. Kuehn teaches a mar-
riage clas.s for women only at
1he West Anaheim United
Methodist Church.
weekend by their sons and
daughters. who attend the
school.
Hilltop is a non-profit parent
pa rt i c ipation cooperative
nursery school for children
ages 3 to 5 with classes MoIJ.o
day through Friday from 9
a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Pi Phi Alums
South Coast Alumnae Club
of Pl Bela Phi held Ila
January meeting in flight to
Palm Springs. ·
Niguel Artists After the business session
Laguna Beach artist and conducted at 10,000 feet by
lecturer Joyce Clark will Mrs. Hart Hickman1 p~ident,
Assistance league
Business will be tabled for a
bridge brunch Thursday, Jan.
20 at 10 a.m. by the Assistance
League of Huntington Beach in
the league chapter bouae.
Prizes will be awarded and
refreshments will be served.
Mrs. John Wyatt ls chairman.
Garden Club·
Orange Country Organic
Garden Club has changed its
meeting date from Tuesday,
Jan. 18, to Monday, Jan. 31, at
7:30 p.m. in the Republic
Federal Savings and Loan
building, Santa1Ana.
demonstrate · oil pa In fl n g the plane landed and the AF Mothets techniques for the Niguel Art women had lunch, sports and
Association Thursday, Jan.'20, ahopplng arranged by Mrs. Flight 12, U.S. Air Force
in Crown Valley .SC ho o I , Dudley Miller. MothQrs will gather at 7:30
Laguna Nlguel, atarting at 8 p.m. 'llluraday, Jan. 20, in the
Of.ficers' Wives p.m. Exercising Glendale Federal Savings and
EV!!rylhing You'v~ -Always Miss Clark ls'HCOgnized for Regislratton Is being taken J.-oan building., Col~ Mesa.
'KriO'fln About Astrology But her work in oils and mosaics now for a six-week series of Thet•s
Refifsed to Acknowledge will and CW"rently has a one-classes in pr e. n a t a r con· llil
be revealed to mimbers of the woman show in Hawaii. She ditioning exerciae at the Mrs. David E. Davin will Officers~ Wives Club of Los recently was selected Woman-Orange County y M CA , open her Mission Viejo home
·Alamitos ti>r their Thursday, ~:~~ear in art for Laguna Newport Beach. at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan.
Jan. 20, luncheon meeting at Instructor will be Mary Jo 20, for the aMual Founders
11:30 a.m. in the Officers' Conway, RN, for classes to be Day celebration of Kappa
Club, Naval Air station, Los Open House held Tuesdays and Thursdays, Alpha Theta. . . ..
Alamitos. Fathers were given a guided beginning tomorrow, fro m Honored. guest will be Miu
Bargains Mount
Astrologer Burton Morse tour of the Hilltop Nursery 9:30 1o 10:15 a.m. Doctor's Helen Sackett, past executive
will speak at the 12:30 p.m.,_,.Schoo;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l iiliin;;;;;;;Coiisiita;;;;;;;M;;;;;;;esa;;;;;;;iilast;;;;;;;~peiinruss;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;ioiiniiiiisiiriieq;i;uiiired;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iinaiitiiigiiniialiisiiecr;;;;;;;eiitary;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;J luncheon following a social II
hour.
awaits bargain seekers at the
Laguna Beach Ebell Club's
rµmmage sale in the Laguna
Beach Woman's 'clubhouse
Deusen, linens ; and William
McCready, Patrick Co r y ,'
Wallace Scott, Carl Rankin,
Harro Groettrup~ Jun Chino; Allt riEP-BERNARDO
-KIM!L EOWAROS ·. from 9 a.rt\. to 5 p.m. Friday, Norman Dolby, Gordon Dahl;
.• Jan. 28, and 9 a.in. to 1 p.m. quist ·and Jell Townsend, ap-;
-G.ERBERICH -
ftF FLYERS-U.S. KEDS
Dll'ICtl WMr by DIMkln C.pulo D1nct Sholl
SllMl ,.,. Cllllfl'M Saturday, Jan. 29. parRelel. hm I ·11 be .
. • ' The Mmes. Edward Nell and res en s wi pro-125 I. 17" St.
Cd:. M-• 1414771 vided by Mrs. Stanley
Donald Knapp ·are co· -~E~lcbs~~ta~ed~L:.=::::_:~~~~=========~ -· chairmen of the sale for which
members have collected
everything from the pro-
verbial kitchen sink to rare
antiques.
Mrs. Larry Hunt, finance
chairman, indicated proceeds
• would go toward such Ebell
·, philanthropies as L a g u n a
· Beach High School
•. scholarships; interest-free stu-
dent loans, American Field
service, South Coast Com-
munity Hospital pledge and an
adopted ward at Fairview
State Hospital.
Chairmen of the various'
displays are the M m e s •
Richard Raclch, art boutique;
William Dotts and Lewis
GUlette, books, records and
toys; Richard Carlson and
·· James Agnew, chiliiren's
clothes; Macayley Ropp and
Alfred Kress, furniture ; Jody
Upham, Gordon Forbes and
James Decker, housew~s.
. Others are. the M m e s .
IJouilas Keoaston and William
·Thomas, .~welry; William
STEP
ou:r_
OF
THE
.• FOG
""' "" ••• :1 .... , • .....,.. .. ntfltmo . """' .,.ltftlll ...,.,.... . . . .. ....... .,., ............ ~· fll•t
• • .. Clll't ... ... .... ., '"""""
• Wl!Mfl ........ '1i1'::'1e,-w"" .. ............... ... . •
.
'
The
KNIT WIT --....
I.OWi• MALL
C ... M .. .... 1.· . , ______ _....
·• ............... .
· .8.99 · to~12:99i
Qual!Craft~Shoes
NOW,
I
.
· s,'9 to 7.99 2 ~9
Casual Group rl::J
(
•
Good ·selections in bonded and 'unbonded
heathers, plaids, tweeds, novelties.
Wools, acrylics, many blends
Acetate tricot linings
54"/60''Widths
REG. $2.81' to $2.91· SAVE TO, $1.41 YD.
YA!lDS
w .. Ls & SurrlN<iS .
Betutifllhelections from our $3 .98 ~•rd-tweeds,
·p1~id1, checks, sfripes and· novelties.
' ' Acrylic•., Wools,.W ool .blenCls
54;'/SS"Widths .
SAVE $1 .41 YD.
YARDS
HOUSE OF FllBRICS
_._.. C... ,._ -lri1tol tf Seri 01.,. f.fy. .,._ "--17tfl ti lri1tol
C... ,._-141•11N ...,...__ MMlll
o.,.:~s•"'r.11* ... -.Oro,oftlo'll'' oN Htr~or .._ P.tt C......-t.. p,J.,., •t Ste11f'!11
""-,.... U.UJ4 ----D ..,_..__ 12111 lrMkh11r1t l111rl+.Voft'1l-1 ... 1141 \,
ti ..... • C.... -E4if19•' of hoch llwtl., Hwt"49M .._. _ "7 .. 11
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•
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A Jltnnt'f 1JICMMI
PUH color
felftt•il• In a
tlD aultabla ..... -.:. ,..,... ........ .. _ ..
..... tctto)'Oll
lltur•"'9b1
PenntyanoclttM.: L-----------' ·-12.,...,_ ~nnet11 ",
Co1t1 Mesi Store e Harbor Shoppin9 Center
Hrs.: 9:30. 2 lo S e T""'· thru Sat., Jan. II to 22.
' ,. ·.
Sears
. '
SOUi'BCOASTPLAZA
lfl.Jtnts •••
Classes in
BEGINNING OIL PAINTING
•
CONDUCTED
•
BY , ..
'
• Helen A. P.rothera:; .. ~~ ... T
~
' '
' .
' 1 • .
j
.
j . '
-
I
.
-·. ... .•; .... .<, ••• . •. "' :·~· • -. ••• "' •• ... ·~t ;,• ,•, ~ " • • ;:.· .. ... ;.-• •' · .. . . ... ,., .•. :.· .. , ::: ••• ,•, ... •'• ... '• :·
• Cll-bcamJai.20, 1972117 P.M.-"linereuty;;
•to C111seto£2 io2* hourda<llioa l!ldi • •
• Ioclit!dllll l"'l'50""1i zed illsttuctio11 •
e'Claali.mlled IOfirst 20 petSOllS t0 ttJdmr
• Cl•-lim!ted io20penonJ
•DlaaDIOlllftSUPplieo~arSws
• .lll:lilllllllo Ccef20 due ill odiancc of l!mdass
•.', '• ., ... '" ... .•, :-:.,: •;f ...
; .. : ... . .. ·=· ... .. ,., . : ..................................... -··: • ..
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. ::;
333 So.Bri.nol Sireet
Cocta Meu, California
S40?333
l
.. ::~ -·-
•
-. •• • ' .
DAlLY PllOT • Moodoy, Ja/IUll) 17, 1972
-'DICK TRACY
FICiMENTS
~NCE la>l.YIS SllllAMIH
-IN~ ~ .Mt1!f
~ HE°' CAN REME.WlER
HIS FMIOU& EXPERINENT m\T
~D WlTHIH6 IS
ELECTUITY'i'
• 1 SomMhlnr to b.-t-t---111htwtth SI
• 2 Min's
nleknsmt .)6
I 3· Shipcti.innel
4 S-~h•Ptd 6\
• mo!difli
5 Appl'QKheS lJL•tr. ~· l~1tcd. Fc1l.un ~le, Joe. J7
. · SOFT SELL SAM by Marvin Myers
•
. •
' • 0"
0@§1
(f/!'
J!~i\
•wrm Al.I-il\F MP NEWS NO'WPAY5 WE'Yf
SWITGHEP iO AH AFT~llON PAPfRo• SNt1
~ MO~E CWAA~f' lN 7ijf P. M. ,I h
•
By CliHter Gould
•
Ll 'L ABNER
MR. ~SH!>Y CA>l
SAFE.1.'f RESUME ~~ SllfcTACUl.AR
&ETTJNG
CA~R·•
By To m K. Ryon
i'Hf: l'A61!1 !!OV, i'HE' l'Mll! V'GET'TOO.
MUCH NEWS ON TliE PA6E IT SLOl'S M R
i'HE ED&ES! TOO UTl'l.fNEWS YA WASTE
PAPER! "IHI' News HAS GOfrA FIT1ME
SALLY BANANAS J
PA&e!(VA FOLLOWIN' ME1 OOV?) ... v
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
REALLY, !>Ii
WHILE •• """ OON'r
ERIC. WAITS HAVE TO GolVE
11r!1.THE LOBBY, ME Tl-\15!
CECIL APPLETON J'--~
lii:ETURNS TO
:
j
TME C"SMtEK
UNDER 11-lE
PRETENSE OF
BUYING SOME
CIGARS!
-fiA'P!.0#-7:1' _.. _ If/ ;,;z;·;:-
MISS PEACH
Ir" ' ::0 ,7
I • '
---
PERKINS
By A l Smith GORDO
WIN 'IO/J
,IS 711E WISE ewe.
OF AJ.L us Ave.s!
By Dale Hale
II
By Frank Baginski
PlEASE, ICEEP IT, VOUN6·
I.ADV! YOU HAVE SAVEP
ME MUCH EM6URASS-
MENT &V RETIIRt.llN6
TWE wore MV SON
..-= LEFT WITH YOU!
<>•.n ·.-..
,
·'
ME'S HAP A MENTl.L &iEAX·
POWW FOLLOWING HIS W-'lt
EXPE!l'IEMCE ... ANC) H6 POES
T'MIS TO ME WHENEVl!R t
TAKE HIM OUT IN PU&UC.!
ANO TMOSI ~
CALLI!>
'U!4'1NU S ' ANO TMO'I _.
'ClltltUS
INTOIETllS-'
. '
C/CAJJ!(},U
S J:ZE:1
IJ/&JJIT'/, ~l!l).NCEf
VERV WH01 sos
S/$KEJJ£ CF! KNOW, ~
8 1J7, CHIER-V,
1rJs O/}R
PROCJ-IVIT'/ FOR
KeTJCEA!C/? 1 , .. ,f
/f'RRIBLE ! I
.JUST DoN1T
Fl'oL LIKI'
MYSoLF
!HIS
MOl>Nll\IG.
By Charles M. Schulz
By Harold Le Doux
' TM 6LAD VOi Pl PN'T ~EAO
'fl(E NOTE: YOU WOIJL~j ~~VE
!EEH l'U\PTEP TO F0Ll.l.1V'f MIS
IN!'TRUCTIONS ANO CALL nus
••
f'eRSON HE MENTlONECI!
By Mell
'"''', c__ .. 't ·; •.,.
~· ·-.. _ . '
. By Joh~ Miles
• •
By Charlff Barsotti
By Gus Arriol"
FOR l"li!EG/l!}:,\11"
P/U.Ci!CE OJ= 1/IAT"
WISEST COURSE,
KEEP1JJe CN£'.s Bl'AK. lWTTOJJEPf
THE GIRLS
voo11<e
15/..0WIJJCI
JT, f OW/.. •
--I-rt
• "l'm going to stand and take Issue whb everything he 1ay1
-these battons r m slttln& oa are kllling me."
' DENNIS THE MENACE
'M'f~!mlT IOOKS Ul<E A 6tJOIJ )'£1W •••
~$SS JIJLY.~.
·1
•
•
'
Monday
Evening
JANUAAY 17
l:OOBCIJDOllll!!lllllrn ........... , ...... _
0 (I) Will Will -(!Q)MIC ..... m Tll• n1ntstoMs
l!J I DN:111 11 IHnnll
(li.l llolatlon: Twt Yins (R)
Ell Hodatll0d11 Lodj:1 Qt""""' RID
l:JO 8 !tllt AU.1 Shtw Guests 1r1
M1rty ln11h, Sylrii Miies, !Ill Mornt
It.th voul 110up, H1nny Yountmtn
,tlld Anthony GrNnbtck.
D McMt: <901 .. .JO." (dt11111l •51
-JIQ Webb, Wllllt" Co11rtd, Dl¥ld
Ntlson. Whlll!IJ Bliikt, Jot Flynn,
Dick WhltUn1hltl. A nlitrt mtntllna
editor *cwntS d"ply IMlwtd In
the hwmtn tlemtnb ot th• drarullc
tlld suapenuful storlls ht prints. (l)llrn
®l •"" ... " ... w..td m """ ...... .... m111...., ....
fl!) ""'" ........ mw.....,,.·
ftCrll!IAcrts
lliJ D ""· S.lib"' Ill !Ins
7:00 II CU Nm W1ll1r Cionkllt
CJ) ABC htnlna ,...,. Smith, R11·
''"" 0 m'NIC Mews Jobn Ch1neenor m ~ ConstqlllllCtS
&!J WUl'1 Mr U11tf
lljM1m·lZ m•"" '"' ti I Drlt11 ti Junnlt
fI!l Httuyop Kalhlt~n Hitchcock
IE)" '"""" 9 TIN vwtlnltn mJ Los T111tiloc:os
(D Mtntrlp
. ..,_ ··-fll)l!J-" ... -.. ,.,. I lf Monlreux" Nlfltty mlnutn d
llllflll1hts from last Jun1'1 5th ,,..
tm11tionll Jm fesli¥1/ 1t Mon-
tr9q1, S-:!tztr11nd. 111"-ll;J h
1:30 mrr~ ... n...,.llttl a Mffit: '"WIVtS •1111 Lown"
9:00 8 (I) Kt11'1 Luer Onct •pin , ..
up with Lucy's Inefficiency, Htrrf.
son nf1s her ind <tlul!J 11plact1
lttr willl 1 f1nt1stlc c:om~ler whlci
ctn do m/Ytlllnr llK)' tvtr dil
•1111 do It bttttr.
O CDC!J l"!JAIC .... ., -(Zlr) "It Hs11l1 Wr(" Conclu·
lion (drlrM) '~John Wtynt. ~
DoU(lal, Patrldl Ht1I, Torn Trron.
• P1ule P!Wbs, Htnty Fonda, D.1111
Andmn. l m'ldon de Wildt. m..,..,.,, ....
lllt. ....
m ,,. """ "' "' m•-
t:JO 11 (I) Din !Mr Dorla ext11ed1y
oraanlz1t 1 UbJ showtr fof her alrt
lriend, Ana!• Palhacd, not rt1llzin(
th1t Whit Andt b llPftlln1 b a
litter of pupa from her st. Bernard,
Sophie.
D "Chmler Presents * The 8ob Hope Chri1tmn Show · oam I ijif¢!ALI T~. •• ii
._. Clwbtm11 saiow For the 21st
Chrbtm•s. Bob Hopt 1nt1rllins
Mlerletn servlctm111 1round th•
world. Fllmed hlth111hts of tht tour
will be prts111ttd. Tht tl1·star cast
Includes Ji11 N1bors, Ch1tlfl Prld ..
Les Brvwrt and h!s S.1111 of R•·
nown, trio sundly'1 Child ind
others. 0'""'"'" 0 Bulef Wtrd ,.... m ft T1Us I Tilltf
fD G]J lool leat ''Summer 111 tile
R~ wo1r· by Morris west. 7:30 IJ stand Up and CllNr Bob Cr11111
fitesls. fI) Dr11:Mt . 10:001J (I) SanllJ 111d Qer Kilt Smitlt
CJ Dr, Simon Lodt "Too MIO) 1nd reau1ars Uke I satiric look 1t
t.andlis" people ind mnb that 1111k1 head·
lints. II MoYlt: (Cl (21tr) "All Ert to1 O m Nm
1n EJI'" (wes'!trn) '66 -Rabell
Linsin£ Sllm Pick1ns, Pat Wiynt, 0 Movie: (Zkr llm) "Sn1k1 Pit"
Glori. Talbott. A younister who (dr1m1) '48 -Olivi1 de H1Vill1ncf,
seeks flmt as the lislOI a:un In tht Mark Stewns, Celute Holm.
West loins lorces with a boonty @ Masttrpltcl ThMtrt
hunter whose wilt ind son have ED fl1• OdJIMY "Jules tnd Jim"'
been murdered. (R) Jeanne Moaiu 1nd Olbr W1r·
(I) To Tiii Ult Trvttl ner star lrt F111nclos Truffalll: lllm
(]) I DrN• of kannll tllS1ie, which offers •n unusual
(iJ Ml/llol $ Mowlt: (Zh"' "'Action twist on tM eternal tri1n&11 tlltmt.
'I m lJ CriMia 11111 Crilllt
JR lflt Mlltll Atlantic'" (1dvtntur1) a;) D Tirttlllt
'4.J'-Humpllfty Bo&ut, Raymond 'l) Mantrtp
Mmey, Ruth Cllrclon.
(JI ltt's Mtkt 1 Deal 10:30 ID News Bill Johns m Ho111'1 Htroes EEi AIDr9tntMI m"'"'' a"""'(C)"""..,.~""'
l!il '"*' • .-, ''" "''"' 11:00 no CIJ ®I ID m-
;" Citpwtkhm 8 ltDitrt It. Dnll a.. Guest ..
.;, Do-R M Geo11• Putn•m. "-"' • I @ 11.w! Dia.. m""" o rn m-m Mlpellfl Y11da SllOll m Te Ttll tht Trd m MtM c.... m 11utr1p
1:00 II (I) Cllltlllltl1 "T1rt" Nnl'ty 11·30 I) rJJ Mert Criffi~
O'B1len b 1ttraded lo I 'IY&dous • D (lj m JoflllllJ' c.... J 0.,
youn1 wom1n 111med T1r1 -un· Bistiosi is auest host.
IWlrl lh1! !ht lovely dlltmet has Q (j) (I}&) Didi CMll Tony
1 crimson past. R1nd1l1. Attn• Mollo 1nd Lia Brow11
D GERSHWIN Spectacular ire scheduled ruuts.
*BELL SYSTEM m•°"': .,_,,."'lob>! FAMILY THEATRE Sartr" (comedy) '47....C.ry Grant,
0 QI m I IPIC!JI' I I t ' t Lt•· Myrna Lor. •~ In 'S WO!Mltrl.i, 'S M1MMus. Q) Riiier "8t
'S C1nllwi11 .spedal ' s.lutint the ll.'ilO g MoM: (C) "fM c.atant Ha-
music 1nd lyrics ol GeoJre ind Ira bind" (romtna) '54-Rp. Hrrrbon
Gerlhwin. J1ek Lemmon, Fred As· Kry Kendall. '
lalra, Lsslie Uu1ms, Ethel Mer-
m1n, Larry Kert, Peter Mero, Und1 lZ:l l ~....,ii: "'Tiit Mm" (mystery)
Bennett ind Rebert Gui111urrt1 per-S4 -Rkl\tlnl Carbon,, Vtronlca
form 51 perennillly·populat Gersh· Hurlt.
win melodies. 1:00 IJ ltawle: ~ flOf' ucn.-0 (I) (I) (Di IPICill! •tbi-(dnma) '54-<:dmond O'Brltn, Joh1
Cnisot kl S,.ctadl Thi wond ft · ,tear, Clrolyn .lonss.
mous Wtmbley Ice Show re -wets (}) 0 0 (I) Oj Mm
!ht pcpular !alt of Robinson Cru·
SOI, AndJ Griffith hosts.
(comedy) '61-Jlmes D1m111, Deb-Tuesday orah wine,. m "Dt)'l of Cloly" (1dvlntu1e) '44 DXYfiME MOVIES -Tamara Toum1nov1, Greaort
'"' S:OO m ~la C.utioA• (adwnturt) Z.1111 m (C) "TIM Mu Who LI ....... '~VICl:or Maturi, lee Cirillo. Conctuslon (11fventu11) '66 -Jun
9•30 D (C) "Ott ti Sllfrl" (comedy) •66 Sot1I, Edmund Purdom. · · 1:00 l1l (C) .,.. ,.,_ ("'!em) -.lonaltitn Oily, Kartn Jensen. ,5,_.1tff Clllndltt, r .. PIBrt.
10:00 CD "Ami•, Sm My Child"" (mu· 9 (C) "Dai(liq Wliilat" Condu-
skal) '54-Splk• 1onts. The City aloft (romance) '57-Lt11r111 hcln,
Sllcke11. '"'°"' Peck. 1:00 g ~htllOClnb In Paris" (tdven· 4:00 6 "Kini 11 the hlrlll1 '20s" (ika·
turt '55-Cl•irt Bloom, M1r11rtl mt) '61 -David Hnutn, MicktJ
Ruthufa1d. Rooney, Diani Dors. o (C) "'""' 0on ....... 4:30 CD,,. .. , 10 '" ....
---CtNFDDMF ?D
.... ~::.:.i: r'.'-~Y..".L-i --CtNFDOMF l / ..
..... r1",,.lL• -· _, ..
STADIUM I .
" .-,..,,.,..TJJh ' ··----,, SrAotuM 1
.. -· ,.. 1 -
---1 1 SUD/UM J .. .-..... ._ ---.. STADIUM ! .. --~ ..... -... ~ ---
DUSTllf HOl'l'MAlf 111 ""' ..... °""' .. ~"""""' ):1M1• l'rl 7:• & ''" S.I • S.. 1:•, a: .. • ,,., 71 .. ,,. -"' ,..... .. -ti
"''*"'"' & llWl'mllcb" Mt>ll-1'11 ,,. & t 111 S.I. & s. 1tiJI.
2:4S, ,,.., hlS, t :». lft AMrt9f -··
•
"Ud"f tM 1M Tri,.... (01
"$1 ........ °"'*" 101 All In Qltt
"Tllt l'tllldl c:.Mcl ..... (II ...
"'Vtfl\lllillt '"""' , •• •
For 'Advertising in
'
Out 'N' About
. .-
Phone Norm Stanky
6424321
•
DAILY .. ILOT 51111 Pllttl
'AS YOU WERE' -Michael Hanlow enacts a loose-
marbled patient of psychiatrist Stan Bell in a scene
from "The Girl in The Freudian Slip" at the Hun-
tington Beach Playhouse.
•
'Carmina Buran a' Set .
For Weekend Stating.
The Lciguna Beach Civic
Ballet Company will perform
Carl Orff's "Carmina Burana"
at Orange Coast College,
January 21 and 22 in its first
collaboration with the 100-
voice Irvine Master Chorale.
The program will begin at 8
p.m.
Founded in 1962 by Lila Zali,
former soloist of the Manikin
Ballet, the ballet group is
composed of 30 dancers from
all parts of Orange County,
most of whom dance pro-
fessionally. Dance members
have appeared with such
prestige companies as the
Royal Winnipeg, Frankfurt
Opera Ballet, Ouk to m·s k y
Ballet Classique, Ruth Page
International. San Francisco
and Harkness.
The Irvine Master Chorale,
under the direction of Dr.
Maurice Allard, is now ln its
fourth season o( performing
great choral masterworks in
Orange County. This is their
third concert of the 17·72
season.
Adapted from a 13th century
manuscript found in a
Bavarian monastery, the
original carmina contained
over 200 lusty songs written by
diseochanted students who
turned to a variety of sensual
pursuits which they celebrated
in poetry.
! The orchestration includes
wo pianos, xylophones, and
Kettle drums. Divided into
three large sections, Orff
chose poems concerned wlth
Spring for the first section,
drinking songs for the second,
and love poems for the third. _
Operii~ the concert will be
an ensemble made up of 32
members of the Chorale,
presenting "The Liebeslieder
Waltzes" by Brahms.
George C.Scolt
I ThllastRun
Hunting-ten Comedy
'Fre1U,lian Slip' Enjoyable '
But Not Up to Potential
By TOM TITUS
Of ,-. ooWY .. , .... ,.,,
Watching the Huntington
Beach PlaybouH production of
"The Girl ln the Freudian
Slip" ls aomewhat like eating
Chinese rooq -It's tasty
enough. but never quite filling.
The latest version of this at-
TH• OlaL. IN TH• ~llUOIAM ILi"'' A cGfN¢'1'" b"I' Wlllltll'I F. 8rowt1,
1W Htf'Mi'I IOlldm.n. "'°' ··m.:"'"· '''" '"''""' Florlf, """" bY Don G*Ol-1.l, -..M .nc1 1r1ht ttY Pon ROJ.S •lld tr Trvclo. • r •I• II I• d Fr~"l'I tlld
S•llldr•~hnllMtl Fttt. It •I I:» f' ftlt H...,,1 lori .. ,Nth Pl•Yl'iou~. 21 0 re=.&... ~lltlll!Oll llMCll. R•JtNI•
THI CAST DI". DtW9Y Ml\lfhlm ......... St1" 8111 P•ul• MM19111m •.... M•rll"l'n Albef"lstn Dr. AIK Rici ......... Nl(flolls MoM ~1r~r1 Ltonl•d •.• Cf\lrlolle Ml!< hell 1111:,.Mtlllll'll'" ••..•... L1ur1 lllfcl!, Mr. 1llm1n ....••.... Mlcilael Hfnlow
tractive litUe comedy bas, to
be sure, its titillating and en·
joyable moments, but the
overall production f a 11 s
several degrees short of its in-
herent potential.
What Is lacking in director
Herman Boodman's staging of
William F. Brown 's
lighthearted spoof of
psychiatry is a sense (lf
cohesi(ln, of onstage rapport
among ttie cast members.
While a number of fine in-
di vidual performances rise to
the surface, the tie that binds
them is threadbare.
Additionally there is a
seeming overall reluctance of
the cast -with one notable
e:rceptiOA -to take full ad·
vantage of Brown's well·
written dialogue. Reactions to
situaUons onstage -again,
with this single exception ~
are muted because of a
performer's failure ta apply
the necessary punch to hi s or
her punch lines.
"Freudian Slif" ts the now·
familiar story o a psychiatrist
who once-wrote a play based
on his quite unprofeelonal
yearnings for a voluptuous
female patierJt whose problem
was nymphomania. 'Ille play
falls into the hands of his
fellow analyst's liter1ry agent,
who just happens to be the
aforesaid 11 reformed''
nympho.
Stan Bell fits comfortably
Into the shoes ol t b •
dispassionate head doctor, but
it ls a guise not unf1tnlllar to
him and he never brings
anything really otartllng lo the
part. His character ls fuMlest
when his veneer of aloorness is
punctured, but Bell falls to
define these transitions :vt .....
quately, missing partlcul 1r1,,
at the point ,where he learns
Uie identity of hls erstwhile
agent.
Marilyo Albert sen is
satisfactory as the
psychiatrist's fashlon designer
wife, through she treats her
role a bit too casual at limes.
After a ~rt beginning, she
warms to her part and finishes
quite impressively.
The fellow shrink with his
own Freudian designs on his
friend's spouse is played com-
petently by Nicholas Mose.
However, Mose appears the
most reticent of the cast to
wring the most from his role,
and his projection becomes a
problem even in horseshoe
staging.
The notable exception refer-
red to earlier is Cha rlotte
Mitchell, by far the best of the
cast in only her second stage
role. Miss Mitchell plays the
amorous ex-patient -and
plays her to the hilt, delicious-
ly stnsuous and totally involv-
Globe Nominees Given
/
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
movies "A Clockwork Or-
llnge," "The French Connee-
t!on ," "Mary, Queen of Scots,"
"The Last Picture Show" and
"Summer of '42" have been
nominated by the Hollywood
Foreign Press Association as
best dramatic pictures in its
29th Golden G I o b e com-
m:Utlon.
In this running for best
dramatic actor of 1971 are
Nominated for best musical-
comedy pictures were "The
Boyfriend," "Fiddler on the
Roof," "Kotch'' and 0 A New
Leaf. Gene Wilder, Dean
Jones, Walter Matthau, and
Bud Cort were nominated for
as best actor in musicaJs.com-
edy, with Sandy Duncan, Ruth
Gordon, Ange I a Lansbery,
Twiggy and Elaine May up, in
the category for best actress.
Peter Finch, Malcolm ~
McDowell, George c. Scott, ·,~'r"'"..t Gene Hackman and Jack • I
Nicholson.
• Glenda Jackson, Jane Fon· ~·=-= ::1iJ:'·
dCannoa, Vanessa Redgrave, Dyan ll ·-~qy:"'· ,_.il1""q."ITT'.Jtt=·=o :--n and Jessica Walter ~
were nominated as b e s t m;-~
dramatic actress for t h e ..,a6l~ .
awards, to be presented Feb. l
6. ijUW
lUiiW A.: I
Mf!ramr'
, HELD QVER
Jnl WHlc
"PLAY MISTY
FOR ME" ....
--.... n-.. 'lw.·~I flll*I-llG&AMYWll(IEM(
J..1~t1tr11.a..11
ed wilh her character. She
raises lhe temperature of·~
playhouse several degrees tn
her e:rce.Uently done seduction
scene.
Also quite Impressive Is
young Laura Black as the
peychla,trlst's precocious teen-'
age daughter. M.W Black
brings a studied combination
of wisdom and iMocence to
her role and is a constant
delight.
Michael Hanlow in what
could be the most memorable
role of the show, that of the
neurotic patient, becomes the
most disappointffig because of
his failure to sink his teeth in-
to a juicy characterization.
Either he is not aware of the
sho w-stealing nature of his
part or he has not been direc-
toriall y programmed for it .
On all accounts . movement
on stage is awkward and
uncertain. with the final con-
frontation of the four prin-
cipals reduced to a tight little
grouping which shields nearly
all from view. ,
Don George's set is at-
tractive and imaji!inative quite
functional ror the t h 'r e e .
quarter staging r 0 r m a t '
however the sou nd a n d
lighUng effects by Don RosS
and Liz Trudo never really
make the grade. Additionally,
the narration scenes by Miss
Black need a shllt in the
lighting : a gong sounding at
the beginning and end doesn't
quite make it. ·
With a bit of tightening here
and there, "The Girl in the
Freudian Slip" may yet
achieve its potential. It con-
tinues for four more weekends
at th e playhouse, 2110 Main
St., Huntington Beach.
"' ••. we were sinking f11.ter ... •
': .. th• w•w• w•re 35 l••t
11bov1 us ... •
": .. more •"'1 more sh11rk fin• t;lltting th• w•t•r ... ~
•••THO ft HlYlltDAHL
You muat off RAI
An· astounding
1rue·1lft tdvemure
for 1ht whole famllyl 1
. HELD OVER
1 WEIK ONLY '
South co.,t Plau I ......................
144·2711
"THE BIRD WITH
THE CRYSTAL
PLUMAGE"
WMkdayl '1.IOH" 7115 Only .. JJfr(' 9130 Ot!ly
Sot .. Sun. "LION" 2:00 & 7115 .. .,,... 4130, 9130
Tll• dltHCN"""fltf
PETER Q'TOOLE
"LION IN WINTER"
II ~NNE OF 1000 DAYS" __.
DllVE. HE'iiiir;
Also D·ENTAL
PLATES
::...,. "1 ANDERSON 1 APES"
Wt•knit•t 7:00. Sot .. Sv11, 1:<15
•Mi.9
IN eP
"THE OMEGA
MAN"
ALSO Git
RICHARD HARRIS
"MAN IN THE
WILDERNESS"
v c ............ ~
,"iet. _. S.1. frffl 2 P.M.
'
• Bridgework • FilHngs e X·Ray e Extractions
ALL ON
INSTANT CREDIT TERMS
All Credit Handled By My Offlul No
8-nk or Fina-Co. Te 0..1 With
40.. """'""' .. Ctlllt>
PENTOTHAL
~
DR. OAKES
IN MESA DINTAL' CINTIR
267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA
PHONE 646°1112
No Appointment N-ry
Quick Plait R.,,.lro While Yov Walt
Ot'IN iAT. "TIL. I •.M. .,...... .... _ .......... ____
•
DAILY PILOT
·: ......... _ .... _ .... : .. ·-· ""'* .... .,.. •PREMIER£ £NGAGfM£Nl o Oyon c-. Jtmiftr o·N.m
8u111u M•rtdilfi
Song1 by O.C. lmilh
. . .
MOVIELAB JW!lAMOUNT 'R' -..... ' '
2nd HIT· (ornt ~rtu
.cm:•2
:;1-••' --~. --..... ..... -......... ,. ....
CNlrM:t• ct'I'.
Also· TMI # 1 -llOl!l
Tiit# HUI (I)
~'SHAFT"
I
•
•
•
• ..
I DAILY PIL9T s
Your ltlOIWfl
' What Happened
To Productivity?
By SYLVIA. PORTEii
At 111hat point, Mr. and Mrs.
America, would yoo say that
the contro!J ~f Phase ll were
• success?
An ovmrbelmlng majority
of you, I'll wager, would
answer wlt.h • statistic or two
about prkle and wage in-
creases.
before prices can start to
stabilize," be emphasized.
T h I s year-after-year In-
crease in the efficiency -0t our
labor force is "imperative, Ir
the U.S. is to regain its com· ·
P.elitive pGSition in the world ~rkets and maintain its
share of world trade."
In short, this resurgence ln
what the economists call pro.
ductivity must be at the very
heart of our victory over in-
flation. ' It's hardly a superficial or a
commonplace answer. In fact,
just by menti on i ng pro-
ductivity 'in this context,
,
President NiJ:on, for In-
stance, would say, as he has
said for months, that Phase JI
will be a suece¥ when the an-
nual rate of rt;e In our. price
level has been slowed to the
2'n percent range -and that
this 21h percent rate is his
target for '72. Grayson has zeroed in on one UPI Te1.,,ii.i.
A cross -se ctio n of
econornlst!:, both in public and
private posts, would ~ willing to setUe fol a rate of rise in
the 3 to 3\.2 percent range this
year. They think Nixon has
committed himself out loud to
too much of a deceleration too
l!OOn.
of the gravest economic .pro-HONORABLE DISCHARGE -With de creasing military demands, the helicop-
blems facing the nation today ter ·industry is producing more commercial aircraft, like this giant cargo heli·
-and Grayson, incidentally,· copter introduced by Aircrane. This aircraft can carry an effective payload of
is among tthe few men in more than five tons, or can be fitted out to carry 14 passengers.
Washington even acknowledg· --------------------'---'--_;:'--------lng the problem, much less
seeking solutions to it.
Buainessmen from coast to
cout would insist Oil lncludlng
a statistic on wage increases
-say, a top of 5'hi percent a
year.
To put it in bleakest words:
what has haPp<ned to the
powerful long·term uptrend in
productivity in our nation?
lta High Gear
Lii1coln-Mercury Expecting
And nilllions of housewives
would call Phase n a tucceS!
only. when prlce increases
dwindle ~ nell to zero or
zero.
But a: Jackson Grayson, Jr.,
chairman of the Price Com-
mission which h e I p s ad-
minister Phase JI, wouJdn't
even give you a number. In
answer to precisely this ques-
• tlon during a recent interview
in Washington, the dynamic I 41-year-old former unlv~ty
I dean declared:
0 Phase II will be a success
In my_ mind only when it t brings about a strong and su,s.
tained increase in the pro-
ductivity of our labor force.
For only then can we have
hope that the slowdown in the
rate of rise in price,, and
wages win stick."
This sustained improvement
; In the output per manbour of l American workers is
'
0 absolutely essential if the
!> upward pressuru on labor
{ coats are to ease, and these t upward pressures must lessen • '
Why did the normal annual
rate of rise in productivity
fade to nex_f; to nothing in the
late 19608? What has gone
wrong with us?
A glib, simple answer to the
effect that we've become lazy
or indifferent or too protected
by unions in just that : too glib,
too simple.
Is one explanation that more
than half of all Ameri can
workers ar.e now emplbyed in
the services -and increasing
productivity in the services is
always tough? (How many
haircuts can a barber cut in 30
minutes?). If this Is an ex·
planation, what can be done
about it?
What might we achieve by
setting up productivity coun-
cils at the local plant and in-
dustry levels? These local
councils worked very well in
World War II. Would tll_ey ac-
complish more than high-level
deals with union lea~,ers boxed
in by political considerations?
Is there something now
basically wrong within our
big business, too powerful
big labor? If so, can this be
changed? H~w? How soon?
i
I
U.S. Businesses Set
. For Revamp in 1972
i ' WASHINGTON (AP) -The President Nixon proposed f nation's bw!:i~ expect to and won congressional ap-
' lpend more for modernization proval of a bill to restore the . 1 of their plant and equipment investment tu credit and thus t give a thrust to business spen-
~ this year than in the last three ding for their own plant and
~ years, a government survey equipment in 1972.
has predicted. A C.Ommerce ·Department
The c.ommerce Depart-economist, Asst. Secretary
mcnt Bureau of Economic Harold C. Passer, said the 9
i.. Analysis and the Securities percent projected gain "will
>: and. Exchange CommissJon re· be a substanUal real gain i ported last week that their ' because, as a result of the
; joint survey showed that busi-wage-price' freeze and the
nessmen expect to speld 9 wage-price stabilization pro-~ percent more for new plants gram, prices are expected to
\ and equipment in 1972. rise less rapidly than in recent
If so, that would make it the years."
best year since 1969, when The biggest turnaround in t capital spending rose 11.4 the report came in the
! percent, and the second best manufacturing area. Jn 1971,
year for plant modernization manufacture'rs were
~ since 1965. pessimistic about the economy
t Last year, when the and said they expected capltal
~ economy recovered from a spending to decline. According
recession, capital spending to government figures, the
~ was one of the weakest sec-drop last year in manufac-
~ tors, growing by an estimated turing was an estimated 5.4
~ 2 percent. percent. ~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ ~
Back-to-hack Profit Years
By CARL CARSTENSEN
01 th• 0..llY Pllol S"ff
Lincoln-Mercury de a I er s
established an all-time sales
record during 1971 with 465,062
new car deliveries, and the
Los Angeles sales district
sales soared 23 percent ahead
of the 1970 total.
J. W. Lancaster, L. A.
district sales .manager for the
division said in an interview
that the division's national
sales in 1971 topped 1970's
total of 382,218 by 22 percent,
and surpassed the previous
tended to all V-8 engines in the
Dodge and Chrysler-Plymouth
Divisions' car lines.
The Chrysler designed and
built system was introduced
on car lines with availability
on only larger V-8 engines.
''This new ignition system
can be realistically placed
alongside o t h e r important
engineering developments by
Chrysler, such as t h e
alternator, torque f Ii t e
transmission, full-time power
&tee r ing, torsion ba r
suspension and many others"
according to Bob Kline, ser-
vice director for Chrysler's
U.S. Automotive Sales and
Service Group.
The new system provides
Chrysler·Plymouth and Dodge
car owners with ma n y
worthwhile benefits, he said.
"The electronic system is
virtually maintenance free,
provides m o r e dependable
starting, has longer life,
reduces exhaust emissions and
lessens engine misfire."
calendar year record of .----------------------, 444,082 set in 1968.
"Continuing strength in the
marketplace is evidenced by a
strongL.. sales performance in
]ate .uecember," Lancaster
said. "With more than 10
million sales in hand by the in-
dustry for 1971 -the first
time in history that mark has
been exceeded -we now look
for 1972 to produce another in·
dustry first -back-to-back
years of J.O million plus sales."
Lanca~r said that the
division expects to beat the
record just set th is past Year,
"and that should convince
everybody that the new car
market is very healthy."
Individual car line records
for the year were set for both
Capri and Mark IV.
Sweet Checks
·Bank Saves 8,000 Tr ees
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Wells Fargo ban k says
that the 200 billion checks used annually by its customers
will be printed on paper made almost entirely from a
sugar cane biproduct beginning Feb. 1. ·
A spokesman for the bank added that a fund for en·
vironmental groups reachin g $75,000 annually is expected
to be generated by the bank with the use_ of the checks
since part of the customer's payment for the checks will
be contributed to ecological organizations.
The paper tQ be used for the checks, called bagas.se,
is made largely from a bi-product sugar cane· and other
recycled materials with. only 9 percent· wood pulp by Val-
entine Pulp & Paper Division of Litton Industries, Lock-
port, La.
The bank spokesman said that about 8,000 trees
would be needed to produce the same amount of paper
required !or the Wells Fargo checks.
"All of our cars have done
well aga ins t the competition,
with Montego scoring a gain of
35 percent and the Mark IV
gaining 54 percent since in-'----------------------"'
troducUon, 11 Lancaster said.
"The big reason we are en-
joying success is due to our
enthused dealers and their
merchandising ability, and the
product lineup this year."
Mercury Jed the district last
year with the import Capri
finishing second. The Capri
will soon be offered with a
new 2.6 liter V-6 engine.
"There's no question that
the Capri has made a big hit
on the West Coast," Lancaster
said. "Its only shortcoming
has been availability."
"With the strong start of
1972 mod el year since SeP'"
tember, we are looking for a
national record of 500,000 sales
of 1972, a ri se of 13 percent
from the 1971 model year
record of 440,700," he said.
* * * Tbe C h r y s I e r Electronic
Ignition System has been et.·
GM Recalls
30,000
Automobiles
Vapor Turbine Engine
Developed by ·nuPQnt
DETROlT (AP) -DuPont
scientists have developed a
new vapo r turbine engine
which, they say, is simpler
and more efficient than con-
ventional steam engines.
The engine, presented last
week at the Society of
Automotive Engineers con·
Air Carrier
'Jaxi Service
On Decline
W ASlllNGTON (AP) -The
number of commuter air car·
riers -operators of scheduled
air-taJ.i service-declined la st
year but their uae Increased,
the Civil Aeronautics Board
has said.
In Its annoal 1ummary of
gress here, uses a
flourocarbon fluid, chemically
related to Freon. The fluid is
vaporized in a rotating boiler
and forced over t u r b i n e
blades. After passing over the
blades, the gas passes through
a spinning condenser, where it
turns bac~ intWa liquid.
The liquid flourocarbon then
nows back into the boiler.
A DuPont spokesman said
the new powerplant has major
advantages over conventional
steam engines because it re-
qui res neither a pump to move.
fluid from the condenser back
in the boiler nor a blower to
move air -over the condenser.
The engine used has a boil·
Ing point of about 400 degrees
Fahrenheit, nearly twice that
of water. This allows the con·
denser to operate at much
higher temperatures than in a
steam engine, making corr
densation easier at normal air
temperatures.
DETROIT (UPI) -General scheduled air , service with
Motors Corp. is recalling small airplanes,· the federal
·30,000 standard·size 19 7 1 )>oard dillcloled that the
model Buicks, Pontiacs and number of oper1cors reporting
Otdamobiles for inspection and to it declined from 183 In 1970
,..I>l-rnen~ lf necessary, of to l6l 1111 ,,...., and ' the
improperly welded wheels. ...mber of nights dropped lS
DuPont currently has a
working 20 horsepower
version of the engine and sees
expansion to 200 horsepower
with existing technology. The
spokesman said · DuPont has
no plans for ad v anced
development or production of
the engine, which it has
patented.
. Finance
Briefs
e AlrfN-
WASHINGTON -The Army
has asked nine flnns lo IUbmll
proposals lo build t h e
airframe for its pro)ected new
troop transport and utUlty
helicopter. Two companies
will be. aelected lo build com-
pellng prototypes. General
Electric will build the engine.
The airframe contestants
are Bell division of Textron at
Fort Worth, Boeing's 'lertol
division at Philadelphia,
· Fairchild Industries, Grum--
man Corp., Gyrodyne Co. of
st. James. N.Y., Hughes
Aircraft, Kaman Aerospace,
Bloomlil\ld, CoM., Lockheed
California and U n i t e d
Aircraft's Sikorsky division.
eGtis Tr.-s
DALLAS -McMoran Ex-
ploration C.O. has discovered
gas traces in four Frio And
areas in a well drilled to 10,950
feet 15 miles from Corpus
ChrisU, Tex.
eLlst Due
WASAU, Wis. - Mosinee
Paper Co. has been ordered by
the local Circuit Court to pl'()>
vide a list of its stockholders
to Francois Rondeau, a di.ssi·
dent stockholder, within 10
days. Rondeau bolds 8 percent
of Mossinee's shares and said
he is considering a proxy fight
against management.·
e Hospital Plan
NASHVILLLE -Hospital
Corp. of America has ar-
ranged $27 million in new
financing with eight life in·
surance companie$ to finance
building or 21 hospitals and
other facilities. The total pro-
gram involves $110 million. A
$35 million revolving loan ar-
rangement was negotiated in
November.
el7·1ncher
BATAVIA, N.Y. ,-GTE
Sylvania, Inc., has introduced
what it said is the first 17·inch
color tele•ision made In the
United stales. Suggested retail
prices are $325.95 to $399.95.
e Sub· Killers
CAMDEN, N.J. -RCA
Corp. has won an SI mllllon
Navy order to supply radios
for use in submarine killer
aircraft. TJi,is brings to $40
million the' orders for these
devices RCA has bad since
1967.
e Inn's In
MEMPlUS -Holiday Inn.s,
Inc ., and Braniff Airways
have agreed with the Peruvian
government to build four Holl·
day Inns in Peru 1t Lima,
Cuzco, Arequipa and Iquitos at
an estimated cost of f7 .5
million. -..
eAlr Clirgo
LOS ANGELEs "-Flying
Tige r L!ne1 l11c., ·launched
new scoeauled ~ cargo
service between tt!e' Philip-
pines, Hong Kong ~ Japan
and the United StaJs on two
flights a week ,bast' J~n. 10.
Flying Tiger opera charter
fl ights over the P a c i f i c
between California and points
in Asia as far as ~ngkok via
the Philippines.
e B•IUc "'"' DALLAS -: !png.Temco-
Vought, Inc., has arranged to
retire $18.3 million in bank
debt in quarterly tnstallments
of $9~.ooo each star\ing "next
March with a ~ payment of
$10.065 million dae in March,
1974. The company has reduc·
ed its bank debl from 144
million since July 30.
WALTHAM, Mass. -Tyco
Laboratories, Inc., has bought
e:cch1'ive rigbts to make and
sell the Pre>-Tex~ electronic
safety guard system which
protects operating machinery
by shutting .It dowt tn the face
of various buuda. ' ·~,,·~ NEW YORK .:.. Belco
Pilroleum Co. ilid it has
made a new gas ftnd ln West
Pella Block 64 ofI the <Out of
Louisiana. The ""1pany said
the discovery wel.1 drilled to
12,900 feet, encou;t..-..1 a gas
Oow In the mk>cene aand.s of
at !wt 7.1 million cubic feet a
day. [
GM, Iii announclni the percent lo ju>! over 700,000.
recall, said It ropes lo find ap-But the n u m b e r of
p/oxlmalely l,llO defective , -en cllrtied increased 3
whee!J lmpr0per\y ·welded by peroenl lo 4.35 'million; the
1 wheel manufacturer durl111 carp carried tncreased 23
·a two-day period. pel'COl!t lo 17.1 million pounda,
The company aaid \hat und<r alld the volume of wU
prolonged operation, an "ex-fTansporled lllCM!ased 18 JlOI'
cesslve wheel wobble, shake cenl lo~ '1!1111on pounds.
He oald, however. that the
chemical finn would be in-
terested in licen si ng ar-
rangements for production and e Cot.r vr1i.
also In aal'8 . of th• . GREENLAWN Ii y
p.,Ja.htton Calculation
The HP~. a llny electronic calculator from Hew·
leU·Pacbrd, weights only nine ounces and fits lnlo
a shirt pocket. The botU!r)"powered unit performs
all IJiMonometric a~d logari,lhmlc functions, square
roots and arltbmeltc functions with a single key-
stroU, a,s the manutaclurv.
•
or nolse could Indicate im· 'lbe greatest volume or
pending wheel separation. ti A p1uengu trarflc oo t h e
GM spokes man said the center scheduled all"lalli services
core could separate from the ... In the carlbbean: 885,000
rim that holda the tlr<. pwengtra hi Puorto Rico and
GM said routine field tn-ll03,000 tn the Virgin Islands.
spection uncovered the d•fect ca!ilornlo prnd\Jced 626.000
and that there have been no alr-tu:l passengers, Florida
accident.a or Jnjuriu: repo_rted '88,000, 1 n d Pennsylvania
II I rsilt ol the defect. ' .. ,000, •
. '
nourocarbon flu id. Hazeltine eor,~;\id ih~t ~
Dividends Told
BOSTON (UPI) -A 20 cent
quarterly cash dJvklond has
been announced by directors or Sierra Pacific Power Co.
payable Feb. I lo holders of common •lock.
ponl Co. has tennlnaled I
joint ellor\ with na .. mne lo
market an electronlc color
previewer sy1lem for the prJn.
ting trades. HmlUne 111<1 It
will contlnue th! _...,. tn
which the two companies have
lnveated 15 million. Three of
the color control l)'llema have
boea IOid .. r.r ..
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' Mo Listens ·' • , .
To Landers?
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OF
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THE
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TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
' Does
Tllat's Mo
You Can 'Listen'' to Ann Lenders
Deily in The DAILY PILOT
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Who Writes
The .Editorials?
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It'• 1 fair question, probably one of the most frequently asked about
th• newspaper. And tht answer at the DAILY PILOT i1 no one -no one
person, that ls.
Editorlal)llritina is a team effort at the DAILY PILOT. It 11 tht art
of phra1in~&uaht1 sq that the finished editorial r1pr111nt1 t:h• news-
paper's cppin' s on n1W1 events and problems of the day. Tht itdltorials
do not exp '' the oprnlonc of 1t'ly one man. ·
Tl;)e' ntwsp~per speaks_ With one voice only after many h1vt bttn
ho,rd7 .
. ,I The voices .art heard~ loudly ·and clearly -In the lnforma1 atmos-
rPbtre which surrounds the w11kl~ !'"••tings ~ the .ditorlal boar~. O~t of ~••• mttfl"jl• come the foundet1ons on which DAILY PILOT .a'ltorjals ... built. .
, At tho hood of the editorial board aro Robert N. Wood, publl1hor;
Thomas Keevil, ~itor; and.Albert.W. Bates, editorial page editor.
Other board members •re Thomas Murph int. maruiglnt editor:
Richard Nall, assistant managing editor: t.. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach
city editor; and Alan Dirkin, Huntington S.ach·Founta-r-.,-. V•ll•y city
odh~ .
As they di icuss news of the wnk or of wnks ahead, th• talk ranges
over topics affecting each of the Orange Coast communities the DAILY
Pl LOT serves as well as the state, the nation and the world.
There Is a ttir .. way test of any topic proposed as the subject for •n
odltorlal:
1. Is it a topic which merits .ditorl•I comment?
2. Will the commentary serve the newspaper's re11ders in terms
of thtir particular interests?
3. Does · the newspaper know enough about the topic to make an
intelligent, responsible comment?
Often the third questiOn is the most difficult to •nswer. And som ...
times the answer is ''no.''
Even after considerable research and further discussion 4't a latel"
editorial board muting, a topic can be dropped altogether bec•u•• the
n1wsp1per still does not have sufficient knowledge to make a meaningful
editorial comment. ·
Discussion in an ~itorial board m11tlna can modify th• conclusion,
shift the emphasis or even reverse the position of the bo.lrd member who
was the original proponent of a certain position and posture the newspaper
should assume on a given topic.
But who actually writes the editorials for tht DAILY PILOT?
The editorial board calls On any man or woman on the ~taff -the.
~on• most qualified to write on the s~ciflc topic selected for comment.
A rePortar whose assignments have placed him closest to the facts-
surrounding the editorial topic may write the first draft,
Most often the original draft is written by one of tht senior editors.
And usually even a ''first draft'' r1pr1s1nts several rewritings by whom•
ever produces it.
It will be reviewed as many as three timts -once by Edltorl1I Page
Editor Batts, again by Editor Keevil and, firuilly by Publisher Weed
(wh1r1 ''the buck stops,'' as '*11 saying goes) -before it finally .reaches
the publication stage. Each r1vi1w usually brings Some further editing
and roflnl119.
Any m1mbtr of the news tea~ with knowledge to contribvte on the
1ubjoct i1 lnvltod to put forth his boil effort.
Many voices blend into one. The editorial speaks In the single voice
of tho now1pa,,.r. Who wroto It? Tho DAILY PILOT did.
Pa .. proof 11 ehoc:kod In composing room by Albert llMI 11.tt), editorial
-editor, and Thomas Kuvll, oditor. 11'1 last chance to -roct 1y,...
9r11phfcal errors:
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Thouah they call it ''edit board" for short and it mHts In a shirt.siuve atmosphere of informality, tht (ob of the eclitori1I
board is serious -and taken seriously by (left to right) Robert N. Weed, publisher; Alan Dirkin, Huntington Buch-Fount•in
Valley city editor; Thomas Murphint, managing editor; Richard Nall, assistant managing editor (ht oversHs the Latun.
Bffch, S1ddl1b11ck and San Clement•Capistrano editions}; L. Peter Krieg, Newport Beach c)ty editor; Albert W. B11fet, ...
torlal page editor; and Thom11 Knvll, editor.
And Other Good Questions
What Is an editorial?
An edJtorial is a statement of the
newspaper 's opinion on a topic It feels ls
of interest or concern to its readers.
"The fire destroyed the building and
three adjacent structures." That'a a news
story. "The fire could have been
prevented if the city council had con-
demned the ancient building ... " that's
an editorial.
Wby do you endorse candidates for
public office?
Many people go to the polls without
knowing the candidates well enough to
vote oil them -or don't go to the polls at
all , for the same reason. We feel these
readers are open to reasoned suggestions.
We know the candidates both personally
and from their records because we think
this is part of our job. We share our
special knowledge with our readers when
we carefully exercise our privilege to
suggest that a given candidate is best
quallfied for the job he seeks. We also
are careful to see that our editorial opi·
nloni, expressed on the editorial page, do
not influence our reporting of the cam·
paign -or any other news -in our news
columns.
Do your editorial writers have lull
freedom of their convictions or does
somebody tell tllem wlaal to write?
No staff member ts obliged to write an
opinion he does not ehare. He is respe<:ted
for his dissent. And dlaent is frequen.t,
though not bitter, among the writers and
editors who produce the DAILY PILOT
editorials.
Wby do you publish 11edlt.orials" which
~lsagree with your stated position?
Often the comments of columnists
whose work appears on the editorial page
are t'Qnsidered "editor1als" by readers.
The top of the editorial page containing
t!ie editorials is where the DAILY PILOT
states its position. The rest of the pqe is
turned over to readers' comments (let ..
ters and Gloomy Gus ) and to writers and
cartoonists \\'ith whose views this
newspaper may or may not agree: These
range from the satJrical political com·
ment of Art Hoppe to the hard-noaed ~
vestigation or Washington bureaucracy by
/ Rober\ S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith.
Their camments are not editortals. But
they orten couflter-balanc~ ideas a ..
pressed tn DAILY PILOT edll<rlalJ and,
thus, give our readers a JDOl't balanced
diet of opinions on a given subjecL
Gloomy \Gus •.• Is He On~. of Us?
Without letter-writing readers l'd lose my voice.
G.G.
IHimitl/)
Gloomy Gus literally Is the voice of the people. No staff member
"'lfl'ites" the Gloomy Gus feature. All of Gus's quotes are contributed
by readen -many more than can be printed, in fact. That lil not to
aay that none of the DAILY PILOT'S some 200 em~loyea ·may not
t occui011a!ly contribute a Gus quote. Aft.r all, they're iubl!Crlbm too,
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Final ,.,,i.w of'"''"' and content of an Jmoortant odltorlal likely wlll find PubJl1hor Robert N. Wood and Editorial Page
ldltor Batoo mMIJnii .....i.r plaque"" Batas' wall which kffPI remlndlns thom tho DAILY PILOT odltorlal pago has hlgli
standards to malntofn. Plaque 11 lint place award Jn California Now1pa,,.r Publi1hors A11oclatlon ~,,.tltlon for I~
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Sharks Endanger.
S. Africa Coast
JOHANNESBURG, South
Alrlca (AP) -It'• high sum.
mer tbls aide of the Equator,
and par<nll are digging out
the llMUal admonition: don\
go near the water ••
South Africa's coastline has
aome of the most inviting
beacbea ln the world but five
persons were mauJed by
JUST A BIT
POWER MAD
STERLING, Mass. (AP) -
Joseph DuVarney bas taken
out papers to be a cand}.
date for all 12 offices in the
town's March S election .
Town Clerk Lois H. Sell· e.rt said It was the fll'lt time
zhe could recall anyone do-
ing ...
The positions Include those
on the Board of Selectmen,
School Committee and lJ.
brary trustees.
DuVamey said be wanted
to run for all offices "to as-
:sure there ill opposition
against the incumbents."
Poll Shows
Crime Fear
By Blacks
NEW YORK (AP) -A na·.
tional survey reports that
more blacks than whites list
crime as a major problem 1n
their ·communities.
The survey by lhe Institute
of Lile Insurance ·asked a na-
~naJ cros.s s¢ion of 2,000
adults to n.t lhree tl1inga they
thought were the greatest pro.
blems in their communities.
Dr. Harold Edrlcb, director
of the institute'• 1 o c i a I
research department said 36
pe~t of the non-wbjtes cited
crime apd safety as a pro-
blem., a! opposed to 25 percent-
of the whites.
These results, Edrich l!laid,
significantly modify the cur-
rent stereotype that law and
order is a predominanUy white
issue.
"1be so-called 'Silent Ma-
jority' lhat people want to
single out as having special
fears are not alone," said
Edrich. "These issues are cut-
ting across line.3 right and lefl
The housewife in Dayton's
fears are reflected just as
much by the black woman in
Harlem."
Nationally, 26 percent of the
responses listed crime and
safety; another 26 percent
listed sanitation and pollution;
23 percent drugs a n d
narcotics, and 22 percent tax-
es and cost of living.
Probe Set
On Welfare
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Formation of a task force to
investigate has b e e n an-
nounced by state So c i a I
Welfare Director Robert B.
carleson.
Carleson said one of the in-
llial objectiYes of the program
would be to look into "large.
scale frauds affecting public
welfare funds and private
ourety and banking firms."
The task force will consist of
representatives of private in-
dustry, local government and
banks, along with county
welfare fraud investigators
and state and federal officials.
David E. Todd, 55, a fonner
special agent with the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, was
named task force coordinator.
Prof: Pepper Packs
Peck of Prob"lems
ST. PAUL (AP) -A
University of Minnesota pro-
fessor says the average gram
of black pepper contaim 53,000
tiny colonies of fungi .
"I used to pepper practically
everything, but now I use it
only on my eggs," Clyde
Christens~n. a professor or
plant pathology, said. "My
wife won't eat p e p p e r
anymore."
Christensen has d o n e
FAMILY ClBCllS
"Open the'""' and let
mo lnl"
microscopic analyses of more
than 100 pepper samples over
. the last few years.
In nearly every in.stance, he
said, he found that .. black pep-
per is just loaded with fungi."
He said some of the fungi
are capable of producing toi:-
ins, meaning possibly harmful
poisons, but be said, no toxin
has been found In pepper
because pepper Ingredients
apparenUy neutralize them.
by Bil Keane .
"Not by t'1e hair of my
chiMy-chlT>"Chinl •
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Didn~t· Even Challenge Them--Shula
Skaters Top
U.S. H;ope
At Sapporo
Winter Olympics compeUUOn ts less
than a fUll moon from getting under way
at' Sappof9, Japan and as usual, the
United State! figures to be a more or
less silent guest.
. We do, however, look strong in figure
skating. National women's champion
Janet Lynn has be<n acclaimed best in
the U.S. !or two years running and.put on a' daiiling exhibition at Long Beil.ch over
the weekend ID retain ber tiUe.
Men's U.S. champ Ken Shelley was also
Jmpresslve.
And. while our singles perfonners look
'l.BllJI WMIT•
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WASH ·--------
capabl~ of holding their own at Sapporo,
our t'rue strength seems to tie in pair~
Oo"wfley's dynamic duo of Shelley and
J o Jo Starbu"ck ·WC>n national .honors for
a thlrd straight year and in doing so
served notice that they.'._Il be on or near
the top of t~ fut of gold medal favorites.
They put .on a performance Satunlly
night at Long Beach Arena that
brought back memories of the 1961 Sum-
mer Olympics in Mexico City when a long
jumper named Bob Beamon went ~211.i
on his first jump to obliterate the world
record and more important, to
psychologically destroy his competiton.
Shelley and Starbuck were the fi.rst
pairs on the ice in Saturday's free skating
and when they bad finished a fluid, near·
perfect perfonnance, you knew It wouJd
be almost impossible to top their efforts.
It was later revealed that judges had
given them 5.8s and 5.9s for technical
merit. In lhe category of composition and
&t)'le six judges scored them at 5.9, the
othe; at 5.8. Perfection ls 6.0 -which is
$.J!ldom attained AQd. rarely awarded in
jud~ing.
Yet as magnificent as they were, they
only finished an eyelash abead. of the
New York brother-sister· combo Iii ·Mor,k
and Melissa Millltano wlio got mostly S.7s
with.some S:l!ls and·5.9s.
Those two pairs ·could well finish in the
money at the Olympics if tbeY can match
their Long Beach efforts. ·
SheUey and. Starbuck are each 20 and
have skated -together · since they were
nine. · The MllltanoS are:17 and 15 with Mark
the eldest so they figure to be super -
toi.igh for the '18 Winter Olympics Ip Den-
ver If they decide to slick wltb skating
another four years.
And looking ahead Io 11176, jot down
Joel and Gayle Juhrman as future stars.
Joel, 15, and his 12-year-ald sister
demonstrated at Long Beach that they
already belong on the ice with the na·
tlop's .~st seniors.
* *' * Dallu' lltlue.-. may DOI be Ille
most loved pro lootball. player but at
leall be acla like ,..,, !lope a ,...
fesstoDll would '* 1etrlac · a
toucb4own.
Take Ille Saper ·11owt Wiien ~ ll<Ored
the game'• aecoed toudldon. He raa
lbrougll lbe end -lbi:a lotMd Ille ball
to officlll1. No 1l1mmtn1 Ute ball lDto tbe
eartb Utl leaplag ap u4 ..,,. 111 yta'd
o:peci a novice to do.
Jt aeem1 that more and more pros and
cotleglu.1 bave take• to putttn1 oa
lhl1 type ol .....,.istandlq after 1COrh11
and frankly 11 11 llUI el .pJoce oa lbal
ecbeloo of compeUdon.
Cowboys Numb
After Victory
NEW ORtEANS (AP) -There were a
few wild Whaopt but little emotion and no
popping of champagne corks In the Dallas
C.OwbOys dressing room. There were just
tired smlies.
"1 don't think anybody who ever won
the SUptr Bowl can feel as great as we
do," said A1J:pro dtfensive tackle Bob
Lilly, who hulled hi! helmet 30 yardl In
dilgust alter lait year's l&-13 Jou to
Baltimore in Super Bowl V.
"All this had be<n so frullratlng
because we have the best talent in pro-
f.,.looal f9'!1ball," Llll_i.sald. "You don't
see mucll l!moll/Jn ri~".' now. But just
watt UllUI the party lciiilPL"
RWUtlnc baCk W•ft Garrbon agretd.
"All lbil ia "' 1Btbelievabl0 It'll take a
few h<Nl'I for It 'to liali Jn .. We are' jtlll
numb rtght'now we're to happy." lJnehlcller: ctJud< Bowley1 another ol
DaUU' '!Id guard oa the l)Qomoday
De!tn11, Intercepted a -1nd
ncov•red • fumble .
·•a11ones sbOuld be b1pnes now." hlll
ltld. ••• -... ....., wiD tlao. lllg -bot yoa eel ocared when yoa &ti lhett eo
onen and yoa don~ come •WIJ with ti.
No)' l Itel we'll otart a Y ankeMy]>e
d1fluly. Wt'U be bock nut year."
Then! ...,. warm hop and blndlhakes
llelwetn lhO playen who had been to the
flrlnk of a cflamplonatllp eo many times
before.
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¥ oung Dolphins' Defense
Demolished by Cowboys
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Foor times
Miami called lhe Commander·in-Chlef's
play -and four times Dallas was there
to put It out ol commission.
But Roger Staubach, a Navy ensign in
Vietnam when the Cowboys were earning
a reputation of .losing the big ones.
perfonned Oawlessly as a field general
Sunday in Tu1ane Stadium and got then1
tha:t big one, a 24-3 victory over the
Dolphins in Super Bowl VI.
"People said we were an unemotional
team, that we couJdn't win the big ones, •l'
the 29-year-old quarterback said alter he
passed for a pair of touchdowns and
directed an offense which riddled the
young Miami defense for 352 yards.
11J think the team proved it is a very
emotional team -a great team.''
"Dallas demolished us," coach Don
Shufa muttered in the tomb that was the
Miami dressing room . "We never got un~
tracked . ~1y biggest disappointment is
that we never challenged them, never
took the fight ~m ... they tore us
apart ow defen.se and completely con-
trolled our offense."
Into Texas territory, It was Renfro com-
ing up to bat down the pass.
"I think he was a UtUe leery of comln«
in there after a whlle," Renfro said.
"J'm relieved, more than anything, there
was an awful lot of pressure on us. J've
had something in the pit or my stomac!t
all week."
In au, \Varficld was held to just four
catches for 39 yards and Griese, all but
limited to throwing to his ba cks and tight
ends, managed to complete 12-of·2'
passes-for only 134. yards.
A.nd with Lilly, the murderous right
tackle, and the rest of U\e front four con·
trolling the in·fighting, the highly tout~
Miami ground game was even less ef·
fecuve as Klick and I.any Csonka were
held to 40 yards apiece.
Only twicnlid 1\flami even threaten to
score. The first time with the Dolphlns on
the Dallas 24-yard line, Qrlese fired to
\\rarfield near the goalline. but Adderley
was there too, leaping and tipping the
ball just enough. So Miaml had to settle
..for what turned out to be their only
sco re, Garo Yeprernian 's 31-yard field
goal.
And with time running out and the out~
come a certainty, Griese ftm'lbled away
the Dolphins' last chance on the Cowboys'
20. BOl~LILLY (74), LARRY COLE MADE LIFE TOUGH FOR IAMl'S BOB GRIESE.
Staubach was the mosl obvious hero or
many heroes in tbe National Football
League cha.mpionsttip, played before a
sellout crowd of 81,023 fans who shivered
through the windy, inld-30 degree day.
· Running backs Duane Thomas and
Walt Garrison and pass-catchers Lance
Alworth and Mike Ditka also shared the
spoUigbt -but it was a gang of grizzled
bandits\ -Mel Renfro, Herb Adderley,
Cornell Green, Chuck Howley and the
rest of the Doomsday Defense -that
demolished the Dolphins' dreams.
Fifi! dawn•
RIJ$1'1tt·Ylnh
PIUlll!I V"•d•tt
11:111irn ~•rti1'1t Pa!.leS . .
Nicklaus Can't
Lose-Not Even
On A Bad Day
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) -It's
nice to win a tournament wheR you don't
play that well. lt's nice to know that
other people can make ntistakes, too."
Jack: Nicklaus was talking a~t his
Jess·tban-spectacular· playoff victory over-
young Johnny· Miller Sunday in the
$14-0,000 Crosby National Pro-Am go)!
tournament.
Nicklaus, w.J>o now bas won five of his '
last sl.J: starts and is threatening a
dominance or the game unmatched in
bi.slOly, IUk an JS.foot binlie putt on the, .
llnt play<ift hole for a $28,000 check id
his first start or the y~.
1
'Ibe victory by the Golden Bear left OP"
posing pl3.yers, officials and observer!
shaking their heads and woodering alow(: "~w do you beat him if you c~'t do Jt
when he's playing bad?"
Nicklaus had a brilliant 66 on tbe opei>-
ing round, but didn't break 70' again. On
the fmal round he missed six llmes from
six ,feet or less, includi{lg a three-footer
' I before· a natKmal television aDdlence oo
the I.7th hole.'
.It led to a bogey that sel up the second
pliyoff In as many weeks. · ·
"The last four tournaments I won were
legitimate wins," Nicklaus said. "I w~s
in frmlt four to seven strokes ali the way.
'l1liS was dUferent. It was like everyone
was saying, •well, who wants to win it
now?' "
The 24--year-old Miller, a skimly blond
who once won the califomla amateur
championship on the same Pebble Beach
Goll Links, agreed.
"I just played terrible," said Billy
Casper's prolege. "Everyone was ju s t
laying down and playing had. Jack told
me on the 12th hole that I was s t i I J
leading and I just couldn't believe it."
Nicklaus shot a fmal-round 73, one over
par on the course that will be the site o(
this year's United States Open.' Miller,
the thinl·round leader, bad a 74. They
tied' at Ille ena ol the regulation 72 holes
at 284. ·
'1 tried. That's all I can ilo," said
Miller, who ioored his first tour victory
last year and won some $91,000.~Second
place Was worth tl6,000. ·
Fl111\ KOfft •1'111 ~ Wklfl11111S S""'41Y In tl'll Crcslw ne_tlorlll Pl'HITI.
JKtl Nla;IM, $21.0DO U-14')1·~ J~ MllMr, fl&.ICll 7MMJ.7._.,
L" Trevino, ff,toll ff-7.f.10.7J-i!t FAld tMrtl. U.ljO 12·1>11-71_..
~1:,,~,·,~rr.~·l'° u-m--. ~~ill lt •
-;:;,-JeQll!\. .... ~ 10-~~ ~r:t::'oOt'!=°.,. lt~,•'ltgn-M.e Hunltr, S)AIO ,..._. Ktrmll~~sJft ~·1 !;e; s:!1: 1tmg"'1i:
Roi ·=· It·~ I Clllldl ~. U.170 ...... "' .... " .. '"" ,,,_,,, lAll OrtNrn, .,_ • I"' 0.lt Douall••1 """ TOl'll W1liofl, '"" fl''g.=~~44 ~1.. r.: ~~!j."" ~~ ~g t~; l~Ui
Miami's hope had been that wide
receiver Paul Warfield, with a little bit of
help from President Nixon and a lot from
Bob Griese, would be able to shake loose
and haul in the long bombs for
touchdowns that had brought them the
American Conference crown.
But from the outset, it was obvious that
the Cowboys, who won their last seven
National Conference contests, then shut
down Minnesota and San Francisco t()
once again reach the summit. w e re.
ready for the bomb -and anything else
Miami coullt throw against them.
"They were pretty intent on taking
away the jnslde," Warfield said of the
Dallas secondary, "and they did it. I jusL
Pim"
FumDlts loSI
Frustration
Came Ofte11,
Says Griese
couldn't shake loose." NEW ORLEANS-(Al') ;,.. 'BOo Griese,
Virtually every time Warfield burst off l\1iami's beaten and fr u 1 tr ate d
the line of scrimmage or, out of the quarterback, hid his head WJder a towel.,
backfield, he found CoWboys swarming The Dolphin dressing room was at:rictlY.
around him, soaring high or diVing low ID f<>mbstone territory ·
slap, away potential long galnen •• "'ntey : "It's a bitter di.appolnlment, • · aald
showed me mor.e than I expected," he roach Don Shll!a, now 8 two-time super
said. Bowl loser. ''Give Dallas credit. 'Ibey
The President's play, a simple down-tore us apart on defense and complete11
and-in pass pattern, was exactly what controlled our offense."
Dallas was expecting, and was ready to Shula patted· Griese on the head little
loil every time. consolation for the AD-Pro Qua~rbact
The first time the Cowboys saw it com· after his less-than-sensaUonal perfonn.
Jag, they blitzed Griese, and the Miami ance in Sunday'1 J4.J defea t.
quarterback, unab1e to take the time to Asked when fnutratlon set In Grie!e
look for Warfield, had to. throw a safety sai d ''Many times, my man. 11 He then
valve pass to Jim Klick that gained six ducked into the warmness of the Tulane
yards -and left them with fourth· down Stadium showers and let the water was ft and forced a punt.
The next time ft came, Green came o6t away some of tlie outer hurts. •~ h dJ di d The silence was ~afening, even when of now,~'C with a ea ong 've an COJitrastcd with Dallas' quiet celebration
fmgertip deflection . across the stadium.
Then it was Bob· Lilly and the front 'jThey embarrassed us," said cor-
!our again, storming in on Griese and nerback Tim FoJev ..
forcing him to throw out or the reach of W "· his wide receiver. ide receiver Paul Warfield, proving 1
And, finally' witb a variation on lhe .master of understatement, said, "It
DALLAS' ROGER STAUBACH SCAMPERS TO 24-3 WIN. play -Warfield in mot.ion before heading wasn't one of our betler games." Griese tried to thinlc ahead, remlndinc "
Stauhach Walks.Off in Daze
· .Game's MVP Credits Mau;s for Triumph / .
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Roger
Staubach was seen late Sunday afternoon
w&lking down the middle or a New
Orleans stree~ still beleaguered by ador-
ing fans sis blocks from the · stadium
where he-directed the Dallas Cowboys to
a 24-3 Super Bowl victory over Miami.
The unlikely scene: pricked the Interest
Of a neighborhood woinan working her
yard. ·Someone !Did ·her · who Staubacb
was and she found It hanfto believe.
.. What's the No. 1 quarterba.ck ot the
world champloes doing walking down the
s1r .. t?" she asked. "Why is tbe world
cbampioq quarterback "81kfng?"
Slaubach wu eometb1ng of an un-
common hero, but be won't be walking long. He receives the keys to a 1972 auto
today fdr being named most valuable
player in Super Bowl VI. _
But the uncommon nature of Staubach,
the natiot\'s newett football hero, was on-
ly accented by hi11Btusual departure.
There was no doubt Staubacb was' on
top after·the nearly flawless wformance
against Miami which added up to J2.<>f,19
pa.. completions .<or lit yards and two
touchdowns. He added II yents running.
.. As an Individual, I think I'm a good·
quarterback, ti he llid.
4'But I ju'st happen fo be on a g7reat careef. with Dallas, perhaps one day
roolball team. 1 think there are quite a reaching the point where coach Tom Lan.-
few quarterbacks who couJd look good. dry Jeta bim call the plays.
with this team. Questioned on Landry's Insistence on
"The quarterback is in the middle and caUlDJ all the plays, Staubach said, 11The
gets singled out more than the others, man 1s a genius. He's phenomenal. We
probably too much so," he added, his won 10 straight and the Super Bowl. l'in
modesty becoming. · not going to get into that argument.
Staubach, who spent four years' in the i'l think the complete quarterback does
Navy -part of it in Vietnam -after call the plays, '1 admitted Staubach, "but
winning the Reisman Trophy at the _ 1 must prove l am capable of it."
Naval Academy, was patient and He said he did make suggestions to
gracious , as newsmen surrounded ~m Landry "six or seven" times on the
and peppered him with questions for an fiicleilne whea the coach went along with
hour after .the game. tll7 call.
Someone kept reminding him that his · '"They were all running plays and I
family was waiting oulsiite, but Staubach think we gained five or six yards on most
dressed slowly, a sock here, a question of them," said Stauhach:
there, a shoe here and answered every The most noticeable decision he made
question. on his own was when he called the audl-
Flnally, when he made It out. Into the ble at the line which ....Wted In a lhre&-
.briak dus~ air, there was !"usttime f~ a yard touchdown run by Duane Thomas.
quick huJ lrom his pretty b onde wife and 11W,e had called for me to roll around
anotl\or from his mother before the rans the weak side, upectlni them (the
surrounded him. Dolphins) Io be In a gap defense. But
, Staubach, the veteran, reached vainly they didn't give us that defense so I call-
to shake the hands of two 11.llors in ed tile aMl!bfe. • '"1'a ' ·
·un1\oiin, but the autogr•ph seekers were "It'• called quick pitch to Thomas off
too quick 'and surged in between them. left end," said Staubach, bis humor as
Now he'a looking forward to a Joni tlmdy u hll modesty.
that three-quarters of the Miami team
was 26 years or younger. He hoped lot
another Super Bowl shot. ~
"This means .anothec training camp, "Ill
that sweat, then winning a lot of too.gb
ball games to get right back whett we
were this morning/' he said. 'Then if we
get ~ far &gain, maybe. we'll .do 'better next time."
Running backs Lam Csonk.a and Jirn
Klick ducked the heid of reporter-s in the
er.amped dressing quarters; B u t c h
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid stayed,
along with veter.an linebacker NJCk
Buonicontl, In the "off ·limits" training
room next door until most writers cleared out.
Shula, who lost Super Bowl Ill as coach
of the Baltimore Colts in a I._1 shocker to
Joe Namath and the New York Jets, said he would "keep trying."
"The touchdown drive that opened Utt
second hail wiped us out/' Sbula said
"That put Danas In a comri1and.Jng pos~
tlon. The running game beat us. We were
put)lng good pressure on quarlerbact
Roger Staubach early ln the game m1k·
Ing him . scramble the way we Jtoj,ed lo
do. Then lh~ Cowboy rurmJng game -ed it around."
Prtssed about Grlese's off <lay, Shula
said, "We never got rolling and Bob fl
the man who has been getting us rolling.''
He added quietly, "But l'd be the last
guy to lay it on ~ quarterback."
Safety Jake Scott, recalling a big :U·
yard pass . from Staubach u. Lance
Alworlh that got the Cowboys rolling fD
their first touchdown, &aid, H\Ve were in
a five.man zone. He sot ln the seam and
it was a IJ'eat pass ••• It had to be.11
Super · Upset: DuQne Th~mas 'ralks
!lefwive end Bill Stanffll, at times
thundered under by the Dallas offense,
admitted, 11Tbey drove the bllJ down OU(
throats " Shul~ was greatly dlsappoi;ted ln lilt
passing attack. ''We never got It aoing.
When we did have a chan<e, there wtro
always S<Jlllehody's !lngettlpa gelling ia
the wa.y."
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Duane
'lllomu spoke Sundl)r, Ne klddlq.
..,,. l)allas CowboJt' llor runner, 'lho refllled u. talk to oporli writers lor live
months, gavo his -for the silent treatment alttr Sonday'• Super Bowl
victory OYtr Mll.rnt: "l didn't wanl you fellOWI to interfere
with my C011C111tratlon."
111on>as, brt•D7 cornered by ""''""" and ttlevlsion reporten, was uked JI
he cculd hit the hole quickly.
".Evlckntty," annrtrtd Thoinal. m.
flnl pubUc word ~I wild cbeera
from 1ris te111U1U1tt1 ·in ihe Dallas <freas.
Ing room.
Do you like loolball!
"Yeab. I do. I do. Thal'• why I went
lnlo pro hall. That's why I'm a football
player."
Tbolllll also saJcI la reply to • qut1Uon
by teltvi&i<o commentator Tom Brook-
lhite that his .,.lght has Ouctuated this
IWO!l at least to pounds, "dependinK co whit I n.ed for a parllcular ga111t.
Al he deadpannod lhe answen. the
stotc 'lbomas stood alongside Jim Brown,
the lonWer Cleveland Browns running
ace who Is now hit aa:ent. Brown klddlngly asked Brookshire If
he was nenout, then remarked : "'J"bom.
u ' aii.... tnahled him to show the pub-
lic, that ho ,... a &ood football j)iaytr,
that's •II . ". there was no conlreveny
involved.
"He's the moe:t gifted nmne.r In foot-
ball . He want.. money ••• when he wants
to talk, he will talk."
Then. a.a Thomas left with Brown,
somobody asked the Dallas ruaner JI he was happy.
11Am 1 happy? 1 never said 1 wasn"t,"
he said.
. '
Warfield, well covtltd by Mtl Rentro
and Cornell Creon, said "Gretn made tho
bif saves on _plays that mlahl have aooe
al the way. They ohowed me roort than I
espected."
Shula 1ald the SUper Bowl loss '°'119
Jeta in lllt was "altO(ether ~"
• '
•
. -1 !I ~All Y PILOT Mond1y, J111u1ry 11, 1972
Y\nteaters Run Streak to 10;
f In 31 Years
First Double JC Basketball
.
,/Jucs Trip Dons, ·71-55; ·
,
Face UC Davis Cagers Next TopsSkating
. LONG BEACH -Ken Shelley was In-
Gauchos in 75-67 Loss
. -
' ., . ,
' '
' '
i'
I -.., -.. --" •
1: DAILY PILOT Pf11,_ llr L" PtYN L:. SEA KING SENIOR -Corona del Mar's J?hn Sumner (25) will be in
action Wednesday night when the Sea Kings attempt to run their
_ Irvine League basketball record to 5-0 against Magnolia (3-1) at the
Sentinels' court.
. ports in Brief
!J'.r. f Pro Star Dies at 38;
N . Players, Ref~ Roughed
;'NORRISTOWN, Pa. -An autopsy was ~dered today for Jim s·chrader, a ~teran of II years In the NatlonaJ Foot-
1,au League and an All-Pro center.
J;chrader died early Sunday morn ing at
. age of 38.
-1'he Montgomery County coroner said
~111e planned the autopsy because he was
r1AOt sure how Schrader died and becaUse \01 his relative youth. Coroner John Hoff~
{d)d say death may have resulted from •
~,heart attack.
ponent for his next tiUe defense but be
always mentioned the unbeaten Foreman
when the aubject of future opponents
aro!e durJng the we e k preceding t h e
Daniels fight. ... .... ...
BOSTON -Boston's third line of Derek
Sanderson, Mike Walton and Eddie
Westfall clicked for live goals Sunday
night, including three in a six-goal second
period outburst, helping the Boston
Bruins to a 9-2 National Hockey League
victory over the Detroit Red Wings.
UCI Zi~Past
Privateers, 92· 78
Before Big Crowd
By HOWARD L. HANDY
01 tllt 0..tr Pllel 51111
UC lrvine'11 basketball team may have
been overlooked in the NCAA c<lllege
division ratings so far thls season but if
the current IO.game win streak is ex·
tended any length of time, pollsters will
be forced to take a second look.
Coach Tim Tift'11 determined Anteaters
came out gunning with accuracy to move
quick1y in front Saturday night in
Crawford Hall and went on to post a con-
vincing 92-78 victory over 14th -r.anked
I.SU of New Orleans In Oawford Hall.
The largest home crowd of the season,
l,852. witnessed the action with en-
thusiastic approval.
The Anteaters left little doubt about
their inttntions from the opening tipoff
and quickly moved to a &-2 edge after
2:2' of the actlo11.
The defl passing game and shifting
zone defense that alternated With a man
to-man· zone to c<lnfuse the Privateers
from 'New Orleans, found tlCI moving to
a 22-9 edge with 11:57 remaining in the
hair and it was never closer t h a n 10
points afte r that.
The UCI dressing room was bubbling
with enthusiasm after the c<lntest.
"This is one o( the toughest teams we
have beaten this year," Phil Rhyne opin-
ed. .
credulous and John Misha Petkevich was
talking abput quitting after making what
he called "a couple of crucial mistakes"
to decide the U.S. senior men's figure
akatlng championJhlps.
1•1 jUl5t can't believe it," Shelley, of
Downey, aald over and over Sunday after
he came from behind to defeat
Pelkevich, the 19'11 champion.
The shy 22-year-<1ld Lona: Beach State
student and h1s partner, Jo Jo Starbuck,
also of Downey, won their third straight
national pairs title Saturday night.
Shelley became the first man to win
two U.S. tlUes in a meet since Gene ·
Turner in 1941 and the first American
ever to qualify for two Olympic figure
akating events.
His victory over Petkevich, who led
afte r the compulsory figures, ended a
four-day meet In which l l American
• 11katers qualified for the Winter Olympics
next month in Sapporo, Japan.
Shelley had to shire the spotlight with
Mark and Melissa Militano, a teen-age
brother-sister duo who startled the crowd
at Long Beach Arena with their un·
conventional style and attire while
finishing second in pairs for the third
lilraight year.
Petkevich, a 22-year-<ild pre-medical
student on a year's leave o'f absence from
Harvard, Jost the championship when he
flubbed in Sunday's final free skating
performance at Long Beach Arena.
He fell while attempting a triple
salchow, and landetf badly after a triple
loop.
But both.Petkevich's a~d the ~ilitanos'
seconds were good enough to put them on
the Olympic team.
After securing ill first South Coast
Conference baskelbell vlctory Saturday
nlghl. Orange Coast College laces 1 pair
of still challeng" thl.s week.
Coach Herb Livsey's OCC Pirates
belted visiUng Santa Ana College Satur.
day night, 71-55, to jump back into the
South Coast picture.
The Pirates (1-2) tangle with Cerrilos
at the Falcons' court Wednesday night
and then host Mt. San Antonio Saturday
nigh!.
Meanwhile, Saddleback was just about
eliminated from the Mlsslon circuit race
with a 7$-67 loss to rugged Riverside
Saturday night at Mission Viejo High.
Coach Roy Stevens' Saddleback
Gauchos now have a 1·3 Mission record.
three games behind Riverside's Tigers
(4.0).
Saddleb3.ck next races Palomar Satur·
day night at the Comets' court.
Riverside won the game at the free
throw line as each team hit 26 field goals.
The Tigers canned 23 of 34 charity tosses
while Saddleback converted 15 of 27.
The Tigers led all lhe way, holding a
12-point lead at the half (34·22) and main·
. tainlng a JG-point ad vantage through
most of the second 20 minutes.
Saddleb~ck had four players in double
figures with Don Swaim leading the way
with 14.
Meanwhile at OCC, the P i r a t e s
overcame a three-point halftime deficit
(32-29). to win going away.
Skip Williams' two-pointer and free
throw gave the Pirates a 37--36 lead and
they maintained the advantage the rest
of the way,
Up by one (41-40) with lG minutes to
p!ciy, the Bucs scored 1ine polnla In a
row to turn a close game into a rout. In
the t;purt, John Seymour hlt five point.I
and Glenn Nelson and Tim Conroy bad a
bucket each.
Orange Coast jwnped to a 10-4 lead
early, but the Dons out.scond the Bucs,
26-12 to take a 30-22 advantage witb 2:5S
left in the half.
But jump shots by Conroy, Williams
and Nelson and a charity toss sandwiched
around a Santa Ana twc>pointer cut ~
halftime deficit to three-·and gave the
Bucs momentum in the second half.
Williams finished with 27 points before
fouling out with 4:05 left. Nelsonrhlt 11
and Conroy c<luntered with 12.
Jim Keyes and Ron Jackson led Santa
Ana with 16 each.
•1v.,,l41 17JI S.UllMU 1•71
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H1lllllM: S.ntt AM tt. Ott1191 CM1t tt.
"I agree, it is one of the toughest but I
trunk San Diego state c<luJd beat them," 1r'":"'.C:-~"'l';:'"'--:::".::---"':'--;;~:;:7:""'.-~":t""".::;:~:;!;"'-:'.'l:'::;"'."':::;; first-line reserve Phil Matthews added. 11 • ...
"It was a great win for us," Troy " ·~ · ~ \.: · to
Rolph and Ed Burlingham agreed. ., ' • H"'a~quart·ers for You'r· "I 'll work on my la.Yups next week," ... , ~ U ,,.
Bill Moore promised, embarrassed that 'I · 1 •
he had missed one during the game but ,.\ '· '.~ • • ~~ ~:~ 19 mention the 19 points he ~d ), { ~tito.mot1v ~· ~
"Our goil was not to give them a three-sears ~· l µ :ii ~::a~a:~_b:.~a;~~.ri~:idth~ :.a:reo'.~f~ ~· ~~ .:' ~,~e'.ed.~'s ,:and Se· ,r'·, ... ,'n:·:c._ 1£' ..• !i~~:
to get even one tonight, were they? • .J,-..--.,......-----' ~i, . ~· )~~+J
"I thought we were super ready for this 1: ' 1\te. ... Alla Cdttt ~-~~
one and our defense did an excellent job .. flfJ .,,~;-' •1 ~ 1( !><:"'¥' lo\ ,~ that first 15 minutes. Rhyne, Rolph, Burl-................... ~ ............ -... •. ,.--..... ----~.;,.. ,;."..,..,;,,; .. ~ . .i.J.a;;.::::..t.:
Ingham -all of them dld an outstanding SA VE ·~2
job including our two reserves, Mathews
and Garrick Barr." Heavy Duty Tift admilted thal the players really
wanled lhis one in !he worst way airer Shock Absorbers
losing in New Orleans a year ago. Cuaranreed For A• All agreed that it was a big win and
that it meant more coming against a Lo11,A1 YouOtti11 YoarCar ra~ te~iory · prolonged the U CI Regular 5 ~~
consecutive game winning streak at IO $7.99 .E.oma1.
with the next action in the All-UC tourna-
ment at ruverside Friday and Saturday.
Friday the Anteaters tangle with UC
Davis at 7.
The loss . was the first in the last 11
games for · LS UNO and leaves the
Privateer record at I0-3. UCI Is now 10-4
for the campal~n and in nine of the 10
victories, has hit better than 50 percent
from the floor.
Saturday night it was 57.6 percent to
37.6 for LSUNO. Rhyne, with a 17-point
first half, finished with 25 points to lead
UC! while Ouhy John Hamilton of the
Visitors had a like number to lead his
team.
UC lrv!M lnl LIUNO f7t)
II II " '-Rhyne • 7 I lS Hll'l'llllOOI Moore I J J 1f Hen6trtor1 o. 8a~1r ' 5 2 11 Hv&rt
Rolph 6 ' 1 16 (;Ill 8url1ngh1m 1 $ 0 • Go1'11on
M1lhtw$ ' 0 1 I (OOPf' ltrr l 0 l "2 K~nedy
Tot111 l• 2• 15 n Tot111 Htlfllme: UC trvlnt 44, LSUNO 31.
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• Kqied lro11 plslcllUd ebrame ndl
• Beavyd1ty for IOl&aal smootMr ride
• Red:Ke pitch ud sway for f.uttr, saft.r seeps and ronierhc
Hea11y Duly
SHOCK GUARA!'iTEE
If l-lr1.,·r·Dutr Shock ,\b>orbc-r
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oril[ina\ purd11ier own-thr (tr.
it 11·i!I hr n-plt«d upon rTturu
frtt o( (harjlr, flt thr purcha>r
priao ••ill br ttf11ndrd. If thr df"
fec:tiw-rboclt abll"lrhrr ., .• , i11st1l·
kd br Seti"'. .. .,. •·ill i11•all '"'".
Jhock. ab~r with ,,o ch1r.tt for
la l>or. ·
Erpert lnstallalioa Available
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• ..
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----
. Schrader ph;i:yed college ball at Notre
":I1ame , graduating in 1953. He then played
~~ht years for the Washington Redski ns
,and moved to the Philadelphia Eagles for
1...three years from 1962 to 64, when he
...retired. He was All-Pro several times In
the late 1950s.
l ' ... ...
• LOS ANGELES Inside left
,.!l'ostao, being touted by many soccer ex-
. )).erts as the successor to the famed Pel e,
1lred in a 10-yard goal early in the second
fta lf Sunday to give Cruzeiro or Brazil a
hard·fooght 1-0 victory over Guadalajara
p~ Mex ico in an international mat ch.
Trojans, Bruins Remain
Unbeaten in Pacific-8
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A crowd of 15,327 at 11-femorlat
, Coliseum watched Tostao, P e I e ' s
• §Ubstitute on Brazil's national team since
1 I964, score on a looping pass from
.Roberto Repetlo for the game's only goal
·in. the 48th minute.
" Both clubs had to be hu stled off the
, ftel d al game's end as a large portion of
the crowd poured onto the field. Two
)razilian players were mobbed by spec·
iitors and one of the linemen was kicked
Jlt . least lhree times by an irate fan
be,fore police moved in and restored
oi-der. The official was unhurt. ... ... ...
NEW ORLEANS-Heevywelg ht
<:hamplon Joe Frazier aceepted con-
. 1tulations from the man and told him.
'J·hope to 11ee you soon bi.a fellow." The
an was George Foreman. The meeting
uld be In the ring.
"He's okay. He want.s to fig.ht again In
f couple of months." manaaer Y1 nk
barn said Sunday after Frazier
keel down Terry Daniels five times
• 1topped him lh the fourth round Sa"
y nlghl In his fmt fig ht linc:e be """ nl<d Muhammad All last March 8.
"I'd like to fight again In m•Ybe . •
th or two." sakl Frazier. "I don 't like
Ide the championship. I c1on·1 lll<e to
!li!fll1'<1 II." P'rui« did no! mention 1 opte!llc op-
'
,
Although intracity rivals UCLA and
Sou thern California once again are the
top Pa&ific-8 Conference ba sketball c<ln-
tenders, Stanford University nearly
derailed the Trojans.
For their fourth · straight conference
triumph , the Trojans required a driving
left-handed bank shot from P a u I
Westphal with seven seconds remaining
to beat the Indians ~ Saturday night.
The Bruins, meanwhile, rolled to the ir
third and fourth victories over the
weekend, walloping California 82-43 and
Stanford 118-79. USC mauled Cal 102~9
Friday night.
In nonconfcrence games, Washington
beat Cincinnati 91-81. Orego.Q State
defeated Cincy 88-68, Washington State
dropped ldaho Bf-60 and Oregon Jost to
New Mexico State St-76.
The Wetkcnd's action l<!~ USC and
UCLA l-0. Weshington l-1, Stanford 2-2,
C.11·3, OSU IJ.2, WSU 0.2 and Oregon 0.2.
Stanford shot well from outside and
played paUenUy against the USC zone. A
free throw by Claude Terry, who led the
Indians with 19 points, end a bisket by
Deve Frost lied the llCOrt UQ wllh 44
second11 remaining.
Westphal, a 8-4 &enlor guard, ran the
clock down and with IS seconds left "11w
the mlildle open up," he did. Ten fett
out, he jumped with two Sttn!ord
defender• on hfs back and banked the ball
In with bll lefl hand , lltbou&h be'1 a . ~ ..
righthander.
"1 wasn't nervous," Westphal said. 141
thought we'd win.''
Westphal's 23 points topped both teams.
UCLA took an 18-poinl lead against Cal
then pulled away in the second half, as
Bill Walton scored 20 for .the defending
national champions and held Bear center
Ansley Truitt to two points. Thlitt later
fouled out.
UCLA coach John Wooden said "He's
certainly amazing '' , of the & • 11
sophomore. Th e victory was the Bruins'
26th straight.
Washingto n Improved iU over-all
record to J0-3 with a ylctory over Cin.
cinnatl that saw Steve Hawes score 23
points. The followinc night the Ohioans
were shot down by Oregon's Freddie
Boyd. who scored 22 points, 18 in the se-
cond half.
WSU knocked off Idaho for the &eCOlld
time thia stason as Cougar Mike Dolven
stored 19 poinl!. Rusty scored 2.1 In
Oregon'• Joss to New Mexico State.
After a two-week rest from conference
play, UCLA hosll USC Feb. 5 !or the flrsl
ol their two meetln83 thh eteson. This
weekend, UCLA hosts non conference
foes Santa Clara and Denver. end USC Is
Idle.
Waahington hosl! Oregon and
Washington Slolo enlerlolns Oregon Stale
In Iha only conference games Friday
ni1hl
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•
Bue, GWC Football Teams
To Clash. in Season Finale
/ Cbeckin& Gill the JC ,..ne:
,Golden Wat •nd Orange Coast colleges
will probably mttl ln the final game of the. ~ Jm f'tlular football aeason-lhet is if GWC
geLs the okay by the state 1thlellc commit-
tee to join lhe South Coast circuit.
Golden \\'est ope113 Ua acbedule Saturday,
E'tb. 6 against Saddleback while Orange
Coa.."1 •-'•ts 311W Feb. t for Its opener. That
one ·is agalns~ 1.1.l. San Jacinto in the open·
Jng routftt..or ti.>1! I>Jrate toumcy.
* * * The state meeUng ls Jan. 28 and Rustler
officials feel it1s just a rormallly.
Thus ir it ls okayed, Colden West will take ~1L San Antonkl 's place on the football sched-
1,lles of the present South Coast members.
CRAIG
SHEF'F
(~1t. SAC Yt'ill move lo the ~1etropolitan Con·
ference ).
And OCC was to have incl Mt. San An-
tonio in the final game.
It's just too bad the lwo schools cannot
meet in the sea.son finale every year.
* * * Golden West football coach Ray Shackle-
ford agrets with OCC's Dick Tucker about
the recruiting situation not changing once
Gf\'C is offk!lally admJtted to the South Colsl
circuit.
"I 'don 't "-lni it makes any dUference what
toefuence we're in as far as recruiting
goes," ~YI Shackleford.
But one OCC assistant coach Fuls that lhf'
move should Improve the Ru stlers' recruit-
lnl quite 1 bil.
* * * The baseball sea.son is right around lhe
corner with SaddlebaC:k getting a head start
on the rest of the area teams Feb. 2 against
visiting Mt. Sc:in Jacinto.
Bue b:u;ebatr coach Barty W1U1ce bas
tlned up el&lat teams ror l:ils lln& annual
toamament.
Oilier lint rood gamff (all btglantng al
lO:st) ind.ode Cypress vs Rlvenkte 1t Te·
Winkle Park. College of Ille <:.u,yons •I Gold·
en West and Saddlebaek at santa Ana.
Secead round ch1mjtlon1lalp and eonsola.
lion tilts will be played tbe same day (!:381
\\"ilb the tiemlflnal came• slated Thursday
and the UUe tiff set Friday.
Golden \\'est, off Its fine summer record.
looms as the favorite.
* * * Bill Bloom's El Camino College basketball
• • · team is riding high in the Metropolitan c.on..
rerence after a pair of thrilling .wins last
week. The Warriors dumped the state's No. t
ranked team .Long Beach CC, 74-73, at the
Vikings' court an'd then came back to outlast
visiting Pasadena , 86-84. in double overtime.
Bloom's club has a 3..() tnark and is tied
\Yith rugged Santa Monica for the Metro lead
just a game ahead of defending stale champ
LBCC.
* * * Golden West will host the Soulbern CaJJ.
fornla spike relays thi s spring (J\fan:b 301
at UC Jrvlne and the state swlmmthg
championship. J\1ay 41.
* * * Otis Haley, the 7·1 v. prep high jumper for
Wasco in '68 is back in JC -at C.Ollege of
the Sequoias. He hopes to be eligible for the
spring semester.
Haley attended Porterville College after
high school but quit after doing poorly his
first year. His family now resides in the
Sequoias district and he'll. be eligible .£or
track if he passes JO units (plus physical
education ).
Haley has cleared 7-0 in workouts during
the rail.
Area Gals For Coast Area
PostCIF
Net Wins
Survivors of last Saturday'g
first two rounds of action will
advance to the last three
rounds of the CIF Southern
Section Girls' tennis cham-
pionships this Saturday at 10
..a.m. at UC Irvine.
Included in the contingent
moving into the quarterfinals
at ucr is a doubles team
representing the Corona de!
?.far Sea Kings.
Lilly Vaid~ and Holly Blair
comprise the Sea Kings'
doubles duo which scored an 8-
<f victory over an Arcadia pair
and which will perform aL
UCI.
Corona teammate C i n d y
~farowitz Vt'as eliminated in
singles, 8-2, by an opponenL
from \Vestern, meanwhile.
{.()sing in second round
singles play was Mission Vie·
jo's Cheryl Walker, who dro~
ped an 8-3 decision to \Vestern..,
Dianne Martin and Pat
Tomsic of Mission Viejo were
elimlnated in the second
doubles go-round, 8-5, by a
Monrovia pair.
llNfLIS QU~Ll,YlllS
IA• f"'' Mt11 Hlllhl K•rll lltl IWtslttnl dfl. Cll'lllY MllrowL~ jCdM) 1-2,i._ p.,,, Ntwi.oni• CA/tlam 1 def nn..rt Fr1ncls ™~ rJ t -11 i-11 Ci<ith (fl:ollln•
HlllO clri. £)t911lf l(rust \Ortl1rlol I_,;
Dlftll'LM (Redlanftl def, "'" $ie91tr IAIOUf'l l •71 S.llCIY Kniltctt CCl1•1· montl drl ~ Mo qr t nt1wthorMI · *°'' Jn Kulln !Las At1m!TMI o.i. herrv 81 n t an IElllllDl'll .. ,, J•ncll1 Pritt I 00!111111 dtf P1I Wl•H (Stn Moreno) f.J; SlllY
F1fr_1>1nk1 {VIII• Perk) def~ Ml•Y """ Dt.ldlt'I' IVlctor V1tl1Yl N . D0,:
1
ALll'llllS tAt C..lf, 1E1t1Mlll
l...U. HW. Time s.r,11. Cl oll.
HUl1J ... df1 All ~Oi'm1 g~~~~"in:c.:;~.f~ r..r.r:v '"~11'1,ent Y•"f!!.y(~i~~~i ::r.n. "*l[.tf"'~ Wlfd CNo. lt"'1n t:fi"'"" Oiet!llY WtsfOrDQ•·
M•t11ret F11...wn 1s.n ,.._.rlnoJ OH. OfbtrY '#lltl·LIMY Hltkell (Vk.tar v1IJ.W\ •f; fl:obbln JCK'i"iAnn OPfe!I l~h Ill · ihtf. Mt<llYn f'l"l"'l'()iervt \/!If' !Wtll,fll) loll MindY Mct'.llrtllY· Klm Mc:Clrlflv !AllOl/!'11 ditl., LlllCl1 Plefa·Drvlmt Wit.on IMorwDY••I f.(I ; 01rl1 Crawtll·JUdY 'Tolen (H-ftlofntl ci.f $hlf'ry H1n<Ol'lnlt SllllTlll IGltn dor.I l ·lr LIU'f VtllltJ-Holly 8t1lr !CdMI lki. SfltrTY LlmO!'HIU•Nlll(W"' D1v>es CAn:tCllll I·'·
JC Cage
Standings
Wrestling Result,s
Vikes Honor
Grid · Sta1'S
J
't_AllJUJl,d_,_,,.. ___ e'L_~--l~
~ '
STIIDS STTLl HEAD ON TIGHT SHOTS
The but · advice I can give
for playing shots from close or
ti&hl lies ii to keep your head
absolutely slill throughout your
&wine. focus your complete at-
tention on the back ol tho ball
ind never tet it w1v1r.
Maintaining a steady head
gives your swing al\ anchor.
tt's the but Insurance that your
, clubface will meet the ball
• squarely despite the bad lie. ~ It is amazinc how frequenUy
a 10Her will make exceptionally
1ood conllct on shots' that •P·
pear to be difficul ~ The chief reason for the success of these
shots is because the close lie
forces players to pay strict at-
tention to the ball.
• •
Score In spit• of trips, bunktn, rou1h •nd downhin Ws-with
th• help Arnold Pal!MI' offers "" in his booklet. .. Trouble
Shots." A copy ts ,.,urs b' 20c: alone •ith • st.mpff. seu-
•ddressld envelOpe Miil IO Arnold Paber, In are of this ntws.
p1pw.
Pro Bask~thall,
Hockey Standings
Memi>llls 11 D•111s 0nrv 11<Ms x11eau1e11. TOl'O"llo '10 l • I• " 111 111 .. Detn:ilf " " , .. ,., ,., ...... f7'1D71 '" "' "' Vaft(OUver " " ' v "' ,.
" Wl'll DlvlliM
" ""'-" • ' .. 1U " Ml~U n " • y '" ..
• C9/lf1Qf'nl1 ,, 2l • p ,. "' , .• SI. Louk " ,, ' " "' '" • f"11JIN9!11tn1 " n • n '" 1H
Pltbbur9M 12 '' • n "' ,.,
L•4.n9itltt " " • ,. IOI '" ' s.tll~f'I ttuulls " 801I01t 4, ClllaHJD 2 ~·-Detroir 7, LOI Anwles 4
V•nCW'f.,. 4, C1llforn!1 l
ll•~ Montr11f '· 8uff.1kl 2 " Toronto '· ,...... van I " Pinlb.lf'9h 4, PhU1M1Phl1 1 JQr, SI. Loul1 7, Mlmnat1 2
SllM.l''I Rl'Mlls 8uf11lo 4, MontrNI 2
SI. Louk f, Toronto I
Boston •• Dttrolt f
Chieffo :S. M lr>nfflfa '1
Loi Anetlfl J, Pnli.1kiPf1i1 l (tit)
~ ... Nmel 1c11.-,1t0.
T ... ,'•Galftll
No ·-llCtltdultd. T"""''I ·-I Bolton 11 Sr. Loull
C1rlfornll •t M""'-'• Only nm.. ~1111 .
Monday, Jinuuy 17, l'ln DAIL V ,llOT I
FV Wrestlers Nab
Costa Mesa Crown
Collegiate
Basketba11
After getting lls namt
changed from Orange Coast
Colltge Invitational to Costa
l\1esa lnvitatk>nal, !ht wrestl ·
ing lournamenL held last
Saturday at Costa l\tesa lligh
\\'U L'OJlSidered an ~ll·round
11uccess.
1-'ount;iin Valley's B11:ron!I
dominated the action as 1hey
captured the team lrophy with
106 points.
In facl. the Barons Jed an
Orange Coast area perform-
ance which placed four arf'a
1ea1ns in the fir st ri\ie ploires.
Behind F'ountaJ.111 Vallty in
tht team st;indings \Vert"
Corona del l\far (2nd \\'ith 76 J.
Ne\vport Harbor t4th. 62 1 and
tluntingto~ Be<1ch (5th. 51 1.
No n . art a rep1·esen ta!11t•
Rancho Alamitos Y.'<IS lhirrl
wilh 70 points .
Estancia'~ Chuck Kehll·r
carted off most valuable in·
dividuat honors as he S\\'ept ro
the title in the 106-pouAd clas~.
whieh was capped off with a ~·
3 victory over Antelope
Valley's Steve Yokum .in lhe
finals.
Wayne Jones of host school
hfesa was awarded t h e
quickest pin trophy after he
recorded. a first round pin in
just 10 seconds, also in the 106·
pound category.
ln addition lo Kehler. other
.area champions I n c I u d e d
1',ountain Valley's Joe Moore
(98), Corona's John Blanpied
( 1301, E~lson's Jim Sweeney
t 136), J.'ountain Valley 's Jerry
Abshitr {141 t Ind p.ave Rust
(157) and C.Orona·s R I c h
Gah1nllne 1168) and Gary
C.1~ey (178L
Scores
Free Income Tax
Preparation
save $30-$40 on pn>fes>iOOlf preparttioaof JW 1971
Califomiund fedenl Individual lncane Tax Relllm~
Don't I>elay strn I!!' loday; appoinlmenture freelfJmape1 an
Anaheim S.vinas accooat al 15,000 °'more,°' for only 15 l>y opmllf 111 mmit of
12,SOOOllllGft.
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
A.HD LQllH AS900ATION
AIWDI 187W. UncolaAff.92803/f~, m .tSJZ
BREA 633So.Srallhd.92621/Tel,529..i971
Hlllll1llGTO(l 8£ACll 411 ll*Sl.92648/leb5~91
I I
'
I
f
\
'
..
•
I • (
'•
11 DAILY PILOT Mondly, J1nuary If, 11n
Few Ml•• Big Game
Regatta Wind Not So Super ;;~¥.E~JEEZ~ • I
Afr..id fai. t.wth will drop at tl9 wro111 thnl! A cM111ture ldbtlilTe cal
By ALMON LOCKABEY Lo-Vent, Tim Mulvaney, VYC; KITE (11) -(1 ) Fritz, Curl NHYC; (2) No. 7162, Dove help. FASTE~H• Po•w.J',i:.
DtH1 ,,.., ... ttltt ••1• (2) No. 292&, Fred Toepel, \Y~e. NHYC; (2) Bottom Sigler, BYC : (3) Buckshot , :•~u;-hy•be~i:::'.n!!:~·,~~ort
Very few skippers and VYC; (3) Swallow, Henry Dunker, Tom Willsan BYC; Jim Buckfngham, NHYC. .:eUrli/ and comfh!,!J u11 1'AS•
crews who sailed In Balboa Wagner Jr., NHYC. l3 ) Space Jn Time, Hugo SABOT 8 (5) -(1) Mi.sSy, ~~'!r.Dt"b~\u7tA:,. .::.~d:1d~~
..
Yacht Club's Winter Regatta FLYING JR. (f) _ Frodo, Schmidt, NHYC. Ke1,th Kilpatrick, BCYC. MJ,h. SM yow-dent.Mt reslllarlt.
Saturday and SUnday mlss<d Dougall & Dave Johnson, SABOT A (12) -(1) Racina SABOT C Il l -No. ~.~~~~~~~~~~ the Su~r Bowl. . d BYC. Machine, Mark Ga u d Jo, Flint Smith BYC. Transistor radios a n "'jiiiiiiiii '
portable TV sets brought all II
the actk>n from New Orleans
that was ml.Jsl.ng on the race
courses.
It was beautiful weather for
the regatta -considerably
warmer lhan in New Orleans
-but the skippers would have
gladly turned off their elec-
tronic gear in .exchangei for
some of that 2(}.2$ mile-an--
hour wi~s that plagued the
Super Bowlers. 1
After the fog lifted Friday
night the yachtsmen went to
the starting lines Saturday
m·orning hoping for a Pro-
mised Santa Ana wind con-
dition. It didn't materialize.
Winds were so fluk y Satur-
day that the last of three
scheduled races on iruide
courses was canceled.
And on Sunday the classes
sailing outside c o u r s e s
presented a study in still life.
Only one class, MORF , was
able to finish the race .
Final results:
OCEAN RACING (!OR)
Victorious Down Vnde1•
(9) -(J ). TreJld, Jim Lin-
derman, BYC; (2 J Schock
Treatment, Tom Schock
NHYC; (3) Firebrand1 West ·&
Cuckler, NHYC. Jim Kilroy's yawl rigged aluminum speedster Kialoa II from New~ort Beach
will soon be heading from New Zealand to the East Coast of the United States
for new campaigns in the Atlantic next summer. The famous yacht recently
won line honors in the 650-mile Syndey (Australia) to Hobart (Tasmania ) race
and followed it with a clean sweep o! the Hobart t-0 Auckland race. She hop~s
to be on the East Coast in time to defend he r title in the 1970 Trans-Atlantic
race. Kilroy sails for both Newport 'Harbor Yacht Cl ub and Los Angeles Yacht
Club and usually berths Kialoa n at Ardell Marina in Newport.
PHRF (17) -(I) Niki II,
John ·Kindel, BCYC ; (2) Sun-
da, Graham Gibbons, BYC ;
(31 Celerity, Tim Rudy, BYC.
MORF (51 -(I) Serena ,
Phil Doan, NHYC.
RHODES-33 (6) -(t)
Sailor, 21,
Dominating
Cup Racing
Youth continued to dominate
the Congressional Cup
eliminations when Andy Ma c-
donald, 21, of King Harbor
Yacht Club topped a field of
four aspirants in the Santa
Monica Bay sailoffs. Saturday
and S1:1nday.
Macdonald, a former USC
sailor, solved the light air
situation that existed on Santa
Monica Bay both days to
defeat Phil Murray of Pacific
M1rlners Yacht Club on Satur-
day and 'fellow club member
Vic Wotlord Sunday.
Already selected to
represent the San Diego area
is another ex-collegian, De nnis
Connor of San Diego who
earlier this year won the Star
Class world championship.
Steve Lorence, 20.year-old
student from El Camino
C.Ollege outsailed three older
skippers the previous weekend
to win the Long Beach-Los
Anaeles area eliminiations.
Former All-American col-
legiate sailors A r g y l e
Campbell and Andy Rose are
expfcted to be among the con·
tenders in the Newport-Balboa
eliminations next weekend.
Oiher southland skippers
who have already established
berths in the Congressional
Cup finals are 19-year-old
Doug Rastello of Long Beach,
and America's Cup defender
Bill Ficker of Newport Beach.
Impulse, Oscar Clevidence,
NHYC.
Power Squadr~ns Set
Disneyland Meeting
PC (5) -(!) Me Too, Bill
Carlson, NHYC.
ENDEAVOR (5) -(1)
Pacific Freedom, Roger Meis-
inger, NHYC.
LUDERS-16 (7) -(I) Ariel,
Carl Davis, LYC.
SHIELDS (9) -. (!).Tie
between Jean, Carl Reinhart,
NHYC, and Columbia, Jo~n
Billings. LSC : (3) Tornina,
Rick Evans, VYC.
The Balboa Power
Squadron, one of the oldest
and most active units on the
West Coast of the famed
U nit C'!d St at es, Power
Squadrons, will have an active
part in the $8th annual
meeting of USPS which gets
under way at Disneyland Wed-
nesday.
The conclave will r u n
through next Sunday.
More than a little heat is ex-
pected when Rear Adm.
Austin C. Wagner, chief of the
Coast Guard's Boating Safety
takes tilt rostrum to discuss
the Federal Boat Safety Act of
1971. Adm . Wagner is the
Coast Guard official who first
dropped the bombshell that
operator licensing was on the
horizon as the result of the
act.
The Coast Guard Itself has
contended for years that
operator licensing was not-the
answer to boat accidents and
has fought for educational pro-
grams of th-e USPS and the
Coast Guard Auxiliary.
Adm. Wagner's recent an-
nouncement that the Coast
Guard now is considering a
license program under the
statutory authority of the
Boating Act has stirred up a
veritable tempest in private
and public boating circles all
over the country.
).1ore than 3,000 members ol
USPS are expected to be on
hand for the annual meeting.
Nationwide, the organization
now has a membership of over
90,000 in more than 400
squadr'bns. Squadrons also ex-
ist in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the
Canal Zone, ,Okinawa and
Yokohama.
The Power Squadron exists
for only one purpose -safe
boating education. Its famed
13-weeks Piloting Class in
basic boating is free to anyone
who is interested in boating,
whether or not he is a boat
owner.
Free Boating
Classes Set
In County
LIDO-t4A (151 -(!) Mabie,
Dave Ullman, BYC; (2) Head-
lt-Up-Honey. Gared Smith,
BYC: 13 1 Ghost Lady, Don
Robertson, LBYC.
LIDO-l4B (161 -(1) Avee-
Acapulco
Fi1ial En,try
1'otal 28
With the start of the San
Diego to Acapulco race only
three weeks away, the final
entry list totals 28 yachts
ranging Jn size from 30 to 83
feet.
Last entries in the 1,436-mile
race were the 1'1organ-33 sloop
Santana Power Squadron , a Blitzen from San Diego and
unit of the United States the Cal 2·30 Sangrita rrom
Power Squadrons, is offering Seal Beach Yach t Ch.1b. They
free boating classes at six will be the smallest boats in
locations in Orange County the fleet.
starting in February. Largest entry Is Bob
The 14-weeks course covers Lynch's 83-foot cutter Sirius Il
the bar.ics of safety afloat, from Newport Harbor Yacht
seamanship, aids to naviga-Club. She took over the largest
tion, charts and piloting, boat handle after John
mariners compass govem-:. Scripps' 89-foot ketch Novia
ment regu1ations, rules of the del 1'far, one of the early en·
nautical road . small boat tries, was destroyed at sea by
handling and tl"ailer boating. fire on a return trip from
Locations of classes and Caho San Lucas. Novia had
starting dates are: been in every Acapulco race
Santa Ana , Mc Fad d en since its inception. .
Junior High School, 2201 S. Despite her size, Sirius II
Raitt St., Feb. I. will not be the highest rated
Famed Cutter to l.£ave
For nearly two decades
Southla"Od yachtsmen have
been accustomed to seeing the
221-foot Coast Guard cutt<r
Pontchartrain on c o a s t a I
pat.fol or escorting loRg
distance races.
The famed L-Ong Beach-bas-
ed cutter will leave Southland
waters soon for its new home
in Wilmington, N.C. She has
been in Southern California
Gardea Grove, Sa n ti a go yacht in the neet. With an IOR
in High School, 1230 Tra sk Ave ., rating or 69.6 she will receive
Feb. I; Rancho Alamitos High time from the 7 3-foot
School, 11351 Dale Ave. Feb. Windward Passage which car-
1: Pacifica High School, 6851 ries a top rating of 71.7.
Lampson Ave., Feb. I. With her new bow and rig
since her comm1lsioning
1944,
\Vhile in the Pacific she
acted as navigational aid to
Trans-Pacific co mmercial and
military aircraft, took hourly
weather observations in an ef·
Orange. ,0 range Recrea-changes, Ken De ~Meuse's
tional Center, 153 S. Olive St., Blackfin, another 73-footer,
Feb. 3. carries a rating of 70.0.
fort to aid forecasters ashore Fullerton, Ladero Vista Jr. Lowest rated will be the Cal
and part i c J pa t e d in High School. 1700 E. Wilshire, 2·30 with an JOR rating or 24.2
oceanographic projects 1 n,-.F,.•,.b.,.2,.. ________ fe,.•,.t.------;;;;;;;;;;;
cooperation witt o the r!I
governmental and c i v 11 i a n
agencies.
• • DAYE ROSS PONTIAC
Lease or .Buy All Models ...
LEASE NOW.
117% CONTINENT AL
l!nlov tlM Ptftlt9• 1.-.d _., lfrlvfnt
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t 11n111r1m dt111illtd fOr l'lllill" Ml'tO!ltl
DAYE ROSS
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650-14 or 695-14 17.49 ........
700-14 or 73S-14 18.20 ········ 7S0-14 or 77S-14 ........ 19.S2
800-14 or 82S·14 21.13 ........
SS0-14 or SSS-14 ........ 22.94
900-14 or 88S-14 ........ 23.04
670-lS or 77S·1S 18.07 ........
81S·1S or 82S·1S 19.SS ........
84S-1 S or 8SS· 1 S 22.2S . ...... .
800-lS or 885-lS ........ 22.92
820-lS or 91S-1S 24.26 ........
lxciH ...
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J.34
J.41
J .67
2.t1
SUPER WIDE
FULL 4 PLY
WIDE OVAL TYPE .
TUBELESS
WHITEWALL
OR
SIZE
WHITE LETTERS
PRICE '::. ...
D70·14 gr 695-14 ......... 521.69 J .Jf
E70· 14 or 735-14 .......... 23.65 J .16
• F70.14 or 775-14 ........ 2S.2S ....
•G70.14 or 825-14 ........ 26.72 2.n
•H70·14 or SSS.14 ........ 27.48 J.tJ
G 70•15 or 82S· 15 ........ 2S.86 UI
H70··1S or ass.fs ........ 27.33 ....
• AYAILAILl IN WHm 1m1••• llLTID TIRU
WHEN BOUGHT WITH OUR
BONDED WARRANTY YOU
ARE PROTECTED AGAINST
NAILHOLE, ·ROAD HAZARDS,
WRECK, COLLISION ~ND
EVEN RUNNING FLAT:
TUBELESS WHITEWALLS
SIZE
D78·13
E78·14
or
or
700-13
73S-14
F78-14 or 77S·14
G78·14 or 82S-14
H78-14 or SSS-14
J78-14 or 88S-14
G78x1S or 82S·1S
H78-15 or 8SS· 1S
PRICE
...... 20.86
...... 22.6S
...... 24.10
...... 2S.2S
• ...... 26.93
. ..... 28.21
...... 2S.33
...... 26.89
J78-1S or 88S-1S ...... 27.38
L78-1S or 91S-1S ............ 30.14
VREDESTEIN
BLACKWALL
TUBELESS
560x15. 4 PLY
h•he . ..
1.t7
2.24
2.Jt
J.16
2.71
J.tl
Z.6J
J.11
J.01
J.16
91
+ 1.61 11.L TAI
TRUCK· TIRES
1st QUALITY
NYLON CORD
INQUIRE ABOUT
ROAD HAZARD
GUARANTEE ON
TRUCK TIRES
SEE US FOR CAMPER TIRES
SIZE PLY
IATINll
700-14 JUllLISS .. .. .. .. 8
670-lS ................ 6
700-lS .................. 6
700-lS ................ 8
700-16 .................. 6
750-16 .................. 8
7-17.S
'917.5
TUllLDS , ,, ,, , • , 6
TUllLISS •••••••• 8
10 82S-20
900-20
1000.20
..............
. ............ .
............
10
12
STOltl HOURS:
PRICE IXCISI
TAX
26.44 ....
21.66 J.44
23.27 2.14
26.81 J.11
25.S9 J .IO
30.12 J.6f
27.20 J.16
30.78 . ...
Sl'.56 . '·" 62.12 7.10
80.86 t .11
111 1 11·•, !i irge
•
MON., TUES., WED., THURS., Fltl. 1:00 A.M.-6 P.M.
SATURDAY 1:00 AM. TO 12:00 NOON
CLOSID SUNDAY
DU'11 AMe WllllTOM, IMC. '
"DELTA. TIRE COMPANY
141 E. 17th St. 645-2010 COSTA MESA
• •
j
Ul'I T.i11t11t11
A lw ays R oom for One More
lilealtime is a busy time at the home of Robert and
Judy Alderman of Tampa, Fla. Here 18 of their 19
children sit down to a meal. The Aldermans have
twd children of their own and 17 foster children.
:Gr oup Fights World Woe s
Solutio1is Possible., Beach Organizdtio1i Says
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 Ille P1ll1 f'llel Slaff
Unemployment. Poverty.
Ra cism. Nut rition .
Transportation. Health Care.
of Youlh. Education. Crime.
Pollution.
Housing.
Alienation
Solve thCse by the end of the century or
throw in the towel {or humanity.
The problems of our society appear
overwhelming, except to a national
association of aerospace workers head~
9-uartered in Huntington Beach.
They say their solution is no more
preposterous than was talking about a
moon landing 2Q years ago.
"In 1948 when people suggested the
Idea of landing a man on the moon people
just laughed Like Hell," says Ray Nelson,
project manager for EDICT (Ecology
Development and Implementation CofJ!·
mitment Teain. )"
"But you know, in the mid·SO's they
were already talking about scheduling."
The 3,000 members of EDICT, many of
Dr. Gwynne's Abor ti on
Case De'4yed 3 Months
Dr. John Shriver Gwynne learned today It had been arranged in Orange County
In the Los Angeles County jail cell where Superior Court that Gwynne would be fin·
he is mulling murder charges filed ed $5,000 and placed on probation for
against him that his Orange County three yaars. He was also scheduled tG
Superior Court sentencing on abortion face .a hearing ~fore the .state Board of
charges had been deferred until April 13. Medi~al Examiners until_ the Dwyer
D G ne boo ked on charges of kill· • shooting postponed that action . r. wyn , h 1 . . jng his paramour shortly after he pleaded . Gwynne . ad also p ead_ed guilt~ to td~n-
guilty to long standing multiple abortion ~1eal abortion -eharges filed against him
eharges filed by Santa Ana police, was 1n Los Angeles County. He was ~heduled
granted the delay in his absence by Judge to appear in Los Angeles Superior Court ,
William Murray. · Jan. 19for11entencing on that conviction.
-Deputy District Attorney Ed Freeman
t-xplained that Gwynne. 29, is awaiting
Los Angeles court action on the murder
count. He said Los Angeles authorities
are reluctant to allow Gwynne to travel t:o Orange County .at this time.
Judge Murray also deferred lo April 13
court action against Mrs. Rubye Unruh
Gwynne, 57, the mother of !he _colorful
physician. A motio~ for d1~m1ssa.l . of
abortion cha rges against her 1s a·,ya1tJng
a court ruling .
Allegations that Gwynne shot Debbie
Dwyer, 20, an attractive Whittier girl,
who worked for Gwynne at what Santa
Ana police called the physician's 17th
Street abortion mill, are being given
p.riority by prosecutors in both counties.
It is alleged that Gwynne shot Miss
Dwyer last Dec. 10 in the apartment
shared by the couple near the UCLA
campus.
'Spirit Week'
At Marirm Higli
At many schools the week before finals
Is "Dead Week," but at Marina High
School in Huntington Beach it has been
dubbed "Spirit Week."
Peace Corps,
VISTA Schedule
Interview Dates
Recruiters for the Peace Corps and
VISTA wlll be conducting three days of
interviews in Anaheim Tuesday through
Thursday, seeking single persons and
couples for 700 foreign and dornesUc aid
programs.
Applicants for 284 different classifica·
tions of volunteer assignments must be 18
or over.
Interview hours are 9 a.rn . to 9 p.m., at
the Hyatt House, 1700 S. Harbor Blvd.,
and several persons involved in Peace
Corps and Volunteers in Service to
America {VISTA) projects will be
present to discuss their roles.
Spokesman Don Stewart says needs
among foreign nations served by the
agencies range from business ad-
ministrators to heavy equipment
operators, teachers, medical personnel
and, in Lesotho, 1South Africa, a
bookbinder to inslruct at a trade school.
them left jobless by recent aerospace in·
du stry layoffs, believe the solution of
these problems is not only possible but
imperative.
"The. outcry against them w 111
ultimately come," added Ted Neima , a
man who worked 9n the Apollo project.
.,But will it come at a time , when it's not
too late?"
Neima, Nelson and Greg Lobdell,
another EDICT member predict that the
same creative management technlques
which spelled success for the Apollo proj-
ect can be used to solve people pro-
blems.
"Management 20 years ago simply
could not have handled the moon proj-
ect," explained Nelson. "We bad to
develop a systems approach which
covered many disciplines."
Lobdell added that the organizatioti has
looked toward the space program to learn
how to integrate the complex tasks
toward a soluUon of the ecological aod
social problems.
"EDICT wants to show that the same
problem-solving approach ls required to
solve domestic problems which actually
contain many more complexities than
space problems," he said.
Against its wishes, EDICT so far has
remained a group of scientists and
aerospace workers Jinked together by
ethereal philosophy .. What is missing is
simply money.
The members of EDICT meanwhile
have placed their faith in a House bill
both called the "Conversion Research
and Education Act of 1971."
Both are intended to convert ·aerospace
employes with experience in research
and development to industrial employes
who would develop products and tech-
niques to solve ecological and social pr~
blems.
EDICT would fit into this scheme as 11
non-profit corporation which would seek
out problems, educate the public about
them and assist in the development of
produ cts and techniques.
Some of the hardware already being
talked about by ecology-oriented space
scientists is a light-weight rugged gas
mask for smog conditions : a non-
breakable, non-scratchable glass
substitute for high crime areas, and
monitoring equipment which c o u I d
measure a person's condition while being
taken to a hospital with an ambulance.
EDlCT is also developing a pilot proj-
ect to study the Southern California
ocean area through a team effort by a
profit-making company, a research in·
stitute and a university.
Exactly what will become. of EDICT's
efforts is still somewhat of a qucs-
liorunark, and perhaps is destined to re-
main so, until a, decisio n on the Con-
version Research and Education AcL is
in. Lunchtime events Monday through Fri-
day include a mackeral smack, a fuMy
bone contest, and a deck-a-pres, ac-
cording to Joni Blank, commissioner of
public relations.
,,The week will culminate with a
basketball rally in the gym on Friday, at
which awards for the week's activities
will be presented.
The following week semester fUUlls
begin.
Newp ort Burglary Suspect
On Flight Back to County
Angela Loses
Bid for Bail
SAN FRANCISCO (IJPI) -A
judge agala ha1 denied bail foe Angela Davis.
Her 1ttormy1 sar.he 11 n.innln& oul of money I U., char,.. stemmtna from e 197V Mlrtn
Ccunty •'1ootlnl In which lour per-
sons died. U.S. Dlstnct Ccurt Judge Wil-liam T."'Swelgert, In denyln1 bell
Friday for the 27-yur-old black
militant, said the "almost Inter·
mlnable" delaya In her caae come.
close to a dettlal of doe procw, even tl1ouih she m1y bava nlllld
them henell.
A Newport Beach burglary suspect who ned a 3G-count complaint carrying
$187,SOO bail. only to be arrested .in Buf.
falo, N. Y., on a shopllftlng charge, wa!
on a free Olght back to Orange COunty
todiy to face prosecution.
John B. Borrell, 14, described by police
81 a creaarlous bartender, has waived
utradlUoo lo Ca!Uoml1.
Newport Beach Det..uve Sgt. Art
CIJ!)pbell and Detective Ed Rudd flew lo
Buffalo Friday to pick up Barrett. Blml4 foi1!ler1Y of 127 4llt St.,
Newport Beach, has been llOllght since
last June I whtn pollce recovered about
tt00,000 worth of stolen property alleged·
ly lloked to him . Tbe items we.rt stolen in
Newport Beach llld San Bernardino
County.
Police bellevo llarrttt eluded a muslve monhunl by neetnc Catllomla drtued ..
a woman.
A Sall Bernardino mountain c1bin
bur&lary orll)Jlally led lo an lnvestigitlon
•
into his activities.
Barrett, also known as Harry W.
Beeker, Js formally charged with 16
counts of burglary, 13 counts ol rece.ivlng
stolen property and one count of grand
theft.
He wilt be taken before Judge Calvin C.
Schmidt In Harbor Judlclal District Court
on Tuesday for arraignment on the 30-
coont complaint signed by the jurist six
months ago.
Barrett was arrested by 1 store securi·
ty guard In Buffalo 12 days ago while
allegedly shopliltlng. The Erie County
District Attorney dropped the charge
when Barrett chose not to fight t.'·
tradition to California .
Police said Barrett owned a cabin In
the Green Valley Lake area of San
Bernardino County and maintained an
apart.rout In Newport B e 1 ch .
lnvel\l11tors said he ha1 worlced In
restaurants and bars in Newport Beach
and Pau'4l'lflllm the put II yrars.
•
FAM E-LESS
FAC ES
• HElEN B. SHAffEl
ML.PH C.DUNS
Think You Don't
Know Them?
)
You probaby don't recognize a single name or
face in this group and yet, ii you're one of the
DAILY PILOT'S very well informed editorial page
readers, it is this talented team of writers which
helps you keep informed. They write the Editori-
al Research Reports. Though their' own names
don't appear on the articles which are published
under the Ed itoriel Research Reports heading,
these are the real pro• -diggers who go a~er
all the backround facts which put today's top
issues into perspective -without thought of
seeking the lame that goes with the name when
you're a national columnist.
They're Your
INFORMERS
...
Yes, they could be your "informers." It's features
like Editorial Research Reports wh ich make the
DAILY PILOT much more than just the most
import•nt hometown newspaper availeblt to
residents along the Orange Coast. The DAILY
PILOT is th e total package. It makes whatever
happ ens in the world "local news" and delivers
it doily right to your homo. Let this team of dedi-
cated "informer1" help you kffp informed. Rud
Ed itorial Re search Reports on the editorial page
-ood all the other informative special featu res
in other parts of the
DAILY PILOT
.. •
M'onl1a)', Jan11117 tr, 1972 DAILY PILOT !8
DAILY PILOT "
CLASSIFIED --~ I~! I _ ..... _, .. s. I~
Gener•I General ..
12 YEAR OLD VA REPO
NEW HOME ' l "'"' UPP'r ··~ Sounrl l'Olflrail1clory, not gain. F. t1'1l<>nt North Costa
ttally, Thf' O\\'IX'r has ('Qtll· r..11'; oc1ulon. f.' u J J pr!te
plett-ly rebuffl !his 4 l>f'd. $23, . Any()n(' can buy
roon1 Col.lege Park hon1f'. wuh J:><'~Til<'nts I e ii 1han
It's OM'-Ol'.,,·kind 11·!1h ('rl· $aKI, j)('l' tllOnlh incl 1&Xt''
larged bedrooms, add<'d 3rd " ins. llurry • l/11~an1 •
bath, JTmode:led kilchrn, all \Von't last long,
ne-w plumblng, carpt'!~ .< Call f>Kl-Il~1l (()p>n E\'f'i::l
draP<"!. <h"t'rsized lot \l•ir h 9 braut. tdsicpd pa1<> \l'l!h HOITAG!
room for boat or traill'r. MAL ll!Atl
<BU us for furthrr dE'ta1!s-. I I • Catt 546 SSi'-0 ~Open Eves_. "Family Center"
-BELIEVE ME
$16,500 PRICE!
Sharp hon1ey ro!tnge \\1th 2
King.slle tx•r!roon1s \1·11h
lots or closet!. Luxur1<lus
pulln1an balti, hUS:l' kilcht'n.
'You can make it your
<ifi•run honll", Submit 10'1i
down, u11·nt•r "'ill rarl'y
ba lanc<' to
Walker & Lee
Rr.nltor:s
2790 Harbor Btvrt. at Ado.Ins
54;..g.191
-$23,950. -POOL-
NO DOWN TERMS
Leisul't" living in 1!11s 3
bedroom, 2 stpar111f' bath
re~dence. Bu 11! ins,
dishY.'8.Sher. CoW'l"t'd &
enclosed patio. Enjoy the
pool, 5-10-1720.
TARBELL
295.S linrbor, Costa ti.1esa
"FORECLOSURE
TH REAT"
Forces sale of ltlis 4 bedroom
home. Has fonnal dining
room, fll"t'place and family
room. Priced lat lx'low the
currl"nl n1arkeL \\1011'1 las1!
842·25.'ti
$44,500
SUBr..1IT all offt-Tll & terms.
Immf'<:liale po!!.<w.ssion. 2
bedrooms, 2~' baths. View.
Bit-in kitchen. D o u b I e
garage + carport. No. 128.
Call 675-Tl25.
ff I I . /I , R ' I
'
Home & Investment
RHlly
3125 E. Coast Hwy., Cdhf
VA .. NO DOWN
Shari>t'st 4 bedroom on west
.side. Exciting large corner
lot • Room for pool • Trailer
• Bright cheery kitchen, It
won't last at 1hese term!
and low price $25,450, Call
64&-717L
10 THE Rf,-1\L
'"'\.. ESTATERS
1'111 ... \x>auuful lhrt>c bt'Cln•in\
11·11h large> fa1ndy Illnm fClC'
f n 111 i I y f'nt(•rta1nn1f'11t.
Op1Xlrtun1ry knocks Ilj!li ln.
Join 1hC' :-rnart 5t'I <1n<l n101 e
inlo a lifetime or ron1•
fort:ible living. , . ,\vnlk 111
n1Hl'k1•! 11nd schools, Call
lt·12-2i1.i.
3-CAR GARAGE
SPACIOUS 4 bedroom.•, 2
luxurious halhs, ' ' Kn t •
Df<'P" shag 11•all·t~wa11
carprling, beautilul custom
drapcri<'s, and I i r C' p I al' e
make this a ll"rrilic lamily
borne lo start your NC'\Y
'1.'t>ar. Only $28,500 and CI
or Fl-IA terms &\'ailablr.
Walker & Lee
Rea.Hors
2190 lla.rbor Blvd. al Adami
5tj-!H91 Open 'Iii 9 PI\t
Macnab-Irvine
BEAUT IFUL
SPREADING TREES
Line th!'!' parkY.·ay of thi'
desirable Baycrest locution.
l.orgeous Ivan \Vclls butlt
IK>me "'/formal DR .. pool &;
plans for a '4th BR. $115,000.
Macnab -Irvine
642-8235 644-6200
Bargain Hunting i
then look at this Aharp_ extra
large 3 bdrm. beauty.
Locatf'd oc~r achoola A
shopplni center. Owner
anxious. It'' a attal at
$25.990. M7-«no.
10 THC RC/\!,
\"\,. f:ST/\TfJ<S -a-ASSUME
This low-low Interest loan A
5ave lot'sa. $$$$. Anxious
own<'r wHJing to assist in
add itional f!Mncing, Neat l
hedrqom, family room
home. Modern, stcpsaving
kitchen. GenLirous fenced
yarcl \~11th cover_cd pa!io,
Payn1C'nts les.s than f't'nl llt
only Sl>.!liJll.
~·co.· -.r:-·~~,. ....
Glamor And Utility
You'll thank )'OUr lucky alat
you caJled about this fa,..
View! With a View! :~~ hor:,~.3 ~:· 2:~~
With a View! patio. nt'W shag carpet. All
To enjoy the finest In this and more for only
Newport Beach living, S(>(' _l.::33:::;'::::500c.·c..."':.:.:..7-<0=IO'-.----
lhl• "°""°"' J 1x..rroom. Executive Living with aepa.rate Muter Suite; Designed for entertainm«"nl 4 large family room leading largl' bdnn. lan.:e den, IRri.:e
out to a sparkling heated & kitchen wlth illantl srove
filtered pool. 646-7171. plut breakfast area forn1al
dining room, plus heat£-'ll &
Jilltted pool. TY.'O story
home $47,990. 841-6010.
\0 THE REAL
"'\.. ESTATERS
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Ma rket place
Put a !!Ille "loot' In your
Lt.vii • ttll lhOse baubJ,, ror
'"bucks", C.11 Oaaallled
,~.,..
. .,
\&THE REAL
1 ESTATERS '·. ·.· ...
BAYF.RONT
Vacant and re11dy. Sale.
leas(', lease opllon or rent.
Lovely lurnishlngs, pier and
sllp.
PETE BARRETI
• REALTY·
642-5200
Enjoy The Security
ol this attractive home. In a
most desirable arell, Ir•
llunt. Beach, We cl:!1.ulfy
this property as ttll sharp.
Priced at $77 .200. 847.ro!O
10 THE REAL
I"'\.. ESTAT!:RS
--:JUST ,LisiE-0-
l.al'Ke R-2 lo1, Ott Harbor
Blvd. $LI ,500, 1m Down.
Payment.I $100 Ptr mo, lo-
lt'N!'Sl 7~.
.Georg• Wllli1mson
··• REALTOR
54MS70 645-1564
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5671
.,.
I
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"
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' ~ ' I
1 I
' ,.
!
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• -------. ..,, --·--
'
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Looking For omeone
rder?
We're
•
We'll even pay the, postage to get you to give us an order; Get
ready for some quick profits by mailing in your order today. Put
a hard-working DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for ·you~
USE THIS ORDER FORM
USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE!
S SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE ·LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
' TIMES
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S4.50
Sl.80
' $6.80
PAYMENT EN CLOS ED 0 SEND BILL 0
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Puhli1h for , , .• , ., ,, ,. , d.1 1, beg;nninq , ., .. , , ., ,, .. ,, , , ,, ,, , , , , , . ,
cr..u.i;,.,,.... . .. ' .. ' .....•............ ' ... ' ..•. ' .•..•..........
tJ ,.,.,, ',,, ... ,,.,,',., •, .. • ...... •. •• .. ,,,. •,.,., • •. • •, • •, .. • •:.
,t.ddtPn , .. , , . , ,, •• ••· ••• , , , • , • • • • • • • .•• • •· •· • ·•• • • • • ·• • •• • •· • • •
C i!1 ••..••..••.. , ............ , ... , ~ho~' ...............••• , •....
• ' . 12
TIMES TIMES TIM ES
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$7.40 Sll.70 '$17.70
S8.28 $14.50 122.50
110.76 117.30 127.JO
TO flG>UltE COSf
Pul C111l 1 Ollt ..,01d ;" e •c!.
•:i•ce ,bo•e. lncludt ••ur
•ddreu o• p~on• numbt r,
T~t «II ~ of vour tJ ii ti !ht
t nd of l~t 1,n t o~ which the
J,11 word ol vour td it wri!.
t•n. J.dd SJ.00 plu1 J Ii•••
~·"• ii 'OO ll dt1irt Ul t e f
D"'1LY PllOT lo• ••••ice
.. ,,h m•.lt d re pl;,,,
------.....-CUT HERE -PA.STE ON YOUR iNVilOI'[.--........-.---
Classified Dept;
BUS INESS REPLY MAIL
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT
P. 0. Bo< 1560
Cost• Mesa, Calif. 92626
•
Or Give l)s an Order by Phone
At 642-5678, The Direct Line to
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Cla11lfled Want Ad
RESUiTS
•
f '
•
• TllE •IGGEST SINGLE MARKETPLACE ON TUE ORANGE COAST -CAl,L DIRECT 842·567•
BEST BUYS UNDER
$30,000
FIRST COME
FIRST SERVED
On this outslanding 3
bedroom 2 bath home
in Costa :\1esa. It has a
sunken living room. l'Or·
ner lot, l>oat or trailer
acc'f!ss. doubt!' car ga-
rage and pricrd 11.t S24.-
]~ [--,.
General Ger;lertl • General ;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;;~===-==1
oflnJa JJ/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT • HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
3 Linda Isle Drive
Lovely, new 5 BR .. 41/2 Ba. home w /water-
front liv. rm. &. dfn . rm . Oak paneled family
rm. w/frplc. Master BR. \\'/sitting area &
fireplace. Bay & ML views, , .. , . , $179,500
HOME +
INVESTMENT . ,
OPPORTUNITY
2 CHARMING llOUSES on t
lrg. lovely lot. A CUSIOnl·blt '1
2 BR I BA, bltins in kllch.
lovely crpls. dNi, lrg ll 'x ,
21' SCl'l'('J1('1l·in lanai, TllE
OTHER. a rhcet'ful l BR 1
BA \\' nic.'<' Cl'l!! & drps,
For Complete Information parl. furn. BQTl'f havt' lrg
Q.o-All Home1 & L;,ots, Please Cill: sep IK>aut ldscpd yds \\'/fruit j
trees. a garage Ar storage
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ..... Xlnt Joe '" Ea31'1do
341 B Id O SI 1 NB 6756161 Co11ta l\1esa. \Valk to schl s, I !!!!!!!!•!!y!!s!!!o!!!!!r!!,!!' .,· ,.".,'.,•,..~· ,..·,..·.,' !!!!!!!!!!!!!!,!!!!!!! churches & 1nkts. Move-in
General General conct: Li\'e in one -rent the 1
;::::::::::::;:::::::;::;:::;::::;::;:::::::;::;:::::::;::;:::::::::: / other. OR rent both. Xlnt investn1cnf at $33,500. L0\\1 1
I
* * * * * * TAYLOR CO.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES -$68,500
Ne\v Offering! Fabulous near new 4 BR"
home on beautiful corner site. Fam rm with
fireolace, dinin,I! rn1 & 3 baths. Expensive
Kara stan cptng & custom drapes. ~!any extra
features. The land is included. Hurry~ ! "Our 27th Year11
i WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 S•n Joaquin Hill1 Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
G --'-""-'-'-l~~----1 -G_•_•_••_•_l ___ ~~-
DOWN. Is! t!nie offered.
E.'<Clu.si\'t' \\'ilh -
HELEN B. DOWD
Realtor 644-0134
FH A,'°VA -
ALL TERMS
• EASTSIDE COSTA t-.1ESA
• 60 x 130 Fenced lot
• Pa\'ed alley access. I
• Thrc-e bedrooms . H/\\I
floors
• 6'/,. Assumable loan
• HARBOR HJGl-l SCJIOOL
District
• Close lo St. J oachi1n
Church and ·School e \Ve have r·HA & VA ap.
praisals
Please call to Sf't'.
950. This one is too good 1
to last -Jlurry.
·NEW!
SPECIAL TOUR OF
I MESA VERDE
Located near CALlF'ORNIA •
Elen1cntary school. TE\\llN-
KLE lntocrmediale school
and a shot·t drive to EST Afi·
ClA High school and OR-
ANGE COAST COLL.EGE is
this '1 bdrm., 2 balh honic 3 BEDROOM &
FAMILY ROOM
TAKE OYER
$23,900
Subjt"Ct to existing Fl-IA
loan. Beautifully done
added fa mily roon1 '''ith
cathOO.ral
ceiling, hrick firt>placc,
' larg(' Jot . great fam ily
an~fl . Full pric{' $23.900
-\\·on'l last.
YOU GET ALL OF
THIS FOR $25,450
3 J&J·ge bcdroon1s, 2 spa·
cious baths, completrly
remodeled built-in
kitchen \\'ilh nC'\\' dou·
ble oven. Beautiful l'K'\V
carpet
MESA VERDE
'
I Shop these "Best Buys" in I
on~ ol Orange County's most
desirable residential' areas. wilh large lan1ily rooni and-I---~==~==_,,..
Bii clec, kltoheo. Patio, PERFECT FOR ''G ,
fenced yard and profession-I Under $30 Thousand and a
OOauty. 3 Bedroon1s, nicely
landscaped, '>''e ll cart-d for.
All tt'rms so buy ir any.,•ay
you like.
ally landscaped '""' and FAt,flL y LIVING.
rear. Can ht>-purcha~ed 11·irh Need 8 home 1vith everything
no do"'" on VA tern1s or including an inexpensive
\\•ith low dO\\•n FHA financ· price? Try this J bedrom,
Ing. An ex~llent huy at onl y 1a4 balh buy al $27,995. ror
$33. 750. the wife ii reatures a double .
• oven, laundry room and •
\'cry a1ixious seller with one
of the nicesl homes for the I
1noney in the area. 4. Bed. \
1
1 roon1~ nice Family Room, ' . Lovely kitcllt'n. Could as-
1
COLWELL
PROPERT IES, IN C.
Fcrmt·rly lu Bord(' k: E
dish\\'ashE:'r. ·rht' fa ther 11·iJJ I
certainly enjoy the brlck
fireplflt-e and barbequt', and
for 1he children, a special
area with IL swingset and
playhou~ is featured. This
ls pricc(:I for quick ac·
lion .,, so acl toda y!
sumt'.' at 51t',;,. St'-e lhis one.
I 220 E.17t h St .. C.M.
I ~ Niel' bedrooms. and Fan\·
ily Roon1 or 3 bedrooms,
Den and a Family Rm.
ready to fit your ramily.11
Lots of charming shutters.
Call 646·0555
Evenings .CaJt-m19o7
NEED
Rom•n rub io "''-"-'""' FAST ACTION!
lot \\'~~h .. boat or. trader stor-ALL TERh1S or~FERED-on
5-16-2313. •
age O move in. .. · -3 bed · 1111s gorgeous roon\ ------
' B 1·r I' Atrium horn 1~;"" \ hon1e that's CLE AN, ~-, <'au 1 u ·. . e _ "t' CLEAN. CLEAN! Every-
beam ce1hngs, 4 bedrooms, tlti kl , Sell .. d ALMOST ra 1ily Roon1 and Den Up-ng spar es. t'r ,,..s
.1 " 1 "°"' 3 b.•<h• bought ne\v home, will givt' LAGUNA HILLS s a1r!'I pay • · ·· · · 1 · Shake roqf. Spaciou, and possession. in ear Y Feb-Only I ye11r old and
gracious lh'ing. Comparable lho'\lary. hall!' 1'1 on< MO\~neSAr maculale. 0\\·ner \\•ill
ho II' f much n1c t o ers a "" VA FHA nd p mes .se ing or • VERDE LOCATION. HUR· or . a ay
more. See for yourself. RY' HURRY' 0 1 S2S 950 necessary po1n1s, Tile roof
1 · · n Y · · & tinted glass 1nakc ii J
CALL &aa.0303 NO\\', i\tAKE O soniething to see! call for i
A':\ APPOINTMENT FOR
1
~ C ~TS appt. ro s~ H no'>''~
YOUR O\VN PERSONAL. •
MF.SA VERDE TOUR TO-. WALLACE LIDO SAND
DAY. REALTORS
645-0303 -346-4141-·
I ORl \I [ Ol.,O \
' Prlfl ro~\
(Open Evenings)
''PENNY PINCHER"
AS LITTLE AS
Sl0.000 in extras, 2 patios. E·
Z care ya rd. Fireplace.
deep shag C<U'J><'IS, 3
bedrooms, 2•; baths. all this
& more. $34,:JCJO.
lhroughout and 11. cov· 1 1 ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;; $140 MO.
cred patio c:omplctc \1·ith 1 BA YCREST 1· A penny saved Is a penny 1
built-i n brick bar-b-q. I e VACANT e ea·rned,. but better ye! it j
Nam(' your terms -I homes. Lo11,·csl priced home take over payments • in-Surrounded by beauliful I could be nlany $$$. Just iii1iii!ililrot3 \Vestcllff OriveM I.
This is a great ho1nc for I In area • 3 Bcdrm. 2l , ! eludes taxes. NO QUALIFY-! Bathll, hug" fam + Hving ' ING. 3 queen s_ite bedrooms.
the monC'y. Sec it NO\V! rni . Great lor enlertaining S1ep saver kllchen. i\lan)' SlJPER FAMIL y I
large groups. Lrg patio. extras including • cl~ lo
shake .roof. Call anytime -schools and shopping. Seems HOME
Impossible tor only $23,500. Need large family, gan1e 01·
Better call today. rumpus room for kids? This
645-0303 &harp borne has il, + .( Bed· MESA VERDE Lachenmyer
Rt•,1\to1
I OHi \I I Ol \O\
,
]~ l ;.1 -~"'u.;;l~;;.e:1.;-' ;;;; __ ,,,,.~]~~! ---1";;;'"' ~] ;;iJ
<Mnoir.iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lG_•_•_••-•.,,IT"'0-0-B.,l-G--i.iiGliionlii•ilraiil-----Gii•iiin•iirii•l._ ___ llllj
OLE', WE SAY
HAVE WE GOT IT
SPANISH style 3 bcdroon1, 2 tiaths. dining:
room. fireplace. extra large builtin 1nodern
ki tchen. carpets & drapes. tvJo LE\'EI . PA·
TIO. See this extra sharp -one year old
beauty. , , , . , , . , . , .. , . , . , , .... , . $49,500,
"PUT YOUR DREAMS AWAY"
HERE
ATRIUM type entry, charrning:open, spacious
living room 'vith fireplace and VlE\V. 3 Large
bedrooms, lovely fa1nily roon1 , 2 baths. 2
Years old home in ··rOSll" Irvine Terrace.
Best buy in area at .............. $59,500.
SPLISH, SPLASH!!
OVER TO THE BEACH
CORONA DEL MAR 2 bedroom 2 baths. fire-
place. cute modern kitchen, picture v.:indov.•s
with enclosed side patio, GUEST QUAR·
TERS over the garage WITH OCEAN VIEW,
only one block to the beach . . . . . . $49.!)90,
YOU CAN'T LIVE WITHOUT
THESE UNltS
3-4 PLEXF.S ... al l in a ro\V. Units have 2·3
bedroom , 2 bath, 1-2 bedroom , 1-1 bedroom .
SPAClOUS and close to shopping, in SUPER
RENTAL AREA . . .. · Each $65,500,
"NOW YOU CAN SEA"
THIS BEAUTY
CUSTOM decorated 3 bedroom , 3 bath, fire-
place, built-ins, WlNE CELLAR & WET BAR.
Kitchen for the gourmet cook. Beautiful
PATIO with a PANORAM IC VIEW bf Ne"•
port Harbor. . ........... , Sl25.000.
~ MIO AS$0CIAT[$
REALTORS
644·7270
2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF ,
golf course estate
big canyon
five bedrooms D family room 0 3 baths
3 cair garage 0 3 fireplaces 0 corner lot
24.hour security guard gate
• ..
thi1 hom• is be ing f ini1hed now and should
be av•ilabl• i~ mid-february ..
26 hermita9• l1 ne 1t royal sf. 4il•or9• road,
n•wport b•ach.,. less than $100,000.
' drive by ind 1e• it, th•n c1ll own•r at .••
telephone: b"4· I 140
MUST SELL
6 BDRM-3 BA
~Just l\:stt.-d! 6 a;!a.111 bd.rn1·~
& nuissi\f' den "ilh 2nd
firepltu .. 't'. Gracklus forn1al
dining rm. :1 drlux~· ba1h.s.
Goum1et kiteht'n, bit-ins.
Lush e&J"PE'IS ,t, clra1X"s.
Soa.rin¥ ~1<1.u·casl' lo l1virig
elegance. Ro111antic mas!cr
1ui1e. Prlttd thousands be-
low n\)c.t, lot fas1 11alr. 5t<'
today. QUI
645-0303
'
I OR L\'I E Ol ~O~ . " fif;t '-ro 11 s
•
EASTSIOE
1 COSTA MESA
Granny can hop, ~kip.(, JUlllp
10 \Veslc·JH! sl10ppu~; J r
1\'alks to school: n.•l.'r<'alttin
at hon1e, 17X34 htd. & fiH'i.l.
pool: :? bdl'm. i· drn pllt.•
guei!l houSt'; in u1111\at·.
cond. \\'on't la~r long al
$31.500. You CUil 3S1>lt1ne
large Fl-IA Joan!
CORBIN-
MARTIN
REAL TORS 644-7662
VA-FHA
Ov.·ner. n\u!t sell right R.v.·ay,
and y.·iJI wJJ for on!)
$27,900. U>c11.ted 111 '.\!or!h .
Costa Mei;a . close to shop·
ping. The carpets are likt>
ne\\'. beaut. CO\ ercd .(,
enclosed patio, quiPl cul-tlt:-
suc st. Immed. po11seJ1sion.
This popular honu·-will st'.'\!
fast. Call righr a\\l!Y to S{'('
this eve nin". ,
546-9521
Nichols Real Estat
I Realtors .
1
2700-Harbor Blvd. at Adams
54j.-O.t6:l Open 'r!I 9 P:\f
' $19,250
I Eastsido -Needs TLC
'l BR corner lot, roon1 fo1·
trailer , boa.I, ere.
A RARE GEM
Shii.rpcS1 J BR , family nn In
N.E. Cosla Mesa. Xlra yard
for trailer or boat. SM.500.
Newport
II
Fairview
6'46-1811
(anytime) ',...._.,... ___ ....,
I -2o611 Kelvin Lane
Huntln9ton Beach
Seabury Buih hon1e "'ilh a
lot of added s~ial fco ·
rures. 3 &: con~rriblt' dt'n,
hui\1-ins, shake roof, carj)('ts
& drapeR, lovely pe!io. Pre·
sentOO fot· '-our lr'l~l)l'1'1io11.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
•EXCHANGE-.-
HAVE 5 acres in Dei;ert Hot
Springs area $7ii00. r .P.
\\.'ANT 2-J bednn hon1e £.
tiidc C.M. or NewporL
ROY J . WARD RLTRS
UNIQUE HAS TH E BEST llSTINGS
,, , , , ,, , ,, ,, IN THE BEST AREAS
I
'
• ,
• ' t
• IN EASTBLUFF : A 3 BEDROOM, Fee land, '
vie\\'S here and there and a hill side loca tion ~
Brand ne\v carpets and dandy parquet floor~
ing! It s Lusk · built & fee land.
PRESENTED AT $55,000, PHONE 675-6000,
----~~----
IN MESA VEllDE : A 4 Bedroom, Its a ranch
style single story on a corner near Adams
School and Park. Floor plan has large master ,
suite with sunken tub and double pullmans.
80'x100' fee lot datted \\•ith fruit trees . O\vner
will accept no do\\·n VA financi ng.
PRESENTED AT $42 ,950, PHONE 546-5990
8 CORONA DEL MAR-675:6000
2443 E.all CoJ~ Hishw.ay, Coron.a d•I Moll'
Cl) MESA VERDE--546-5990
2850 Mc t J Verde I) rive,
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
Be sure to see this LUSK Built fJi bdrm
beauty. Dining roon1. family room w/tire-
place . 3 car garage. Cul -de-sac location, idf!!!a
for children. $84,500. C Tenn ille .
CORONA DEL MAR VIEW
Spacious 4 Br. home on quiet cu l·de·sac on
fee land. Large family room. Will lease uµ-.
lion or trade. $105,000. Harriett Davies.
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
Glamorous Bayfront 4 Br, . 4 Ba with two
large masters. Family room , pool table size.
adjoins kitchen., separate formal dining
room . Deck , dock $198 ,800. Al Fink,
LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS
Vacant 3 Br. Canyon View. Subm it-$56,500.
4 Br, courtyard. pool , Harbor Vie\v -
$67,500, Cozy 3 Br, home, excellent for kid•
-$54,950. We have many choice homes.
Lavera Burns. '
BAYCREST VALUE
Compare and save~ Adult occupied, 3 Br.
2\\ baths, 18x36' heated & !Utered pool,
2 firepla ces, covered patio, low mainten·
ance yard. It's immaculate! $62.500.
M. C. Buie.
FIFTY FEET ON LIDO
An exquisite couple's home of two bedrooms
& two baths. Quiet charm &: French decor
Priced at $77 .500. Gene Vreeland.
OWNER WANTS OFFER
Eastblull, 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, family room,
ideal famiJy home , close to schools, tennis
club & shopp ing center. $49 ,750,
Carol Tatum .
i
4 BEDROOM
$27,90D
!860 NOwport BIV<L, C,M, I j Call 646-3928 Eves. &T:>1827 ]
~· • 4 • • .J ""
CONNECTICUT 1 ---~-1
rooms , S<'P. dining, 2 baths
•nd dbl gar. Good nbrhood.
close to sehoo1s & shopping.
ALL TERi\fS!
Newport If or Action • • • Call 642-5678
1
'"'' w.~~'· N B. • LIOO ISLE NEW LISTING
Perfect family home . move-in condition.
4 large bedrooms & family room, Large
South patio, 50' lot. Short walk lo clu b,
$89,500. Mary Harvey. Outl!ilanding value in
Costa i\lcsa's best res!·
dential area. 2 full baths,
bullt-\n ldtchtn -flll
tcm1s 1vailablc Fl-IA,
' VA or c.onv. \Vhat clioe
can v.•e say -s~ It.
ltavt IOP\elhi!W you. want 10
atll? .OW1Uled 1dt do tt
W<U -CAii NOW 64l-6m,
',
NO DOWN G.I. •I
FARM HOUSE BEE -Y ~~'.~~-UL! Nor
1 I many or these lef1. so hn.r
Fairview
! 2 STORY-NEWER this -3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
JUST LISTED~ Gorgeous 1 panE:1ed dining area. all (anytime)
6'46-8811
I "New England'' ehann. I carpets & drapes &: bullt-in'J••••••••••
TO'-''et•ing 1taitea!!e lo unique kite.hen, all newly painted! IT'S BIGGISH
lofl atyie balcony. Cathedral I J-lugf' corner lot \\•ith patio,
beam celtio.,, CrackeH"" BBQ and room for boat ••· AND BEAUTIFUi
fireplace. Pub tavern kltch· trailer. Thert!:'s more -call
en. "Bonus" family f ~ n 1 today, befon> It's too late! \\'hat a pleasurt IQ find • 3
room. Huge mastu suite k & hurie bf.odrooms, 2 large
overlooking eXtra large pri-1 Wal er Lee baths .• REAL family room.
I vale back yani. Won't Jiut lov~y kitchen .. heaV}"'l:hakl'
at only $34.500. See toda)l. I Realtor• roof and 1nnn1curcd la\\•ns.
'45-0303 On Brookhurst So. or \\1arnt'r !l's ne\\' on the market aod
i. §Gs..JJn prictd only $33.000. A L L
I NEED LOTS OF c~1:°'~~·'"1open Eves.1
iOOM? 1~ .. A•lil•l
I llKI \I I. Ol \O\ . ' .
Coro• Hltlil•nc!l
A .real Etftttts scoop! I 3
bedrOorn. l~i baths, ocean
vl~w. healed Ii filtered pool
plus two Jowly patlol aod
lots ol potential for ad-
dlHol\I.
Only l'Q,000
Call 61WXoO Quick
The.n lhf1 1" the hou!le for
you. A 2,000 square ft.'tt, '1
bedroom beauty, with tbcl""""'~~~~~!!!!!!!!'
p1ua 1 .. u .... 01 • "'""" EASTSIDE room and a bonus room.
$36,900 W\lh 10~· down.
!1464313,
1 Acre -R·2 lot. 2 Older
houses. Drive by 2447 4 W9
Elden A\·e .. C.:\I., 1twon c~I.
20 unit p
$55,900
PElll\ON R~L·ry &l2-ITII
TRADE or StU: 2 BR, 'Pool. rm OrlJ'le A\'t., C.ll.
Vlew, Spacblt, XJ111 eond, Prt.lt ••• )i'OUr tnsh Is
131!,\IOO. IJtad<... 213/ CASI! •ilb a DAILY PIUl'T
'a 1THEREAL
'"' I:STATERS ' '
I DAILY PILOT for action!
18>6314. , Ouolllecl ML , -------------------------,,----! .!!!!! ........................ !-"==----'--1-'--'-------,. '
' I 1, •
•
•
INVESTMENTS -C.D,M,
Residential income. Two excellent homes -
only '$76,500. Good !lnanclng, Try 10%
down. Mary Lou Marion
WATERFRONT , DOVER SHORES
Ultimate In Indoor & outdoor living, Com·
plele electric home. 4 Bedroo ms. study &
CormaJ dining roam . Separate maids area.
Large pool. pier & slip. $190,000.
Katherine Raulston.
·133-0700
_.......
Coldwe1~Bank8r
~
550 NEWPORT CENTEll oa., ~···
Daily Pilot Classified Ads
for Action .•• Call 642-5&71
' •
I
.
'
"
-~ ' ---~ ---~ ~ ... --
Dlll Y l'ILOT
I
Everyone Has DAI .LY PILOT CLASSIFIED .ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With 11 Want Ad
• Someth in9 That
' Someone Else Wa nts The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
lnvutment HouH• Unfurn. 305
L ido 1110 Income Pro.,.rty 166lncom• ProJMrtv 16' Irvine Irvine Ueneral ner11 ·~-~--~--~---------------------=-=-=====---== ;;;:=;:;;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;=;;;;; I COTT AGE FOR SALE
$11,soo I STUNNING -IS THE WORD ••••• ,
for this 2 Bdrm .. den, 2 bath home with an
extra panelled retreat room. Beautifully dec-
orated & landscaped. Prime park location,
walk to shopping & church. For the most dls-
Opportunity 2201.,.--------. -GMeral
CUSTOM 2 story, 3 BR, 3 BA, /--~-:-::'::::::::7".~:'::"":-:~'.:"':"--...;_;...;;..._.;;;._
lam, room, din. room, h.... 9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS.
• !
' •
' !
EAST SIDE
TRIPLEX
REALTORS
SINCE 1M4
673-4400
PRIDE OF
OWNERSHIP
ColecJ• Park
4-Bedroom
.ra.mny room adOed 10 this
lovely, dean, lht\rp home.
Gold mag carpets 24 x 14
Uving ' room w I fireplace,
dining room. Built In appU·
ances. Walking dis1ance to
shopping and to all schoo!.!I.
Only $32.950. Ca I J now,
646-7171,
IO I THE REAL
''"'\/'. ESTATERS
I •, _.•.•' ', /,
HA VE O.IENT .•.•
, •• for one, two or three 2
or 3 bedroom homes located
on R-2 lotJ \n Corona de!
)tar. Fixer-Upper O.K.
675-3000
2401 E. Cout Hwy. -----
mndeck with vlew. Strfft OUR lnwstment Div. would -----=----c:m & o:~~e "i!~ta ;~ 1
lot. Jn Huntington Beach
close to shopping, &Chcx>I &
freeway. Jd eal for
newlyweds or retirees. Call
for more dttail.!i. Walker le:
like' lo provide, at no cost FREEll
to you, an up.to-date a.p.. L1ndlord1-0wner1 w:n::· ir..':y 675-5200 4 separate buildings. Shake rcols. Private
IJllO patios. No stairs. All 1 story bungalows. 2 & 3336 VIA · N.B. S bedrooms. Some have fireplaces. The type Mo•• Verd• of buildings that attract and hold good ten·
pralsal and a.na.Jysi.s by com. \Vi! will refer tf'nants lo you
puter of YoW' property. FREE at charge , , . Many
Ple8St' call ~1600 desirable ttnant.T on our
Investment Oivi&l.on waltitll{ lillt, SALE or i.. wtoptlon. 3 B•.. ants. Income $16, 74-0 yr. $145,000. Excellent l~ ha., $28.000 or $250 mo. financing.
criminaling buyer at ................ $37,500.
Lee Realtors, on Brookhunt
So. of Warner. 96&-33n, "I l11!1'I11•lld. "SINCE 1946" ALA Ront•l1 e 645-3900 Day, 644-2501; eve 1, ''Our 26th Ye•r''
,.,S<S-4225~-·..,.N,.,.0 ..,.down. __ vA_._1 WESLEY N . TAYLOR CO., Realtors -FURNISHED -
1-0· THE REAL
\"-ESTATERS 1st Western Bank Blda'. M&-1r;,o1.
Thought you cou!dn't live
in Costa Mesa !or $Zl,OOO.
2 Bdrms & a fireplace •
---··1 ll'11il11r University Parlf: Mission Vie lo 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road I 7.,---~======o • FANTASTIC! l Br + Den,
NEWPORT CENTER 644-49IO Monoy to Loan 240 all um ;nd, VACANT! S98.
' . '
•OCEANFRONT DUPLEX* Huntlngion 8e1ch
Top Newport Location.
will trade -182.500. DOWNTOWN
Balboa Bay Properties CUSTOM BUILT 5 BR, 2!.t * 642·7491 * BA, panl'd. tam rm, stone
0 fpl, lovely crp_ts &. drps, A'ITENTI N INVEsrORS bltin RIO, hrdwd Un. App
RARE, almost level lot with 2000 sq fl. 3 car gar w/alley
180 degTee ocean view. Ex-&cctss. Choice location •
elusive Laguna areL Easy All terms 842-4466
term. Lee Pereyda R.E.
1
·
494-~88 or 546-1698 T eadership-..1....J REAL ESTATE
Balboa Peninsula 1---------
BAYFRONT, P"" S B•. I $ QUICK $
ba.. DIR. lg. !iv nn. WE BUY HOMES
$Z39,IXXl. Realtor 675-4600 r.m. KAS'ABIAN 817-9604
Corona del Mar
LUSK 2 story, 5 br, 4 ba, 3
trple, greenbelt location, fee
land. Agent, 675-7225.
KASABIAN
REAL~ATE
2 BEDROOM
Days 833-0101 Nlghll
Huntington Beach
GI NO DOWN
Spacious 2 story, 4 oversized
Bclnns. WaJk·in closets, 3
ful1 baths. Walk to beach &.
Edispn High School. Seller
will pay Cl's cl06lng cost,
Priced at GI appralsal
$41,500. C.all 968-4«1
CREST REALTY
BY owner, beaut <I BR home.
$37.,500. Open house i!~'~u;:~171 Mosquero I tbMfarU.
Newport Beach Mobile Homet
HIGHLANDS For Salo 125
Prime Harbor H i g h 1 a n d s ---,R::o:E"SA':':"L':E:'.:S,---
area. Like new, warm It Jn Greenleaf MobiJe Home
riCh home. 4 ." pa c Io u 1 Park. Descriptions &: prices
bdrms. k family rm., 21h pasted at the office, 1750
baths. Living room sliding \Vhittier Ave., C.M.
glass wall overlroks a HIU..CREST 2(lJG6 2 BR 2
$19,950. sparklln~ pool.. Everything BA, Lovely sit~. Irvine
3 Bednn. + 2 balhl for gracxrus Jivlllg. $43,00J. Ranch. Pvt pty. n4/544-0157
FORMAL DINING, vacant, CAL9L G)" •46·1414 Acreage for sale 150 huge rear yard! xlnt area!
R&O, dishwulu', n ice ~R.E ALdTy"L DEFAULT! lndscp! SUbmil! Call 847·1221 SEYMOUR REALTY, lTI4l Nt1r Ne•port Po1t Office A 31 acre&: a 40 acre parcel
Beach Blvd., Hunt. Sch. 10 UNITS in beautiful northern Calif. _ _ _ near quaint li!Ue logging
Owner Walked Away Eastside Costa Mesa, great community! Surrounding
HIS LOSS YOUR GAIN! 4 rental area. Seven 3-bed-land alnady sub-divided!!
Coit• Mew Bltin RIO, din rm . forma1 BR. Franciscan fountain. rooms and three 2-bedrooms. As low as $200 down & $79
Jiv rm, FA ht, w/w crpt.11, Low cash to loan. All separate units with lots a mo. ($9948 cash price)!
SUNSHINE STATE drps, 60'x100' fenced Jot, dbl REAL ESTATF. by or &pa.ce. Shows a fantastic Where can you buy land in
SUNSHINE HOME gar, 15·~· patio, ldscpd. McVAY 893-8533 return with income or $1,400 Ca1il like this? Think 5 yrs
11 SUNSHINE PRICE $18.500. F'. P. 3 Br, 2 ba, fam rm, petrar mo. Submit on down or =d le ~?._~W! E:I Ed·
for this gorgeous 3 bedroom cul-de-eac, fully · c r pt d, de. to -s, ~way, CTI4)
:7 :1awiMi:-:;a~c~,: lf ;;<;nB~~;~~;..~: Walker & Lee R"'m"'A"'~ru"c"~"'o,,_"'eat~u--G~l.-noa-k
dra .... s. Hugo ,.odern 962-4471 (::;~)54W10J 1 all Real•--Hills, 4.8 acres. Excel ,~ am. rm, qu ty cpts & ""'• bull kitchen, 2 full baths,· im-GI NO DOWN 2790 Harbor Blvd, at Adams ding site, view, uh.I drps, trplc, patio, sprinklers u•de nd ed ~ maculate enclosed ·-"""-All 54~9491 n....n 'til 9 PM " rgrou • pav s ... .,.,ts. ,_. •-th. · ~· d · & planter11. Near schools &: '"'t""' lhi.s with an FHA Joan of W'I" is spacious w._~ es1gn-• guarded entrance. By
$20,500 and TOTAL ed 4 bedroom home on a ~~7 ~~~6. Ow ner. FamifyExpand1ng? owner, $30,700. Call 714
payments of $Zl4 per month. super sized lot that just 1---------5 BR, 3 BA, family rm w/ SJG..6776 after. 6 pm
Everyonequalilies,socall needs a little TLC to make Irvine lrplc, Comp! new kitchen SHOP. Center-18 Stores
W lk & L , itworthhundredsofdoUsn:1 _________ makesthis2700sq.ft,home. 100% leased gtOY.1h are ' a er ee more tfi'a"'ii The low, low price GORGEOUS new 3 to 4 BR, Ideai'ly situated on a COT· Low down; x°lnl terms. will
SoHf El30R.300We· 5'0.D-ll55SR. EALTY Spanish w/den, formal din-ncr lot in Newport Beach. trade FOUR srAR
Realton ing &: living. Decorator's A ratt find. Asking only REALTY 835-4422
27ro Ha.rtxir Blvd. at Adam5 18964 BROOKHURSI', F .V. touch thruout. Extraordin· $51,fm. You own the land, .
Lots for Sale 170
CHOICE lot 100'x135', R-2,
paved alley. 348-E.
Rochester St., C.M. Short
walk lo 17th St. shopping
cntr. $21,750. 673-9509.
FOR sale: Triplex lot in San
Clemente. Ocean & Hillside
views. $12,500. 642-7216.
Mountain, Desert,
Retort 174
Sattler Mtg. Co.
336 E. J'Tn-1 STREET
Cash For TD's
ALA Rental.'! e 645.-3900
e TINY Collage tucked away •
nr beach. Ulil incl. SJOO.
ALA l\t'nlal." e 645-390.'.)
First & Second e PRIVACY! ·Older ttp.
-TD Loans _ bunaalow. Sml pet olc. Util
Lowest Rates Orange Co. incl. $115.
6'2-2171 545-0611 ALA Roo"'1• e &<~ml
Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. e MJNI PAD!·l Br. cpl/
$25,000 drops, fncd yrd tor pets. Sl2S
Private money ror real estate ALA RentAI~ • M.'i-,'l!n)
loan. Mr. Adams, Bkr, 714 / e HAS EvtTythinot 3 Br 2 ** BIG BEAR LAKE 499-2130 ·~· · _ ·--_ _ _ Ba, great loc, s1nglt'S ok.
WOULD YOU BELIEVE -NEED CASH FAST? 1215.
AN ORIGINAL LOG CABIN? 1st & 2nd loans made or buy ALA Rentnlo:. e &'"' 1900
on approx. 113.rd. acre of your tnJst deeds. Mr. Clay--UNFURNISHED -
land in the pines, with a ~t~on~,~(~1!4~)~542-~~9380~. ~~~1 • EXTRA Nice! ·l BR, ept/ lake view. Only $5,950. E,z drps, end gar. SmJ yrd. $110
terms. ~ ALA Rf'nlals e 645-39))
OR O\VN YOUR OWN 1-
M!Nl FOREST -""-re • BUDGIT Save•' 2 BR,
Beautiful wooded lot tor only ~;jjj;jjj~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; stove/refrig, kids ok. Avail
$2100. Terms. These won 't ~ Today. $135.
last -Call us lmmedial-ely! Houses Furnished 300 ALA Rentals • 645-3900
Call Ross (714) 536-1738 or
writt: Spencer Real Estate, Balboi1 Island • CORONA del Mar-Cozy
P .O. Box 2828, Big Bear 1 Br. ety/refrig, cp:ls. Pel
Lake, CalilorniA. 4 BR, 3 Ba., home w/pier & ok. $150.
beaut. view -of passing ALA Rentals 9 645-39))
Out of S_t!_fe Prop. 178 boats. $450 month. ,..
OREGON WINTON, Realtor 675-33Jl e FAMILY Wanted! 2 Br,
w/ !ncd yrrl nr beach.
Beautiful 2 1/3 ar. Klamath BEAUTIFUL Ba)'fr'Ont 5 br, Kids/pets. SlsO.
Falls area, nr. river & hwy, 4 ba, completely furn, Will ALA Rental.!! e 645-3900
$895 FP, $95 dn, $19.l6 mo-lease untif Jillie 11th. 'f:Aa. • NEWPORT Height,Spac 2 48 mos. Slmrmri Land .,..,., Sales, 545-1942. mo .• + ulil's. Br, fncd yrd, kids •/ pets.
ARIZO-NA Wtnlon RHI E1tato N1CE• n60.
'75.3331 ALA Rentals • 645-lSOO Large level lots, water,
po11.'Cr. Good roads. $795 fuli
pria!. Easy terms. Frt'e
picture maps, Write Elmer
Butler. Bax 486, Kingman,
Aril:. 86401. . • 545-9491 Open 'Jil 9 PM ROOM FOR ALL .,.,, landscaping. walk Open House Sun 1-5 40 ACRES Rblling meadow
! CAMEO SHORES-. lh' ~--b 3 >Choo!•, poof • rec """'· 213'1 Holliday Rd. n0,VEnaR'!°.,na!Mlore•t. TAKE RH! E1tato * NEW 2 B•, l Ba. ==:::::::::::::::==== '" ~ "'"'" ··~•• ;JI $59.500. Ownc, (7'4) 833·8121 -RED CARPET ~,. a. 968--0047. Exch1ng1 182 Townhouse w I pool, Meu
* 5 BEDRM * . bedroom home leatwing a REALTORS Comotory Vent" Bl,.,, cpts, •-•. RENTAL FINDERS • $92 500 400 sq ft family room with LOVELY TO LOOK AT Lot1/Crypt1 156 CHOICE acr e ag•, Lan-pat.lo, gar. $225 to t:"lal~N.. 4l•W· 1'*-c:onA Nl1A Elevated A bolated tun-game , • profess'ly blt wet bar. Prlc-2740 Camino 0a. ... 1-..ano ,,......... ,_ re--o• •chi•. 557 ••-. -• Houses* Apts. hiom, pool table .I: wet bar, I ed for fast action at $30,950. 3 bdnns. 2 ba., family room Se. Cl te -;9'19700 --·~-wr '"-" • ""O'tW •
BAY& BEACW
J{f-:ALT'r' ----·
Huge OYel'lized lot, quiet 1" Br, 4 Ba .• Poot. Sweeping No down GI lerM•. and separate dining room n emen . 2 Cemetery lots, Sl5Cl each. ~~/•68iln~~!.s.. Own~r. 2 BR. liv rm, din rm, frpl c. * 645-0111 *
traffic free location. Formal oceanview, epaeioUs &: efe-SHERWeeD REAL TY all beautifully decorated. SPACIOUS Will sell separately. Call •.w -.i.»'t Priv yard &: gar. 2 childrn 4"'~-Free to tmwllorde
dining, lush carpetlns, mod· gant. Luxuriously appointed. 18964 BROOIQ-IURSr. r.v. Well p lanned patio, VIBRANT 536-5167· $8,400 second trust deed, ok. Close to schls & sbop'g.
llrn kitchen and kids room. Exelu11lvely Jicreri •vttn: $l37 M p All I landscaping and gprinklers LUXURIOUS <t Lots at Harbor Rest trade for R2 Jot, Costa SI75/mo. 646-0481. -F1.JRNISllED-
Poor iUY, just purchased . EASTBLUFF REALTY o 8°(1 plui;a view.Allthistor only BAYCREST ~BR. Set it, Memorial Park, Costa Mesa. 545-1657. HOUSE in Costa Mo•-fum $110-BACHE~R Pad near
then trand'erred. Must sell ~1133 Anytime I ff you assume existl.ng S%.'1t. S42·500• and the land is love it, buy it -$69,950. Mesa. $125.~a. 548-9729 2 hr 1175 mo Call ~.cu"" ocean. Just nght for 2. All "39 950 F.H.A. loan on th.11 sharp ;yours. ---GEu D · · ..... ~ O'tW util pd. HURRY! • · VACANT 3 BR REPO, / Huntington Continental '" Conclom1nlum1 ~ ana Point __
Call 545-8424 (Open eves.) Huge custom trplc, l'Ai Ba. townhouse, or buy on flL\/ i '· red h·111 1610 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. for sale 160 f"lnlncial I • 85-$23,500. Bkr. 5-16-1739:
1
VA terms. Vacant & ready, . REAL'roRS StZ-4623 WARMTH & CHARM! Sl STUDENT'S Special! 2 12 ~==~=~ · Br, 11h Ba at the Beach! 545-34 . Full price ns.500. BEACH SPECIALS-LUXURY 3 BR, 2% BA -2 Br, fpl hm, mod. kit w/ Pet considered. Avail 211.
FOR sale by owner Mesa FULLER REAL TY * 2 Story 3 BR A·frame wet-bar, big patio, low Business bltn bar. lge ba w/ Roman _
Verde West. 4 BR, 3 BA. 1546-0Slt Anytime Univ. p~d;~r. Irvine steps to best beadi .• $34,ooO :~n & take over nlA of Opportunity 100 ~ Lg1e ~losets 1 & s!orage. -UNFURNISHED-• --se -Optr"on Tli .;,,~eve!. Lge tam~· I $INSTANT CASH$ Call AnyHmc. ~ * 1 Sto,,,, 3 BR, A-fi'ame. ;"" mo . .;.""°Li.A,R"'wu""IN& _ NU-Vl.EWmR. 'E"N'T' A""'Ls· ll:JS.CU'l'E2Bd:o11ag.,gar, ...u 546-";,otO after 6 pm .. 1oe113 !Of' the equity In )"OW' home. . ..................... tr!.!'{)() ennIS co ' Distributor's Needed 6734030 or 4.,_~,8 tncd yard, pet ok.
Buy at todays price with Boa Vista. $52,00J. \Ve pay a1J costs. In tore-CAYWOOD REAL TY 546-S4ll. National ~12rkeling Company I •==:--=-=-:--=":::::~
1: om or row 1 money, I FIXER-upper mtl 3 br, R-2, closure ok. Just eaU • 24 Laguna Beach · 6306 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. BY OWNER -3 BR 2 BA NEEDS NO\V, re liable men Legune Beach $160-NEWPORT Heights -2
•Lease-option this •harp $17,500. occupied. 2001 hours a day. 847-8507 548-1290 redecoratt'tl. from top to bot· or Y."Omen in this area to ----··-Br w/ encl gar & priv ))a·
?i1 rsa Verde 3 bedroom Charle (oU Hamilton ) INCOME WESI'CLIFF, by cwner, 4 tom. Oven, range, dishwshr, SCIV:ice fa.st moving min TINY COTTAGE tio. Stove, r&(rig, cpl/drps,
home and start enjoyina the 548-5M4 ~A 3 rent.al units, close in with br, 3 ba, 2300 gq ft, walk to dbl. gar, call 645-0231 operated products. NE\V Really nice! One sngJ rm w/ child/pet ok.
p I ea s ure s of home EASTSIDE Very charming UNfnD 51,..115 }r,,1£.\n:o lo!s of charm. Older income school, newly decor. $51,00J. Costa Meta multi-million do 11 a r ad. studio couch, nice ba w/
ownership today. Why wait, 12 bd "·-' ~....... property with rC'al value, A 642-9989. vertising campaign. Com-stall shwr, Ftl'U kit w/ gd f1lO.CONVENI ENT Loe. 1 w rms, na,w.,,. paneling pan -·~ 1 11 appl's. Fncd frnt • ......,, $lOO Br. stove, cpl /drps, gar. call 673-8550 tor details only & beam cren. f"""IC, 1-R-2 find at $39,950. Dft·"'-nt lot sm.ooo LEISURE Li<tina! 2 storov, 2 y "'°"""'"" 0 ca 0 n s. ~· u .... u5 ~J.J." wu ·-... •J ial util pd'. Avail 2/l. •
$27,500. lot w/cov patio & citrus 1---o=~=~--AG TED HUBERT &. ASSOC. BR, 1~ Ba. Cpts, 'drps, oomme'r'c and factory. NU.VIEW RENTALS _
', Gllil·~"iil· trees. By owner 167 Broad· SELLING 0 I,,., 6-61 34n Via Lide 675-8500 bit-ins, frplc. Private patio. P10AhoRT or FU1J.. lime, 6 to 6'73-4D30 or 494_3248 $116-ALONE on Loi! 3 Br, 2
- -----way 548-7939. YOUR HOME? ~U-1 c-CUTE 2 b 2 ba to nhou Large pool. I.dry facilities. urs per wet>k. n -ho DCC Dbl
REAL ESTA'JE r w se NO SELLING lido I I °" me, nr. · gar, FREEWAY & Fai r view Free appraisal .•. We buy ,,... S · ·' 1 f land. By Owner. 549-0674 aft 5 18 R/0, cpts/drps, fncd for
1128 "--· Lo I 3 .....,,!tie•. Pe-~at atte•tion. ll90 Glenne-St. wimming poo ' ee . PM CASH REQUIRED $600 to kid area. ~,,.,,,n. vey ~ .. y • ...,.. " J•" Agent, 675-7225 · $2,995. For more in-BAYF'RONT3BR, 3BA. 'Ti/ s. EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
3 Bdrm, 1% bath, double car
garage, EKtra large lot.
$28.500. Call for appoinl·
ment, 642·2'153
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
2025 W Botboo 67l·J66J
BR &: rumpus, sunken Uv. 25 YI'S. exper. 962-5523 494.9473 549-0316 D I /U It July $100/mo Also 2 BR 2 0 Newport Heighfl up exes n I formation write: Quick Kup · · of rm. $31,500. Owner. Access C LLINS & WATTS 4 BR + Fam. Rm., 3 ba, iale 162 Distributing Co., 1111 w. BA. din. rm. frplr, •T,,_H: ... (largest selectlon
to""' yd. -REAL TY -located on lge. pool ~,. tot 4 BE'DROOMS Walker RHlty 675-5200 rentals In New;ort &
C
R1:1binhoQd Dr.. Stockton. C M B S
$3000 Reduction, Save Comm. & W w I canycn views. Living 6 Cal'f 95-7 G" 3336 Via Lido, N.B. oste ese-t•t er• • • / --< ., w , ove name. • I) buy direct from owner. room w open beam ceiling Near Newport Ht.s. on 16th RESIDENTIAL address and phone number. 2 BR, 1 BA, 2 car garage, v rvce ,
Gorgeous 4 br No. Mesa FULL PRICE IS &: fireplace, bl tin kit Low St. Just a few " steps trcm cute house with patio $350 'IT tT. YOU LL Lfl<'"t" rr!
Verde home. Leaving state. $ down &: VA I In an c Ing park&: children playground. UNITS Yr. round. 67J.-5445 e~es, ' BEACON * 645-0111
Fum. av•il. Xb'as. 546-5984. 21,500 avallablo. $39.950. Owne., 4 BR., 2 Ba. Kitchen bltns., EASTSIDE, COSfA MESA MANUFACTURER Nowport Booch H eli~'l!FO~ re 'T.
East Bluft No down to GI BuYtni and 494-7651. FA heating new carpet $69.500. WITH TERMS
minimum down to FlfA. ln *SELL OR LEASE * ~ 1encec1'yan1. $29,900. ' Roy McCardle Realtor Nl_~,:>"~ FOR ORAN'GE . OCEANFRONT _ ~ B 1ge OR LEASE OPTION
Eastbluff Open Houte fa ct. Cveryone QUalilies. zoo Sq. Ft. 3 B.R. 2% BA. CALL ·@ · ,41_,.,14 1Bl0 N~rtnB291vd., C.M. L"""f'II AREA. PARTY ~ UR, DIR frpt rblt 3 Bdrm. Mesa Verde home,
I Sha.-n 3 bedroom dreamer .. .,..., SELECJ'ED MUST HA VE ' • c, ll!I, "l blocks to shoppina $'151), Duplex. Best Bil'{ Lovely vfew hm by owner •. "t' be . Lg.fam .rm.,dm.rm.,frpl.I I} ' Sl2500 nnstSADrRECT d ls pl, refr1g , fully · 2-Spm Mon-Fri ll-Spm Sat with open ' am ceilings, Cpl •-drapes, bltins, wet '•A ·~-1 ' · cptd/d~ $3~ 'lil J mo, See thl fne !IOUth f th e ' •-d "' -. .. ........, I FACIURY Otm.E"T OF 10 ........ '"mo: une ALSO 5 1 0 & Sun "flear new carpets"' rapes, bar, etc. Immac. $47,950.' REALTY . Income Property 166 30 Refs 830-8'm high~·ay in Con_>n11. d~ Mar, 1' 2915' Catalpa St., N.B. idea1 location. Great fenced Full price. Nt•r.Nt•P•rt Pe it orrltt .. ...__. SPEED BICYCLES. WE . . ' 3 Bdnn, nr Vista Shopping
Dupll?x . \Valk1ng distance &44-$1.0 aft 6 yard, Total payment as low MISSION REALTY 494--07Jt San Clemente PRIME UNITS wru. TR.AlN • EXPERI· OCEANFRONT 1 BR, Compl Ct>n!t>r "210. ""O.
to beach, shopping . Nicely 1 a.~Sl68permonth. Why rent, ,, _ ... ~ STX 2 BR, 2 BA apts. near ENCE NOT NECE..~RY. turn. Frplc. UXl I mo. 'tJ1 ~9521 OR 54()..6631
decora!ed • Quality carpels Fountain Valley call! SELL or tease. 2912 Alta VIEW OF OCEAN westcliU Shopping Center. GOOD CLEAN FAMILY OP-June. No pets. 2408 Ocean. Nichols ReatEstate
·Built in kitchens. CQm· 4 BEDROOM w lk & L LagunaBlvd.4BR,3baths: DeluxeJBdrm,2 bathhome Blt-in kitchl?ns, fr pl c's , ERATION.STARTIMMED· fron167$-.2962
pleiely lurn;•hed. Swe<fob FAMILY ROOM ' a er ee 2 .. , ..... "°°'-Fabulou• wilh f;,ep!ace, family room. luge Br .. laundry. Se ... ned 9!A~6YD.AC!LALLY'. 7l"87~S3!0, OCEANPRONT 3 B• homo LANDLORDSI
11rplc. • A must 5ef' at only K' viem of Octan & Laguna Cul-de·sac street. Priced adult tenants. Good return I tum, Winter rental. We Speciallt.e In Newport ;,~:~ • llurTy • p h 0 n e I =~ ~t~s 1C:S~~f ;[.;., 2790 !fa~~~ at Adams .Hills. SeU $41,00J or lease at $39,950. Call for appoint· + tax shelter. $1JS,CO> with PA'RTNER 6154807 Beach e Corona del Mar e
EASTSIDE C .M .
banning 3 bedroom "'ith
room to build f'xtra unit •
featuring dlnlng room. 2
baths, fireplace, bulltin~.
Jarge R.2 lot. Vtry clean
and neat. Asking o "I y
'S27,750. To tee thit ont fin!,
Cali 540-US! (()pen Eves.)
shag crpt thruout, master 5'15-()465 Open 'tll g PM $350 Mo. Call 213: ~72.'lG. ment. 492-4911 flexible tenns. LIGHT MANUFAcnJRING 2 BR Winter Rental. Av11il. Laguna • &: Dana Point.
bedroom hai; private bath $ NEW 3 BR, 2 BA hilltop b~ lotveoD JD. Active with $25,000 cash for now $175 mo. + util. 312-Our Rent.91 Service ls FREE
plus dressing area. Walk to 19, 950 IS THE ocean view home. Frpl, ..olfOtt U Western Slates. Admin-33n::I St. NB. 673-2098. lo Y<'ll•'
shops and schools. PRICE beam ceil .. wet bar, blt-ins, 3416 Via Udo 675-4!162 lstrative exp, an asset. How-BAYFRONT l br no dogs NU~VI EW RENTALS
Sparow Rlty 842-4474 c Pt s, drp1, fenced yd. . ' ever. will train Individual $165 mo. A~il 11i9 to &f'!JJ'. 673-4030 or 494.3244
for nu s very lovely 3 $39,950. 494-53XI, 646-7561 RETIRED, or )'Oung 1n· with either salts or produC'. 538-017B. I.ck Bay
''A nest. for every bird" I bedroom: 2 bath home. The ' * SELL OR LEASE * s.n Juen Capistrano vestor! 12 weU kept prden I tion background. ...,,,,.....,,,-----
*S"an11h 4 Bdrm.* lolln is high enough that you 1 zm Sq. Ft. 3 BR. ~ BA. rentals. Room for more. 1st year'• ll'ICOl"ne ihoulrl HouMS Unfum. 305 3 BR. 2~ Ba., tam. rm ..
Im ate! ltf e d a 111 o n can aswme with p&yme~ll 1 Le. lam. nn .• din. nn., frpl. CAsJTAS CAPISTRANO Xlnt tel'llLllts &: income. r.xceed $50,00;), General newly cpld & deter. sm
k1· Prof. ldtcpd! Many of $160 per month which 1n-Cpt &: drapes bltins wet. Sharp & pretty t"'O bedroom, $m.ooo. only $.25,000 down. For Inrervltw Write Class!. Mo. Bryant Wiest 675-2723
xtra_• Terms? $35.900. clude1 all. Modem built-ins. bar, etc. ~c. -s.fT,950. 11iW bath, 21tory townMuse. !>48-8007 fttd Ad No. 773, rM.lly Pilot, $lpe4tlt.s2CB.RM .• fenc:ed for kldi &. Belboi Peninsula
HAF FDAL REAL TY deep . pUe carpets, also I Full t>riC•!. The porloct way"" worlri,,. 54 New Units P.O. eo. 1560, Costa ......
842-4405 Eves: 968·!'m6 matching drapes, Double ~IISSION REALTY 494-4731 couple. Patio enough to ex· Ca. 9'1626. $145, · 2 .BR pvt home w/ l;r"BikOcEANFRONT'
LUX 4 RR 2~ BA xtra lee garage to boot! Call Bl Lagoo Vill 113 trci.se your arttn thumb. mllW.lltJOfk. & Lff6.tlR•Gltrrou NEW LISTING ••. ••• everythine, C.M. 2 Br lower d I lS
family .;,, blt,;., cpl> Walker & Lee 2·~· BR-2B.A-1 a but not. bun!on, Spacious a llf' s r,,,,. .. ' 0r..... 1135. Pvt -. • ..,..,, JU, cpt/d-Ind h . __ : '. • I 7' urn. ba)a)ny tor re I Ii u re I y (114) i76-9l50 Holl1nd Bus. Sales fenced H.S.. ..... ry r ... ·n. t'llu
CO\'ered patio, Nr scb:>ol. Surf v1tw·faclng priv. hreUfuts or cool evenln& , ''The Brot·-.. wtlb r . 'y" ~ ufil• pd. mobUe home pr Avitl! "tr" -.. !"11.)
Owner, 842-5676 Rft.lton beach pool tennis re1 tJo A pool f DANA Point. Nl'W duplex. -· &.., ., 11ni1t o~ N.S. ' NU·VIEW RENTALS .
Huntington Beach mo Harbor Blvd. at Adams Call Schwortr 673-2&M uae':':ul ~t to ca~~.~ S49,500. Silveri..ntttn at La ~1 ~0lllll'~c;:~. fl55. 3 BR w/aar, tenctd tot 673-4030 or $-32'9 ---------I 56-0fM OCEAN front OYO, magnif. car gar,.. with «'lec:bic Crtsta. Webb-Bier. M2-490S. ---kid!, c . \f, l-i BLK. 'ICI .... or Betich. 3 9-.
BONUS ROOM 70 1F you ate aattaHed w/youf n• --•--nt U9J •• , EASTSIDE C.M. $23,750 vu. Pool. 2 BR, 2 BA, !Um. door oponer. What more Loli for S.lo 1 • ""'"nt lncom•, do"'' call. ,..,... ...,... 3 BA den, •P· dilL patlo. L~ nf!'W 3 BMrm home rtui r 4 Bedrm. + 2 Baths Owner t:randel'l"'d -must S53M. tmmed. pw. ma. oould you need? FHA We are only looking r or • Gr9.t oceJ11i View. 2 br Yt:arly. 673-6450.
1tll clean, aharp 4 BR 2 BA 4gg..aoos, 213: M~225. TERMS CHOICE prople w/drivt & a.mbllfon. home Cameo HJJhl&lld1. Corora. del Mer
dt n. 2 baths, flreplaOI!. 308 $32 950 sdull OCC"Upled home w!Tlre. Lido Isle JUsr $27.000 R ·2 LOT Sever"J po1lOon1 open. LeAse $of2S mo.
'\'alnut. Open dally l..t, or E:xecuttve hcn:1t xlnt Ifft plact, bllln.t. Jarae petio. CAPISTRANO V&Uey 2 Blocks "J'o Be3eh. $15.000 837-37•• or 8»-3939 eves. e 3 Br, 3 ba Shoreclitf1. 2 BR, ftrfplace, 11ovt I ~;·t.~i "R!illor ~~fir:· .w~. d~!-~-.~ Y~ m. ~!'!:._!'.~"!._~r.ldlcpdCALL REALTY 493-1124 minimum bid, Bid optning """' ltm. nn. Xtra !Jr ""11· l•nced )'I'd, -· ttt ·~ .... ~. ... ~· ~~· ~ • BR. 3 ... 70i<88 1125,000 Mobil• Homn F•bMJ&l'Y n .... 1irn. GIFr Shop -81.Uo • Botlque yard, !'50 mo. Ill!. &46-<llll.
0 Newnon Rh-d.. CM. ldllcprl Vacant! 0 w n er 962-7771. RED CARPET 3 BR. 314 bt, tam nn, pool For Seit 125 -CITY OF-:_ ~.-... !~· "~.· ln'ltlt. e Olhl!rs, •. l Br. dole tol---------
541-7729 tnnxfom:dl Sllbmit! Call REALTORS. rm, <fin rm. 40' lot Wo.l!OO NEWPORT BEACH •·~~ • -""°' "" m 'P.r. ~ ""'· Dom't 11vt tlJ! the 1htpl !'~~.~~ 1141.1221 A 1""" Id LIDO REAL TY INC. ·17 Su11 va1117 12"40' -U• •7>-211t CC IN Op. t..und,,,, eo.q DON V. P'RANKLJN "Lbt" 11 1n clulilled ~'-,_.. ...... *'1 Call l SEYAfOUR JtEALTY, JTICl Wini. II a IOOd 3371 • • l[)(.. bomt.. Mesa uu. Mu•t 1tU du. to fte1ttor ' ....... -~-----· ----Bucio 81'11., Hunt. Och. 1nv..-n1 67J.7300 • . ~ Ext. 211 -job trtntlor. -· e 67).2222 e In Shon 11<"11~> IHl-lm
t ,i, I I r
·-
•
' ,. •
•
·' M-. J...,,., 11, 1972
1
._[ ---111.-~1~.:I ._ --------~ I ....,.,,.,.,,._ lrtl I .... ,-., ...... ::!J ~-"'-Jftl l ....... ;;'~·-~~-J~ftJ~l ;l._;;."'-'•"-"•""-·;;--;;'~:I ~
~-__ ,_u_n_fv_m. ___ 30..;.;5 ROUMI d£rn. ii 1'pt1. Fum. 360 Apt1. -Furn. J61 Aptl. Fum. J6I :. Unlurn. 36.1 Apt. Unfurn. Q
C;o~r-;;;o"-;;;":;;;;do:;;l~M;--o;-r;;;-;~-:-l •l"';;;;;;1";;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I llolbn lalond Co1t1 -Newport ... ch COii• -e NEW DELUXE e l ":~~:::i:~::!~l'Nl~w~porl~!,_!le~ICl~h:_,~-_I CARl ~REE LIVING! 3 Bd11lll 2 batbl famlly CHARMING, lmmac, I BR --------;;;;;;;;:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;-;;.13 BR, 2 BA Apt kw Ieaae. ON BEAC V~~1~1'!; rr~c~':i: ~~ ~ r;;;:' 21l:!~= : : : : : ~65~•n;,:vall in:ilil .;\~ i:i \!,~ :~?"A.i~: ~ ;:: N~. ~~. m,;~~ CHILDREN !:1! 'J:c~=~· ::•;i: H ! ~c:!;, i;::.,:. :!/.,
&. Pool. Charming deck wl 3 BR, 2-!; ba., tarn •••• $325 Amethyst.. 532 Ctnter St .• ~1'926. Winter. 3 Br., 2 Ba. • •• NEW • • • ~ner avail. Pool le. Recre-2 BR U'nlum n. $230/mo. a.....U DOW. sioo: -..ma
view. Prlv'Cy. •200. WE HAVE'OTHEllS MATURE worn<• studio apl. *' BR. turn. 1140 mo. ~64&-S135-;:::--:-" ..,538-_99S2--,.,_-,..-VILLA PEDRO APJS, ation ...... -• Furnltu.. Avallahlo 2 Br, Sl!S. We•ldlll Cl NU-VIEW RENTALS non.amoker pre!"d. S1:ll yr!y Adulb, no pell. 820 C.nttr I BR Apb . Oceanlron>. ~" CIJ'peto.dni-wuber Apts. 1100 W,..tlllf Drive
613·4030 or 494.3241 he. Ut:U, lncld. SiS--'JfAM. -,St., C/{. 6(2-SS4I Yearly, $J!i0/mo. Alio .., M AmlCol Way, NB heated pool4aunu-tennia ~642""-Q!f.;:4';:,.,,-;;;;;;;-=:-:---J
2 BR Houat, unfurn. Newlv EAGER l 2--., winter Ml.tlll1. 1818 W. JUST n:Nt$H!:D Mani red By rte roomo<ICltA vilwl W EST CL J FF area. , ' B•IMll p911fnsul• to serve you, -""" "----•--t. ,~ -. Supcr.('om.fortahle·n.·Jet \VIWAM WALTERS CO, patiol-amplo -·'""" n.~ decorated. $185/mo. 702 Iril Br'a, l Ba Furn&. Unf. Uke ....._,,, .. UlVll '"""""-(IO B ,.v --.. ocu•uum, 2 bath. AduJta Avo. c.Jl 49!>-1'60. • $25 WK• Up-On Oceari e new. S140 Up. 64>-SS30. ATTRACTIVE 1 Br. l blk l 2 R, 2 Full BA. e 2 WEEKS FREE I e S.CUnl)> ruards. \y. 1275. Art~.
2 BR ~ 'd G Lovely Baclrl 8"-RoomJ fro l!.lO Incl ti! Must IH to 1pp1rcl1l1 Dep/cJ .. ,. om,. -to mov. Jn HUNTINGTON • ..... .,t , arqe A SUO/MO. Util. paid. Small m ocean. u · Near Newport Back Bay, Bachelor $110 • I BR $125
patio. 305 Jumine Ave. "SINCE 19-16" Maid• ~~~U~ pd apt. nr 15th • Newport. Wlnter rental. 67$-1145. school, parks, Ylo!CA, Boy's 2 BR $140 • POOL PACIFIC
**DELUXE 2 Br .• 2 Ba.
cpta, drpr, bJtnt. encl 1ar.
patio, $175. MS--3108.
67;,..4523. lat Wtatem B&n1I: Bld&. Sif'ICle adult. 64i-5583. ** OCEANFRONT: 1·2-3 Club, •~PK. frwys, etc. Can F'um •• Very Jow extra TU OCEAN AVE .• H.B.
•BDRM d G Unlvtrsllv Parll:, l rvlne Costo ~~11 BR" w· t A~·"· -"· G ~·Id/ t. •-:1181 (TI4) •~1•-" • cplt, rpa, arage. Diys 83).010l Nights 1 ----------LGE 1 BR apt in f.-pltx, • in u . u"" .. .,....,, as heal, gu cookf"" and ""1 ca _... , 673--0507 ....,_. ...,,
LGE 2 BR, 2 BA, w/bltns,
displ, dlhwhr, gar. I blk
ocean. (2131 387-2257. Children ok, no p e>t 1 ! quiet E-slde area, nr Nwpt no pet.a. 67J....8088. water, all paid, M0/1.10 BRAND NEW-1-&R:-Ofc open 10 am~ pm Da.Uy
,.,..,.,. L1guno Be1ch Casa del Oro Freeway,•"· mo. 518-1517 Boyfront B. Bey Club from Sl8S. Z332 Elden,.."' FROM $1!0 WILLIAM WAt.TERS oo.
Cost• Me11 ,,,._. -~· -... ~·-• AU. 1..TfILITIES PAID l BR. Furn. Trailer. $75, Utll Lux. furn lrg 1 Br. 645-03.19 ~all ~tanager Barbara .. Dav~ Near Shops ~ncl ga. bltns
OCEAN VIEW Compare before you tt.nt • paid. Mature adult only. No OCEANFRNT 2 BR, patio, 11 645-4012• fivt pat~. Attracr.· land: * FR~SH AIR Santa An•
FAMILIES
WELCOME!
WANTED
One famUy that would enjoy
this lovely 4 BR, .2 BA home
w/ frplc • Poot. Great Joe.
Close to major &hopping.
$325.lmn.
In the Cfnf~r ~ town! Slid· CUs• Spatorn. deligned, fnturin&: pets. 645--0818. a:arage, wt.sher It d...,.r, A SPLASHING ecaplng, 1910 W a 11 ace. ;,.., "i .... lrg d k • B CIOUS kltchen with ln· ·.1~ "'~" ........ ~ II:.--;~ ~:..i~ ;;:unttc!. Q,t;~rps~ direct li&'httng * WELL-furn. 1 Br. Gar. no -** 67J..ll47 ** ~ FOUNTAIN • • • -"O"UDV'I, :v--• .. ~.
\Valk 3 blks to Beach! Lee l BR Apt, ru!Wly decor.
Dbl a ttached a:u. trplc. 1%
Ba: bhm, except re!rlc.
SZ!S. No fllgls, no pets.
AU e!ec. S20J. • • ~a.le dlrf'i area children or pets. Quiet. Newpert Heights welctlfnes Y'OU ft) thit '11.-ell· 2 Br, 2 BA., newly redetor·
NU-VIEW RENTALS e Home·like-srora&:e $135/mo. 137·9517. loc, well-managtd corner ot ated $165 mo. 673-5169 ~
673-4030 or 494.3248 • Priva.te patios D•n• Point 1 BR. Newly pa I n t e d , the world w~ you q.i:i en· · tore 9.Ai.\! or aft 6 PM. 412
• Cosed garage w/rtoraa;e 1 ;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;; parti&lly furn, $135/mo. tn. joy adult liv'i away from ~";;:0"nl""'Rd.'i"-:-.,-,~--536-.tm. SINGLE STORY
0 c E A N F R 0 N T view South s.. Atmosphere * OCEAN VIEW * e Full length marble pull-11 eludes util.. 623 Irvine Ave. the hassel, yet conv. to UCI LOVELY, lge 2 BR in quiet
3 BR. 2 BA, trplc, bi.tin kit.. man LIVE IN STYLEJ · 646-8017. 4 a irport. "adults only" Id&". Garagt's
Call 56-84'4 <Open evtsl £undeck, heh, nc.,.,·er detux ' 2 BDRM-2 BATH
2 hr., bltru:, crpts, drps, $1'15/mo.
crpls & drps. Lease. Call alt e Klng-1z Bdrrn1 NOW OPEN .. -:-c--7'"..,----~= • 1 n.r liv'g-lge room11 bltm. laundry, no pets. N; ~'-p_m_._ ..... __ 31_85_. ____ 1 e Pool -Barbeques • sur-Apt. Unfvm. 365 • 2 Bdrms, 11,i; Baths Westcliff. $145. 646-5355.
laund &: Rt1-r. Nr shops &: Ca~ta ~.Drapes
pier $17:> yrly. Adults, baby Air ConchtiOned
L1gun• Niguel rounded wifh p!ush land· ALL'. NEW Ge••rol • Frpl, personal patio
tcaping MARINA INN ·-•Great pool, garage NEW 2 BR Condo studio.
Dk. ~2131. Private Patios
HEATED POOL
2 BR, den, crpld fnt. din 4 Br, 2 ba, liv & dining area, AdultJ.i.vlng at Its best ., _________ •Own lndry/worksp rm Near Harbor & San Diego
comb Ira: kit, older child & !a.m rm, frplc, blt-iru;, Large 1 BR $175 3 BEDROOM, 2 b •th• Start a new liv'r 11yle·vlsit Fwy. Cpts, drps, $185 n'IO.
2 & 3 BR, $140 up. Pool. Carport & Storaee
Chlldrtns bonu1. Mora Kai Nr. Schools
0 f kl 2 F I carpets, drapes, built-Ins. N i. hiJ•-pet .K. $185 mo. 1st &. last ence, s.prn r, cpts, drp1, vrn.mES FREE * u I Modem Kitchens Do 1 wt or c~I: , ope or c w-.:n 54fHi068.
mo. + $50 des. 1921 car a:ar. Immaculate. S31G 365 W. Wilson 642·1971 *Free TV* Linens lncl'd 96:S~;;t::~·pm~ patio, THE FA IRWAY VILLA 3 BR. 2\j Ba ., spacious
Apts, 18R81 r.1ora Kai Ln, \1 Nr. So, Coas! Pl"t-
hlk E. or Beach. 962~. HIDDEN VILLAGE
Fullerton. DO NOT disturb mo. -first & last dep. $135-nlo. BEAUT. dlx moO. * Poot * Sauna Batbt roJ.22 Santa ~ Av 545-6215 itudio. Shag, washer/dryr
tenant. Call alt 6. 64.2--08.57. 49>-4244. home. 12'x52' tompl furn. * Phones * Patios B•lbo• Island DELUXE or:i. premises. $200. 64~1496.
e MOVE IN TODAY! e 2j()O South Salta
Kids Ir pets we:lcome. 2 BR. Santa Ana • St&-1525 * Maid Service 3 BR hse, !Iv rm, den din Lido Isle nice patio, tool shed, mature * Utilities lnduded $400 Yearly. 337 E. Baytront. APARTMENTS 1 BR cpt!, drps, $142 mo.
rm &: kit, bltns, dose ~hla I ~--------cp1. No pets. Ponderosa VIE T!1 2 BR 2 b dbl Air ""-nd . Frplc"• • 3 Swun· . Ut" •'ncl. No children. ~-st ~ ahop"g, w/w-cpto. l 'KI> 5 BR, 3 BA, lovely home. Mob. Est. 1991 Newport, WS OF E HARBOR " a., • pr. min~. Pools • H··'th Spa • •ld"e. "'11-1674. ~
$139..._All extra11. Pool, gar, l He<d Poo1t
patio, furniture avail .. 17362 Lt.rze Oubhouse ete. BBQ
"JOI $600 mo. to July. 646-8373 . BACH UNITS.$59.SO Winton Real Estate 67S-l331 T -.i ..,
mo. Also furniture for aa.le. Avail. Feb. 531-2220 ' SOME 1 & 2 BR. LGE 2 BR, 2 BA, Bayfront. .ennis Crts • Game I: Bil· LRG 2 br crpts drpa-bltns
A-Kee I 11 on Ln, H.B. Otlld Care C.enter
968-7510. 842-6235. Great new 1 2 I: 3
Fnm! $1'9
SOUTH COA
VILLAS
1101 Ma
687 W. Wit"'"· 646-1266. * $30 WK I. UP * UNITS LEFT Frpl hard Room. I 2 hlld
0
' • • 548-1227. Mesa Verdi e Studio & 1 BR Ap>s Cl , _ 1,~,c. beyam 1 ce~ ~~· 1 BEDROOM -~~ 1"1.~ ~k.; ~~5Schls & ose to ... guna Sch, San ~ mo. ear y. Q•-· FROM t155 ....... ., g. """ -1.,. ·
2 WEEKS tree rent, nt'W,
wa.lk to beach. 1, 2 & 3
BR's, Frplcs. $130 l!o $170.
539-2103. VERY a.EAN 3 BR home LEASE/Option 3 hr, 2 ba, • Room S15 WK &: Up. aernente Ir: Doheny State LrITLE Island 1 BR. Dtluxe MEDITERRANEAN LAltGE 1 BR du plex. Cdl£,
w/builtlns and fenced yard dbl frplc, ·quite cul-dMl.t\ e 'IV A Maid Service Avail Park. AU b1tns Gar G·-"--'~ bJtns Ad J 11"
f a !a ll • pl •Phone "--·ice UtB Pd PH (714) 49'2353 · · IUU'l:ner. VILLAGE ..... .,s, · u ts. -·
Blvd,
or m YI euure, nr schls, crpts, d r p 1. • All .~:__,,,·,. .::...... • llil'" 'Yearly. 673-7178. 2231 Oranae Ave. 54~2771. ONLY~ per month. Beautiful lam, home. kids & ml.)OT' cn:u•~ Cll.IVa ' 34902 Del Obispo St. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
(714) 557-8020
RENTAi. OFFICE .
• OlEZ ORO APTS. • 8234 AUant:a. 1.;.3 Br's. Poot. Aptt.,
•MOVE-IN! 2 Br., 1~~ Ba. Priv a t e closed sar. 'Fum.
.
' Unlurn. a Call Ageol 046-4141 t OK •~• Incl 2376NewportBlvd. 5411-9155 DANA POINT &.Ibo.I POt1ln1ul1 · pe · · _,., mo. This Ad Worth $5 on Rent EASY Living! 3 BR, 21ii BA water. Call r.1r. Lowder Children &. Pet Section HARBOR 3 BR, 2 Ba., 2 decks, dt wlhr,
Twnhle. Pool, rec. ce'Mter, 645-0615 eves 5'~1500 da1. •love, refrlg., cpls, drps,
mainten free Great 1 hool N B 1 BR. Furn. 2 lge dosets, 2 Br, furnished apt pr!v. gar. \I blk Ocean • · · c ewport each queen siu bed, priv dressing "" district, N.B. area. $285. • , 1 ncl Carpeted I: drapes Bay. S300/mo. Lse. No peta.
645--2385. 3 BR. 3 Baltl, FR, LR. DR, r m, x1ra ge rooms , e $155 mo 496-938'1 ~rm4 b il I d h d gar w storage. Ad ults only, · *'NEW 2 BR. 1 Ba. Townhse u· t-W p WI et a c e no pet!. $150/mo. Huntington ilffch YEARLY 2 BR, cpts, drps,
w/pool. Mesa Verde. Bltns, F~R. BR, Bath. H~} 2035 Fullerton, C.M. • · · ·· • pr~ digpl, g~. l blk
cpts, drps, patio, gar. View H 0 mes, Portotiqo EXECUTIVE SUITES oce&n 01" !ie.y. 620 W. Ba1boa I~, ~' Nr ._,_ model. Lease. Pvt. perty. FINE, lrg. furn. apts. View. MOTEL A S BI·-' ~ .o.2 55·~70.!i. _. · sci~. 644-8137. Lots of storaa:e: &. PT • v1.1,Q'"""°" ·
....,_., wardrove:s. Oose·in. w.1.Sth 727 Yorktown Blvd, Corona del Mlir
l\1ESA Verde, 3 Br., I"-ba. D13E,!;U~,.., 3PoBrtR. Charfam.I 2 PBal St., C.M. to Kenwood, So. to 194n BEAOi BLVD ••
ti b "'· ....,.,, es ' AT YORK'OOWN S250 mo. w/op on ·to uy. (Harbor View Hms.) %l3: blue 1arage1. Shown sun. SllMMll
$28,000. 644-2501 d a y I , 670--460L on. ~
54!>-4225 eve. VA ok. ~~;::..,,...._...,,,..,...=,--FURNISHED 1 Br .• cottage STUDIOS FROM $35 .,~, ' 715 St. James Rd. N.B. I BEDROOMS AVAILABt.E -2 BR cpt/drps, a:arage. No In rear, priv patio. $120/mo '
,.ts. 2 sml children ok. 3 BR, nr schools, $2lO til 'd •·t • •--1 • • FUU kitchen ON ~ ·--plus gardl!ne-r. Open Sat. u · pal • ....,. "" llUi mo 1 • Heated pool 4.c.n ~--... $145. 20Tl' Wallace, Apt. 6, rent + security c~. e La ..,._, u· CM.. San Clemente Older male only. No pets. Uuua.r lac Jties 1 A 2 BR. Furn, A Unlurn. -=•L A • Free utilities F1replacet / prlv. patloL
MASSIVE rambling home, 2 NE>,;R Beach, 2 BR, liv rm. 1"'""71 naheim Ave., Of. • Free linens Poola Tennia O:Jatnt1 Bkf1t.
trplc's, vacant & open. 258 w/ftplc, 'din rm. kit Fum. Bach. & 1-Br 'I. • T.V. &. maid 11erv. av&i!, 900 Sea L&ne, CdM 6"-2611
Santa Isabel St, CM $250 w/bltlns, cpts/drps, 1 ba, Especi•lly nice, $130/' • &.r-6.Que: CMacArtbur nr Co&.c Hwyl
mo. No pets. 642-2991. gar, !enced back yd, w/C!Jv. up. 2110 Newport Blvd. •!_)Phono~C'!,:,.....~~·ce:!_ ___ . I ~!!i!!ii!iiii!!lj!!iiiiiiiifl
CLEAN', new 3 br, 2 ba, 2 patio. Call for appt. 49Z-390T C.M. 1 BR. Furn $140 I mo. NEW
car gaT, Ct"Plt, drp!11, !ncd btwn 9-11 AM or!>-& PM. I -'-.~W~l=NTER=~RA~~TE=s-.-· ~ Overlookin&: beaut. a:arden 2 BR., 2 baths; uptta.Jrs. Car·
yni, no pets. Avail. Fed. University P•rk Attrae tum studios SllS, 1 patio & pool. Adults. No }Jeted a: draped. Encl. gar.
13th. 548·3'163. Brs $1.25. Adults, no pets. pets. 1035 12h St. Across are. Comp. bltns, Private
3 BR, 2 BA. crpts, drpg, 3 BR, 2 Ba, dbl gar: ~· 2135 Elden, Ma:r. Apt. 6. from Lake Park. 536-2692. patio. 71)5.lh Orchid. $250 Per
bllins. 1-Jc. 1225. 1st, last&: drps. rec:. & pool, lacil. _...,, NEAR cl .... _ month, y•arly. .. t' moo th. ~9160. WELL turn 2 Br in trlplex. new -~ to ueach
$75 dep. Avail. 2/15. 1· Adults, no pets. $165. 768 & shopping, 1 BR. & •n.60it 0
'135-9t12/842-TIS3. Westminster Scott Pl. CM. 646-2l2J. Bachelor Apts. 309 Memphis • ' •
2 BR, frplc, beam ceil, w/w, 4 BR, 2 ba, crpl/drps, bltns, rn.JDIO 2 part furn Sr. Inquire· Apt 2 or call -,,;, La.
paho. Adults only, no pets. pd p •-OK A il p o:. ~"""roonu, incl • · 536-4484 . v.·ater . eui . va · auo .• ._./mo. • util.s. ==~,,,..~-~~-LUXURIOUS French Referr
$152/mo. Yrly. 642-853>. Feb. l. $250. 893-m6 6'7S-O'.:a. FREE Utll, furn 1 BR nr cy, l bedroom, 2%. bath,
Ho,,.frplc., 3-BR::-2 Condominiums W VELY .2 BR. furn. a pt., ~~1~.,m 201 lOth St., Fireplace, Dining Room,
BA., 2 c~r g er• g •' Unfurn. 320 shag crpts, pool, close to ===·=~--·---laundry. $400. Agt. 675-t930.
fenced yard. 541-2:720 ---------storu. Adults, no pets. $160 BACHELOR Apt., 1 mile Adults only.
UNFURN 2 BR. Sl.0/-·. c __ o;.;•_t•;;.;..Ml..;..11 _____ , per mo. 1941 Pomona, Costa from Beach. Gas & Water I ,;;CllELO=;,;:;~-----""' ,,.. id $00/ 213 592-29'17 BA . · R Apt Jor quiet,
No dogs. 1989.C Charle St. 3 BR, 2 ·Ba, apl1, drapes, Mesa. pa • mo. : · ~ployed penon. $100 mo,
642-22.59 or 646-7017. blt/ins d/w, 2 pools, db. Sh•rp Beautiful 2 Br FURN. 2 BR all extras. $159. util pd. No cook in r.
2 Ba 2 ,.__ t Hou~ e, $235, StS-5270 Pool. Adults. No ~ts. ll teen Kids &: sml pets Dk. Pool. 675-2880. 3 Br, • -... gar, cps, 968-7510, 84~. I...:.:.:.....:.:.; _____ _
drps, dshWltt'. Qufet area. $46-3710. OK). $100. (Also, br untum ~---'-~-----11 Br a pt. partiaHy turn,
No pets. $ZWmo. 546-015&. TownhouH Unfun1, 235 ~1::14;;5;..E-cl=-:::de:;;lc..:c64::'-::9520:::::·__ Laguna BHch stove, refrig, crpts, drps,
2 Br, rerpc1nslble adult• only, 1 Bdnn, compl !urn, New 1 ·rn---,-mo-,-.M-w_k_u-p.-Ba-c-'" dose to heh. $150. 496-1981
no pets. Santa Ana Ave.,H _,_u,_n-ti_n;:.gt,,on,...,B,_•-:•,.<.,.h~..,.-· I shag~· new drps, bltns, clr TV ~pd. Crescent~; ,;54°"7..()993,::;:::·~~---
CM. 545-6412, 642-9139. $200 mo. Hnttn Bch, Tnh&e no ren, no pets. Bch 1435 N Oiut 494-2508 MOD.1 Br, Garage Apt. nr. $140/mo. 545-1882. · · · D11n11 Point for lse, 3 br, 2~ be., frplc, ""'~~~:...:::=---Lido Isle Albert50f1S 'Mll:t. Yr'ly' SlfiO
cpts, drps, w/d rtfrig incl. 2 BR Furnished Trailer, $135, ---------mo. Adults only. 67J.3936
3 & FAMILY RM. Pool, tennis. 714:5.16-3815. Utilities included. 1 BR. Furn. Util pakt. OCEAN view, elegant 3
Fr'pl. 2 Ba, b!tn RIO, Jndry Duplex•• Furn. 345 646-1809 Garage. I Bachelor, no pe!J. bedroom, 2 batht, lireplace,
hookup, dbl gar, f/yrd. $140. 1.Dvely 1 BR. Flan. $185/mo. 673-0837 eves. dining room. AdultJ only.
Chtld/pet ok. Hse to be en· Coit• M••• Near 1tort"I. Quiet adults. Newport Be•ch $500 per mo • .Agt. 675-4930.
firely ttrlec. $25fl. 1985 Po CM 5'8.-0728 NU-VIEW RENTALS 1 BEDR00~1. 131 East 214t mona, • DPLX apt, immed av.ii thru 3 Blks to ocean or bay, new
6734030 or 49.J.3248 SI, House A. ONE Bednn. Adults, no pets. J 2 1 BR deluxe, 2 br, 2 ba, bltns, Pool A Utilltlfs 1ncluded. une, &: • trplc, 1 \.ii frplc, beamed celling. $300
Fovnt•ln V•ll•Y phone 6".Q039 SI<" ~M 5411-....,"" BA, oU s!. prka:, trees, util lse. 673-3471. ;;.;..;;.;.""" __ ..;.. ___ I Duplex•• Unfurn. 350 ,,...~_._. iuo;io. pd. Library area berwn bay 1,c;=:.::.;.;:.:.:;.,,,..,,.-,-.,-~
3 BR, 2 BA, hllie rec. room, 1 OR 2 Br, lg rms, pool, nr °" ocean. Sn>. Everett 2 BR., bltns. Walk to beach.
crptd, drpd, water pd. ClOle BalbN Penin1ul• stops, util pd. Adults. 18&1 Michael, 673-6880. $190. Orange Coast Real
1cht>ol.1 &: park£. Avail. Feb. 3 BR, den, 2,A Ba., bllns, Monrovia, CM. 543--0336. l BR Guest muse W/JWim· Estate. Call: 6«-4M8.
$285 mo. 531-1120· relr\1., dshwshr. ~ blk bch •Sll9 DELUXE 1 Br., pool, m!Mi pocit for rent to single I BR unfurn •pt, CdM
NEWLY redec 3 BR. 2 BA, & bay. View. $4.25 yrly. )359 cpts, drps, bltns, 145 E.18th lady w/child. $100 mo. incl. S175 ** 675-5726
frplc, bltns, ch>se to schools, E . Balboa Blvd., Apt. B St., Apt. 10. 64~5429. ,util. Flexible, Call GeorJ:e, * GREAT VIEW ... 2 Br, frpl,
nice fncd yd . $250. Water 5.16-3518 or CZ1.3l 864-1846. •, w h 1 t e Elephant&" over-646-7071. bltns. 1undeckl, pooL $200
pd. Eves: l>lt-3970. N rt Beach running your house? Tum 2 BR, newly decorated, ~ up. 644-6344, 61">-5~.
Huntl ... ch IWPG Int ~ • =·• ll ngton. NEWPORT HEIGHTS them o "~· -ie ft. trom bay, ~ lse. incl. 2 BR, &hQ •-drps; Ref~ !hem lh.ru Daily P 11 o t utll. Inquire at 1004 Balboa., range,... $185 Frplc. No pet/
•WE have a lar&e selecUon ' DUPLEX CJ ,., .......... 5678 NB ~•
• ho US I=. '"-• · · "-'uid , 431 ltis 644-4340
of 3 and bedf'ODm mt:!• New large 3 BR, 2 BA, w/w
that can be moved Into & drps Elee bit-ins di!!.h·
alma.t Immediately on our washer' many extru'. $30,'.l/
Rent-Option pla n . Mo. "C"Thomas.
SHERWOOD R.E A LT Y • RM!tor 648-5527
54M555 BEACH TOWNHOUSE
VACANT 3 BEDRM 2BR + Den/Ottlce. Frpl, pa-
2 Bath, eled blttn 11/0, FA tio, tile deck. 1275. 548~
beat, ~. ar1100• 1e~
od lot, dbl p-. Wail< to
ahoppin1. $210. per mo. I \!Wl CAlL a.gent 962--4471/546.8103 A,1r1m1nt• fot ~
4 Br, S ha <!Ofldo w /bl tns. l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~m; $250 pt.t rno. 812'J Deertleld J60
Dr. H.B. t:n3l 823-'<85. Apt1. Fum.
* 3· BR, 2 BA, cpts, drpe.
dthwiht. Qu iet cul-de·sac
11rt«t. $225/mo. 67s.&23G.
ol BR Condo. Children. ok.
Like new ffiru.qut. Cali
&42,..7096 tit 5 or wknds.
3 Br, Jee )dtcbtn. wa'tC!!t' pd.
$1!0. Tint • Ill piU> lea. .. ,__. .
Gener11
---iiiiiiiiii"ii-ii x
lold New Concept
FURNITUIE RENTAL ·-to Monll> * 1001' Purcbuo Optlo:i • BR-, m botha •••••• l3Sl *Wide s.tect1or>
I BR., 2 ba. -•••• $300 S,,le-Oolon
I 811.. 2\i ha. •••• ~ I * 24 Hour Dolivtr7
ired h111 1 WfJ• fD
REALTY
.-
OPEN JO AM 'IO 6 PM
$100/mo. Bltn at.ove. Rebig. \Vashu/Dryer. 536-(13J6, C
avail. Children & pet ok. DELUX 2 BR, l% Ba. nr/;;;o;•:;:t;.;;;::;;;;::;::;;;:;.I Nr. sclll. OU Bak.~r St. 646-2056. bch .. prlv. back yrd. gar .•
HARBOR laund nn. 315 Crest Ave.
2 BR. cpta, drps, bltns, Call SJ&.7029.
TOWN HO US£ ~'t~~.ir;~6 ~~·62~r; :;c~C!:.~}~F~ .. ~';l.~~ *LABltACONS: NAEW * I~=~~-~~--D/W. 8231. Ellis 342-7644. '" PTS. 2'll7 Hlll'bor, ftCat Wilson 1 BR Carport:. Priv. patio. .. BR N k/"M/ 2 BR, l~ BA STIJDIO Cpts drps all 1 .6 r. par • ~......,.. mo.
TOWNHOUSE, '140/mo. adulis onl;, No :h~';s!; Cpts, drps. No pets. Adllta. 2 Wroom Avail •
: :eated pool:·Adu!ts only pet. $12S/mo. 543-lJ22. 846-2'208, 935. • Built-ins • SWiJnnUn1
o PetA-Adj. 1o .shopping ** NEW 2 BR Townhouse. 2 BR. cpts, rps, n.nge. No Pool • LIDaJ • Bu-B-Quas
•• pt.ts. 1 child OK. SUS mo . • Garqe, 3 Bdrm * 2 lath Cpts, "'1>•. patio, bllno, gar. ,.,_,.,,,,/ ALL trrnmEs PAID
Pool. C h l l d Ip et ok. J ~-~~'-'-.,.------ADULTS. NO PETS ~
Llvin1 room with· cathedral $175/mo. SlJ.-2904 lrvlne 354 AvocMo St., C.M.
ceiling It frple, Sepa.rata fO.-laundry &reL Encl tlo ***MES,{ Verde 2 Br. .,.,.,.
Swlrnmln& pool .r. cbllJ:..; upPer, newly decor · bltoo. PARK WEST
playground. pm crpts drpts, Adults, no peta. APARTMENTS
HARBOR GREENS 548-sm 540-?562 $150. 1 Bdrm. From $160
516-4353 2 BR w gar, 1140. CRt, Ind 2 Bdrm., 2 Ba. lltAND NEW .
BAY MEADOW APTS. yrds.nta"'r.!°A· .:". Callpd. b~I From $1'5 Bnm cellln,p, paneling, .... ,,..u 3883 Parkview Lane From $14 DSabtrullmr, ....
prlv J:ll.tiot:, recreation fa. A 5, 636-4120. Irvine, fJU1t otf c:arpeUnc, W1Jk.1a a.ts.
dllt:les. All adulta:, no pets. e WI L·SON San Diea:o Fwy 1t C\Ll1er Rd~ Forced aiJ' btat, extra lllel
e 2 BR'• FROM ' AS LOW GARDENS • rooms. Belollful--
Ai $159/mo, 2 BR, 1;tlBA, cpt/drps, L1,un1 Beach heated JIOOl. BBQ's. eeca-i
·-w "'·-4Ulol --• • Bay St., C.M. End p~ . $140. 641"68ll tn A ... i-._ ..... ""'"---''"'"" 00 6'6-0073 2 BR r.1.., UNUSUAL 2 Br .. part, furn, P ~ '"" .. Nft"U•· ... ..,1 d. No pets. lst Ir Ocean view. Lge. iardtn Ad"1t llvtne. no pet1.
SICK--OFLOOKmG!Qulet 2 last. Cl'!anin1 dep. areas. S250 mo Incl. util. EL CORDOVA A,TS.
BR 2 13A. Prime Joe. Fully .$150/mo. Util. Incl. 135 Mature adlta: only, 494.4fiM. 20N'n Charle St. 6'2"4470
carpeted &: draped ahd Albert Pl. 213: 595-4436. OCEAN front 2 BR 2 BA Nit Harbor A HaqU.ltoa SL
sparkling clean. M<>dern • REAL Value! Cpt!, drps, ' ·'
bilins-walk to ahopping. dshwhr, pool, 2 BR. $l30. for lealie, reatonable rent. -
$155/Mo, CALL 545-3424 Matuni adults. No pet.!, 53G Oil! Dr. J!!!.,.!!1!'!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!911•1
(Open ewal. S OUT H Quiel. 2'2!15 Pacific Ave. Lagun• Nlguel THE EXcrnNC
COASI' REALTORS 543-61178 or 642-«29. PALM MESA APTI.
.. THE GABI.ES" BEsr Area. Lg<. 3 Br., LAGUNA NIGUEL MINUTES TO NWPT. BCH. ' -, B /prt APARTMENTS ruRN. OR UNFURN. ~ r w gar. AdJts, bltns, ttfrlg., cpta, drps, l BR, l BA * 2 BR,, 2 BA Unbdievatily la.rp apts, butt c p t Id r p, b 1 t n 1, patio. No peta. Ptt-1choolu --' J--·~ I bl fuUy c111rpered ,. rtt'aped ...,...., M.'lU.61, e ect tin•,
&OUndproofed, Fncd yrd ok. $150/mo. 5 48-2765, From $115 aha& crpts, dt"PI. 11una...
\VI patio. Wt r p d . 642-4261. incl pa, 'IV cable, witer, etc:, Aduita, no pet.:. .
Gardener/maint. Call btwn"u_N_F_URN--.-i.,-•. -1-B-R-. -Sto_v_e all kit bl.tnt, ~ry areas, SINGLES •••••• From 1135
l&.5, 636-4120 I: relrig. Adult. only htd swim poo1, BSQ'a, priv 1 BEDRM ··~··•From S'140
2437 <pnee Ave "G" ••• $155 $135/mo. 2135 Elden Ap!. s:' patiol A bltcontes Open 2 BEDRM •••••• Fr6m S1tO
N1w adull 91rd1n Apta. cC_M_. ~~·-----I ID AM to 9 PM *~ You·,. rilht fllly're -
$180. * $140 Ideal !or active 499.2'117 * 290Cl Alonl4l priced!' lS61 Mesa Dr. J
2 Bedrooms • 1% Baths aeniors. , Br. immac, New att Crown Valley Prkwy (S bUla from Newport Blvd.) S255 .-...... """ 0 -"' M••• v.~--• crpts. -,.. -· ~ e SP•-us e .S Bedrooms • 2 Ba tbs -..1v
\ALSO AVAIL. FURN.) ** BEAUTIFUL l A 2 BR. DELUXE 2 I: l BR. 2 Ba, Well·Dniined Apts
151 E. 21st, 646 16•6 Con.temporary Garden Apts. encl gar $150 up. Rtntal 1 A 2 BR. w/ Terr&ee1.
We1tb1y 21 Apartments ~o~~. pxit. S150-l16S. Ofe, 3095 Ma~ A V.C. From S\40 • $2'15/mo
P1rk0 Llk1 Surrounding REDECORATED 2 br, I ba *ID3< 5;:, ~4?'~~ QUIET • DELUXE · 1 ,. N-rt ... ch Qvltt Mult IMn•
1-2 • J BR APTS ~.;,;;~ P';E~~ 1: ~---~-------! MIRRIMAC WOOOS
Prv patloS *' Hid Pools 5f6..l6S8 Sf:ACUFF MANOR Apta-2 GS Merrimac Way, CM Nr shop'c: * Adults only · Br. $160 Uni. $175 turn. i -====:...:.:=.:::::...1
Mart• I A ts EAST •Ide. lovely I hr, Cpta, ,_ bltna b ••-1 lft q11e p ' garden duplex. Adult !!<!.' -~· , iar ~P . HACIENDA
l n7 Santa Ana Ave., CM $135. 548-8007. 15Z Placentia Ave. Alk HARIOllt Mgr. Apt 1L1 646-ssc:! atx>ut our discount. 642-334() 241 AVOCADO STRIX1'
eBEAl!J'JFVL GROUNDSe 2 BR Apt. nr. OCC. New or 548-2682. lnlanfl OK, up fo 3 )ft ol IP
SPANISH DECOR cpt•. drps. Back yd. Utll. PARK NEWPORT No pet•
Alrlcond. Gas, wtr. pd. ..,..., rar. Wtr. pd. $165 mo. APARTMENTS DelW<e 1 6 2 BR. Pool
Garap, Pool, Rec. nn., 919-1590 (]f &'4·8867. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms Gara,.. Dilhwthr, Paid util.
laundry. l BR $140 •• 2 BR DLX 1 BR, gar., quiet area &nd Towntloult:!.1. SPa, pooh, Tit.OM $150. '6tf.UOC
Sl&o.$1654175. for adults only. No pe-ts, tennls. From f:l.70. Acrou
Hacienda de MHa Apls $135. 150 E. 21st. 646-f,016. from Fashion [lland al Jam· * 2 BEDROOM *
160 W. Wil1on, Ste Mgr. No.1 O.luxe 2 Br., 2-1..-boree It San Joequin Hili., f~ Ba Tow.ahouM conorpt.
Mt:!sa Verde Villa $1751mo. * 536-26S2 Roe.di. cn4) 644-1900. BHm ceillnp. extra lrl
New Deluxe townhouae, 2 Br. . e NOW OPEN e bedrm1. encl i .itto, ~
Bltns di1hwhr car P 2 BR. Clean, 2 kids OK. No BRAND NEW 1 A 2 Br From tloa rm,, •wia batbri. ft:.
drap@s, garage!, ~atlo, poo1 '. peta. $135. 770 Shalimar. $148 Prl Adults. Ollr 8UndaJ' ,after. !1311-47'1. -v. patio, bllllanl .... S.IJ.Q' • -·-Nr IC.his, park; S195 month nn, ht'tted pool w/ jacuut, LNIOlll _ .;_, ... ~
540-1668. LARGE 2 Br., Ill Ba Studio 1>ure cio.ts, dee!> pile csr-HARIOR CllRlliNS * OPEN 11 TO S * apt., re!rlJ. avl. No peu. petlnf, I"'" ~Jnr. -DCLUXE 1, 2, 3 Br's. ~ W, f140. 726 Joenn .st,, M6-15M . AdultJ-, Nr, &lrport just W.J.,,::::--=:::ii;;:;;;:,,.,,... __ J Sunfi~. ~7-8218, 540-1901. SM~l Br. duplex, patioJ d. ~er. 21102 S ln:h St1 $100 • MOVE IN 4Uowuce
• TOM<l!OtlSE < BR 2 II< baamo, fli>l, no pets, I adlt. Nft'port Beach. !117"'246. Shady Elml4"1'"Pool
cp>s. drpa, bllnl, P,.. & Yrly. U$. uW pd. 642.a:;:IO. ,.,, BRAND NEW ,._, Oilldftn'a Sectton
clubhouM'. % ml. O.C.C. AVAIL now, fttshly ~led *32 sane.a Ana Ave (Act09s ~· 6 Unfurn 1 •2 Ir. d ftclm U Countrt OUli) From Sl35/mo. 11.P:
$245. 5!tl~4S after 4 pm. 2 BR, Bltns, . shwrr, encl Spacklus 1 It 2 BR ·from lTI .E. 2'lrd St. e ta..J1CS
SPA'"'2 l 3 Br. Apt. $140 up prage, No pelt. M8-608I $100 •Sil!. nREPLACES. Huntington ......
Pool. cpt/"'1> .• bltna. Kids ok E••t llluff Prfv patios, loldt of cio.Jt. l j"j~~-jfijjjH;;j; :: S~1!f:"N~0i 5 :f~ 'iliE"WPORT'e~ACH ' :;:;e~":s. Atlultt. Man-I la Quinta lln1sa * l LOWER * F~~·:!~:d~~;...,_ Dt.X, new cpt I dtpa, l blk SPANISH COUNTRY 'gg.
All t: C!ctric 2 en, cpts. drps, !es above, below. Crtcloos ocnn ~. Split &tv.tl 2 Br TATE ltttna' a •chat
pr. patio. Nr . ..,. • lhea· IIW.s • ·qu1e1 aum>Wldlns duplex, frpl, dwt<r, P60,.. .,.. 1'111....i '°"" -ttt. Adults, no pet.I. $155 mo. klr 1antU.y wUh children. ly,. no ptt•. f.d...1924 aft 5 a cu BBQ •
545-lSI~ &12-64119. Neu O>rona del Mar lllll> wloida. ~IM ll<lq W OICL
SHARP! I Br, l&e cloleta, School. Fltopjace, wet'*' A 3 or < Bit.. n,Jc. Patio. I lldnL U .... PIO,
pool. Nr. •hops. Adulll. US< bullt·ln kltcben a~ Bit.,. Dlhwbr. Ntt -A ram $115.
MoMl\lla. wa.-0336. S35 AMIGOS WAY 6"-!1991 d..... Child OK. f16f-7'73 2 Bdrm """'"'-$1.'IS.
LRG 3 Bil. 2 BA, no pau: 0>!4Wtll. Banker • CO. evea """-1Z10
ChUdttn OK. Nr IChlo l Manarlng A,.nt * 2 • I Bl\ Slldol, l Ii Ba, A!X l11'lLmES INa.uDED
ShPI. 1110. mo. 54~1 Huntlntt9" 6';ci\ an flee, dwhr, "11r/dry ADULTS NO P!:IS
rrom ··0u1sim.s Nodcti.t.. BEACHWOOD APTS. hookup • pr. Nr. R... =POUR MODE!.8
to outgrown Ltvll -)'OU can Brand Mfr 1·1•S BR. J blk Hosp. UIS 6 S%5Q. 6t6 as. tTI~) •n .... ~ LH. '1
tum ''n.sb ID cuh'' ln a . ntlJ 8 " "'vn..o DAILY PILOT clauifltd Id to BEAOl! cPtt. tlrpa, bl!J>t, l.UFFS: I bd. 2 ba, 4 Blka. So. ot Son Diop SC~M-UTS ANSWUS IN CWSIFIED 700 1rp1c. 125 ut11 "· llB. bl.,,, crpia, drpa. ~ tncl rrwy. oa -1 b11r w ... ___ ..:..:..;;+.;.;...-=.;..;;...:..:....;..:..:..:..=.:..:..:..:.:..:..-=.;:.:=:::..::::.::....:..:::_ __ 1 • caill-311-!Stll l water l«-7'29. 1 Halt to P-.
Uni•. Patt Cttlltr, l.rvtN 517 W. l~h. OI MW4!I
Cal AJ>r)lmt, -me N. Mtln SA l141.Qll4
/
• •
, OAll Y ,llOT
b..,:wl l[jj] ;;I ;;"t .. ;;·-·;;· ;;;I i •;i~I ~11~-·~·-~I ;,;111
s., Office R-ol 440 Found Ureo ads) ~Ip Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F710
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 p-RJV="A .. TE.-o-ll.--eul-la_bl_e_lor_ SMALL kitten. white cheit ilt WINTER Ra.tat Concrete WA?l.'TE.O! Meuy 1 re es ATTR. WAITRESS -INVEST IN
-~-I[!] .._I _-__,J~ [ '""--J[S] [ ..-...... Jf5l I ---l~ 1---1~ I
Hauli"I
-·" •·" •---· Yard1 & I REPAIR. re=~r any;<: ExP'r .• not "nder 21. M>11I be N...wpcrt S..cft s1u.u ins., tu or Jt!:. lttt, &rti1 bi.ck &. ww. uuw-•, patioc, dr 1vf!1, 1:arqe1. movng Roo'ful&. EXECUTIVE f
--· -· .•. -1 -,:;;opers~c;;:,.:~~:;;.:;·=--·' F"'od In Mariners Park. 11dewall<J. Do•. 642-851~ I< how .... $7."° P'' ht. + problems. Wenoda · =b/e. NO PllONE YOUR UTURE
OAKWOOD GARDEN I ~ Ft. NEW OUice v:I fewpart Beach, 646-S586. PATIOS, walks, drive, ioslall odd jobs. 548--5863. ~"""~·-•-•~t._64_5-~1-69_1_. ---1 , aJ>Pl.Y In person, 111! YOUR OWN BOSSI
Mtn or Women • Ap.1rtment1 y A RD/ 1.. e T. Guy Roofino, Deal Surf & Sirtoln, 5930 \\'. Cout
VIEW! in ....,jng BLACK Lab. Re~ r I ever. new lawns, saw, brtak, &ara&e, c-.. ... nup1. -H..,., NB (Rl!'BOf( L.lv\no for 5'" n-•-di I Dl-·t. I do -· °"'n w-~. -J., . · ... unUngton ~ch. ~25T9. About S moa. w/whlle gpot rtmove. 548-86tiS for Ht. .nl!'tnO\'e u.._,,,, . rt vy. '""" ••v w ... N""~~TO~~A)Cl·I • Orne.ES • on chest. Vie. lSlh &. CEMENT-WORK-~.k7 t!.,~oad11r, backbot,1 =G4~5--278~0,..._ .. _s.._9500_-_. ---ATTRACTIV.1!; fen1ale, lnid-
Personnel Agency
"' Briatol s A 557 .,....,,.. lt'I --Plumbing ~nUes, for fUU.time poSI· s-·y $55
16th e.l Irvine 300 &: ~ 3<I ft Co!l:ta Mesa ' · · ....u.>.1· Froe En. &15..()826 I :cc.~::::·~~--~-ti:>n as ~ptionlst·{ypist. -to 0
., ••• ~ or .~70 calt.6MJ.2'130 ' :rOUND, nw111 watch TRASH. & Carage clean.up, .... _ A11t. Bkkpr to$600 ~ o• Contrac-;tor d F ....... LE\V TAICAS &: Sonis Plum· ,.._, lnwlve1 as 1 is t Ing G
Lease A Yellow
Tax:i Cab
-VISTA DEL ESA-3)15 Newport Blvd. NB playground of CoUege v~w ~t ttt e!it. no..,-tlme. bing. RcpaJr, re PIP e, edltor in producing monthly .O./Bkkpn9 to $550
Apart nts Aaou/Clty Hall. 675-l60l School. H.B. Jdenti!y to ROOM Additions, Efilimales.1 "°~=;:·-~----remodel. New C 0 n 11 t. magaDne. "99--4571. Sr. Acct. Clerk to $600
l & 'BR. l'u9". & Uni. Dial> CORONA DEL MAR claim. 3<7-<>900. p:ans & L.laTyouteo. gtnglc •.r ' WE ~Ill anything that Iii.. ui 64&-8340. BE AN AVON Sec'y (IO Koy) $525
Call for Appl
546-1311
WJLSht~-1(7\le A ~rig • Deluxe Bu&. Otncfl, 673..6757 ADULT male s I am e se !!ry1511. . nstructlOn, a PA-1\.~P !,ruc.297k. 1 ...:.:;C~O;;L.:;E:--,P"L"U'"'=MB"l"'N"G,--REPRESENTATIVE G irl Friday $550
io.a. • 'g·L"' Rtt center. w/collar, vlc. Via Lido O'I•· · 01.r 3 y -Clerk · Typltf $425 'c-"7.:-Aik..,.,,,for=H~ennan~~~-I
·• Butlnest Rent•I 44$ N-~ 8 6-1136 24 hr. serVice. 645-1161 ....,-t me 5how you how easy • • 1 'T Sr11.rts f'~ I u<-u, N. · •r · AD.O.A·ROO~t or 2nd story Housecleaning it Is 10 make money & havt I A'.M LOOKING FOR A
Irv ne & Mes• OriVe FOR Rent: Deluxe ottices, COLDEN Jtetriever, Vic. Remodel kitchen flr bath ---------1 S8 JfR. Plumbing &: tun tn your free hrs. For a Call MAN who Is capo.ble ol * 545-4155 * Jndustrial area. New bldg 17th St & Superior, C.M. Ap-CENTER l.JNE CoMt. Co. CAU. Us Again, Dutch Main· Eleelrical Repair. personal interview, ca 11 Betty Bruce earning $20,000 to $00,000
/.
~E ,\U.! N ;-w p
0
rt nr. San Diego Frwy & prox. 2 )11'1. old 675-8419. Fnee EstimafH 8J3..8833. rena.nce Service fot carpet, 1 __ Gl2=·::.27o:5o::-.::°''-'64c;2:.·l:.:403::.._ S.'Kl-?OU. ! &MW!.Uy. Fantulic finan.
T01''US, from $350. Bay Crown Valley Parkway, FND. Bi&' red dog. Pleue ~tY Way, quality hoine Doors & \Virldov.·s. Free PLUMBI"'."JC REPAIR RASYS1'11'ER needed for 410 W. Co.st Hwy., NB cial opportunity if you
tronl.
2
Br ..
2
Ba., doclca. 831-J<OO. identify. Vic. Orange Co. remod. wans, • • i li n,, estimates. 537-1508. No job too •mall 11 mo. old. y,.., home or Suite H 645-2716 qwtlify. Must have manage.1 3121 W. Coa.11 Hwy , COM.'1ERCJAL rental nr the Airport, 551--0321. tloon. ('IC. No job too sm&ll. JAPANESE Lady for I ~--*~64_2_-3_1'_:?8_*___ mine. 11 you have facil. call EXPER al . mcnt Rbilily. Phooe 835-!Dll
7141642-2202. Cannery In N.B. Immediate I -'"'-"c::.~.:.:...=0---~ 547~. 24 hr ans. Str\'. housework . Requitts Sewing/Alteraiions aft 6 5'1$.8384. • · ununum mast for confidential lntervW!'I\• YOUNG female de-cla.11.'ed ,,.,.__.,rtatio 642 = ~'"""=.:..::;::.____ assembler. Must : have O\\'fl \\ilh 1\11-. Ralnwatu.
-Westcliff-RiYier• possessioil. 6'i3-4747 or cat. Rich blk I gry. Vic. AddlUons * Remodelin& ~-~"" n. ..,.,.,,.. -------·-BEAt.rrY Operator. l!Ome hand tools. Apply 770 \\'.liiOiiOiiOiiii;;..iiii'---'•
Spacious I Ir. 2 BR. Bltns, 544-3124. nti k Tustin. 642--0647. Gerwick &: Soll, Lie. ea!csa. ~=g Scrviee :Iterations -;, 642-5845 folJowlftg preferred tor C.AI. 17th St., C.l\t.
carpetJ, drapea, heatel pool, CAR Lot-75 x 1so-2 0 36 FAT Cat: Pt/S'l8.mese. Vic. 673-<iOU * s.1~2170 ts, 1 s, Floor etc. eat. ~ccuratt. year~ e"J>. shop. 642-SJlS. I E=XP=~.0--..... --m-b_l_en--f-o,
Nr shop'g area. Adutta. Harbor, Cl\f, Ready fur Orange&: Sierks St., c.M." Electric-;al Resld. & O:imrnc'I. 548-tlll Televi1ion Repair Bookkeeper/Secretary ca1nper factory. Apply l\1a·
:: ~':61~J!t0..~=-:, ::~· w. J . or 5 moo. 6'!Ul88. ELECTRJCAL. p,.sidential, D;~~ri;~~U:G * BLAINE'S TV * Bookk<co;ng thtu tliol bai· jorway. &;9 \Vest 18th, C.M. ~~ SHOWROO'!, mgt •. otfl-• BLACK Labrador, female, comm1, industrial. Also, re~ 24 hr. Call 673--4072 servicing All Brands ance & xlnt typing skills " .,. ·... found MI s a i on Viejo __ ... _,, Authori1.ed Magnavox rcq'd to associate \vith tbis EXCEPTIONAL
rpace in LagUna loc 11~ng. repain &-ilmal· Income T•x substantial sales organiza. $100. To S Mo. 494-4653 • LibrtlJ")', Jan. 13. S.1058. lations. Big or 61llall. Llc'd Known ~r honesty 5'~3U tion. \Ve are looking for a SALES -lnclu r al Rental 450 FND. Fml. Boxer, vie. Lido & tna. Free est Fair prices. CLARK &: Toner Tax Tr•• Service well groomed marurc book· I~•. 675-8666. Electronics S..Vice. 24 YEARS •"1>· in -k.....-as•i'1ant 12540 -.) OPPORTUNITY GENERAL Tree Serv. Yard ~·~ 4 000 SQ FT Lo1t SSS area. P('rsonal service in with a min of 5 yrg exp. 1 • • PRINTED circuit boards, your home. Call for appt. clearHIP, hauling, sprinkler Please send type written re-Unlimited CO'mpE'n · n po-
} \VANTED 2 gala (&11)' age) to SprinJdt'd • Good JocatSon. DOC lost in Vic. of Orange design & fabricatio'11!!, short 54f>..Ti35, Howard Clark & 1~pairs. Reas. 64&-5848. sui:ne including salary re· tentlal \\'ith futu~ manage·
share new 4 br home $450. ~month. SI. &: 20th, 01. Thru AM. ~ gpecialists: 1 or 100. John Toner. REl.10VAL &. trimming, fire quu-ement to Box 2328. Nc-v.·· ment opportunit. for quali·
w /working w id
0
w . -l/13. Xtra aick longhaired ne Entef'pr'i.sies, 962-lT:tl \\ood 'allowanct'. 642-2755 or port Beacn, for appt. l m· fied {)('rson '\'i sales or Exec Sec
Washer/dryer/kit. pT t v 11 5,00~ s9. FT. German Shephenl. Brn. & Fiborglau DIGlilFIED pvt. preparation 642-1403. mediate opening. public ,,,,, ... , bac . Bookkc.-~~~-~ to ~
I
•~-Li Blk. n am• "Tena-•". loo::".'O:"'-------· I of your return. ACCU-Tax,' ,;;:;.....:.;.::'-------,_ _ w sepr re ... ,.. Non amoken Ice new, high ceili-Lrg. ~· • N "Tile Bkkpr Asst. t:Ullto Cleric .,.,,_.
I P
--Pie ... help us llnd, COi\1P.mobilefacilitiesfor 31" .NewptN.B.645--0779·1_________ ,...,.. Com he · 1 ·n· "lh ''l''
51
$425 pease. ?'ivacy, ~ % acre lot, fenced. $650. home/industry, lite manu. Fee Paid. Look~ & skills+ .. ?re ns1ve ra; ing Vo'! Keypunch Traint $350
dependence, congenial liv· per month. Reward. 642-2434. boat/auto repair. New ~
1
M_•_'°_"_'Y;..._____ CERAMIC tile new & pcriionality will SCCUl't> top imbal t~t> ~ar salary + File Ocrk e S32.>
·: ing. Rent nesq. Call B. Roy McC•rdle Re•ltor LOSr tan l.ee.ther drawstring duct developm't $7·!S79 remodel. Free est. Small notch opor. 1111h fun firm com.misSon pl~ .\l"adirig to Aecounting Clt>ric to $400
•
. Bullett. Mf..1170 or 832-878.5. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. -~. Please ftlurtl lden-BRICK, Block&. Stone Work. jobs welcome. ~2426. · that stresses t"mpi...~ re-slraighl commissions. Cen 'l Ott:ice Trne -....
,.--Furniture Ca.II I ~~~~~~~~~ ~,= -WORKING pl only, WW be 541-7729 tification, Urgent! 4 6 0 1 54().-0929 or &16--0SjS lattons. Call Pat Kennedy, A . . Free/1''fie Positions ~ .viug as a bua in this Fairfield Dr., C.Orona dcl SPECIAL! Avg. chair or [Ill 8.tl-2700, Also fee Jobs. Den. nnual eatrnngs Pxceeding 488 E. 17"1 ''" 'rvine) 01
: upstairs studkJ room tn prl. COSTA MESA Industrlal, fKX> ti.1ar. rocker stripped $5. Gluing, Painting & Emt*Yment I i I nis &: Dennis f'mlonnel n>,(QJ not uncommon. Ex· 642-1470
home w/pool. $85. mo. Call & 1000 sq IL 959 IV. 17th St Paporh•"li"!I ~ Agency, Im Michel'°" Dr, ccllent lringe heooi~. AJ ~!:::~:i::;=:i==:l=il!I .. 639-lllO REW ARD .. into leading to brass polished. 645-0866. ';;;;;;;~~~I lrvil'l(". chance to be your own boss. l~-
t s.tG-6740. .-,-,,-.,=..,--~~~--I V I r ii I, B ig, r f! d Gardening 1 · E\ffl.fEDIATE PLACEMF.r\~ .ROO.l\t & bath 1n pnv•te M~l 1350 ·Mt ft 2/otrlre & Afghan/Setter, last littn No Wasting Job Wanted, Male 700 *Bo6Ktcetper-$600 ~ resu.me & personal data OFFICE POSITIONS
home. Kit & laundry priva. be.th $150 mo. 2800 sq ft vie. 19th & p I ace nt i a. AL'S GARDENING * WALLPAPER * Gcn'l gackground, AIR, AIP with business background to PACIFIC MUTUAL
! Female only, Mesa Verde, w/ottice, -i Baths, Jge rear &f&..3149. for gardening & s ma 11 \Vhen you call ''Mac·• SCRAM-LETS-& payroll. Know' I of Trial Classified ad 323. Daily Fn!e dail b ! -:1391. door, $32S mo. mo 1.og,. LOST Red Lab. Retriever iandsca¢ng services, ca 11 5-18-14<4 646-1711 Balance. p;iot, P. o . Box 1500. C..lo tlon for ~ .. ~' 1 lra~rta-
St. CM. Dys: 646-503.1, eves , _ _._ 540-5198. Serving Newport, 30 DAY Special InlcrtEx!er Service Cent.er Agency 1\1.esa Calif 9'J626 ei · n L<Vl> An·
BEDROOM, den, bath. J>riv. "A" ,.,,.
01
1'.111111111,111 Viejo area. Answeni CdM r-•-M Do ANSWERS 500 Ne,~ C•n~r ~ ,,,,, · · · R es until n1ove to NeYo'·
• en
--E-'--.1 __ ,_ V'IO"'UUOL, •A Tim n-w-~ 837' ......,., • ~ esa. ver painting, Local refs, 30 yrs . ..,.... .. '"" v i-•o port
u ... ~. '"''.-..3"'" ,.....,, w • 1"'" °""" -.;i.;i••· Shores, \VestclifL F Sulie 535 Gt.i.49b't An Equal 0p..-n
1
ni!y . : $IKI mo. NpL H
1
b ta. Rentals Wanted ~ LOST exp. rec est Call Cluck, ,....,. '" SEP'I'E~1BER 1972 ,,, ·~· ,,,-..,..-..,------· ; Boxer puppy, 3 mos. GARDEN Maint. Clean-up, &i;)-0809. Fennel -Guest -Secor -BUS DRIVE R-S-Employtt J.1./F lnterviewi"" H-In
-WANT 2 t brn w/blk stripes. Reward! $3 NEW ... •<> · ru • car garage or 536-4595 96S-38l
7
ratotiHing, new lawn pron. PAINTING/Papering. 18 yrs Behold -LOUSE .17 Per Hour EXPORT f' k.! Sal PORT 1',NANCIAL CT'R
RN room H.B. 4 C.M. stora.ge. N. Huntington Bch. • • ing, sprinklers. Oda Garden In Harbor area. Lie & bond-Ne\\'s ilem of a homicide: Apply ~1on thnl Fri l'.rom • Jml see cs l.1onday & Tuesday
Util. Ideal for atudent 1 area pref. 841·2535. LOST 112/'72 • BI r;, Male, Serv. 531-#16 d~ aft 5
1
ed. Ref's furn. 642-2:356. "1llc accused. an extennin-7A.\i 10 4P~f at bus garage, '-lgr., Dutnt Gennan. Reply 9 o'clock Ai\.1 . 2·30Pti.I ~$65/mo. &: $75/mo. ~!~!!!!~~! Red Irish Setter, ''Eli". ~958S. =P~A~INTIN==G~--G~--atO!' by trade, came home 915 Baker St, C!\t P.O. Box 188, Dana Pt. On ·
1 Br ful ba Ia: closet pvt mt I ........, 11•1 -~~'~"'~:ro_.~"':-.~-·-P~ls.--rtrn=. PROFESSlDNAL. Can:lel1('r, work at falr~rices.~!:! ~:1~ i~ ~~ ~~n a~) BUSSSl-53:110 Fee Paid Si~A~~r~!'~g
-11o
3
b'"-,_ ~~-·· '-------' =-tree V."Ork, pruning, Ins. GTh-5740. wilt-'s closet" B Y Serv. Cl<'rk f.".,20 Comer Santa~--&
,... , ..... w "'-""llA3• -MESA de! Mar "stormy" hlk sprinklers, clean-up io· b•. I ~ ~ 67J..1023 9 ~10 pm. &: wht long hair cat, owl
1
and
5
cap 1 n g, Gro,...,,e, PAINTING, prof. AU y;ork YOUNG man l2, educated in Full Time, PennarK>nt Lr!ga A ~~·y p "' $5...i N<'Y.'J>Ort Center Drive
I
~ "A" ""''"'. ·a guarn. Colors p e c i a Ii 11 Denmark seeks ne\\' flelds. Neat & Dl-pendabie PP ieant ays T~N! l~~~~~~;..;;:,;;;;,,~1 NICE room fru' emp]oyed Personals 530 face, v.~ uea coUat ~,),XIV .,,., ... <IL' .,,.71441 18 -n.. .• , P.ccept·Sec·y lo $55011NSURANCE: Top tch
man /
-"'·· prlvile w/1 D •~.. """' .,.,,... O't,,.....,..,.,, .,.. · . Ex-rienced in elec eng, '" v~ no "' ..,.,.,,.....,. ges. -,._ -::=·~-~-::::;·-~::,:.·~,:..:;:::.,'· --1 AL'S Land·-p;•• Tr r Apply 1'n ~-n Typist :s:Sl comm'l lines gal ~-· ~-->Aide CM .,.,, """"' TenH, uptinht? .-. ._.. ~..... ee COMPLETE exter. $DJ & quality control recr land •""-,,.._ 'l O! sr-" '"-~ UU1C · _.__., • LOST: Irish Setter 4 mos. removal Yard remodeling. After 3 Pfl.f '-"'n c .,...., lo agency exparu;.iOn. }.t ··-'
V 'Ion R nt I
,
25
Bt pampered by an attractive area 395~ O>s1a Mesa St. up. Avg. rm. SM. Neat d<'\'dop incl management, (No Phon Cal Rettpt $-f!O be bl -,AC• • •I ,. highly qualified technician. Trash hauling, l9t cleanup. work. Ref.s. Roy, 84.7-1358. interviewing, training, ard e Isl • a e to work .. jJ). REWARD: 642-1613. Repair sprinklers. 673-1166. . Al 20 The Five Crowns Bkkpl' to f.'"'100 deJ>cndcnUy. Salary open. ~-~Ys;:::ipooma ... ge IGO~~LD;;EN;,;=,R<:,.=,lrl::..:eve=r.::.a_p_pro_x. EXP .. PAJNTINC, prof. All \Wrk r;~ing. so ~ Restaurant Clerk S320 Call Mrs. Slnt11 &33.-9550.
2 old F nd
. M • Hawanan ~an:lener. guarn. Color special i • t yatching eX1J., speak5 5 3801 E. Pacific r ••• , H~.. BackF':'.'.,/F_ p-;.-..~ $425 INSOMNIACS .•or r•··-~
3. Sauna&: shawer yrs. ou vte. esa Complete garde!l'l.1ng serv._ g.u,...uss 541_1441 · languages. Penonable & Coro ~ "J ,._-.. ~.--""''"''.... ~ ..... u
4. Work Out room Verde. 968-0063. Kamalanl, 646-4676. S46.fl'1ll: ' willing tu learn. .m-\861. na. del Mar. No ph. calls. t RUTH RYAN AGENCY project on sleep di~
5. Comptimentary Juices LOST in vie, l9th &: Orange, * 549 2015 J b W t d F 1 702. BOOKKEEPER, Jns. Agency r 1793 Nc-.\l>Clrt C~t &164ll1'1 21..» yrs.. Good pay for 5
and soft drinks. C.M. white ·male rabbit.
21
_ exp • F -
1
SIDING k Facia si29• 2 story 0 an • 1 ema • e~. req'd. Call i\lrs. 17931 Beach Hn 847·9617 wQ study, tilJ..9393 ext 158
Executive He•lth Spa Very friendly. 642-6'T/'4. ~-~ · • ree es· $229. Exter only. 642-27a.5 "r NEED HELP AT HOME? Sims, 833-95.lO. ' 5-filJ~f wkdys. ' · ·
R."t.11 to Sh.... 2192 D"'10nt e 111 'rvine LA\VN Mainl. HauJing. ne\v 642-14-03. e \Ve b av t Convalescent BOYS FASffTON styiist for Beeline INSURANCE Clerk·. M-•·,.
430 (7)') '83'2100 lawns, clean-up. prun'""'· YOU I lh . t A'de e N e d l -•1 I r---~ I'-_.. _ _;..;....~;.;.;-_;;.; • ~ Free Est Call 546-
7379
• -... supp Y e pa 1 n . ' 1 s i or s es Age 10·14 lo deliVf!r papers no e v., .. ...,. ect., no nvest., UUl: expcr. Days f/time * Male. Brand new prlv. BR (3)(1 Yards behlnd the ,. Snm --· . 1Gjf1 Rooms painted $10 ea. Also Hou.scktepers • Com· in the Dana Point, San Cle· will train, work °'''n hn. Personnl!J Dept ' H '
nr OCC _ SD Frwy. 126-µl Aif'"<>rter Hotelt . .D ExJl'r Japanese Gardener exterior. Call &l(>-7"'6. pamons mente ""'"· C•li Marcy 827-6()13, 892-5497. 11o,,1., N.8. ., o a g
MODERN desert l bdrm
.home nr Death Valley. 24
hr. free mineral baths.
Elcc. 1 atove, retrlg., panel
heat, a.Jr cond., piano. $285.
per mo. $85. per wk. (213)
691-SMS.
wk. or by mo. 557-MOO. ~0 AM to 11 PM Complete yd ,.,rv;ce. Neat PROF. paint!ng-inter/exter. H OM E.\IAKERS/UPJOHN· i DAILY PILOT fLORlST wanted, top pay, INSURANCE Bkk • Ai"
WILL
~---ter Charge, BankAmer-&: Re:lia.. Ftte est. 64z..4389. Honest work. L l c JI n s • 492-4420 1t.eady, f/time. expcr. -·d.• Call'· .. ~
ei .... c new e, nr icanf and Personal Q1ecks.) Babysitfl"I .. 54.7-66Sl. ·~'ill .... u~.w/employed lady. Pool DISCOVER DISCOVERY General 548-27'".>!J. 540-1#1. CAROUNE Emmons the 67'"~1 Sims, ~9550.
pr1vil. 833-3274. Fini!YoURSELFtnSomeone EXPERIENCED dilld care STO P Bed we t ting. PAPER HUNG $30 i'.\tATURE lady will Jive in&. company of equai op-GAL FRIDAY JANITORIAL opent.n
Wll.t obare my Igo. Laguna El.e In my home. Ages 2-S. $12."° (ENURESIS) Ir•• ;,,. A1Yy rm. + PftP''· 646-2449 care tor elderly lady. Exp. portultity has openings for n.;, '' the job for the ma· permanent foll-time !i:;
Beach home with working can now ~ No obligation wkly. 7: 30 am .. .; pm formation call 642-4634 or FOR dean & neat painting, Refs. ~3658-men &: "'Omen also hw;band 'lure .woman ~t can handle tion. evenings, n 1 g ht•.
gentleman or lady. 2 BR,~ cn4) '83>Q!S.5 (213)
387
_
3393
"~ only. Fenced yd., "'Tite E.C.S. 'T.J2 \V. 18th No. interior or exterior &: rea!I. Help Wanted, M & F 710 &: wife teams, who are in. ~eta1J a~ting. The rot.t· Starting salary $2.5Bfbour
BA, den, kitchen priv. NATIONALLY hot meals, good home &: A, c.osta i\1esa. rates, Dick, 968-4065 evH. te~ted in extra money for fine work is done on a com· plus be'nefits and shift dif
Comp. pvt. bca"l view. RECOGNJZED tamily e n v i r on m en t • ENGLISH Pa~r Hanger & A/P Clerk S45.5 the amily, & a high paying putcr. y ~ hand I~ the Jl'f· ferentiat. Ex Per) • n ce d
4
., ~,7 wk•nd •• aft?. 968-0833 THINGS by itoose, Lt. ,.-RE L S'~" career -full or part time. sonaJ arr. airs of th1.s SUC'l'l'SS· pl"('fcrred. South Coast Com·
., P•u , ..... ~. e, ,... Sr. Acct'g. ark $.l4!5 a,,.. ve,,.mcnt; in l1WI ~ w \\'1~! pay.our munity Hospital, So ut h ~ -FULtY LICENSED · elect '·mb fe-n·1 Painter. 30 yrs. ex. nor, Call Sec'y · ic ;J;JlJ No c -• In ~ luI ~·"de ho
ReJmowned Hindu Spiritual· BABYSIITING in my home jnsUns, carpentry, paint etc. Ed., 968-7461. Secretaries 10 $:)25 bu~ncss for yourst-11. No fee &. f{IVe n1er1\ raises. Laguna 499-1311 p
jst. Spiritual lt'adin&" gi\.<E!n for ages infant 5 yrs. Have 545--0Sro. It'.1 a b~ • .sell your experience n t> c es s a r y . Start $600 Of · ' ' eraonnel LADY Teacher wants girl to
share lovely Apt. Reas. Ab.
bey Rl!y. 642-3850.
daily JO am·lO pm. Advice a 3 yr old daughter as • , a Daily Pilot Cla.ssified items with. ease, use DAILY Jr. Acct'g Clrk S37!i Group interview held Tu<.<s Other Fee Jobs A · 'J lice. An equal opportunill' onallmattenaflile.~N. playmate. Large fenced Ad. 642-5678 I Pilot OassifJed. 642-5678. GSec,.~y~d~~~stat to~ Jan. 18, 7:30 p.m., Jnn or , Cail Helen Hans,~ l•ii•iimiip~(°"'~'~·iii;OiiOiiOiiOiiiil
El Camino "-al Sa Cl yard. EL TOTO, 1tiISSIONl iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiilJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii , .. &•• J ~ T-( Coastal Agency • n e-Asst. Bkkpr/Sec'y $6()0 ... -... w, cw of West & LABORE
GARAGE !or ,..1, E<lfde mente. 492-9136 or 491,9034. VlEJO AR.EA. 830-4370. Recept/Gen. Ole. $400 Katella) Anaheim. Thurs, mo H.-BJ at Adam• RS
Costa Me-sa. .LADIES, will fit you in a bra EXPERIENCED child care * * * * * * G. Ofc San Ju!ln Cal>is $433 Jan. ~. 7:30 p.m. King's GAL FRIDAY: Local co. \Vo1·k when-&: Where * 642-4289 * that firms, builds support + wttkdays in my home with NEWPORT Cross, Bristol, Costa Mesa, needs right he.nd. This posi· you want!
Garages for Rent 435
FOR rent. lrg double garage without strap strain. 144 fenced yard. Infant to 5 )'T'!'. Personnel Ag en~ ( form t r J y Rembrandt's tion offers variety &: chance Interim
ror storage. $40/mo. 177 E. Sire!. 839-4701. Located next 11> Np!. &: San 933 Do r D N Info: 536-4825. for advancement. Start $400. p I S , D" F · ve r., · • r -•( trsonne e-ce
22nd St. 642-3645. bET rid of map •train, + .... rwy. 'u n ct i 0 n. Trader's Parad1"se 642-3870 COOK, EXPE-R~ ~ Jean Brown, ~ ...
I
54()..1691. P / · Coastal Agency
Office Rental 440 guarn.· or 1 yr. Be com· lime, over 2:l· Apply in 2790 Harbor Bl at Adami! 778 W. 20th, C.M.
fortable with Kathy All's VACATION l\totber will care ACCOUNTING Oerks, 10 person, Surf & Sirloin, 5930 ~2 752
Custom flt bra. GT'a-4540. .for your children and home 1 • key touc.h-posting•type. $:!.~ \V, Coa$f: llwy, NB. GENERAL Insurance, pert • 3 ~2592 Near Hoag Hospital
425 N. Ne11.'J]{)rt Blvd.
:0.1odern medical or otnce, 10
rm. suile on street I e Y e 1 •
ALCOHOUCS Anol1YJJ10U•· while '°" vacation. Own 1nes hr. temporary. Apply' 1580 DAYTIME ba"""l1er tor 2 time to •tart. Typing, tiling DIES-Seit Nevad
Phone &12-72l7 or write car, matw-.. Ex. Reis. Monrovia. N.B. children, 5· & 7, at my & forms. Apply P.O. 1686, tion from my olli a r:;ca·
P.O. Box 1223, Costa J\f esa. 645-0074. t• • e .-.-.-.-Corona del l\far home •. Newport Beach. p/time. Cuar ~'ary ".;
Ample parking. l\1r.
Robinson 642-iOOO.
NE\VPOR T 1'~i na nc ia l
Center. complete single of·
fk'e, car!'ll'ted, at or a g e ,
M>cretarl.cJ ,;ervice, phone.
PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-LIC 'D Day Care, 7 am-So30 I mes Accountant, Jr. Free $7"° 67>-3838 an 6 & wknd•. GENER.At oru ..... Sales. commluion. s3s.ms .
fidential, ,ympathetic pn!g· pm. Hot meab. Xlnt can" Keypunch/l'ype Free $500 DENTAL A.ubtant. ma..,., medical !iek!. Will train, 30 LVN II I ..
nancy coumetlng. Abortion Harb or I Baker area. dOJ larS Fiteltite tYP J"ree tn $400 exp. In froot oHice &. or over. 6#-006.5 aft 6pm. 1ist ·eoi:v ii pm shift Bep-
& Adoption re.ferral. AP· =-=~1=5.19=.==-----Accts, Pay Free $4$ chairsldt. Must take a llELP! St, CM.~ f'6l Center
CARE. 642-4436. SABYSmING 24. hrs. all Sec'y, Exec ~ $675 penonal interest. in our pa· I ha~ a new business m,lc,.,1-;,.ALE-;;-;,,,CC-::=----
aga, Big a: fenced back Sec'y, no sh Fee $500 tient'1 dental education & !own a1li:l J need your help. So.I & ~nl w/c."41"_ tor ~ "2-,1592 Jr. Corresp, r·ee $-150 comfort. 962-247l tf a ground floor 0... · un work, $1.7:J J>er
yan... VI • 22· Ocean ,,.,,, ....... ,; .. ~ 200 ... DODGE r-t auto ., F Of -$4""' ..-hr 8"" "'Inn 0"
0
""' -~~ .• " "'' .... ""r ""''v'"'. , ,, edi<:ru, . c Fee '" D NT portunli.u oUered i.., • Tl<'\\' • ~·"" '-~-•~_.
CHILD care in my hon1e. In-HP VS, deep hUll, lrg c,:Pted P/S, PIB. Landau 1op, s!er· Cl no.~ F t.m E AL A&'Jis!Anl, financial v "
3
M
I
• Co ~ k, ''I"" ee ,-·y. ~-per. only. r-ve~ company with new ldca11. anager Associate
S4 IO/nio. Social Clubs 535
FOTO DATE DESK ~pace avllllable $30
mo. Wlll provide furntture
at $5 mo. Answering service select your companion from
avai!Able. 17875 Beach Blvd. lOO'S Of photo referrals that
1-luntincton Beach. 642-4321 we mail to you. NO CON·
ant ""' up, sta 1'1esa. Call cabin. pvt head, trlr. a ('O tape. Trade ror late mo-T c St F $"""' .... LJ\ ... ..--.,.. 645-1875. beau""! Trade for units, dcl camper tully cqUip..,.,., m • eno t>e ·rw tive practice. Au!onomy .t-possible earnings in excess '" all!ist In my fast growing
'J lilJ.
5258
or Sl9-07at.,..." Local Job Llslings interoffice reporc pl'l'S<"nl. of $.10,000 and more per ye~r sales busints11. Extremely
Carpet Service r.D, or? 5~·2011 Bauer 8 mm elect nlovle As.liOCi~j~ ~~~. Inc. 962-32'l2. ~~~re~t~y~u ~'O~~ il~~:N..~~ :~g'M~~~ lfqual. 8394701
camera, elect eye zoom 1885 Ne\vport, 01 6-IU720 DEPENDABLE MAN Wl-10 t For na1 · MAU.°"1L"1'°F"'IL;'iE,;.-_,..,,. __ _
lense,$150ori£value.Trade -.-.-.-.-.-.-CAN WORK WITHO UT mee you! perso ur girl, Utet1ping DELUXE 6:xl sq. ft. oUice TRACI'S. JOHN 'S C t , U ho-lst......,. Lake--Gotl Rl Lot Soulhern
suite • Corona del 1-lar. 24 hr, recorded message arpe « P . cry Oregon $3,500 clear. Trade
Near post office • Snack 7t4/835-%.m, 213/C).l122 Oeancrs. Extra On.sham-for Aircraft Cadillac, Roll~
Shop. PI'iv. park., air cond. ::tardh'ee ts~t~hguard (Soil Royce, Diainond or Boat.
RPalonomics, Bkr. 67'.)..6700 I ![SJ an • greuen & &4&-'l'66'l t..ost nl F<M'd all color brighteners & 10 I~,,_,~.,..-~..,_-,....-
DESlt space a\.'31lable $50 minute bleach for white W AN1' Apple ValJty Area
mo. WUl pr'Oride furniture 'immmm;;~;;~ carpel!i. Save )'OUr money bldg Jot for m:ulty in near
at $5 mo. Amv.-ering service • by saving me ~xtra trtps. new executive home. \\'/"'
anllable. 222 Fomt Ave, Found (frM Hs) 550 WW clean living rm., dlnlng epts, drpg, gan.gt dr open·
Laguna Beach. 494-9466 FEMALE Slrawben')'·SJol'ld I nn. 4 hall Sl5. Any rm. er. Owner/Bkr SJl-4467,
NE\V lrg offlct, Air cond, Shepherd type dog •'/white $7.50. couch $10. chalr $5. 13 • * * 5 BR. 3 BA . 2 Story,
heat'.t". Utilitll'!I pairl. 191~ J>a"'' ~ chest, v I c , 1 m .. txP Is \\•hat counts, not 2600 5q, II. Trade equity 1or
:\1eyer PlaC'P. C.~f. Da~: Brookhu.nt & Garfield, H.B. I method. t do '9.lR'k myself. small home or any kind or 543-ll259, E~s: 6':>-026l. 96,2...6234. Good ref. SlJ.-{)toL Income pl'OPt'rty.
GREY & Blaek strlped male : C•rpenfer 5-~1TI3
ctt, green ~ very ti· C ,1 Ind R ... :..1 Trade 4·plex ln Anahtlm !or
TIME FOR ftttionete. Vicinity l9th It omm UI e.,.. Du?ex or sgl. in Costa
H bor a.ta M Remodel, frame, tlnilh m-Mesa. N~ rues & J>fllnt In ar • t I a · pa.tr etc. Uc'd, lloftded. Jut yr, Low equity, Dlncsa
QUICK CASH 543-mtl. Quick Servi ... 96:-1961. In family. -
GERMAN Sl!epherd, llpt ALt ~ o1 carpentry by RA lot In Belmotlt H•l~ll
tan, fern. app. t moc. old, local man • W'lll Tra~ tor Newport : TH IOU G H A I :=l.&ftl=na=N-igucl~-aJu.--No-1\c_., i.ir.1&!3 atta income -Art -ll!n1. no collar. 495-4332. C Hin 1ment, Concrete
FEMALE Spaniel puPPI' I~=,...-----I ,,.,--,-6:.:1l::..>-4930:;=..,.,.--
DAILY PILOT found injured, tn Cost11 LARGE or amall, cement Comer beach lot, Ventura
M~ at Newport Blvd le; 11'Ql'k, patio tops. adcUUons, Qiunty, cltar., Bt.aut1ful
Me.sa.Dr. W1H O"i\Tltt plait! repaln., roonn& etc. Free octan vn. Trade on In-
• ANT AD
identity. CaU 54:5-dL pl&i., permlll. F'rtt est. come unl!t_~tt Corona
FOONI> Bladt~ Whl,. male Call anyt!nw, 539-94l6. do! Mu • ..,,..,..., 6",29SI
doc. pal'lcq lot White CEMENT WORK. no job tllO *
Frotl(, Costa Mtaa. 56-9630 nall. ~ FI e e
0< 14-70ZI. Estim. H. 6tufild<. :141 ~ * *
•-d ·
11 1 1
suPERVISION. Ex-llenl terview only, call l\.'lr. new orc11 In Irvtnr. UM:
sur r1 press, 1"0U er, e C. A tant J F SlSO "" Bruno •~9000 Call Lind ~ 962·1145. ccoun ' r. tee op!!:ning tn bee.ch area. No ' __,. '
8 ~M77.
27' Delwee Holiday Motor
Home new cond. Only '1500
ml's, loaded. \Vilt trade for
propeny.
~~ f::C ~ = experience ntcesW'Y· Age Hon:L maid, part time. MARKETING: The ldtal
Sec Free $El50 not t ro por t ant. Good days. will train. Apply !n gpot for traVt!I, superv11ion M.:.ir· °":trot Fee • ...,,,, charactf!1' a must. We tf"fl.in. peraon. Lido Shores Hotd, A pubHc relations, t.ocaJ ~~k~ c Fee $i'i) Air ma1l C. G. Otckenon. 617 Lido Park Dr, N.8. assignment In prominent
Trne, Steri rte $400 PrH.. So o 1 h we 11 t er P Housekeeper. complete home natioMl CO• with expense
Local Job Listings PetrOleum Corp .. ft. \Vorth. l rnalnte11811Ce &. cooking. $285 acc't &: car furnUhed. $3400.
Trnde \t)ctotville fl3 k>l J .R. Piertt Tex. I month. Room .l bath. 5 day Call Bob \Vlboo. ~ S~ l'Q. for Trlr Sailboat As«lciates Agency. t nc. -· $390 "«k. Gi:J-!103. Coasta1 Agency
(714) 328-3401
"'/bunks or late niodel car, 1-N ~1 .,2 ,,_.,, De1k Clerk 2100 llarbor Bl at Adame auto-air. Trad«-JS' Sl\ilboat oo.• 1 .!\\•port,..... V'I "'O•.o:.v Bt'aurlful boll'[, NCR 4200, JISKPRS Emplrr pays r<!e. - - ----
ror car or ? ? 833-8411 Ac-;ct'g Cl;;°k $425 l{olel elt'S)tt. ncooi~. can George Allen Byland Ate:en· *Mach. Designer $900
Cat to 8.S'5isl rontrolltr. 10 7'A-na. (n4l 956-1000 Cal-cy 106-B E. 16!h S.A. Design, make cJrawl.ngs &
l\IINI·RANCll, Back Bay key t~. Good l\gutt ·~ Falr EmploYment Aitncy, ;,t?--039.) \Jcyoul for • u Io mated ;~~ .::1m~~~~~~1;f3 tltude. wu1 train, ean Zena. ~m.No. EucUd, SJ.ile A, Ana.· 1~ 213 morn-~_:_nery. Exprr. tn •hop
•t (Il4l 900-1000, cal-F•lr Em-•= -~· " <fl. For lnc:<>mo p-"Y. ~--t Aa<ncy 9(6 No. QI • ""-~ " galary Servi(,, °"""' A#.f'»cy ro·, "' 1 Bkr 546-:IJIJ E;;d'jd,'~ A, k.ai..1m. ~;;o~ ,.,,,1tlle, 133-3:19'l. 500-Cett!<T Dr .. N.B.
Owner wanta SS.000 ,..,.n-AER-ACE ~~~YES u -· "~ to-~ ·'th _ Hosm.Managor SUJto 535 tl4M!l81
od ret\de tiaJ 10% ~·. Jl'or ~' ~~-,_ -~·WO ~· ~·· -• ... -n •v UTILIZE YOUR ORGANIZ-pie lo have had W.. oc -• • m •" MECHANIC'S .,.bWif 1Dr ~~~.~~~pl~: ING SKILL 11' a cliallt.,tnc publt< mm.ct •JtpCJitnoe wanffd lot qul.lllY ftSlaU· aoll """"· C.ll !or tn.
Prine -'•• 846-15&1 Md rewardln& management W'f! wt!! tnin .YOU tn an m. nm. Nffds abiH~ to super-tervlew ~ton thru f'rl
• "!'""'" · op--l..·nJty In commercW tff'tsti"I c 1. r ~er. Com· vl.tc din1ng room rWf. Xlnt 64f..0002. • JIWIU h(Nt'f ._ hcntflll. \Vrlte,
l\1ult.lp!e 10ned land & fU· tndu.sfry. call 835-0003 tor a mlHSon + SAlftry provkkl OU1Jllkd if •M29-f, DtUy MOTHER'S .bftlpu..Mesa. ~I 1
ture de\."elopment L&g\lnl pc1'1Qnal intrrvtew wlU1 Mr. high earnirWfi. Flflt ytar Pl.Jot, P.O. Box 1000. C.O.ll "far.fltta., i to 9 roomtna:s • .c ~. $13.5M val. A SUIO~ Camn'IOn: $60()G4.llOOO. Mt11., Ca. 92626. to 6 aftttn00nt, $3-. per di)' •
v..t. Trflde one Ot" both for .uremous _ Gal learn , Call Mr. H.upet, 540-60;;3 ro.. RESULT! ,w can a.. Call Mn. Keent!r MMSU. 1
!fl". home or TO's. -te<dt pmttSl!onol mak&-op. Cou!ol Agency • pm! oo, Clll tho !ltpOI-NEED 11,_.. 1t1!lu -I
*
FfT, Prr. ftte traln1nc'· 7i'flO HaJ'bor BL at Adams !lalt1m1.n. J>a111 PDo1: Wner "1at can drawn.
Vivan WoodW&rd Coctnt!tic<. s.n Idle 1 ..... ,.,.,, Coll austlltd --,._ In-Ht. All<y Wat ~-
---1 ,_ ttd t dla'&O It! ant 615-1711 N.B. * * -----------------
,\ I I • . I
•
'l
' . •
Moodlr, .... ..., 11, nn
J[Il] I I~ ._I _ .. _ .. _ .. _. _J iiiiiiiiiiiiii];;;;[B [. ' t--. llil I A-"'..,.
NEED to pay aame Jl.E. Sales
Help Wonfo<I, M & ,. 710 Fumlturo 110 Pl•-/O.,on1 154 Compora, S.le/Ront 910 Truc:ko
ST. BERNARD: I yr .old, * SHELL TOPS . * *;.;.;;19ll=G-MC-!l-1Dn-Plclc-!-u-9 Chrhtma.1 bW1 ! Show SALESMAN
Sarah Coventry Jev.·elry. Full time for independC!nt
1_::M;;l•;;:·,,=a::g•;;;;,20.;54t)-06=,;:;:1;;:4.==-I ate, ln Hunt, Bcb. Cali Carl
NEW STORE OPENING Nf'laon, Sf6.1300.
Part.time or Full-Ume. Ap. RN, full time, night 1hlft
• ply in peraon )'bun. Jan. 11·7, xlnt fringe bnft1.
20th. 10:00 AM "tll 4:00 PM. Beverly Ma!J!r, Capo
MC DONALDS HAMBURG-Beach, 496-5786'.
ERS, 700 W. Coa.11 Hwy., RN. Relief. Baptist Conv. ~.B, Hogp., 661 Center St., C.M.
Niie Auditor $300+ 518-5585.
RELOCATE 1.;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
NCR CXI, twitchboa.rd, sa.1·
ary + room &: board, Call
1.ena, 1n-41 956-l<XX>, Cal-
Fair Employment Agency,
9ro No. Euclid , Suite A,
Anah~im;
' Younr men. mechanical ex-
per. helpful, but not req'd.
Must be 19 or owr. Abie to
start Vt'Ork immedial~Y. lf
a~pted. For Info on job
placemtnts, call Tuesday 9
&m·lpm only.
776-8551
S.crotary $500 Soc~y Rocopt. $450 !
loaslng Agt. $500 +
General Ofc to $487
Cau Lorr3 ine
WESTCLIFF
Ptrsonntl Agtncy
2().13 \Vestclitt Dr., NB
&«s.mo
Sec'y Extcutive
ANNOUNCES
DUR NEW
ENLARGED
ORANGE COUNTY
HEADQUARTERS
Temporary Service
That suits you to a
"T"
Come In and reglsler
with us. Join the fast-
'
est growing office
WANTED X.Gl'S KIN--G-.... --... --aprinr--,.-,....,.m
For Non-Union War Jo~ilm. iood condition.
Ftlm production co. now $40. Ph: gu..m
ca.stlna:. >~ Provincl&.l head·
Call (2'13f 461.·Dil bo&/d a. tootboe.rd. Standard
WANTED trained. d en ta I aize bed frame. Perfect con-
uat. W I front desk exper. dltlon iJO, 6#-0577.
.tor l rltl office. Ml.ulon 9' SOFA, 'beaut. Cl'Ulhed V~jo atta 83CJ..50l0. velvet, never used Sl!iO.
WOMEN to telephone from March Ina 1 o v e 1 •a t $11D.
your home verifyln1 tnfor. 0538-028~=~'·---~~
matton for Luskey Bros, '°' 2 l..AMPS, 2 end tables, 1
Co. new South Oranp Coast Danish d'8ir IS5 ea. Ork.
Telephone Dirtttory a.a. Brown chair .I:. automan
guna Beach, South Laguna, .m~·..:M::.7:..4~467:::;... ---= Capistrano Beach, Dana -: 112 Point, Jo.fission Viejo, San Gar.gt Sale
Juan Capistrano), No solic-_A_D_M-IRAL--port-a_b_l•-TV-,-1-6"
!ting, Legible handwriting screen $285 lie\\', sacrltif'e
essential. Apply to Mrs. for $25. Chrysler air eon. Frost, Tues. Jan 18 from 12~30 to l :JO p.m,, Vacallon ditioller, 2 room type plus
ViHage, Rm. 21, &17 s. Coast V/indow frame, good cond.
Hwy., Laguna Beach. $150. Admiral color TV,
con.sole model, 91·alnut, $600 -I~
Antiques
13th ANTIQUE
SHOW & SALE
J an 20, 21, 22, 23,
Long Beach Arena
800
O~an & Long Buch Blvd,
Thurs/Fri/Sat 1 to 10 pm
new, must sell $150. Blue
su ilca.se $5, regular size.
Baby high chaJr $8. Tablt
Jan1p, green, 43" 1all S15.
Lamp table, \\'alnut color,
28"x191,2" $15. 547-3182.
DINING rm suite· w f 6
chairs; couch &: chair. Br.
suite, dbl, bed; o the r
household itema; Ch l n a
butch. 548-1227.
Ml1ctllanMU1 111
Su001ly·l2006pm STEREO, unclaimed
ANTIQUE Bdrm set. tw1n layaway 1972 model Gar-
bed&. Oak dresser, 5 dwr. rard, 4-spd changer, full
brass pulls. Cut ,&1ass. (213) range air 1 u s p e n 1 Ion
691-5545. 1 peak e rs w/cross-over
ANTIQUE ~'ood burning 4' system. AM IF MI MP)(
stoves. •Samovar de.sign. radio &: tape player. Still
_, •m• h brand new. Sold for $309.95, Fully resto,....u. ..,.,.,, eac .
675.0390. balance due $110. Cash or
Appliances-I02 amall pymnta. Credit Dept.,
714/89J.:0501.
2 5 GARRARD COMPONENT KENMORE stove, $ ; SYSTEM _ lOO w a t t 6 ,
Coldspot refrig, S25; both AM/FM stereo receiver, 8
good' cond. twin bed pair, track tape deck, lge air SlO. 642-1413. ho r 1 susJ>('nsion rn r e e x
RECOND. Appliance& & speakers. Prof. Garrard turn
TV 's. Guar. & Delv'd. table. Sold tor $3.5S. Pay off
Dunlap's, 1815 Ne w Po r t balance or $199.95, or
BJvd, CM. 548-7780. payments o( $6.50. ·
· KENMORE elec. n....•er. 1 NEW B track, Car tape deck "Temp'' organtza· ...,.,,
I yr. old $45.00 or trade for with speakers. $29.95.
a:as dryer of equal value. U.S.A. Stereo Equipment
lion in Southern Cali· '68--0833. Warcllou!<, 1n E. 17th St, l l ·.==~R~Ei-;;P~A~l~R~M"'A~N:;-'ha~sl..:Cos:::::~:_;M~esa::;::,~64S-~24<"7~,.--,.
fornia. We have Im· wuben/dcy<rs & dahwhn. * AUCTION *
Guarn-Delv'd 5.C~-5218 ;
me d I ate openings 839-7620.
with top client com·
panies, paying top
hourly rates for
qualilied:
KENMORE wa.sher, 1 ate
modeL Xlnt cond. $75. G.E.
Wash. Gd. cond. $45. Guar
dcl 546-8672
MAYTAG gas dryer. Cop-
pertone. Xlnt cond. Trade
for electric. 96~1208
REFRIG. 10 cu. fL Wf\1tl',
near new, Guar. 5 yrs. $90.
64S-6.109.
Building Molorlola 806
Fine Furniture
& Appl.l&~s
Auction, Friday, 7:30 p.m.
Windy's Auction Barn
~ Newport, CM 646-8686
Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'I
• CASH •
Highest prices pald Jor
)'OUJ' furni~, appliances
& antiques
CAIL DAY OR N1TE
519-:ll41 • S47·7733
RATER
PERSONAL LINES
• PosiUon in Hunt. Bch, ofc for
exper, personal lines auto
rater. Xln't benefil1 &: op-
por. for 11.dvancement.
Impossible dream? Not If • e Secretaries -
your dream includes BLACK IRON PIPE • Ap-
proic. 600 ft. of 1%." 200 ft.
of T', all threaded I: coupl-
ed. 'Mostly in 21' lefWlhs.
~03.
• BRAND new automatic
gas healer, Dayton 65000
B.T.U. Radiants & glass in-
cluded. Never UAed. Sl70.
CaU 5f9.18Bl (Sant.a Ana).
Personntl
842-7751
UNIGARD INS.
GROUP
sometimes f I y I n g to
faraway places, assisting e Steno-Typists
the pres. tif N.B. based co.
Salary competitive. Fan-
tastic brnefils. Call Miss e Receptionists
Laura, 5.57-6122, Ab igail Ab-I
bol Personnel Agency, 230
Cam1ra1"
Equipmtnt IOI
POOL TABLES Waretiouse
Sale. Freight damaged $49
to $199. New 1lalf' factory
crated, $195 to S J 9 5 •
li.1!1-M23, 529-8466.
FREE mole. l40. Aiao BuHt EL CANINO * RANC!l~l\O Completely rcbuill. ·
ORGAN L!SSONS ~;'tn.m.ie, ',,. ""'· 1211 0Ai's:i ~.. :i-"'isso~' su.-.
FOR BEGINNERS AKC Gorm. Shorthair, 7 wks. 1030 S, Hul>or, SA &!9-2515 '61 SCOUT ' wheel drJ
You do not have ta own an Sire<! by Alicea Bruno Von Cycles, Blkts, R/H, rtmovablo hrdtp, t
Instrument. Free practice Welt Me ister, 28 Ch. $75. 2U Scootera t2S nfflls work, SS50. 6'5-1
time ava.i1able. 591--0tSl , , Auto Lt••lnt 9"'
Start Tuesday January 18th MINIATURE Schnau:zen. 8 TRlUMPH 69 Bonnev\llo.
1
. . ".!
at TPM-0 w'~Jc:s. wk, AKC, champ bloodlln· Excellent condillon. ~rlonl ~
REGISTER NOWI es, ;xool ttrnpera~. hst-front ~nd. custom pamt Job ~NG
Al50, Jntennediate clus brim. S15 &: up, 96UJOO. $800. 2336 FJden, House C,
Tuesday, January 18th at TOY poodle!!' pupg, 1 white, I 0 t!;n:,C aftu 6 and Try our lease U?erll tr;
BPM-' Weeks. apricot. 1-lousebroftn & w ' . Savings • Satisfaction • Set
$12 + mattrlal shots. $.50. 642--4818 , '66 BULTACO, dtr!, :llO cc. \•ict. # e Thn·El'ltertainin& 534-3885. Bargain $250. 'VE LEASE ALL POPULAI.
Knowledgeable !-'GHAN . 9 $4g..fj732 1972 ~tAKES AT COMP£'ri.
• Rent Oraans Available A puppSholC!, .~0ly•· '7o K&wasaki 100 Cf'n. Nf!'W TIVf: RATES. ' During Term Of Course, AKC reg. w CfUai • call ~Ialcolm Reid tor
Inquire 1'"or l>claits 1150. 962-9ll05. tlrc:s, very good cond. V~ry further delfllls.
HAMMOND ORGAN GERMAN SHEPHERD 1'"· $300. fn7·&1St.. THEODORE
STUQIOS AKC champ alock, a wks. BOY'S Schv.·lnn Sti~ray,, ROBINS FORD
2154 E . Coast Hwy. • * GTh-2533 • good cond, Make oiler. .-HarlJor Blvd.
Corona d•I Mar 646-7810, Costa MeEa 642-IXllS>
644-8930 DACHSHUND. ' yr. old ""' * * '6' s"'u'° ioo • • Truck & Auto Leasi·111·, male, paptrs & shots. MUJl Street or dir t 5600 mi Open Mon, ti Fri. Eves. ~to good homf'. 67J....3604. *** tl45-5&55 ** ..
USED ORGAN ST. Bernard ·p~ppiea, AKC llONDA ISO, ptrfccl runnin11: 1\LL MAKES & MODELJ;
HEADQUARThttS Reg. Show quali ty, 6 "'~ka. I lncld's hf'hnet. $210.
Orange County $175 lo $250.~-18~._ -~:~; ti4S.179J.
All ~akes &. Prices • Good German Shephtrd Pups -,70-H-d-CB-350-
choice. Also, New l~am· Purebred, 6 wks old. i4o. on • S42-5007
mond, Kimballs & Conn. 6f6..f671 aft 3 Xlnt cond. Xtraa.
Penny Owsley Co., (714) · 156 '70 Suz TS 100
892-3314. 11352 Beach Bl\ld. HorHI Low mil<'S plus all lighting
(Neu Kalella).. HORSE HAULING NtUip. $275. 836-4727 64&3661
WOULD YOU Motor Homos 940 Autos Wonted
Cort Fox ~
BELIEVE $S pl"'•••·
•REE ORGAN LESSONS rn.2!!73 *Marvin Pearce* as long as yoo like! No reg· 4 ~AR old_ R. Geld, prof
lstration. No obUgation. Just trained for zhow, western. Motor Homes Come Mondays 7:30 pm, 16 H. SUsan Smith 54~9903 .
COAST MUSIC SPUNKY 6 yr. quarter horse
642-28Sl ,,,.,.., $300.
WURLITZER PIANOS 646-!728
Sales • Rentals
558-3222 New 10 yr, Warranty CHOICE box stalls atill
Save $300. avail. AU tacllitles. Reas . ..:..:.::..c::....:.==-'-'-'-"---
Cable .. Nelson Rak"!. 962-8679.
41" Consoles
s1095. List, While
They Last. $795.
GOULD MUSIC CO._
APPALOOSA. Iftse $50 mo.
67>-2973.
Sinc•l9ll I Boehond 11·~1 " ,, 2045 No. Main, S.A. Marint EqYipmtnt 1'
* 547-0681 * !~--~--~::;;;; 13631 Harbor, Garden Grove PIANOS** ORGANS /I 1 I Blk. So. or G.G. Frwy.
Kt\ .. ai, Steinway, Lowrey, Gener• 900 636..2333
AHen, Baldwin. etc. From Mirine Consultant 26' HORTZON1 970-
S295 up. RENTALS SlO up. INDEPF:NDE.i'IT Y.'ell maintai~d, l'('ady
Daily lB-6, Sun. 12-5 e Purchasing _ to g-0, comp! equipped,
Fl ELD S PIANO CO. Counseling on purchating Private par 675-0211
1833 Newport Blvd. boats & equiomenl.
HI
WI PAY TOP CASH
loru.od..,.,Atlucl<o,,...
call ut fer be eattmat& ·
GROTH CHEVROLET
WANTED
• Cit.an UsMI C1r1
SEE US FIRST • M 0~ • Oos1A Mesa 7141645-3250 • MarlM Surveyor j r,::;-i •
BALDWIN Grand Piam. A 646-29771!!1 I CREVIER MOTORS.
musici an 's delight. 8 M . I/ 208 w.~lat St., Santa An&. Mahogony, Immac. Prl pty. 0•ts,, lln • 13.S.3171
962-5814 1_.:.s•:.:rv.....;lc.:;• ____ 90_2, General 950 IMPORTs WA!'TEll :
PIAN~ tuner has all kinds 10% DISCOUNT, Free est. FREE! Custom tire covt'r· Q~ CounUu '
of pianos, Very, Very Custom Boat coven: & with the purchase of e._ach TOP $ BUYER I
Reasonable! 52J..97U, cushions from 1' to 100'. van interior. Headlin('rS, ~~~;,,OTA ,
J.1AHOGANY Spinet piano, Q\allt)' w o r km a n 1 h l p . pam!UinJ, aha&'. crplng &: --
Bald.,.,1n acrosonlc, $:i1XJ, B a n k am e ri c a rd , curtalng BankAmuicard, H. Beach. P!I.. In__,,
54>-1619 Mutercl\ar&<. LOK•"'• Mutorcl\arie. L o K• n' 1 ·WE PAY TOP 004
S rtl Good aG Upholstered pro d u ct I ' Upbolstt'l'ed prod u c ta, J'OR 'roP UIED CAJtl
po ng • 642-1333. 642-133.1. u -... '" -~n·~:ew o ~~ m: UNDER::oom: HUU. Trucks 962 ~ u;.=a 8t.1ICI l
~ Sunda,y or wk d Y Free cl.,. c:treuit TV II>-'71 Chevy % Ton Von _ • 2M !:. iTtll 11.
557-5696 spectiona: tncl w/cleani111 125 inch wtteeJ base. 350 VB, OOiti~ 541-
WINCHESTER • 94 • 32 Sp!. program to fit )«Ir needs • turbo tra111m lnlon, Ulce WILL Bu,y >'Olli' car paid f<J'
A Kit. $&3. 349 N. Olive, No. low n.tu. brand new. ?!Ql){, or not. Call Ralph GornCJI
C. Oraog•. UNDERSEA SERVICES $3195 673-0IOO -S4!h1031, 1910
.308 J.fl Garand, match cond. 213/4~9'35 .,,.. llarbor Bl vd .. Costa Mesa!
1:m. BOAT Bottom• cl•Mlnr 2!c Autos, Imported 97'
962--2'254 a fl. Leneth at wn. • ** s.,, boots .1 .. s sis. 836-5523. 1171,.,,1111,..1 AUSTIN AMERIC.4,
Beginner 1kis &. poles, $20. n--ts Powtr 906 ~iT4 MllA
OIJEAN! 36" Stone '40. 4 pc, 536-4063. -1 14t·~ ... ·'7·H '69 AUSTIN Amer1ct. Ne'1 ltECEPTI.ONtST: Un I q u e SEC'Y, some SH, wme full size bdr, sel S35., Men's al Su ·Ht Urea. Perfect runnin.J mnd. oppor. with new rap!~ grow.' mathematics, 5 yrs. expcr. Furniture 3 speed blke $'6. 64G-0697 Store, Relttur•m, 32' OIRIS Cr t. per 637-707•
1 inf co. Ideal location for + 2 yrs. college. Jolin Bar-e Keypunch B•r 132 clean, xtl'l.1, co~n, . twin
ambitious penon looldn&: !or ry " ""°"iates, 67>-3551. 2nd & 3rd shifts 3 ROOM GROUP KlNGSIZE bed, lin<r, pad 6 ....::;:;______ •nr. 116.500, Pvt. pty. BMW
adva.nct!ment. $400. 1 ALL NEW frame, 5 135"'°' Prio~, 5 YT'· 16 liwnineted •howcue, 3 &&5-1313 T~. Intmiational Harvester
Call Helen Ha)fl. 540-m SERVICE estab. Ful er FURNITURE guarantee . vale par-glus abetves, gold a.nod iz@d FISHING Dory Hull, Fg JlECREAnON CENTER ..lutomotivt £xt»IYoct
w. Warner, Suite 20'J, s.A. e PBX·Operators
Coutal Agency Brush Custom•r" C.M. Up • General Clerical ty, '68--0833. "'"""'· """' cond. Ca 11 ovor. 14' x 5'6 beam, Tar ROY CARVER Inc: &
2790 Harbor Bl at Adam11 lo $160 wkly to a tart. consisting of 8 pc bedroom FRENOl Provincial head-526-llli orl 616-6721HIF'I box design. Fut. $200 firm ~ Harbor Bl~ • J
RESl'UIW<l' Help. ,..11,bfo, "12--0416. group, 1 pc living room board & lootboard. St......., TV, Rod o, ' 673-9378. Costa M•sl 548-4<44 f
"
•• ( individuals w/good SERVICE station attendant, • Hostesses group & 5 pc dining .set. aize bed frame. Perfect con-Sttreo 136
38
CHRIS Tr
1
cab In --OR -y -, , f ed Full & P
.,, d•·1•·0"· $". w ~71• • • • '63 FO D IL ON PU + bckards may apply morn-exp. pre err . A I t ~ ~, '71 ZENini Z" Chromaeo!or Constellation. 1963. Loaded 72 ROY. C"ARVIR, l!I '., .. 8 am-U am Tues-Sat. time shifts avail. PP Y a ALL FOR $299. FOR sale membership Jn •-Llk "'w 122 000 Davs
11 17 h & Irv! NB e Lite Factory combination with remote "' e · ' · ~ 292S 'H&rbor Blvd. Ja'Ck in the Box 385 E. 17th Sl;le • t oe, · · TERM<ALSO Newport Beach Tennis Club, control. Pecan Medlterran. 213: 636-0757 or evea 213: VS, ~utomatlc, Alr Cond., Cotta Mesa . 5d
4
,lif St, C.M. NO CALLS. TRUCK DRIVER: Local ~ $300. Transfer fee Sl75. 'th llidin d 200 ~3438. RadJO, Heater, Camper Shell . t
branch of national firm will 541..fil.47. ~~~t :ttO, ftoo~ in:;~· now *'69 BOSTON WHALER 17'. (P30f78) $895. dlr, Cliff Wal· DATSUN ;
SANTA ANA
now intervic11.·ing for
DAY
HOSTESS
Apply in Person
Between 3pm &: 5pm
2313 No. Broodwoy
Santi An•
Elual Oppor, EmplO)'er
---------·
R&PRO TYPISTS
Work when A where
you want!
Interim
Penonnel Service
m W. 20th, C.M. I
'42·7523 546-2592
troi" hu•ky cloaocut m~" LAY-AWAY PLAN YAMAHA, 250 cc, IJIO; RCA price<! to clrar. Sav< $350. Pacific Pu,.g< Yachls drop S4~64. .. .. NEW '72 P16aii> .. ,
with good drivi"g reco · Easy to reach Joca· TRAOERS oolor TV, 1175. o" this , .. ,..oo clearanco. 2912 w. Coast Hwy., N.B'. ·SPECIAL IS PICKUP
4
apd d1r dlx Bwn]>tt iJ
Good be""""'· $3.50. NITURE --ABC Color TV, 9021 AU<"la, 645-5321. --dlo. MinW.. PL72WO, T•l<f!
Call Joa" Marli", ~ tion, opposite Orange FUR ** FIREWOOD for Sat• H""tlngton Beach. !168-l329. * 33• Ow•"' Brig. * _..... ~ omlll mwn or trade. '91-<ql
Coastol Agoncy 202 N. Broodwoy, S.A. delivtred & •tacked. M-H Bl d 64;-0466 r •• 5'6-8736 ( 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams ~1.305 Open 7 Days Loaded. Make oiler. "''""" arbor v . a tr ~ · 1 • TWO housewives for ptftlme County Airport. Tum OG y d bl bed 2 Call 54G-988T I ll 1 642-6m8 • 1972 GMC J immy .C-whecl ,urro DATSUN pickup S.134J.
MAH AN Ol.l e · DAWN autumn mink 100le, Fm to You drive. Lie. No. 086E1B less od, cone!., •72 Ucense .... ~, de live"", for dental lab. C&ll hog •nd t ab 1., R /C" rt' 90I • ~
'J at ma any • S150. Portable Remington c _____ __, Bo•ts, tnt n• r than 4,000 miles. PIS, P/B, 96Z-686C alter 1 p.m. .· 5'!1-2002. off MacArthur ma.,... table, like "'w. 1}'pe"1'iler $35. 54>-J!JJJ 3 Ll!lft, 2 Tlmot, $2.00 CATALINA
27
, SLOOP auto, radio, & auxill&ry to~. party. , ;
fYPJST, Re ce pt i 0 n i gt ' Mt'chelson to Du Pont Misc., oddJ & ends. 549--0421 Muslcal lnatruments m Sl.9!>5 plus tax, llc, &: Doe •DATSUN 24().Z, • 7 J!:;
ge.,.rol olc. mM exec. "'"· PART Temer female 111 Brand now boat. Aux."°"'"· lee. Bill Barry Po"""'· l40llOIB<st offer. Prlvalo
typewriter, 11tenorette expcr DOUBLE bed with maple NEW ~n dru11U1, 5 pc yrs, spayed. \rery frl~ndly Asle<paM/FMsix,
1
,::(,Sr, ra~pl".~,· GMC. Fial, 2JOO Ea.rt Flnt, ply.
7141
54&-69S2. Pret'd. Accuracy, spelling D · headboard. Platform 1 22" .. _._ .,...., or •-01 ~-' / hil~" ,,~~ '""'" ''" "v'" "' SA •0•1000
important. Mrs. H06kins, rive. rocker. While naugahyde :rf~. lBOl~~ Ana~. V\IUU w c un: • --~. galley, 6'2" headroom, tun .::::·::·,,:-::::_:::::::.·-,,-,--,,-.,
558-8333, Santa Ana. recliner chair. sun bur at Costa Mesa THREE pert Shepherd pups. aa.fety gtar, convenient New. '70 FORD Ranger~ ton CU1t.
· ] 3 clock. Make offer. 83().-7084 female, 6 wks old to aood port slip w/pJ.enty of park· Lamp. Auto., P.S., VI, 5,800
TY PI STtReccpuon st, * * WANTED ** home~. 54M40J. ing. From $15/day. For info ml. Goldenwest 10'11'. cab-
days per wk. Acct' K kin CRUSHED velvet couch &: 12 or IS chord, uled auto GERMAN Shephml, male, 1. call 557-9046 aft 6:30. over camper, fully t!qutpptd, background helpfuJ. Nlta · Ample Par I love seat. Zig Zag aewlna harp. 64S.-1668. 909 C19400H)
Myer, 549-0377. ~--mach in cabinet, co~per 3 yra old, gentle nature, Boats, Sail $S200 --~ Offlct Furniture/ 494-2998
VIETNAM relrlg. Carpe,ter t ool•, 124 . 16' Hobie C.1, Bra00 .,.w, DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
'IETERAN fishing p6Jes. baby furn & _;E;;.q~u;.;IP:;.·------•n, yel., wt. aalla, Mal\Y 24801hrbor BIYd.atF&lrDr.
FERRARI
FERRARI
A llrnOIUZ!:ll
IALF.S ,. SEl!VJClll
NEWPORT : once 1n a llfellme oppor. 10 Equat Opportunity misc. 1062 Miasion Dr. Apt SCM Marchand! Calculator I II"-') xtr..s, w/trlr, $1100 . Costa Mesa 5'6-a>l7 1
1art a ma""''m'"t.......,. Employer A. C. M. Model 316. 13511. Austrian PtlllNI..,.. . ~ il<O-:tlll or 67>-1$4 '62 Scout Pickup
in a local branch of one of 2 Beds, twin aise. f1CW; portable dictating machine 16' SNIPE Sailboat with trtr. SlDO W. Cout Hw,. •
countries b l ggeat com· Danish' modern 110fa &: 2 &: transcriber. Make otter, A aa l la·Famlly Fun. Runt good, Mutt ttll. •re __ .:l'l::•.;;W.:port:;.:,.8"dl:;;=.--I pani•~ Pl""""' lral!>l"g 'chaln, likt now; •moll din-<95-Sl:n. Dogs 154 Complet• $<95. 83J.ill.ll. 5195 $495. dtr. Clitt Waldrop FIAT
IMPORTS ·
program lets )t)\! learn Ing table &: 4 chain IBM Sel-trlc -writer. 2 tri ".;540-::::,:5::164::,__,,,_-,,,:-:=-·---------I ..... Vt"' Gennan Shepherd Pups 16' SiIP'E •llboat with r1. • 1 • while you earo. s1art !6000. 2182 OU Pont Dr, -· ,.,... old, mM ma'"'"'""'· Lra breed 6 k 4 ,.JI,. Family >'un. O?m· '71 ~ Van 300 Serl ... 1971 Flat 124 coupe S<r. No.
Call J~~~ 541)..({)5.S Divorce Sale: S450. 6&1360 or ti73--21'7T. '35 * * ·5-4~~ s pll!te M95. 8.13-8433. V-8, 11.u10 ahltt, radio, hl?al· Ot!i0059 a bc'autlful aport ear
2790 Harbor Bl at Ada.ms JfousefUI of fumlture! ap. ADDING Machines and ca•h AKC Miniature Schnauzer Bo.ts, Sllps/D9ck1 910 :!';!anreuxlllerlorpr;_7500,, ;~c! with 12 months A l.2,000 ,__ A" 1 rei!tters. $11 '-up. +Jl,N ,.. mil e!! factory .,.,·unnty plu1 RN'S WAITRESS, p/llme, ~xpcr. I . pllanc:es and m-... 11 n 645-0095 puppit1. Reasonable. FREE BOAT SLIP 621M7$ (Fullerton)', A1tl-FM radk>, &nd mq
Various hrs, "' Su" or Suite206 * mne good eond ....... rn7
-0309. M7"8929a!ltr6pm *** 64'-*** '67 ...... _ WaCJOn whl'el•l 2,79apluatox,llc,• Exper. Surgical bollda)'t. Kramer's Ollo"lal HERCUUJN 0>la"' kweseal, Plonoo/Orgont 126 2 • 9 WEEK OLD PUPS ~ -_,. Doc !tt. Bill Barry l'Ontlac:,
3PM 'tU llPM ShURt Kitchen, 19th 1; Harbor, 3 mo'a old, sacrill~. CHRISTMAS Part ShelUe, amaU breed ST Mooring For R1nt 4 whed drlvt. Buy mw for GMC. Fl1it, *11J Eut NCR OPl!RATO
6
1
1
(T'{Yl03) 11!191 ~-~r1 CM. ** 645-170l ** TRADE·IN 64M818, 5U-383S 54'5-5445 k> pm tum.mer un. Flrst St., S.A . ...,..,...1000.
H;A"!w'J'.°'JJ:M WAITRESS exp'd, over :n . 833-1295 -CUSI'OM made vi"YI .. u .. lar9•ins Now Available AI<C Malamute pup pl,., ttBOAT SLIP, NEAR dlr. Cliff Woldrop_S!~ '63 FIAT 850 Sport Coupe,
CKetllMt •""1dnr c:ondlllona Lunch A dinner. &varian """'h _ 9'6. Mapl< Hll'Vftt ORGANS· Jl'Q. Mate. A lemolaa. UDO. 2t1 to <O It. boaL SPECIAL VA.NS RAH, now cluteb 6 bralmo.
,. f1:inre btndln. , , "'""'me aupplled. Apply In tabl<. Call 646c-2831. Hammond oiom .. Now l2lJ5 96&-ll70 'm-6450 .,.,, ~ Good rubber. Clean l X!Jlt
MISSION .,.....,,Blleld rl 1,,.H rB!\tst., 18582 DANISH di!>'"" room oel. Hammond Spinet .. Now $5'5 COLLIE, rnal•, trt. l yr. I ~ .~ .,"= c:ond. ~ or best oll<r,
COMMUNITY Bee.ch v • · • table, 6 dlllrs; 2 lea.we, 1 Hamftl!>nd A..ltO ••Now $1895 vm reuonable. I Jlil 2lOO 1••""l" BJ • ..,, '",,.,,._, 67".....u.f., evtt.
HOSPITAL WAITRESS. part t l m •. bufrel. $235. &M-6349. !Awrty Hc4 Dix ··Now t1295 83M973 T.....,.natkin Ill '65 ronn Yan r1blt.1:na:. new 1971 124 Fiat a:taUon Wl&O!l'I
J'1IYJ PumA RHI Hwy., Junch,JoUyOx.2SI92Cabot t( l.owreySpinetDUc.Now.$895 ~f.:f"i:f!~~~~~1 ;;;;;;;;;;;~·~-==1 paint • tlrta, mag s. Ser. No. 1ZfAFU01151N a
IE. :,-:, ~ ~. ,. ·Rd:::u;,"~s~.D~. -FWy'"".,_1.a,....P_u_1urn=--Glll wi:-"' '::' co1':~~ ~ ~';,,7~~.".':'.': ,:',:-:g 1;: •• r~i.:P.,~~ i .~.i ii " iii :::11:.':'.~.""''d ~~~.!'.·:i~ ~
Oouwu Vall Pll'lcw>y) ~ • S31-l648. Om>& Chon! .... Now 1195 lln<o. X-r>J"CI -duo Cl""''/:;::;:_rc:;r:,:o::.:., ___ ,....;..,.1.;::::i::,:;:=:--'i:::::O;;:::; I llac, Gt«:, Ylol 2t1llO EUt
PH'ot.I WANTED:·-ll•nd¥man11 ''!' r EARLY Am•rlcan couch E-Z ,., ...... All Gu•n1ntted "'"""""'· 96&-29!9. *** Alttrlf( w .. t<d ••• "'Mine l'Oll.':~~.~! orur;; Flnt SL 8.A. --
C714) 495 -apt comp~x. Muat " n or bed • di ... $50. Ulce COAST MUSIC M ! NI A TURE Seh,,.uaor, Have customtt1 nltlnr , ~~
1
~!0 !:le ~phanta" -o:_, ror tha.t Utm under ...
(7l4) •77DO _pl ... ll7 E. ~ SL ..,w, 64Ul71. NEWPORT A llAIU!OR nial•, AKC bred, ear '"'I>· N< ....... Sleyw.,...C-. u,. thru Dlll1 p 11
0 1
lry the 1'<M1 t'1nchor 64~ Fut mulll an )Ult o phoM Coelo M-* 642-2151 lhow croom"1, lhot. A l>Hler. O.C. Airport, S.A. 0.:1Utd. 642-;611. )"Or btll ....tla! -
A l')Od want ad lo • lOOd J call •-·. ~71 -ff""""" W1ldl tho pa"'"'. 5*-0ll19, _ _;*.:*.:*:..:54-:::::Tlllll:.=:..:*:.*:.*:__ 1.==.;;...-----~m~~~·~tmtn~t:_ ____ IL...................... -~ I
; l ~ " • ' • ' I
..
•
I
•
970 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, UllCI t90
CADILLAC MERCURY ----·----_._,.. ....... ·-72 VOLVO '70 FLEE1'VOOD El Dorado
fully · equlp'd. Xlnt care.
23,000 ml. $5650. &Th-1St5 or
efl 6, 675-3723.
1971 MERCURY
STATION WAGONS
HERTZ CORP.
Biil 11ot llO &plder, LIO No.
.. DqE. Goo4-tiaa oi"a 1ow COii $195 plut
OYER 25 WE HAVE 'EM
Clnn, Rocpndltlonod, '72 LAND CRUISERS LARGE S... ~. ·~ FOR
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY ·
BIG SAVINCS ON
RE~fAINING
'""' He, • doc le<. Bill Bar·
rt Pontloc, Gl>IC, Flat,
J0G0 Eat J'ltll St., S.A.
'1111-lCIOO.
., ·n m spor1 eoup., Riff,
t.m/bn lttreo. $2250.
., '69 ""' Spid<r, Riff, 11100.
'lloth xlnt cond. j9U228,
.. FIAT tr.o S"°"' Coupe, lo
pllle1, m,any x-tras.
'1£1DO/otter. 499--lSI.B.
JAGUAR . . . .
IAUER IUICK
&. Gu•r•ntMcl.
PORSCHES
tll'S. 912'•. J14'•
1957 ,. 1971
NEWPORT
IMPORTS :
3100 W. Cout Hwy.
Newpc)n Bffcb
642.9405
1968--9~5 SPD., new Koni's,
Ah1 /F M, 1972 lie.
Showroom Oean. $3,950.
6U-444L
Immediate Delivery
ll'!l 111\"tlis
~m.t•n
, Authorized Sales &: Service
900 S. Coast HJa:hway
Laguna Beach · 540-3100
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA
Service dept. open 7: SO am
'ti' 9 pm hlonday thru Fri·
day.
PHONE 541).2512
'71 VOLVOS
~w.Lf.IN
W YOLYO
'61 EL DORADO, Loaded!
Local car. Orig. owner,
221 W. Katella, Anaheim
(714 ) 77M050
S2lOO. * 644--0462 '69 MONTEGO. Lo ml, clean,
'71 CADILLAC El Dorado. All powa-, AM/FM, air.
Yellow/Gold. Lo-1 0,vner Aqna. $1850. or best oUer •
ml. Fl P"'r ., all extras. Ph: S49-3l32
Vinyl top, leather int. Cost ''~69'°'ME=RC=.°"M'"'arqu-i'"'s747dr-. H~.=T.1
Sl0,200 r.ta,p •ntNow $7900. Full power, fact. air. (YON
6-16-9303 6·'4-3185. 576) Blue Book price $2990 .
1940 Harbor, Coola Me" CHEVROLET DAVE R~~~99PONTIAC
Autos, Used 990 I USO Harbor Blvd, at Fair Dr.
We Pay I '63 CHEVY ""'• ~;;'sTANC:"'°"
I 'J1>e H.artlOr Ami.I Only' Authorized
JAGUAR DEALER
Al••an baa an excillent .e-
1ecdon ot both New It Uaed
Ja...,..
pORS;HE J97l, gu-T, S spd, 417 \V. Warner, Santa Ana
sUver w/black 1oL Mag "70 COROLLA
whll. air, AM/Fl\f. 14,00l 2 Ooor ·Fastback. dlr. R&H,
miles. $7100. (714) 541-4451 \VS\V, T. Glau, Excellent
1966 912, 5 spd, red w/blac.k ' Cond. (623BFP) WU! finance
int. AM/FM. Stereo tape. pvt. ply. 494-6811 aft 11 am
Top Dollar I STATION WAGON •'66°ilUSTANG, v.8, iuto.
For Clean Used Cars ! l\fechanlcally perfect Inside :~·· :e~~ Rld~'typw:~::
G d G and out, Rent option to pur· ar en rove :~.$1:R~~~· 122.80 ~:~~~J1~~·
CONTINENTAL 1971 MUSTANGS Linc:oln-Merc:ury
Garden Grpve at Brookhurst H~RTZ CORP. 1'71 JAGUAR Vl2
Air conditioning, automllttc.
Only J,000 miles. (928DMN)
$'1295
Good cond. $2600. 646-1136. ~~"""=·=C7.=-;';"-:-,'69 CORONA Mark JI, 2 dr.
hrdlp, yellow w/blk Inter.
Ra\fials, very gd. eng. $1500.
5j7-8681 alt 5 pm.
636°2980 MOTORS 221 W. Katella, Anaheim
(714) nM050 TOYOTA AMERICAN 947.3842 1966 Mustang, V-8, auto, air,
_ p/s, vinyl top, wide ovals,
1'70 JAGUAR 2+2
Autorhattc, factory air con. ell-(261BQD) •• 1m;
"SpeclallZinc 1n Quality'"
USED TOYOTAS '
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
TRIUMPH * Ambassador * * '71 CHEVY'• * slereo tape deck. $850 or of.
* • * IMPALAS • CHEVELLES fer. 644-8428. Gremlin CAMARO 'S '66 MUSTANG, ecooomlcal 6
* Homet * I HERTZ CORP. cyL, RIH, cruise-o.malic, * AMX * 221 W. Karella, Anaheim '72 lie. Pvt. ply, 545-1237.
BA,UER
Bulck.O,..hl-r
234 £: 17th SI.,
Costa Meta 54S.m5
"-"JAGUAR-XKE -
Y·12 ROADSTER
NOW ON D16PLAY
100-/. Financing (OAC) * '66 C,ORONA * 4 Door
(S'"en533)
$199 * '67 CORONA * 4. Door. An:o. Tni.ns,
(U.tr.7"'3)
$1099 * '69 COROLLA * 2 Door. 4 Spee(t
(ZACl-t-1)
$1099
Authorized Sa1tt &·s.rv1c:e * '67 CORONA * 900 s~ Coaat Hlifiway Coupe. Aulo, Trans.
Laguna Beach 540-3100 cvrx~.t )
'53 JAG• SK 120 I $1199
CLASSIC * '61 CORONA *
Wire · yt'heell, etc., entirely Coupe. Auto. Trans. orielnal thruout. Mechanic-(V7.Vfi2'l)
ally perfect lhruoot. ""' $1299
JJglifl alone -.Id cost over * '61 CORONA *
$300 to replace. Pb one Co:.:.pe. 4 f -1, Air Cond.
~days, eW!S Slt·S033. 1 (VR-Ylr..~)
CLASSIC 1962 J A Q 3.P I $1299
Sedan. Wlr< whtt!i, al: j * '70 MARK II *
:xtru, new erw .. trans. Musj' Wagon. : ., t.ir Coad.
se11, a.skinK $1250. iTS-7498 -1·-. ''°":)
Y.'r8ln $2399
-JEN$EN _ , * J!~<Rtl<,.~. *
JENSEN I (l'' ~)
AtmtOR!ZED $2l99
SALES • l!ERVICE llLL MAXEY
TOYOTA
VOLKSWAGEN -----...... .. YW BUS
&
* Javelin * 1714> ·77MOso OLDSMOBILE
'69 EL CAMINO Custom. FuU1,._....,.=-----* Matador * power, factory a•r, excel· '67 OLDS Cutlass. Full pow.
LARGE SELECTION
Finest of
Guaranteed
Used Cars
"HOME OF
CONVENIENT
PAYMENTS"
lent condllion. (46885C) er, tact. air, low miles.
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC ITYE910J Blue Book price
2480 Harbor Blvd. at Falr Dr. $1550.
Costa l\1"esa M6.8017 $1399
'56 Chevy 2 dr Wagon DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
less engine and trans 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Or.
$100 Firm! 557-9305 Cos!a r.f esa • 54&.8017
'64 OIEVELLE 2 Dr. '62 F-85 V-8, Good
1 Wagon, engine minu.! head. transportation. $»:> cash.
I Standard Transmission. 4 Call 536-4063. I nc;v wide ovals. $275. Days, '~66~T=o~R~O~N~AD~O"'.-Xl~o-t -00-.-d.'
5\l;>-10-14. .l\fichelin tires, $13 5 O • * 1970 OIEVY, P/S, disc 642-3686. CALL FOR FREE
CREDIT CHECK
CAMPER SALE 1se'7'3li~:.~~~~day
'62 VW BUs .......... $109!!
bcalres, air L 0 ADE D ! -""'P"'L"Y'°M'"""'o=u=T=-H~-1 557-8443. Rich, 772-5151, ext
263. 1 ~--------~1
'65 impala wago•, full • ..,.. '69 Valiant New engine. 100% Cuaran.
tee. ZSU716
'62 vw camper •••••• Sl.199
OIW-036
066 V\V Bus ••••• , ••• , $"1399 029CPC • .
'66 V\V Campno , •• , , • $1399
RLG224
'68 vw Deluxe Bus .••• $2199
V'l'S316
Harbor American
646-0261
1969 HAR BOR, COST A MESA
BUICK
'68 RIVIERA
Gran Sport. Vinyl top, strato
seats, full power, faclory
air, stereo. tilt wheel,
chrome sport wheels. etc.
(7B9EAE)
$1999
AC, recent trans, tires &
brakes. ST":il. 675-6369. Runs good. Blue with white
'63 CHEVY II Sta. \Vgn. $-100. vinyl top. 2 Door. 6 cylinder
xtnt cond. 713 29th St., N.B. automatic, radio, heater.
Good trs rad fY'BAT:>4) Sl.295. dlr, O.iff ., . Waldrop 540-5164.
ESTATE SALE: ·~Chev Sta '6'9 HE~fi Rd H d
Wag, good lihape. $400. mags: 4 spd ru~~eai{~ * 830-47'l1 * 5-18-1493 aft 6:30 pm.
CONTINENTAL _ PONTIAC
'69 MARK Ill, Fully equip'd, '67 GTO H.T. Cpe. Vinyl root,
:speed oon!J'Oi. Stereo. New tu!J pwr., factory e.lr very
Polyglas tires, 557-9349 low miles. Blue Book. Price NEWPORT
IMPORTS
'66 fa·stback NABERS ~acliUac: CORVAIR $1465, 12<2lml254001) 18881 Beach Blvd. AuntOR.IZED DEALER · $799
Huntington Beacl;r 847-85.55 i D k bl fl I Ex I 2600 .HARBOR BL. '65 • Auto.Radio. Xlnt, ooly DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
3IOo w: tout 'l"l'·
Newpons.al:h
LOTUS
LOTUS
AUTHORIZED
SALES A SERVJCJ;;
4 .)-~ • • • ' : N.EWPORT ,.
'\.,.IMPORtS -.
3100 w. c.oast Hwy. I
Newport Beach
MERCEDES BENZ I
HouM of Imports Inc.
(Residence of
Mercedes &m)
SPECIAL nus WEEK e ZO-SE <l>UPE
300 chrome trim, ftawless!
6862 Manchester Blvd, Buen:i
Park. (Alongside S.A. Fwy,
Be&ch Blvd. turoott)
(!) Sll-7150
AT
*$ANTAANA*
TOYOTA
BUSINESS
IS
. GREAT
BECAUSE WE
SELL FOR LESS -·-OUR CARS ARE FULLY
Gone Over' From
Bumper to Bumper
THAT'S WRY WE GIVE A
100°/o 30 DAY
WARRANTY
ON OUR
RED SEAL
TOYOTAS
'10 COROLLA
SJ'ATION WAGON •• nm
4 speed, radio, very nice
cond. 7'8BZU
:::;:::;:;::::;:::::::::;-'69 CORONA .......... $1<25
MG
AtmtORIZED
SALES 11 SERVICE
4 Dt, Automatic, &ir radio.
YCT&l7
'111 MAR){'!! .......... $1825
2 DR, Hardtop. Automatic,
radio, (2 in stoclc).
'70 MARK II'. ......... $1925
2 DR. Hardtop \\'jth fact. air.
385BQD. .
*SANTA ANA*
TOYOTA
ar ue n sh. ce Jeni COSTA MESA '
oonditien. New brakes. 4 • S4Q.91.00 0 S d 42,000 mi. $350. SchY.."t>rer • 2'180 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr.
spel!d, radlo, heater: (SQY· pen un ay 107 Sapphire, B.I. Costa Mesa 546-8017
6591 1695. dlr. aw wa1<1rop '70 Buic:k Riviera / CORVmE . ., Grand Pril<. Fu11 ..,,..,
m.5l64• Gold" Beailty thats Joaded in-fact. air, tilt whl., P-win·
VW BAJA BUG, New style ciuding air & custom inter-, w dows & seats, fact. tape
fibreglas kit. new paint, ior, OZ7AFX 65 Corvette, Am_-Fm. 2 top11. deck. Rally wbls. Blue Book
new uphol., carp e ts , $3695 4 ipecd. Original owner, Price $295:l. Hl7?.BHL)
headliner. wide t Ire 1 1 1 $1200 644-5029. $2699
'!""m• rims, bl& ~re kit. I' MacHoward COUGAR . DAVE ROSS PONTIAC e.c. Ex!Ta 11harp. $1350.00 or 2-180 Harbor Blvd, at Fair Dr .
bt'st oUer. 234 Albert Pl., 839-96(X) or 531·0608 t967 Cougar, all auto. P/s, Costa 1'-1"esa · 546-8017
C.?.1. anytime. 'Corner 1st & Harbor p /b, low mileage, xlnt '66 CUSTM Pontiac 2-dr
'68 VW BUG Santa Ana con<'I, private party. sedan, Auto. V8, Air, PI S, '71 Estate Wag 499-1460. P/B, x Int cond. $650. 2 Dr. cllr. Cream exterior w/ Oft 675 1849
black bucket sears. (WVH-! Super Wagon! Like Brand DODGE ,;;;-~===,,-::::--o-.,.-1
9-13l Take old car in trade or New! Only 7,344 local miles. r '69 FIREBIRD 450. Auto.,
small down. Will finance. Loaded. Factory air, etc. i SPECIAL 15-pjCi(Up... air cond., custom trim. (373-
Call 49'1-6811 aft 11 am (024CXV) $4495.· CAO)
546-8736· TERRY BUICK ~ ~ DAVE R~~PONTIAC '68 V\V Camper w/pop top. 5th & \Valnut
Rcblt eng, tape deck, tent Huntington Beach 536-6588 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0400 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr,
w/poles. $2400. 675-4719 ' '71 Electra 225 Ltd 4--dr hd '53 DODGE, Xlnt rnech cond. Costa Mesa 546-8017
after 6 pm. t d • . $80 or best offer. BEAUTIFUL low ml. '66 Le
op, ark ~n, ~n Vlnyl 1 * * 830-8036 * * l\1ans Sprint with radial '71 VW Camper. Al."\f/FM, top, green int, ultimately · Sa ..
disc brakes. 10,000 miles. equipped, 9000 mi. Listed '58 DODGE, good transports.-tires. critice at low Blue
$3,295 64&-5033 daya; $7800, sacrifice $50C(l finn. tlon. New tires. $100. Call Book. 49-1-9642.
646--0681 eves. Pvt. pty. -494--4892. 968-9869. '68 LE l\.lANS Cpe. Automa-
FALCON tic. !act a.it, landau roof. '70 , VW D1'c, Sunroof, yell., 1963 BUICK Riveria full Blue Book Price $1865.
blk inter., tuned exhaust. power, xlnt mec:h. cond. (XWF020J
Jta9io. Xtras, Xlnt cond. ShMp! $600. 675-4084 ; LEAVING for Mexico, '64 $1399 ,
~2872 675-4016. Falcoo S2SO or be<t offer, DAVE ROSS PONTIAC * 1971 VW Camper 1967 BUICK LeSabre. 4 Dr. good car for oollege student. 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr.
\Yestphalia, xtra lge.. Int. HT. E'xcellent condition. 536-3563. Costa 1.1"esa. ~~
Self contd. Make otter, Must sell! 5'15-5485.
642-9444 * '66 BUICK Skylark Spt Cpe.
'62 ·VW l\.1otor ju.st Xlnt cond. 49,000 mt. A/C,
\\'Ofked on. $300 P/B, PIS, $995. 6f4.fi(XX), * 675-4io1 a11 s • CAPRI
FORD '69 CATALINA h.L. auto, --------·I P/S, P/B, air, Ventura '61 FORD T-Bird. Full po\\'-trim, Xlnt cond. Have co. 1
et, fact. ai r. Blue Book price car now. Best oUer takes.
11480. 1tlQGrm i Pr!. ply. 645-2855.
1971 vw Camper, 11,0IX)
miles, red, excel cond. ·n Capri 2000, auto,
$899 '65 GRAND Prix, .All pov.·er --------&Jr-. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC & air, Xlnt e<\oci; $550.
it8() Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr, ** 847-6824 ·** • 636-4334 cond., radio. $2495.
'68 VW Pop top SUndlal * 832-9355 aftCr 6. *
camper with teot. 11 ,99;, 1 --C~A~D~J~L~l.J~A~c=--
Costa ~esa 546-8017 '69 PONTIAC Grand Prix.
"
. NEWPO-Rt
IMPORTS , PHONE 540.2512 675-6342.
* 71 FORDS * Full power, air, AM/FM,
GALAXIES e MUSTANGS Crulw control, $3100. 548-572'5
LARGEST TOrlNOS '68 CATALINA 4 dr, PIS, ' ' " 310o W. Cout H117.
Newport S.act. ·1 ~~""'~ -~-
l
' 1968 MG Ml<(&e~ orta. owner,
~ 2',000 ml. Wire Whla .. R&JI,
IOft "lop, hard top, tOMeau
covet-$1.39S. 673--7370.
·se MGA l:kdtp, C.ood cond.
~ ~ Bat. oUt>r over S475. 349 N .
: Olive No. C. Ora~.
I ~ Warner. S;inta Ana
'72 TOYOTA
LARG..-. ~ • FOR
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY!
BIG s~vr '"ON
T'F'"·•·.-··~
'71 TOYOTAS
'7() VW Squareback Orange,
AM, radials. auto, xlra
clean. 675-6410 or 646-2238.
LIKE new '70 VW Camper.;
Sundial Dix Conv + 11tereo
& pop top, $3600. 826--08Zt.
** '66 VW, &'IJOd cond. I Sunroof, Al\f/Fr.I. radio.
I Gopd tires. 213: 592-5744.
'60 vw
SELECTION OF HERTZ ·CORP. PIB, air cooci, very c1 .. o.
CADILLACS IN 221 w. Karella, Anaheim 11595. 67:H;728
ORANGE COUNTY t7l 4I nM05o RAMBLER
SALES.LEASING '68 LTD, fact air oorid. 1 ~~~ ~:;.'':r':'~.1mmac. 8J3.l220 -,6-6 .. Ra_m_b_le_r_Am_en_·_ca_n
Nabers CadlDac: 1966 ECONOLINE supervAn,
2600 HMWOR BL., stick, 6 cyl. $695. 213: 2 Dr Hardtop, 6 eyl, Auto
COST• MES • 431--6535 do.ys· 962-4035 aft 7 Trans, Immaculate, Rent
"'" ... pm. ' option to pm:chase $57 DriVI!!
I MGB
.,Ptu.lf.W
W TOYOTA
GOES GOOD!
497-llS<
'69 V\V. Xlnt oond. Lo ml.
PB radio, nu tirts, priced
whld. $1145.' 83W814.
~·9100 ()pen Sund13 , =~=~--~--out, $32.80 rier mo. <SP1021)
'71 FORD Ran<hero GT, air, CONJINENJAL
AM/FM. Excel cond. Priv. '65 DeVille f '67 MGB-<:'r. Gd. cond. Tai<•
1 ~ Jmporteel led.. ln trade ot
I ,,..,,. ~· 541-lZlS ,..,
! OPEL .... ..,...---.---~
l *** .. oPEt. "** Xlrrt cond, nu' tim ··•.~ l:IE I • •• ,POR3CKE 9lJ, . kpd,
~16-93()3
llM6 Harbor, C.osta ~1esa
-,67 -TUJata Corona
Auto Trains, Like new. inside
and out. Rent opUon to f)UI' ..
chue. $S7 drive-out, $36.80
per mo. (VCJ:\All~
CONTINENTAL
LATE 1968 VW. Excel cond.
8 track ster«>. '7% llc. $1,100
or best oUer. 548.--1530.
'65 VW Sunroof, lo mUe11,
Michelin X Um. Xlnt cond.
$615., &T>-3355.
I '69 VW pug. Like new,
$1300 firm.
Aft 5pm: 21!/430-6341 ' Alt-· 11'"1 cldn. $4ri<xl MOTORS ftrm, t1H1f11 '71 VW Squarob&ck, air
IT'S .... -llme. Bl&· 847• "842 mnd., AM/FM rad_!o, lo ' 9IJll r' 111& ...rt IM the _. mileage. Pr1v prty. 61>0211
D.&'11..r "1D'l e s j'lld I Nttd a "Pa.d''? Place a.a ad I BOUSE KuntfJllf Watch lbe
- -. Call 64U6111. OP~ !IOUSE column.
\ I
Coupe, }'ult ~ctory p:nver,
factory air coridlUonlng,
pty. $3,350. 644-4521.
S PEC I AC VANS MOTORS
Jl"Wer window" IPBP983J ~ __ ,. __ • 847·3842
$9!15. dlr. Cllfl Waldrop -1----~~~-· I 541J.5!64. 2!00 Horbor Blvd. 64>-0466 '61 RAMBLER 2 DR.
SPECIAL CADILLACS • MERCURY 6 cy1, Auto. ll50. tt ru111 • 557-9.105 • ?Ncee•~ ~.6~7~M~O~NT~C~LA,..,.,,IR~1-~~T~.B~IR~D,.;-~J
1100 Harbor Blvd. 645--0466
1969 T·BIRD
2 Door H.T. Dir. V.Top., Air
'66 CAD '1 pass. lnfonnal Cond. Ai.Vfn.l. Loaded. LIL·
limo. Pearl grey. XJnt cond. tic-old banken car. (VOB·
Front ,• ~ar alr/cond,, 049) Call $f6.8736 aft .10
new tlrta, ahQcka, brakes. 4~-6811 . F\tny t(JUlppcd, factory alr,
!9,000 ml. Great f&mUy.car! 'Sra ME'RC ltfonlct"ey, 2 Dr. vllt)1J top, new ~! Jow
S:.UJ. CtJI «It 4 pm. I~ Motor, wry IOOll. body mileag<. $2.500. Call .,..3367.
_M_H_1_111.~~~~~-•~needs~~tnl~nor~..wf<.~!ll4l>-llm.~~J 9!!!!!!!1 .... l!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!'/
• ,1
'
CALLUSNOWll
···-117·ff21 INSTA•T CRIDIT
TOl-UIPIU IAVITOIWT 1.1,.. .. -1oc11r.11io 1.1,.. .. -.,,...;.
2. f 1W IWI ...., lft YN" 4. ,tf JM hl•t little er N
"' cMit UT•llTllWl•t·M~AllW\'91-M TU1'Ttl•t ........ ,..., ........... .....
BRAND NEW
'72 DODGE TRUCK
t..w ......... -.er ..... """"· (11114 ......
wNslMW wnllers. ~"""'" ......... of l!ludl-ti .._., DI IAH!S 16$6,J
lllllllld witli vilryt Wdi Mtll. hlatoo
M , !71~1 4 filfl, •ilMIJhit fd.,_
.....,_ • .,.., Mgn.jr. NI -.il!l'I
ill!~ + 11\U(h 111u<h 1110!"1,
Wt.21(2"127619
$228811£
PllCl
SI" ittllll a,,.._ S7J ii ..e.i. ,,_. W. ... It-. & ti ....,.. ....... --· ........ ,. -.,.,..._,.,..,... S21J1 illd. .. &lil:-AlllMl.f'llCJllTAaU.TI io.o.'!I.
~~~~------IMM~EDIATE oru!!!iiERiiT--
l ..... will\ .......... ~ higli
•k Mbl·Mlllt, ...... \'iJ!l'I.......,.
tr, ou!Mds lnimlr,C9S.14 lim.+ !!Uh
11Mhmon.U79121114S4J $2088~L $199. MMIDIATI DRIVll
P11u DOWN ""·"""' .... ,.. .... __ ............. • $66 MONTH FOR 36 ....,.. .,.,.. --· ....... ,. -~,,..""' s251s o.t.1u& bu& IMIAlPIOfTAG1..-nt.H'-· MONTHS
.turo Irani, rod10, tleoltr. landou,
buc:ktl uats. 11inyf Jilerior, wtiil ..
woll tir11 & dthJll .m.fll COYtri.
141111Ul15990
'69 FORD '70 Charger
GALAXll 500 v.1. auto. tfOl!l.. toct. air CGlllll. ro1!o. "'°'"· wtitt-
2 •Dr. H.T. V-1 .,IO, "''""' !Dtlory tr conditiol!iolg. wells, my! roof. 512 ASfol -·193jp~~:· . $1588P:~u ..
'70 BUICK ·. , '71 PL YM.
llYIHA
W-1. euto trons. ~ llr cond. U ~ •. ~ "'°"'"· lnlou. ihlO MOii, lilt "'1!HI, lllCtptiordly -~S3288P.lu
Of FIR
'68 Firebird
2·0001 llAIDTOP
2-Door H«NtoJr • • • v.e n . tram~ Ndio. hlc1er. whlttwwl h ~
~'$"1' 78. 82~A~
• · OFlll
'70L
VI, llllo. lflllt.. W c..dl~ ,._. rlMrfllll,·,oww tD r-. -. '""' & !lollW, •/111fr & ....... Y-1.
Wokn, AM/fM radio. MoHr, loftdau, fgclory lllOtilt th lilt. windoln. llltt. lir, WSW'a. ,..., ML 272 Ni.
-if18i~~r ~$"1988~1!
OPEN
9AM1110PM
I
7DAYS
AWEEI
'
> '
•
i
" 10 .~, .. 0." .... ~ .,_ t_ • '--. 1 ••11 •• 'I I .._ • •• (_• •• "-
•
San Cle111enie .. ·---~ ... ~~h·-T.,,,s P l•al
~apistrano EDITI ON N.Y. Steeb
YOL:. 65, NO. 14, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 17, '1972 • JEN CENTS
Kill 9 •• ID Perfect Driving Wea th er
Clear weathe?·and normal traffic con-
ditions !ailed lo halt highway slaughter
over the weekend in Orange County a5
eiCht persons were killed or suceumbed
to earlier accident injuries. '
In !nothtt accident, an Orange County
resident died in a beadon collision near
Lancaster. , • .
• , The victlms-lnctuded two Garden Grove
leen&11ers' kQI,.i' wlitn their car rollf;d
over early SUnday on the Newport
Freeway oflramp at Baker street in
c:..ta Jleaa. The accident Injured . two
buddies rldlng with them.
The tragic loll Includes: ·
Dovtd M. Net1, 21, o! 1585 N, CQut
Highway, Laguna Beach:
eurU1 A.. Smit.II, 17, of 8901 Blossom
. Ave., Garden Grove.
Jame• L. Pease, 17, of 8692 Blossom
Ave.,·Garden Grove.
Genevieve Wylulll, llO, of 2170 S. Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim.
Alfredo Rodriquez, II, o! 904 N. Briltol st., Santa Ana, ' ~
JlD Moaroo, I, ol 198ll Alezuder Ave.,
' '
' '
C<n'llos.
Jolia·Guy Crtauaw, 19, Salt Lake Ci·
ty. • ' '
Lano W.W., 21, Orange.
Job Qarlel a .. .,ld, 7,.of 1651 w. La
Habra Blvd., La Habre.
Nees: ~spuU CNt of control on Plciflc
~ !llihl'•X 41111.bll a power PQle near
the El Morro Scbool rood, the Clli!Ol'IUa
Highway Patrol ·,.id, · ·
Smith 1 and Pieaae, were 1d1Jed when
ll\elr ~ oyertumid OD. I he NewllOri
FrffWay .early' SUnday. In Coata· Meaa
Alternative
To Death
Gets Study
-' ' ' ' NEW YORK (UPI) -AD article alwt
rectuae .billioaalre lloWard llqhei to '4>-. . ~ia~;r~·'· 'llrlli#Mle ''• ' ~after .... .. ... bt
biouglil'to'llle 18ter.~ • · . ~~
' ' "'-"-'-I " j., ' ' ' ' .~U;""~~~'
mp, ....... "":""'' bf a.ichel ud ldlted {
by ~ llobert P • .'Eal& · ··
Memorial Hospital with maJor Injuries
Incurred In the same accident are the
driver of the car, Henry A. Gonzales, 19,
Garden Grove, and Brian Mendonca, 17,
allO of Garden Giove. · · · r
Mrs. Wykol! died a~ Palm Harbor
Hospital, Garden Grove, SUnday night,
lour bours alter being injured !Jl a two-
car acdden~ Police ~abe wu,drivlng
north on Harbor Boultvard when her c~
collldtd with a plciup t?uct" driven by
Thomas A. Ver Panek, 21, Santa Ana.
Santa Aila police are lelrcl>iD& for the
drlver of a· white van that struck and kill·
ed the Rodriquez boy al Bristol aod !Id
Streets Saturday night.
The ,Monroe child was killed in La
Palma Saturday when hit by a car on
Orangelborpe Avenue near Moody Street.
The llalste.d boy wu !atally Injured In
La Habra Sonday afternoon when he
rtported)y ran Into the street and was
struck by a car.
Cre.n.maw, a Navy sailor was dead on
arrival at Los Alamitos General Hospital,
Saturday morning alter bis eastbound car
. . ' -. ' • . ' "'lbla -· tbal Iha eqalpmaol ud DALYJ'llM llOll . ...,, the capmlo in wbidl bia body 1'llllle Upt
11fEY buG uNsu'c:~SSFULLY UNtlL fJt~lR HA~S~ERE Ri.v/ nnlll ·be ...,. II band, and tba1 ~ u.. cro1-. Jane Clo!1Pboll, Marcia Monroe . IDd. capoblo bdinlcl••• -be nadllY. · . · · · . • avallable, • aald Eaton. ,
· , lie QIJOlild &II-u dying, "I have
. . ..
.. ~ .. .,.,...;. .... ,-.
ACCEPTED HIJG141S LOAN fllawport•1,~d · ,._;. " . .... .tJ.&n.~t . _··mg · ~lt' .. · : :s:.:;::bl:u::
Studen~ Give Up Fossil Sear.ch xe~~ii ~ook :Says .Hui!ies 'Le~i'
. , · ' ' Minli at tlielr lUt meeting !Jl Lu ,Vegas • · · ' 1 Tbe~:.;:;:i~~e .. lcyo!: :i;.~:~41~ ~~7=:~:=:: ~~~n'~~.K:in $~.qs,ooo·. ; ..
'19ers IDoklng !or gold... . · ~ wllicb. 11 bull~ lb!" }'o.Wn and Among otber·dlacloluna In !be article ' ' · · ~y worked untli their · hands were CoUnlzy: Sbopping, CetWt.00 1¥ site. wu th~t f1•pes"lntereat In ·women . NEW· YORK'(AJ') -'Clil!ord ·Irving, · pilbi!Sbed ~k · wbich be•clalms"fo 'have
callused, their · baCk.s ached and dirt · The, lonnet'; l!'nd .~r.-brooght the never aeellled to be prurient but -con-· author •of a P\ll'POrled aulobl<lt!raphy of · pui togetlier oot of a 11rlea o!'lllttrvlews covered their clothes. · · .£...U to Winget who lmni~Y·called (See ,FROZEN, Pace 1.) . Howard Hugbes, .quotee ·tl>e .hllllorialre -
But the earth refused to give up Its · the·bigh school scien<e atalf. · . recluse aa uylng tl)at former Secretary ·with ·l!'ugbea., .
. secret: , · , · · From then Oil it was like a ·trtuure of lle{enoe.Clarlt Gliflord eaked him for a , (United Preis !nttrnatlollal reported
And · today tbe San Clemente High hunt. Cl le Cr h · $205,000 Joan for Rlchlrd ill. Niloo'a today tbft·~ .-u.r lold .CBS·the ~ licence,stalf .decided to give up The fonner owner'tbouglit he 'ttcalled emen -as ' brother. • allegation ..... !alae, but -edged
the iea~h ·tor' a liissil that might have where the' Spot was be<ause It had been Clifford, who eerved In the Johnson ad· . that bla law rirm ~ repr-'911 the
been millioos of yean old. · · · llW' a eucalyptus tree, He pointed ii out · S • usl ·ff rls -ininlatration, denied any connection with . Hugbea Tool Co. alnce lllO.)
The students · beard about the !wil to Winget who In turn ahowed ·il to the CnO y U . the deal. · The Dayton (Ohio. Jouma~Herald
from Tom Winget, r,:,::tdfnt of Misslo1l eager science students. I la ·today quoted Sail Francllco al·
In I Toro propert la d . . "It a complete libricatlon," be 111d lorney· Melvin Belli u za·'-• that the Bank E • w Y a • FHday afternoon they dug until their T • • 'T hi } · when contacted Sdnday at his Wasblng(On 1 , off ,_
jacent tO a.eoostructlon site. handa bled but !ouod nolblng. 110 ID ' e c e ' hollje.''There 15, hot orie lo~ o! truth In .=.~J:.':Y lo.:;.~=
The owner ot the property, digging 1 A bulldoder operator agreed to remove that sllte!nent. It had to be made up out .. Ori' --' tiler · dralnap ditch with biz lractor 211 yean dirt ,,_, d , A Daoa Point youth au!lered a mangled . oi wbole'cloth." · new eana roula .... o favors for •-• --k • bard -~ece and had lill '° -~, couJ start 111 1 gnRllld Tran.World Air"-then --' '"' j,:p;d" oft'l!b irlctClr lo ';'back and,.. ~.'°OD Saturday they coattpued the leg and other oevere Injuries In • ' Noah Dtetrtch a former Hugbea aide Hughes. w-., ·•-"'
bat It -~·· . • prela'" crllll of bla vao and • parked llid In Calilornia that the Jou which The ,:,_ r.M ..... In N~...:., .. -~ w -· ' · . • ' truck Sunday !Jl Sao Clemente. Two com-· rled In made L.1 ••' -· ... ------Tbe blade bad lohlpped' the matertaJ ·A group of La Habra ""1---panionl also _. IOVerely burl !Jl the WU repo 1911>, WU • -uort cea(uJ J910 prak!Onlal caJilpallft, Both
wldcb ~ to be a bone. The finner CllQle lo watch !or 1 -liii ~oiler --a compaDJ1 law,yer haodled ii and atllDrd Nlaoo and bla brother, Dapald, have
(knowii, oo1y u •'Mr. -...,,") picked to belp. . . ' Tbe ~ oer1o1111y • .,jmad In .tbe U:OS ~~-knodecl;t!~elno!a ~•~~ ·m•_,_:_ denl0 .-:.:ti Jl,••hea,~ -uy la,vorz up the bonepoit, DOied where Iha !oisll llcia!e,-t bactSUnday.to contlnue·too "<'••---..-1 ~~-· ,...,~ ,,.lho!_ wu ud. co0tlnuec1'hla -ic. <!II but thelr•ellorta ,,_ In va!Jl. a.m. crab along the 11111 bloclt ol South SUndiJ lo 11y wtia~Hugbea got In return . · lrvii1g 'a bopt has. bten a au~Mct o! mn-' ·w1ngei aald tbe developers o! the .land ~ wu Robert Lyn McNalr, 19, for lhl 11!1· Joan. But he said the "quid troversy slnCe'll wu innounced oo Ilec.
had Indicated I willinanesa lo rOlle ol!lhl! of ·3!&11 Big Sur; Ilana Polnl. Fittmen pro quo'" la• delcrlbed !Jl bla ..... -<!hie . DONALD,, Pql' !) ..
Onui _,.
' . .. . ' Night and morning low ckluds
section ao tbe dlg.cotild continue, but the aald he aul!ered mu!Uple compound !rac-"
zcience staff decided to gi>e 'up beCa... tum ol the right Jee, a broken arm , -k * -k -k -k · -ti
the locaUoo ca11 't be pinpoint~ and zevere cull and other hurts.
might even be under Winget'• benlr. Tlvo . ol tine pulengers also .. ,. H h L t N t' tbe~~~~~~t\'ft"t!'~°:!~ hu~i.:f°~~ ... 17, o1 ns Calle • ug es oan o ewpor s
ol a wflale rib. Many whale !osstla have Salvador, Sao Clemente, -treated' !or
bee> .._ered In the Sad<!leback Valley. deep ahock and -.to cutJ 1na •
Some date 15 mlllion years back, to the bruises. ' N. . R . d Wif s ~ t.~· 1o ruture aenera1iona to ~7:',..x.!!!".;..1:,:..~T~1! , . JX~l,1: .ep~ ' · · e ays
ran off Westmklster Boulevard In Seal
Beach, one half mile east of Studebaker
Road.
California l!igpway Patrot officers said
\Vatkins died near Lancaster arter pulling
his car into the opposite lane to pass, and
colliding with lhe car of a Riverside man.
John McKnight, 34, Riverside, his
daughters, Charlotlt, 14; Jeanette, JI
and his son, David, a, were all critical1Y.
injured Jn the cruh. ·
'The county's week,nd death toll
brought the 1972· auto !atalily list to 19
names, seven ahead of 197l's caroaac.
'San Onofre
Plant, PUC
Hearing ., Set
•
A lonnal . ....._'to= If ,.. MSl l'qllllo p!lllllls Ort bu
·~ lo ... -= 11211 Illa ;Sao Clllolre NaOleat 6-11£W_ljlllozi fl
unsale wD1 bit lltla lzrlM ~ J&
211. •
rue s!)Oltali.a ~ lbat liactan4
tbi! People'• I.4lllli wlddl ln..iie the
charges late JUI JUI' would join In the 10
1.m. talk.s !Jl the Slate bulJdlna In Los
Angeles. _ : . _ .
-The statewide oonaervatlon group has
asserted that ane sy1tem1 at U.
generating . plant '!OUld be un'!Rfe in a
1evere eartbquke'" 'Jbe group formally pe~tloned tor Ollldal PUC hearings on
the charges.
Nez! week'• !alb will be held In room
107 before o!!icerl of the cormnlsslon and
,will dwell prilDlpily OD jurladlctlon.
The Lobby's aDeaatlon1 are the laltat
In a aerte1 ot ·-. against Southern
Callloml1 EdlaOa Company and San
Diego Gas and Eloctrlc Company in their
(Seo ATOH; .Pap I)
LA Fire Captain
Now itt llunning
For Councilman
A fire captain who W.rk.s in Los
Angeles today became. the !Hth San
Clemente resident to take out papers for
city council olllce.
Jemes W. Mou ol 131 Avenlda Crespi,
who once served on an ad·hoc committee
of advisers to City Manager Ken Carr on
lire department planning, obtaioed the
nominatlon 'papers early today.
Moo.1 lul i'Ur lddr'elsed councibnen
several times ,OD what be believed to be
the city's needs !or an upgraded lire
department. ,
Othera who '11a .. 'obtained nomination Pl"'1' are !IH!· two councllmto whoao
pom are al stake !Jl tbe Aprtl 11 el'°'
Ilona -Mayor Walter Ev1111 and C:OU...
cllman Stan Northrup -pli.m PW..
ning. Commlaaloa a.airman Art lloJmea
and. San Clemente Inn corporate bead
Poul Pmloy.
None o! the azplrlng caodldatts has yet
turned In bis completed paporo, Clty
Cieri: Max Berg said today.
The llllnc zeason will continue through
the month and end at noon Ftb. s.
are OD the agenda again !or Tuel-.
dlu' .. c~· by mkl-momlng to
buy' IUDlhlne lllgha Tueaday 18
at· the , coul rtstnc lo •· Inland.
I"'!"~·~ to 41.
:· JNSQHI: '190.4.'Y
-tbla ..... ' . . ' omie ICllp cut .;.. • lnjurlea.
Auto Pioneer
Fisher Succulnhs
a..f; (WnnwnltJ • , ' UV11a1 1.auu, WWK All Iha vlct=taken to South • Mn F --•d N'~ ~. hulband
Mc""1t -!or .... , at 'e~ a •15'000 lot;.". rr:; ~
No lee a are. charled candidates !or of·
nee, unlell they wish a prlntod quall!lca-
.. i-dlaputocl biqsrapphy of the nclue' lloa statement ac<:Ompaaytna their name
blljlolllire 1111y ar may DOI be PllbliWd. 111 tho ba11o1.
'claillled SUaday tbal a Io rm er f;v1111 aeell1 1 aecond torm .., the
The mojor probt'cmi of todar'•
• f9Cktr 9re, bri1141 .tackkd by a
, V1°0Mp , 'of MrolJ)OCI WOTkert
• ~red fn HuntinQton
B--Sti Page 29.
• ' ' r L,Jl.llrf f t• ,,........,.. ,, =-· : = ........ :l CllllMllll ~ • ._. or-.. C.... l>M
CIMlllll • • """ •• 1 C&Mll • • ..... MlrWtl tt•U .... --u 'hillil... .. .... ,.. . """" .. ....... " -. -, --. .. "' ._.. _.. ..... ,,.,. --..
•
' DETROJT (,\P) -Edward r. Flaber,
the ~ lll)lhor " th lnlbft ......
founded the f'llber Bady Co. Wld ----u .. 1o_, ..,._..d!ad
today. HI WU IO.
Flaber, w-formal educaUoo In-d-only JP'lllUIW' and draltinl
acbool, bacame I lop otlJcer aod dirletor
lor-o..al -eor,. . • ... at• ... .._ Dlboil bass Mo'
Ills .... a lq llzw. ·
tbabolplta'tllla_,.,.!ornpolroUhO ·-_,. yean .. o ·~· .....
badly broken Jes. , .~,to '11cuu the matter In the Nl>-
Tbe remaining lnjurad -. kepi . a N-rl Beach home. . , ...mPt foe obiel v1Uon. , •.Y-. we received the' 1 o a.n,!' Mr1.
-. aa1d the ... be -drlvinc leat l!jt ~." abe llid.' COlltnil 11 It trtveled north OD Elporm, wHe of the Preaident'I brother
mi.ad 1 cane at hi&h tpeed, tbon Plow-, to COllU"ent oo the latest con-ad~t a campar""""" lro¥Wl)l'aurroundinl the nott -who ar-
Tbt truck, poUca IOlil, ...... """"' It. • , ' ta B. Pwrtae el 111,.......w. ''YOD'IJ llave' lo !alt to 1111' hulbelld.
Tbe ..OW. .. ..-Iha beaY)' -le lla'1 Iha one that la In -· He'll tell
.... t.I -Illa an, ...... ._ta ,.. -occurred," sJie llid •
aid. . -hal -quolocl u A1llll he Sot
Tbt ....... ""llnl ~ the ,Joa tlnucl\ a J:::: ,,... J, ... .,.,_ ... or 1;~ "?llln.•w.~ ....:_.~~
.... .... • • j ........ , AU.....-, ....Ulvnt• ........ , . . . '
I
•
Elleobow<t aide· lfrlllllld Ille .deal. ""'""'" and Norlhnlp WW be ..,... !er a
. Mrs. Nbon deellDed ·to talt uy more lourlh, ,
about It and did her 1Nahaad, -a vice Hotme1 ran two years aco Ind 1ot1Jfc1 a
pmldaot of the ¥mtiJU Hotel chain !onnldable tally ol vot.1 -a ihade
could be ,.achad 1~ a !111T111tt con' · under ~ o! Clifton Myer1, who woo a
ventlon at ~ Marriott Hotel i n seat on Iha council. Holmes w11 !ourtll
Waabln(ton, D.C. h!Zhest In the race tor tlltee OOWICI!
The hotel aald Nl1on wun't Ihm. zeals, •
An inquiry to Marriott'• corporate The electlona will be Pruley'1 !Int
headquarters ' In Wublr1*ton was JUst u crld< at local oa1et. Tbe bin._ hll (
IJOl\productive. been hl&hl7 acu .. In ron11 .. dtJ on.a ~:·.::....,~ beatd """' hba,· .. of· :!I=:::..-::~.:. i=e ~
Neltllw bad Iha olllce of President Nix-President N!Qn tor .......... Ille 111m
'm'I prw' _...,., Llbnry.
' • I •
. .
I DllL V PILOT SC
_Ne,otiations Fail
24 West Coast
Ports Close Up
' SAN FR AN CI SCO (AP )
Longshoremen resumed a strike at 24 W~st Coast ports today after negotiators
failed to reach a settlement. Negotiatkm
sessions broke off but the union said they
would be resumed later at an un·
determined Ume.
Harry Bridges, president of the
International Longshoremen'• an d
\Vareho usemen's Union, emerged from
bargaining sessions that had run through
the night to announ ce:
''The strike officially resumed at 8 a.m.
this morning, although we exerted all el·
forts we could at this time to try to settle
it."
The firs t orders lo resume picketing
came at San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Long Beach harbors after an 8 a.m,
(PSfJ dead)ine expired.
Pickets appear ed almos t
!imultaneously shortly after 8 a.m. at
piers on the San Francisco waterfront
after the chief dispatcher at ILWU Local
10 told some 300 men in a hiring hall to
resume Picketing "and tie it up." Iran Discloses
Kidnap Plot
On U.S. Envoy
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -Four Com·
murtists trained in Iraq tried ~o kidnap
U.S. Ambassador Douglas MacArthur J[
and his wife last November as they were
returning home from a dinner party, a
government spokesman reported today.
Tbe Communists planned to bold the
MacArthurs as hostages for political
prisoners held by the governmen t, a
spokesman for the security forces said.
MacArthur, at the time, told a qucs·
tioning newsman that he had been in an
accident but gave no deta ils. The em·
bassy in a statement today said it kept
quiet at the government's request so in·
vestigation would not be hampered.
The statement said It was confirmed
that four armed men in two cars stopped
the ambassador's automobile and fired
shots at the car as the embassy dri ver,
on orders of the amba ssador, sped away.
The assailants, the statement said, shot
at the car and attempted to break the
window with an ax but were unsuc-
cessful.
The would-be kidnapers were captured.
The gang lead er. Sohrab Nehavandi,
confessed and he and four other gang
members are awaiting trial among 120
other members of three communi st
groups captured during the past 10
months the goverp.ment said.
The embassy said that since the "ac-
cident" the embassy received complete
cooperation frun government of Iran for
arranging security for the ambassador
and the mission.
ThO em~soy s1>91!111111an denied r<pi>,U
that Ambassador MacArthur resigned
because o1 ·too-tight security measures.
He Nid the ambassador has seryed for
mote than 24 years and resigd'ed for
personal 1easons. He is due to leave
Tehran in February.
From Page I
ATOM ...
joint ownership and planning of the
Onofre Nuclear complex.
Since the environmental group fJ.)ed of·
flclal briefs on the safety charges, the
utilities have answered with documents
rebutting the asserted safety hazards.
The complex has as its closest neighbor
the Western White House two miles up
coast in San Clemente.
The utilities already have admitted that
plans for two more reactors costing a
half billion dollars are hopele ssly delayed
and additional fossil-fuel plants wiU be
built elsewhere to take care of future
power demand s.
Delays in the reactor projects ca me
about after a federal ct1urt heaped the
responsibility for environment on to the
At.omic Engergy Commission.
The AEC also required earthquak e
safety reevaluations of the reactor plans
as well as reports on the safety of the ex·
istiri rea ctor.
DAILY PILOT
~ COAIT PUILWllHO awJtAH'r
RoHrt N. WoM
Pc.llllal a Pt1bU1111t
Joe\: R. c.1.., vr. ........... c;..,.1 ....
1Men Koo.;
"'"" ' n0o.n A. M ..... loo MowflfO E41tor
ChfW H.. Leos 1Ud1'"' P. Ntb AWl&MI ~ Edltlq ""-_.,_
211 Foroat A•111o10 Mllli1t •dcft.t1: P.O. •o• 666, f2651 . S.. Cls•atw '.OHko
303 Hort• e CmiAO IW•L tl671
°"" °'"'" Qlll ,,,_. ,,, w.rt '" """ ....,. a..ca1 GU """""" acu~ "1 '1$ ...................
About the time, John Pandora, bead of
the big 2,800-membe r l'LWU local in Los
Angel es and Long Aeach was saying: 11As
far as we're concerned , the strike is on.
We're dispatching picket! now." The
Nixon administration has warned it would
ask Congress to intervene and direct a
settlement ~f any renewal of the walkout
that shut ports for 100 days last year.
Negotiators for the union and the
employer, Pacific Maritime Association,
met throughout the weekend a n d
overnight today in joi nt and separate
sessions wit h J. Curtis Counts, director of
the Federal Mediation and Concilia tion
Service.
"This is the only strike I haven't been
able to crack," said Counts. "This is one
of the toughest ones. They've been argu·
ing this one for 14 months."
The strike began last July 1. It was
halted Oct. 6 by a Taft-Hartley injunction
providing for a cooling-off period of 80
days which expired Christmas Day.
Disaster Averted
In Cruiser Test;
Engine Burns. Up
Melvin Woody of Pomona probably will
not buy the 34·foot cru iser Tiburon alter
a weekend trial run nearly ended in
disaster.
Woody and sis: others took the vessel
for a run to Catalina Island over the
weekend, then late Sunday issued a may
day distress call.
One of the craft1s twin engines was
ablaze as the vessel lay idle aouth of San
Clemente Island.
Coast Guard !pokesmen aald the boat
was towed to its berth at WUmington to-
day by an unidentified fishlni boat.
Tbe engine fire, under lnvutigation,
WM e¥iniWshed by the fishing boat's
crew. 1
Tiburon had been listed as an overdue
vessel on Coast Guard logs late Sonday,
spokesmen said,
Woody told authorities he had been
testing the craft before buying. The
cruiser, he added, had not been used for
two years before the weekend jaunt.
Trustees Hear
Status Report
On Insurance
A report on the present state of in-
surance protection for Saddleback Com·
munity College will be delivered at the
board mee ting at 7 o'clock tonight.
A committee of board members Alyn
Brannon and John Lund will present the
report, which is not expected to recom-
mend changes in the insurance program
at the college.
According to Dr. Fred H. Bremer,
superintendent·president, six private in-
surance agencies make up the Sad4
d!eback Comm unity College Insurance
Agents Association.
Yearly pre miums on insurance total
$64,000 tor present coverage s a id
Breme r. The biggest churik -some
$32,000 -goes toward health, accident
and dental care insurance for the 135
district employes, he added.
Bremer said the repo rt is conducted
periodically. ''The committee was asked
several months ago to prepare the report.
It looks like there are no problems at
present," said Bremer.
In other matters, th e board will:
-Hear a repor t on total enrollment for
the winter quart er.
-Approve the academic calendar for
the 1972-73 school year.
-Authorize paymendt fo r arch.itectural
services in conjunc tion with the science-
mathematlcs building.
2 More Solons
Accused by Russ
MOSCOW (AP) -The government
newspaper Izvestia accused two U.S.
Republican congressmen today o f
vlolallng the rules of Sovltl hospitality
while on a lour here to 1tudy Soviet
education.
A third member of the touring gl'()Up,
Rep. James H. Scheuer, a New York
Democrat, wa1 ordered expelled from the
Soviet Union last week after meeting
with Soviet Jews see~ing to leave for
Israel. (See earlier atory, Page 41
In an article on the tour of the se ven.
member House subcommittee" 'on
education Izvestia charaed that Rep.
Alphonzo Bell of C.llfornla met privately
wUI! crillcs of the Soviet 1overnmmt. It
11kl Rep, Earl Landcrebe of Ind iana
dlitrlbutad rell&iowi mat.rials.
' U"I Ttie.M!• GETS TV VIOLENCE STUDY
Surgeon Gtntr•I Steinfeld
Scientists Link . .
Violence on TV
To Aggressions
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A panel of 12
scientists reported to Surgeon General
Jesse L. Steinfeld today there is evidence
that television violence causes aggress ion
am ong children predispased to that kind
of behavior in the first place.
In a 275-page report, Steinfeld's scien--
tific advisory committ ee on television
and social behavior said the scientific
data were neither consistent nor con4
elusive.
But it said there was enough evidence
to indicate a relation between violence on
television and aggressive behavior among
children who already tended toward ag-
gressive behavior.
Jt also said the response of children to
TV violence depended upon t h e
framework in which it was presented, in·
el uding whether there were parental ex·
planatiorui, the outcome and nature of the
violence and whether it was seen as fan·
tasy or reality.
The committee was given 2lh years to
make the report at a cost of $1 million. It
also was given instructions not to make
policy recommendations.
The findings, the committee said, "con·
verge in three respects : a preliminary
and tentative indication ot a casual rela-
tion b e t w e e n viewing viole.ce on
television and aggressive behavior; an in-
dication that any such ca\1!81 relation
operates only on some children (who are
predisposed to be aggressive); and an
indication Ufat it operates only in some
environmental contexts.
"Such tentative and limited conclUJions are not very ~11atisfylng. They represent
substantially more knowledge than we
had two years ago, but they leave many
questions unanswered," the committee
aald.
In a statement released with the
report, Steinfeld declined to make his
own crinclusions, quoting the committee's
summary and aaying that the report
"merits the serious attention of all
persons and groups conctmed about the
effects of viewing television."
Water District
Slates Meeting
To Confirm Head
Directors of the South Coast County
Water District will hold a special meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday to confirm the in-
terim appointment of district superin-
tendent Raymond C. Miller to replace
general manager-secretary John "Tex"
Smith, who has resigned after serving the
district since July, 1962.
Board pres ident Thomas H. Brooks
said Miller was named acting manager
when Smith handed in his resignation last
week. A permanent appaintment to the
position may not be made until com·
pletion of a comprehensive study ol
dis trict operating procedures, ordered by
the board, Brooks added . He said the
vacancy probably wi ll be filled by some-
one already in the employ of the
dlslrlcl.
The SCCWD manager serves in the
same capac;ity for the South Coast County
Sanita tion District, which shares the cost
of his salary of $1,450 a month.
Smith told reporters he is leaving the
water district to accept a better business:
opportunity and will announce his plans
at a later date.
Saddleback Sets
Election M~t
The first meeting of an ad hoc com-
mittee to study the method of election of
trustees in the Saddleback Community
Colltge District will be held Thursday
night at 7:30 p.m. at the board room,
28000 Marguerite Parkway.
Two representaUve.s of the Capistrano,
and Laguna Beach Unlfled School
D~tricts, the Tustin Union lligh School
District and the Saddleback board make
up the committee.
The public la invlled to attend the
meeUng.
The commlllee was appointed by tho
various district boards aft.er a recent
controveny on whether the Saddleback
trustees should be elected al Iarae or by trustee areas.
Alt« llUdy or the matter, tho com-
mlltA!a recommendation will be ~
to the !UU coll .. e board 1M actlon,
Action Set
On Rights
Of Pupils
A policy on student righta •nd
responslbilities will be considered for
adoption by trustees of the Capistrano
Unlfied School District at tonight's 7:30
p.m. meeting in Serra School, Capistrano
Beach.
The policy will allow students to ex·
ercise free expression Includ ing, but not
limited to, the use of bulletin boards,
distribution of printed materials br peti•
tions and the wearing of buttons, badges
and other insignia.
•
I
..
U"I T11fft1911
If adopt ed7 the policy would set specific
times for the distribution of printed
material and would designate the maMer
in which the material is presented. All
material would have to be presented to a
school official at least 24 Muri before
distribution.
IRVING PRODUCES HIS PROOF OF HUGHES' EXISTENCE
Author Showa 2 Notes Ht Says Wire Written by Howard
The poli cy is being adopted to fit with
recent slate legislation which clarified
student rights and responsibUlties and
made it mandatory that each governing
board of a school district adopt rules and
regulations relating to the exercise of
fr ee expression by students. These rules,
according to the new law, are to include
reasonable provisions for the time, place
and manner of conducting such activities.
The law and the proposed district
policy both state that free el]>ress ion
shall not be prohibited unless the ex-
pression is "obsce ne, libelous, or slan·
derous" or if it "incites students as to
create a clea r and present danger of the
commission of unlawful acts on school
premises or the violation of lawful school
regulations or the substantial disruption
of the orderly operation of the school."
The district policy adds that materials,
displays or buttons would be prohibited
al so if they expressed racial, ethnic or
relig ious prejudice.
From Page I
FROZEN : •.
centrated on their personalities.
Eaton said Hughes thought Ava
Gardner the most sensitive, intellig.ent
woman he had known.
Publication of the account was blocked
briefly, by an injunction obtained by the
same Nevada company that is fighting
publicat ion of author Clifiord Irving's
book. The injunction was dissolved Satur·
day and a bearing set for today.
Irving said in a television interview
Sunday night that Hughes lives in ...
James Bond setup," once hired a man tCJ
sample his medicines before he took
them and started a card file rating
everyone he met for cleanliness.·
Irving said Katharine Hej:>burn, one of
the actresses Hughes was friendly with in
the 1930s and 40s, particularly impressed
him. He quoted Hughes as saying, "She
was a very clean woman who used to
bathe three or lour times a day and she
always told me I was divine. And I kind
of liked that."
Irving said Hughe5 at one time kept the
file card syst@1' on friends and
associates and it had "a classification A,
B, C, D, -and that ranged from filthy,
moderately dirty, dirty and moderately
clean."
He said Hughes wore false beards,
mustaches and wigs to the secret
meetings at which he tape recorded his
autobiography. Irving said Hughes told
him he wore disguises because .,there are
always people looking for ~e and there's
a price on my head."
"There's a James Bond setup here
that's out of the worst possible detective
novel you could ever read," Irvine sa id.
Time ,Magazine published. an in terview
Sunday with Irving in which he was ask·
ed why Hu ghes told him his life story.
"The man is in the last decade of his
life," Irving said. 0 He believes he has
been maligned, lied about. He has recei v·
ed a bad pres... As he said himsell, he
wanted 'to restore the balance.• "
From Page I
DONALD .••
7. The voice of a man claiming to be
Hughes &aid in a recent long-distance
telephone news conference that he did not
know Irving and denounctA the book as a
hoax.
Newsmen at the conference said they
are convinced that the-voice is that of
Hughes. Irving says it was not Hughes'
voice because the man had too many
memory lapses and talked longer than
Hughes can witpout a break.
A Nevada publishing firm, which
claims It bu exclusive rights to Hughes'
autobiography, bu filed auit to bar I.-
publication of Irving's book by McGraw.
Hill Publishing Co. and Its seriallzatlon lit
Lile magazine. A hearing in the case
is set fOr Wednesday.
The McGraw-Hill book has been
described by the publisher as Hughes'
autobiography, taken from interviews
that Irving, as collaborator, taped with
Hughes. '
Irving talked about the loan during an
interview with Mike Wallace on the CBS
television "60 Minutes" program.
The late columnis:t Drew Pearson first
reported the loan ahonly before the 1960
election. Pearaoo aaid Hughes made the
unsecured ioan to Donald Nixon in 1956,
while Richard Nixon was Vice President,
and afterward Hughes' problems wilb
various governmental agencies were eas-
ed.
The Pearson story was termed a
"smear" by Nixon's campaign manager.
Donald N!J:on said he IOUlhl the loan
through tu. friend, lawyer Frank J,
Wate;n, then a lobbyist for Hughes, in an
unsuccessful eUort to save his chlln of
mtauranl!. He 18.id the loan was secured
by his mother's Jot in Whittler, Calif.
Donald Nixon said he never asked his:
brolber to do anything for him or anyone
else. He said that a gas station was built
on the lot and that it was worth $228,000
when it was fmally given in payment for
the loan.
Jn Beverly Hills, Calif., Dietrich,
former bead of Hughes Tool, and an aide
to Hughes from 1925 to 1957, also con·
firmed that the 108n was made but said
Clifford had no knowledge of it "because
it was handled by a lawyer -who worked
for the Hughes Tool Co.
"The loan was made for working
capital for the operation of the restaurant
in Whittier," Dietrich said in a telephone
interview. "It wasn't made for a chain,
though he (Donald Nixon) was tryinft to build another restaurant at the time.
San Francisco attorney Belli said the
money was transferred in the form of a
mortgage payment to Donal(I Nixon and
his mother, accordiag to t fie Journal.
Herald story.
The newspaper reported that Belli said
he wu the attorney for Ph.illip Reiner, a
Hughes accountant whose name was used
on the loan and who subsequently sued
for defamation of character over the use
of his name. Belli said the !Uit was set4
tied out of court.
Why pay 1150 for a l/4 Carat
Diamond when you can buy the
Diamond from us for . iust s75 ?
We liaYe tile Expertise
~wand boclig1ond
........ ,..._ ... ..,.1
Oii .,_ clsmowd inw•uwnt.
Ex-county Fire
Chief Osterman
Succumbs at 58
Flags will fiy at half staff at all county
fire stations today and Tuesday for
retired county fire chief Elmer F.
Osterman, 58, who died Saturday follow-
ing a long illness.
Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m.,
Tuesday, in Waverly Chapel at Fairhaven
Memorial Park, Santa Ana. Burial will
follow.
Mr. Osterman served eight years as
combined county fire chief and bead of
the State Division of Forestry in Orange
County.
He was bonored recenUy by county
supervisors who named the. new fire
training center to be buUt in the El Toro
area after him.
The fire chief, who spent most of his
fire career since 1934 in Orange County,
was also honored recently by the U.S.
Forest Service. He was presented the
Smokey the Bear silver statuette during
ceremonies in Washington, D.C.
Mr. Osterman was the first Californian
8nd only the second person in the nation
to receive the Smokey the Bear award. It
was given to him for his work in develop-
ing fire prevention and conservation pro-
grams throughout Southern California.
He was appointed fire prevention
coordinat.or for this area in 1951.
. Chief Osterman was born in El Toro
May 8, 1913. He joined the Divlsloo of
Forestry in the county as a radio
dlspalcher to 193l. In 1913 he became
state forest ranger and county fire chief.
He is survived by lils widow, Lois ; a
daughter, Mrs. Susan Kleiwer of Arizona:
his mother, Mrs. Lillian Ostennan of
Santa Ana, and two brothers, John of Los
Angeles and George of Santa Ana.
Gas Siphoning
Attempt Foiled
The two sons of San Clemente City
Engineer Phil ::-Peter thwarted the at·
tempted theft of gasoline fro m the of·
ficial's city car over the weekend .
The youthful thief fled from the car
leaving his gas can and siphon hose
beh ind.
Peter phon~d police before dawn Satur•
day and told J:>fficers his two so ns would
keep a watch on the thief until patrolmeD
arrived.
But the night vlsitor noticed the Im·
promptu stakeout and ran before officers
arrived.
Magnat~ Heller Dies
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Maurice L.
Hell er, 78, founder and former vice-presi-
dent of Swank, Inc., died Sunday.
OUR MOST.
UNUSUAC
DIAMOND
SUARANTEE
'llCI IACtTI we ......
II· rn•
CO.. IN AND SEE
WHAT WE H.AYE TO OFFER
-ucm ' ,,.. ........ .. ,. ...• • WI*! Yoll t.uy I ell•
mond from UI WO will
1'u11r1nteethatdl•
-nd lo oppralM ot
40% MORE thoo YoU
pold fw It or your
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do H woll .......... ?
CO~PAltl.
Dia..-Cniter fer Or ... e c .... iw
COSTA MESA illWILRY & LOAN
Opo1l DaUw • to 1
1131 NEWPORT ILYD.
Come lo ond Brow• Around
...... 646-7741
••
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Mondoy
Ev•ning
JANUARY 17
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M1rty ln11ls, SyMI Mil.a, tht Momt
\ ltllh wotal 1ro11p, H1nny Youn11111n
and Anthony Gfffnb•clt.
D Mr. (901 "·»" Cdr1fG1) •59
-Jttll Webb, Wi11l1m Con11d, OtY\d
Nilson, Wllilnsy Bllb, Joe ~"·
Dick Whtttlnaflill, A n!1ht m1n11ln1
editor bcma detpl1 tll'l'Olvtd In
the htrll'lln elements ol tht drem1tk
and suspenseful stories he prints. (I)-
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P Ill (IJ l'lAIC ·--(2hr) "In H.,.., Wrf Conch1·
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P1ul1 Pnntlts, Henry Fondl, D1111
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c:E) Nt Uom P'f ·Ml mn.. Ptnuldtn
t:JO 1J (I) Dlril Day Doris excltldlr
0111nlles 1 baby showtl for her 1rtt
friend', Anclt P1l1uccl, not 111llzln1
1h1t what Antle Is .xptetin1 b 1
lltttr ol pups fnlm he r St 'Btm.lrd,
Sophlt.
0 "ChrY's.ler Presents• * The 8ob Hope ~II CBS Nm Walter Cronkite Christmas Show
(I) AIC htnl111 NIWI Smith, Ru · CJ 9) e;, I IHCilC IT. 1 I t .
IOlll!._ "°" CWbtMat sttow for the 21st 8 wi NIC News John CMnttllor Christmas, Bob Hope tntfrta lns Cll Trllttl 11 Conste111tt1ett '"' ' Ametlt1n 1ervlcem1n 1round t111 CJ) Dracnet CJ Mat'• MJ Un1? wartd. Filmtd hl1hllaflls al the taut
t1j Ad••·lZ will bl presented. The 111-sUr c1st m I Le'l't Lucy includes Jim NabotS, Ch1rtl1 Prld ..
ID I Dfu• •f ltimtle Les Brown ind his Bind of Rt·
fr.I HltUplp Kflhlten Hitchcock I • nown. trio Sundt(s Chl!d ind Ill~ lirtnru olhlrt. a•--a DI Vircllll" 0 lat« W1rd N ... mw MINDI mH t••nllf G 111ntnf m lDl ,._ 1t1t "Summer at 1111
7:109Stu4 Up and ChlH Bob Cnn1 Rtd warr· by Morris West
'ruats. 10:001J ([j Siiiy aM a.tr Kii• Smith
(}) Dr.,..t tnd rerulan take 1 11tlric loall at 0 Dr. SlllOll Locie "Too MlllJ people 1nd Mnts lhtt ll'llkl htld· C.ndlts'" . a"""' !CJ !2flr) ·i. "' "' ~in-,. E,.-(wsstern) '66 -l\tbert 0 Mowlt: (ar llll) "Snn. I'll"
l1nsln1. Slim Pickens, Pit '9iyne, (dtlml) ·u _ Ollvli de Hivllluid,
Glorll Ttlbctt. A JOUlllSilr who Mart Stmm:. C.lttte Holm.
.. se1b f1m1 u the lastttt run In the 111' llllttlJNlct Tilutrl
Wul Jaini fortts with 1 bountr ED Fu. OdysMf "Juln ind Jim'"
hunter whosl wlf• i fld IOI! hm (R) J11nn1 Maruu ind Osbr Wu·
bffn murdertd. f cl ({)Ti Ttl ~ Trvttl net atar In rtn os Trutfaut lilm
(I) I DrNll ti Junnll tl1sslc.. wtlldl offers 111 unusual
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Ill Ill~ Mlaltlc" (tdwnlurtl cml 0 Tertlllt
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Mmty, Ruth Go1don. 0 Let's M1b 1 Dul 10:30 OJ Newt Biii JohM m-·-E-m-a -!CJ """""" "w ~-•-: m Cotbllt11"'8D(l)lli ll3m-M• 1J loblfl L Dnn .. Guest II !!!-,. lien Geor1i Putn1m.
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• tnl!UOll put. R1nd11!, Anl'll Moffo Ind Lis Brown
D GERSHWIN Spectacular '" "'"'"" """-* ant SYSTEM m-· ....... "" -FAMILY THEATRE ,..,,-(comldy) '47--"~ G•nt,
D al fDIW<l41Jttt..... MJtMlliy.
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muslc ind lyrics of Georp 1rwf !rt Nnr (roll'llntt) '54-Rtx H•rrison.
Gtnhwfn . .Itek l.tmlllOll. Fred As· Kty Kand1ll.
t1lre; Lnlil Uuuns. Ethel M•t·
min. tarry Kert, Ptter Nero, Und1 12:11 ~ Mtvfl; .,.. Man" (myst1ry)
Btn11ett i nd Robert Guillaume Ptr· 54 -Rlchl1d C.rtson, V1ronlct
form 51 per111n1tlly·popul1r Gtrsh· Hurst.
win melodlts. 1:00 IJ Movie: "Shield for Munl.-fJ (I) (j) &J i IHCIALI hbllW (drt1111) '54-Edmond O'Brien, Jolln er.. kl s,.cttdl Tb1 world I•· At;ir, C.rotyn Janes.
mous W1mb[q kt Show "-tn1cts rn B 0 (I) 9 """
the jiopultr t1r1 of Robinson Cru·
IOI. Andy Griffith hosts.
(comtdy) '61-Jtmes D•rttn. Dtb-
Tuesday "'' "'""· m ''DIJI of llltJ" (1dventu11) '" DXYfiME MOVIES ·-T1m1r1 Toum1nov1, CttlOIY • Peck.
1;00 • -.. -!"""""> ~• m !CJ ..,.. "" ""' LH&M" '40-\llctaf M1ture, Lio Clrtllo. Conclusion (1dvtntut1) '66 -JMn
t:JO D (C) "'Oat of SIPl" (comtdY) '66 Sorel, Edmund Purdom.
-Jon1th1n Daty K111n Jenllft. J:OO Cll (C) '11le ,,,....,.. (wat•m) ' '59-.llff Chandler, F .. PtB1r.
10:00 (I) "'fl~•· SM Mr Qllll' (m_u· 9 (C) "Dlsl1ftin1 WOIUll" Condu· Ilea~ S4-Splk1 Jona. Th• CilJ •ion (romance) '57--lluren Btcan,
$Udt1n. Gre1ory Peck.
1:00 9 , "lnftOCtnb In hrll" (lllv•n· 4:00 II "lln1 or tfM htrt!l1 '20l'" (dra·
lute '5S--Ct1ir1 Bloom. M1rp111 m1) '61 -O.vid Jamsen, Mkktr
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I
DAILY PILOT Sti lt P!Mt.
'AS YOU WERE' -Michael Hanlow enacts a loose-
marbled patient of psychiatrist Stan Bell in a scene
from "The Girl in The Freudian Slip" at the Hun·
tington Beach Playhouse.
'Carmina Burana' Set
For Weekend S tp,ting
' The Laguna Beach Civic
Ballet Company will perform
Carl Orff's "Carmina Burana"
at Orange COast College,
January 21 and 22 in its first
cbl laboration with the 100-
.. rwi• Prlc., I t• 41)0
"ONl'f MA•PINS
TO OTNllS" (Gr)
Pl•os • "T. I. U.SllJl'' lfP)
' voice Irvine Master Chorr.te.
The program will begin at 8
p,m. I
Founded in 1962 by Lila Zali,
former soloist of the Mordkin
Ballet, the ballet g~p is
composed of 30 dancers from
all parts of Orange County,
most of whom dance pro.
fessionally . Dance members
have appeared with such
prestige ~panies as the
Royal · nipeg; Frankfurt
Opera Ba et, Ouk t o m s ky
Ballet Classique,. Ruth Page
International, San Francisco
and'Harkness.
The Irvine Master Chorale,
under the direction of Dr.
Maurice Allard, is now in its
fourth season of performing
great choral master\\'Orks in
Orange County. This is their
third concert of the 17-72
season.
Adapted from a 13th century
manuscript found jn a
Bavarian monastery, the
original carmina contained
over 200 lusty songs wiitte n by
disenchanted studenis who
turned to a variety ot sensual
pursuits .which they celebrated
in poetry.
The orchest ration includes
two pittnos, xylophoiles, and
Kettle drums. Divided Into
t.hree large sections, Orff
chose poems concerned with
Spring for the · first section,
drinking songs for the second,
and love poems for the third .
Opening the concert will .be
an ensemble made up of 3l
members of the Chorale,
presenting "The Llebeslieder
Waltzes" by Brahms.
George CScott
l'llllast Run
Butln(ten Cemed.y '
'Freudian Slip' Enjoyable
.
But Not Vp to Powntial
By TOM TITUS
Of .... EHlllJ 'll•t ll•tf
Watching the Huntington
8,;ach Playbowo producllon of
''The Girl In the Freudian
Slip" Is oon!twhat like eating aun.s. food -ll"s wty
enough, but never qulle fUllng.
The latest version of thls at·
TM• Ol•t. IM TM~ ' •••UDIAN SI.I ... ' A t!ln'ltdY bv WUU11t1 F. lrO'#l'I, dtrtciNlY 11«1'1'1•11 looclmt". pro-•~, "i G•ll!,:Sh'w, •l•f!e mtMVtr ~or 0..ltn llY DM G-"' Ind I ~I bJ Don 111:,,,1 tnel I.Ji
f'Vdo, P r • • • 11t1 d l'rldlv• •Ml ~lldr1Y• tllroW_ll Fell. 12 If 1:>0 ~I • H1,1111l11tllll'I BHCl'I 'llvhou,1, 1110 I" SI , Hut1ll119ton ,__. .. , k•MNI· DllS ~I. -.:;-·
THI CAST
D<.1DlvrltY M.uell1m •...•. ·fJ.· '•" ldl Pt\11 Ml!.IOlllm ,, ... Mlr!IY bt\\:' Dt, Altc Ale• ....... : ,Nie fl 1• f'''f'r• Leonard ,,, .Ctllrl~ll• MUt II 111 •. Mluelltm ........ Ll\11'1 BllCll: Mr. W1Um1" .......... MlcNll Ht"l-
traCtiVe little comedy has, to
be sure, jls Utillating and en-
joyable moments, but the
overall production ta 11 s
several degrees short of its in·
hereat potential. r
What is lacking in director
Herman Boodman's staging of
Willi am F. Br ow n 's
l ig hth e art ed spoof of
psychiatry is a sense of
cohesion, of onstage rapport
among the cast members.
While a number or fine In·
,liividual performances rise to
the surface, the tie that binds
them is threadbare.
Additionall y there is a
s~ng overall reluctance (lf
the cast -with one notable
excepti09 -to take full ad~
vantage of Brown's well-
written dialogue. Reactions to
situations onstage -'&gain,
with this single exception -
are muted beca~ of a
performer's failure to apply
the necessary punch to his or
her punch lines.
"Freudian Siif" is the now-
familiar story o a psychiatrist
who once wrote a play based
on his quite unprofesalonal
yearnings tor a voluptuous
female patient whose problem
was nymphomania. The play .
,. fa)ls Into the hands of his
fellow analyst's literary agent,
who just happens to be the
aforesaid • 1 reformed''
nympho.
stan Bell fits comfortably
Into the shoes of t h e
dispassionate head doctor, but
it Is a guise not unfamiliar to
him and he never brings
anything really startling to the
part. His character Is funniest
when his veneer of aloofness is
punctured, but Bell fails fO
define these transitions ade-
quately, missing particularly
at the point where he learns
the identity of ·his erstwhile
agent.
Marilyn Albert se n is
satisfactory as the
psychiatrist's fashion designer
wife, through she treats her
role a bit too casual at times.
After a soft beginning, she
warms to her part and finishes
quite impressively.
The fellow shrink with his
own Freudian designs on his
friend's spouse is played com -
petenUy by Nicholas Mos,.
However, Mose appears the
most reticent of the cast to
wring the most from his role,
and his 'projection becomes a
problem even Jn horseshoe
staging.
Th.e mtable exception re fer-
red to earlier is Charlotte
Mitchell, by far the best of the
cast In only her second stage
role. Miss Mitchell plays the
amorous ex-patient -and
f,lays her to tbe tll!t, delicious-
Y sensuous and totally involv-
td with her character. She
raises the temperature of the
playhouse several degreta' ln
her a cellenUy done seduction
scene.
Also quite Impressive ls
young Laura Black as the
psychiatrist's precocious teen·
age daughter. Miss Black
brings a studied combination
of wisdom and innocence to
her role and is a constant
delight.
Michael Hanlow in what
could be the mosl memorable
role of the show. that of the
neurotic patient. becomes the
most disappointing because of
his failure to sink his teeth in·
to a juicy characterization.
Either he is not aware or the
show-stealing nature of his
part or he has not been dire<:-
torially programmed for it.
On all accounts, movement
on stage is awkward and
uncertain, with the final Con-
frontation of the four prin-
cipals reduced to a tight little
grouping which shields nearly
all from view.
Don George's set is at.
tractive and imaj!inative quite
functional f~ t h 'r e e .
quarter ifiging form a t .
however the sound a n d
lighting effects by Don Ross
and Liz Trudo never really
make the grade. Additionally.
the narration scenes by f\.1is.s
Black need a shift in the
lighting; a gong sounding at
the beginning and end doom't
,quite make it.
Wllh a bit of tightening here
and there, "The Girl in the
Freudian Slip" may ye t
achieve its potential. Jt con-
tinues for four more weekends
at the playhouse, 2110 Main
St., Huntington Beach.
Globe Nominees Given " ... we w.,.,;/;'};ng fener ... '"'
~-· rhe w•w• we,. 36 l••t •bov• u•····
'"'-motW •rttl mo,. •lt•rk fin• cutting rh• wa«•r .. :
···THOlt HfYlltDAHL HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
movies "A Clockwork Or·
ange," "The French Connec-
tion," 11Mary, Queen ol Scots,"
"The Last Picture Show" an d
"Summer of '42" have been
nominated by the Hi>lly~ood
Foreign Press Association as
best dramatic pictures in its
'29th Golden GI o b • com1.
peUlion.
In thls running for best .
dramatic actor of 1971 are
Nominated for best musjcal·
comedy pictures were "The
Boyfriend," "Fiddler on the
Roo f," "Kotch" and 11A New
Leaf. Gene Wilder, Dean
Jones, Walter Matthau, and
Bud Cort were nominated for
as be.st actor in muslcal&-com-
edy, with Sa~y Duncan, Ruth
Gordon. Ange I a Lanabery.
Twlcgy and Elalne'May uirln
the category for tfest actress.
Peter Finch, Malcolm ~·
McDowell, Goorge C. Scolt, _iil, .. ~M!;"'"'_ Gene Hackman and Jack •• T
Nicholson.'-..
Glenda JaCkson, Jane Fon.1, --~·~r~B~~-;:;;·:y::";;'=-;-da, Vanessa Redgrave, Dyanll Q .:r lr.To'fi'I
Cannon and Jessica Walter • ~~
were nominated as b e s t f'!Y'1";
dramatic actr""' for the ~
6. ~ awards, to be presented Feb. l
UU\W A; I
~~
Youmutt1Hl!AI
.An u1Dund"1g
true-life odvtnlll,.
for tho•wholo l•mllyf
HELD OVER
Jrtl w ...
"PLAY MISTY
FOR ME" ...
"THE BIRD WITH
THE CRYSTAL_
PLUMAGE"
IN •P
"THE OMEGA
MAN"
AUO •P
RICHARD HARRIS
"MAN IN THE
WILDERNESS"
c..... ......
s.t .... Sn. ,,.. J , ....
.,,.
l ~JWG~ .... -... 9=An11· ---·-~Jm.12ttn.-.11
HELD OY~
1 WEIK ONLY
South Coast Pl1u 1
S.Dtotofwr .........
IU-2711
Wotf<days "llON" 7, 15 Only ._. 9,30 Oofy
SOI .. Suft. '1JON" 2100 & 711.5 "AHN" 4:30, 9:30
PETER O'TOOLE
,;LION IN WINTER"
II ANNE OF 1000 DAYS" ~
DENTAL PLATES
• Bridgework • · Filfings
• X-Ray • Extractions
ALL ON
INSTANT CREDIT TERMS
All Credit H1ndled By My Office! No
Bonk or Flnonco Co. To Deal With
(Oii ~ Crllllll
PENTOTHAL
~
DR. OAKES
IN MI SA DENTAL CINTllt
267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA
PHONE 646-1112
No Appo lnlmont Noas11ry
Ovlck Pfoi. R-lrt Whllo You Wo ll
., ... bf, "TIL I , ...
DAILY l'llOT
....... -. oPR[MIER£ EHGAG~MEllT .,
[)yon ContlOl'I • .llMl4tr O'NtlR l
lufv'1$~ ~
Song, by 0 . C. S,.,lth j
"
' I' • MOVIELA8 FMRAMOUNl 'R' -
~ .. '
.. -.Id-~~••tn•• ... cm-. 111.,
AIM • Tiii i 1-PIOM
TMI # H llM fl)
~'$HAFT"
\ . •
•
•
'
_DAl_LV_Pl_Lo_r __ ..,:&o,:C:__ __ !'<r.i"Y· J411 .. ., 17, 19n
V-r M!ReJ1
~at H;appened
• To Productivity?
Ill' sYLVIA PORTER
At whit point, Mr. and Mra:.
America, would you say lhat
the oootrols ol Phase II were
I IUCCtll?
An ovuwbelmlng majority
• ot you. I'll wagtr, would
answer with a staUsUc or two
about prloe and wage In·
creases.
Jiresldent Nixon, for ln· atance, would say, as he has
uid for months, that Phase 11
will 5e a success when the an-
nual rate of rise in our price
level has been slowed to the
2'°' percent range -and that
this 2YJ: percent rate ls his
target for °72.
A cro1s -1 ect ion of
eoooomlils, boll! In public and
private posts, would be willing
to settle for a. rate of rise in
the S to 3~ percent range this
year. They thlnlc Nixon has
committed himself out loud to
too much of a deceleration too
soon.
Businessmen from coast to
,,_ would Insist Oil including
a statistic on wage increases
-say, a top of 5~ percent a
year.
And millions of housewives
would calJ Phase ll a suettSS
onJy when price increases
dw1Dd1e to next to zero or ...... .
But C. Jackson Grayson, Jr.,
•chairman of the Price Com-
misaion which h e I p s ad-
' minister Phase II, WOUidn't
even give you 1 number. Jn
answer to precisely this ques-
tion during 1 recent interview
in Washington, the dynam ic
"8-yelNJld former university
: dean declared:
"Phase JI will be a suctess
in my mind only when it
brings about a strong and sus-
tained increase Jn the pro-
• ductivity of our labor force.
For only then can we "have ·
hope that the slowdown in the
. rate of rise in prices and
wages will cstick."
, This austained improvement
In the output per manbour o!
'Am~rican workers is
"absolutely essential il the
upward pressures on labor
costs are to ease, and these
upward pressures must lessen
· U.S. Business.es Set .
For Revamp in 1972
WASHINGTON (~) -The
nation's businesses e:xpect to
,apend more for modernization
• o( their pl~t and equipment
·this year than in the Jast three
years, a government survey
has predicted.
The Commerce Depart-
ment Bureau of Economic
Analysis and the Securities
and Exchange Commission re-
ported last week that tlieir
joint survey showed that busi-
nessmen expect to spend 9
percent more for new plants
and equipment In 1972.
H so, that would make it the
best year since 1969, when
1 capital spending rose 11.4
percent, and the second best
yea~ for plant modernizaUon
linCe 1965.
Last year, when t be
economy recovered from a
recession, capital spending
was one or the weakest sec-
tors, growing by an estimated
2 percent.
-.... .-~,,
President Niion proposed
and won congressional ap-
proval of a bill to restore the
investment tax credit and thus
give a thrust to business spen-
ding for lheir own plant and
equipment in 1972.
A Commerce Department
economist, Asst. Secretary
Harold C. Passer, said the 9
percent projected gain "will
be a substantial real gain
because, as a result of the
wage-price freeze and !he
wage-price stabilization pro-
gratn, prices are expected to
rise less rapidly than in recent
years."
The biggest turnaround in
the report came in the
manlifacturing area. In 1971.
man'ufacturers were
peSllimistic about the economy
and said they expected cs.pilal
spending to decline. According
to government figures, the
drop last ,year in manufac-
turing was an estimated 5.4
percent.
IJJll , .... ,. ,._,._.,,..tum Calculation
Tiie HP-35, a tlny electronic calculator from Jfew· ~. nlgbt.s only nine ounces and !ill Into
a llllrt poctet. The b1Uery-powmd unit performs
all trip-ale aod logarithmic fwictions, square
.... llld arttlllDellc fanc:tiou •Ith a llD&I• key· oa ob, •1' Ille tmnuflcturer,
•
•• • •
Complete-New York Stock List
•
I
,;. • ._.. ; " ' ., I • •••
•
DAILY. l'ILDT 2f
Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New Yor.k Stock Exchange List
Complete Closing Pri~es-American Stock Exchange List
I
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14 IWl.Y PILOT t.lond>y, Jonu11t1 l7, 1972
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Coaataat Menace San Antonio to Be Site
Sharks Endanger.
S. Mrica Coast
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For Smog 'Gr and Prix' . .
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PITl'SllURGH (UPI) -Any rtmoves v I r t u a I I y all
day now residents of San particulates from e x h a u s t
Antonio, Tex., probably will ga..,, including lead ~lcles
cltvlce to "move the lead. ·rha
government Tight now Ia.:OOt
concerned about what goei( In-
to the gas tank, hut lt ls wQr·
rled about what comes out of
JOHANNESBURG, S o u t h
Africa ·(AP) -It's high sum·
mer this side of 'the Equator,
and parents are digging out
the annual admonition : don't
go near the water.
South Africa'• coastline bu some of tho most Inviting
beaches in the world but five
persom were mauleCI by
JUST A BIT
POWER MAD
STERUNG, Mass. (AP) -
Joseph DuVarney has tsken
out papers to be a candi-
date for all IZ offices In the
town's March e: election.
Town Clerk Loil H. SeU·
ert said it was the first time
ahe could recall anyone do-
ing so.
The positions include those
on the Board of Selectmen,
SChool Commtttee and li·
brory trustees.
DuVamey said he wanted
to run for all offices "to as-
sure there is opJ>OSilion
against the incumbents ...
He said one candidate for
town office wu unopposed .
last year and "I am an ad·
vocate of opposition on the
ballot."
Poll Shows
Crime Fear
By Blacks
NEW YORK (AP) -A na·
tional survey reports thq.t
more blacks than whites list
crime as a major problem in
their comniunJtles.
The survey by the Institute
of Life Insurance asked a na-
tional cross &eeUon of 2,000
adults to list three things they
thought were the greatest pro-
blems in their communities.
Dr. Harold Edricb, director
of the insUtute's s o c i a 1
. mearch department said 36
percent of the non-whites cited
crime and safety as a pro-
blem, as opposed to 25 percent
of the whites.
These results, Edrich said,
significantly modify the cur-
rent stereotype that law and
order is a predominanUy white
issue.
"The SO<alled 'Silent Ma4
· jority' that people want to
· single out as having special
fears are not alone," said
Edrich. "These issues are cut4
ting across lines right and lefL
The housewife in Dayton's
fears are reflected just as
much by the black woman ln
Harlem."
Nationally, 26 percent of the
responses listed crime and
safety; another 26 percent
listed sanitation and pollution;
23 percent drugs a n d
narcotics, and 22 percent tax4
es and cost of living.
shsrb over the Chrlsbnas-bllnlt,\helr eyes and thlqk they from cars o~ted with lead.
New Year period. have been lrllllfl01led <to Le ed gasoline. ·
Mans, 'France, site of the So-called cyclone co n e 1 Bathing in rivers b no I~ Grand Prix automobile race. remove large particles, and the exhav.st." *
aurance. Inland waters contain The San Antoniana will 1ee-this bu~ been tested on cart Harri! said that several Pt·
a specimen known as the llOIDe may already have teen-operated from the C.Orpus lcabs in C.Orpus ChrlsU have
Zambeai shark. II has been four 11172 model cars whiz Chrl!ll, Ta, technical center been •-aUnc' dally .°With a I o n g Intem.te biahways,, of Houston ·Chemical C.O., a ,.... recorded as attacking a canoe suburban roads and city divlSwn of·PPG. A muffier-llke alnglwihaust prototype wjlis.
300 miles from the mouth of streets It hlgh , a p e e d , fibe'r glass filter takes cafe of "These el:periments ( i I
the Limpopo River. moderate speed · and'.stop-and-sma1ler particles, as tiny as providing WI with gu.ldellnes'on
The Zambesl loves shallow go driving conditions. 'The cars 1,100,000 of an Inch. the amount of the rtmoval:j>f
water. Two recent attacks oc-operate on 50,000 mi J e William R. Harris, vice the particulate! h'om the !e1·
cwnd 1f less than three feel durability schedulU prepared president and general haust," Harris said. "'The efclbs
A young Australian lost a leg by the Southwest Research manager of Houston Chem1cal, have ~n Using the sys~m
and a hand. Institute of San ~tonio. ts 1 chemical engineer who for more than the put five
Government concern about There _iJ, no . prize flt Staie has been involved with the months." : "
shark: attacks has led it to set for the cars such, as in !he project since its inception .Harris said General Motors
aside one department of its Grand Prix. Rather, the Tens nearly three years aao. and Ford have indicated thiy
prestigious Council for Sclen-etperiment is designed to "Tests from the system will run tests with the PPG
tific and Industrial Research reduce air pollution, lt'a shows it removed about 99 equipment. ·•
to investigate them. The fear anotbef, and advanced. perceilt of all particulates "They have not aald when
1s that attacks can ruin a stage, of America'a ef!Ort to from the· exhaust of cars thetestswillbe·made,"Halria
tourist industry whose reputa4 avoid death from production operating with 1 e a d·e d said. "Right: now the motor
tion rests upon a alrand of B ........ of Beaut~e.. andconsuiner~wuuiiooofthe gasoline,t1Harris1ald. companiesarecon cer-n;e-d
beach. iw;;...., 11 • Juture. ·. -. "There la no proof that lead about meeting gov~nt
Research hasn't been en-'Ille four ·cars .are equip. In the atmosphere is a health standards of bydrocsrboo 'Ind
•·· A rt d Photographer says boat show queen Laurie Ladphere, bears a strong resem· ped with particulate ern!Sslon menace, we'rt told by the Na-, nitrogen oxide bx 11'15. : : courag&U6. repo rawn up blance to figureheads that are di.splayed at the San Francisco National ·Sports control systems develo-......1 by tional ReSearch Council," said . Tests also ari be.i:t. Con-by the department after ....... . lengthy study found : "Attacks and Boat Show. lt's readily apparent, ~t_any rate, that Laurie certainly has a PPG Industries of Pittsburgh. Harris. "But eventually lead ducted in PenD!fJYlvan ·for
occurred in murky and in, _:n:ic::•_•::m::ili::· •:....:am=o::•::::g~h::•r:...:o.:.th.:.er:::....'.:.Ch_ar_m_s_. -·---------------·--'~.-Th_• __ ••_w __ •_zh_a_us_· t_·_systc__em __ m_us_t...;gc.o_. _So_w_e_d_e_sig.cn_ed_t_hi_•_d_u_ra_b_n_uy_of_co-;-m_po_nen_'_ts_'.':; ·:-
clear water, shallow or deep, 1 •
cold or warm, rough or caJm,
and in the vicinity of or Well
away from effluent outfalls.
Victims included a d u I t s ,
children, wbite and dark
races, bathers with brightly
colored swimsuits, those wear4
ing jewelry and t b o s e
without."
The researcher had to admlt
attacks were a: t i 11 un-
predictable.
Shark nets are not wholly
successful. Freak waves have
been known to dump killers fir
side the nets. One whale-sized
species, the Bhle Pointer,
known JocaJly as the "white
death shark," bas no difficulty
in ripping nets to pieces.
An electrified cable has
shown some success. It is laid
500 yards offshore. Any ahark
nearing it feels the current
and turna out to sea.
The problem Is that an 8t)O.
yard installation costa over
$200,000. Scientists are work·
in& on a clleaper system.
Probe Set
On Welfare
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Formation of a task force to
investigate bas b e e n an·
nounced by · state .S o c i a 1
Welfare Director Robert B.
Carleson.
Carleson said one of the in-
itial objectives of the program
would be to look into "large-
scale frauds affecting public
welfare funds and private
surety and banking firms.''
The task force will consist of
representatives of private in-
dustry, local government and
banks, along with county
welfare fraud investigators
and state and federal officials.
David E. Todd, 55, a former
special agent with the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, was
named task force coordinator.
Sears
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Whitewalls ,and·Blackwalls
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Prof: Pepper Packs
Peck of Problems
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ST. PAUL (AP) -A
University of Minnesota pro-
fessor says the average gram
of black pepper contains 53,000
tiny colonies of fungi.
"I used to pepper practically
everything, but now I use it
only on my eggs," Clyde
Christensen, a professor of
plant pathology, said. "My
wile won't eat pepper
anymore."
Christensen has d o n e
FAMILY CIRCl/S
microscopic analyses of more
than 100 pepper samples over
the last few years.
Jn nearly every instance, he
said, be found that "black pep-
per is just loaded with fungi."
He said some of the fungi
are capable of producing lox·
ins, meaning possibly harmful
poisons, bot be said, no toxin
has been found in pepper
because pepper ingredients
apparently neutralize them.
bir BH Keane
"Not by the hoir of my
chlnnrchi-'iinl"
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Flis.....,.
etn.-Corn
Bllleb, C-,., n;,.s,,.,
r...i..~r.... ~.oi+·,..w
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F11sMa101 otn-c.n •
CodlU.... a.r,.len,
Mnea171. Old1111 ..
lilloo, p.,....-<:-
... t•le, 1.;.rw.
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ED ITI O N
VOL 65, NO. l <f, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES . ORANG,E. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY '17, '.Im JEN CENTS
. . KiI·I .9 • 'l ·ll P·erfect Drivin ~ W e·athe·r ·
Clear wealJ>er and DOrmal trlfllc coo-
dltloos laliell to bali blgbway ,1..,111tn
over the weekend In Or&Dle Coonty as
eight persons wore killed or suc:cwnbed
to earlier accldenl injuries.
In another a<;cktent, an ofange c.ounty
"'1dent died In,• beadon colllslon near '•neuter.
Tbe vldiml Included two Garden Grove ~en klllecl when thtlr car rolled
over early SuDday on the Newport
Freeway o!!ramp al Baker street in
Costa M-. 1ht acclde!JI injured . two ,
. buddlet riding Witl! them. Cerrit.c.
Tbe lrqlc toli lncludel: Job Gary Crulbaw, 19 •. Salt Lake Ci-
llo ... M. Nees, 24, o! 1585 N. Coaat, ty. ~
• lllgbw1y, LqunaJ!eacb. . Lar,.. Wa-, 21, Oranae •..
Clrlll IL 8mlllo, 17, ol 11111 m-m . Jolul ·awlet Bal••l'I, 7, o! 1651 W. La
Ave., Gardin Grove. Habr1.BIVd1, 1-Habra. , ,
James L. Pease, 17, of • Blouoni . Nees"car. s.pun'out,of,C9q~l oli Pacl:fic
Ave:,, Garden Grove; 1 • · Coast Highway and' lilt .a power pole near
GeMvlove Wybll, IO, ol ano S. llarbOr · the ~I Mor\"o School n>ad, lhe cau!omla
Blvd., Anlhelm, . , .. Highway, Patrol said. ·
. AllNdo ~ 11, ci( IOI N. 'Brbtol Smilh and fWe, w~ killed when
St., Sonia Ana. · their car overtumecl' "'I I he Newport
.111-..,4,ollllll.lle•ndor-Ave., Freeway early ·Sunday: In Colla Mesa
Memorlll Hospital .with major · lnlurles
·Incurred in the ume accjdenl ore tile
driver ol'lhe car, Henry IL Gomales, 19,
·Garden Grove , and Brian Mendonca. 17,
a11o' .of G~ Grove.
Mn.· ,jVykQij died. at. Palm Harbor
Hospital, Garden Grove, SUnday nlih!,
lour bours alter being iltjured in 1 tw ..
car accldenl Police said she was driving
north. on. Ha'rbor Boulevard '.when b'er car
collided. With a pickup· trucl: driven by
Thomas A. Ver Panek, 21, Ssnta Ans .
Santa Ana police are IOl1Chin& for the
drlvero! a white VIII that slJutt and ldJI •
eel the Jloclrlques boy at Bristol and 3nl ·
Streets Soturday night.
The Monroe chlld wos killed In La
Palma Slturday 111Jen hit by a car on
Oranaethorpe Avenue near Moody Street.
The llaiJteod boy wu fatally Injured In
La H1bra SUnday altemoon when he
reportaclly ·~an iQlp the slreet and was .
struck by a car.
Crenshaw, a ,Navy sailor wu dead on
arrival· 1t Los Alamitos General Hospital,
Saturday morning alter hi! eas;bowld car
ran. off Westm inster Boulev1rd In Stal
Beach, ortt1 half mile eut of Studeblker R~ad. 1
Califomla Highway Patrol officers said
Watkins died near Lancaster after pulling
hiJ•car into tfie opposite lane to pass, and
colliding with the car of a Riverside man.
Jolin McKnlJhl, 34, Rjvenide, hi•
daughters,· Charlotte, 14; Jeanette, 11 ,
and· bis son, David, I. were all critically
injured In tile. erq!I: ·
The county's weekend death toll
brought the 1172 auto fatality ii3t. to 19
names, aeven ahead~ lfll's carnage.
J .tidge Urged to Support
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L · ' H ·· ht L. ·1 _ aguna ·.s ·· · :~1g ·. . · · 1~~ .---
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· TALKS ABOUT HOWARD
Ghoot Writer Irving . ! ... . ·. ' . ' , ! ' ~
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... ILY PILOT ltlft ......
. ACCEPTED H~HES LOllN ·
. Newport's DOnold Nbuln .
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,, 'State Law'
Behind Vote
LaWyerSays
i.AGVNAGIUNS BY INTERLANDI . .
·Ska~board,~
Auto Meet· . . . '
Teenffu,rt :
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B.ook·::S~js :J!~g~s -~~i: . . . . . . ' .
.· ':k'fl.Jl!l!IN!lil:= .... ,_ Ill· '.......... ~ .. ·-·{
aflif rldlJJI ........... =i11•1 . .. lnli"an....,'a';t:._., . ·,, POU., .. I 'nunp· Cl . iai .,... .... .,., WIJi IUoD~Jf f
An Orange CollDly SUporlor Cllltl Judi•
WU urged fodlt lo 1'lie llJll )-
Jleach ,..~ l!!IJl ·"*In llllall4
lbla.~'* ...... 11\D' "'!:=!·r,~t -I .,,,_ tllJ:M lllr7 lllillll lmJll la Iii . 'the Alf CoblJI. . . '
Allan., PM ..._. et ...... NiXOn'$. 'Kiii $205,800 floWC ' It; Sti-'fal!tll!l!ll ·IM· '' •. ,,Jll.19 ''J•A.IPu'mnnlllllllJbm." I
ll!i4-tw•lilo-•-and ... • : , . , · Mid the J'!llll wlli )JolrC bpt' ID tlio in-
NEW YOilK (AP) -'Olffiml irvl!JI, · published -wbldl 11&..,Jabm.to havo :::." ..;::~~,.;::.
lucb ulred ,,..... WllUtm .. Lit to
· N9•• tha .... 1' '8 adl llivt
~ilnjlolloWecl
''I.lie broade& ol'-local coatnd" to
Calllornta 001 m RI
Bl!Uior ·ol • ~ .a~tobiogrlP,!IY ol put together out bl a serlel ol lntervlewa m<!IUple -..,, inclillling 1 brol!en ·
I!"'\'¥ Hui!>ll, ""°"' U. bllliiJbalre wllh "lililb& · arm andib<Qken ·leg, ll!d•a jlosaible liead tee! ... Bl lBYIJC llilt•lormer' ~tary . uni•~ ~-,.:...;..tlonal rt. ed injury, . ,. . of De!enae Clark Clll!ord utecl blm tor a ( -~·--· -repo $211&,ilo!I' IOan !Cir Jildmd M. Nllon'I . todiyl lh8t "Cllfford· arller. Ibid ·CBS the Ac:Cordlng. tO poll<!, 'Rlpley ........ o!
brother. . · onqat!On ·was la1lij but oclloowledgecl · ""1'BI yoothe rtdin1r1ulel>Oards la the
· Cll!fonl l!bo sorved in lhO Joim.on ado · tllal bil law firm Jiu rapnsinled the roadway clown steep 'Nyei Place· &!llday ministra~ denied ~.connection With ·' Hughes Tool ·Co. alnce llllO:) · evening.' POiice Aid I! wu dml: and
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"'I know Why, Tho¥ Call This p_. A...,-. lrt
. · • '-~'ff ~ lluinpors and~"
Wllcoxen ar&\*f • ~ l1llique
' to Laguna Beodt )ldltO,-~ of . hli~ rise llmilalloa tllat hi.-*' "'11
allowecl to any _.i law co~
!ht deal. ' . ' · • • \ Tbe • Do)'lon .' (Ohio ~ournsl-Heraid visibility WU poor: 'lllien the mJilWpi oc---. . . ~• ' I "T / "
. Wilco1en,baobd by L1luna ~~
1ttorney TUiiy ""'-'r, remlndecl !udgo -11" in the llnol .,.....1 o! an in-~ hearinC lbol Laguna's heiihl Umlt'wu no dllllra!t from lhlt imol>led "Il i. a· complete fabrication," be aald :=:1 M~Biel' ~~I :.; ~.,·~~~downlbe:iitn;ofo:
whencontactecl SUnday'afhllW.Mbhwlon •--y . ft•_,, 1'81 n~.~· ---• licm said, when Ile ilammec! ·tnto 111. l>oiDe. ''Tfiere ii nol oDe totl ·cil"trutli 1111· ~ !""' ""'to-·, .. -the 51." .~.'
tl!Ot·slate?nl.,,lthad to be made.up oat · ;1.,r'erJ:" :..J!!tJn. other'~ ~co=. theDhDI o1~':c ~~ ·CMrk PiillS ,Nominatwn ' ' ' ' . '
on airport ..... ' la sevorll Caltlorota
, ~ 1111 tbot the same !lw •Po
... -to -art cololJ,y action. •• ~ •ltemi>I by the couit to rule the.in-of wbole .~otb. . · , ' 'frllll.World Air~ lliea owned bJ Drive. Dui:borme Wd 'polioe hi n.aiJdecl
Noah Dlettich, a·lanner !lugbes aide,, Hughes. . , · one of" the curves in the road and dliln't
said, In CaJilon)la .llilt the· loan, which ·The . loan llgurec1 . Jn Nlzon'i amuc-aee the yogth,1'11ll ~prior to impoct.
was. reported In 1960, was made but tjlat .._..rul l9ilO prealdenlil!l ·cain~ Both. In llriking ,Iha front, ol !ht vehicle,
a._.,·lawyer;handlecl it andat!lord Nixon and hi! brother, Donald, have , young Ripley flew uP 01'en'tht hood, his
liad !IQ knowledge of.it .. :" . . • denle<f tlJlt.Hugbes obt8inecl any !aVors · bead·strlking the windallleld. Lacking any other customers for ' '
IMng <k!cli1lecl in a televlalon !nterview u • reautt ol lhe'.)oan. , · . · Police said the accident 1' still under m-lpal election nonpnatlon popen.
Supjlay to sayT what. Hughe> p In return ItvlDg'i book ~ been 1 subject of con-Investigation. 0!1icers also noted lhll the Lagunl\ Beach city clerk Dorothy Musfelt
former 14 and -· said Mn. Mllllell, wUl be co. .... lilalod Into IS combined
precllfcla ... the ~Jl!:ll 11 "'!111111· for the 1* )Ou. Bul:be ~-the "quid lroveny since II was annOwiCec1 oo.11ec. ares wbere the accident oCcUrrec1 has today·took out popen for heraeil.
pr\i qiio'' 1' delCribed in hll llOOl>to'be (See DONALD, Pop I) . been U9ecl by ableboarders maoy limes ~ of !!Jo ·~ boundary
' In the put. Nelibbcn lilVe complained Mrs. Muslelt, wbo was appolntecl to the · * .* * · * .. "tr * to police on numerous occaalons obout city clerk poslUoo In September, lll'IO,, · • the acUYily 'and the youths hive been Will be fac1n1 her first· elecUoo race far
chanpi, "" llid, i! WW be neceaary to
.. t •up new poDtna places in'. llllll)' in-
stanaes. 'Thll II 1 portlculor .problem In
Laguna . -h, Mn. ' Mllllell added,
bOcalile' ol Ille bllly toposnphy wlUcJI
mUel It ,_., lo stve special con-
·s1c1orat1on· to· acceulbll"y ol the pollln&
plac:ea.
,llughes Loan,t4;):N ewport's . :-=:i.i~~ down the"hlll :E';::==~. ~.pr!~
I • ~mao Charlton Boyd, a candidate !<ir re-· N· ·' R I ·• d Wif sa . Lagµna Hunting d:i.~~:::.~~~~=:;~~:
. IXOD . epm ~·;. e Y~·~ For 2 Rapis,ts . Et:~:r:1a1~:it!::;·. °Lqguna to Offer
Special Times · I Constance Kimble, whose current. terms
Mrs. F. Doalllhllbon,. wllcfle timblnd ons•, Newport, BeacH home. . · also .,. esplril.JI, hu yet become an an-·
1-!vecl • IZOl,000 loan ~ lloward "Y01, wa receivecl the , 1o· 1 n," Mrs. Of 14-year-o}d nounced caiJdiaite !or l'Hleclion.
llugbes IOJDI 11 yean l80 llilft, menllnl y0u whit occ,umd " she said Mrs. • MUsrelt nolec1 lhlt m a n,y
'decl.-S to clllcuu the -ta!llhtbe Nix-1.'het"wt11 o! th~ ~1c1eni•1 brothtr Laguna Beach aulhorilles today are· Lqunaiil Will !Ind lhemlelves voting at
" d0"11nec1:1o comment · on illlf)lalfll
0
-contlnuq their search !or two men drlv· new pollln& ~ lhil year.
C111& trovpsy ...,...,.ung the note,-wbo..,. lngawlndowleti v111wbolllegedlyrapM no~"t.·' 25~~ i:fa: Nolin( lhll Feb. 17 la the doid1lne for
I ranaed It. 1 ~ .Jl" ~~u=. were , reglltrttlon to vole In the April' II ~ "You'll .6'.ve ~ ll!ti to~·~ bolll clelcrlbec1 b' the victim 11 being. . • m<lnlclpal electJOn, i..c-~ City
... _ ' He'• the ... that II ln "buslneas. He'll tell abaal fl yean old and ol med!llD build.• Saddleback Sets . Clerk ·Dorothy Mus!elf _, .......Iced . W'•iller ' 1"ol what oCcUrrecl," sbe aald. A pollCe artlat wu Ible to draw 1 com· · · 1. • the following scheclule ' ol l'tllllr•·
F iir; R'egistration
llbon has been quoted 11 ,.Ying be got poslte-1ketch of ono o! the suspects !rom E tloo locaUons and bollrl:
the loan thro!Jgh I lrleod, Frank J. !ht girl's description. lec tion Meet On the next two Frld1ys, lrom II 1.m.
Wolerl, who waa 1 Huahes' 1obb,a.t In According to lnvest1c1tor11 reports, the tO 2 p.m., a voter registration table will
................... ~~·'-CIUlord ,1-•-" ~~ wos wal~thomel IO throughh a The fu'st meeting o!' an ad hoc com· . be set ~P.~I the Alpha Beta shopping ->-.-,...., uu.. res--ares II -: p.m. W en mill<e 14 study the metbod ol election o( center oww'of Lquna Beach II W.,aey .
wlme """*"'bio&ral'Pbl' ol the reel• the two i\J1pod1 offend lier a ride. Siie 1-·M-• I the Saddl •-·• Co It Drive ··•·-~ __ , the ~oil ·--n •-• mmvn y .,.,.:_ M nda ...,..._.._ ta.bl '~" ---1119 ar -ool be p11bllabod, , ·~~ -..... ~·· • Collop' Dlllrlcf ww· lie held T!Junday M•~1 ~ y, ·-··-.. WW
d11mtit) 8pndl)' tl!at I , 0 rm. r -. ... they -·nil¥ ....... I nlfhl .•I. 7:IO _p.DL at the. boanl room, be ma!""" from II 1.m lo I p.m. ·~!ht
Ill I lborl distance -and -tlJO 11r1 -__.. p-1 y. . Bal)k .Of A~, .. Ocean AYI.
--.... ..,...... ... do!IL ----. • ... ..... .Two r ... 1m•111 ... ol the Caplltrano, Evory Slturdayi!.a.nptralloa oorvlce
lllls. lllD dodJmd lo talk, f!1.lltlll9 llld and fOl<ed -·and 1-Beach · Unilled School WiD be at ollable II LID. lo I p.m.
' ..... and llid l!orlmblltd,-I""" ... told pol1oo allo'llnplld to eacape· Dil!fjCts, ll!o 'Ttaolln Union llJch Scfiool , •I Bill~.~~ F.arolll"Ave.
111 ..... cC 'll!o ~.' ljalel 'cilllil l!lll 'atcbd ·oao of tho ~ In tile • Diolrlct,ll!d ,lht Wdleboci: boon1 -· Weeil!O?,~ Nillslr-~II cioDlcl ~ "1ocMif''ll I kofrtoll ...... .,...,, bu! WU aaabii'to pt fl9'. J ' up. the committee. . , ' , ~lllable -tlJrouOcPl'ldlJ ~
"1lllle •'II 'a •Msctllll 'l Holi(' 'I• Olll4Jort Mid l1ho :wu drl"" to U. In-' The pib11c 11 invi!Od to. att.od the rqulor I 1.m. . lo . J:IO'.f 'f.!· bnll-
W.......,_ D.C, ler..ctlaa of Catalino -and t.0s · meOtlng. ' hours 11 Lquna Fodor So.top 'and 1" '1111. liald Rlion -'t ll!ere. llGlllol JJmo, 'wi1ln the -Pltbd-. . Tbe "'ommtti.e was. apiiolnlod by' the Loan, llO Ocean Ave. ' '
Ao Jaqodry to ...,,..., -• om of lht -ti Mid lier wfiUo the varloal aJatricl boarda o1tor , r«ent On lht 1111 throe doys of the ..pir.
..... '"' .... Ill WlllidJWtoa WU jail II other-,..--. olflcm said. _...,. on wbelher the·Soddl-!Ion ptrlod, Feb. II throqb 'Feb. 17, I ... .,, .. ,u... ro11owt111 the .....it. Ille wu laid to -·-be electad 11 larp or bJ vol« nslllnlloa deputy wm bt"" c1a1y
"W hnl!J, beard bun blm," ., cl· pt oat of the -and tile van drove oil.' lnlllee areu. at dlr lioll lrom 11 a.m lo I p.m. = • l'olloo said JJbl -.... lrilhtanecl and / "!I« study ol the matter, the com· New >olo1'I AIJJI -• 11o .. .,...
)lad lht ...... Pnlldd NI> ~ Jiit ...i lht -...... !Gllow· mllMe --lion ~be pnoeotod ed cc cl!IJlled hir -bf marrlafl ,._ _,. ... • aflrr "-I..... II ... It. ' lo lht "111 oollllo hoord !Or actia -lal fOlirJI on 1oqulnd lo 141'Jla. ' . .. ' v
I ' I
·-J
·-·" lnVolii --to ludlda1 lnlerferaee, Wllman ~ And ho -demned· 11 • "'Wli'y atreme-doclrlne'' the oppoaltlo0'1 lflWllenl that the entire
initiative ptocels liid been Uligal.
Judge Lee wll1 bear araunfeuta from
Loa Anael01 •lton!eys Hollack Hoag and
Ronald -Pirie today before be rul,.
on the writ /lied ·by Laguna Beach real
Ollale broker Va'll Taocliner.
It Ia expecled that Judge Lee wlll t1ke
the iaue under wtwn•ukm and announce
his rulinl later in the -· Toachnor II mUJnt 1111 llCOlld 1ttampt
to have blP rill limitation laws in
La .... Bead! clocland unlawful.
He hu ....... tlJrouCh Hoag that
Laguns voten hava no power to preaent
their lnlllaUve for local votlnl action and
that the city couocll'a subsequent· en-
dorsement ot the· meuure wu no las in·
valid.
,\n ICllon lllecl by TallChnor prior to the
election wu struc:lt down by !ht F...nh
Dlalrlct Court of A~ in 1 ndin& which
lecl to !ht Aug. 3 election and I oolld 3 to
1 margin in' !1Vor·of the hlib rill bU.
· The Laguna Beach City Q>uilcil has
enoi:ted 1n....,....,, -wbic:b
Will keep the •fool llmH in -......
dlntl the -of the irislDI bwii(.
•
Laguna Seizes
ISD Sale Suspect
An Dllnola man wu arreal<d In Lq\lno
Beoch Fri~y Iller he allefedly tried to ..u a quantity or LSD to a poltco u..
formanl. •
The sale on the Main llucb wu
wlinelled bJ -lei oflloen, polJco
said, and IGIJowlnc the -·· ...... " -of lht halluclnopaic nc _.. found .noorby ,hidden under a IU_.t
boo~
'tbe 11-1 WU ldoallflO\I II Mielllll .
Lee J1llool, II, and ntlJarlUoo dalll ha:\
._... carrytns ftn -of I.SD -•
ta-.0 Into CU11od7. -COlld llliibllA
no-----tbe
LSD -neor tlJo locolloo ol the alloc-
ed sale.
The ll1l]llcl .... lo be omlpod 11111
~on cborpa ol seJ11i!1 ._..
d!"ls. olllolra -
•
.·--
-
t OAIL Y PILOT
Dock St1·ike
On Again;
Tallis Fail
SAN FRA NCISCO (AP)
Longshoremen resumed a strike at 24
West Coast ports today after negotiators
failed to reach a &elllement. Negotiation
aessiol\I broke off but the union said they
.would be resumed later at an un-
determined time.
The first orders to resume picketing
came at San Francisco and Los Angeles·
Long Beach harbors after an 8 a.m.
(PSf) deadline expired.
. ~ ... ' .
Harry Bridges, president of the
International Longshoremen's a n d
Warehousemen's Union, emerged from
bargaining seSJions that had run through
the night to announce:
· U'I T•i.Mt. IRVING PRODUCES HIS PROOF OF HUGHES' EXISTENCE
Author Show1 2 NotH Ho S.ys WHO Written by Howord
"The strike officially resumed at 8 a.m.
this mo rning, although we exerted all ef·
fort! we could at this time to try to settle
Jt."
'Quick Freeze' Sough.t
I Pickets appea r e d a lmo st
simultaneously shortly after 8 a.m. at
piers on the San Francisco waterfront
after the chief dispatcher at ILWU Local
JO told some 300 men in a hiring hall to
resume Picketing "and tie it up."
About the time, Johit Pandora, head of
the big 2,800-member ILWU local in Los
Angeles and Long Beach was saying: ''As
far as we're concerned , the strike is on.
We're dispatchin~ pickets now." The
Nixon administration has warned it would
ask Congress · to intervene and direct a
setUement ot any renewal of the walkout
that shut ports for 100 days last year.
Negotiators for the union and the
employer, Pacific Maritime Association,
met throughout the weekend a n d
overnight today In joint and separate
se.ss.lons with J. Curtis Counts, director of
the Federal Med iation and Conciliation
Service ..
"This is the only strike I haven't been
able to crack," said Counts. "This is one
of the toughest ones. They've been argu.
ing this one for 14 months."
The strike began last July 1. It was
halted Oct. 6 b.Y a Taft·Hartley injunction
providing for a cooling-off period of 80
days which expired Christmas Day.
Counts then obtained PA-IA and ILWU
consent to continue dock work under a
temporary agreemen t which first ran to
Jan. 10 and then was extended through
8unday.
Laguna's Oerk
Seeking Funds
For Paper Work
In addition to considerable verbal tor·
rents, the Laguna Beach city council has
generated a veritable blizzard of paper
work this year, a fund request from the
city clerk's office indicates.
The council will be asked on Wed·
nesday night to allocate an additional
$4:,500 for legal publishing costs for the
balance of the fiscal year, the city
already having expended $4.120, com·
pattd with $4,908 for all of 1970-7 1.
Since the latter su m had so far ex·
ceeded the budgeted item of $2,300, the
current year's budget ~'as upped to
$4,500, city clerk Dorothy Musfelt said,
but this apparently will be only half as
much as needed if the council continues
to adopt new ordinances at its present
rate.
All ordinances must be published in
Jegal notice columns, the cost depending
upon their length. Also boosting the legal
publication cost figure is !he num'ber .of
citizen appeals on variances and othl!\-
matters, which must simllarly be
published prior to hearings.
"There just seems to be an awful Jot of
activity," says the clerk.
OIAllal COAST
DAILY PILOT
C1MJ1G1 c.oAIT PUaLllHING U#IArrr
le1t1rt N. W1.d
l'rllldMt _. l"llblblW
Jetlc •• OnJty ¥let Pr9\dMI ... '"-''' MllllSIW
1\orll11 K11•il Editor
ns;lftll A. "'""'ht1• NMIOllll E.dlllu'
Qool., H. ,_, RkhM P. N•ll ---.._ __
222 For .. t A'f•a11• Me.me, .dcW.u: r.o. ••• ,,., '2611 s-Ck ..... Oftlce
HI -fl c..J• llHI. tu7Z .,,._
-~ MIA• U1 W•f • ., """ llMcll: aD N........ ltu...,.,. l'p Ms · ._.. 11&7J .-a.....,.
By Hughes After Death?
NEW YORK (UPI) -An article about
recluse billionaire Howard Hughes to ap-
pear in the February issue of Ladies
Home Journal says he is seeking "an
alternative to death" and wants his body
quic k-frozen after he dies so he can be
brought to life later.
The article is a condensed version of a
forthcoming book, ''My Life And Opi--
nions," purportedly by Hughes and edi ted
by novelist Robert P. Ea tow.
"This means that the equipment and
the capsule in which his body will be kept
must be near at hand, and that trusted
and capable technicians must be readily
available," said Eaton.
He quoted Hughes as saying. "I have
taken and will continue to take such
UPI T1i.p11ti.
GETS TV VIOLENCE STUDY
Su rgeon General Steinfeld
Scientists Link
V iolerice on TV
To Aggressio1is
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A panel of 12
scientists reported to Surgeon General
Jesse L. Steinfeld today there is evidence
that television viol~ce causes aggression
among children predisposed to that kind
of behavior in the first place.
In a 275-page report, Steinfeld's scien-
tific advisory com mittee on television
and social behavio r said the scientific
data were neither consistent nor con·
elusive.
But it said there was enough evidence
to indicate a relation between violence on
television and aggressive behavior among
children who already tended toward ag·
gressive behavior.
It also said the response of children to
TV violence depended upon t h e
frame.work in which lt was presented, in·
cludirig whether there were parental ex·
planations, the ou tcome and nature of the
violence and whether it was seen as fan-
tasy or reality.
The committee was given 2~ years lo
make the report at a cost of $1 million. It
also was given instructions not to make
policy recommendations.
The findings, lhe committee said, 11con-
verge in three respects: a preliminary
and tentative indication ol a casual reJa.
tion between viewing vlole11ce on
television and aggressive behavior; an In-
dication that any such causal relation
operates only on some chlldrtn (who are
prediSposed to be aggressive); and an
indication that n bperates only jn IOmt
environmental contexts.
"Such tentaUve and limited conclusions
are not very sati.sftg. They represent
substantiaUy more knowledge than we
had tWo years ago, t they leave many
questions: unanswered," the committee
said.
In a statement released with the
report, Steinfeld declined to make his
own conclusions, quotlna the committee's
summary and 1aylng lhal the report
•imerlta tM serious attenUon of all
persont and fl'OUl>S conoerned about Ille
elleci. of v!twla( ltlevlalon."
1
steps."
Eaton said Hughes cut hlmseU off from
society mainly because he feared
physical assault or kidnaping for r&nsom.
He pictured Hughes as a scrawny, deaf,
aging man who looked like a tall Ho Chi
Minh at their last meeting In Las Vegas
in 1970.
He said visitors were searched for
weapons electronically and sterilized for
germs by ultraviolet rays.
Among other disclosures in the article
was that Hughes' interest in women
never seemed to be prurient but was con·
centrated on their personalities.
Eaton said Hughes thought Ava
Gardner the most sensitive, intelligent
woman he had known.
P'Ubllcation of the account 'fiS blocked ·
briefly by an injunction obtained by the
same Nevada company that is fighting
publication of aut6or Clifford Irvin g's
book. The injunction was dissolved Satur-
' day and a hearing set for today.
" Irving said in a television interview
Sunday night that Hughes lives in "a
James Bond setup,'' once hired a man to
sampl' his medicines before be took
them and started a card file rating
everyone be met for cleanliness.
Irving aaid itJCatbarlne HepbW"'d, one of
the actresses Hughes was frlendly wilh in
the 1930s and lOs, J!llrticularly Impressed
him. He quoted ltJghes as aaying, "Sbe
was J yery~ clearti woman w® used to
balhe llht or foul tlnies a day and she
always told me I was divine. And I kind
of liked that."
Irving aaid Hughes at one time kept the
file . card system on friends and
assocJatea and it had "a classification A,
B, C, ·D, -and that ranged from filthy,
moderately dirty, dirty and moderately
clean."
He said Hughes wore false beards,
mustaches and wigs to the secret
meetings at which he tape recorded his
autobiograpby. Irving said Hughes told
him he wore disguises because "there are
always people looki ng for me and lhere's
a price on my head."
'1There's a James Bond setup here
that's out of the worst possible detective
novel you could ever read ," Irvine said.
Time Magazin e published an interview
Sunday with Irving in which he was ask-
ed why Hughes told him his life story.
"The man is in the last decade of his
life," Irving said. "He believes he has
been maligned, lied about. He has recei v·
eel a bad press. As he said himseU, he
wanted 'to restore the balance.' "
From Page 1
DO NALD .••
7. The voice of. a man claiming to be
Hughes said in a i'ecent loog-dl!tance
telephone news conference that he did not .
know Irving and denounced the book as a
hoax.
Newsmen at the conference said they
are convinced that the voice is 'that of
Hug~es. Irving says it was not Hughes'
voice because the man had too many
memory lapses and talked longer than
Hughes can without a break.
A Nevada publishing firm, which
claims it has exclusive rights to Hughes'
autobiography, has filed suit to bar
publication of Irving's book by McGraw·
Hill Publishing Co. and ib seriallzatlon in
Life magazine. A hearing in the case
is set for Wednesday,
The McGraw-Hill book bu been
described by the />ubLisher as Hughes'
autobiography, taken from Interviews
that Irving, as coll1borator, taped with
Hughts.
Irving talked about the loan during an
lr ~el'View with Mike Wallace on the CBS
.elevJsion "to Minutes" program.
The late· columnist Drew Pearson first
reported the loan shortly before th.-19!0
election. Pearson said H111heJ made the
un!f!CUred loan to Donald Nixon In 1956,
while Richard Nixon was Vice Prealdent,
and afterward Hughes' problems with
various governmental agencies were eu-
ed.
The Peanon story was termed a
•11mear" by Nixon's campaign manaser.
Donald Nixon said ht aoucht the loan
through his friend, lawyer Frank J,
Walen, then a lobb)'ilt for Hurhes. In an
W1JucceufuJ effort to 11ve his chain ol
rt1taurants. He said the loan wu HCUred
by bJJ mother'• lot Jn Wbllliet, Clllf.
• •
.'Devil Cult' J
Case Gets
Court Delay :'
A young defendant'1 plea that he can-
not be tried as an adult for a murder
allegedly committed when he was only 17
led to a delay today in the Orange County
Superior Court trial of "Devil cult kfil.
ing" auspect Christopher "Gypsy" Gib-
boney.
Presiding Judge Bruce Su m n er
postponed the trial planned today for the
Oregon youth and ordered him to appear
Friday for • ruling on the defense motion
that Oibboney's rights as a juvenile are
being violated. .
It has been earlier ordered in juvenile
court that Gibboney, now 18, should be
tried as an adult for his alleged role in
the killing on June 2, 1970, of MissioO Vie-
jo teacher Florence Nancy Brown.
It is alleged that Gibboney was one of
thiee young drug-using drifters who pull·
ed Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro from her
car as she left the San Diego Freeway at
Sand Canyon Road and butchered her in
8n Irvine orange grove.· ...
.,,., ..... ('
DAILY PILOT Iliff,._,.
Testimony at trials of Gibboney's alleg·
ed companions in the ritual murder has
been to the effect that Mrs. Brown was
knUed to death and dismembered to the
accompaniment of rites associated with
the worship of Salan.
Steven Q-aig Hurd, 20, tabbed Jong
before the trial as the leader of the
group, wa s found t.o be insane and Ja con·
fined to Atascadero State Hospita1.
THEY DUG UNSUCCESSFU LLY UNTIL THEIR HANDS WERE RAW
Lisa Croi1ette, Jane C1mpbell, M1rcia Monroe
Trustees · Hear
Status Report
On Insurance
Can!Jt ""Dig lt!J
Students Give Up Fossil Search
A report on the present state of in-
surance protection for Saddleback Com·
munity College will be delivered at the
board meeting at 7 o'clock tonight.
A committee of board members Alyn
Brannon and John Lund will present the
report, which is not expected Jo reeOm-
mend changes in the insurance program
at the college.
According to Dr. Fred H. Bremer,
superintendent-president, six private in-
surance agencies make up the Sad·
dleback Community College Insurance
Agent.. Association.
Yearly premiu~ on insurance total
$64,000 for prt1"11 coverap 1 a J d
Bremer. The biggest cbull -aome
$32,000 -goos towai:d health, accident
and den~ care insurance for the 135
district employes, he added.
Bremer said the report Js conducted
periodically. •'The committee was asked
several months ago to prepare the report.
It looks like there are no problema at
prese nt," said Bremer.
In other matters, the board will:
-Hear a report on total enrollment for
the winter quarter.
-Approve the academic calendar for
the 1972-73 school year.
-Authorize payments for architectural
services in conjunction with the 1elence-
mathematics building.
Laguna Thefts Probed
Laguna Beach police are investigating
the theft of $600 worth of stereo equip-
ment and leather jacket& from a
residence.
Officers said Beth E. Helfman, of 567
Catalina St., reported the items missing
Sunday night when she returned home.
Investigators determined that thieves
entered the loc~ed house through a living
room window to remove the stereo and
four jackets.
By PAMELA HAU.AN
01 tt11 DlllV '11•1 lt11f
The students dug with the intensity of
'l!lers looking for gold.
Tl:iey worked until their hands were
caltused, their backs ached and dirt
covered their alothes.
But the earth refused 19' gi'(e up its
secret.
And today the San Clemente High
School sicence staff decided to give up
the search for a fossil that might have
been millions of years old .
The students beard about the fossil
from Tom Winget, president of Missio111
Bank in El Toro, whose property is ad·
jacent to a construction site.-
The oWDer Of the property, digging a
draina1e ditch with his tractor 20 years
ago, had struck a hard surface and had
Last Rites Held
For Area Pioneer
Louis Robinson
Funeral services were held today in
Santa Ana for Orange County pioneer
Louis P. Robinson, 83, who died Jan. 13.
Mr . Robi nson was born on hi! father's
1,000 acre ranch in Trabuco canyon in
1888, one year bef<lre Orange County
became a county.
fl.tr. Robinson's grandfather, Alonzo
• Waite, founded one of the county's first ·
newspapers, the Evening BI ad e ,
predecesS<lr to the Santa Ana Register.
Mr. Robinson worked the Trabuca Can·
yon ranch until 1966 when he sold it to
his son, James, who recentl y opened It to
the public as a recreation area.
Mr. Robinson Is survived by three sons,
Marvin of Fountain Valley, Robert of
Tustin and James of Palos Verdes: two
sisters, Anne Robinson of Laguna Beach
and Mrs. Allee Divor of Alhambra, and
seven grandchildren.
Burial was in Fairhaven Memorial
Park, Santa Ana .
jumped off his tractor to go back and aee
what it was.
The blade had chipped the material
which appeared to be a bone. The fanner
(known only as ''Mr. Stevens,") picked
up the bone part , noted where the fossil
was. and cont,inued his work. ~
Making· a few inquiries, the farmer '
thought nothing more about it until the
land was sold to the Alexander Haagen
firm which is building the Town and
Country Shopping Center on the site.
The former land owner brought the
fossil to Winget who immediately called
the high school science staff.
From then on it was like a treasure
hunt. •
The former own'e r thought he recalled
where the spot was because 1t had been
near a eucalyptus tree .. He pointed it out
to Winget who in turn showed It to the
eager science students.
Friday afte rnoon they dug until their
bands bled but found nothing.
A bulldoder operator agree'd to remove
fill dirt ro they could start on a ground
level, so on Saturday they continued the
search.
A group of La Habra s~ience students
came to watch for a while but didn't offer
to help.
Some went back Sunday to continue to
dig but their e!forts were in vain.
Winget said the developers of the land
had indicated a willingness to rope off the
section so the dig could continue, but the
science staff decided to give up be<:ause
the loca tion can't be pinpointed and
might even be under Winget's bank.
Examining the existing piece of fossil,
the science staff had thought it to be part
of a whale rib. Many whale fossils have
been discovered In the Saddleback Valley.
Some date 15 million years back, to th1
mlocene period.
It will be up to future generations to
discover this one.
Magna te Heller Di es
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Maurice L.
Heller, 78, founder and former vice--presi·.
dent of Swank, Inc., died Sunday.
Why pay '150 for a l/4 Carat
Diamond when you can buy the
Diamond from us · for just '75?
same
llCI' llAClll
W laaa:IM .........
We 1iave the ExpertlM
k110w•w nd backgralllld
to ••aw JOll liow ·to lllYe
Oii JOlll' dUllOllCI lnfflil111e11t.
'
COME IN AND SR
WHAT WE H.AVI TO OFFIR
IOI IACITI
Jr4 lwa•'-
lit ·-· .. .
D1e111111• c-ur 1-0...11.,e c-ir
COITA MllA JIWILRY & LOAN
0pn o.a, • 1o ' c .... In cmd Br""'" Arowild
1838 NEWPORT ILYD., Pllone 646-7741
•
DOM RACm
OUR MOST.
UNUSUAi!
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
• When yov ""1 • dl.i.
moncl from "' -wlll
9v a r 1 nte 1thttd1 ..
mond to appr1l1e at
40'/. MORE than yow
pold fw It or "'"' money bock. Can yov
do H -11 ol-"orot
CO Ml'A lll.
•
•
I
Sadlllehaek N.Y. Steels•
. ' . • ' I . 'J • I ' . • YOC. ~. NO. ·14, l SECTIONS, l6 l"A&ES . O~NGE 'CQ'lJNTY, CALIF.ORNIA . . . . ' ~DAY, :JANUARY ·11,;r9.n :rEN CENTS -. . ' . . ~ . .
Revamped CCI LoOlis to Otl!er Interest Areas
A revampod c.unctl o1 CommUnltlea o!
lrvlne (CCI) ~ had het,!I aet ap to
-k for lnoorporatloa ls turnlni Ill, al·
lonllo!la to -IJUI, The cp education 'mnunltlee plant' •
tu •yarrkle and -electlqo diacWion
at I p.m. Tbunday ln room l~l of the
~yalcal Science Building 11 UC Irvine,
~ Marian Ellis aald. • That 'eVenlnil ..ion ·WW leaturo
_.m.Uves of ,IJbtb the'Tuslln Union
llfgh and San Joaquin EleJ!lOlllarY
*' . * *
llialricll. Both,ww ulc voe.n to approve
tu' ev.mldos. The blgh IChool dl.irlcl
allo' ls llMklng voter appwal ol a 115
mlllloo'bond.laue in an elect.lpa Feb. I.
On_ the '..... day. vo!ers trom tbr<iu8bout the hlgb lclJool dlatrict will llloCi' a board member to oomplete the
""""Ired term of Mn. J... Smith. Six
perao111 have lil<d for the board ... 1. The
ttl'l)l,...is,ln lune 1173.
Ollly one Irvine realdent bu filed !or
the· board.eJection. Mrs. Ellzabeth'uLee"
. .
S·. ll . ;,. of 1'"""' Whi'·-~ 'Way M•~ae', LI';! sn'ver Birch "'-'ve, '!'Ii.tin. 190 ' ., ... • . """"f6' l.OCW\,llN. • .,,. w ...,,,
U!)lveralty Pork.. lhe bu fe<elved en-Both c:aflley and Fabula ·r111 WllUc-
dommtnt.s. !tom. CCI, another pro.in-<Wfully !or ~ls on the .hlih ICbol>I ~ration «1anilat1on, the City ' O( board last April. ,
Irvine ·Now'(COIN), ~nd the Irvine Coun-Dllcuaalng the fiscal lssuea Involved In
cjl !or, Ed¥catlon (ICE). . · ' the Feb. 1 election ·during Tfiuraclay~a
OtberS seeking the· •HI lnclud_e: Dllla • meeting wW he Rex NerllOG, aaa1alant ~tey; 25151 Erlc89n W_ay, Lagwia • supertntendent for businesl' services of
Hills: Earl ·carra~. ~f731 Eldamar, El the So.• Joaquin elemenlary dlslrlct. and
Toro: Stephen Fablila, 14532 EmerYwodd Rebert Matthew, aaalalant 1Uperintendent
Read, Tmtln: Marie Morales, · 24975 !or business of tbe Tuatin ,Rlgh dlllrjct,
Whl!tler Drive, i;:t Toro, and Dou1lu . Paul Tonkov)ch, <bainnan of ICE, and
. ' •
Clialles 1 Boutanier will rejireaent the
ct~·C\>mmlttees >UpportinB the ·bond
and tu overrides.
Cc! ptealdenl Fred Fry said the
orJaniutlon which favored cityhoc;>d has
reftae4.lts bylawa "IA> expand its role iJi
the -communJt.ies:of Irvine." '
He slid, "the CCI will work· for an In-
formed, acUve , al)d unj.fied . commu,nity
which will follow a common and positive
direction •.
"It wlll be the ,oa1 of our study com-
mittees to work with lbe city council and
other recognized organ izations to Imo
prove the educational. cultural, social,
recreational and enviromnental quality of
the community."
CCl'1 newly appointed public re.li tions
c~nnan Denny Glen, 19522 Sierra Soto
Road, lrvlne, said "other recognized''
organh:atlons Fry referred to Include
such groups as Irvine Tomorrow and ICE.
' Building
To :GeiEye
In Irvine
8 1-(.lled in County
To · Results :Despite Clear Weather
.
Clear alher and rionnal traffic con-
Two buildlnB perpiit fre.eze ex'1'f>tion1,
held over . f6r the fl:I\ ~ ol. the
lrvlne planning agency, wW he heard at·
lQolgbt's. 7:30 o'clock meeling . .I! the .new cttY's planntng.'c0-lisJon. · ·· '
dltiona i.lled IA> halt highway alauihler :;t weekeDd in Orange County u
persons were kµIe<l ..or auccumbed
l.. earlier accldent Injuries. ·
In ·lllOther aectden~ an Crane• CouJ117 .
resident· died tn a hudon colllalon near
Lancaster.
IC \he laca oa ·dais ·tpok 'lamillar ,to
cltY.,.a\ch<ri, that,.,,;m bi:. ·because . the
nn: City's Jll.annl~c·cpmiiiisa1o.; lor'the
lime, belng, II the lrvlpe'<;fty ~H: .
·Mayor Willilim 'Jl'lscbbicb ~· the c;ouncu.-m .. tlnJ aa .• \he ,Pl~· agency, can Only: dtscuJa and review nqueals· !or
OJCOpllons ·to the .-ctly's IMoy buildingand~~~lDOfa\ofium. · '· •· " 1 W1 ~ ·~
1
, ~Y.P.n,OT..;..,._. ~Any actli!ti' to be·~.n on the lttmai'!ill · ' "r•LkS •aoUT HOWARD ACCEPTE" .. HU. _GHES ·LOAH • be het4 over1o Weclne,uy'a city c:ouni:U " " "' lllltting. ' ·. : GhOst Wrltor" lrvlnt : ' 11!.w"°"'' .Donald : 1,1~ . , .
~1:°J.~;:1:%~~ni~~ ·Hu: h . Uo· < :NL. . :. ,-,-, .
Slndbw:& Way, In;iDe.; 1 • : • : : : • g es ' ·an to. . ·eWllft.-.~ 1 C::'i!"tiu;;r,~~~1;;z; . . ' . . " ·· • r:~.1. ·IV :1 ~ muHOn .••1~ m .......... station-• "" -• • , ~I\• •• • • • 1 • ... : · • ·' :·-r ~ ~~ ·~,, .,. ' lieJoc ~ "1 P~ T~ ·~ . . • QI ' -· ~'.w=!!l1o~2 ·Nixon °epm~.~: · _ife ~vs _..Jan!l.it' . f j .I !J,J , I !. , • 1J.' ~r ~ ~~I r. t.r?~ ".;· i"com otfidaltballd tblt a·llp tb9 ·.· ·;· '! r · · · · ··: · ····) ~".i .... ·.~, <; l' ; : · '1 ,. ·: 1 !• : • • • ~~to·-he· elmUi>lll!d, 'Mr..' lo'. 'i!Orlild --Iniabinil wl!i>ae ~ ~pj,r,y of !bO'recmse and. 1 tru&•~;aoalalner.planNd·to receiVe'di a '$1115,iloo 1011.Clioin<Howard i>Jl!!OiW~ m or JDAY'nol be~ hav~ a)>uthld alnsl&-1""'11Y homes ·~1th• Hughes aomell5 ·y.ara11gO tlilJ:mommg clalnled Sdndai · tljal a f o ~ln'e r
Ra!ICll c!wloP!Jltlll ~ be~ . d~ i. :di!<tW tl)e)llajl<!r.in the NIX· ~ allje li'nni!d the <!e¥· .
Beltdea ~lnll, m....ver .. coan-ons' Newport Beach homo. . . · Mrs~Nt.en clec1lned ti> i.Jit any-more =·~ bit~·~= ":Yea, 1!0 received the tol,n,",Mrs'. ab0ut \~8ndaaldliet'himhand,1,_·~vtce
bpll4lng and the bom 'lytqg ~"'~ the Nb:111 ,aald, "bot it's au ~ .... j18id.:' ~enl. of·the ·~tt llold ,dialn
Jl!UJ!ertl · ea .artwiy ~ The' wl!e· of the Pmldent's brother coOJd lie rUc:hed· at' a r Marriott' ain' A~/ on ~ton.P ' ~ Yale clec1lned to .commenl on tbe latest """' ~-· .. •I ' • ' Martlolt ' Hotel '. In
'<louncilmenwW ilao review 'plani.for a U:O~~ ~·the 111tti·-w\JO· or· .w.~ . .D.C. , · . ' , .
aflllnpotone wall · being built by 1he rillged It. . . · '.l:be.'bOltl adl.Nlioa wasn't tbert. ·
c!Ovelopm •f the -·'in celltral l'Yoo'U, liave ,tod alt·.ta lllY\huaband. . An •lnljojrY to Mli'JIOlt'a "'"l'~ate
lrvln<. Descrlhed bl' Levlt\.,;.;.i Sotls,Jnc. Ht?• !1" Ol!O. that ls,,ln ·b1111Deu.·H~'ll toll ~. Ut :W~·,,. jps\•aa
representatives u a "landscape wall" 10U .wba:t ~.. .Aki. ' 1 ~producttv.~. • . · • . ~ 1, ·
tbe need for ·a at.Idol' wlJI was ~ ,NWlll baa been quoled • aaying be.got We haven tfbeard ·fri>m· hiJri, · 111 of· t)o!ed by cowit11men . the 1oap tbi'ou&h a Jrt.Qd, nan1: J. ricl'ar said.< . , .-. . .
The pfannlng .....Y, ls not e~ ·to \\'.•~ .. !'ho was a·.Huchea'·lobbylst in N~Uier ~-the offi~·of·P~hmlt NJI•
hear requesta from flrma iJr the Washington. Author .. Cllflord ·Irving, on's prw ~ry. . , , . . .
!nJhja!llll• Parle ,for lnlerior'· miovation ...<:. ._,_ ._,_ • · _,_ ·.A. · . ..A. . ~1for1 'laheJl"l typi&bu.Qdlngs. : ; ' H ' H : H : '. : · 1 W . *X '. H , .: , . 1
l't~:l:i~cl.W';;;!'~ley.;r:.~ B'oo·"' k. Say· s ·Hu·g· ·L..:....s· ·i ·e· n·· i· -: ment· IA>, the building •permil "-ls . · . · · ' · ' .f J,e ·
llllnB 'drawn .lo·enmpt1111cbatructures. : · : ·. · . .· · .
Shelli huUdlngs are numetOUI iln the · m.. •
4ustrlal complex; Qullley noted.
T)ley a.. bulldlnl• built w!Ut,an empty
lnt.rlor into whiClt a C!>IDPIOY might
~d whatever type olfJCe or other spa ..
ii needa.
z:·E. Germans Flee . . ;
~GEN, GtrmaDy (AP) -Two
20')oear..id Eul· -..... llnored
'WamillC ahoia'from -parda and cioae11'tjie mined deallt &trip Into Weal
Gtrmany undei' COW/I' ol darlmeas Satur-
daly, -IUlhorltles ~ today. ::::i: occumd la Ibo H1r1z MOIBl-laln re o( ·central G \ r In a n.y ,
•Uld.'· I
' ' ........ .,. ...
N~on's .Kin .'$2(J5,000
NEW YORK (AP) -Clifford Irving,
..,thor ol a purported ~ ol
How...t,Hughes, quotes the btlJkq!n
recblle 11 aaylng that former -.tary
olJ!o(e,_ a.rt Clllford .-lllnl 1 ... a '21i5,"6f· loan for Rlcbard M •. Nlail'a
blotber. Cueford, wbo IUVed in•tbe JolmloftJlll.
mlaillratlon/denied lllY CCllDIClloa ·-,the ,deal. '
~.,.:1.i. fabrication," he'aald. w.., 'Sunday al his WublnBton
home /'There Is not one Iota of trµtb. In thai'iita~ It had' to'.be made up out
of whole clot,h. ·: • ' . 1 , , ~
Neeb ·Dietrich,. a) former Hughes aide,
aald in ·Califomia that tho loan, which
... r<porled In 19tl0,--made bul tbat a...._ lawyer handled It and Cltlford
had no -loi!P ol ll
lrvltig dedlned·ln a televil1on Interview
Sunday to 11y what Huchea.got In rtturn
for the !Iii loan. Bui be aald tho "quid
pro quo'' la deocrlhed In bis aoon-lo-bo
publlslied _. -·ho,clalma to-have
put toBetbar oul of a series Of lnttrvlews
with Hulhes.
(Unii.d Pre.. 1'11ernational reported today tilst Clll!oi'd earlier IA>ld CBS the
all,ptlon· waa false, •bul acknowledged
tbal tils law firm baa repre,..ted the
Hu1hea T<iol Co, since' ltl60.)
l'ile victims Included two Gardell' Grove
teenagers tilled when their car rolled
over early' &!Jiday on ' the Newport
rr,...11 oflr¢p at' ~' ~I in
' " . '
Insurance . -
Of ·S&dilleback
Saddlehack" ·sets . ' ' '
Election· Meet
The r1nt meeting of 'an All hoc com-
miti.a to study the method of election of
trustees In the Saddlebact CommWlity
College Dlstrtct will be held Thuraday
night at 7:30 p.m. at the board room,
2IOllO Mqguerlte Pamray.
Two repr.,..tatives of the CaplstrlllO,
and Laguna Beach Unified School
Dlaltlds, tlle , Tust!B. Union' llllh Schqol
Dtatrict and the Saddlebact board make
up tbe,commit~.
Tbe public ,1s Invited to attend the
~ting.
T\le COllllllittte WU. appointed by the
various diltrict boards after 1 recent
con!roveray on wlletber the Saddleblck t-ahould be elected at large.or by
truatee·areas .. , .
Afler1aludY of the matter, the com·
mlttee re<ommendaUon wlll be prmnltd
to the lull collego board !or action ..
coata 'Mala. Tbe accldenl lnjurecf two St., Santa Ana.
buddies ilcuni wttli tl1em. · · · Jm Mootae, 4, o111111 AlelUdar A""
The tragic toll ·Includes: • , , , . Cen\lot. . · . -
Davtcl lo!. Nees, 2f, ol 1585 N. Coast Jobn Gary ~w, 19, 5alt Lake Ci·
Hltihway,' Laguna Beach. ty. · : ·
Clrlla. A. SmHb, 17, ·Of 8901· Bloaaom ' I.arooa W•tlllna, 21, Orqe.
Ave., Garden .Grove. . Joba Cbarle1 H~delCI, '1, of 1&$1 W. La
Jamea L Puse. J7, oC 8692 Blosaom Habra Blvd., La Habra.
Ave., Garden Grove. Ne!s' car spun out of control on Pacific ~Yllvt 'Wykoff, 60, of·21·70 S. Hafbor Coast Highway and bit a, power pole near
BIVd., Anaheim. the El Morro Scho!>L road, the Calllorni1
.wr.do IWrlqnez, 11, ,,. 30! N. Brlstal (See CllASlml, Pap I) :
'Devil Cult'
' '
Murder Case
'. ' ' . ... "Ge•"' D·J...1-.' .
1• ~ 1~ '.~y
,. '' • f • ' • •
-·' ~Yount d'elendlill .. plta,lllll llo ....
r llnl be trleCI • .... .., far -· """"--~co"""....,...., I:::""' ti led 14· a deia'j'idiY ID 1111 Qiaptf.
SapOrlor C4iurt lifll 'ol "Drill ellll· m:
tng" suspect ·Cllrtltopber 0 GYPIY'' Gib-
boney.
' ·Prtstdlng . Judge • Btuce S u m n e r
poalponed the trial Planned today for the
Oregon youth and -.ed him to appeor
Friday for a ruUnc on the defense motion
t.bat Gibboney'• rilbts as a juvenile art
helq vlolaled. .
It bu been -ordered In juvenile
court that Gl~, now 18, should be
tried u Ill. adull !Gr his alleged role in
the kllllnB ,on J,.. I, 1970, o! Mlaalo)I Vie-" · '.· ~" , u(i::t'' 1.i ..
• l .1 . 1 ... ,.) (
' Jo -Flonaco Nancy Brown •
, r• , ~"·~ltl~ ~ .. !•'
'' I •I ~)JJ:/ / 0
•'·''•1 ···"'1:1i"'·" .t.:H...;m.e, '"N~~: ~~~'''·'y ·.~ .....
Th 'ti"Cl 'Shidellt ,
: r • • 1 • • • • ·' • ' 1 ' ~· •
Affairs f P,Sitipn .:
' , ' ''I ' ' Melvin H. Bernstein,. a poUtlUJ; scien-
tist and attorney, .hll been app0inled
llJl<Clal U.istlnt to the •Ice cbaDceuor . l • • .
for, student aljalrs at UC ltvtne. . · ,
~.of tbO appolntnienl wu made bi v1 .. ~llor Jobll c. lloy.
Dr. Bmlltein'bu been a pncticlll( al· ' torpey In. S.verly Hills .for. the ~ aj<·
ye"'°' and .an aaalalanl, PfOI"!""'. of·.
pollilcal oclence at Calllomia . Slate·
Polytochnic ColleBe ln ·Pom0na 'for clwo
yeara. . :
A &J:lduaie' of New Yott:Univ,,.Sii¥ Jn
economies, Dr. Bemsteln' reCdved .. hll
law ·degree al Harvard UniVoratty, a~t'
the• PhD In polltlcal ICienco rat UCLA. He
ls llsted ln "Wlio's WOO in~ 'Y~·" . ,
It II alleged that Gibboney was one o!
!breo )'OUbc lfnl&ouli18 ctrUtera wbo pull•
ed Mn. Brown, 11, of El Toro rrom b<r
cor aa abe lefl tba Saa Dile• l'retloay at
Sand c.nyoo -aad buld>ered lier la an Irvine orange anwe .. · '
Tutlmony al'trlalt of Glbboney'a alleg·
ed compani-ln the rlblal murder his
been .to the ellecl lbat Mrs. Brown wu
tnHed .14 death and dismembered to the
accotnpanlment of riles as.soelated with
the wol:,lblp of Satan. . ,
Steven Craig Hurd, 20, tabbed Ione
before the trial · aa !lie leader of the
group, wu IOUlll 14 be insane and II con-
fined to Ataoclldero State Hospital. '
Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 18,
charged with compllctly In the Brown
murder and convicted u the hatchet man
In the kllltll( :K hoan earlier of a young
Santa Ana -atalloo attendant, u
,...1ng a five yura to life !<!rm ln state
prilOft. ;
Melanie Mae Daniels, 11, the -·· par11110ur, pleaded BUilty to complicity
charP,l l!ld 4-ug off...,. and II· ,...1ng
a one IA> !en year. i.rm in atate prlaon.
Court action on Gibboney 'wW cto.. tho
file on what lawmen ire. unanimously
a(rted. II the moal ll'WY murder in
OrlllB• County .history.
The murder of Mn. Brown followed by
Just U houra the hatchet kllllnJ of servlca
(See DEVIL CULT, Pap I )
' . . • • I ' , " ' ..
~·'More , H~pe(~
'
The , Daytm (Ohio Journal-Herald
today quoted San Fl'ancllco a~
torney Melvin Belll u saytne that the
loan was a payof! !or lUchard Nbon'a
auppoaed effort to ob1a1n the SI. Loulf.to-
New, Orleans root. and other lavan for
TV Violence ·Relation
.
Told·
,Liii'."'' ; 1•1 e;-lf' ~ ::=.. . . = . ....i = ...... ICMllMIM ' ,..,. C.., I
~·1 '• ...... -•, --"' :...-:;. ': ·;::a " == I. ..... f
DD --·-» liW "" ._,. II ' _.. ~ ,,_,, .......... .. ...,,.. -...
I
seek . Board ·Post: . .
' Two -CllldlOatea llaye filed lot the ~ aloctloa In the San · Joaquin
Dem 1117 School Dlllrict Ai1'tl 11.
·-.,. ID fill ' the uneJplred 't.rm of
· J-Mellmi wbo reslcned recently are c. O'Dollllll Lee ... ll<illlrl J. Acres.
Lee, wllO )Isla hit • occupallon .. ' • -1ftallaa ..,.-, raldes al 1 .. l
flltrta Porto Rood, Irvine. Acroa, a lllhman, realdea it ISllll Landlsvlew, El
~ ...... ~.h.;.,.,..; ~ ...
' ...... -adildlilab'llil II> .... OeaoD 911.r • ifllllar7 Bel>Jol-. .... -al *11.litllOlba 1-, 'nlrtlarock. Glnaburg
---... bll candkllq lut week. Daldllnl ... m1n1 lar'tlie apaclal eJeo.
~~~toN= a t\td...,,. w •s• im...-
, ..
Ttano.Woricl • Atrllnea, Ulen ownad by "/) .
. Htioan figured in Nlson'• .....,. Surgeo~ Gen.er(Il neceives Report. by 12 Scie. • ntists
cesaful 19111 preoldentlal campalp. Both
Nbon and Ida brother, Donald, JIM WASHiNGTO)i (uPl) .,.. A _. ol 11
denied !bit ~ obtained lllY la-. IClailtlt.I nportod to li\qeon General
... reaull of tho loan. J-L. Stalnllld todaY tbera .. evidence
lrvlnl'• -baa -a sabjeel or...... tbil televllloo vlolorice -..........
W.eny lince It WU ~ OD :Dec. -·-lll'Jldlapoaed to Utit•klncl: 7. 'Ille 'voice of a maci·~alml11 •to ba o1belilvtorInt1oe11n1 pld, 1 ,
Hlilbel 'Mid ·In a recent 1oqi-..., In a 17'-Jllle nporl, Sleinleld's -.,.
telepbli!lo newa con!....,. Ut1t·he did no! Ullo ,......, :--· dn 'laifvtslOn
knoir lJlvq ..a ditdmctd Iba -u a anti ,aoelaJ. belilvlor · llld tfJo •1cle&1Uffc'
bou. ~ • • • • ~ data, ... ..... o:ioalttelltrlaOr •+ CODo !Cet!-at the ...,,.._. aid lhof clualn. , i 1 • • •
"" -·-that the Votc'o Is lhot Of 1111\ It llld tliano ..... .....,. .......
H,..iie.. ~ _,. II ..U not fllilliea' to lndloate a---.-..,.
..... bee&• tlit -had ,too 'i£lll1y tetmaleD ml ........ belilYlor .......
11101110rf' la-anti talked 1cqor' than chlldren wbo alreadT le1ded towanl If•
lhtllliM ... -,, blolt.: -' .,...i.e -·· , . A ....... ......... b. wbkll II alto aald tho r_.(tf·dillclND to'
-AtD,..,..1j , TV. riofe&IOO ..... a(. -tba ,
environmental conlala.
"SllCb tentaUvo and limited concluslolls
are not very ~. They npr•ont
aubalanUally more lmowledp than wa
hid two years·qo: bul Ibey 1H1111 lftlllll
quesUona • UDlllR'thid')1 'u. ('Cin11ltt~ 1. ..
&pl. r •
)lh 1. ataten..1 1 -wllb tho ..;port, !li.lnleld decllnad to ...... hla
.,.. conclualona, quotUic tbt COllllDlltee'•
aoimmary and aaytnc lbal 0. ._.i
"..tis ' tho -au.nllon of au
per10111 ancl srouP& CODCG1lld aboul Iba·
e(lecta ol vJew1rc leieTlatoo."
The commlttee llld tho "key ......,~
ll how lelevi.tOG toold bo • ...... le
(loo VIOIDICI, Pica II
t:'
,
I DAILY PILOT SI Meodq, .J4nUMJ 21. 19n
Sanitation Directors
~ant Sw eeping Reform?
By ALAN D!RKlN
OI ltlt Oell't ,. ... , Sltff
n SED1S 1 bit Jlke a gentlemen's club, exctpt they serve coffee not
drinks. There are cheery greetings, handshakes, broad smiles, knowing nods.
Just as if you had walked into the Elks or a Masonic Lodge.
Somehow you've seen all these people before.
There's the mayor of Santa Ana and that so-and-so from
Brea. And isn't that guy from the Midway City Sanitary
District sitting next to a county supervisor? ..,.
Yes, he Is. Everybody's here. The mayor or council-
men from 21 cities In Orange County, t.he supervisors , too.
All gathered in one room in Founta in Valley to wrestle
over the doings of one of the county's biggest s.penderS-
the Orange County Sanitation District, which has a $S0
mlllio11 annual budget.
The attendance is remarkably good. Thirty-one di·
rectors present of 37 eligible.
That's an impressive display of public service. To make this meeting,
some people must have had to pass up a conflicting appointment. The th~ee
Huntington Beach councilmen present, for example, could ·have been at a city
council meeting. There was o_ne on the same night.
FOUR COUNCILMEN from Newport Beach ha~criliced their evenings
to attend. The county supervisor had nev'r atte~ed a sanitation district meet.
i.ng before, but he made it to the first one for which he was eligible.
You know that the $50 each director receives for attending has nothing
to do with the fact they keep coming so regularly. Some pick up $100 for
turning out, others $150 and one director $350. Last year two elected officials-
Mayor Ed Just of Fountain Valley, chairman of the joint boards, and Super·
visor Robert BatUn, who served Oil all seven boards -picked up $350 for
each meeting. .
Still, the remuneration and the near perfect attendance records have to
be the merest coincidence. After all, these dedicated public servanl3 are talk·
ing about changing the setup, consolidating seven districts into one with only
25 directorshi~ instead of 37 and prohibiting any duplication in fees so no one
would get more than $50.
The board of supervisors would have only one seat }VOrlh $50 and not
seven worth $350. Newport Beach would have only one instead of four, Hunt·
ington Beach only one, not three.
People like Mar k Stephenson or Anaheim, Robert Clark of Brea, Jerry
Christie of Fullerton, Hal Sims of La Habra, Don Smith of Orange, Lorin Grisel
and Wade Herrin of Santa Ana, and Clifton Miller of Tustin, would get only -
$50 and not $100 for a couple of hours or work. _
Ellis N. Porter of the Costa Mesa Sanitary District would get $50 not
$150, and ·Norman Culver of the-Garden Grove Sanitary District $50 instead of
1100.
YOU KNOW HOW anxious they are to change the setup because they
have been talking and studying reorganization for six months. They are care-
fully following the advice of the 1970 Grand Jury.
They delayed voting on a committee's recommendation at the last meet.
lng Dec. II. 'They did Jt again on this January night on a l&.15 voted to· allow
more study. Such sweeping reform needs more goina: over to protect the pub.
lie interest. ,
some suggested that since the present structure works io well from an
organlzatibnal standpoint, perhaps the best thing to do was to preserve it and
simply reform the inequities in the fees by as.king members of more than one
board voluntarily to sign that they would accept only one $50 payment per
meeting.
This was already being done by some members:, the speaker waa told,
but really Jt would look better if it was not done on an honor basis.
YES, INDEED. For hard as it may be to believe, the sanitation dls-
trlct'1 finance director, J, Wayne Sylvester, allowed after genUe prodding that
all members are being paid the full amounls and it wu two years alnce any·
one bad asked lo be paid only $50.
Israelis Round Up Rebels
In Fatal Attack on Truck
GAZA CITY, Israeli-Occupied Gaza
Strip (UPI) -Israeli troops rounded up
15 Arab guerrillas for questioning today
in connection with an ambush 'Sunday
that killed an American nurse and
wounded an American Baptist minister
and his daughter. ,
Guerrillas attacked a Baptist hospital
truck near here Sunday night. firing a
burst of submachlnegun fire that kll\ed
Mavis Pate, 46, of Ringgold, La., and
wounded Roy Edward Nicholas, -47, of
Austin, Tex., and his daughter, Carol
Beth, 17.
Spokesmen said about 50 bullets were
fired at the truck.
'
The suspects were rou nded up after oc-
01.ANCJI COAST
DAILY PILOT
,...,.rt IMck ............
c.o.. .....
O«AMGI! COAST PUILISHIHCJ COMPANY
Jlol>trl N, W11d
Pmlltflnt ~ P'llOI~
J1clc I!. Curl-v
Vice ~IHN Md 6-tl MIMftl'
nM•• Ket.,(I
Ed!fw·
'"'°'""A. Mu""hr~. MAMell'll f.dltor
Cliairft 1 H. t._ Richttd P. Nall
AIMtlN .-..Olntl Ecl/ior. -Cllltrs ,._.I :)JD \fl'•f ll•Y $tnff 111---1 l#dl: un N_,.,,n lloo!..,..,..
UIWlll ltKto: m ,..,., "-... 1,... -..ctl: 11'1S &eKl'I louleV• ...
"" ~ -fWlfl &I ~ ~
cupation authorities combed the Jebali ya
rerugee camp.· The ambush took place
outside the camp's southern entrance on
the main raod through the Gaza Strip.
LocaJ military authorities said they
believed the attack was a mistake. Guer·
rillas, they said, may have mistaken the
hospital van for an army vehicle in fog
and darkness.
They said it was the first guerrilla ac·
tion of its kiPld in nearly a year.
Israel occupied the formerly Egyptian
Gaza Strip during the June, 1967, Middle
East war.
Miss Pate had been an operating
theater nurse at Gaza City's Baptist
hospital since 1970. Nicholas has been the
hospital's administrator since"h1s arrival
in Gaza City in 1958. .
The car was a Volkswagen double-cabin
!ruck.
The sources said the Israeli authorities
took the three Americans by helicopter to
the central Negev hospital in Beersheba.
Miss Pate died on the operating table of
head injuries. Nicholas suffered thigh and
lowe r abdomen injuries. but was not on
the critical list, and his daughl.er was on-
ly slightly injured.
Hospital sources said Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan flew to the hospital soon
arter learning about the incident and
chatted to the wounded minister in the
emergency ward.
They said hospital authorities called
the Baptist center in Richmond, Va., lo
arrange for Miss Pate's body to be flown
for burial in the United States.
Military sources said Nicholall was
retu rning his three daughters to the
American school at Kfar Shmaryahu on
the outskirts of Tel Aviv when the am·
bushers struck. Mis! Pate accompanied
h''un on the trip.
From Patel
DEVIL CULT • • •
atatlon attendaat Jerry W~yne Carlin, 21 .
The youth's body wa1 found in a pool of
blood In th~ 1t.ation'1 restroom.
Huls., Hurd and Herman Hendrick
Taylor, a l9-year-<1ld transient, wtre aJJO
linked lo that earlier kllllne.
Taylor was placed on a long probation
term after 1trv.lng aa a pro1eCUtlon
wltneu In tha trials ol Hurd and Hul1e.
'!be proMCUtion bu II.lied he wUI bl
available lo teltll)' qalnlt Gibboney.
•
Bu;&lles Freeze~
Article Bares Recluse's Plan
NEW YORK (UPI) -An arllcle about
. reel UM billionaire Howard Huaha lo •i>'
pear In tbJ February lasue of Ladlu
Home Journal 11y1 ht ii aeekfnc "an
alternative to death'• and wants his body
qulck-rroun after he dies so he can be
brought to life later.
The article is a condensed versio n of a
forthcoming book, "My Life And Opi-
nions," purportedly by Hughes and edited
by novelist Robert P. EatOtl.
''This meaos that the equipment and
the capsule in which bis body will be kept
must be near at haod, and tha~ trusted
and capable technicians must be readily
available," said Eaton.
He quoted Hughes as saying, "I have
taken and will continue to take such
steps."
Eaton .said Hughes cut himself off from
society mainly because he feared
physic~) assault or kidnaping for ransom ..
He pictured Hughes as a scrawoy, deaf,
aging man who looked like a tall Ho Chi
Minh at their last meeting in Las Vegas
in 1970.
He !!laid visitors were searched for
weapons electronically and sterilized for
germs by ultraviolet rays.
Among other disclosures in the article
was that Hughes' interest in women
never seemed to be prurient but was con·
centrated on their personalities.
Eaton said Hughes thought Ava
Gardner the most sensitive, intelligent
woman he bad known.
Publication of the account was blocked
briefly by an injunclion·obtained by the
ume Nevada company · that is fight ing
pubtlcatlon of outbor Clilford Irvins'•
book. The lhjunctlon wu dluolved Sltur·
day and a htorlos sot for today,
Irving 1ald ln a television intervlew
Sunday night that Hughes lives in "a
James Bond setup," once hired a man to
sample his medicines before be took
them and started a card file rating
everyone he met for cleanliness.
Irving said Katharine llepburn, one of
the actresses Hughes was friendly with In
the 1930s and 40s, particularly Impressed
him . He quoted Hughes as saying, "She
was a very clean woman who wed to
bathe three or four times a day and she
always told me I was divine. And I kind
of liked that."
Irving said Hughes at one time kept the
file card system on friends and
associates and it had "a classification A,
B, C, D, -and that rangtd from rilthy,
moderately dirty, dirty and moderately
clean."
He said Hughes wore ralse beards,
mustaches and wigs to the secret
meetings at which he tape recorded his
autobiography. Irving aaid Hughes told
him he wore disguises because "there are
always people looking for me •nd there's
a price on my head.''
"There's a James Bond setup here
that's out of the worst possible detective
novel you could ever read," Irvine said.
Time Maga:tlne publish~ an intervie\f
Sunday with Irving in which he was ask·
ed why Hughes told him hi! life 1tory.
"The man is in the last decade of bis
life," Irving said. "He believes be bas
been maligned, lied about. He has receiv·
ed a bad press. As be said himself, he
wanted 'to restore the balance.' "
OAll Y P ILOT 11111 rtte•
THEY DUG UNSUCCESSFULLY UNTIL THEIR HANDS WERE RAW
Lisa CroiMtt1, J1n1 Campbell, Marcia Mon roe
Dock Strike Resumes Can't "Dig ·Jt'
I
As Talks Break Down
Students Give Vp Fossil Search
'
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of tilt Dtllr '11•1 lt•tt
Bank in El Toro, whose property is ad-
jacent to a construction site.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Longshoremen resumed a strike at 24
West Coast ports today after negotiators
failed to reach a settlement. Negotiation
sessions broke off but the union said they
would be resumed later at an un-
From Pagel
VIOLENCE ...
reduce the possibility of causing violence.
"The reade rs of this re1>4?rt will find In
it evidence relevant to answering 11uch
questions, but far short of an answer,"
the committee said. "The state of present
knowledfe does not permit an agreed
answer.'
The committee said the rate of violent
episodes on TV remained constant at
about eight per hour between 1967 and
1969.
"The nature of violence did change.
Fatalities declined and the proportion of
leading characters engaged in violence or
killing declined," the report said.
However, it said, violence increased
between 1967 and 1969 in carto&ns and
comedies, and cartoons were the most
violent type of TV program in that
period.
The committee said that while it did
find a relationship between violence on
the screen and aggressive beha vior by
some children the evidence also sug-
gested that "the effect is small compared
with many other possible causes such as
parental attitudes or knowledge of and
experience with the real violence of our
society."
In a news conference, Steinfeld went
beyond his cautiously worded written
statement to say, "This study is not a
whitewash. For the first time it identiries
the casual connection between violence
on TV and subsequent aggressi\'e
behavior by children."
From Pagel
CRASHES • • •
Highway Patrol said.
Smith and Pease, were killed when
their car overturned on the NewPOrt
Freeway early Sunday. In Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital with major injuries
incurred in the same accident are the
dr iver or the car, Henry A. Gonzales, 19,
Garden Grove, and Brian Mendonca, 17,
also of Garden Grove.
Mrs. Wykoff died at Palm Harbor
Hospital, Garden Grove, Sunday night,
four hours after being injured in a two-
car accident. Police said she was driving
north on Harbor Boulevard when her car
collided with a pickup truck driven by
Thomas A. Ver Panek, 24, Santa Ana.
Santa Ana police are searching for the
driver of a white van that struck and kill-
ed the Rodriquez boy at Bristol and 3rd
Streets Saturday night.
The 1'1onroe child was killed in La
Palma Saturday when hit by a car on
Orangethorpe Avenue near Moody Street.
The Ralstead boy "" fala!ly Injured in
La Habra SUnday afternoon when he
reportedly ran into the street and was
1truck by a car.
Crenshaw, a Navy aaltor was de1d on
arrival at Los Alamitos General Hospital1
Saturday morning after hit eastbound car
• ran off Westminster Boulevard in., Seal
Beach, one half .mile east of Studebaker
Road.
Callfornfa Highway Patrol officen said
Watkins died near Lancoster after pulling
hl1 car into the oppoeite lane to pus, and
collldlpg with the car of a Riverside ma.n.
John McKnight, U, Rivenide, his
daushters. Charlotte, 11; Jeanette. II,
Ind bis IOD. David, •• Wert Ill critically
injured In the crollh.
'l'h<I county's weekend dealb toU
brou1bl tho 1m au1o fauilly lJat to u
names, MYID ahead of 117111 cam11e.
determined time.
The first orders to resume picketing
came .1t San Francisco and Loi Angtles-
1ong Beach harbors alter an I a.m.
(Psr) deadline expired.
Harry Bridges, president al the
Interna tional Longshoremen's and
Warehousemen's Union, emerged from
bargaining sessions that had run through
the night to announce:
.. The strike officially rtsumed at B a.m.
th is morning, although we exerted all ef·
forts we could at this time to try to settle
it."
Pickets appeared alm a st
simultaneously shortly after I a.m. at
piers on tbe Sao Francisco waterfront
after the chief dispatcher at JLWU Loca'I
10 told some 300 men in a hiring hall to
resume picketing "and tie it up."
About the time, John Pandora, head of
the big 2,flOO..member ILWU local in Los
Angeles and Long BeacltwaS saying: "M
far as we're concerned, the strike .is on.
We're dispatchin~ pickets now ." The
Nixon administration has warned it would
ask Congress lo intervene and direct a
settlement of any renewal of the walkout
that shut ports for 100 days last year.
Negotiators for the union and the
employer, Pacific Maritime Association,
met throughout the weekend a n d
overnight today in joint and separate
sessions with J . Curtis Counts, director of
the Federal Mediation and COnciliation
Service.
"This is the only strike I haven't been
able to crack," said C.ounls. "This is one
of the. toughest ones. They've been argu·
ing this one for 14 months."
The strike began last JuJy 1. It was
halted Oct. 6 by a Taft-Hartley injunction
providing for a cooling-off period of s>
days which expired Christmas Day.
Counts then obtained PMA and ILWU
consent to continue dock work under a
temporary agreement which first ran to
Jan. 10 and then was extended through
Sunday.
The students dug with the intensity of
'•Sers looking for gold.:
They worked until their hands were
callused, their bacb ached and dirt
covered their clothes.
But the earth refused to give up its
secret.
And today the San Clemente High
School sicence staff decided to give up
the search for a fossil that might haye
been millions of years old.
The students heard about the fossil
from Tom Winget, president of _Missioa
From Pagel
DONALD ...
claims It has exclusive rights to Hughes'
autobiography, has filed suit to bar
publication of Irving's book by McGraw·
Hill Publishing C.o. and its serialization in
Life magazine. A hearing in the case
b set for Wednesday.
The McGraw-Hill book has been
described by the publisher as Hughes'
autobiography, taken from interviews
that Irving, as coUaborator, taped witb
Hughes.
Irving talked about the loan during an
Interview with Mike Wallace on the CBS
television "60 Minutes" program.
The late columnist Drew Pearson first
reported the loan shortly before the 1960
election. Pearson said Hughes made the
unsecured loan to Donald Nixon in 1956,
while Richard Nixon was Vice President\
and afterward-Hughes' problems with
various governmental agencies were eas-
ed.
The Pearson story was termed a
"smear'' by Nixon's campaign manager.
Donald Nixon said he sought the loan
through his friend, lawyer Frank J .
Waters, then a lobbyist for Hughes, in an
unsuccessful effort to aave his chain of
restaurants. He said the loan was secured
by his mother's lot in Whittier, Calif.
Why pay 5150 for a l/4 Carat
Diamond when you can buy the
Diamond from us for just s75 ?
We lillYe tile ExpertiM
bowew alMI badrg101Hd • hi ..._ ,_ liow hi ICIQ
• yow Cluao1d lne .. 1-.ir.
The owner of lhe property, digginlil a
drainage ditch with his tractor 20 years
ago, had struck a hard surface and had
jumped ofr his tractor to go back and 1ee
what it was.
The blade had chipped the material
which appeared to be a bone. The fanner
(known only as "Mr. Stevens,").picked
up the bone part, noted where the fossil
was, and continued his wOrk.
Making a few inquiries, the .farmer
thought nothing more about it until the
land was sold to the Alexander Haagen
firm which is building the Town and
Country Shopping Center on the site.
The former land owner brought the
fossil to Winget who immediately called
the high school science staff,
From then on it was like a treasure
bunt.
The former owner ttlought he recalled
where the spot was because it had been
near a eucalyptus tree. He pointed it out
to Winget who in tum showed it to the
eager science students.
Friday afternoon they dug until their
hands bled but found nothing.
A bu_lldoder operator agreed to removs
fill din-so they could start on a ground
level, so on Saturday they continued the
search.
A group of La Habra science studenta
came to watch for a while but dido 't offer
to help.
Some went back Sunday to continue to
dig but their efforts were in vain.
Winget said the developers of the land
had indicated a willingness to rope off the
section so the dig <X1uld continue, but the
science staff decided to give up because
the location can't be pinpointed and
might even be under Wlnget's bank.
Examining the existing piece of fM.!lil,
the science staff had thought It to be part
of a whale rib. Many whale fc&ils hav e
been discovered in the Saddleback Valley.
Some date 15 mi\llon years back, to ths
miocene period.
It will be up to future generations to
discover this one.
OUR MOST
UNUSUAC
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
COME IN AND SEE'
WHAT WI HAYE JO OFFll
IOI aacm
Jr4 ·-·-· r. DI•••• • When -bvy • c11 ..
mond fr .... U1 ... Will
.DN111111M1 c..ier ,.,. o..,...e c-"'•
COSTA MllA .llWILRY & LOAN °"'" Daill/ • lo ' 1131 NIWPOIT ILYD.
C-In Giid B,..... Arotllld
...... 646-7741
' 1 uar1nt1ethatdl•
mond te •ppr•I• 11
40% MORE thin .,..
poltl for It or ,...,,.
-IN<k.C"')l9U
do " w•H al• ..... rat
CDM~Alt l.
I
·-
.
. Huntington Beaeh
Valle1
r . .
Fountain . I . N.Y. Steeb
.VO~. 65, NO. 1-4,. 3 SECTIONS, 36 PA&ES OAAN6E COUNTY, CAL1FORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY ·17, ·'1972 '
' TEN CENTS
Students Pitch In on Huntington Park Plans
Bfl\UDI NIEDZIEUiKI 'I
Of .. °'"' , ... lwt •
Stl\(lents fr<im · GOiden W'eot College ~e ~ to parlii:IP"!te Jn ;11.uhtlqt<in
Beach's future by ullstlng city offldab
with park aeveldpment.: ·
Their fiat projec:I; I picolc obelter
· dealgn, will be buil~!hor:t\Y '•l ·Arevalos
Park, one 'ol .32 nelah!>orhOod park sites
beiJ)g de\>etoped by the cll,v, ' > •CLl.LL".• .,..;,;_.._.,. 1 · d j ~~·-.. ~. 1 u en .s worked flil":mote t!ian' t\\oo manlbt. ll!O'~ .
TUioPlanes ' . '"
Tangle Up
-·
ln MUl-air · ·
A pair of private planes tangled Jn mid-
air Sl.turday over Fountain Valley'& Mile
Sqdare Pirk. • but the . pllots ol both
managed to laod their damaged crafl
aafe[y. · · · ' · · · · ·
Oh• of the planes WIJ flown.by I SIU·
dtnl· pilot from COsla Mesa:
Spokesmen · for tl1e Federal · A v!ation
Agency (FAA) in Los Aqeles said both
planei landed safely on theli bonie ftelds
af\er the 10:49 a.m. colliil911.
The Costa Mesa pilot was idenufied as
Billy J.'Valeocla, 24, of 36t 17tb SL, Col\a
Mesa. Valencia is a former Army
hellcopler pilot ·and had been takh!i in-
1triiction from James F. 'Wallin, 411116
GmnaJnder ,Rotil, Irvinf.
'The pllOI " .,. lhe ~ plane, .....
. ~~.JZ.,ol ·ll.acJmda µeJibll.
' . '. '.. ' . ru __ ,.pi•·~ u..,.~
tocalftd'\ ~ "'"""' a.i Illa iilbor Jlibt Wini dmn•p. ·. ' . .
~ kiijiilil'ldt Omaa1"'"11 it """ertoQ Alria!f ...... ValmcW ..... ·bla ~ . a..;;ue ~ . Ofoiiia , ~
AirpoH.1 • ' I, .'.
'l'he .lncldenl' 11 bellil"hrmt/P'*I by FM officials ·In 141( lleacti. . · .
I
Suffers Shinning
Election Def eat . . , . .
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -PNldent
Salvador At-'has suffered ' -... setbaC~ In \Wo)peclal .,..,.,...._ ei...
tloos, . bbl 1111 ' IOIUst · PopJlir \Jlllly
go"'""'*t i:tlied the results Ollly "'a
1T1n1llory defeat."
T1iJ ~--1tlen llld Ibo ,_...-.par11e. each md\ld btlllnll •
lincl& Cllldldlta .In Sanday'1 -""'!
Q for·l l!onlt.IU!, lllt alhtr for I -
Ill.the Qiam.ber of Deplllel.
Oppollllon candidate llalael -· •
Cbrtatlan -·~ -tbe-ei... lion In· Ollchqua ad O'Hlalu pro. •mca,Jllll-oe~g . -. to l8,Sll for Bae
OlJYFll, · ,
In the elecllon tor dOputy In Llalm
--.. fartller "' .. 1111111, .....
IJlu, I -Plf'1 --· ileloofed lllria llJua llorJ .., I .. cl .....
21,ta.
lr«111 their own Ume, preparing render·
irip, models and analyl1ni site use,
•truc!ure and costs. "II was a real problem, and we handled
It like tt would . be done if the students
were,employed In u architect's ollice,"
said Edward Mulder, who along with·
Gerald Volpe, teaches architectural
tecllnology.
1be -of Golden. Wtst COtlege
lludenta may alao be ulilli:ed ln other
arQs, 'IUCb ·as the development of nature
UPI,.......
.TALKS ABOUT HOWARD
Gholt Writer Irving
•
trails and lral\ IUldea by blology students. Buatnooo otudenta could help
prepare guJdel1-for ·concealona con-
tracts and fine 'lf!a studeota cquld
delcrihe art project.I •Jn lhe -central
library and cullunl cenltt.
"What we're talk.lDc about ls 1 rela·
tionsltip extending over eeveral years,"
said Tom Severns, dev·~lop.ment
coordinator for lhe Clly of Hunltnglon
Beacb.
Advantages of ·lhe joint effort.mend
beyond students, teachers, and city ad·
mlnlstrators. Ultimately the taxpayers
are apected to hehefit alnce the aluclents
do tbelr work free of charge.
Work hy the architectural tecbnology
students started In the fall. following
several months of d1'cuslloa between
Severns, City Recreallon Dlm:lor Nonn
Wartby and college offlclata.
1be wlnntng deligners, Grtg Benton,
Colla M-. and Ben Antell and Pal
Beedey, hotb of Huntington Beach, 1uh-
milted '. tbelr :plans to . the Huntington
Bea~ Rec.reatJon and Parka Commission
la.sl WedDesday night.
C.Omirusaloiiers atJecfed Benton's work
from the three because. of US simplicity,
reasonable cost. and sultablllty to the site
and pmailhig wind.
"II sliowed a great deal of thought In
terms of the site, and how · to ac·
commodata ' large and . small famil y
g?OOps,'.' Severns 11id, i
,Tom Cooper, vice-chairdian or the com-
mission. praised all three designs and
said he hoped the other two designs could
be retained and considered for other park sites.
The three designs will now go to the
city's Design Review Board for final in-
spection.
Btnton's design, If approved by the
board, wlll then enter the working draw·
ings and specificatiol15 stage. Then comes
construction, on--tbe--site superviaion With the contractor.
1,500 J ·ohsinBeach
•
Douglas Announces Transfer Plans
Transfer of 1.SOO jobs lo the Huntington
Beach ·plant of the McDoonelt Douglas
Astronautics company has been an-
nounced by company olflcials.
The office of Strategic Defense pro.
grams and supporting sWf will be
trlnsferred from Santa Monica beginning
thil weekend, said Walter Cleveland,
director of external relations. Several
other prsjects which cannot I><; tdulilied
•
because they are classified will also be
moved tp Huntington Belch. he said.
Cleveland cited "efficiency · 1 n d
economy" as the .......,. for the transfer.
Cleveland · stressed, howtver, that .. the transfer of 1,500 jcihs· did not nece.sarily
mean .that J,500 more. people would be
htred. He said that existing personnel at
the Huntu\gton Beach plant might absorb
some' ol'tbe 'new j!)b functions, and also
that many people would move to Hun·
~
SC!lendfc Report
tington Besch from Santa Monica.
'lllere are cumntly &,ltio employed by
Douglu tn Huntington Beacb.
The lllOll. Important ol the project•
being transferred, a cc or d I n 1 · 10
Cleveland, ts the Spartan long·ranp tu.
terceptor missile PfOll'sm. lJellp and"
assembly of that missile will be -111 Huntington Beach, Cleveland said.
The transfers are not related to the
space shuttle project, he said.
Television V inlence
... .... C:.•lit
Nlgbl and momlng low cloacll
are on the agenda again tor ~
day, clearing by mfd.momlng to
hazy wnshlne. Hlghs Tuetday Ill
al the coast rtaln1 to 15 Inland.
Lows tonight II lo 41.
INSm ETODAY
The major IJNlbitlna of lodcv'•
1o<1c1w ••• b<ing tackled bv a oroup of otrOIJXI" ioorktr1
headqoarttrtd In HUftttngton
Beach. Ser Poge 29.
L. M,. _, 14 ... ti.. ,.
CM...._ 11 c*'""' ,,_,,. . c-... • -. DMfll ,...._ lJ ..-w ..... . ...... ...... " ·-... .......... " ..... hi ..
•• ......,, 11
-n ... .............. .... c:..r ,,,,. -.. . ...._ ....... ..
-n -. :;... ,;
_,.. -IJ.tt --..
-
•• . , •
I DAil v r1LDT H
Danger Aleris·
• Street Trouble SfH>ts PinfH>inted
a,. RUDI NJEDZIEl.'ID cldenta will occur and hopeflally do
• .. .,., ,..., .,,,. 10methlnc aboUt prevenUn1 them.
Jf you're hurt In a traffic accident in 'Jbe machinery, acoordlnJ to SCL
HunUngton Beach, you will become a Robert Flck'.le, digests information from
1tatisUc. But you may also prevent som&o traffic reports such u JocaUon, time of
one else from joining you in the day, weather and citations.
holpltal. At a moment's notice, the computer
A new program or computerized can spin back inrormation about the trou·
record-keeping by traffic officers from .. ble spots in the city. Jf, for example, the
the Huntington Beach Police Department retords show that a majority of accidents
can tell instantly where the action has at an intersection involve north-bound
been on city st.reels. traffic turning west and south·bound traf·
From this information In vestigator• lie: going straight, a left tum pocket
can almost predict where the next IC· might be needed.
l'rona Page 1
DONALD ...
Waters. then a lobbyist for Hughes, in an
unsuccessful effort to save his chain of
restaurants. He said the loan was secured
by biJ mother's Jot in Whittier, Calif.
Donakt Nixon said he never asked his
brother to do anything for him or anyone
else. He said that a gas station was built
on the lot and that it was worth '228,000
when it was finally given in payment for
the loan.
In Beverly Hilts, Calif., Dietrich,
former head ol Hughes Tool, and an aide
to Hughes from J925 to 1957, also con·
finned that the loan was made but said
Clifford had no knowledge of it "because
It wu handled by a lawyer who worked
for the Hughes Tool Co.
"The Joan was made for working
capital for the operation of the restaurant
in Whittier," Dietrich said in a telephone
interview. "It wasn't made for a chain,
thoulh he (Donald NiJ:on) was tryinft to bu.HO another restaurant at the time.
San Francisco attorney Belli said the
mon ey was transferred in the form ot a
mortgage payment to Donald Nixon and
hi! mother, accordiJg to the Journal-
Herald story.
The newspaper reported that Belli said
be wa.s .,the attorney for Phillip Reiner, a
Hughes accountant whose name was used
on the Joan and who subsequently 11ued
for defamation of character over the use
of hil name. Belll said the suit was set·
tJed out or court.
2 More Solons
Accused by Russ
' MOSCOW (AP) -The government
newspaj>e.r lzvestia accustd two U.S.
Republican congressmen today o f
violating the rules of Soviet hospitality
while on a tour here to study Soviet
.education.
" ·A third: member of the tourinr group,
Rep. James H. Scheuer, a New York
Democret, was ordered expelled Crom the
SoYiet Union last week alter meeting
with Soviet Jews seeking to leave for
Israel. (See earlier story, Page 4)
In en article on the tour o( the seven-
member House subcommittee on
education, Izvestia charged that Rep.
Alphonzo Bell of California met privately
with critics of the So~iet government. Jt
!aid Rep. Earl Landgrebe of Indiana
distributed religious materials.
Disaster Averted
In truiser Test
Melvin Woody of Pomona probably will
not buy the 34·foot cruiser Tiburon after
a weekend trial run nearly ended in
disaster.
Woody and six othe rs took the vessel
for a run to Catalina Island over the
weekend, then late Sunday issued a may
day distress call.
One of the craft's twin engines was
ablaze as the vessel lay idle south of San
Clemente Island.
Coast Guard spokesmen said the boat
was towed to Its berth at Wilmington to-
day by an unidentified fishin6 boat.
Of.Mal COASt
DAILY PILOT
CllWfOI!! COA$T PUILmmCQ CflMPU'f
"•"•"* N. Wo.d Pr."*1and NMW.
J1clc R. C.T.,-VD "*"'"' _. ~I .......
ni •••• K11T1I ._
thMH A. Mw,JiT ..
MHll!se IE41tor
A1111 DirkT•
An accident frequency report, also
available at a touch of a bulton. will show
when aceidents happen. From th is ir.-
formation the traffic officers can be
deployed at the right times and on the
right days in an effort to reduce accident
frequency. -,
Records of highest citation locations
give investigators a better Idea of where
Jaw violations occur and can aid in ad·
justing speed limits, correcting hazards,
and getting patrolmen to the troubled
areas. •
In addition, the computer keeps ac-
curate records wh ich will be used in
deciding basic policy of the police depart·
ment, developing division budgets, and In
planning accident prevention programs
months in advance.
Sgt. Fickle said the new program costs
about as much as manual record keeping,
but that it has the advantage of providing
immediate and accurate inrormation for
use not only by police, but by engineers
and administrators as well.
Huntington Beach's automated record
system is being operated under 1 $129,000
federal grant. The pclice department
.shares in the expenses to the tune o{
$88,000.
Fr~m Page 1
VIOLENCE ...
persons and groups concerned about the
effects of viewing television ."
The committee said the "key question"
is how television could be changed to
reduce the possibility of causing violence.
"The readers of thls report will find in
it evidence relevant to answering such
questions, but Car short of an answer ,"
the committee said. "The state of present
knowledge does not permit an agreed
answer."
The committee said the rate of violent
episodes on TV rema~ed constant at
about eight per hour between 1967 and
1969.
"The nature of violence did change.
Fatalities declined and the proportion of
leading characters engaged in violence or
killing decl ined," the report said.
However, it said, viol~e Increased
between 19S7 and 1969 in cartoons and
comedies, and cartoons were the most
violent type of TV program In that
period.
The committee said that while it did
find a relationship between violence on
the screen and aggre!live behavior by
some children the evidence al.so ru g·
· gested that "the effect is small compared
with many olhi.~ possible causes such as
parental attltudt • or knowledge of and
experience with Lhe real violence of our
society."
In a news conference, Steinfeld went
beyond his cautiously worded written
statement to say, "This study is not a
whitewash. For the first time it identifies
the casual connection between violence
on TV and subsequent aggressive
behavior by children."
Steinleld said, "lf we had had this
kind of infonnaliow 10 or 20 years ago
we would have been far ahead of the
game."
He said the report Hshould provide the
basis for intelligent acUon'1 b,Y the: Fed·
eral Communications Commission, the
TV networks and Congress.
Man Sells Kids ,
Robbed, Slain
MANILA (U PI) -A farmer who sold
his seven children was robbed or the
money he received for them , then was
killed by the bandits, police said today.
·The farmer. TeOOorico Oosdos, 35, sold
his ctiildren for about $50 each after his
wife died while giving birth to their
sevl'!nth child recently. Police said armed
robbers Friday went to Dosdos' straw hut
at Zamboanga del Sur in the southern
Philippines, took tile money he had
received for the children, and then shot
him to death.
'
,.. . -· •
•
..
Slalom Solon
•
\
,, •
• •
' A bundled up Congressman Paul McC!oskey (R-
Calif.) enjoys some skiing with his wife Caroline
(right) and a ski instructor at Waterville Valley in
New Hampshire. Mccloskey took time out from his
campaign swing, through the Granite State to hit
the Waterville slopes.
I ran Discloses
Ki.dnaping Plot
For U.S. Envoy
I TEHRAN, Iran (AP ) -Four Com-
munists trained in Iraq tried to kidnap
U.S. Ambassador Douglas MacArthur JI
and his wile last November as they were
returning home from a dinner party, a
government spokesman reported today.
The Communists planned to hold the
MacArthurs as hostages for political
prisoners held by the government, .a
spokesman for the security !orces said.
MacArthur, at the time, told a ques·
tionlng newsman that he had been in an
accident but gave no details. The em-
bassy in a statement today said it kept
quiet at the government's request so Jn·
vestlgation would not be hampered.
The statement said it was confirmed
that four armed men in two cars stopped
the ambassador's automobile and fired
shots at the car as the embassy driver,
on orders of the ambassador, sped away.
The assailants, the statement said, shot
at the car and attempted to break the
window with an a.1 but were un suc·
cessful.
The would·be kidnapers were captured.
The gang leader, Sohrab Nehavandi,
confessed and he and four other gang
members are awaiting trial among 120
other members of three communist
groups captured during the past 10
months the government said.
The embassy said that since the "ac-
cident" the embassy received complete
cooperation from government of Iran for
arranging security for the amba ssador
and the mission.
The embassy spokesman denied reports
that Ambassador MacArthur resigned
because of too-tight security measures .
He said the ambassador has served for
more than 24 years and resigned for
personal reasons. He is due to leave
Tehran in February.
Laguna Thefts Probed
Laguna Beach pclice are investigating
the the.ft of $600 worth of stereo equip--·
ment and leather jackets from a
residence.
Officers said Beth E. Helfman, of 567
Catalina $t., reported the items missing
Sunday night when she returned home.
Investigators determined -that thieves
entered the locked house through a Jiving
room window to remove the stereo and
(our jackets.
Israelis Round Up Rebels
,
In Fatal Attack on Truck
GAZA CITY, Israeli-Occupied Gaza
Strip (UP I) -Israeli troops rounded up
15 Arab guerrillas (or questioning today
in connectio n with 4n ambush Sunday
that killed an American nurse and
wounded an American Baptist minister
and his daughler.
Guerrillas attacked a Baptist hospital
truck near here Sunday night, firing a
burst of submachinegun fire that killed
Mavis Pate, 46, of Ringgold, La., and
"-'Ounded Roy Edward Nicholas, fl, of
Austin, Tex., and his daught,er 1 Carol
Beth; !7'. . Ii . I
Spokesmen said about 50 bullets were
fired at the truck.
The suspei::ts were rounded up after oc·
Lost Explorers
Reported Slain
LIMA, Peru (AP) -Two Indian youths
~ave t'Old officials that members of their
primitive tribe killed three explorers -
two Frenchmen and an American -
missing for 17 months in the jungles of
southeastern Peru.
The Glory was revealed Wednesday by
Father Adolfo Torralba, head of a Roman
Catholic mission at the jungle community
of Shintuya, in a report to church of-
ficials in Lima.
Officials believe the story told by the
two youths may explain the disap--
pearance of Robeit Nichols, 29, of Los
Angeles, and Serge Debru, 29, and
Geraud Puel, 31, both of Paris.
Nichols, a correspondent for the Peru·
vian Times, a1 English language maga .
zine published in Lima; De:bru and Pue!
have not been heard from since mid·
September of 1970.
cupation authorities combed the Jebaliya
refugee camp. The ambush took place
outside the camp's southern entrance on
the.main raod through the Gaza Strip.
Local military authorities said they
believed the attack was a mistake. Guer·
rillas, they said, may have mistoken the
hospital van for an army vehicle in fog
and darkness.
They said it was the first guerrilla ac·
tion of it& kwt in nearly a year.
Israel occupied the formerly Egyptian
Gaza Strip during the June, 1967, Middle
Elst war.
Miss Pate had been an operating
theater nurse a't Gaza City's Baptist
hospital since 1970. Nicholas has been the
hospital's administrator since his arrival
in Gaza City In 1958.
The car was a Volkswagen double-<:abin
truck.
The sources said the Israeli authorities
took the three Americans by helicopter to
the central Negev hbspital in Beersheba.
Miss Pale died on the operating table of
head injuries. Nicholas suffered .thigh and
lower abdomen injuries, but was not on
the critical list , and his daughter was on-
ly slightly Injured.
Hospital sources said Defense Minister
Moshe Dayan flew to the hospital loon
after learning about the incident and
chatted to the wounded minister in the
emergency ward.
They said hospital authorities called
the Baptist center in Richmond, Va., to
arrange for Miss Pate's body to be flown
for burial in the United States.
Military sources said Nicholas was
returning his three daughters to the
AmeriCan school at Klar Shmaryahu on
the outskirts of Tel Aviv when the am·
bushers struck. Miss Pate accompanied
him on the trip .
Gria Year. -
Not Over;
Gals Play
The ladles from Eslancla High School
In Costa Mesa and Edlaon High in Hu&
tington Beach, will lake a few whacks at
each other the ne.1t two weeks on the
, · footbaU field -for charily.
Junior glrls will tangle with Uie seniors
of thelr respective schools this wetkend1
and the winners and losers will clash the
follow ing weekend.
Game time is 1:30 p.m., Saturday for
the Edison j:irls and I p.m. for Estancia's
groups with both games played at
Newport Harbor Hlgh's Davidson Field.
Tickets are $1 for adult.!, 50 cents for
children under 12 and 75 cent! for
students with ASB cards. All proceeds 10
to Fairview State Hospltsl.
Last year· the girls raised $1,300 for
Fairview with a aimllar set o( contests
between Estancia and C:Osta Mesa High.
Game times for the Jan. 29 contes t -
matching Estancia's winners against
Edison's champs, as well as each losing
team -will also be 6:30 p.m. and I p.m.,
at Davidson Field.
Members of each school's varsity foot·
ball team art coaching the girls for the
Powder puff bowl. Use of the 1tadlum ha s
been donated free to help the charity
cause.
Jan. 26 Hearing
Set to Deci.de
Plant Authority
A formal conference to determine H
the next Public Utlllties Commission ha1
jurisdiction to act on charges that th1
San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station ii
unsafe will be held in Los Angeles Jan.
26.
PUC spckesman said that leaders of
the People 's Lobby which brought the
charges late last year would join in the 10
a.m. tal~s in the State building in Los
Angeles .
The statewide conservation group has
asserted that some systems at the
generating plant wouid be unsafe In a
severe earthquake. The group formally
petitioned for official PUC hearings on
the charges.
Next week's talks will be held in room
107 before officers of the commission and
will dwell primarily on jurisdiction.
The Lobby's aUeg.a.Uons are the latest
in a series of setbacks against Southern
Calilornia Edison Company and San
Dlego Ga1 and Electric C.Ompany in their
joint ownership and planning ol the
Onofre Nuclear complex.
Since the environmental group filed of~
ficial briefs on the safety charges, the
utilities have answered with documents
rebutting the asserted safety hazards.
The complex ha s as its closest nei1hbor
the Western While House two miles up
coast in San C1emeale.
The utilities already have admitted that
plans for two more reactors costing a
half billion dollars are hopelessly delayed
and additional fossil-fuel plants will be
built elsewhere to take care of future
power demands.
Delays In the reactor projects came
about after a federal court heaped the
responsibility for environment onto the
Atomic Engergy Q:mmlssion.
The AEC also required earthquake
1afety reevaluations of the reactor plans
as well as reports on the safety of the e.1·
isting reactor.
Magnate Heller Dies
µJS ANGELES (AP) -Maurice L.
Heller, 78, founder and fonner vice-pre1i-
dent of Swank, Inc., died Sunday.
Wilt or... (auQt'( £dltar
Hllllblf•• ..... Oflk4t
17171 ...U loidtw&nl
M1ttr11 AU,_, PA hr. 7t0, t2641
'Sister Euzz' to Fight
Why pay 5150 for a 1/4 Carat
Diamond when you can buy the
Diamond from us for just 5~5? --t....-._.., ...... ,. ....
ca .. -... • '=5!'T....,. .........,...,_ ....... a.a-aa ... a~.., Suspensinn From Force
GRANITE CTY, Ill . (AP) -"! cer-
tainly am going to fight this ," a Catholic
nun known as "Sister Fuzz" 11y1 of a
decision to suspend her lndefinHely
without pay lrom the Pontoon Beach
Police Department.
Sistu A1ary Cornella Hawk ins, who
was a gup-toting juvenile officer with the
small lorce. learned of the decision at St.
Elizabeth's Hospital, where she Is beli'lg
treated tor virus pneumonia.
"They didn't discuss this with me. J
had no idea they were to do this," Sister
C:Omelia said Friday night She earned
the nickname "Sister ruu:ll from youths
In Pon100n Beocfl, a 1111burb of St. Loula.
Thursday nJ&hl the v1Ua8' board ol
trustees l11ued Ibo 1uspen1lon on 1round1
Sisttr C.melll bad violated police
regulations by attending a Nov. D meeting~
of local government officials and a
member of the Madison COunty grand
jury.
The meeting was followed by a grand
jury investigation of alleged irregularities
in Pontoon Beach, Including charges of
gambling and narcotics use. The jury ex·
onerated the village after several weeks'
investigation.
Sisler Cornelia appeared belore the
grand jury. She has been at odds wilh
police officials over law enforcement
practices.
Tnislee Dean Rocheoler aald the 46-
.year-old nun can appeal the 1uspenslon.
He 11ld a hearing would be scheduled "11
aoon 11 lhe feels she would UU to
present her cue to the police com-
mllaion ...
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We have the • .&pertise
bow-flow _. badl9l'OllllCI
to show yoa how to SGY•
on J011f •unOUICI lnYeslment.
COME IN AND' SEI
WHAT ~ HAVE TO OFRR
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Jf'll•-·-"" .. DI••••
Dlc-tul Ce.ter IM" Or ... e Ce•ats
COSTA MESA 'IWILRY 6. LOAN
09f1t Dailr • 1o •
1131 NEWPORT ILYD.
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OUR M.Ost
UNUSUAC ,
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE .
• \¥'-you My a di•
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mond lo 1ppr1IM 11
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tlo n well tl•alwef
COM,Altl.
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IRVING PRODUCES HIS PROOF OF HUGHES' EXISTENCE
Author Shows 2 Note• He S.yo Wore Written by Howud
Hughes Freeze?
Article Bares Recluse's Plan
NEW YORK (UPI) -An article about
recluse billionaire Howard Hughes to a~
pear in the February issue of Ladies
Home Journal says he is seeking "an
alternative to death" and wants h1s body
quick-frozen after he dies so he can be
brought to life later.
The article is a condensed version of a
forthcoming book, "My Life And Opi·
nlon!," purportedly by Hughes and edited
by novelist Robert P. EatOll.
''This means that the equipment ind
the capsule in whi ch his body will be kept
must be near at hand, and that truJted
and capable technicians must be readily
available," said Eaton.
He quoted Hughes as saying, "I have
taken and will continue to take such
steps."
Eaton said Hughes cut himself off from
soclety mainly because he feared
physical assault or kidnaping for ransom.
He pictured Hughes as a scr awny, deaf,
Bging man who looked like a ·tall Ho Chi
Minh at their last meeting in Las Vegas
in 1970. t
He said visitors were searched for
weaj)Ons e1ectronica1ly and sterilized for
Boy to Reirnburse
Funeral Expense
· CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) - A 15-year-
old boy arrested after a teen-age 'girl was
found dead of z: drug overdose in August
was ordered to reimburse her parents for
the cost of her funeral.
Juvenile Court JUdge Be n j a m i n
Schwartz said Thursday: ''U the young
man had money to pay for drugs, he
'should have money to pay for the
funeral."
Steven Farmer, 15, Southgate, Ky.,
pleaded guilty to possession •Of a
hallucinogen. Schwartz lined him ISO and
placed him on probation.
Carolyn Walker, 16, Highland Helghts,
Ky., was found dead in an apartment
here Aug. 13. The court said Fanner
gave her the drugs which resulted in her
death.
germs by ultraviolet rays. •
Among other disclosures In the article
was that Hughes' interest in women
never seemed to be prurient but waa con-
centrated on their personalities.
Eaton aaid Hughes thought Ava
Gardner the most &en.slilve, intelligent
woman he had known.
Pub!Jcation of the account was blocked
briefly by an injunction obtained by the
same Nevada company that is fighting
publication of author Clifford Irving's
book. The injunction was dissolved Satur-
day and a hearing set for today.
Irving said In • television Interview
Sunday night that Hughes llvea In "a
James Bond setup," once hired a man to
sample bis medicines before he took
them and started a card file rating
everyone he met for cleanliness.
Irving said Katharine Hepburn, one of
the actresses Hughes WI! friendly with in
·th e 1930s and 40s, particularly impressed
him. He quoted Hughes as saying, "She
was a very clean woman who used to
bathe three or four times a day and she
always told me I was divine. And I kind
of liked that."
Irving sald Hughes al one time kept the
file card system on friends and
as.sociates and it had "a classlflcition A,
B, C, D, -and that ranged from filthy,
moderately dlrly, dlrty and moder•tely
clean."
He said Hughes wore false beards,
mustachel and wigs lo the ...,,.1
meetings at wbich he tape recorded hi!
autobiography. Irving &aid Hughes lold
him he wore disguise.! because "there are
always people looking for me and there's
a price on my bead."
"There's a James Bond setup here
that's out of the worst possible detective
novel you could ever read," Irvine said.
Time Magazine published an lntervle'llf
Sunday with Irving in which he was ask·
ed why Hughes lold him his Ille story.
"The man is in the last decacfe of his
life," Irving said. "He believes he has
been maligned, lied about. He has receiv·
ed a bad press. As he sald hhruell, ho
wanted 'to restore the balance.' "
Mond•r. hn""1 17, 1972 H DAILY PILOT f
West Po.rt Cio-sedown Resumes -,
·Negotiations Break Down; Union Vows t,o · Keep Talking
SAN FRANCi'sco (AP)
Longshoremen resumed a otrll<e at H w .. 1 Cooat port. lod1y olter negotiators
!ailed lo reoclt • .. 1uement. Negotlallon
...,1.., broke ol! but the union sald they
~. he resumed later et an un.
delOrmJned time. · ,
· 'l'ht 'Ont orc1ers 1o rosumo ptcl:etlng
came at sM Ffanclsco and Los Angeles-
, Long Beach harbors after ID I a.m.
(PST) deadllne .Uplred.
Hmy Brtdies, president ol tho
International i..ongshoremen's 1 n d
Warehousemen'• Unl"IJ, =erged from
bargaining session> thal had run through
the night lo 1UU10unce:
"The strike of!ici&lly ruumed at a 1.m.
this morning, olthouih we "'erted all el·
fort.. we could et thla time lo try lo aetlle
It."
PJcket.. appeared almo.1t
1lmultaneoo!ly abortly after I a.m. at
plen on the San Franctsco waterfront
after the chief dispatcher at ILWU Local
10 told 50me 300 men in 1 blrJng hall to
resume pickeUng "and tie it up.''
About the Ume, ·John Pandora, bead of
the big 2,JJOl).memher ILWU locol In Los
Collins Worker
Resigns Rather
ThanFireOthers
CEDAR RAPIDS, low• CAP) -An
electronic engineer for Collini Radio Co.
aays be wu told to select two employes
wbo would lose their jobs, bul he quit hia
own rather than force aomeone elae out.
"I loll my aecurlty and gained my
freedom.'' aald David M. Hodgin, 43, an
engineer at Colllna here !or H yoara.
He was among 550 persons who Jost
jobs al the plant tut week in the latest
set of cutbacks.
The ' father of four children, two of
whom still live at borne, Hodgin an-
nounced his decision at the First Chris·
tian Church's Sunday worship service.
He said be rated the men in his group
and decided -1n terms cf immediate
money·mak!ng potenUal for the radio
manufacturing fll'lll -that his name
should be on the bollom of the list.
He said be hopes to form a corporation
which wou1d be based on "human dignity
and lull participation by everyone
UIOciated with il"
Red Skelton Set
For Retirement
LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP) -Comedian
Red Skelton says he plans to retire soon,
bUt a spokesman says Skell.on doesn't
mean complete retirement.
Skelton, who tw 50 years as a comic
behind him, told a crowd at the HUion
International he planned to retire after a
few more bookings this year.
A spokesman for the 60-year-old
Skelton later sald the comedian planned
to end appearancts on the night club
circuit, but he would not rule out.
television and movie work. ·
Anpl• and Long Boacb WU uylac: "Aa
for u we're coocomed, tho llr!ko 111 on.
We're dllpalchbur picl!oll now.1' 'Ille !'l!aoo admlnlstrafloti bu wll'i>Od it would
ult C<qreu lo lntervena and direct a
oetll-ol any renewol of the walkout
lhal obat poril for 100 cloys Jul yur.
Negotja1<1r1 for tho union and tile
employer, Paclllc Morlllmo .\.-talion,
met throuihout the weekend a n d
overnight lodJy In joint and Rpll'lte
aealons with J, CUrt1s Counll, director ol
TAKES UCI POST
Melvln lern1t1ln
Attorney Named
·To UCI Student
Affairs Position
Melvin H. Bernstein, a political scien-
tist and attorney, has bttn appointed
special assistant to the vice chancellor
for student affair1 at UC Irvine.
Aan<K10cement of the appointment wa1
made by Vice c&ancenor John C. Hoy;
Dr. Bernstein has been a practicing at·
lorney In Beverly Hilla for the put six
years and an assistant profeuor of
political science at Call!om!a state
Polytechnic College In Pomona for two
years.
A graduate o! New York Unlvenlty In
economiCI, Dr. llemlteiD recolved hil
Jaw degree at Harvard University and
the PhD In political sclonce 11 UCLA. He
ls listed in "Who's Who in the West.11
He ii vice president and legal coumel
for the Southern C4llfornil Center for
Education in Public Mfalr1, a
cooperative association of 26 public and
private universities and colleges in
Caltrornia. He will be chairman of a con-
ference lo be held by the organizaUon In
Sacnmenlo Feb. 27-19 at whicb represen.
tatives of the state legillature, executive
branch, mass media and legialative ad·
vocates will serve on paoell and
particlpote In exchanges with student and
faculty delegates.
SUNKIST NAVEL
tho Federal Med!aUon and Concll!allon Service.
"This LI the only strike I haven't been
able to crack, 0 a.aid Counts. 0 Thll 1J one
ol lhe toughest ones. They've been llJ'iU·
tng this one for 14 monlha."
Th• strll<e began lut July 1 .• 11 was
halted Oct. 6 by o Tall-Hartley injunction
providing !or a cooling-oU period ol ao
daya which expired Christmas Day.
Counts then obtained PMA and ILWU
COllleDt to cont1m11 dock work under a
temparary agreement whlch flnt ran to
Jan. !O and then was extended: through
Sunday.
In San Diego~ a single shlp was ln port
when the strike was resumed •
A half-dozen plcketl at the main gate of
the loth Avenue P.farioe Termlnal were
shilled later In the morning lo tbal
wharf.
A union orficial said no mass plckeUng
was planned in San Diego "because there
aren'I any ships In porl !<>he worked."
Perfeet C:Ondltlons
Near RecordSlaught;er;
Nine Countians Killed
Clear weather and nonnal traffic con-
dltionJ failed lo hell highway slaughter
over the weekend in Orange county as
eight persons were killed or succumbed
to earlier accldent injuries.
In another accident, an Orange <"A>unty
resident died in a be•don collls.ion near
Lancuter.
The victims lncluded two Garden Gro ve
leenagon killed when their car rolled
over early SUnday on the Newport
Freeway offramp at Baker street in
Costa Meu. The accident Injured two
buddies riding with them.
The tragic toll includes :
David M. Nees, 24, of 1~ N. Coast
Highway, Llguna Beach.
Cm111 A. Smltb, 17, of 8901 Blossom
Ave., Garden Grove.
Jama L. Peue, 17, of 81192 Blossom
~ve., Garden Grove.
Genevieve Wykoff, fiO, of 2170 S. Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim.
A1lredo llodrlq1Hos, 11, or 304 N. Bristol
Si.. Santa Ana.
JW Moaroe, 4, of 19811 AlexA.Jtder Ave.,
Cerrit.o11.
JehD Gary Creubaw, 19, Salt Lake Ci·
ly.
Larson Watkins, 21, Orange.
Jolln Charle• Halstead, 7, of 1651 W. La
Habra Blvd., La Habra.
Nees' car spun cut of control on Pacific
Ccast Highway and hit a power pole near
the El Morro School road, the California
Highway Plolrol said.
Smith and Pease, were killed when
their car overturned on t h e Newport
Fneway early Sunday. In Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital with major injuries
~ed In the l&Pl• accident are the
driver ol tho car, Hanry A. GoauJ.,, II,
Garden Grove, and Brian Mondol!C&, 17,
also of Garden Grove. MI1I-Wyko!f ,died al Palm Horbor
Hospital, Garden Giove, Sunday nlghL
lour houn alter being Injured In • tw ..
car accldenl Police aatd ahe was drlving
north on Harb:lr Boulevard when her car
collided with • pickup truck driven by
Thomu A. Ver PJ11Ck, 24, Santa Ana.
Santa Ana palice are aearcblng for the
driver of a whlte van that struck and Jdll.
ed the Rodriquez boy at Brillo! and 3rd
Streell Saturday nlghL
Tho Monroe cblld wu liilled In La
Palma Saturday when hit by a car en
Orangethorpe Avenue near Moody street.
The Halatead boy wu fatally Injured In
La Habra Sunday afternoon when he
reportedly ran iDlo the otreet and ,..,
o!rvcl: by I car.
Crensha•, a Navy ullor ,,., dead on
arrival at Los Alamitos General Hospilil.
Saturday morning arter his eastbound car
ran off \Vestminster Boulevard fn Stal
Beach. one ball mUe ust of Studebaker
Road.
California Highway Patrol officer1 said
Watkins died near Lancaster after pulling
hi s car into the cpposlte lane to pass, and
colliding with the car of 1 Riverside man.
John McKnight, 34, Riverside, his
daughters , Charlotte, 14; Jeanette, .. 11.
and hls son, David, 8, were all critically
injured in the cruh. ·
The county's week'nd death toll
brought the 1972 auto fatality list to 19
names, seven ahead of 1971 's carnage.
Ex-county Fire _
Chief Oswrman
Succumbs at 58
Flags will fly at boll stall at all county
fire statioru1 lodJy and Tuesday !or
retired county fire chief Elmer F.
Osterman, 58, wbo died Saturday !olldw-
lng • Iona illness.
Funeral servicea will be held at 3 p.m .•
';'Tuesday, In Waverly Chapel at Fairhaven
Memorial Park, Santa Ana. Burial will
follow.
Mr. Osterman served eight years a.t
combined county !Ire chief and head of
the State Division of Forestry in Orange
County.
He was honorod rec:enUy by ~
1uperviaor1 who named tbe .-. 1nr.'
trolnlng center lo be buUt In tho El Toro
area after him.
Tile linl chiel, wllo tpelll -of 1111 lire career since 1934 In Ofanl• Coolnty,
was also honored recently by tho U.S.
Forest Service. He WU Jr•lllled the
Smokey the Bear sliver statuelle durlnf
ceremonies in Wubfngton, D.C.
Mr. Osterman wu die first Callfornlln
and only the second peraon in the nation
to receive tbe Smokey' tM Bear award. It
was given to hlm for his work in develop-
ing fire prevenUon and conservaUon pro-
grams throughout Soulhem Call!omla.
He was appointed fin! · prevention
coordinator for Ulil area in 195.L
Chief Osterman wu born In El Toro
May 8, 1913. lie joined the Divlsioa o1
Forestry In tf\e coonly as a radio
dl.opatcber In 1934. In 11183 he became
llate forest ranger and county !Ire chle!.
Enjoy the tute of sunshine I • , , Ripe and owcet, the war. you remember oranges should taste I Peel them, and let th•
aroma tantallu your tute buds ,,, oectlon them, cleanly, and enjoy the firm juicy" roodneso! You'll be glad you thought to ahop
El Rancho!
, Beef BrOchettes .... 19!. Margarin' .............. 291-·
Blua Bonnet illvilel you to compare flavor with the biih priced apreadll Ready for you to cook , •• and enjoy I Minimum weight ••• 6 oz. each.
Pork Cutlets .......... 89~
Offered two woy«, breaded and oven ?Udy, or fresh, to do your own \hiJlil
Chicken-Breasts Cordon Bleu ................. '1.29 •.
BoneleM and 1tuf!ed in the continental !..Won I Min. wt. U oz. each,
Buddlg' s Sliced· Meats·::: ........................... 33•
Smoked for flavor I Hirh !n prottln, low !n fat. Three-ounce paclrap.
Pritu in effect Mo._, 7',...., Wed.,
Jo,..17, 1s, 1g, No •a.Ju lo dul<ri.
Snack Piek ............ 5 3 c
Hunt's, the delight of tho lunch brigade I Fruita or puddlnp. 4 pack ctn.
' Weight Watche(s Bouillon .................... 4,,.. '1
Beef, Chicken or Onion • ; , The flavor !s ita own reward! 8 oz.
Halley's ChlU and Beans ......................... 3,,.. '1
Read}' to heat and serve I Fi.fteen .. un ce can• for generoUJ servinp I
ARCADIA ,, ·: . .,, ... , ' ,' PASADENA . ': ' SOUTH PASADENA ' . HUNTINGTON BEACH 11,,' NEWPORT BEACH 1 .'1 N•• • R" 1
, L , , 1·, r· . , , , · • f • ,, • i ,', , ·. · , . • . · f 1 • 111r ~ f 1 • , ·'1 'J 1• , 1 ·•
' I' I ' '
(
•
• • -
• 4 DAILY PILOT
• U.S. Planes,
Red s Trade ...
"' .. Mi ss iles l•
••
~· SAIGON (AP) -American fighter
planes exchanged rniSsiles with North
~, Vietnamese antla ircraf\ defenses along
the Laotian border today and Sunday and
·~ were believed to have destroyed two or
them, the U.S. Command 8llDOWlced. IL
said the American planes were not hit.
"There is a lot of air activit.Y up
there," said one U.S. officer, referrtog to
the corridor along the border bet~een
Laos and North Vietnam where AIJ!er1can
bombers are pounding the Ho Chi Minh
trail network. "It is one of the heaviest
days since the beginning or the dry
season." .
North Vietnamese missile batteries
near the Ban Karki pass unleashed three
~~-surface-~air missiles -SAMS -at U.S.
~ planes operating in ·the region 33 to 45 ~ miles oortb of the demilitarized mne ~nd
{ threatened others. U.S. fighters escorting
,. the bombers fired two missiles, and tho
: U.S. Command said one SAM Site an~ one
: antiaircraft artillery radar were believed
I destroyed.
This brought the total of BO-Called pro-!. tecUve reaction strikes into North Viet-
nam to 10 this year. j On Saturday the U.S. pilots slgh.ted
North Vietnamese MIGs nearly 200 miles ',~ farther north. near the Barthelemy pass
and east of the" Plain of Jars in northern
r-.. Laos. One MIG crossed ~e 00\der and
tried to intercept an Amencan ffigh~ but ~ lhe American Phantom jets fired ball a
dozen missiles, and it fled back into
,,_' North Vietnam unliurt.
Paralleling the intensified air action
was a Communist ·'high point" of ground
· activity in South Vietnam, whi~ began a
~ week ago.
' The South Vietnamese c o m man d
'· reported 20 small-scale enemy ground
assauJts, rocket, mortar, sapper and ter-
( ror attacks, most of them in the .central
C and northern provinces of South Vietnam. ~ This raised the total of such attacks to
·: 190 in the past seven days .
:: • The U.S. Command reported that one ~ American was killed when enemy ground
~ fire bit a light observation helicopt_er sup-i: porting South Vietnamese oper~bons 17
,,. miles southwest of Da Nang. Nine more
:: Americans were wounded and three ~ vehicles were destroyed or damaged by •! mines on Highway 16 about 25 miles ~ north of Sa'igon, and six other Americans
: were wounded when a Vietnamese youth
; hurled a hand grenade into a truck in
,. Ban Me Thuot, in the central highlands.
I • i Laotians Wage
• t Hand-to-hand l Fight for Base
• • • ' ' • •
VIENTIANE (UPI) -Laotian soldiers
are engaged in hand-to-hand fighting with
Communist forces for control of Skyline
Ridge overlooking Ule key CIA-0perated
base at Long Cheng, government sources
Sitid today.
At one point last week the Communists
claimed the base had fallen, but govern-
ment sourees said that although. it may
eventually have to be abandon.ed, the bat·
tie now is centered on strategic ground
around Long Cheng.
The government forces, supp<>rted by
artillery and air wwer, were making
slow but steady prog ress against an
estimated North Vietnamese battali on
dug in on the ridge that overlooked the
Long Cheng base The base is head·
quarters for Gen. Van Pao's Meo forces.
which are trained, advised, !Upported and
paid for by the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA ).
Today was the third day of hand-to-
hand fighting on the ridge, the sources
said, and casualties on both sides were
described as heavy.
An estimated 60 North Vietnamese
were killed in fighting on the ridge Sun-
day. Si1teen government soldiers were
killed and 22 were wounded .
The sources said government soldiers
were able to advance only 200 yards
eastward on the ridge in fighting Sunday.
_ ......... -..... --
Monday, J....,, 17, 1!72
'Cultural Genocift'
R•r· Alpbonzo Bell (R·Calif.) and his \vi!e, Marian, meet ne wsmen Jn
Te Aviv. Bell, who just completed a visit to the Soviet Union, accused
the Kremlin of •icultural genocide" against the Jewish population.
He said that Jews told him they lo st their jobs immediately if they ap·
plied to emigrate to Israel.
Expelled Solon Tells
Fears for Nixon Trip
LONDON CAP). -U.S. Rep. James
H. Scheuer of New York says he hopes his
expulsion from Russia on charges of
subversive activities won't adversely ar.
feet President Nixon's planned trip to the
Soviet Union in May.
Scheuer denied that he had engaged in
subversive activities or had encouraged
Russian Jews to emigrate to Israel, as
the Soviet Union charged in ordering him
to Jeave the country last week.
'lbe U.S. state Department said after
the Soviet expu1sion order that it "would
not be helpful to relations."
Scheuer. a Democrat, told newsmen at
the U.S. Embassy Swiday, "I would be
Former Colorado
Governor Dies
DENVER (UPI ) -Teller Ammons,
whose term as governor of Colorado in
the 1930's was marked by the BO-Called
"microphone scandal," died Sunday in a
Denver hospital at the age of 76.
Before being elected governor, Am·
mons also bad served as deputy city
clerk, public tru stee and city attorney for
Denver and had been a state senator. A
Democrat, Ammons served only one
term as governor before being defeated.
The "microphone scandal" 'Jed to a
grand jury investigation, the conviction
of three men on eavesdropping charges,
disbarment or a local attorney and
publication of private correspondence
between Ammons and his aides.
Ammons ordered a search of his office
after a Denver newspaper b e g a n
reporting stories of p o I i t i c a I ap-
pointments before they became public. A
search revealed tw o microphones hidden
in ventilator shafts in his office.
horrified if the incident affected Presi-
dent Nixon's projected trip to Rus sia."
He was detained by Soviet security
police for 40 minutes last \Yednesda y
a(ter they entered a Moscow home where
he was dining with eight top Russian ,.
Jewish scientists. The expulsion order
followed .
Scheuer was in the Soviet Union wi th a
seven-member congress ion a I sub-
committee studying Russian educational
methods. He arrived here Saturday.
2 Greek Trains
Collide; 18 Die,
50 More Injured
LARISA, Greece (AP) -Workers were
clearing Greece':; main rail link to
Europe today of the wreckage of two
passenger trains that collided in north-
el"JI Greece Sunday, kill ing 18 persons and injuring 50.
Police said about half the injured were
in serious condition. All the dead were
believed to W Greeks.
Officials opened an investigation to de-
termine why the southbowtd Acropo~
Express, loaded with holidaying Greek
workers from Germany, crashed into an·
other passenger train bOund for Salonika
125 miles to the north.
Police were questioning the statiow
masters at two small stations on each
side of the crash site. The police said
each station ma ster had given the g~
ahead signal as the train passed through
his control point.
There was speculation that the trains
were on the siune track because switches
were frozen.
Bitter Cold Spell Ended
Temperatures Climb 30 De g rees ilt Midwest
California
MOMDAY
'4Cclfld ................ ll:'Ml•.11'1 •••• ~ llW .,..,., •• , •• );.,.m. •I.I
TUIJDAY
....... ~ ..•.....•.•..• l;Mt,fl'I. 1.t
'"'' ... -........... : •• t.lla.m. 1.• ,..,. fllllli .......... li11J1.1'11 • .,,
,...., klW •.••.••••••• •:1J,,m. .....
.. . . , . . • . ' . ..
•
'W or·st Disaster Ever ·'·
Mujibur Rahman Says 3 Million Killed
LONDON (UPI) -Sheikh Mujlbur
Rahman &aid SUnday three million
penons were killed and 15 percent of the
buildings In East Pakistan destroyed
before West 'Pakhtanl forces surrendered
in the lndla·Pakistan war.
"There might have been more daths,
but not any le6S," he said. 11Never to ~
history ol the world has anything like lt
happened belore." . The remark came in an hour-long m·
tervlew with David Frost in Dacca on
Britain's Independent Televislon Network
(I~~· prime minister described the
events leading lo the creaUon ol
Bang)adelb u the "blggest •human
dlsuter tn the world" and &aid bis people
were sWI suUerlna:, especlally to war-
lhaltered hospitals.
"There, they have Jost their band! and
have lost their legs. Tbey have lost
everything," h6 aaid.
Mujib described several Jncldeata ()(
troops and &aid one former government
mlq!ster who aupported. his movement
was tortured for Z4 days belore be died.
The Bencladelb leader· oaid bli own
death could have come at any time dur·
tng bis oine<no.tb coo1i-t tn West
* * * * * * Ravished Bengali W'Omen
Ostracized by, Husbands
SyAiacJ1Ntlrr ..
About 200,000 Bengali wives who were
raped by Pakistani soldiers during the
war are now ostracized by the Moslem
communities and have virtually no place
to tum to, a church relief official
rePorted today.
Returning from Dacca, the Rev. Ken--
taro Buma told a news conference that
by tradition no Moslem husband will take
back a wife touched by another man,
even il she was subdued by force.
"The new authorities of Bangladesh are
trying their best to break that tradition ,"
he said.. "They tell the husbands the
women were victims and must be con-
sidered national heroines. Some men
have taken their spouses back home, but
these are very, very few."
The Rev. Mr. Buma ts Asian relief
secretary of t&e Wodd Council ol
Churches. He said its commission on in·
ter-church aid ' will meet here next week
to discuss what can be dowe to help the
•
women and, if possible, work out some
long-term project.
The Rev. Mr. Buma spent nearly two
weeks in B~ladesh.
He said tn addition to those who fled to
India, an estimated 20 million Bengali!
who lost their homes and all the.tr pro-
perty have sought refuge in remote areas
of Bangladesh.
He said about one-third ol the 30,000
primary schools and colleges were
destroyed and virtually all the country's
cash had been taken back. to West
Pakistan.
He said Bangladesh urgently needs
baby food, medicine,· roofing material
and about 1.8 million tons of food and
transport facilities to distribute relief. Be
said Dacea authorities have asked for
1,000 trucks, 500 buses, jeeps and amall
ships for the coestaJ areas to transport
both refugees and supplies.
Pakistan.
"They bad already decided to hang me," he said. ·
At one point, Mujib said a grave was
dug In the cell oext to his and th6
p<boners incited to kill him. His guards
removed him from his cell and hid him
until the danger passed, he said.
Mujlb called Agha Mohammad Yaha
Khan, the former Pakistan president, "an
evil man" who wanted Mujlb killed even
as be was haM ing over power to Zulfiqar
All Bhutlo tn Rawalpindi.
"I am grateful to Mr. Bhutlo. No doubt
ollout li," Mujlb said.
A& for Yabya, Mujib said .. he Ls 1
criminal. Ho killed my people ol
Bangladesh. I don't even like to see hll
picture."
Before slU'relldering, Mujib said the
Paklstanl army destroyed his country's
bridges, hospitals, schools and other
elements of jts economic infrastructure
and killed the country's leadin• In· tellectuals and civil servants.
"I remember the Nurenberg trials," he
said. "I thlnk there "should be another
lrW ••. no, an enquiry.
Rahman Given Pick
Of Pakistan Posts
By Tbt Associated Pre11
President Zulflkar All Bhutto offered
the top job ln Pakis)an to Sheik Mujlbur
Rahman today if he ...would bring
Bangladesh back to the fold.
Bhuuo olfered Mujjb upresident, prime
minister or whatever he wants," one day
after the Bangladesh leader accused
West Pakistani troops of slaughtering
three million people during his country'•
fight for independence.
Radio Pakistan said Bhutto bad
previously told Mujib the only coodilion
be would set to turning over the govern-
ment to him would be that Mujlb agree to
maintain the integrity of Paklslan. .. •
add some spice to
your teenager'S lifestyle
at a sale of a price .
,
I
from / $1T1\NLEY
lllllllllltllllill"
Nothin& adds more spice to a qual ity sale than
a dash of Stanley's furnishinp for 1irls. And our Ann~rsary Siie now makes it, ~sible for you to add
zest and flair to your tee111ger s lifestyle .• , ~t
siinificanl sa~np. Tradition1l stytint menl stripos of
lemon-lime, lftlique wtii~ finish ••• as femlnm1
as silk and lace!
Twl11·tl" -••dt11rd
Pt;ll·ll• ...._,4
Nl1ht S1011d
S4'" Dl~llt• Dr•11•r
Mir,., ....
.... .. ~ ... ...
79. ••• "· ...
1.1•. 1Jt. ... ...
'''·
ANNIVERSARY SALE NOW AT ALL 3 STORES
SANTA AN~
Mlln It lla•utt1
• •
547-1621
PASADENA •
•
•
• .. • -
. . .Orang~ Coas~
EDITleN
YOC. 65, NO. ·14, 3 SECTIONS, Jll PA'GES OltAN61! COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY ·11, ,lm N TEN eENTS
ClllJD Vnit Set8 · llp Becycle Centers
By" CANDACE PEARsoN
, Of .. Dellr 'lier 'ltlM
F~ ·Newport Beach ·women out to
change what they· call a ."no depcislt -no
rtlurn life style" built the d ty's tlrSt
z:e!'y<:ling center Saturdoy Iii' Eaatblull
Town ~ter :-almllll;sinileliandedly •.
·\!'.Ith aisis1111<!e, from la• d scape·
archlte<I wil!WD · w ."Johnson. irho alao delicned the alte, tile wqmea speDt loor
. ' •J .....
TALKS ABOUT HOwARD
Ghost Wrltw·lrvl•· .
Planes COllide
OVer." Park; BQth
(;et Do'Wn Safely . . .
• A pair Of private planes lall8led In mid-
air 'Saturilay over Fountain Vallf!y1s Mile
Square Park,. but the pUot,t, · of both
msnilfed ·to · land their c1amaaicl cia/I
safely, .
One ol the ;planes 11ali flo"'.11 by a stu-
dent pilot from CO.ta Mtsa. ·
Spottlmen ·for the ,Ffderat AviatiOn
Alency (FAA) In Los Aigeles sald bo)h
pliries JIDtled safety on their home fields
after the 10:4'-•'.m. colliiiao. ·
The COsta: Mna 1"Jot .... ldOl\lilled as
Billy J. Valencia, 24, of 3&117th st., COsta
M.esa., Valencia Js a former Am\y
helicopter pi191 sod liad been." takfnt Jn.
structlon from James "F. Wallin; >!Oil
Germalnder Ro.a_d, Irvine. . • •
Tbo pilot ol the '!lhet" plane ..... --.-11. ollladenda Hetghta. FA:A ...,..., said ..,. ol "!lie planes
-~ a= falelal• _.a the other ~"'t~ * ~ ~ c1o,. a\ ll'Jllllltoft Airport ond VIima lal!<W.hlii
Piper ~ al Oraf, qaat1 ,
Airport. • J
Tbo -11 being filvesllpted by
FAA offtclall1tr1.oq Bead!.
•
Chilean -Marxist
Suffers Stunning . ' . ~
El~~~µ :Peft'flt
• I sAM'r!AGO, Chile (AP) ~1 ProlldeGt
Salva<IQr>-hn,suflmd .......
setbad In 1..6 ~!al congr.,.looal -.
llou,, lill."Jill . liltl1t Popular UlltJ'
.... ~~.Jhe r.sulll oaly ... troal defeol." I
Tbt· ~ eppoolllan 11111 Ule
.. M..-\ portlol eacb ~ blllflld a
single colldlCfale In SlmQy's -·
-for a Seollle 1eat, 111101J!er for 1 oeit ID Ille Qilml>Or ol lleputie1, •
Qllilalllhll Cllldldate Jtllael Moreno, "
Chrilllllt Dt!l'liocrtl, -the 5«\lte elec-
tion In CoicllqUI and O'Hlgglns pro-
vince~, just -th of Slatiuo, w!lll 17,Ut
votes lo lt,s:MI for 5'l"lalllt -
Oilvares.
lo the e1ectlon for depilly In U.W.1 ~. fartllor ' lo tllo ooutfl, kilo
Diez, a NolioDal !*11-. deleolOd
Marla E1laDa Mery bJ a tG1e cl It.•
tl,la. -
•
. ~ ..
CoPC 'WOMAN 0. YW'
Mn.l1•1rtMail ..
first cltlun's lllbcomm1ltee ol the City
council In Docember.
-IJ long..tandll!( memhen of the co.ta
Mesa recycq pncram. they aJao
wentfd to briDI ,..-aJumlnum
and glasa coll~ to Newport Beach.
Cooperation ol the dty ID.prcMdlllc In-
surance and ttchnlHJ uaistaDce wu
lauded 0todly by ·one CRUD -ber,
Mrs. Lowell Erenato/I.
"Talk about nlct -we've had more
help than we needed," she said.
"Everyone1s'been great.·NOW we hope
the !'lblic will start using the places,"
she llld.
To empllaslie'the Deed far the sites,
she raWes oil otatlstlcs about mounting
garbage problems, · ••Did you know that one year or
Calilomia trash -1d be 150 feet Wide
IDtl JOO feet high strilched from Oregon
to the MeJican·border?" she says.
She iJ for city re!U1t• systems which
1eparate alumtou¢, mltals 8nd gl&ss and
use lesS landfill ·sod considers the 1wo
collectloo slta only a beginning.
The sites Will be malnlalned by
volupteer · ciVlc groupi, · but hauling of
trash · will' be done · by two former
aerospaed 'ei1gineetS, Bob" Kupfer and
Gerry 'Carlin. They haul pr.ressklnally
!Or ollier Orange CoUnty cities, lncludini
Garden Grove, Huntington Beach and
Costa Mesa.
Mrs. Erenstoft said that volunteer help
In Newport Beach wu also being given
by John Pollack, contractor, Pete Jones
or the Carpenter Shop, Ward and Har-
rington Lumber. Beht ManUfacturing
COmpany, M. Michael painting con-
tractors, Marko Prodocts , Inc., Weber
Plywood, COiiege Lumber Cqmpany and
Bruce Derflinger, i>botoc!apher.
-·Clif·f ord Tied to Loan
Ex-Johnson Aide Denies Part in Nixon Case
NEW YORK (AP) -CU!ford Irving,
author of . a purported autobiography . o!
Howmi! Hughes, quotes the billionaire
recluae u saying that former secretary
· Of Def..,.•Cllrk CUlfOrd lske!l•hltn for a
. $2Gll,llOO loan for Richard M, Jfixofi'•
brother.
• CIKford, who-"""" In the Johnaoo ad-
mtrultrat.ion, denied 1 any , cdnnection ·wit.h
"the deal.
"It is a complete fabrication," he said
when contacted Sunday at his Washington
'home. :•l!fhere la not one Jota~ot •tnrtb, ln published book which he claims to have
that t;tatement. It had to be mad• up out put tagelher out of a ..,.;., of Interviews ol ~bole cloth." ' 1 with.Hughes.
1".0fh .. Djetrtch, a. lopner ffjlgbes aide, "(United ·Press International repol"ted
said In ' Callft>rnla ·!hit ·the· loan, which Ufday <thal· Clilford earlier .l<ild: CBS the
was repoited In 1960, was made but tliat ' allegation was falJe, but acknowledged
a company lawyer bandied it aod Cllllard Illar his · raw flirn · bas .,,,._;led ·the
bad no know lodge of It. Hugheo :Tool co .. since 1951).>) · .
· Irving deCllned in a lelevlalon lnt6view The Dayton (Ohio Journsl·Herald
Sunday to lay what Hugbes go1· 1n,reium -today-r-oquo{ed · -san· · ·Fl'anCiscO · at·
for the 1956 loan. Bui he said the "quid t0rney··Me1Vln. Belll as saying that . the
pro quo" is described lg his soon-to-be IOan wu· a payoU for Richard Nkmn's
-I Forms Pleked Up
Pease May Go Airer
' ' ' ' ' • 'I
Hirth' s Council S.eat
. t ..) ! , ' ~ • ; _\ -
supposed effort to obtain the St. LouiJ.to-
New Orleans route and other favon for
Trans-World Airlines, then owned bY.
Hughes.
The loan flcured In Nllon's unsuc-
cWful llllO C:ldeoUal campolp. Both · Nlzot.I and 7 brother, Donald, bavt
denied that Hughes obtained any favon
as a result of the loan.
Irving's book bu been a subject or con-
troversy since It wu announced on Dec.
!See DONALD, Page I)
Collins Pulls
Open Parcel
Application
Oolllns Radio t:omiionY today wftlldrw
111. apptlcatlon Iii,. • ...-al dnetop, · ~lllml hal~ lf""'1 p; ,.., • . wm ...... ~ lo llirt ,. := · ~=·~c· xa~ c•llJlla---. , ,..,. ._.
clbn-~ ''' · ~· ·' · . ~ ~ '
• -of tis .u ....... open Mr<1l adjacent
'. · tOlll~platilonJomboreellood.
~ I' -:--&1-~ ..,. _ ..... lJSI 'flnn
. wla!o --.. -.. pllDDill
Qlj Cla.·~· ~said ~ -w~"ill(hl; 1'• r,pr.eudng Peutt~
~ "'!"-papero l"rldly. ..
P .... llid be.bu lllllborbed m·-Jo
obtalll .Ifie ·i.nm. but .er.:-to say
wbetbc onlOI he will file them. ·
Pease .ind Newport Bloch ittouiey
Max stutges several moiiths op· were
threat..Jng to lnlllafe a recall ""-1io
a&alnst .the mayor . and Ji<irbapa otlier counCilnien over vRrloul lsiuet. '
· Pease would !Jo the second 11111' to lll!'k
Hirth'• seal, whl~h goes on the block .In th~ April 1,1 ~lectlon. Paul.Ryci<9fl, .!DI
s. Bay Froill,'Balboa ls~, Is seeking_ a writ of. mandate· from SuJ>Ori!>r Court .to
allow hlDt to ,nm. He tjoes,nol l!lffl the
city's thrie-year residency ~ulrement.
. • Maypr Hli:th . has declliled, to · otate
' whtther or not be wilhtet a aecond fo<lr.
year term. He is one of three lncumbenls
whole terms esplre in April. The others
are councilmen Donald • J,lclnnls IDtl
Lilldsley Paraone. Mclnnls said this week
he will seek a second term. ..
Form~r Envoy Dies .
. WILL HE; OR WON"!' HI?
RHllor PH•
·Authore88 Dies ·at 90
: NOllWICll, Encllnd (AP) -Daill'
Ashford, IO, wbo wroi.: a belt-teller whon
she wu • )'Olfl old, d~ over the w-. Hor .-. "'!'be You· .. 1
Vlllten." beo1 aold -<11\D l>all .I
mllllon ................ .Prill.
, COllllll!aloi> nl>Jiali,w lo a. plltl.
.community Dol1111$111mt., D I r e c I o r
Richard v. !Iopa 1lld 11111-l!Dnbtl be
WU told the -will flit A DeW r ..
quest next ~ er oummer,
Initially proDOle4 wu a planned oom·
munlty wne tfill·-icr have pennltted a
hlgb rise hotel IDll two .million square
!eel of o!Oees, ._other thlnga, on the
parcel that ts .-IDd-lally mned.
ID a prepared llatement Issued thiJ
morning COlllnl Aid It is seeking a "!em·
poi'arjr hold" on Jtl request.
R. D. JohDIOll, vice president and
lrD"P ezecutlve for COlllns' Newport
Beech oper1Uoat Aid there are two
. ~;':~mpanj 1
Meds additional time to
. obtaln. ln!O~Uon i:equested by the city
· pl1 .... i,;,.. coriuldllkm '' he said "and '"''t"6 , ' alnee riecolfalldlls wllb a cfevelol)er art oow aeortnc compltllon we ~ .,_
to postpone the ....,. requeot and fn.
volve t&e developer in decisions relatinl
to1 it. It
Planning comm1111oners Dec. 16 threw
cold water o~ the plan saying Ille request
could not properly be Judged untll com·
pletlon or the ctty's general plan aod
wllboul Input from the city of Irvine.
Johnson lhll morning said studies art
now being n!adt to obtain more In-
formation on U. Impact of the plan on
traffic and a comparison of the Impact of
Industrial versut commercia l uses upon
Orange county Airport.
Both wera key point.! made by com·
miasloners during tbe D e c e m b e r
m.etlng.
Magnate Heller Dies
LOS ANGELES . (AP) -Maurice L.
Heller, '18, founder and-former vtce-prfl~
dent of swank, 1nc,, died Sunday •
Weadler
. Night IDtl momilc low cloud!
... Cll the agenda apln for Tiies-
day, clearing by mid-morning to
hazy IUMblne. Highl Tueadsy 118
at the coast rtatog to • lnlsnd.
~ tonillll • to •.
INSmE TODAY
The major pn>bl..., of todav'•
1ocJe1v are bring todd•d 1111 •
flTOUp of GCTOlpact toarkfrs
headquartered in H11ntlngto11
Beach. Sc• Pwft: ZS. •
... M. ..,.., ,. -.. ._ " -.... -. ·-. --n ........ , .... ....... '" " -... .......... '' ........... .
............. ,, -" .............. .., "-cw.. 1>1• -... ----" -" -. ........ .. ...... ,... Do1f --..
•
•
~ OAIL Y PILOT N Mond1y, JinU"1 11, 1972
Sanitation Directors
Want Sweeping Reform?
By ALAN DIRKIN
01 tlle O•llt ,11•1 11111
IT SEEMS a bit like a gentlemen's club, e~cept they serve coffee not
drinks. There are cheery greetings, handshake!, broad smiles, knowing nods.
Just as if y<iu had walked into the El ks or a Masonic Lodge.
Somehow you 've s~ all these people before.
There's the mayor of Santa Ana and that &1>and-so from
Brea. And isn 't that guy from the Midway City Sanitary
District sitting next to a county supervisor?
Yes, he is. Everybody's here. The mayor or council·
men from 21 cities in Orange County, the supervisors, too.
All gathered in one room in Fountain Valley U> wrestle
over the doings or one of the county 's biggest spenders--
the Orange County Sanitation District, which has a $50
million annual budget.
The att.endance is remarkably good. Thirty-one di·
rectors present of 37 eligible.
That's an impressive display of public service. To make this meeting,
some people must have had to pass up a conflicting appointment. The three
Huntington Hych councilmen present , for example~ could have been at a city
council meetiJli. There was one on the same night .
FOUR COUNCILMEN from Newport Beach had sacrificed their evenings
to attend. The county supervisor had never attended a sanitation district meet..-
ing before, but he made it to the first one for "'hich he was eligible.
You know that the $50 each director receives for attending has nothing
to do with the fact they keep coming so regularly. Some pick up $100 for
turning out, ethers $150 and one director $350. Last year two elected afficials-
Mayor Ed Just of Fountain Vall ey, chairman of the joint boards, and Super-
visor Robert Battin, who served on all seven boards -picked up $J50 for
each meeting.
Still, the remuneration and the near perfect attendance records have to
be the merest coincidence. After all, these dedica ted public servants are talk·
ing about changing the setup, consolidating seven districts into one with only
25 directorships lristead of 37 and prohibiting any duplication in fees eo no one
would get more than $50.
The board of supervisors would have only one seat worth $50 and not
seven worth $350. Newport Beach would have only one instead of four , Hunt..
ington. Beach only one, not three. '
P.eople like Mark Stephenson of Anaheim, Robert Clark of Brea, Jerry
Christle of Fullerton, Hal Sims of La Hilbra, Don Smith of Orange, Lorin Grlset
and Wade Herrin of Santa Ana, and Cliltan Miller of Tustin, would get only
$50 and not $100 for a couple of hours of work.
Ellis N. Porter af the Costa Mesa Sanitary District would get $50 not
$150, and Nonnan Qi.Iver of the Garden Grove Sanitary District $50 instead of
1100.
YOU KNOW HOW anxious they are to change the setup because they
have been talking and studying reorganization for six months. They are care-
fully following the advice of the 1970 Grand Jury.
They delayed voting (ln a committee's recommendation at the last mttf...
ing Dec. 8. They did it again on this January night on a 16-15 voted to allow
more study. Such sweeping reform needs more going over to protect the pub..
lie interest.
Some suggested that since the present structure works .BO well from an
organizational standpoint , perhaps the best thing to do was to preserve it and
simply reform the inequities in the fees by asking members of more than one
board voluntarily to sign that they would accept only one $50 payment per
meeting . ·
This was already being done by some members, the speaker was told,
but really Jt would look better 1I it was not done on an honor basis.
YES, INDEED. Fpr tiard as 1jt may be to believe,.. the aanJtatlon di•
trfct'1 finance director, J. W!iyne Sylvester, allowed after aenUe prodc:lilll that
all members are being paid the full amountl and It wa1 two year1 Ence ariy·
one had asked to be paid only $l0. •
$15,000 in V aluabl,es
•
Stol.en as Man Away
A vacationing Newport Beach man
returns home Tuesday, to the task of tak-
ing inventory at his aparlment where
burglars have made off with nearly
flS1000 in valuables known to be missing.
Lyman Farwell, 63, of 2888 Bayshore
Drive, lost a sterling silver tea service in
addition to other loot.
Ted Hoover, manager of the Anchorage
Apartments where Farwell 1 i v es ,
telephoned the victim 's son Friday to
report the break-in.
He said the apartment manager found
the door ajar when he went to feed
The 1oun1er Farwell counted 1 111,900
Farwell aenior'1 cat, alerting him to the
burglary.
The intruders broke a sliding window
to gain e1lry to Farwell'• un it in the
complex, which has been hit by burglars
at least twice in recent weeks.
The younger Farwell counted a $14.00
loss and told investigators oye r the
weekend that a movie pr oj e c tor,
telescope and jewelry are among the
missing possessions.
Last Rites Held
For Are a Pioneer
Loui s Robin son
l
--DAILY PILOT
CIRQ'OE COAST PUIU$HDl'O m1PA1rr
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Funeral services were held today in
Santa Ana for Orange Coun ty pioneer
Louis P. Robinson, 83, who died Jan. 13.
Mr. Robinson was born an his father's
1.000 acre ranch in Trabuco Canyon in
1888, one year before Orange Coun ty
became a county.
Atr. Robinson's grandfather, Alonzo
\Vaite, founded one of the county's fint
ne~·spapers,. lhe Evening B I ad e 1 predecessor to the Santa Ana Register.
Mr. Robinson worked the Trabuca Can-
yon ranch until 1966 wtien he sold it to
his son, James, who recentl y opened it to
the public as 1 recreation area.
~1r. Robinso n is survived by three sons,
Marvin of Fountain Valley, .Robert of
Tustin and James of Palos Verdes; two
sisters, Anne Robinson of Laguna Beach
and Mrs. Alice Divor of Alhambra, and
seven grandchiJdren.
Burial was in Fairhaven )lemoril1
Park, Santa Ana.
• Thief Borrows Sock
To Hide Own P rints
A burglar who borrowed his victim 's
50Cks to use Jn lieu (lf gloves and 1vaid
leaving fingerpr ints, looted a Newport
Beach home of nearly $1,000 In valuables
Saturday.
He did discard Willard c. Courtney's
stockings on the front lawn at 611 St.
James Place While making his escape,
pollct discovered.
Whoever bmke In Saturday really sock-
ed It to the Courtney•, liking 1 leopord
akin co1~ 1 mink stole and 111 In coin• lddJna Up ID I 1182 Joo,
'
I
1'ro111 P.,e I • I
-·
• ,, ' • •
U,I T11WMte
Slalo1n Solon
DONAW ••• , 1
/. .,
1. The voice of 1 rilan clalmlng 14 be
• Hughes said In a ''""'"I 1001-dlstance
tele~hone new1 conference that he did not
-ll'Ytill ud denauDcld llll boot U I bola.
Newsmen at the conference said they
are convinced that the voice is that of
Hughes. Irving 11)'1 it was nal Hughes'
voice because the man had too many
memory lapses and talked longer than
Hughes can without a break.
A Nevada _publishing firm, which
claims it has exclusive rights to Hughes'
autobiography, has filed suit to bar
publlcatlon of Irving's book by McGraw·
Hill Publishing Co. and Its serialization in
Lile magazine. A hearing in the case
is set for Wednesday.
The McGraw-Hill book has been
described by the publishe r as Hughes'
~autobiogiapby, taken from interviews
that lrving, as collaborator, taped witb
Hughes.
Irving talked about tl1e loan during an
Interview with Mike Wallace (ln the CBS
television "60 Minutes" program.
The late columnist Drew Pearson first
reported the loan shartly before the 1960
election. Peatson said Hug~ Jllade the
unsecured ·loan to Donald Nixon in 1956,
while Richard Nixon was Vice President,
and afterward Hughes' problems with
various governmental agencies were eas·
ed.
The Pearson story was tenned a
''smear" by Nix(ln's campaign manager.
Donald Nixon said he sought the loan
through his friend, lawyer Frank J.
Waters, then a lobbyist for Hughes, in an
unsuc:cessful effort to save his chain of
restaurants. He said the loan was secured
by his mother's lot in Whitt ier, Calif.-
A bundled up Congressman Paul McCioskey (R-
Calif.) enjoys some skiing with his wife Caroline
(right) and a ski instructor at Waterville Valley in
New Hampshire. Mccloskey took time out from his
campaign swing, through the Granite State to hit
the Waterville slopes.
Donald Nixon said he never asked his
brother to do anything for him or anyone
else. He said that a gas station was built
on tile lot and that it was worth $228,000
when it was finally given in payment for
the loan .
In Beverly Hills, ,Cali{., Dietrich,
former head of Hughes Tool, and an 1lde
to J!ughes irom 1925 !<> 1957, also con·
firmed that the Joan wu made but A.id
Clifford had no knowledge of It "because
It wu bandied by a lawyer who worked
lor tbe Huah .. Tool Co. Irvine, Company's Mason Police Checking
Mystery Death '
Heads Red Cross Drive Of Newport Man Two Men Sought
In Rape, Kid nap
Of Teenage Girl Irvine Company President William R.
Mason of Newport Beach has been named
honorary chairman or the 1972 Orange
County Chapter of the Ameri can Red
Cross capital fund drive.
Mason said part of this year's goal of
$348,937 will tielp pay off the loan finan-
cing t~ Red Cross' award·winning blood
center at 601 N. Golden Circle Dr ive,
Santa Ana.
Mason became interested in the Red
Cross blood center when as one of the
Disneyland Community service awards
judges, he visited the center. "1 .was
tremendously impressed," Mason said to-
day. The center which works to meet the
blood needs ~f the county's 30 hospitals,
earned the Disneyland panel's top award
for community service.
Prior to construction of the $563,838
blood . center, the Orange Co u n t y
Amer1can Red Cross chapter supplied an
average of 22,000 pints of blood each
year. Last year the center provided more
than 32,000 pints .
"At any m~"!lent any one of us might ~ ,t;te facility and the help it pro-
vides, Mason said, "thousands have
already benefited from it."
Last year ·the center rushed 2.364
emergency units of blood to hospitals
within six hours of the initial call. Three
1upply vehicles logged 108,000 miles while
delivering needed blood.
Beyond ita service as a source al blood,
Liquor Hijacker .
Fails to Show
For Bribe Trial
Liquar hijacker Gene Ra.ndano broke a
double date today in Orange County
Superior Court.
Randano failed to appear for tiis trial
on charges that he bribed a Costa Mesa
pollcem~ in ~scheme to eliminate a key
prosecution witness from his trial on the
liquor offense.
And Judge James Turner waited in
va in to sentence Randano, 46, to what
could be a lengthy sta te prison ternl for
the switching of 300 cases of Jiquor from
the ol~ Saddleback Jn.n in Lagun11 Beach
to Fehciano's, a Westclilf Drive nightspot
in Newport Beach.
.. Defense attorney Leonard McBride ex-
plained to presiding Judge Bruce Sumner
that the former Newport Beach man is
confined to a Las Vegas hospital as the
·result ol another heart attack.
McBride said it is not known when his
client will be welJ enough to face trial.
Judge Sumner set Jan. 31 as the new
trial date for Randano. Judge Turner al~o
put the new date on his calendar.
The bribery trial will be the second
such session for Rlndano. lUs flt'lt trial
was ruled to be 1 mistriaJ when 1 woman
jlU'or changed her mJnd after voUq with
11 compaNon1 for hJs conviction.
Hairy Rebels Shorn
By Arab Guerrillas
BEIRUT (AP) -Loni hair II not
revolutionary, the Pllestlnl1n ..,.mu
hlVI decided. They are mundi"I up 1hl1·
IY teen-11er1 In rtfua .. c1mps ud 1bav·
In( them bald.
"Thia umn1nly habit ol 1nn•inl long
h1lr II r11pldly catchlnl up wltll our
youth," said 1guerrtlla 1pokesman. "lt'•
vffr! unrovolutlonuy end d*"'I llloGme
people l1chl1n( lllf I CIUlt.'' '
the new facility tiouses programs in nurs·
ing, water safety and first aid.
It also provides disaster service, U
needed, and assistance to military
personnel and their families. Ma son
noted.
"In time of community and family
crisis I know of no greater public service
provided by a non-tax supported agency
tban··tbat performed by ·the Red Cross/'
Mason said. "They well de s t: r v. e
everyone's fullest support."
A native of Seattle, Mason is a
graduate cf Massachusetts Inatitute of
Technology and holds a master of acience
degree in civil engineering.
Circumstances surrounding the death
of a young Newport Beach asthma victim
whose apartment showed signs of a
struggle were being probed today, but
police theorize it was due to natural
causes.
Charles Haines, 22, was clutching a
wooden stool as though he had used it for
a weapon when his body was found.
Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said an
aquarium in.his Arches Motel apartment
unit had been overturned and the back
door was aJso standing open.
lnvesligator1 called to the scene at 224
N. Ne wport Blvd., learned J ate r,
however, that Haines' asthma seizures
included violent activity he couldn't help.
Triplets Fund
Frierids Open A<:cou1it for Farnil y
' A set of Costa Mesa triplets has
become the center of considerable at·
tention -including the creation of a $100
trust fund to help pay their bills.
The triplets are sons of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ayres, 2988 Croftdon St. They
were born Jan. 8 with a combi wed weight
of 20 pounds, 14 ounces, just eight ounces
short of a world record.
The trust fund was opened this week by
Paul and Frances Gomez, Santa Ana ,
friends of the Ayres famiy. They put in
$100 with the hope that other couples
would also donate . "
Besides the triplets -Michael, Steven
and Richard -tbe Ayres bave two other
sons, ages four and five . Both parents are
23.
Robert and Yvonne Ayres have receiv-
ed a movie camera from radio station
KWIZ, three months of diaper service
from a Cos ta Mesa agency, clotties from
a Harbor Boulevard baby store, and baby
formula from a local company.
Tbe Assistance League of Newport
Beach also danated a large chest for stor-
ing the baby things.
"We didn't have much when we came
heme but everyone has been wonderful,"
the mother said today. She said her two
older boys were qu ite excited by the
triple ts and have pitched in to help take
care of them .
"We're livint with my Jll()ther-in·law
now, and It is beg inning to get a little
crowded," Mrs. Ayres said.
Robert works for Auto Coast in Costa
·Mesa.
The trust fund was opened at the Banco
del Pueblo, 429 N. Sycamore. Santa Ana.
under account number 000924. It's In the
name of triplets, and Mr. and Mrs.
Gomez say they hope other people can
donate a few dollars.
Why pay 5150 for a l/4 Carat
Diamond when you can buy the
Diamond from us for lust 575 7
w. licrYe ... EJCpertlM
know4ow •i boclrgro•d
to show JW how to -
on per dlcm11Dlld l1m11111wnt.
A widespread search for a foreign car
with out-of-state license plates is under
way in Orange County today, following
the kidnap and dual rape of a Costa Mesa
tee nager walking home from a movie.
The 18-year-oJd girl flagged down 0(·
ficer David Walker about midnight SOWr·
day 1od. . sobbed out the story of her
ordeal with two abductors, a big, burly
man and his smaller pal.
She was subsequently treated at Costa
Mesa MemoriaJ Haspltal, where ei:-
amlnation confirmed she had been SU·
ually assaulted.
Police were told the victim, a clerk,
was waliina on the sidewalk at Ford
Road and Harbor Boulevard when the
late model foreign sedan pulled to the
curb.
She said the occupants spoke to her and
she ignored them, at which time the
.smaller man opened the door and 4fag-
ged her Into the vehicle.
The hulking driver followed ;,. rambling
route to the deadend of Joann Street, the
victim said, where she was ordered to
disrobe and was stripped when she ·fall·
ed to respend fast enough.
She said the driver waited while his
companion raped her, then he also
assaulted her.
Investigators said the girl was dumped
out of the car at Pomona Avenue and
West Wilson Street, not far from the
point where she stopped Patrolman
Walker.
She described her abductors as being 11
to 23 and havtna: close-cropped hair.
OUR MOst
UNUSUAU ,
DIAMOND
GUARANTEE
•tc• .ucm ·= :..:::=-COME IN AND SD
WHAT WE HAYE TO OFFER
IOI IACm •When yw 'livy I di ..
mond from u1 w1 will
t u 1 rent 11 tNtdl•
rnoncf to eppr1l11 at
40% MORI thin yea
pold for It or yovr
money bock. C1n yw
do ff well .,_.....,
COM P'A RI •
.,.. ...... .
r ..... , ..
1He111111• c-ter fer ......_. Cet111t9
COSTA MESA JIWILRY & LOAN
Optn Dailv I lo •
1131 NEWPORT ILVD.
COfM lo alld B,..,.,,. Around
l'llone 646-7741
•
'
•
' Teday's l1mal
N.ll. ~toelul .
• ·*·;· . ,·* . . .
YO!.'.. ~5 .. NO. l.f, j SliCTIONS, 36 PA~ES ORANtft COUNTY, CAllFORNIA: MONDAY, JANUAlY 'ti, ,,972 . c TEN CENTS
Clifford .Tied to Loan
ex-Joh:nson Aide ;Denies Part in Nixon Case
• r.;
NEW YORK (AP~--cllf!onl ":flnl.
,author of a P9rPOrt«f · autob6oilraPltv of
Howard Hu~,.. quotll> tbe'· bW.&onaire
reclUle 11 saying that former Socnlary
,of)Je!emt:CJ'1k CJIJ.!ord ~ed'.l!lm !~,a $205,000 ,lliaJi . for Rlchlril .. M •. Nb:Qtt~
b-,."-I . • . rvMJl:;I. • • • • •
tmrord, who 1tn1ed ~ Ute lohn!lln ad·
nilitlStra!Ion, denled.any •conncc:tlon·witb
~deal.· ..
"It b a complete fabricatk>n," ~ said
when contacted SUnday at his Waohlngtcio
'S~ter Fuzz' ~ ~ ~ ' . . . .
D.lN.Y P11.0f ltilf ..... '0.ACCE~ HIJGl4ES l:!Wf
' NO:.riioft'.a· Do.l'Aftl Niu;,.
" ·;'
...... ,........
T A1'l(S AiouT HOW .ARD .
Gi...t• Wrlter·l"I"' ·
·~~g~es .Loan to ~ewP.o~'s ·
Nixo:.i R~p~d, Wife S~ys
Mn. F.' Donald Nilon, whole husband
r«dved ,, Piii.Goo loan from HowMd
H~ IJlll" IS years ago lhla morning
~ In dlacUls the maller 'In the Nix·
oitJ' Newport "lleadi hcllle. .
J••veS.:we .recelved 'tlie Jo-1 'a,'' Mrs.
Nlml ~,Aid. "bUt Jt:s alf bC!en .repaid:"
' Tlie w11 .. , of the President's . brother
Acllned w·comm..t on the ·1alfat.c:i>ii-
troveny sm:roUndlng 11ie•note -.mo Iii'
...... q .-' ' : ' . ~•""'l':'to, . ··~ . ' "'{IJ!l'll ha .. In ta1t In !llY lmsben4.
Hf 111M ... u,;~~li.l!i '1''!*'•~~ you ybatuec.mted.'''abe.dliL •'I"
iii.. bubom~....,i., .. ~ tlle }o~11 ~ a lltipl,_ ~ ,J:
W.al!fa, wbo na a ....,.., IGli!iJlll In w:..iii...: ~ 'autoid ' .Inlac.
-dllpalecl blacrlP!li!J of tllt -liOllonilri .maf w:' JiJ1ti DOI 1>i )llblllllod, ·
dahned SUnday · that a ' f o-· f' m e r
E~ IJde.manged-the.deol,
· Mn. Nm.. declln..f te' talk fll!'I more
about it ml uld ber llullialiil, DOW I -
president of tho Mari1otl llolel chain
could be ' ruchid at 1 ·Mamou con-
•eotlon. · at · 1 · •Man:lott" Ho\il I n
W~D.C.
Tiie holel 'llld NbrGn wasn't there.
. An .Inquiry ·In Mlll'l'loll'1 corporate
' .
Planes COilide
. . over Pal'.k; · Both · . .
Get Down Safely
, A_ptlr ol .private. plal)OI ~ Ill mid-
llr Satarday over FO\llltaln Valley'1 Miio &it!aro Park, ' but the pilots of both
mabaged In 'land their clalllaged cr!llt
a!ely. . '°"' of Ille ~ WIS Oowu by 'I ""' \
dent pilot -Colla Mesa. •
1pobm1en • 1or the Federol Aviation
(FM) In Los ~ uld bolb
landed ~el)<· ... their -llela Ille 1':111.m. collllloa. ·
.,,. .Colla -pilot Wll lderttlled ..
flea.dquartm In W ashlnglnn was · Jµst as
nonproduCtfve.
•1we haven't· beard from him .. " an of ..
licial 1114. .
Neltber hid the office of'President Nix· on•sprta~. ·
f':og, ·Low . Cfuwls
Bac"k on c.;.n .. £. . . . . ,. v,.....a' , . ' I ,
M 1 tl.::or ru ~ ' . ~n;ury: 1 .1..nps:: : ' : .
. ,Silll,a 'Aila ..,...la tiiit. f~ tht
biie oi.--......... ~ r.r ..... .-. md l!I :ID ·111e· 111P1 1114
IU'lyt JllCll1dnC . bailn. . . • .
Men las II npecteil ......_ llld early
'l'ua!da1 .. lowl range -• Inland lo
........ llq llle ·coul. HJcl!o .......
row,.will be·in·ihe iilcb IGl>llqllle CGlll
and -Inland. .
'!'be mild Santa Ana .-icll! wblob
pi-evalled over mllcb of s·a u t be r n
Calil<lrnia over • tbe WM!<end brlngq
clear i 1kJee arld ·. aµnny, ·warm , tem-
pentlll'S,' yielded . today . .. t b •
barometer dropped Inland; .
· In the ableoce of the bigb _... tlill
brinp wanning winds to ilie · coUt.
onahore breezes P\DllP ·cooler weatber·jn-
land, brin&bll' wilh it the low.claudo llld log. • . . . . .
Tile fog lor<ed cloture .ol Los .Angeles
lnternatlftl Airporl early today IGn:ing
oWfllclU In Ontario llld tu v-. More of the amc IJ-apocted lnafgbl
and Tueaclay, with·tl!e low -...
poded lo hong around S,ou·tbern
Calllomia through Wedlluday, tht Na-
tional Weather service predicts.
Car Rams Pole
In Costa Mesa; .•
. ' Two.Hospi~
llillJ.J. Vlllllcla, :H, of Jll l'llh St., Cotta A -of llClnrs _....., _.
Miii. Vilencla II a, ftrmer Mmy lribatacl In 1 OiJlta .-car <rUb tml
holioojlm 11111at .... ...,,_~.ID--• ..... bartllng ...... -,.,.
11i!IOb from J-t. w~, !!* Sundl1 alihl, holpllallxlng the drlftr Ind
(JlnbalDdor Rold, lnlile. bis •passenger, accorcllng In police
Tiie 'pilot of the -plani! "\" ...,.111. . .
Rlcliar4 Boden, sz, ol llaclenda ~ti. . Tiie 1l::io ~.m. aci<idtnt on Placentla ~ ......,,llllcl -of,~ planes ,O.venue 3llO feet north ol 11111 -
r--·nd 1 Med. laMlap and the otl!er 'nlllllled In Hoq •. Memortal ,.Hoopllal
lilhl Wlal damac< employ• Cynthia Tumbqll IJ1lo Hoq: '
.,_ broq1i1 bi. OellOI ISi doWn 11 Mill TurnbWI, It, of • Victoria St.,
W.i·U :Fig,1!f ..
. ·~ . .
·F:orc.~;Flri~g ·. , ..
, GRANITE' Cl'Y, Ill. (AP) ~ "I: cer·
lalo1y am ·going In fight this," I Catholic
mDt ·known IS "Sliter ,Fuzz,, sayl ·of a
dOclSlon : fo' suspend • her-.·lndt!iiiitely
-without pay from the Pontoon Beach
Police Department. .
· Sisttr 'Mary C.ornelia Hawkins, who
was a gun:.toting juven'ue officer with the
small force •• leanled .of the ,decision at st.
Elizabeth's Hospital, ,where· she is .being
treated fOf virus pneumonia.
''"Mlty didn't discuss this with Die. I
~4no·lde8 lhey were In.do lhla,"Slster
Q>n!ella. uid Friday nigbt,,Sbe,yrneci
the iilCD.ame "Sliter Fuzz" froln youths
in· Poniaan.llf!acb. 1 suburb of.St. Lwls.
'lbunclay rught th• village bolrcl of
truafecl Issued the s"']Jtnsion on .,.uncll
SiJ1'1° . Cornelia had, violated polii:e
regulatloni.byatlaldlng.a Nov.,t~
OI, local '. govenin\ellt ol!IC~ , ·Al!", a
•ber·of 1t!e ~·~.~ J~ riiJu~\_. 1f~ed fa,. aj~ jmy~'{lllMid.........,_..
In> Panlol; , lnciUclln& ~·of
Cl':i'.;::t..9t?:'J.::.:
~-.. · . S!Jler Qnelil -eel before• the araiid jmy: Slie.bu been 'at odds wlllt
police ofOcl•'' 4K'lr Jaw ·enforcement
pncUces; ~.Dean Jlocbeller llld the tS-
.yeor'old-Dt¥> can appeal the Nlptiilion.
300 Gallons Not . ' . . . . . . .
Enough ·to· Q~eU .
Apart,mentBZMe •
A 13,000 . bedroom blue at . a Costa
MeA apartmeal compla ~,.lfllt 311!>
gallons of stuffing from ID exploding
water1 bed cacadinl · dcnmltlli's, among
othtrcalamltle!. .
The fll'1 .teDt one-of the apartment's tenanl! ·1n jail, lno, according In in-
vestigators who alleae th,ey fouiid mari·
juiila and 1 pol-smoking pipe !asbloned
from 1 deer horn In the gutted bedroom.
Dean C. Line, 18,. Wll .lm!sled by Of.
ficer Rob Brown during followup 'in'
vtsligation at the unJt where his brother
Albert alto uv ...
(Tiie -. -~·named by their
l1tber, an electrlClan, wbo thOUght il
would be novel In hive IODI hamed. A. C.
and D. C. Line). .
l'ltomim blamed , tho blue In A. C.
Liiie's --. that .-Ille! In Ille ar-
rdt <t D. C. Line DOI oP lltl'f. electrical maJ11mc1ton,, bnlon canlal m,mpiilg ol
ID uh tray lnlo I W-~
1'allerllll A1rpart 11111 valoaclo lmltd bis Co,lla -· ls lllt..t In fair !ondlllon to-Pjper~· '~ ... , Oii . ~ lloallJ "" oi.~ hospital w\lfrt Ibo.,.,.~_ In ' . ' . ' Ille :r..n,-.,., _I. ' . . . .
)Dddeot II belnl lnvestipW •bJ .. 11_,beld .tor obotr'(•tlon, ;irbil• FM~ )II 1,opc 8eaclt. I a.No :n Jllm&y, 121, ;trho llYes Iii. uie ·."
TL!'-.i' ~B.' ,:.·'. , cz __ ,_ ::s.s:::w~: ~(',.: ~J'.!jO':fl '. ~. ·=-·= =·~ ,. Tb '..,e. .. ·\,Own, Pmt1 ta ....... ., ..... _, ~~. .
R TMJ iold ..... lllt A'""'*""',fto ••AIOWecl hll•>ltlllo'9 flllad.-.i.!J -'.tip .
-lfo•""6'11..,lf ....... ad....id, ..Saldtlltcu-'ti7t ltlftir llJc«l*biU, lotled I Newport . pole. .
~ DM. Gf oeuly •1,1110 In vaJulble1 • , , , ,
r
·11ome. '"111ere Is not -loll of truth In
that llatement. It hid In be llllClo op out
of wbolfl Cloth. 11 !
Noob Dlilrlch, I former H!Jlhes aide,
said In Cllllornla that the loan, which
was ~ In Jilo; was inade bat that a company lawyer bii..0114 tt and Cll!ford
~ no lmoW~e of IL i...u. ilecuiied In 1·televlalon Interview
SUnctay In say what H!Jlhes got In rtium
for the 1156 loan. Bui he uld the "quid
pro quo" Is described In bis . aoon-IA>be
'fries Agal.D
. .
publlllbed book wblch be claims In have
put lolether out of 1 series o! Interviews
with lfuCbel,
(United Prml lnlernallonal reported
today that Cllf!ord earlier told CBS the
allegallon Wll !Ille, but acknowledged
that his law !Inn bu reJinsented the
Hughes Tool Co. since 1950.)
The Dayton (Ohio Joumal·H•rald
' today quoted San Francisco at·
tomey Melvin Be1li as saying that the
loan was a payoff for JUchard NUon 's
Maniis Vows to 'Keep
. .
In Touch . With Peopk'
• • • I ' -• • '
supposed tlfort to.obtain the SI. Louis-to-
New Orleans route and other fa vors for
Trans-World Airlines, then owned by
Hughes. '
. The loan figured In Nixon's unsue.
cessful 1950 presldenUal cam paign. Both
Nixon and his brolbe.r. Donald, hav1
denied that Hughes obtained any favor•
as a result of the Joan.
Irving's book has beetr""a su bject of con-
troversy since it wu announced on ~
(Ste DONALD, Pace I>
' Mes~ Police ....
Hunt Clues
In Ass~ult . . A. widelpnad 1tarch fer 1· fonlp ear
with oat-o~ llcemd plates 11 111111er
Tom Manus, who ran for city council way In Orange County ·tooay, following
two ft4fll ago, today --4 .his in-the kidnap and dull' rape Of a Costa Mesa
• tention to try again !or a Costa·Mesa seat teenager walklna home from a movie.
. In the April 11 election. The l~year-<>ld lirl flagged down Of.
MIDUI, II, of :1212 College Ave., said he • fleer David Walker about midnight Satur·
pllDl .ln nm .a people-to-people campalgn day and sobbed out the story o/ her
wltb 1 lot of door bell ringing and tiark ordeal with two abductors, a big, burly.
plerucs. man and his smaller pal.
. He bu ,not yet · filed for the election She was oubooqueiitly treated •I Colla M... MemorW Hospital , where ex· with the city clerk. Two candidates ha~e amlnallon conllrmed she hid been aex-
now filed, making their candidacies ol· ually assaulted.
ficliJ., 1 , Police were told ·the victim , a cler~.
· 'Do~ llaclU, owner. o! eoita Me11 was walkin« on the aldewalk at Ford
Road and Harbor Boulevard when 11-J.w.iry aDd Loan, wu tho first tO rue, late model foralp aedln pulled to the 'J'bun!1ar,, the first · 4ay no,mj.nltiOn curb. , . , • , . ,
-. pen eoald he ·obtaltM!ct · = ~ ~ ' ' . ' • • She 1114 tboOCCllPllU . lo -on4
'. An aJIOrillY• JitJr!1 ·G. ~'.of,JDlll a11o l&nored .Jlllm, 11 . 11m1 ·!lit "°"""*' ...._, b~H"'I 1111 ·=• Cllt' · llinaller min opRd tht\ diilr llld drq• dliWI lo flll U .lili 'N . M • JM '. pd her bU Ulrl "1ldde.
lion· -11111 ...,-'*:.1:111'1. IMr.,af• .c.:rtlt bnllllnildi:lm"•f!>llilll.._ecl"" " ..... .., ..-.. ,. iru-, a,.ty1.1 I A ... -1o flit ilacllld tt .i-lll'eel, Ibo · 'del'~-ft\ititlld'11~~·~. ==-=·~-~-:-,.: Ilea llW. ...... li·rmmtll!iitdlr~ ed. lo ~pond ,. ..... ' ~ hlo -lo bop "' Sbe uid Ille -..... wbllo hit • lbi JIOGlllo. · · • · C01Dpanlon rapsd Im, then be ali!O
• • 1111'1 ........... to the ....Wied her,
. ~ · ciji lie .... In 'Ille !n'vesUgalnn ulll the lirl wu dumped
. !l(IOlllel!c '1lllnc',_ of· Qiola ..... :• out of the car II PolllOlll Avenue and
. ,....y....., ,,. ......
Hl'LL TltY, . AGMll',, '... Coun~I! ctiidld~' ~ ; •MIDUIUld.He·lilll1hls~lilail•1 ·west ·w11son -....,, not far 1rom !be
fllrnltare mabr. · · point where 111111 olnpped Patrolman
• ; , . . 1 1. : Walker. ·
Triplets'. . Fun.tf ·.; "'~:n-:=:ir~l·
Frie~ t;Jften: Acco~nt for F¥f11Uy
• , + ~· .,
A sel o! Costa MtSI triplets·· hu a Harbor BOulevard baby llnre, and baby
become. the ·center a1,-.-llder1bla 11-formula from 1 local .eon1p1111. · · ·
tentloO;:..liid~tlientfOil'of'1'~ The '.A-.... Loque <i. 'NeWport
trust liina· to'htip pay their' bllll. Buch lllo doeated a large cbut for llnr·
Tb• triplets are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Ing the baby thlnp.
Robert , Ayres, .291111 Crolfjfon 'St They "We dlcln, hive much when we came
wtre born Jan. 8 with a·combilled we!Pt home bat everyone bu been wonderful,"
ol 20 pounds, 14 ouix:es,. Just.•ISht oupces the mother uld today. Sbe uld ber two
short .of I world record. . older boys. were quite excited ·by the
The trust. !und·was openrd this wetl: by tr1plets and hive pitched In IO belp lal!o
Paul ind· FrAnces Gom~ ~ ADI, care of them. ,
lrltnds or the Ayru falllly.;Tliey put In "We're Uving with my mother-In-law
111111 with the hope that other couples no;,, and It Is bO&lnnJnl In get 1 UUJe
would alao. ckmate. . · , · · crowded," Mn. Ayret Niel.
Btsides the .trlpl~ls ,-1'11,chlel, Slevl/I Robert works for'Auto cout·ln Colla
and Richard -t~ Ayre! MVe two.othor Mesa. . • · •
·sons, ages lour and five . BOth·~ are · Tiit lnllt fUnd was opened ot the Banco
23. • · • del Pueblo, 429 N. Sycamore, Santa Anl,
.. Robert 1nd Yvonne AYrel hlve·recelv-under 1CCOW1t lllllllber-. ll'1 In lllt
ed a movie •camera .ftan ncllo -name · of trlpltll, and Mr" and Mn.
KWIZ, three ·months of diiper -. Gomes '"1 theJ hope oilier peoplt CID
from i Colla.Mell agency, clotbea.trom donite 1 few dollars: .
-. ~ ' .
Television Violence • .
'
I
Linked tri Aggressw·n
'""· . .. . . . '""" ' . . WASHINGTON (UPI) -A panel of·12 . The· committee wae alven 211 yurs tO
atjentlsts reported ,In SUrgeon Genor1I mue the report ili:.:· of'1 llillllon. It
' J-L. Sleinfeld loday there II evldtnoe , lllo WU ,II... .. DOI• In malle
that 1'!evlalon vloipn<:e ........ --policy' IDIDlll!il ' ....... chlldrea ~ In lbel kind The =:u;:: ... •t• uld ......
of bebmor In tflt place. ' ' vsp. In -'r-9: I pnl-
. In a,~ ,_i, Stelnfald'• acleJI. and teolatlvt ..._ If 1 wt rail-
. tlllc· ~ olnorn111e1t an llll'llllCI!> Uoa b •tint a ·~cw .,
llltd a6dil;liellmor alld Ibo -lllC telmoton ml .. ,,, --- ; .. Ii>-
· -wn llllllilr ~111111 nor -dlcallon that .,,, -_.. nllllolt duslve. .,...... ..., ..... ....,,.. '""" m:,e But I\ aid tJ.. W11 eip,.1' ~ pi-edl!lpoltd In be 1111 llSH); 11tt1 an
, In lndliate"' rolallao bol•-rioleDce on ~ !bot k --911111 -
~elfare ()ffice
' Squabble Goes
To COuniy Board
Orange County supervi,.rs are er·
pected to lettle the controversial iasue of
a welfare ofllce lite in C.Osta Mesa at
their Tuesday meeting.
· llllchael Howard of the county's real
p_roperty aervices division said he would
lepOrt the clty!s rejection of a zone ex·
ceplloa pennlt for the office 1t 1055 El
camlno Drive.
Th• City council two weeks ago voted 4-
1 agalnlt the eounty decision u more
than 50 Me11 del Msr homeowners pro-
tested the prGpJled wallare branch o!·
flee.
Howard said bt -1d report the city
a~ publ.Jc reaction to cOll'Jty muperviaors,
but would make no recommendation on
what the county · lhould• do with the
building. • '
County olfldals coatend that legally
they don, hive In follow city zoning laws.
Costa Mesa say• otberwllt. .......
...........
Night and momln& low clouds
are on the agenda again r.r Tlies-
dly, clearing by _,. In
buy IUllShlne. llJcba Tueoday 18
at the coast 'rising lo • lnllncl.
Lowa lonlgbt • In e.
INSIDE TODAY
The "'4)or problfms of tocla1'• 'IOCitt~ ••• bring . taclc/4<I ...
Q!'Ottp of • ....,,.., ll>Orf<cn
heodquarttred In Hunlinglon
BIGCh. Ste Pag• 29. .
L. M. llffl lt .... Llillelrl tr 1\~.411bni'win.rtc. c.o.....,:. Aoihoreu. Dies ·at 90 .
itooklilp ..,. Ille -lhn II Ill a. •
tele<iljoa..S ....... btliarior...... ---' • cblldrea wbo lfrel4r -··~ ... " "Such ltnlatlvo ml llml!Ocl .... Ulona ' ar-l>e belarior. .,. not very ulJalyq. 1'boJ rtinlo6t
It alao said the . r-of dllldrMI lo !0!1111>,ntlally more __,... 6iD llO
........ ........ " ~ ... 11 ............... . ... _ .,. -.... , •..
3 ..... Piiot' -......... -NOllWICB; --(AP) -llli!I)' ""'1ct ~-. ~ ... who ......... bell·Hllll'wllea -.-.--~---... -• ,.,... old, died .... tbe td II fo 'eie Oiurlllal, ; .. ........, w•-lltr ' -.-'"111o Yo a• I
-.... 1: 1 -M •-v-." 1m aol4.,,.. -lllll• ........... -, .-...... ..s11•111•
•
TV violence deoended -l b.o ' hid two fW1 ..... bat t111fi.-Jt!ll'I)' lrame1'ark In WblCli It waa .,,_..,In-q-...,..._,,, Ibo _.,..
-ind wllalber II - -a Ian-· lllld. • dlldlllc _,.thtle -.... ibl •· In .1 llajtment 11h1'!"I "911 Ifie
plwlliim, Ille IOllcoint --of tht ~ . ..__ dtcllNd lo -Ills ...,. ... • • • ' (llWVIOUINC:I. .. ijiT ;
\ ' .. 11 t • r l
• • ' •
~ ...... .. '"""""' ,. .... ,...... ... Dellfl ....... 11T...,.._ It ....... ,.... 6 ,,._,. II
....... u11w u rt .._ •
,.._ an "'""._ • .......... ,, .......... "''' .. , JI M -... ..
2 DAIL V PILOT c
San Onofre
Plant, PUC
I
Hearing Set
A formal conference lo determine if the nut Public Utllltles Commission has
jurlsdJction to act on charges that the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station is
unsafe will be held in Los Angeles Jan.
2'5.
PUC spokesman said that ·leaders of
the People's Lobby which brought the
charges late la st year would join in the 10
a.m. talks in the State building in Los
Angeles.
The statewide conservation group has
asserted that some systems at the
1enerating plant would bt unsafe in a
uvere earthquake. The group formally
peUUOl!ed for official PUC hearings on
the charges.
Nert week's talks will be held in room
107 before officers of the l'Onunission and
will dwell prinurlly On juri.!diction.
The Lbbby's allegations are the latest
ln a series of setbacks against Southern
California Edison Company and San
Diego Gas and Electric Company in their
joint ownership and planning of the
Onofre Nuclear complex.
l ,
-.,, Jlft1W1 l1, 1972
DAILY PILOT Siii! Phtlt
Since the envirorunental group filed of·
ficial briefs on the safety charges, the
uWities have answered with documents
rebutting the asserted safety huards. The complex has as its closest neighbor the Western While Hoose two miles up
coast jn San Cleme1ite.
THEY DUG UNSUCCESSFULLY UNTIL THEIR HANDS WERE RAW
Lin Croi11tt1, J1ne Campbell, Marcia Monroe
The utilities already have admitted that
plans for two more reactors costing a
baU billion dollars are hopelessly delayed
and 1dditiona1 fossil-fuel plants will be
built elsewhere to take care of future
power demands.
Can"t 'Dig 11"
De1ays in the re.actor projects came
about after a federal court heaped the
reaponaibility for environment onto the
AtomJc Enge.rgy Commission.
Students Give Up Fossil Search
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of tM 0111y Piiot Sl11t Country Shopping Center on the site. The: AEC also required earthquake
1alety reevaluations of the reactor plans
1s well a1 reports on the safety of the e1·
lollng r .. dor.
-· ·The fonner land owner brought the
The students dug with the intensity of fossil to Winget who immediately called
'49ers looking for gold. the high school science staff.
Douglas Tells
1500 Job Move--.
To Huntington
Traol(er ol l,500 jobo lo lhe Huntlnglon
Beach plant of the McDonnell Douglas
Mirmautlcs oompany bu been an·
DOU.nCed by company oiliclals.
The office of Strategic Defense pr~
ll'lml and aippartlng •tiff will be
tranlferred from Santa Monica becfnninl'
thla weekend, aald Walter ,Cleveland ~ector pl external relations. Several
other pro}ects which cannot be identified
beeause they are classified will also be
moved to Huntington Beach, he said.
Cleveland cited "efficiency a n d
economy" as the reasons ror the transfer.
Cleveland stressed, however, that the
transfer ot 1,500 jobs did not necessarily
mean that 1,500 more people would be
hired. He said that eilstlng personnel at
the Huntington Beach plant might amDrb
some of the new job functions, and also
that many people would move to Hun-
tington Beach from Santa Monica.
There are currently 6,500 mployed by
Douglas in Huntington Beach.
The most important of the projects
being transferred, a c c o r d 1 n g to
Cleveland, is the Spartan long-range in~
terceptor missile program. Design and
assembly of that missile will be done i111
Huntington Beach, Cleveland said.
The transfers are not related to the
1pace shuttle project, he said.
Magnate Heller Dies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Maurice L.
Heller. 78, founder and former vice-presi-
dent of Swank, Inc., died Sunday.
DAILY PILOT -"""" ...._. _., •·i...t ... w ... ,,_.., .... ...... .....
J•ck L c'.t1.,. ftl Pra-.r .. 0.-.1 ,,.....
1Mli•• Kttril -,...,_,, A. M.r,\111•
"'-• E111'or
Chrln H. Loot Rtclr•"' P. N•ll AllllW ...,_ EdJIWI
c-.-..OM.. lJo w.t ..., s1r...-
116t loMi-PA .. IUO, tll2' --• ,I t !"Q.~l~P.,' a,'J:;,. 44 ,--.. .-,.i 11'1'1 ._.. I 11 11t
... a..i ..... .,'-' ...
•
They worked until their hands were From then on it was like a treasure
callused, lheir backs ached and dirt hunt.
covered their clothes. The former owner thought be recalled
where the spot was because it bad been
But the earth refused to give up its near a eucalyptus tree. He pointed it out
secret. to Winget who in turn showed it to the
And today the San . Clemente High e.ager science students.
School sicence staff decided to give up Friday afternoon they dug unW their
the search for a fossil that might have hands bled .but found nothing. ·
been millions of years old. A bulldoder operator agreed to remove
The students heard about the fos.ill fill dirt so they could start on a ground level, so on Saturday they continued the from Tom Wineet, president of Missioa search.
Bank in EI Toro, whose property ii ad· A group of La Habra science 1tudenl3
jacent to a construction site. came to watch for a while but didn't offir
The owner of the property, digging a to help. •
drainate ditch with his tractor 20 years Some went back $1nday to continue to
ago, had atruck a hard aurfaet! -and had dig but their efforts were !(I vain. Winget aald !be devOlopen of the land jumped off hia tractor to go back and see had indicated a willingness to rope off the
what it was. section so the dig could continue, but the
The blade had chipped the material science staff decided to give up because
which appeared to be a bone. The farmer the location can't be pinpointed and
(known only as "Mr. Stevens,") picked might even be under Winget 's bank. Examining the existing piece of fossil, up the bone part, noted where the fos,,il the science staff had thoUght it to be part
was, and continued his work. of a whale rib. Many whale fossils have
Making a few inquiries, the farm er been disct1vered in the Saddleback Valley.
thought nothing more about it until the Some date 15 million years back, to the
miocene period.· land was sold to the AJe1ander Haagen It will be up to future generations to
firm which ill building the To.wn and discover this one.
Irvine. Company's Mason
·Heads Red Cross Drive
Irv ine Company President William R.
Mason ot Newport Beach has been named
honorary chairman of the 1972 Orange
County Chapter of the American Red
Cross capital fund drive.
Mason said part of this year's goal of
$348,937 will help pay oft the IOAn finan·
cing the Red Cross' award-winning blood
center at 601 N. Golden Circle Drive,
Santa Ana.
Mason became interested in the Red
Cross blood center when as one of the
Disneyland Community servic e awards
judges, he . visited the center. "I was
tremendously impressed," Mason said to-
day. The center which works to meet the
blood needs of the county's 30 hospltals,
earned the Disneyland panel 's top award
for community service.
Prior to const.ruction of the $563,838
blood center, the Orange <::: o u n t y
Ameri can Red Cross chapter supplied an
average or 22,000 pints of blood each
year. Last year the center provided more
than 32,000 ·pints.
"At any moment any one or us might
need the facility and the help it pro-
vides," Mason said, "thousands have
already benefited from it.11
Last year the center rushed 2,364
emergency units of blood to hospital!
within six hours of the initial call. Three
supply vehicles logged 108,000 miles while
d<llvering needed blood.
Burglars Break In,
Leave Items Behind
'
Ba!Ocd detectives today sludled a
Costa Mesa commercial burglary with a
lolally new twlsl.
Beyond its service as a source of blood,
the new facility houses programs in nurs·
ing, water safety and first aid.
It also provides disaster service, if
needed, and assi stance to military
personnel and their families, Mason
noted.
"Jn time of community and family
crisis I know of no greater public service
pro vided by a non-tax supported agency
than that performed by the Red Cross,"
Mason said. "They well d e s e r v e
everyone's fullest support."
A native of Seattle, Mason is a
graduate of Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and holds a master of science
degree in civil engineering.
Estranged Father
Kills 3 Children,
Takes Own Life
HAYWARD (UPI) -A falher embil·
tered at failing to win a reconcWatJOlt
Wilh hit wile, shot lo dealh his three
children loday and then killed himself.
Police said EnnJtanlo Velasquez 25,
ol Bakmfi<ld, shot lhe three chlldrtn
•nd himselr In lhe bedroom of a home
wh.,. hls wile, Lydia, 2!, was staying
since leavh1.ir him 1 seven months ago.
The slain youngsters wr:re ErmJtanlo
Jr., 4. Anlva, 2, and Alberto. I.
---·-
. J,fesa, Beacla reanas
Girls to Tangle
'
In ' Grid Charity
The ladle• from Estancia High School
. tn Costa Mesa and E<llison High ln Hun·
tlnaton Beach, Will take a few whacks ai
each other the ne1t two weeks on the1 foolball field -for charity.
Junior a:lrls will lan&le with the aeniors
of their respective schools this weekend,
and the winners and IOltn will clash the
following weekend.
Game time ii 1:30 p.m., Saturday .for
the Edlaon girls and 8 p.m. tor Estancia'•
groupa with both games played at
Newport Harbor Hlgh's Davidson Field. I ran Discloses
Kidnap Plot
On U.S. Envoy
TEHRAN, Iran MP) -Four Com·
munists trained in Iraq tried to kidnap
U.S. Ambassador Douglas MacArthur JI
and his wife last November as they were
returning home from a dinner party, a
government spokesman reported today.
The Communists planned to hold the
\ Pl1acArthurs as hostages for political
1t"isoners held by the government, a
sPQkesman for the security forces said.
MacArthur, at the time , told a ques--
tioni ng newsman that he had been in III
accident but gave no details. The em-
bassy in \a statement today said it kept
quiet at th'e government's request so in-
vestigation ~uld not be hampered.
The statement said it was confirmed
that four armed men in two cars stopped
the ambassador's .autoJnQbiJe and fired
shots at the car as the embassy dri~er,
on orders of the ambassador, sped away.
The assailants, the statement said, shot
at the car and attempted to break the
window with an ax but were unsuc-
cess£ul. '
The would-be kidnapers were captured.
The gang leader, Schrab Nehavandi,
confessed and he and four other gang
members are awaiting trial among 120
other members of three communist
groups captured during the past IO
months the government said.
The embassy said that since the "ac-
cident" the embassy received complete
cooperation.from government of Iran for
arranging security for the ambassador
and the mission.
'Ille embassy spokesman denied reports
that Ambassador MacArthur resigned
because of too-tight security measures.
He said the ambassador has served for more than 24 years and resigned for
personal reasons. He is due to leave
Tehran in February.
Burglar Freezes Tiine
During Mesa R-0bhery
Nobody knows where the $665 in
household appliances burglarized from
one Costa Me·sa home went Saturday, but
police pinpointed the time of the crime.
Whoever broke .into the Thomas H.
Walker home at 1811 Pitcairn Lane
koocked over a kitchen clock at 7:50
p.m., cuasing It to stop.
The clock-stopper also made off with a
television set and a pound of chocolate
cookies, police said.
Hairy Rebels Shorn
By Arab Guerrillas
BEIRUT (AP) -Long hair is not
revolutionary, the Palestinian guerrillas
have decided: Tht?y are rounding up shag~
gy teen-agers in refugee camps and shav·
ing them bald'.
"This unmanly habit oC growing long
hair i!I rapidly catching up with our
youth," said a guerrilla.spokesman. "It's
very unrevoluUonary arid doesn't become
people fighting for a cause."
Tickets ire $1 for adulb, 50 cents lot
children under 12 and 75 cent! for
1tudenll with ASB cards. All proceeds go
to Fairv:lew State Hospital.
Last year the girls raised $1 ,300 for
Fairview with a similar set of conttsts
between Estancia and Costa Mesa High.
Game times for the Jan. ,29 contest -
matching Estancla's winnera against
EdJaon'a champs, as well as each losing
team -will also be 8:30 p.m. and a p.m.,
at Davidson Field.
Members of each school's varsity foot·
ball team are coaching the girls tor the
pcwder puff bowl. Use of the stadium has
been donated free to help the charity
cause.
Liquor Hijacker
Fails to Show
For Bribe Trial.
Liquor hijacker Gene Randano broke 1
double date today in Orange County
Superior Court.
Randano failed to api:ear tor his trial
on charges that he bribed a Costa Mesa
policeman in a scheme to eliminate a key
prosecution wilness from his trial on the
liquor offense.
·And Judge James Turner wailed in
vain to sentence Randano, 46, to what
could be a lengthy state prison term for
the switching of 300 cases of liquor from
the old Saddleback Inn in Laguna Beach
to Feliciano's, a Westcliff Drive nightspot
in Newport Beach.
Defense attorney Leonard McBride ex-
plained to preSiding Judge Bruce Swnner
that the former Newport Beach man is
confined to a Lu Vegas hospital as the
result of another heart attack.
McBride said it is oot known when his
client will be well enough to face trial.
Judge Sumner set Jan. 31 as the new
trial date for Randano. Judge Turner also
put the new date on his calendar.
The bribery trial will be the second
such session for Randano. His first trial
was ruled to be a mistrial when a wonlan
juror changed her mind after voU11g With
11 companions for his conviction.
2 More Solons
Accused l>y Russ
MOSCOW · (AP) -The . government
newspaper Izvestia accused two U.S.
Republic1n congressmen today o f
violating the rules or Soviet hospitality
while on a tour here to study Soviet
education.
A third member of the touring group,
Rep. Jame! H. Scheuer, a New York
Democrat, wa~ ord!!~ expelled from the
Soviet Union last week after meeting
with Soviet Jews seeking to leave for
Israel. (8ee earlier story, Page 4)
In an article on the tour of the seven.
member House subcommittee o n
education, Izvestia charged that Rep.
Alphonzo Bell of California met privately
with critics of the Soviet government. It
said Rep. Earl Landgrebe of Indiana
distributed religious material!.
Why pay 5150 for a l/4 Carat
Diamond· when you can buy the
Diamond from us for lust 575 ?
We have the Expertise
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'
F..-P.,eI
DONALD •••
f . The voice of a man clalmlnl to be
Rughel said In a recent long-distance
talephooe new1 con/eronce lhll be did not
bow Jrv1n1 and clenoullCld the book U I
hoax. '
1 Newsmen at the conference said they
·-Are convinced that the voice is that of
Hughes. Irving says It was not Hughes'
voice because the man had too many
memory lap!les and talked tonger than
Hughes can without a break.
A Nevada publishing firm , which
claims it has e.1.cluslve rights to Hughes'
autobiography, bas filed suil to bar
publication of Irving's book by McGraw·
Hill Publishing Co. and its serlaliiation in
Life magazine. A hearing in the case
is set for Wednesday.
The McGraw-Hill book has been
described by the publisher as Hughes'
autobiography , taken from interviews
that Irving, as collaborator, taped with
Hughe!.
Irving talked about the 10an during an
interview with Mike Wallace on the CBS
television "60 Minutes" program.
The late colwnnist Drew Pearson tirst
reported the loan shortly before the 1960
election. Pearson said Hughes made the
unsecured loan to Donald Nixon in 1956,
while Richard Nixon was Vice Presidtnt,
and afterward Hughes' problems with
various governmental agencies were eas·
ed.
The Pearson story was tenned a
11smear" by Nii:oo's campaign manager.
Donald Nixon said he sought the loan
through his friend , lawyer Frank J .
Waters, then a lobbyist !or Hughes , in an
wuuccessrul effort to save his chain of
restaurants. fie said the loan was secured
by his mother's lot in Whittier, Calif.
Donald Ni1on sa.id he. never asked his
brother to do anyt.hing !or him or anyone
else. He said that a gas station was built
on the lot and that it was worth $228,000
when it was finally given in payment for
the loan.
Jn Beverly Hills, Cilif., Dielric:h,
fonner head of Hughes Tool, and 1n aide
to Hughes from 1925 to 1957, also con-
firmed that the Joan was made but said
Clifford had no knowledge Of It "because
It wu handled by a lawyer who worked
for the Hughes Tool Co.
From Page 1
VIOLENCE ...
own conclusions, quoting the committee's
summary and saying that the report
"merits the serious attention of all
persons and groups concerned about the
effects of viewing television."
The committee said the "key question"
is how televiJion could be changed to
reduce the J>05.1ibility of causing violence.
"The readers of this report will find in
it evidence relevant to answering such
questions, but far 1hort -of an answer,"
the commitlee said. "The state ot present
knowledge does not permit an agreed
an!Wer." '
The committee said the rate or violent
episodes on TV remained constant at
about eight per hour between 1917 and
1969.
"The nature or violence did change.
Fatalities declined and the proPortion of
leading characters engaged in violence ot
killing declined," the report ,:aid.
However, it said. violence increased
between 1967 and 1969 in cartoons and
comedies, and cartoons were the moat
violent type , of TV program ln that period. ·
The committee said lhlt while It did
find 1 relationship between violence on
the screen and aggressive behavior by
tome children the evidence allo IUI·
gested that "the effect is small compared
with many other possible cauaes IUCb 11
parental attitudes or knowledge of and
experience with the real violence of our
society." ·
In a news conference, Steinfeld went
beyond his cautiously worded written
statement to say, "This study is not a
whitewash. For the first time. it identifies
the casual connection between violence
on TV and subsequent aggressive
behavior by children."
Steinfeld said, "If we had had thiJ
kind ol lnformatiOI 10 or 20 years ago
we would have been far ahead of the game."
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Somebody broke Into the American
Rambler dealership, 1969 Harbor Blvd.,
through a rear window, it waJ discovered
Salurday, and not only look nolhlna but
left ll•ms behind.
Velasquez, who had been lrylng lo
work out a reconciliation with hi! wire
during the weekend, came to her sister's
home where she was stayb11 to say
goodbye abool I a.m. today, according
to invesUgators. COSTA MllA JIWILRY ·& LOAN 1 mond lo 1ppr1l11 11
40% M01'1 thin you
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COMPAlll.
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Employ~ J01epb W. PhllpoU said three
rings conlalnJn& a lotll of :ia keys were
lelt 00 his desk.
He went into the bedroom where the
children were and caUed lo his wile lo come. She did not enter the room, and a
low moment. laler heard lhota 1nd found
her huabaftd 1od t"o childltn dqd and
lht tbird chtld criUcalijr wouodal.
Open Dallr I IO I Comt In Cl1ld Brown A,..,.ml
1838 NEWPORT ILVD. Phone 646-7741
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