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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-01-04 - Orange Coast Pilot' -·- I '., ...... " 17 .. -·-----~·-,·--. . -·~-·--v • --_ __.._ -·----'---···-------ti _ ......... --·--· " .. --···- -~·· .,. _ _....-----~ ...... -~-,,. ear . DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 'I, 1971 V I.. '4 NO. I. I llCTIONS, J4 J"AOal .. Cool at Pool lll"t " ..... " LAS VEGAS DANCER (36-24-36) COOLS HEELS BY POOL For Briony Morledge, 63 Degrees Is Better Than Bli:u:ard Intense W inte1· S tor1n Cripples Midwes! Area ·~ By United Press lnteraatloael An intense storm blasted the ,Midwest today with hei'lvy snow and high winds. In Iowa the storm was described -as the worst in nearly 30 years. 'Traffic there was at a V·irtuaI !tandstill. Businesses closed. Mail deiiveries wi re canceled. Government offices were sftut down. ilundreds of motorists were stranded. The Iowa Patrol and Highway Com· mission said tht..state 's Interstate roads were impassable. At least three deaths Weather r·atr and' Wanner is tfie. gOod I •ord . froOl the weathennan for T'Uesday, but that doesn't apply to the overnigh~ hours. during which the mercury "ii\JI plunge down to the freezing mark. INSmE TODAY The Democrats art poUtd to exercise ·iheir "ieW-/ound con- trol of the state Legislature to- doy, while two newl11 elected stat officials take office. Storie• un Page 9. ..... ........ C.llNmll a..ct1,. Up :::.'-' ,_,. ~,. .... kft ··-.................. ""'ell(• --""" ~"' • n • ' ''"' " " • • ..... ... . " " Mt•ltt 11-n NUIMll N... 4-J Or~ C-ty t . .,...... ,.,..... ,. .... ,,. U.1' IN<:lf Mlrti:_,. :lt•Jf T*ll'Vl11" ,. TllM1tn J0.11 -. Wllllll ••• u -...... ..... ~, ..... WINtllN .... U . ,_ In Iowa were caused by the storm. authorities said. Two of the victims died al heart attacks after shov,e,U,n.g snow. . . Additional 1now ·amounts of more·.~ 4 inches were expected from northeast Iowa through northern Wisconsiri and . Michigan .. Travelers warnings were in . elftct from northeast Kansas and eister:n Nebraska; thtoµgh Iowa and portioni of eastern Minnesota. The new snow accumulation totaled 16 lnches. at ~armony, Minn .. The . Nebralh · Highway Patrol re- quested that Kansas close all roads entering Nebraska because of a "serious backup of traffic, severe weathe.r and road conditions.~' · the storrri ranged over much of the 'nation. Snow measuring 3 to 16 inches covered almost 811 or New MexiCo. Schools in Albuquerque .aod In other · commlinities· were closed because of trUChei-ow: ·ctriVtng' conditlona:-Oii! traf- fic· deaUr was blamed '.on ~. ef.orrp.· Mrs . Dolofes Anit.r·Haar,. city 't l·e·r k of Taos, N\M., dr~ ,•When . her ur· slid off U.S. 64 neat Velarde · and ' sailt in the Ri·o Gra,nde. · Near 'Ma<Uson;-<Wu .• a showmo6iJe was <li9a)ched;lo-bring-Mis,.-Dilne-~er to -. hOeplW lo ·deliver a b~y. Five sheriff's vehlclea: and three 11now~-p1ow1 got stuck trying to. rea<:h her home. An estimated -.7i000 persona were stranded at ·Cleveland'• Hopkini Intema- tl"'1al Airport SuJilly nlght becau!"e airports west of there were snowed in. Twelve 'fiigbtl' tKJl.Jnd for CliCago, Des Maines, Cedar Rapids and Milwaukee were brought into Hopkins '-olie a 747 carrying 3811 paaaerigen, IO?De of whom spent the night dr1nki.ng wine aboard the luxury pl1ne. Cbfoaco'a O'Hare Alrport wu cloaed -IO!dlen, Allon, -II Ind otllm lrYlna to gtt out.of ..town.' Aircraft were !Sae WEATllBll, Pqe 1) .._ ~ 0 oun~ --·-·--- • • ------· ----·~-- /"'-...__·· • •• • • • • • • • • . d 'C '·· 1 "• . . . m s . h1f , Coast; 'g Sloop Sinks ,Off Catalina Body of 2nd Teen Found In Laguna A week·long hunt for a Fountain Valley teenager ended tragically Sunday when his body was found on a hillside near the site of a Christmas holiday happening in Laguna Beach which al.so involved one other fatality. Circumstan~ .surrounding the death of Grant Weldenhammer, 19, of IT/61 Oak St., were being probed to determine whether drugs were a factor. Coroner 's deputies uid he apparenUy died sometime on Dec. 30, after leaving ·a' group o.f iseVeral friends. He had been reported missing Dec. 28, after leaving home fOllowing a familY: quarrel. Investigators said Weldenhammer bad been to the fe.stivar -which drew an estimated 20,000 persons from all over ~ris:Q -. and returned home before the argument. Fr~ends theorbed be may have gone back to the site of the colorful event in the Sycamore Hills· area and wen~ !»ck there early Sunday to bunL Robbery Victim Gets Last Laugh Bein& °" Victlm Of I gwipoint 'robbery may-·bave been arduous for a San Oemenle man;· but tt wun'l very pro- fitable for the three bandits. They -bll nllet ·al· 11J11polnL But ft had DO money. J~rry Dale)!•ller, lOl·Calle Rosa told police he w11 •robbed by u..e men late Sunday night u . he wallrtd to bls car at 208 S. El CamlnO Real. One . of the meo, polJct satd, pulled a pistol and demanded the man's wallel ·He· <0mpllech 111<\. ~ lrlo!· llo4. .If_,.., waitma1car contlini.n& tbree wOlbeiL'"-- Tba . iJn1J '')lnllltti. 18 "t.bl tlWt-was the six.pact of -wblcll the trio •Isa toot from BeUer. ' -~ W~rJi,lng Vacation Nixon Coniing to Coast Tuesday for 10 Days By JOHN VALTERZA Ct !ht l'.Ulll!llot Jll11 • President Nixon toda y abandoned no- tions of a Florida vacation and opted instead to brave chilly S o u t h e r n caJifornia for a 10-day working stay at the Western White House in· San Clemente. White House aides in Washington an- ~1111lllced the President will arrive here Tuesday. Officials at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station confirmed thal the chief executive's arr·i\'al time aboard Air Force One is scheduled Tuesday between 3 and 3:30 p.m. El Toro's gates will be closed lo the public. The President's arrival here will come just one day alter his naUonaUy televised chat tonight with four television com· mentatora. The program will be aired at ·6 p.m. on channels 2 and 7 and in a.dela)':td version at 9.p.m..on Channel •• White H<me officers said· today that whUe in San Oemen~. Mr. Nilon will be working on bu!llnesa left over by Coqgrea apd on meuaaea and programs !or the~Y,ear ahead. . Molt~t.a~ among , ~e work .items· are completton of the new budget for the lt'12 . ~I ,year and the draftlng of the annual '°"""e "on the Stale of the: UDkm. T1l1t Will encompass ad- miniatrapc:n leglalatlve plan& and pro- IT'lftll rm; the y-. '!head. Tbe annual ec:ooomJc message · is the tliiJjl ma)<li' "ttem, !hit will 'be aetllng 1 aol4<Jver' 1ro111 !be Prulcleol ·and' bls top" aides '*'-. · !In.· rll.oo ·Will alto· make the trip but' other . ..........,. or the . family hilv• no plalis to do' oo. . Mr. Nllon'• ••rest-vacation''' here •P- peal's to ftt-m· 'Wtllr recommendations o( '1le Ptealdent'1 physician, Or. Walter Tkach, who pronounced him in good shape alter •• lllllUI checkup but uld lloao ,cbW.~ .. oughl to ... ,. up Yiiorl 6i'rap0tiibl· CllUotnla and FJorida. Reporll Nici the 'Chief execuUve had ~anned a trip to hJs Key Bllcayne ::me, but cbanied r mind II tha last minute and opted for San Clemen te. The President and First L a d y originally had plannel:i to travel to San Clemente on Dec. 26, but that visi t was called off weeks before Christmas. Their last visit to San Clemente took place. during the hecti c national elec tion season and was highll ghted by the (See NIXON, Pa&e I) Reagan Pledges Welfare Reform At Inauguration SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan launched his second term today by proposing. that. California . lead the nation iri reforming welfare to weed out "those whOse &reed i9 greater than their need ." "There ls no greater challenge . facing the· 1tate or nation,'' µie Republican chief es~tive aaid Jn his second U.. aug'ural adclrHI. ' - "U not us,' who? It not now, when?" ast.ed Reqan, · who bU 1 ~ one or the' most persistent . and. vocal critics of President Nixon 's family assistance welfare refon;n pf:an. • Reagl.ri, 59, laid· the oilly altemaUve , blgher, laxea ·to pa,y for rililllg weUare ~-ii' the easy . way out and · tem- porary it beat. . IJ )Ill ·.111..-...i !In( ~: laid •he .~spell · out the .detalla al· Illa plan diacusa the .atate's bleak filcal ouUoolt Jn.a meeute to.the legislature Jan. 12. tate ...Uore spending now totals ilbout '2 blllion a year and nearly 2 million penona receive aid. The leglslaturt also cm.venes tlday with Democrall taklnl' COllln>I-of . bolb- the Assenibly and the Senale -1 ~ that Is certalri.. lo complicate Reqat\'i· -plans for the weUare reform. In the (Sff REAGAN, P11e I) -,, Mercury Dips Below Freezii1g Downward-zoomlhg temperatures and frigid Santa Ana winds that gUJted up to 60 miles per hour Sunday will ag~in remind Orange Coast residents that Old Man Winter has ua firmly in' his grip. Chilled, chap.stkk-canying folk.s . are In for more of the .aame treatment tonlght and Tuesday. Record low te-a,iures ~ below the freezlng mat.k 1n ,certain Uta Angeles ~nty .. .;pots as ·California recorded its COldtit Jan. s-1n fa yean. Bltterly coJd,1 wtnU wblppiDg in off the desert created 'hazardous conditions for ci:mpera arKl ·tri.ilers, wtiJ.te· beaV-y anOws mailtle-· the ;,.San .BenWdino 'alil San Gabriel mountains. Orange Cowrty escaped with juat tar- • ribly CQ!d fee~ while damale was re- corded elsewhere: A 32-foot •loop and"·• baulibotl O!lpoi> ~ and sank at Sau.ta Cattllnl · t.iand, while a $20,000• yacht weM down ott San Oi~go's Corooado llland: ~ · - All seven .p&.oo. lbOlid ihe'Seaql!all escaped before it.f0Qndered .. 1ccordinj t. ; authorities. ; . The current cold •. IUlp ii put of. a slorm system ·Ulljl 1w' -~'!"."!"! condidons in the llld..,., Jtl1hll'i· bl I Mycothfm. • "It started Oil' tlla "l>tllllal'Cillft>mfa ' coast lite Friday .ind ·•hen tlMI low pressure system ·miwec1 east; a· lot or cold air moved bl," e%plains Dave Williams, .of the Nltiqnal Wq,tber .. Service. · , A bigh ,of 61 elem.. w .. lorOciMI today: with llT ovetnlght. low .ft• !I• . in cue you wanl ~&et up ·Ind dMCk your lbennome.fer, . '. ~, • • Small cnn wamtnp•are holltacl,iloaa theS.Uthe~~:.~ ly~o~,~~D,l!JaJ'li'~ apokesmin ••Id . -·sutta will •lie "" ' to 40 -below~ ._.and - , & io 15 kriota elseWIMre In "°"al, , ' Jela arrlvln( and deparllnc :ltam ! , 0ran1• ~ A\rPOll """ uma. IJl!i!r t_ Inland --. .,, .alter ,)l!D\tl ' rea.cbed a 35 knot' ~ .. ~ predawn how's. -. ----· "W• ba•en't been ,9ho¥t-._. 1 ..... since," aald a control tower dutY offlolc. ?' -- j ' I' " J . • s Terrorist Tells Death ot ~ot ficiaI · ,. 'MONTREAL (UPI ) -Ftancia Simard, ,,,, ~-coq!e~ terrorist of the Quebec tJberauon Front (FLQ), described 1o Jloiloe "bo'!f ·be and Paul Rou killed Quebec· Labor ·Mlnister PJerre Laporte, a coroner's lnque!Jt was told toda y. -e .. At $:20 'p.m., Paul and J smothered t&m:• said a .statement said to have '8n m~-by Simard and re.ad lo police • th4: coroner'• irn:juest into the death .. Laporte. ~Oe .atar witnesses al the final session of the ,inquest v:ere Simard, and Rose'5 1'11111&er brother, Jacques. <··we an responSble, the three of ·us," •id Simard's statement. The three' men took" the witness stand, tlut refused to answer questions. Instead ibey d:louted revolutionary slogans and jeered at the court. •r.''LongJ.i'YI the FLQ,'' they shouted. .1Boasted Paul Rose from the witned liand : "In 1970 we fausht the establish- ment. We hil at the ·right spot and ... hit lu>rd." ~ ' . Monday, J.vn1ary '4, 1~71 • Still ·in t'onattaatad -· ---.. ---. -._,.__ • Reciprocation As-ked Russians Invited To Angela Trial WASHINGTON (UPI) -'The Slate Department ha!'I lnviled 8 group or Ru•ian 5C1entists and acaden1icians lo send al\ ob.server to the murder and kidnaping trial in Californ ia of black militant Angela Davis. · A department spokesman said Sunday the invitation ""'as sent in response to a Jetter signed by 14 persons who ex- pressed fear Mi!!! Davis, an avowed Communist, might not get a fair trial. The signers , he continued, represented the letter as an independent action not connected with the Soviet government. Assistant Secretary Martin J. Hillen- brand "mads it clear, or OJUrse, we expect reciprocal opportuniti es." the spokesman said. Hillenbrand was the officer who cabled the reply. That would mean opportunities for Americans to observe Soviet trials of policial dissidents or Jews accused of tikyjacking, he said. purchasing the gu~ that were' smuggled info a ·Marin County courtroom Jn San Rafael in an unsuccessful escape atte mpt in which four persons were killed. Those killed were a white Superior Court judge, two Negro (,'OOVicls .and a black accomplice who took the guns into court. One o( the San Quentin prison convicta was being tried on a charge that he assaulted a guard. TI1e other convict \.\"as a v.·itness. Mjss Davis y,·as once a faculty member for the University or California at Loi Angeles and bas been active in Black Panther party circles. 'Visitor' Held In Beer Bottle Judge Jacques Trahan said he would daliver his decision in the inquest - '9hich determines whether there are lfOunds for crim.lna1 charges in the aeath of Laporte -81.3 p.m. EST. "'Long live the FLQ .of 1970 -excuse me, df. the ·lU'lOs, '' shouted Paul Rose: "long live Free ~bee," shouted bis brother Jacques. · President and Madame Chiaqg Kai·shck ~reet gov- erment .officials, military leaders and servicemen in front of city hall at Taij)ei, Formosa, after a t- tendi.Qg· New Year's day rany marking the 60th year.of the Republic of China. Except for brtef ·• period of semi-retirement several years ago, Gen- eralissimo Chiang has led Republic of China since 1927. 'The Nationalist government moved to For- mosa from the mainland of China Oct. 8, 1949. Only one or the Russians who signed lhe letter was identified although the spokesman said they were prominent scientists and scholars. The ·man iden· tiried is Pyotr Kapitsa, a top Russian physicist. Hillenbrand·s cable stressed "complete confidence" Miss Davis would get an impartial hearing. the spokesman said. W~fe Attack A Porriona welder crashed into his ealranged wife'• Costa Mesa apartment Sunday -in a shower of jagged plate glass window fragments -and allegedly attacked her and a visitor with a broken beer bottle. The . Si~ iitlllelJlent ~as rea~ h1 ~alNce Corporal Jacquek Ga- boury. He said Simard ga ve police the statement last Monday, the day the three IJe11 were arrested at an isolated farm· liiuse 25 miles sooth of Montreal. ending G4nada's _greatest manbu11t. Simard r-e-~ to sign the statement, he said. ~mard 5'1-id Laporte, kidnaped and fltld ~tage in a suburban hoiue, had ~td to escape by b~~ing a window ~ poll~ .bad ear lit!' ~ced from cuts on the depd labor minister's lx>dy. "''He "1hfe'W'·8 pillow to break a win- dow," aald Simard, and was cut When It! caJ>l!>tS ·gnbbed him and pulled .him bllck. l ! • n ~"''He""oied eni! he. Wanted Us to take· i.,tn to :.-.· hospital, but" there was no ~::.ion , ~f ~at,'' said Sim ard's slate- v• Plas~r Ducks . . , . . Fly the Coop }. pq of:,ducb "wMdJed" ~way lto!n. th'Mr ~ lrf -a1 Sl.lf-Clennnte yaM during the wet hours of a Saturday rainstorm in San aeroente. Sut ~ ~ir ~of plaster statues 1\aJ. some help from thieves in their flight fcpm Uae yard of· Bet.ty Chapin at 318 Cflle M'adrld. . '.$~~ repartee:! the theft of the $25 oQjecta: Saturday afternoon. · · From P"'ge J ~AGAN ••. optgoirrg legislature, Republicans con- ttotled·both chambers. Reagin's aecond lnaugural features ln entertain!nent gala tonight starring Frank Sinatra. John Wayne, J immy Stewart and Jack Benny. Glasgow Soccer Peath Stam1Jede Probe Ordered 'LONOoN' (AP) -Pressure mounted todly fat ari overhaul of safety measures at Bliti!ih SOceer stadiums as top govern- riien.t OffiCials probed the stampede that killed 6& fans atld injured 145 at a Glasgow ·game . • Sports authorities said the soccer clubs woUld need governtne.nt r;ubsidies ii forc- ed tO carry out e.XpfAsive improvements to· their arenas. Attendance hAs been raili ng, and m8ny of the teams are in the red. 'Flags flew at half staff in Glasgow, wllete Britain's worst sporling disaster otCirl'Te(f·' s&hltday · at the en<f of the annuaJ•match between the local rivals. the Rangers and the Celtics. Hundreds of fans st.Umbled and fell do""'rl aconcrete filairv.9y oWside lbrox . Par1", crusbing thole .Dn the bottom of. the pile. "PeOjile were-falling all over the place,'' said qive f\.fitchell, who had gone to tile match with his son .Jnhn, 21. "I passed out. and \vhen I came to. a policeman was holding .me. I had been buri.e,d under a pile of bodies. ."I saw my son lying next Lo me, lifeless... Then l passed out again." Eldon' Griffiths, Britain ·s minister for sport. sqheduled talks in Lond on wlth advisers ·including Sir John Lang, \vhose 196!1 recommendations for safety im- proVilments bave not been fully carried out by the 92 British maJOr league clubs. Gordon Campbell, secretary of stale for Scotland, \\'as repor!ing to Prime f\.1inister Ed·~1ard Heath and his Csbinet after a visit to Glasgow. Authorities in Srotland "'ere preparing their own judicial inquiry. lrvit1e Company Drops Proposal on Balboa Wharf An onrwhing tide of protest has sunk Balboa Wharf. The Irvine C:Ompany said today It has wit hdrawn its zone change ap- plication for the controversial waterfront development across the channel from Balboa Island. James E. Taylor, l':eneral planning ;idministrator for the company, wh ile standing behind the merits of the project , conceded the plan ''presents many ques-- lions and concerns which have rendered it unacceptable to those citizens from the community of Balboa Island." A public hearing on the project, seheduled Tuesday at f p.m. at Corona del Mar High School, has been cancelled. J~owevc.r, John Jakosky, Newport BeAch Planning Commission chairman, s;iid lhe rommission will meet as scheduled. The commission is expected l.o act on the nearby Promontory Point cip11rtment development. Taylor said a representative of the Irvine Company will be present to answer any questions on eithe r project. !·le said there are no new plans for the seven.acre wharf property. c- "'lf the Irvine Company retains this properly," he said. "it will undertake a study to reevaluate the potential development possibilities.'' Taylor, in his letter. told the com- mi ssion. "The Irvine Company, based upon its years of experience in developing projects of qualit y, firmly believes that t Balboa V.1harf) \\'Ould be a significant asset to the commW1ily and, as such, would prove ilsel! to those who now voice concern. "However, aft er much consideration the company has decided to withdraw its apolication and respectfully requ ests that the pl anning commission withdraw llle zone change amendment and remove !his item from the agenda .'' Taylor said the project had received "wlde app roval for its uniqueness or character, design and quality and that its economic viability would provide an excellent and much needed tax resource for the city." Miss Davis, 26, is charged' with Neat Burglars Break Into Cafe Burglars with a penchant for neatness sa wed off locks on a window of the pier-end cafe in San Clemente over lhe ":eekend, making off with 582 in cash. Police said lhe thieves entered the \vest window of the cafe, opened a cash register, took money , then found a key to a cigaret vending machine. Aller opening and rifl ing the machine, the burglars replaced the key, closed the register and fled. They closed the window behind them and replaced the nearly sawed locks to their hasps. The break!n apparently look place !ale Saturday or early Sunday, according to Marvin F. Cable, ~the operator of the diner. All three including the husba nd, ar· rested at the scene suffered cuts bu t the woman was most seriously injured, with lacerations in the back and pelvic region. · Roy R. Jarrard , 26. was booked on suspicion of two counts of assaul t with intent to commit murder with a $50,000 bail figure set. He was quoted by one policeman as saying any man would do the same under similar circumstances. Diana L. Jarrard, 25, of 701 W. 18th St .• was listed in fairly good condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, where she was tak en following the predawR incident. Her acquaintance. Milton W. May, 40, of 21661 Brookhurst St.. J~untington Beach , was treated and released. Jarrard himself wa s treated at Orange County Medical Center for multi· pie cuts on the hands which will require further care, police said. Welfare was the single issue Reagan discussed in detail in his inaugural remarks. "Manda ted by statute and federal regulalion, welfare has proliferated and grown into a levia than of unsupportable dimensions," the governor said. From Pagel J1@~ooo and we love it! NIXON DUE HERE ... "I shall propose restructuring welfare President's casting his first non-absentee -to eliminate waste and the impropriety ballot since becoming a part-time rcsi- of subsidizing those whose-greed · ts dent on the Orange Coast. greater than their need •• The present -The visit set a record for unforeseen confusion must be ·replaced with a ~ events, including a riot during a cam· gram .•. that wW m.ulmhe ftUman ~ paign swing in San Jose, followed a ty and aalvafe the ~tel)' ,:-:_:. few hours later by a smoky blaze which _ _,, . •. -:.. routed the President from his bed. -.... ~ .... -... DA!lY :;i!lOl • · -::.. The fire and subsequent arriv11l nf -:' ~ .. San Clemente volunteers led to a ·:.;:-.J>ersonal visit by the Nixons to fire .. ..,.,. .... lf[l' j?• ..... · · :·fleadquarters on election day for person al -_x:ongratulaliQJls for the firefighting effort . .. ·.]\ii the fi re damage has been repaired ..:."':.IUlce the last visil , !raving the Spanish ~ ..... bf!l}k 'tf!r C:.... Mn. ... pilM!t OltAHGli COiU'T PUll.JSH~AJIT'" 1 Jlab1r? N, W1~ Pr•ld ... 1 ....... lllWlll' J1c:lc JI.. Curley \lb ,,.IH!ll WAI o-.1 Mlrllilr lhom •• K1.,.il I.di .... Tft-•• A. M1rplliq MMIOlftt lfdllor ru,11 •• d "· H·• llwl~ Or1rip County £411111" ....... • .. ·-. '-· - -Mme fresh for the arri\'al. The Nixons. as usual. will arrive on Air Force One at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. then poard their Anny helicopter for the short flight to the landing pad near the San Cemente • r~idence. Among the entourage arriving 'I'uesdhy will proba bly be top adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger. who left San Clemente _ tn recent daya. an.er spending more than a weet~~t t}le Preai4el1lial compound.-: The vfsit. kept quiet by White House aides, ended sometime over th e weekend. Press secretary ~aid L. Ziegler said the President woqld ta ke of( before 2 p.m. EST Tuesday and planned {o remain ()n the ' ctiast into the week of Jan. J L He said he thought he might i;tay untU midweek. The President today was c\Carlng away Immediate matters requiring his, at- tention, including, ZJegler said. a:>me· ti the Ult b'.itcb' of 52 bllb: fr om the eo,,g;m· tl!ot lust odjourned. ~ctlon on 80me, of these II ~peeled before the Prc..fi:tenl't 'departure and the rest will be. bandied Jrom the W1>rking bue In cantomia. · Tht budget has been gelling a lot a! attention,. to the extent th at C-~.P .. SClaulti:, Wtector of the Office o(Buqiel a~~ Management, is not fl ying to Clltfon'lia wilh the_Kresident. But a galaq oVflhtr White llouse. • officials ls, and Shultz "'1!1 be available for consultation by telephone and may go to California later. No date has been set for getting the budget into the hands of Congress. But the State of the Union message is scheduled for delivery to Congress at 4 p,m. PST Jan. 22 -the day after the new 92nd Congress convenes. From Page J WEATHER . •• late due to disrupted schedules. Most of the storm's hardships occurred in Nebraska and Iowa . There were two deaths in r:ach state attributed to the weather. llundreds of motorists were stranded. The body ()f a man who died Sunday nf carbon mOnoxide remained in a rescue truck which was stalled west of Omaha. The victim was one of two men ovel'(ome with fumes while seated in a s n ow plow. Re scue workers rev ived the oth4!r m11n. Scores of motorists spent the night al the national guard armory in Lincoln and in schoqls and truck stops. The westbound Uhion P.11cillc City ()f Los Angeles, scheduled to arrtve Jn Omaha Bl 3:15 a.m., was strandtd at Perry, Jowa. The ea!tbound City ()f Los Ana:ela v.•as being held In Omllha. At Offutt AJr Force.&., budqiarten al the Stratea:ic Air dmmand. IOUlh of Qwiaha, officers tofd per~nnel (e stay oU the job unless otherwise lJ>. structed. f\1any of Om1ha 's streets, In- cluding the ma in thorofare. Dodge Street, \.\'ere. impassable. Many schools ln Nebraska and Iowa ll'ere cl05ec2. These included the Untversi· ty of Iowa and Iowa State University. Iowa's livestock marktl3 wert closed for lhe day . • Locally founded, locally owned, we're p:ut and parcel of the co=unities we serve. That's why we plow back all of our Orange County savers' dollars right here in our own Orange County. It's time to plant ... time to save ••. at Laguna Federal! This is the season to save at Laguna Federal Plant your savings here -and now. Watch them grow and multiply. No Association pays you higher interest on your insured savings. No AsSbciation offers you more va,ri.ed ways to save . Plant your money with us ... and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to grow! It's our way of saying thanks for saving at ' Laguna Federal. Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Conie in for your packet of Lunaria seeds -a purple-flowering money plant for your garden -plus a complete, helpful and informative Flower Seed· Garden Guide . 3 Monarcli Bay Plaza South La gun•, Calif.' AND LDAN ASSOCIATION 200 Ocean Avenue Laguna Beach, Calif. 494,-75'1 , ' , 001 N. El Camino Reol San Clemente, Calif. ' ' • ' ,( ( ,( • ,• I . - ---------------- DAILY ~ILOT S"lf ~l'lttM 'Mondv, hnulrr 4, 1971 s DAILY PILOJ , :J Z Hour• a Week Religion Class Begins in Laguna; Beginning Monday Jan. 11, reJeued time ChrisUan Education classes will be made available to fourth, fifth and 5lxth grade atudlnts tn the Laguna Beach school district. One-hour classes will be offered twice a week at each of the district's three elemutary schools. A mobile claa~m unit will be moved from school to school and parked adjacent to the achoo! grounds. The program, in preparation for several months, has cleared all 'lega1 aspects, school official! !aid and received endorsement from the scb<>OI system. It is sponsored by the Laguna Beacll ~lea:ied Time Corporation, whidl -bu financed the enterprise .and will piovide. the mobile classroom, the teacher an4 all materials. · The corporation i.!I backed by nine Laguna Beach churches: Un J t e·4 Methodist. St. Catbetlne's Catholic, ~ munity Presbyterian, Church of Rellgiou1 Science. St. Paurs Lutheran, Calvary Evangelical Free, St. Mary's Episcopal. Neighborhood Congregational and Unitr..·: Instructor will be Mr!. Joh Ii McDougall. recently on the staff of the. Neighborhood Congregational Church in Laguna Beach. Immediate regislratiGn ror the c1U!el Is necessary and signed authof"in.Uon from parent or guardian mu5t ba presented by each particlptiting 1tudl!int. THIS WAS SCENE AT HEIGHT OF 'HAPPENING' ILEFTI; NOW, AREA IS CLEARED AND ?OSTED AGAINST TRESPASSERS Contr~st •t Sycamore Hills: Now That tha Crowd Is Gone, Even Would·be Tree Planter Can't Get on the Property You Can Get Dou~le Cash From Airlines Lesson! will be non-denominational in content and will not be a duplication. of church school lessons, but a 1peclal course in Bible study. Detailed in- formation may be obtained from Mr. or Mrs. Otho Budd, program ad- ministrators, fit 49f-.5689. - Police Seize Yule Trees at Festival Site Laguna Beach Police today are watching over 12 Douglas fir trees, im· pounded Saturday at the Sycamore Hill! site of the Christmas weekend rock festival. Organizers of lhe festival claim th ey were going to plant the live trees on the land Sunday. Police said the trees \\'ere removed because th ey were lying unattended al the site. Donor of the J2 large trees is Los Angeles clothing store ow ner. F'red Le\.\'is. who wa s among the backers of lhe Christmas "happening." "I'll be down to Laguna today with the bill of sale. so I can get the trees back. Then we'll try to get permission to go on the land lo plant them," Lewis said when contacted late Sunday. Police noted that the site of the festival, owned by Great Lakes Properties, has been posted "no trespassing." No one may enter it without permission from lhe owner. police said. Pla11ners Stttdy New Ordinances After con1pleting a brief business agen- da tonight, Laguna B e a c h planning commissioners v«ill adjourn to a study 5ession, examining the proposed new subdivision ordinance and the com- prehensive zoning ordinance. b o l h prepared in conjunc~ion \Vilh the general plan. The commission _\\'iil rormally recom- mend lhat the City Council acknowledge receipt or the general plan document prepared by Daniel, Mann . Johnson and ~1endenhall. in fulfillment of the firm's contract vlith the city. Still Number One Campus Turmoil Perils Rating of UC Be':keley Death Claims Model for Ipa11e1na Girl \VASHlNGTON (AP) -If an airline has overstild the flight on Which you hold a ticket and can't somehow get you to your de.!ltination within two hour~ of your original schedule, you're entitled to more than "We're .!IOrry." You're enUtled to double your money back. lioliday rush period.!! account (or many of the 134.,000 passengers the airlines Ba rbara Ann Boyter of Newport Beach, report walk up to check-lb counters every ' . BERKELEY (AP) -The University of Calirornia has compiled the best ratings in the American Council of Education·s new survey of 130 graduate schools, but campus turmoil and budget press ure jeopardize that stature, the Berkeley chancellor says. "We are slipping compeLltively with other schols, especially the ones com- pared in the ACE report," !'aid Roger W. Heyns, whose resignal.ion as <'hancel!or after more than five years was submitted Motorist Jailed For Pulling Gun On CHP Officer a beauteous redhead who portr.ayed the year to rind the flight has been oversold. Nov. 13. tic is serving \\'hi!e a successor farned .. Girl from Jpanema" both as Last ;year. 4-4 ,000 persons" cashed in is sought. a painHtig model and in lhe living picture on the double-your-money-back penalty The council"s report. released Thurs· \'ersion al Laguna's Festival · of Arts, .set by government regulation. TI:ie day. involved a survey of more than S,000 diecl Nrw Year's day after a lengthy .airlines apparently arranged to get the scholars who rated facu lties and prcr-illncs~. She \\'as 34. <lther passengers to their destinations grams in 36 fields of study. f\1iss Boyter 1vas selected by Newport withou~ penalty. , Three-fourth;; or the progran1s survey-artisl \\'il!ian1 A. Molla in 1965 10 model llow many persons were not reported ed were scored higher than they were 111 for his painting of the hauntingly pretty by the airlines and were not advised a similar sur vey five years ago. bikini-cl;irl n1iss who y,·as famed in Lalin <lf their right to the double payment Berkeley rated ainon):! lhc top fivl' nn :-;ong. f\folta won the Laguna Festival's isn't known, although federal o~fici~s 32 of the 35 programs where it w;:is su r-"l-;oldcn Palette Award" for the painting, say the number probably runs tn e ~~y~:341~arv<1rd rated in the top five on ~~~~~ti~a~~: such award given by the ~~~u~~f:u:~uroF~i:s d~:~ ~~~~: Miss Boyter then brought the painting regulations. Other graduate faculties mo.c:;l frequent-F' d I I t· t •-th t a I d · r to life in 11 livi ng p1·ctucc rluri·ng !he e era regu a ions I a<.e a ny y rate 1n the top ive po.c;itions in vi'lr-b ped de ··-holdi " d h Pageant of the Mastcr.c;. passenger um sp1ui:: ng co~ iuus epartments ranging from art is-fl · ed " · •lUed to U · • rc··1·'en! nf tl1e Harbor •rea for nn reserve space. 111 enw a l'e· lory to zoology were niversity of Chi-" "'u " f I I It cago, University <lf Michigan. Stanford 10 years, Miss Boyter made her home und hp us an equa pena Y payment - University and Yale University. at 213 1,2 35t h SL in Newport Beach. but t ere are1excepllons. t . ·r "I was interested in Berkeley," Logan She was · a freelance graphics designer For examp e, go~e1:runenf req_UISl ~:: \Vilson. council president. told newsmen and dirl much work for Bond-Parkhurst-of space relieves alair inesbl 0 paying_ .. in Washington 'J'hursday, ''Apparently Bond Publications in Newort. penalty. Mechanic pro ems reqwnnc the JUbstitution of a smaller plane alJO there's no deterioration Uiere :· There are no family survivors. Her frees the airline from paying anyone But Heyn·s took a dllfcrent view in an 1nany friends, however, are plann ing bumped because ol the switch. interview at Berkeley. which coolers n1emorial services. Pacific Vie W al ed t Jf the A Westminster man accused of holding more than 900 Ph. n. degrees a year and ~tortuary of Corona de! Mar is in charge ·Ther· penaltylhel• w v , oo, Ille up a California Highway patrolman at has 11 Nobel laureates on its c;urrcnt of arrangen1cnts. air ine gets passen~r lodn •,n•t. r gunpoint white being questioned about facult y. flight arriving at the origma es 1n1 ion his erratic dri ving on the San Diego Since the last ACE survcv in 1961 . the with two hours <lf the original domestic Freeway near San Clemente is awaiting year of the Free Speech Mo'vcmcnt , Ber-Sa11ta Aita Tot flight or within four hours of a foreign Class schedules, beginning next wedf, will be as follows : Aliso School, 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Mondat. and Friday. " El Morro School, 2:30 p.m. to 3:• p.m. Tue!day and Wedne!day. r Top of Oe World School, t p.m. to 2 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Thursday. ·· Former Solon's Widow Succumb~'. Burial was scheduled today ror the. widow of onetime. Re p u b 11 e a ti CongresSman Edgar W. Hiestand, who leaves three daughters iiicluding one llv:o. .ing in Laguna Beach. . Mrs. Berenice Crall Hiestand died ta&£. Thursday of complications resulting from pneumonia. The widow oft~ man who represented· California's 21st Congressional Distrid· from 1952 to 1962, when reapportionment put him out of a job, succumbed irl' San Gabriel. Services are to be at the Church of· Our Savior in the. San Gabriel ValleY. community. Survivors include Mrs. B a r b a r:-t Bragassa. ()f 280 Aster· St, 1.agunl Beach, Mr1. Mary McCoy, of Paudena and Mra. Janet Watts, of Altadena. ". Lost to Thieves ' ' arraignment today in municipal court. kelry has had 70 rnas s-demonstration~. fl ight. Andres Reyes Alvarez, 56. of 7741. some ri o!s, along y,·ith arson and bomb· Although a passenger caMot refuse Laguna Beach police today are bt-· IZth St., was booked on suspicion or ings. More than 2.500 arrests were made CJJ okes lo ·Dea tJI another commercial flight and 5till ve.stlgating two New Year's Ev•· drunken driving and carrying a concealed on or near the campus. receive the penalty payment, he can burglaries In which jewelry and auto weapon shortly before midnight on New "If the 1urmoil continues. it will ha ve. a refuse to switl:h to an air taxi or ground accesaoriea valued at more than $71» Year's Eve after a patrolman disarmed harmfu l cffecl," J-feyn s said_ "It n1akcs A 2-yea r-0Jd Santa Ana boy choked transportation. were taken. the suspect following a brief scuffle the life of the mind difficult. and the in-Lo death Sunday on a toy ba!loon, the _ The ceiling on the penalty payment Pollce said several pJeces of jewelry and turned him over to sheriff's deputies. sl itution can't tolerate it for long and re-Orange County Coroner's Office reported. -not including the ticket refund -valued at $500 wert taken from a jewelry The arresting officer said he halted main distinctive ... When it gets disrup-Edward Orozco, son of Mr. and Mrs. is $200. The minimum penalty is f25. box at the home of David Alltn Pboenii:, Alvarez'! pickup truck after spotting tive and threatens personal safety it·s ri.tanucl Orozco. of 2235 S. Rosewood According to Civil Aeronautics Board 450 SL Ann's Drive. An investigate\ the vehicle weavi111g in the southbound eng,rmously debiHt:aUng ." Ave .. was dead on arrival at Santa figures for 1969, Caribbean-Atlantic, a sak! the thief may have entered th«. lane Of the San Diego Freeway about Campus turmoil has lessened this yea r. Ana Community Hospita l. small airline serving Puerto Rico and home by using a key to unlock tb4I a mile north of Avenida Pico. He claims but the other major problems S('('n by Efforts of the Santa Ana Fire Depart-the WeGt Indies had the highest percen-front door as there were no algnl, Alvarez tried to ram his patrol car Heyn·s·reduccd financi<1l support-has be-ment rescue squad to restore breathing tage of violations : S percent of all of a forced entry and the horn• wll" during the pursuit. corne more acute. failf'd. lhc coroner's office said. passengers carried. Jocked at the time or the burglary. ::::==============--=~~===========::::--~~~~-'-'-- El Rancho has the hottest price in town! CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF TOMATO REG. SIZE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Meatl!,t_that make the meal! I Meat loaf Oven ready ••. simply·ahape and bake! Fine!!: meats, freah ground ••• seuoned to offer genuine satisfaction I 79~ Breakfast Steak • S'l.79 lb. U.S.D.A.-.;hoice Bee!I ••• rrrut wiUt El J!!.J1cho'o ew! Stroganoff Beef • Sl.89 lb. Chunks or rich tender U.S.D.A. Choice beef! ARCADIA: PASADENA: Sunset ud Hontinatoa Dr. (D Rllcho Centll) 320 Wat Colorado Blvd. J • I PricetJ in tf I ect M rm.'\ Tue1., lV ed., Jan. 4, 5, 6. No Snlea to Dealers. SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: . ' Fuerte'• .•• b.uttery amooth ..• delightful In aalad1 ••• and deliciou~ for aandwichea ! 4 :$1 ../--' El Rancho's Delicatessen for va.rietgJ Sliced Meats • • • • •• Leo's .•. 8 oz ..•• Wafer thin Dark Turkey, Bff!, Spic~ BMfl Turkey White Meat, Corned. Beef or limn • • • 45c NEWPORT BEACH: 'l1Z1 NtwpOll aw. ... Fremont and Huntinstor Dr. Warner and Alronquin (llolrdwalk Center) 2555 EastMvlf DI. (Ustbluff Vlll1p Cetlter) ' .· ' I , Peace Tal;ks Re·suming Israel, Arab. Envoys Fly to New York lly ll1llW .P.-lllluPU.011 £typUan ~sldf!nt Anwar Sadat warn- td bl& people today of the possibility ot a ntw war with Israel should the tnlddlt eest puce. lilU brtak down aaatn. AA ht dkl , the Egyptitn and lll'aeli envoya flew to New York for talks with U.N. Medlltt.-G'"""' V. Jarring. Jordan, also a pirty to the peace t.alb, was in the midat oJ a criais involvin& Pa1eitln!an auerrllla1 and there wu some conl111ion u to who would reprtsenl Jordan in New York. Thi guur-Wu oppoee both the CWTenl ceue- flre. and the talks. ·Khrushchev's Son-in-law The ctue·fire does not involve the Syrian or Lebanon fronta and the Btlrut newspaper Al-Anwar II.id lsraell tank gunnen at.tacked a aouth Lebanon vlllige Sunday, damaging at least 15 houses. The report said Iiraell latW hJt tbs vUl1ge of Shebaa for five houri and killed a nl.lfflber of people. There wu no offkial confirmation of the attack. l!rael still was having trouble in the Gaza Strip and a military spokesman Jn Tel Aviv said lsr1eli troops killed an Arab guertiJIA near a Gaza refugee camp today lfter he burled a grenade At an Israeli patrol. Another grenade was hurltd at an Israeli civilian vehicle. In a si milar attack Saturday guerrillu killed two young Israeli children. Seen as Me111oir S1nuggler LONDON t UPll r-.•iJcita S . Khnuhchtv's IOn·in-law Lev Petrov may hive "been the one who smuggled part of the former premier's -notea to the west, in the opinion of an increasing number of observtrs. The 1rowing belle! i& that il was :Petrov rather than another son-in-Jaw, AJexti Adzhubei. wl'lo provided the notes th1t formed the basis for the book ''Khrushchev Remembers.'' Adzllubti, the one-time influential editor .of the government newspaper IJVbtia. is an embittered middle-aaed man living an obscure and dull existence as a minor employe of the monthly WU.trated ll'll.Ju.i.ne Sovlet!l:y Soyuz LIOHTEJt SIDE COLUMN WILL ltlSUME MONDAY CS9viet Union). Petrov. who d.if!d a few months ago, was the huaband of Khrushchev's arand- daughter Yulia, whom K h r u ah ch e v Je&:ally adopted in her infancy .tnd rliud as his own daughter. Adzhubei'a relations with his father·in· law in the past few years havt been strainM. He djd nol have tht easy access to the Soviet Union's former supreme ruler lhat Petrov had. . Petrov, ror many years the editor tJf ~viet weekly, an English-language newspaper prepared by the Novosll Agency for distribution in ~a11 Khrushchev's confidant"""Who frequently visited him and heard him dictate rough notf'S on his reminlScences. Unlike Adzhubti, the h u Iba n d of Khrushchev's daughter Rada, who liw.s an isolated life and never meets forelgners, Petrov, by virtue of his job, had frequent ct1nta:1 with English-speak- ini newsmen and diplomat.!. He spoke Ellilish well. ' The Egyptian president already has begun a vrorldwide diplomatic off6lSiV~ to explain Egypt'' position in the peace tllp. Today. Sadal journeyed to the town of Tania, 56 miles north or Gairo, to exp!Wt hi& policies to tM Egyptian ~pie. t·The ne.xt batU e will be a fuJJ.scale on!. not only al !he battlefront,'' he ~d a rally of thousands of cheering lrhabitanls. ''We shall fa ce it in the J ield. in the factory. in the city, in !he street. in every town. everywhere.·• Cro\\·ds chanted: '"Sadat go ahead. we are your soldiers until liberation"' and "God i,; great, lo"g live Sadat.'' Others screamed, "we snall fight. we shall fight." "We have become stronger ecC1nomically, militarily and politically," Sadat said, •·and althOU&h the enemy is still strong we sla.ll enter the battle at whatever cost. Icy · Blast Numbs Nation Fierce Winds Bury Roads With, Snow Drifts ' Cellfortda IY UtOTaD .. llU INTlltNATteNAL Mli"'-C1ll~l1 br1a.1 m.11 ... ,_ frltolf ,_.,,,, ... ,..., "''" Wl1111 ,.,..,. ,..._,.., -· 6f "'• e.ld· -61 ......... Iii tW9 'l'Mr1 . .Skin ... ,, .. 1 •• o-.....,. •MloN •I'd ..-ntt l" 1"'91 "M: ...... l..i. ..... t !\lrtt. Wi ii II.- '-l,_I ... 11 Sl111t Allt ... IMh rl l- 1 ... 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" .. ... 091.,M! " " ... ~.,~~· " ... ~ .. rl W1Y1" " ,. " , . ., .... " " ...,!l'l<>luru " " !"4;1ntPftll• ., " •• J t dclOllWllll " " J"""u " " ... "'""' Crtv • " ·" Ml1ml " " ·" M\IWt '""'H " " ... Ml11"Ntel11 " " .. , Ntw Vort " " Oki•"""'' Cir.-" " ·" Om1111 " .. M """•<1•1111111 " " ,. ....... 1. • " "'"'"'"'" • • " ""'lltnd, M• " • ·~· " ., ~l•h ....... ~ •• " ' :5!. llolJlo " " .. , .'it lt l ttt Cltv " " ...... .,1. " " :S..-.... " " ' T11¥1nt! " " w ""'"'t.., .. ,. ' U,1 Ttl#Mlw SKELETON DISCOVERED NEAR JERUSALEM Artl1t Shows Posslbl• Mettiod of Crucifixion • l)eath •More Painful' • Crucifixion Skelewn Unearthed by Scholars JERUSAL.EM {UPI) -The skeleton of a man na iled to a e r065 about 2,IJOO years ago shows crucifixion may have befll'I different -and even more painful -than the method depicted by hi5tory. Or. Avraham Biran, director of the Israeli department Qf antiquities. said !he skeleton was ··a very. very important discovery, .. but 5aid it would be "mere Red Units Apply Added Pressure On Supply Lines SAIGON IUPI I -Communist t.ro:'lp5 stepped up their pressure. against suppl y lines In Laos and Cambod1a today and a 5poke1man in Vientiane 5ald a battalion faboul 600 men) of Nor1.h Vietnamese troops crossed from Lao5 into Thailand last \\"eek. The U.S. Command said American 852 strat.tgic bombers 5truck near the &iuthern edge of the Drmilitariztd Zone (DMZ) and against a Communist base camp area further 50uth in their fir5t raids ln South Vietnam in a month. The raid5 followed increased Communist pressure below the DMZ. Gen. Thongphan Knocksy. a Laos defen5e ministry spokesman. to I d newsmen in Vientiane lhe North Viet· name:ie had crossed into Thailand at Ban Hue.i Poon. J${1 miles northwest nf Vientiane. He said the purpose of the border crossing was not Immediately kno\\·n. fllltasy" lo think it might be the remains of Christ. ''It cannot be Christ for the man's name is Yehohanan and it wa5 chiseled into his oo;5aury (tomb),"' Biran said Sunday. As generally depicted by paintings and historians, crucifixion -including l ha t of Christ -was with the outspread arms neiled to the crossbar through the palms of the hands and the two feet nailed to the upright with the feet pointed downward and the nail going through the top of the foot. Instead, from the bones found by Israeli scholars, the 11rms ~ere nailed to the crossbar through the forearms. The feet were placed together and turned sideways. with the spike driven through the two heels and into the wood. This left the man with his body t\\·istcd to one side. in the case of Yehohanan ,~·1th his knees pointed to the righ t A .~mall "·ooden sea t called a sedacual "'·as on the cros5 lo give him added support -and prolong the agony of d 0 y1nu Holiday Road Deaths Nearing 500 Barrier By United Pres5 l11ternatio11al Traffic fatalities during the long New Year's holiday weekend stayed within tht expected range. compih1tions showed tod ay. but delayed reports could push the figure beyond the 500 mark, A UPI count at 9:30 a.m .• iEST), showed 440 person5 killed in traffic between fi p.tn., Thursday, and 11 :59 p.m., Sunday. Air Pirate • :Veers Plane To Havana MIAtdi (UPI) -The fir1I hlj1cldn1 of 1971 caq thrN d1y1 into the new year. The script bu cbanaed very little since the flnil bijacklnl almost 10 ye&r1 ago. In each instance, the craft was a National Airlines plane. the hijacker waa armed and quickly took contrel ol tM fl ight. Sunday's occurred as a n11ht from Im Angeles prepared to land 1t Tampa. "This man walktd into the cocksi't with a big cannon and 11id we're 10\ng to Havana -and that's whit we did." said Capt. Carl Weiss, tht pilot. The OC8 jet carried 97 persons, c0r1· siderably more than the National 1irliner with 11 persons aboard t}Jat wu diverted to Cu ba by an armed Cuban during a flight from Maam.i to Key Wut en May 1, 1961 -the first hij1cl:ing. The hijacking SUnday was carried fltlt by a Negro ·armtd wi!h a pistol. but when the plane landed In Havana. another black passenger "Nsved a pi5lOI and e5COrted two wome n an d three children apparently the wive,; and children of the hijackers -of! the plane . The passengers remaining in QJba \\'ere !isled only as P.1r. and MrL Johnson and Mr. and P.1rs. Jones. The Jones couple had children. 4 ind Ii, and the Johnson family was listed as h<iving a non·licketed infant. The first 1gunm•n asked stewardess Dorothy Amato for a drink of water as the jet approached Tampa on a fligh t frotn Los An.celes to l\fian;i. "When •I brought him the "ater, bt pulled a C(lver off hi! lap and he had a gun underneath it," she 1'1d. ''He grabbed my arm and marched me up the aisle and got the key to lhe cockpit from Janice (s~wardess (Janice Lov&- ladyl and wenl into the pilot's CX)mput. ment ." Witness Relates Painter's Manila " Attack on Pope ~IA NILA (UPI ) -A Manila judl fl rured today that Bolivian painter Mtn. do:r:a y Amor. 35. was sane enough to stand trisl and lhe first witness said he saw Ml'ndoza·s dagger strike Pope Paul VI twice on the chest last Nov. 27. The first vtitness was Jolly Bugarin, director of the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation {NBJI who wa.!J present \\'hen Mendoui allegedly tried lo murder the pope when he arrived 11t Manila International Airport al st1rt of a Pacific and Asian tour. Bugarin identified t>.1endota in thfl courtroom as the man dres!ed in I priest's attire who rushed toward~ lhfl pope during airport reception ceremonie1 and '·made a plunging move to thfl pope." "'It was so fast I just 5aw the action of a knife striking !\\'ice on the Jtft portion of the breast or the popt." he testified . Bugarin later identified a black· tinted curved da11er. preatnt.ed 11 &II evidence in coart. IS the weapon. The Bi M is big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the nation's highest interest on insured · I sCVings ... 5% to 6%. But equally important-care.s enough to give you very personal service. -Highest interest at i/;,t-,,.. (lfj ~ ... ' iill THE BIG M Utual ~~~logs Coro"' cM1 Mer office: 2"7 l!llt COUI H~hwq / 6,~tO Other omcee In Covln1, Wftt Arcadia, Paudena and Glendali. .. ' ' I ·I ····""· _,., ..... -...--·..-~·--·-··'I" ~· ""°'\• .,, •• -~. ........ •• 1 ....... ~ ......... .. • Huntington Bea~h Today's Fina) N.Y. Stoek:8 VOl. M, NO. l , 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES f ORANGE COUNTY, CAlJFORNIA MONDAY, JANUAltY 4, 1971 TEN CENTS Nixon Comes Tue·sday for San Clemente Stay By JOHN VALTERZA Of no. O.lly l'l•t Sl•ft President Nixon today abandoned no- tiom of a Florida va cation and opted irultead to brave chilly S o u I b e r n califomia for a 10-day working stay at the. Western While House in San _Clemente. White House aides in Washington an- nou:noed the President will arrive here Tueoday. Officials al El Toro Marine Corps Air Station confinned that the chief executive's arrival time aboard Air Fqrce One is scheduled Tuesday betv.·een 3 and 3:30 p.m. El Toro's gates will be closed to the public. The President's arrival here will come just one day after his nationally lelevised chat tonight with four television com- mentators. The program will be aired at 6 p.m. on channels 2 and 7 and in a delayed version at 9 p.m. on Channel •• . .. While House officers said today that while in San Clemente, Mr. Niion will I.le working, on busineM .Jeft over by Congress and on messages and programs for the year ahead . Most vital among the work Items are C-Ompletion of the new budget for the 1972 fiscal year and the drafting of the aMual message on the Stale of the Union. This will encompass ad· ministration legislative plans and pro- grams for the years ahead • • Ul'I ......... MEMBERS OF BOSTON'S 'L' STRE•'l\BROWNIES ROLL IN THE SNOW BEFORE SUNOAY SWIM Nottt"'e Llkt • Dip in the Atlentlc When the Tempereturt Climbs Into Hl9h 30s Intense Winter Storm Cripples Midwest Area By United Pres11 International An intense storm blasted the Midwest today wilh heavy snow and high winds. In Iowa the storm was described as the worst in nearly 30 years. Traffic there was at a virtual standstill. Businesses closed. Mail deliveries ~·ere canceled. Government offices were shut down. Hundreds of motorisls were stranded. The Iowa Patrol and Highway Com· miss ion said the state's interstate roads were impassable . At least three deaths in Iowa were caused by the storm, authorities said. Two of the victims died of heart attacks after shoveling snow. ' Seal B each To Set Recall Election Date Nearly six months of political dispute In the city (If Seal Beach appear headed for resolution tonight as the city council prepares to set a date for the recall election aimed at unseating Councilman Conway J. Fuhrman. The order to set the election was tMued by Superior Judge Luter Van Tatenhove. Additional snow amounts of more than 4 inches were expected from northeast Iowa through northern Wisconsin and Michigan. Travelers warnings were in effect from northeast Kansas and eastern Nebraska, through Iowa and portions of eastern ?\-1innesota. The new snow accumulation totaled 16 inches at Harmony, ?\-1inn. The Nebraska llighway Patrol re· quested th at Kansas close all roads entering Nebraska because of a "serious backup of traffic , sev ere weather and road condHioru." The storm ranged over much of the nation. Snow measuring 3 to 16 inches covered almost all of New ~1exico. Schools in Albuquerque and in other communities were closrd because of treacherous driving conditions. One traf· fie death was blamed on the storm. Mrs. Dolores Anita Haas, city c 1 er k of. Taos, N.M., drowned when her car sli~ oU U.S. 64 near Velarde and sank in the Rio Grande. Near Madison, Wi s., a snowmobile was dispatched to .bring Mrs. Daine Krueger to a hospital to deliver a baby. Five sheriff's vehicles and three snow plows got stuck trying lo reach her home. An estimated 7,500 per!Ons were stranded at Oe)"eland's HopkJns lnterna· tional Airport Sunday night because aJf?011s west of there were mowed in. Twelve nights bound for Oiic.ago, Des Moines, Cedar Rapids and Milwaukee (See WEATHER, P•ge %) Northeast Winds Cause Troubles To Boat Owners Gusty winds beached a 2 8 ·f o ot catamaran at Sunset and capsized a 14-foot sail boat in Huntington Harbollr • over the weekend. The strong win ds also sent Huntington Beach lifegua rds scurrying to help six other troubled boats in Huntington HarboUr channels. No one was injured in any of the incidents. The catamaran came ashore nea r 24th Street in Sunset Beach about 4:20 p.m., Sa turday. Lifeguards said the rudder of the boat, owned by Mike Austin of Long Beach. broke at sea, and wind an d wa ves drove the catamaran onto the beach. When Austin's boat swung out of con· trol one unidentified sailor was tossed into the ocean. I-le was quickly rescued by Huntington Beach lifeguards who patrol the Sunset area. Austin and ' three other persons rode the catama ran ashore. Lifeguard Sgt. Bill Richardllon said Austin took his rudder home for repairs and by 9 a.m.; Sunday had sailed the catamaran back to the Long Beach Marina. Damage was listed at $200. A If.foot sail boat owned by James Jenkin, 16372 Maruffa Circle, Huntington Be:aeh, overturned in one of the Hun- tington Harbour. channels about noon, Saturday. Lifeguards helped him rigfit the boet and reported only $20 damage to the mast. Two Rival Groups The annual economic message is the third major item that will be getting a going-over from the President .and his top aides here. M'.!'3. Nixon will also make the trip but other members of the family have no plans to do so. Mr. Nixon's "rest-vacation" here ap- pears to fit in with recommendations of the ,President's physician. Dr. Walter Tkach, who pronounced him in good shape after an aMual checkup bot said the chief executive ought to ease up more in spots like Califoniia and Florida. Reports said the chief executive had planned a trip to hU Key Biscayne home. but changed his mipd at the last minute and opted for San Clemente. The President and First L a d y originally had planned to travel to San Clemente on Dec. 26, but that vWt was called off weeks before Christmas. Their last vi.sit to San Clemente took place during the hectic national election season and was highlighted by the President's casting his first non-ebsent.ee ballot. since becoming a part.time resi- dent on the Orange Coaat. ·The vi.sit set a re<:ont for unforeseen events, in(:luding a riot during a cam- _paign swing in San Jose, follcwed a few hours later py a smoky blue which (See NIXON, Page Z) Runway Top lss:ue Big Crowd Seen at Huntington Meet Meadowlark Airport again gets top billing at tonight's meeting of th e Hun- tington Beach city 1fOUncil. Pilots and homeowners are expected to jam council chambers for a public hearing on whether the runway extension may be used. Another major question at the council meeting will be whether the city should hire a project manager at a salary of between $1,500 and $1,800 a month to oversee the building of the civic center and central library. Th is will be considered at the 4:30 p.m. session of the council. The Meadowlark hearing will be based on an appeal against a planning com- mission decision to declare a conditioRal Winds Strons . . . ~' . . . ., ....... exception pennit for the runway n;. tens ion null and void. The plannefl argued that certain improvements they had in sisted be made at the airfield had not been carried out by lhe operator, John Tumer. Today City Building Director Jack Cleveland said those imrpovements, which included the correction of elec· trical violations and the installation pf a blast ferre, had now been carried out and he would recommend that the perm it be re instated. The blast fence -at the Heil Avenue end of the runway -may be the target of criticism by homeowners. They have charged that the fence has not been sunk into solid foundations. Cleveland sa id that, although the fence does not Near-freezing W ~ather J(eeps Grip on Coast Downward-zooming temperatures and fri gid Santa Ana winds that gusted up to 60 miles per hour Sunday will again remind Orange Coast residents that Old Man Winter has us firmly in his grip. Chilled, chapstick-carrying folks are in for more of lhe same treatment tbnight and T'Jesday. Record low temperatures dropped below the freezin( mark in certain Los Angeles County spots as California recorded its coldest Jan. 3 In 18 years. Bitterly cold v.•inds whipping in off the desert created hazardow: conditions for campers and trailers. while heavy snows mantle the San Bernardino and San Ga briel mou ntains . ' Orange County escaped with ju.!lt ter· ribly cold feet, while damage was re· corded elsewhere. A 32-foot sloop end a houseboat capsiz. ed and sank at Santa Catalina Island. while a $20,000 yacht wen t down off San Diego 's Coronado Island. All seven persons aboard the Seaquest escaped before It foundered, according to authorities. The current cold snap is part of a storm 11ystcm that has caused severe conditlom In the Midwest. if that't of any comfort. "It started off the central California coast late Friday and when the low pressure system maved ea.st, a lot of cold air moved in." explaina Dave Williams, of the National Weather Service. A high of 62 degrees wall forecast today, with an overnight low of 35, in cue you want to ·get up and check your thermometer. Small craft warnings are hoisted along the Southern California Coast, particular- ly lrom Point Conception to Dana f'.oinl An Orange County Harbor District spokesman 1aid wind gusts will be up to 40 knota below coastal canyons, and 5 to 15 knots elsewhere in general. Jets arriving and departing from Orange County Airport were using their inland approaches toda y, after winds reached a 3S knol velocity during predawn hours. "We haven't been above 30 knota since," said a control tower duty officer. The highest airport wind reading was 52 knots Sunday . Despite the fact temperatures are to degrees lower than norm al for this tim e cf the year, the five-day forecast· is al least for co ntinued fair weather. No smog can be seen in the Los Angeles Basin and elsewhere, afford ing Southlanders a rare glimpse of their ne ighboring snow-draped mount.aifl!. Desalting Plant Ruling Expected To Conie Tonight Directors of the Orance County Water District will decide tonight if the (!Qllflty gets a $12 miUlon waler desalinization plant. The federal Office of Saline Water has offered the water district '9.9 million to help build the experimental plant. District officials must agree to chip in about $2.5 million for Ul6 plant. It would bl! btdlt on the dlstrtct's 26-acre headquarters eite at Euclid Street and Ellis Avenue In Fountain Valley, or on a 12-acre parcel ·at the mouth of the Santa Ana IUver In Huntlngton Buch. stricUy conform to a plan submitted by Turner, it is "structuraUy sound." The Meadowlark affair, which haa kept homeowners and Tun1er in conflict tor several months now, gained morti notoriety last week. Turner was arrested and accused of assaulting a police officer after an in. cident at the airport. The oWcers had gone to the airport to check c:1ut a citizen's complaint about night flying and a tirief scuffle was alle1ed to have occurred. Turner, who was released on his own recognizance, is schedO.ll':d to appear In West Orange Municipal C o u r t • Westminster at 8:30 a.m. Tu~y to aru:wer the charge. Valley Youth Foun41 ~.i. Af Happening / A week-long hwit for a Fountain Valley teenager ended tragically Sunday when his body was found on a hnJside near the site of a Christmas holidiy happening in Lagana Beach which also lnwlved one other fatality. Circumstances surroonding the death nf Grant Weidenhammer, 19, of· lTlfl Oak St., were being probed to determine whether druga were a factor. Coroner's deputies satd ht apparenUy died sometime on Dec. 30, after leaving a group of several friends. Ile had been reported missing Dec. 28, after leaving home following a family quarrel. Investigators said We\denhammer had been to the festival -which drew an estimated 20,000 penons from all over America -and returned home before the argument. Friends theorized he may have gone back to the site of the colorful event in the Sycamore Hills area and weDt back there early Sunday to hunt. Four of them separated and two, John Almquist and Russell Hanna, both or Huntington Beach. discovered his body during the early morning hours. The victim was lying about three fourths of the way up a small h.UI. just east of Lagua8 ~nyon Road and about ::llO yards IOUtb of El Toro Road. His car wu foond parked along El Toro Road , leadlng AJmqulst •nd Ranna to center the aeilrch'tn that area. No visible s1gna o( vkllente or physical Injury were fowtd, leading to the possible dMJg dealh upect 111e1tlooed by Sberill'1 CapL Jame.· BroadbelL WNiloer ·i l Fuhrman, who holds the Second District seat, was served with a recalt notice last July 17 when he and Mayor Morton A. Sawn and Councilman Thomas Hogard voted to fire CJ\y Manager Lee Risner. Risner, a popular man with the pro- ponents of t)ie recall, was accused of neglecting hb duties and of failure to furn ish the council with proper financial reports. He now ocatpies the position of City Administrator ln L1 Habra. Employe Secret Yo(~ Seen Engineers e~ the plant to tum <lUt S-4 million p.OO'n!: of n it.free ocean water when t'.!tlmpleted In 1'73. The water would be plimped undergi:ound tn Hun· tington Beach •nd fountain Valley to keep •ally ocean water tway from the fresh walfr tables. Fair and '"'~" iol lho good word from the · wutbenni.n tor Tuesday, but thal d-'t 1pply •• the °'ernlg)lt houn, durl111 which the mercury ·will plunp down to the ~ee:zing mark. Although no exact date was sptcifted In the court order, It 15 expect~ that the election date wtn fall either on March 16 or March 23. The squabble over the election dale entered !he courtroom when Fuhrman cm his supporters cl•lmed that IOme signatures on the recall peUtion were invalid and charged that they were col- .ltded under false pretext. Jod8e Van Tatenbovc ruled ~gainst l!ie Fuhrman backet1 Dec. 29 and held Ule petitions valld. No one has yet offlclally deelarcd bi1Tl3elf a candidate for the counc.11 aeat beld by FuhrmlJl. A secret ballot may ~ held to settle a months-lone db'pute between two rival employe auoclaUons Ln H11ntlngtoa. Beach. , ' Tiie ·dlapete will be· brllqllt . before the clty councl1 this evening by members of lhe fOC<OUy formed Huntington Beach MW'llcfpal EmpJoyes,' A 11 o c I 1 t J o n (HBMA). Thil group will 1sk the council to grant It official recogn!Uon or direct the city clerk to hold a teeret election "immt'diate.ly" to determine whether the l-IBMA or a longer establLshed tiody , called the City Em)ltJyes Aalloclatlon (CEA), whould repreeenl noiwafety personnel In lhe clly. Tbo HBMA was lormed after the , September salary negotiations in the ctty by employes who felt they wen! not .adlequatety reprtSented. HBMA manber1 argue that the CEA ii a IOcial orpnlza.. lion and does not ha•• Ute authority to rtpresent emp)oyes oa Plf"O'lD'I m.~ le~. • J'n a letter to the eound1. Mn. Lnrel McCarthy, chairman or Ibo HBMA'• recognition committee and · a ~etary In the city attorney'• o!llce, ~ Viat the membership of the new ~ ~ stitutes 50 percent of the ~,QfOUf'. employts In tht city. ' Mrs:. McCarthy claJmed that "<!ertaln employe factions" are intemLed ln unlOl'l rcpreaent.at.ion and says that It lJ one .... • I . of the 1iml of the HBMA "to keep unloN out of the city-" I Ted .Knmp, ·....-:of the .CEA and a member <l1 fhe f1nance depat'lment, sakt · today tlllt ~ ......... tlcia liad .... pnpared .popm ~ -....... Ulm. . . . "Wt undentood, however, thtt last Novunblr the city llltonl<y w•. In. ttructed to'pnpll't I rtlOIUtlon on tbll," be commlinted. "We have not-rtcetYed a <'Op)' ol lhll fUOlutloo and It would -wear that any ntrture to the cooncU al lb& tla)I WOllld be an ezerclse In redundancy." He ag.Med tbllt a secrtt blllot or a merger of the tW1> lfl'OUPI were among lhe poulble IOIUtlonl to the dllpu1L - It wouJd iJIO 11trve 11 • p!'l)tolype 'for luger de&aklne 'pJ1nta in U\e Mure.• If water llltrkt IMrtetors qree h> the hperlmen~ con1tluctloo ,on '111e· pllllt · tbOuJd start' In June. T~t. dlrectoi'I wlll say "Yes" er "no" to the f«lenl offtr. Dlstrkt ol- ficlala wtli meet ·,1 7 p.m. In their olllces 1111:1 W. l'IU> st .. Sonta ADI. Comet Discovered 'l'OKYO (AP) -A J-amat...- atttono!Tlff ba! d\llCOVtttd a new comet which h11s been conflnned by the Tokyo Astronomical Obillerv1tory and t h e Smithsonian Jn111tltuUcn, the newspaper Yomlurt Shlmbwl .. porled today. • INSJD~'IOD~Y T~ Democrats 'are polied ·io CUT~I!' their M"'°"/OUKd con.- trot of tM 1t4UI WQU&Gtv.re to- day, while hoO 1'ttol11 t:lt~d 1tat<o o//idaU ta/« of/lu. Stor· Na ori Page i. ' -' -D .._ ' ClllclJlll "' , c....,... ..,. ._ " -" o.stll Mttk• ' ·-' •~ttrt•llllMSt -.n PIMM• ...,. -... M A ........... 16 I • ·-- ' 'Political,' Says Lawyer. LOS ANGELel: (UPll -Charles Maneon iJ underg'Ojng a "pollUcal trial" tn the Tat. murder cue and Wuld no more be charged with murder than Gov. George Wallace or John Birch Society bead Robert Welch , a delense lawyer orsued today. lrving Kalli.rd.: resumed f i n a I argument. for the defmse in the sl1•nd- one.-half-month-old trial by leUing the jury that Manson was being charged with the sl&yings because his philosophles 'Were antagonistlc to,most of AmerlCiln 11C>Ciety today. • ''There are all sorts of militant IOClet.ies In this country today." Kanarek NJd . .'"Theta la no reason why George Wallaet. the governor of Alabama, or Robert Welch o! the Birch Society should be eharged with murder. "Thil . ii • poUt~I trial in which Mr-ManlOn ia brought'° here because he is a symbol of one of the con- frontations that Is going on in this coun· try today ." Turning to evidence that the word ''pig" was daubed Jn blood on the (ront door of the Tate home, Kanarek said the deleMt: felt that key state witness Linda Kaaablan printed thoee letters there. Kanarek said il backed up the defense contentions that Mrs Kasabian and Charles "Tex" Watson were the leaders of tbe bloody foray at the Tate home. The four defendants were absent from the courtroom aga\n today, li.a:teninll to the proceedings: by loudspeak.V from ~arby rooms. Kanarek began his final arguments .n the trial Jut week told Superior Court Judie Charle Older he wouJd finish to- day. Kanarek has atumpted to diSaedit the te:rtimony or the slate's key witness, Linda Kasabian. a former "Manson Family" member who was granted im· munlty. The attorney portrayed her 11 a Mr. Magoo-type character who created havoc but remained unscathed. He also likened the cult leader to a Christian being ihrown to th e lions and the trial to 1 ROman circua. The liwyer began hb: swnmation by ahowiJli the jury enlarged c o I o r photographs of the victims. includJng the-nearly nude body of actress Sharon Tate, who was eighl months pregnant. At one point, Kanarek, whose repeal(d objections have punctuated the testimony of many wttne!!lea, suggested that the prOSttUtlon was out to get him peraonally. DeP.uty Dlltrlct. Attorney Vincent 1 BugUoil objected and Older sustained -tile objection. ., Bugliosi had attempted to ha ve Kanarek removed u an attorney in , the case when lhe trial began contending • that Kanarek had a history of prolonging trials by dilatory tactics. Attorney Maxwell Keith , who was a~ pointtd to represent Leslie Van Houten in the cue after her la.wyer, Ronald Hughes. disappeared on a camping trip Thanksgivin g, was to follow Kanarek with bi.I final arguments. Oil Field Blaze Damage Revealed Signal OJI and Gas Co. elte<'Utl\•es today estimated that the cost of a spec· tacular oil field fire wa s about $100.000. The fire. wh ich knocked out six pumps In the company 's field along Pacific. Coast High .... ·ay. broke ou t New Year's morning. Today crews were repairing and overhauling piping, tanks and pum· ping units damaged In the blaze. Capt. Carl Duncan of the Hunti ngton Beach Fire Dept. said only 25 barrels of fuel in the Unes leading to undefgtound wells were burned. An automaUc alarm sysiem shut down the purl!P. and prevented further damage, he s~: DAILY PILOT O&MtG5 CO.UT ~ ta.u-Mrr "•bMt N. Wed PT-lit""' ........... J1r.k R. w.i., Ykt Pmld ... .and ~·1 ...... Tho11111 Ktt'fli Eo1-.. llio""'' A. Mu,,llint MaMglnl IE"Ol.or Al1n Dir.In Wftt Of"llWI C-ly elllftr Alltert W. l1tu AIMclltl £dllor Hntt.tt-• .._.OM. 17175 l1111i. 1Mln1ril M1ilr111 Ailclr111t P.O. lox 7f0 92641 -. °""" . u.. •..oi1 1n ,.~ ......... CHltJt\-: »II W•I .. ~ .....,.,, e-dl1 au W•t ...... 691'1 C:~; .. Nol'lll II A · • ll'I T.iHlloM Reciprocation AKl~ed Russians Invited To Angela Trial WASHTNGTON (UPI) -The State Department has invited a group of Russian scientists and academicians to send an observer to the murder and k.idn<iping trial in Cal ifornia of black militant Angela 0<1vis. A department spokesman said SWlday the invi lation was sent in reeponse lo a letter signed by 14 persons who ex- pressed fear Miss Davis, an avowed Communist, might not get a fair trial. The signers, he continued. represented the Jetter as.an Jndependent action not connected with the Soviet govemment. Those killed wen~ a white Sl.lperior Court judge, two Negro (.'Onvicts and a black accomplice 'o\'ho took the guns into court. One of 1hc San, Quentin prison conv icts \vas being tried on a charge !hat he assaulted a guard. The other convict was a witness. Miss Davis wa:s once a faculty Jllembcr Ior the University of California at Los Angeles and has been ac1ive in Black Panther party circles. MADISON, WISCONSIN'S RALPH VAN HORN CLIMBS THROUGH DRIFT Tit PLUG METER 11 Jt Condition.ct Reflex? Or F•ar of Met•r M1ld1? Or I• Ralph Just Plain Honest? Assistant Secretary P.fartin J. llillen· brand "made it clear. of course, we expect reciprocal opportunities." the spokesman said. Hillenbrand was tile officer who cabled the reply. Apartment Bid Hearings Set For Tuesday Reagan Pledges Welfare Reform at Inauguration ~A:CRAMKNT<1 (AP l -Gov, Ronald •-Reagan launched his second term today !>f proposing that Californi~ lead the nation in reformine welfare to weed .out 1'tbose whose greed is greater thao l!IO!r need." "There 11 no greater challenge facing the &late or nation," the Republican ' Teacher Accord On Pay Issue Hinted Tuesday Teachers in the Hunting ton Beach City School District may finally reach a salary Bettlement af a special session with district trustees Tuesday night. The board of trustees is meeting to accept or reject an arbitration decision handed to the district toda y, according to S. A. ?i.1offett. district superintende nt. Lasl October, a three·man panel began studying the stalemated s;alary talks between teacbers and !he distr.ict. Dr. Edgar Jon~. a UCLA Jaw professor and neutral member of the. panel. com- pleted his recommendations lait week. Moffett declined to state what sel· Ueme1t ha1 been suggested by Jones fltld the spokesmen for teachers and the district. "I'd rather let our board aeeit first, be.fore making il public," Teachers and trustees slopped talking about salaries last spring when both sides refused lo compromise further . The 220-member teachers' asscx;ia tion is eeelmna a nine percent salary increase plus another three percent in sucb frll;lge benefit. as medical services. The administration has refused lo offer more than a six percenl salary increase \l'ilh any fringe benefits to come out of that sl1 percent. Oo Nov. 2 the tea chers' association voted unanimously to accept whatever decision ds handed down by the three-man arbitration panel. School trustees are not bound (and can't be by stale law \ to accept the arbitration decision. f>.1offelt said trustees will hold their meeting at 7 .30 in the library of Dwyer School. It is a public meeting . chief executive said in bia second in· augural add.res!. • ''If not us, who? If not now , when ?'' as ked Reagan , who has been one , of the most persistent and vocal critics of President Nixon 's family assistance wellare relonn pl'1\. Reagan. 59, said t~ only alternative -higher taxes to pay for ri sing welfare cosls -is the easy way out and te m- porary at best ln his prepared text, Reagan said he would 5pelJ out the details of -his plan and discuss the state's bleak fiscal outlook -in a message to the legislature Jan. 12. State welfare spending now totals about $2 billion a year and nearly 2 million persons receive aid. The legislature also convenes today with Democrats taking control of both t~ Assembly and the Senate -a fact that is certain to complicate Reagan's plans for the wellare reform. In the outgoing legislature, Republicans con· trolled both cham bers. Reagan's second inaugu ral features an entertainment gala tonight starring Frank Sinatra, J ohn Wayne, J immy Stewart and Jack Benny, Welfare was the tingle issue Reagan discussed ill detail in his inaugural remark.5. "Mandated by statute and federal regulation, welfare haa proWerated and grown inLo a leviathan of unsupportable dimensions.'' the governor said, "I sha ll propose restructuring welfare -to eliminate waste and the impropriety of subsidizing those whose greed i5 greater than their need. The present confusion must be replaced with a pro- gram ... that will maximize human digni- ty and salvage the destitute." Mesa View School Sets Talk on Drugs "Keep Them Off the Gra!ll ," a talk on drugs and children, will be presented al Afesa View School. Hunlington Beach, at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The talk, sponsored by the Parent Teachers Aisocialion , will be given by Dr . Leonard f\t. Zunin of the Institute for Reality Therapy. From Pqe l NIXON DUE HERE • • • routed the President from his bed . The fire and subsequent arrival or San Clemente volunteers led lo a personal visit by th e Ni1ons to fire headquarters on election day for penional congratulations for the firefi ghting effort. All the fire damage has been repaired since the last visit, leaving the Spanish home fresh for the arrival. The NlxoM, as usual, w!ll arrive on Air Force One at the El Toro Marine C',orps Air Station, then board their Army helicopter for ~he short flight to the landing ·pad near the San Cemente realdence. Among the entouraie f1TIVing Tuesday will probably be top t,dviser Dr. Henry Kialln1er, who le.ft San Clement.e in recent day• after spending more than a w~ at the Prelidenlill compound. The vialt, kept quiet by White liouae aides, ended aomeUme over the weekend. Prell llCl'l!tal'y Ronald L. Ziegler 1ald t.ht Prasidat w.ould like. off before 2 p.,91. £ST.'J\1t1d11 and~l•n\ltd to remain on· the ~ Cdut Into the week ot "Jan. 11. He .. Id he though! he might slay until midweek. The Pretldtnt today wa1 clearlna ay,•ay Immediate m•tters requirina hi• at· tention1 incllldi.n&, Zleiler said, some cl the lut batch of 62 bills !rom the CoJ1IJ'MI Lb.at just adjourned. Action on ...,.. d ·-Is apectod before Ille Pre.sldent'11 departure and tbe re5t will be bandied from the worklnl blN In Calllol1lla. The bildpl h.. """ setting • lot of atten tion, to tht ntent that George P. Schulti. director of the Office of Bud&et and Management, Is not nying to C.lilotnla wllb the Pr•ldenl. But a galaxy of other Whlti= Rouse offldall: II, and Shullt wlU be avsllable fOr CODlllltatJoo by telephone •nd may 10 to Clllfornl1 later. N<> dlCe hN been ttt for aellinc the bud(tl into the bandl of Conar..,. Bui the State of the Union message is 11cheduled for delivl':ry to Ciongress at 4 p.m. PST Jan. 22 -the day after the new 92nd Congress convenes. Nixon will be putting in a busy mornlng Tuesday before taklng off. A Cabinet meeting is on tap and a meetina with fou r Republican governors will follow for a discussion of the sharing of federal revenue with I.be st.al.ea aDd ol the welfare reform problem. The governors include Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, who his con- sulted Nixon before on t.he (inandal plight of the sllites, and three e1ecuUves of the conference of Repub lican governon. Louie B. Nunn of Kentucky is the incoming chairman of the con- ferenre, Raymond 0. Shafer of Penn- sylvania Is the outgoln1 chairman and Gov. Richard B. Ogllvte of Illlnol1 iJ chairman of the GOP Governors Policy Co mmitltt. ' Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will sit in oo the sessiOJI. Ziegler said the visiting governors wanted to get their thoughts on revenue sharing and welfare before the Pruldent prior to the State of the Unlon mt11age. Pennsylvania Bank Lowers Prime Rate PfllLADELPHIA (API -YI ro I Perwylvonia Boldni • Trutl Co .• bla- gest In Philadelphia, today cut lhO prime lnterut rate front ~ perctn1 to t"' percent -the oiatll reduction in Cint months -and npllitoed .... ,..,. 1oe money and we're lookinl for loena." It w11s the firtt ma}or bani ln the nation to take thil acUon. ~ prime rate Is the lnterett ch1rged to the bani's best customert. It hat ak.14ded sttadlly f r o m 1 hlah of 11,; percent lut Match. --Fl'om Pqe J WEATHER. •• were brougllt Into Hopkins -one a 747 carryina 361 passengers, some of wh om spent the night drinking wine aboard the luxury plane.· Chicago'• O'Hare Airport was clogged with soldiers, sailors, atudents and others trying to get out of town. Aircraft were late due to dlarupted schedules. MO!il of the storm'• bard!hips occurred in Nebraska and Iowa. There were two deatha in each 1talt attributed lo the weather. Hundreds e! motorists were stranded. The body of a _man who died SundJ!Y or carbon monoxide remained in a reScue truck whlch was stalled WC!t of Omaha. The victim was one ol two men ove rcome wilh fumes while 11eated in a s n o w plow, Rescue workers revived the ether man. Scores or motorists spent the night at the national iuard armory in Lincoln and In schools and truck stops. The westbound Union Pacific City of Los Angeles, scheduled to arrive in Omaha at 3: 15 a.m., was .stranded at Perry, Iowa. The eastbound City of Los Anaeles was being held in Omaha. At Offutt Air Force Base, headquarters of the Strategic Air Command, south of Omaha, officers told personnel to stay off the job unless etberwise in· ~rut'ted. Many of Omaha's streets, in· eluding the main thOrofare, Dodge Street, were impassable. , That v.·ould mean oppcirtunities for Americans to observe Soviet trials of policial dissidents or Jews accused of skyjacking, he said. Only one of the Ru.ssians who signed the letter was !dentined although the spokesman said they were prominent scientists and schol11rs. The man iden- tified Is Pyotr Kapllsa, a top Russian physicist. Hillenbrand's cable stressed "complete confidence'' Miss Davis would get an impartial hearing , the spokesman said. 1'.liss Davi!. 26, Is • charged wlt1r purchasing the guns that were smuggled into a Marin County courttoom in San Rafael in an unsuccessful escape attempt in which four persons were killed. 2 Killed, 1 Hurt In Los Alamitos Two persons were killed and another critically injured this morning when a car left the roadway in the Rossmoor area of Los Alamitos and ran into a tree. California Highway Patrol officers said th e accident occurred about 10 :30 a.m near the intersection of Monteclta Road and Kempton Drive. Witnesses said the car was southbound on J\1ontecito Road at B normal rate of speed before it swerved and struck the tree, according to CHP officers. The names of lhe accident victi.m.s were not immediately available. Two projects wi th a total oF 600 apartments are set for public hearings before the Fountain Valley City Council Tuesday nigh t. One, the 496-unit Ponderos a Homes project. will be looked at with a critical eye by councilmen who requested a chance to study it. The tenlaitve tract for Ponderosa Homes was approved by the plaMing commission. But some councilmen felt there were too many apartments for ttw. 18 acres at Warner Avenue and San Bruno Street, and asked for a public hearing on it. The council could overturn commission approval of the apartnients. According to new city laws the Pon- derosa development has more apartments per acre than allowed in R·l (medium density ) zoning. Planners approved it beca use the tentative lracl is part of another project started before the city's new apartment laws were adopted. The other public hearing concerns a request for .R·4 !high density) zoning on 5.Z acres at the north side of Starfish Lape. Classic Homes wants 10 build 104 apartments !here. Planning Director Clinton Sherrod said the apartments con· fo rm to the master plan and have been recommended for approval. The council meets at 8 p.m. in council chambers of city hall , 10200 Slater Ave. fu@@mllooo and we love it! • Locally found ed, locall y owned, we' re part and parcel of the communities we serve. That's why we plow back all of our Orange County savers' dollars right here in our own Orange County. It's time to plant ... time to save ••. at Laguna Federal! This is the season to save at Laguna Federal Plant youx savings here and now. Watch them grow and multiply. No Association pays you higher interest on your insured savin gs. No Association offers you more varied ways to save. Plant your money widi us ••• and we'll ·: i;-:;::-;;;;;tff';~iS: give you Money Plant seeds to grow! ·; 1t•s our way of saying thanks for saving at Laguna Federal. Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in for your pac:f et of Lunarla seeds-a pmple-Bowering m~ey plant for your garden-plus a complete, helpful and Informative F1ower Seed Garden Guide. .[i~una7~$~ AND LDAll ASIOCIATIOll ' 0""'6• County'• Lariat, Fir ii and Stro,..ua i..Mperuhni F ederaJ 200 Ocean Avenue Laguna heh, Calif. 41U-75'1 tlOI N. El Camloo R..l San Clemente, Calif. ( I ii I I r, ·-•••• -· . . . ' .. ·-............. ~ ..• . . . .... , . _.._..__ ------- ,....,,., JanuaJ')' II, 1971 H DA.IL'l PILOT Ter1·orists Smothered LaPorte • Quebec .Kid11aper Describes Death of Labor Minister - 1.10NTREAL (UPI) -Francis Simard. self-confessed terrorist of the Quebec LlberaUon front (FLQJ, described to polict how he and Paul Rose killed Quel>ec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte, a coroner's inquest was lold today. "At 5:20 p.m., Paul and 1 smothertd him," said a statement saicl to have been made by Simard and read to police at the coroner's inquest into the death of LHporte. The-star witn<'sscs at the final session of the inquest were S1n1ard, and Rose's .)'Ounger broU1er, Jacqpes. "We are responsible-, lhe thr« or us,'' said Simard's statement. The three men took lhe witness stand, but refused lo answer questions, Instead they shouted revolutionary slogans and jeered at the court. "Long live the FLQ," they shouted, Boasted Paul Rose from the witness stand: ''In 1970 we fought the-establish- ment. \\'e hlt at the right spot and we hit hard." Judge Jacques Trahan said he would deliver his decision in the inquest - \.\'hirh determines whe!her lhere are grounds for criminal charges In the death of Laporte -at 3 p.m. ~T. "Long live the FLQ of 1970 -excuse me, o{ the 1970.," shouted Paul Rose. "Long live Free Quebec,'' shouted his brother Jacques. The Simard statement was read by Provincial Police Corpor.al Jacques Ga- boury. He iaid Simard gave polict the statement last Monday, the day the l.hree men. were arrested at an isolated farm· house 25 miles south of Montreal. ending Canada's greatest manhunt. Simard re· fused to sign the statement, he said. Soccer Tragedy 111 Scotland Stirs Stor111 Road io Health E xercise K ey· for Doctor, 86 llnflagging The fl ag he was carrying "'as uncooperative, but Kenneth 1\-lorroll. 18, Racine, Wis., managed a perfect salute anyv.1ay. Mor roll and Tony Van Helmond , 16, members of the R acine Kilties. "'e re taking part in drum and bugle corps competition in Milwaukee during the v.'eekend. , J11dge P1·aises G1·and Jm·y As 1970 Panel Disba11ds By PATRICK BOYLE 0 1 .... D•ol' l'il91 Sl•ll l~ONOON (AP\ -Pressure mounted Senior citizens of1cn prescribe a ~ecret toda y for an overhaul of safety mrasures forn1ula for longevity, ranging anywhere at British soccer stadiunis as lop govern· from a daily shot of .,..·hiskcy to a _ment officials probed the stampede !hat yearly trip to Arizona, but a retired killed 66 fans and injured 145 at a Leisure World physician allributes hi! Glasgow game. good health to exercise. Sports author ities said the soccer cluhi; Dr. Edward Davidson has been active \l'Ould need government subsidies ir ror c· since he first learned to milk a cow cd to carry nut expensive improvementi; on his father's ~1ontana farm in th e lo lheir arenas. Attendance has been 1890s. latling, and many of the teams are At 86, the doctor still .,..-a\ks several in the red. miles a day and recently climbed the Flags flew at half staff in Glasgo11'. hlghesl peak in Sou thern California with \.\'here Britain's "'orsl sporting disaster his SJ-year-old daughter. occurred Saturday at the end of the The agile mountain climber , who live~ annual match between the local rl\'als. 1vith his wife at 2172-A Via Mariposa the Rangers and the Celtics. Hundreds East, has the clear skin and steady hand~ of rans stumbled and fell down a concrete of a 1niddle-aged man. The Oct. 17 stairway oul!ide lbrox Park, crushing ascenl of Mt. San Gorgonio was hi~ those on the bottom of the pile. fifth 1rip up the peak, although the "People were fall ing all o~·er lhe last climb \vas made in 1950 \.\'hen he place," said Clive to.11t chelt. \.\·ho had was still a young man of 66. He sa,vs gone to the match with his 'son ,John, he has hiked all his life and doesn'l 21. "I passed out, and .,..·hen I came f\'er pl11n to stop. lo a policeman was holding nu'. I had "I \\'as in Color;1.do last summer \.\'ith been buried under a pile of bodies. my daughter on her ranch," Davidson "l saw my son lying nexl to me, says. "and T told her I wish I knew lifeless. Then I passed out aga in." someone about n1y age and skill I could Eldon Griffiths, Britain's minister for make the climb \.\'ilh. \\'ell. she' told Dy TO~I BARLEY happen here very soon," the j u r i s l d k Lo d · h m• she woul d be •l•d .. go aloog." ' spod, schedule ta\ s in n on \.I'll ..__ "'.. "'' SCALING THE HEIGHTS Dr. Edward Davidson 01 ti!• 01 '" ,-1i.1 5t•n comm"'nl-... H · D · · " o;u advisers including Sir John Lang. whose His daughter. Dr. arriett av1s. l~ Nineteen members of the J970 Orange 'T'he 19 Orange County residenl'l who 1969 recommendations for safety im· onlv S3 and is the ~ea'd pathologist As Dr. Davidson was the elder membt.r County Grand Jury met for the last will form the 1971 grand jury will be prGvements have not been fully carried Ill . Burbank Com1nunity H os Pit a I· of the group, he did not have to carry time today in the Santa Ana County selected later today in Judge McMillan 's out by the 92 British major league To.gether with Davidson's son and his a back pack. The two tent3, mattresses, Courthouse to receive the congratulations courtroom. clubs. wife, the group set out on Oct. IS food, cooking utensils andrttping bags tJf Superior Court Judge James r . Judge Among the 30 names which will go fnr the drive to !he mountain, about were all carried by the three young for their "signifiCant contribution to the into the ballot box will be those of JOO miles east of Los Angeles in the members of the crew. cause or justice and county government. Mrs. Doreen Marshall. 367 Via Lido San Bernardino !\1ountains. The cli mbers spent the night at Dry "''l'our v.·ork has been hannoniolls and Soud; Mrs. F'rance11 L. Tooley, 1821 San-S llll, Cle1n e11 Le They parked lheir camper at Barton Lake Overlook, about half-way up the efficient," Judge Judge told the outgoing dalwood Lane; Mrs. Marte Lozano, 116 Flats, sometimes called Poop-out Hill, peak. and the temperature dropped to Simard said Ulporte, kJdnaped and held hostage in a suburban house, had tried to escape by breaking a window as police~ad earlier deduced from cuts on the dead labor niinis ter's body. "He threw a pillGW tO break a win- doW," said Simard. and was cut when hjs captors grabbed him and pulled him back , ''He cried and he wanted us to take him to a hospital, but there was nG question of that ," said Simard's It.ate· ment. Police Seize Yule Trees at Festival Site t...aguna Beach Police today are '1.·atching over 12 Douglas fir trees, im- pounded Saturday at the Sycamore Hills site or the Chrislmas weekend r ock festival. Organizcr.s of the festival claim they were loing to planl the live trees on the land Sunday, Police said the trees were removed because they were lyifli unattended at the site. Donor of the 12 large trees fs Los Angeles clothing store owner, Fred Lewis, \.\'ho was among the backen ol the Christma! "happening." "I'll be down to Laguna today with the bill of sale. so I can get the trees back. Then we'll try to get pemUssiort to go on the land to plant them," Lewis said wh en contacted late Sunday. Police noted that the site of the festival, owned by Great Lakes Properties, has been posted ;,no lrespassing.'' No one may enter it wiU1out permission from • the O\\'Tler, police said. Motorist Jailed For Pulling Gun On CHP Officer panel. ''You have made a consciou~ Via Koron , and Martin hiangold, 2144 at an elevation of 7,SOO feet. The group a chilly 19 degrees. Attired in a double effort to present a united stand on all Vista Dorado. all of NC'>l'port Beach. Gal 'Go es. A pe' spent the first night at the flats and sel of thermal underwear, heavy woolen A Westminster man accused of holding issue.s and this fact has been deeply Al.so nominated are J ames C. Caley, began their seven mile climb to the socks and a wind breaker, Dr. Davidson up a California Highway patrolman at appreciated by me .. , 8252 Snowbird Drive and R a y h top of the peak the next morning in ~ays he slept better that night than gunpoint while being questioned about A female gorilla \\'alking t e · 20-d th .Judge Judge presented certiricates to Laroourew:, 5831 Trophy Drive, both of streets of San Clemente recei\'ed 8 crisp, egree y,•ea er. he had since I.he last time he had camped his erratic driving on the San Diego each member of the outgoing grand lluntington Beach: Bill Fernandez, 320 stern warning from police over the there, 20 ye ars bffore. Freeway near San Clemente is awaiting jury after receiving a copy or the pancl'11 ffazel Drive, Corona del Mar; Dr. George w-ke"d. s Ao T The group ro~e on Oct. 17 lo set · O Robe "~ K h I I · "' " anta a Ot h h ... _ arraignment today in municipal court. final report for 1970. The 150-page vol ume . rts, .J.ll'" enos a ,ane. rv1ne ; After receiving it , she "·ent nut for t e summit, reac Ing uic l l.SOO contains copies of the 2J interim reports \Valdo Drake, .27 S. La Senda, South home. agreeing no~ to dislribute fool peak by noon . They took piclures Andres Reyes Alvarez, 56, of 7741 issued during the year by the group; Laguna, and John Kama!ani, 303 E. any more handbills. Chokes fO DeaflI ,,.for the rest. of lhe day and spent the 12th St., was booked on awipiclon of Judge Judge was the Superior Court's 23rd St .. Costa Mesa. The ape -actually a housewife night aL the summit, the temperature drunken driving and carrying a concealed liaion with the grand jury during 1970. Orange Coasl residents who received wearing a costume -was an ad-dropping to a low of 12 degrees. The weapon shortly before midnight on New .Judge Byron K. Mc~1illan will take over certificates today for 1970 duty on the vertising gimmick for a huge A 2-year..old Santa Ana boy choked following morning, the four climbers Year's Eve after a patrolman disarmed that duty with the 1971 panel. grand jury were Marian Louise Parks. garage sale conducted by about 30 lo death Sunday on a loy balloon, the walked down the opposite side of the the suspect following a brief scuffle Judge Judge predicted two grand juries 2J3 Morning Ca nyon Road, Corona del familie s in a San Clemente neigh· Orange County Coroner's Office reported. mountain. and turned him over to .sheriff'! deputies. for Orange County in the near future Mar; David Clark, 35685 Beach Road, borhood, Edward Orozco, son of Mr. and Mr:i:. Dr. Davidson, \.\'ho only rel.ired from The arresting officer said he halted and the division of civil and criminal Capistrano Beach; Mrs. Audrey Cotton, Police delivered the warning on Manuel Orozco. of 22.1fJ S. Rosewood his private practice in Los Angeles seven Alvarez's pickup truck after spotting in vestigation in the manner that is now 1509 E. Bay, Balboa : A. C. Achey, 615 New Year':i: Day. Ave., wa s dead on arti\'al at Santa years ago. admits that he is getting the vehicle weaving in the southbound being pioneered in Los Angeles County . 8th St .. and Cha rles Mashburn, 503 13th The city has a code regulating Ana Community Hospital. a little old for such activity, The robust Jane of the San Diego Freeway about "The legislature jusl won't let us do St., both of Huntington Beach and r.,,1rs. distribution of handbills -by any· Efforts of the Santa Ana Fire Depart· outdoorsman says he used to be able a mile north of Avenida Pico. He claim! tt in Orangr County but I think it Harriet Bemus, 2631 Waverly Drive, Ol1t', even apes. men! rescue squad lo restore breathing lo make the entire IS mile round trip Alvarez tried to ram his patrol car '-'~''-'-'~'"~'-'""~'-"~'h_a_l~it~i'~g_o_m_g~t_o~_N_'e_w_po_c_t Be . .::::':'h:·:_:_~~~~~~~~~~===--=----=-~-::-~-,,,,.......,::::::::-o:'..~~~:i:le:d:·:'h:•:c:o:'•:":':'~·,:o:f~fi:cc:_:_sa:i:d·:_:_~~~--=•:n:M:':·:S:'"__:G:o:'g~o:n:io:_:_i":o:":'Y:..:O":':d:•~Y:·~~~=d":':'"~g'...:lh:•:".P":':':":''=·~~~~~~~- El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Meats that make the meal! Meat Loaf 79~ Oven ready ••. simp* shape aDd bakl'! ! Finest meats, fresh ound ••• seasoned t.o offer genuine utis action ! Breakfast Steak . Sl.79 lb. U.S.D.A. Choico Beef! ..• mat wilb El Rancho'a etts ! • Stroganoff Beef . S1 .89 lb. Ch1m ks o( rich tender U.S.D.A. Choice bee!! • c ARCADIA: PASADENA: S.nsel and Hunlin(lon Dr. (0 Rontho Center) 32ll West Colorado Blvd. Crackers ...... . ••• CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF TOMATO REG. SIZE • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... · .. 33( Finer Produce at El Rancho Sunshine's._. K~ispy crackers, so rood with soup, or for snacks! 16 oz. Avocados Price~ in e/ft.ct Mon... Tues., Wed., Jan. 4, S, 6 .• Vo Sa/ea to D~o.lcra. SOUTH PASADENA: HUMTINGTOH BEACH: Fuerte·~ ••• buttery smooth ••• delightful in Mlads ••• a.nd delicious for sandwiches! El Rancho's Delicatessen for variety! Sliced Meats . • • • • • l.eo'A ••• 3 oz •••• \Vafer thin D&rk T urkey, Beef, S pier. Beef! T urkeJ White Meat;comec1 Beef or Ham • • • 45c · NEWPORT BEACH: ll27 Newport Blwd. w fr11110nt and Huntineton 01. Warner and Al1onquin (lloirdwalk Center) 2555 Wlbluff Dr. (Entliluff Vllllp Center) - • l l I I j DAILY ~ILGT Peace Tal~s 'Resuming 1 ' Israel, Arab Envoys Fly to New York IY LI-"-latuudooal IC)'pUu Pruldtnt Anw1r Satlat warn- ed &ii; l)IOplt tada)' Of the pouJbJIJty of a new war with Ia.ru.I &hould the middle eut poet tallu: break down •aabi.· Al he did , the Eaypt!.an and Uraali eii.voya tl.ew to New York for ' t.alU v.·itb U.N. Mediator Gunnar V. Jarrina. Jordan. •!so a pilrty to th• pt:let talka. ... •• tn the mJdlt or • crilll involving Paleatlnlan 1uerrtll11 and there "''as 1ome confu!lon 11 to who would represent JordaD in New Yori. Thi IOtrushchev's Son-in-law Seen as Me111oi1· S1nuggle1~ LONDON (U F'I) Nikita S . (So\·iet Un.Ion). KMushchev's son·in-law Ltv Petrov may Petrov, wM died a few monlhs ago, havt been tbe one who •mU.Ultd part wa.s the huablnd of Khrushchev's grand-daughter Yul11, whom K hr u 1 h c he v of lht rormer premier's notes to the legally adopted in her infancy and raised west, in the opinion of an incrwin1 ~his own dau1ht.er. ;:uerri.llas oppoge both t.he current cease- fire and the I.alb. The cease.fire doe1 not involve tha Syrian or Lebanon frt1nta and th• Bt-lrut new1paper Al-Anwar 11id taraell tank gunneni attacked a south Lebanon village SWlday, damaging at Jeaat 16 houses. The report said Jsra,u tanks hit the vl Uage o! Shebaa for five houri and killed a number of people. There was no official confirmation of lhe attack.. Israel atill o,ya1 h.aving troub~ In the Gau Strip and a military 1poke.11man In Tel Aviv aald l!Taeli troopa killed an Arab guerrilla near a Gaza refugee camp today after he hurled a · arenade at an Israeli patrol. Another 1renadfl wu hurled at an Israeli civilian vehicle. ln a almilar atlack Saturd1y guerrillas killed two young Jsraeli children. Uf'I Tt._,..19 number of obM:rvers. Adzhube1'1 relations with his father-in· The ercwina: belief is that it was law in the P,.st. few years have been Petrov rather than another sori-in-law, litralned. He did nol heve the easy The Egyptian president already has begun a worldwide diplomatic offensive to ezplain Egypt's position Jn the peace talk.'i. Today, Sadat journeyed to the town of Tanta, fi6 miles north cf Cairo. to explain hl11 policies to the Egyptian people. SKELETON DISCOVERED NEAR JERUSALIM Artist Showa Possible Mettled of Crucifixion AJeiei Adz.hube!, who provided the notes access to the Soviet Union'• former that fonned the basis -for the book supreme ruler that Petrov had. '.'Khruahchev Remembers." Petrov, for many years the editor Adzhube.I, the one-time innuenlial _ of the Soviet weekly, an En1li1h-lansua1e ~itor of the government new~ i.:e.::spa~r ~~~tp~b ll byl Bth~talNovostl "The nezt ,.batUe will be a full-scale one , not only at the battlefront." h11 told a rally of thousands of cheering inhabitants. "We ehall fa ce it in th11 field. in the factory . In the city, in the atrt:et, In every town, everywhere.'' Crowds chanted : ."Sadat go ahead, we Death 'More Painful' Izvestia, i1 an embittered middle..1ied . ._ .. ncy or,~ rt u on n r1 n, waa man Uvlng an obscure and dull exilitence K_bruahchev • confidant who frequently 11 a minor employe of the monthly v11Jted him and he~rd hlm diet.ate rou1h are YOW' Mldiers until liberation" 1tnd "God is great, lo1g live Sadat." Others screamed, "we !ITlall fight, we shall fight.I~ Crucifixion Skeleton ,_, So J •-k -notfl on hlt-remirulcenc .. Wurtrai.cu m11lline v e.., Y SoyUJ uDlib Adz.hubei, the h.u.a b..a n d ol LIGHTEI! SIDE COLLIMN Khruahchf:v'1 daughter Rada, who Jives an laolated life and never meets forei,nen, Petrov, by virtue of his job, hid frequtnt conta:t with Enalish-speak- in.& nnamen and diplomats. He apokt Enillsh well. "We ha ve become stron1er economically, milit.ar\ly and politicilly," Sadat 11ald, "and althoua:h the enemy is still stroni we shall enter the battle at wh1tevu cosL Unearthed by Sc1wlars WILL ltESUMI MONDAY Icy Blast Numbs Nation ' JERUSALEfo.f (UPI) -The 5keleton of a man nailed to a crou about 2,000 years 1go ahowa crucifixion may hive been different -and even more painful -than the method depicted by history. Dr. AVTaham Biran, director of the Israeli department of antiquities, Mid thr: 1lceleton was "a very. very important discovery," but 1ald it would be "mere Fierce Winds Bury Roads With .Snow Drifts • Callfornla I" UNITID f'llll INtl.•NATIONliL Mulflw~ C1ll111r.,11 b•t c.MI l•wll lfllntf lrl1i. 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J.J l'"lrtt If"" .•••••••.•• 11:1( 1 "'· DJ kind .1111~ , •.....•...•• , ....... l .8 SIC"""'~-.. I .Mt,,.. II lu~ •1-''"'·"'· Ut 1:Jt1.l"I. ~ l l-1!;"'"'· S.n lt ·U 1 . ..,. , • (l.S. Summary LOS ANG!L!S IUl'll -r~1 "''Ill"· Witl WN ... t r l u,,. ..... ry W~ll• 1n I•• 1tn11 w1111tr '"''"' c11,..Pet1 oa•t•r 11•1<1 "'• Mt.;w111. lft1 l'1<ll;t '"" w~•l- 1•11 IMt rllO' "'''" 11\IYl•f(I ... .;,, e .. "e'"' bl1111 ni Arcllc t lr 11 •kl11 ... m1111oa c111•. ~HVY •now ....... 1"'' ,.,,,1on11fd ''""' 11"11' !owl tl\r6Uf .I\ Wl1<e•ol11 tPlll "'' H11in11111 al M ltl\11111. "'""' t • t d· 1111 ...... 1 llOll•!llOI of I-MW ft ll. Tr1•1l1"' w1r11ln11 Wirt In t lltc:I '"'"'-II""'' !+11 Mi.will •ttln '1ld1y, I.._ ICl nHt lfl M l••Mt!t. t i pj'"'' W•ood1 1MvM ·-••llh 1'111 r91f. .... o . A "-,....,, el c111 Arctic ,,, 1111 ll•M ~ -1"6 "'°' tur,...1 11tr"' IVI~ Ind Wl"'l""I 1'1 ut l1r Wl1- C"""1I•, 1111111111 11141 '°'-ttlllr• M IMlllO!t . Temperaturu Red Units Apply Added Pressure On Supply Lines •1i...., .c,1tio.11u1r11ue At!e M1 .C,nclll•••• &tk .. 1rl1ld 1 1,...,.r«; 1 e111 e •• t~ l "'w"'vlllt l u1+111t (~1 rl"'11 c~1e1te c;intl~"*'I Cl•Y•ft "i:l 0-M~I~• O.nv•• e11ro11 .,,1,...., ..... 1'""1 Wort~ .,,, ... 1-J-1u1u jftflt•t H llt J •• ~ ... .,~1111 J~n11u 1(1nw1 Cllv M lt m l M ll.,tu-N M IM H ... 11• H..., 'l'er~ 0~111w1.,,. Cl"' o .... ~. "~'l•d•l ... 11 "~-I~ l'lttro~··" l'>e,lltowl, Mo ·~· llllt~tne"\11 II. l11<lt Stlt L•k• (llv IN!!lt ·-· ... ,.~ ....... 1 w .. h11111"' Hltl\ L-l'rllC. JI 1~ .II el ,II M ~ ~ " A ~ 01 .fll " m 41 2• 1; :: SAJGON !UPI ) -Commun1sl troops 31 11 .oJ stepped up the ir pressure against supply !,! !! '' Jines in La0& and Cambodia today and JI l' ':!! a spokesman in Vientiane: said a battalion 1' ~! 1•0 (about 600 menl of Norlh Vietnamese ~ l J ::: troops crossed from Laoa Into Thailand !i ·~ .n last week . 11 n The U.S. Command said American B52 " ~ •s 0 i _y atr.ate1ic bombers struck near lhe !:? s1 80l.lthe·rn ed1e of the Demilitarized Zone .... .1'J 91 31 ,, .1, !DMZ ! and against 11 C<immunist base '' 11 .nl camp area furlhe:r IOU!h in their fi rst ~: :; ,;~ ra ids in South Vietnam in a month . ~, •1 The raids follo"'·ed increased Communi.!lt 38 IT .11 1• ~· ·'° pressure below the DMZ. ~ ;: Gen. Thongphan Knock.,y, a L1to.!I .. ,, ,,. defense ministry apokesman, to Id ;: :, newsmtri in Vienti1ne the Nnrth Vie l- '' .11!1 t namese hid crosHd lnto Thailand a t J1 ,, .SJ Ban Huei Pooo, JM> miles northwut 1, 01 12 u nf Vientiane. He ftaid the purpoM nf ~ ~! ' Ole border crossing w11 not lmmtdiately u t• T known . fan!Asy'' to think tt mi1ht be the remains of Christ. "IL C01 nnol be Christ rnr the inan's name i.'i Yehoh11n an .11nd it Wll!'I chiseled into his oss.aury (tomb \,'' Biran said Sunday. As generally depicted by pa intings and historians, crucifix ion -including tha t. of Christ -was 11•1th the outspread arms nailed to thP crossbar through th e palms nf the hands and lhe two feet na iled to the upright with the feet pointed rlnv.•nward and the nail going through the top of I.he fool. Instead. from the bones found by Israeli scholars, the arms were na iled to the crossbar through the forearm!!. The fee t were placed together and turned 1ideways, with the spike driven through the two heels and into the wood. This left the man with his body twisted lo one side, in the case of Yehohiilnan with his knees pointed lo the nghL A small wooden M'.Bl called a 11tdacual was on the cross lo give him added support - and prolon1 the agony of dying. Holiday Road Deaths Nearing 500 Ba~er By United Presa International Traffic falal ilit s during the long New Year'ft holiday weekend ateyed within the expe<'led range. compilations showt.d today. but delayed report.ft could push the figure Myond the MXl mar k. A UPI count at D·JO 11.m., tEST), sho"'ed 440 persons kil led in traffic between 6 p.m .. Thursday, and 11 :~9 p.m .. sui;day. Air Pirate Veers Plane ToHavan~ MIAP.il (UPll -Th11 first hlj1din1 or 1911 came thrH day1 Into the new year. The script his chan1!d very Utt!• 1ince the lirst hijacktn1 almost 10 year• ago. In each instanre. the craft waa 1 National Airlines plane, lhe hijacker 'f~I 1rmed and quickly took control of the fli ght. Sunday·s oceurred aa a fl l1ht from Lo! An1ele1 prepared to land 1t Tamp.a . "This man walked l,ito the cockpit with a big cannon ind 11ld we're goinr to Havana -and th11'1 whit we did," u id Capt. Carl Weiss , the pilot . 'Ble DC8 jet carried 97 persom:. C'On· 1iderably more than the N1tllonal airliner with 11 persons aboard that,.w11 diverted to CUba by an armed CUba.n durlne 1 flight from P.1.iami to Key Weit tn 1tf1y 1. 19'1 -the first hijackiiir. The hijacking Sunday wa1 carried out by a Negro 1rmed with 1 pistol. bu t when the plane landed In Havl.lll, another bl1ck passenger w1tved a pistol and escorted two women and thret chlldren apparently the wives and (:hildren of the hijackers -off the pl•P•· The passenge rs remaining in Cuba \\."ere listed only as Mr. and Mrs. Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Jones. The Jones <'OUple had children, 4 and 6, and the Johnson family \\."IS 1~ as having a non-t icketed 1nlant. The first gunman asked Alew1tde1a DOi-olhy Amato for a drink of water as the jet approached Tampa on a fl igh1 from Los An.cities to Miami "Whe n I brought him the water, tia pull ed a cover off his lap and he had a gun underneath 11 .'' she· 11\d, ''He grabbed my arm and mar<'hed me up lhe aisle and i;:ot the key to the c~it from Janice /stewardess iJa.n.iC't: Love- ladyl and "''ent into the pilot's camptrt.. ment." Witness Relates Painter's Manila Attack on Pope f\IANILA (UPI) -A ~1an ila judfe ruled today that Bolivian painter Men. doza y Amor, 3~. was sane enouah 10 .sland trial and the flr.'lt wi1ness said he saw f\1endoz a's dagger strike Pllp e Paul VI twice on the cht:st !<1st Nov. 27 The rirsl wHness v.·as Jolly Bugarin, direct.or of_, tht Philtpplne National Bureau of Investigation fN BI J who wa11 presen! v.·hen fl.1endoza all egedly tried to murder !ht: pope when he arrived al Manila International Airport a t 1tart of a Paci fic and Asian lllur. Bugarin idenlifit:d Mendoza ln the court.rllom as the man dressed in a pritst's attire who rushed towards th• pope during airport reception ceremonies and "made a plunging move to the pope." "It was 30 fa lit J julli saw the action or a knife strikinjl'. twice: on the left portion of the breast of the pope .'' ha testified. Buearin la!er identified a black~ tinttd curved daaeer. presented 11 an eviden('I! in cour!. as !he weapon. .. The Big M is big enough (over $434,000;000) to pay the nation's highest interest on insured savings ... 5% to 6%. But equally important-cares enough to give you very personal service. 1 Highest interest at .. ut-ual ~§~lags Corona llltl Mil ortfoe: 21t( lul Coe1t Highway/ 11 .. I01G Other office1 In Covina, We11 Arcadia, Paaadena and Gl1nda1 .. • ' I p ii ' . . . .. .. . . -'• . . . ' .... '' . •, .......... ~, . .., --,,.. . Fountain Valley EDITION .... ·-"' .... • ~-" Today's Ffllal N. Y. St.oeka-.. VOL. 64, NO. 3, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Nixon Comes Tuesday for San Clemente Stay By JORN VAL TERZA 01 11w o.uy r 11et l l•tt . . .. . Pru1dent N1..1:on today abandoned n<r tiorui of a Florida vacation and opled instead to brave chilly Sout hern Ca!Horai.a for a l(}.day working stay at the W~tcrn White House in San· Clemente. 1 White House aides in Washington an· nounced the President will arrive here Tueaday. Officials at El Toro Marine Corp9 Air Station confinned that.., the chief executive'• arrival time aboa rd Air Force One is scheduled Tuesday bet ween 3 and 3:30 p.m. Et Toro's gates will be closed to the jiublic. The President's arrival here ,, .. ill come just one diy after his nationally televised chat tonight' with four television com· mentators. Tbe program will be aired at 6 p.m. on channels 2 and 7 and tn a delayed version at 9 p.m. on Channel •• . White flouse officers said today that while in San Clemente, Mr. Nis:on will be v:orking on business left over by Congress and on messages and programs for the yea r ahead. "" Most vital among the wbrk items are completion of , the new budget for the 1972 fiscal year and the drafting of the annual message on the State of the Union. This will encompass ad· ministration legislative plans and pro- grams for the years ahead. ,. 1 I fl.• ;..J .. .. ""<:z ,f MliMBERS Oi' BOSTON'S 'L' STREl!T BROWNIKS ROLL IN THE SNOW BEFORE SUNDAY SWIM Nothlng Llkl a Dip )n the Atlantic Whtn the Temperature Climbs Into High 30s Intense Winwr Sto1·1n Cripples Midwest Area By United Pren International An intense storm blasted the Midwest today with heavy snow and high winds . In Iowa the slorm was described as the worst in nearly 30 years. Traffic there was at a virtual slandslill. Businesses closed. Mail deliveries were canceled . Government off ices were shut down. Hundreds of motorists were stranded, The Iowa Patrol aild Highway Com· rnlss ion sald the state's interstate roads were impassable. At least three deaths in Iowa were caused by the storm. authorities said. Two of the victims died of heart attacks after shoveling inOW. Seal Beach To Set Recall Election Date Nearly s.i1 moo~ of political dispute · In the cit_y of Seal Beach appear headed for resolution tonight a.s th e city counc il prepares to set a date for the reca ll elect'cn aimed 1t WlSeating Councilman Conway J. Fuhrman. The order to set the ~Jection was ls.sued by Superior Judge Lestu Van Ta.tenhove. Additional snow amounts of more than 4 inches were expected from northeast Jowa through northern Wisconsin and Michigan. Travelers warnings were in effect from northeast Kansas and eastern Nebraska, through Iowa and portions of eastern Minnesota. The new snow accumul;ition totaled 16 inches at Harmony, f.1 inn. The Nebraska High way Pat rol re- quested that Kansas close all roads entering Nebraska because of a "serious backup of traffic, sever.; weather and road conditions." The storm ranged over much of the nation. Snow measuring 3 to 16 inches covered almost all of New f.{exico. Schools in Albuquerque and in other com munities wer~ closf'd because of treacherous driving conditions. One traf. fie death was blamed on the storm . Mrs. Dolores Anita Haas, city c I erk o[ Taos, N .M.. drowned when her car slid off U.S. 64 near Velarde and sank in the Rio Grafide. Near Madison, Wis., a snowmobile was dispatched to .bring Mrs. Daine Krueger to a hospital to deliver a baby. Five sheriff's vehicles and three. snow plows got stuck trying to reach her home. An estimated 7,500 persons were stranded. at Cleveland 's Hopkins Interna- tional Airport Sunday night because airports welt of there were snowed in. Twelve fl ights bound for Chicago, Des Moines, Ced8r' Rapids and Milwaukee (See WEATHER, P1ge %) Northeast Winds Cause Troubles To Boat Owners Gusty winds beached 11 2 8 • f o o l catamaran at Sunset and capsized a 14-foot sail boat in Huntington Harbour over the weekend. The strong winds also sent Huntington Beach lifegua rds scurrying to help six other troubled boats in Huntington Harbo ur channels , No one was injured in any of the Jncidents. The catamaran came ashore near 24th Street in Sunset Beach about 4:20 p.m., Saturday, Lifeguards said the rudder of the boat, owned by 1iike Austin of Long Beach. broke at sea , and wind and waves drove the catamaran onto the beach. When Austin's boat swung out of con- trol one unidentified sailor w::..s tossed into the ocean. Jfe was quickly rescued by Huntington Beach lifeguards who patrol the Sunset area. Austin and three other persons rode the catamaran ashore. Lifeguard Sgt. BUI Richardson said Austin look his rudder home for repai rs and by 9 a.m., Sunday had sailed the catamaran back to the Long Beach Marina. Damage was lilted at $200. A l'-foot sail boat owned by James Jenki'n, J&J'/2 Maruffa Circle. Huntington Beach, overturned in oae of the Hun- tington Harbour channels about noon, Saturday. Lifeguards helped him right the 00.t and reported only $20 damage to the mast. Two Rival Groups The annual economic message ls the third major item that will be getting a a:oing.over from the President and his top aides here. Mrs. Nllon will also make the trip but other members of the family have no plans lo do so. Mr. Nlxon's "rest-vacation" here ap- pears to (it in with recommenda tions of the President's physician, Dr. Wa lter Tkadl, wbo pronounced bim in good shape after 1n annual checkup but said the chief executive ought to ease up more in spots like Calilontla and Florida. Reports said the chief es:ecutive had planned a trip to bis Key Biscayne home, but changed his mind at the last minute and opted for San Clemente. The President and First L a d y originally had planned ti) travel to San Clemente on Dec. 26, but that vbil was called off weeb before Christmas. Their last visit to San Clemente toot place during Lhe hectlc national eJectlon season and was highlighted by the President's casting his first non.absentee ballot since becoming a part-time r•i· dent on the Orange Coast. The visit set a record for unforeseen events, incJudlng a riot dilling a cam- palgn swing In San Jose, followed a few hours later by a .smoky blaze which (S.. NIXON, Pqt ZJ Runway Top Issue Big Crowd Seen at Huntington Meet Meadowlark Airport again gets top billing at toniiht's meeting of the Hun- tington Beach city council. Pilots and homeowners are e1pected tb jam council chambers for a public hearing on whether the runway e1tension may be used. Another major question at the council meeting will be whether the city should hire a project manager at a salary of between $1,500 anQ. $1 ,800 a month to over~ the building .~the civic center and central library This will be considered at the 4:30 p .. session or the council. The Meadowlark hearing will be based on an appeal against a planning com- mission decision to declare a conditional W~~, Str~~.~. exception permit for the runway ez. tension null and void. The planners argued tbat certain Improvements they had insisted be J!!!de at the airfield had not been carri¥0ilt by the operator, John Turner. Today City Building Director Jack Cleveland said those jmrpbvements, which included the correction of elec- trical violations and the installation of a blast feoce, had now been carried out and he would recommend that the permit be reinstated. The blast fence -at the Heil Avenue end of the runway -may be the target of criticism by homeowners. They have charged that the fence has not been sunk Into solid foundations. Cleveland said that, &!though the fence does not Near-freezing Weather Keeps Grip on Coast Downward-zooming temperatures and frigid Santa Ana winds that guated up to 60 miles pe r hour Sunday will again remind Orange Coast resident! that Old Man Winter has us firmly In his grip. Chilled. chapstick'..carrying folks are In for more or the same treatment tonight and Tuesday. Record low temperatures dropped below the freezing mark in certain Los Angeles ,. Cooni spots as California rtcorded its co( e:it Jan. 3 In 18 years. Bitterly cold wlnd.8 whipping in off the desert created hazardous condltloru: for campers and trailers, ,while heavy snows mantle the San Bernardino and San Gabriel mounta ins. Orange Qiun ty escaped with just ter· ribly cold feet , while damage was re- corded elsewhere. A 32-foot sloop and a houseboat capslv ed and san k at Santa Catalina Island, while a $~ 000 yacht went down off San Diego's Coronado Island. All seven persons aboard the Seaquest escaped before It foundered, according to authorities. The ct1rrent cold snap ls part of a atorm system that has caused severe conditions in the Midwest, if that'a of any comfort. "It started off the central California coast late Friday and when the low pressure system moved east, a lot of cold air moved In," es:plain.s Dave William,,, of the National Weather Service. A high of 62 degrees was forecast loday, with an overnight low of 35. in cue you want to gel up and check your thermometer. Small craft warnings are hoisted along the Southern Ca!Uomia Coast, particular· lyifrom PolDt Conception to DaDI Point. I :4.n Orange County Harbor District spokesman said wind gusts will be up to 40 knots below coastal catJyons, and 5 to JS knots elsewhere In general. Jel8 arriving and departing from Orange County Airport were ualng their inland approaches today, after winds reached a 35 knot velocity during predawn hours. "We haven 't been above 30 knota since," said a control tower duty officer . The highest airport wlnd reading was 52 knots Sunda y. Despite the fact temperatures are 10 degrees lowt!r than nor mal for this time of the year, the five-day forecast is at least for contin ued fair weather. No smog can be seen in the Los Angeles Basin an" elsewhere, affording Southlanders a rare glimpse of their neighboring snow-draped mountains. Desalting Plant Ruling Expected To Come Tonight Directors of the Orange County Water District .wfll decide tonight 1£ the county geU a $12 million water desalinization planL The fedtral Office of Saline Water has offered the wa~r district $9.9 million to help build the e1perimenlal plant. District officials must agree to chip In about $2.5 million for the plant. It would be built on the d11trict's 20-acre beadquartm site al Euclid Street and Elli.I Avenue in Fountain Valley, or on a ti.acre parcel •at the mouth of tbe Santa Ana River in Hilntingtotl Beach. strictly confonn to a plan submitted by Turner, it is "structurally sound.'' The Meadowlark affair, which hu·tept. homeowners and Turner in conflict for several months now, a:ained more notoriety last week. Turner was arrested and accused of assaulting a police officer after an in- cident at the airport. The officers had gone to the airport to check out • citizen's complalnt about night Dying and a brief scuffle was alleged to have occurred. Turner, who .wa s released on tii• own recognizance, is scheduled to appear ln West Orange M1micipal C o u r t , Westminster at 8:30 a.m . Tuesday to answer the charge. Valley Youth Found Dead At Happening A week-long hunt for a Fountain Valley teenager ended tragicdly Sunday when his body was found on a hillside near the site of a Chrlstma.9 holiday happening in Laguna Beach which also involved one other fatali ty. CircumstanCeJ surrounding the death of Grant We ldenhammer, 19, of 17181 Oak St., were being probed to determine whether drugs were a factor. Coroner's deputies said he apparently died IOmetlme on Dec. 30, after leaving a group of several friends. He had bten reported missing Dec. 28, .after leaving home following a family quarrel. Investigat.ors said Weldenhammt:r had been to the festival -which drew an estimated 20,000 pen:O!'IJ from all over America -and returned borne before tht" argument. Friend.1 theorized he may have gone back to the slte of the colorful event in the Sycamore Hills aru. and went back there early Sunday to hunt. Four of them separated and two, John Almqulst and Russell Hanna, both of Huntington Beach, discovered bis body · durif1a: the early morning h<>tlN. The victim was lytng about three fourths of the way , up a amall hill, Just east of Laguoa Cao.Yon Road and about 200 yards aoutb ot El Toro Road. His car was found .parked along El Toro Road, leidlng Almquilt -and Hanna to center the 1e1rCh ln that area. No visible algns 9' vk>lence·or physical tnjucy were ~' leading to the possible drug deoth -mentlooed by Sberlll'1 Capt Jamea. BmldbelL Weadler Fuhnnan. who holds the Seeori'a District seat, was served with a recall noUct last J uly 17 when he and ' Mayor Morton A. Baum and Councilma~ Thomas Hogm! voted to fire City Manager Lee Risner. Risner, a popular man with the pro- ponenU of the recall, was accused of neglecting his duties Ind of failure to fumllih the council with proper financial reports. He now occupies the posi~on of City AdmJnlstrator Jn DI Habra. Employe Secret Vote Seen Engineers expect the plant to tum out 3-4 million pUons of ult-free ocean water when completed In 1973. The water would be pumped underpumd In Hun- tin,ton Beach and FoonLlln Valley to keep aalty ocean water away from the frab water tablet. Fair and winner Is the Jood word from tbe • weatherman for Tuesday, bul lbll·~t.opply to tho .-.lalll·-., during whldl the mercury wUI pluna:e. down to Uoe freelinl mort. Although no exact date was apecified In the court ordei', It la es:pected that the election date will fall either on Maf'th.11 or March 2.J. The squabble over the election datl!: entered the courtroom when Fuhrman and bis supporters claimed that .ome 1ignatures on the recall petition were tnvalld and charged that they were col· lleted under false pretes:t. Judge Van Talenhove ruled agalrt$l the Fuhnnan backera Dec. 29 and held the petlllon1 valid. No one haa yet ofricla\Jy .. decl•red ll imsett 1 candkiate for the council Ital held by Fuhrman. A secret ballot may be h~d to settle a month1-Jona: dispute between two rival tmploye. UIOcialiom in Huotina:tOn Beach. The dilpule wJU be brouiht . before the city ~ th1s evening by members of the recenUy formed Huntington Beach Municipal Employes ' A 1 1 o c I a t~i o n (HBMA ). Thl! group will ask the council to gr:&nt It ofUda l rtcognltlon or direct lhe eJty clerk to hold a secret election ''immediately" to determine whether the HBMA or a longer establlshe<I body, called the City Employes1 A.uoclaUon (CEA), whould represent non-safety persoMel In the tity. Tht HBMA was formed after tllf: September salary negotiations in the city by employes who felt the"! were not adequately represented. HBMA members argue that the: CEA la a aoclal organlil·' Uon and does not have lhe aulborlly" to represent employes on personnel mat- ters. In a lttter to the cwncn. Mn. Llurtl McCarthy, chairman of the HBMA'1 recognition committee and a secrettry in the city attorney's office, aay1 that the' membeiihtJr of the new group ain- sl itutes 50 percent of the mJcelt1neoos cmploye., ln,·the city.· r Mrs. McCarthy cl1lmed that "certain employe factions" are lntertsad In union representation •nd uy1 that It iJ ont of Ille alms of the llBMA "to bep unions out.of the city." Ted Knmp, l"'lldent of tlJe CEA and a member of the flnlnce department. Aid: today that ,bJI· orpnbaUOa ll>d ollo. pi'epril po pen fiililritltii eow>c11 .._..illoo. ' . "W6 understood, howtver,. thlf. Jut NoverDber the city, attorney wu fn.. ltruet.ed to prepare • rtlOhlilo-. "' &his ... he commented. "We have not received a copy of this raolutloa aM it would appear that any 09ertun to the council at .this time. .would be an eurclM In re<hmdaney ••• He agreed that a •ec:r•t ballot or a merger of the two. group1 were a.imng Ille poulblo oolutlonl to Iba dispU!f. It Would obo ~ IS I p,.tolype for llfJ'r detaltlns planto In Uoe futur.. U water dlJttlct direct.on qree ~ the apoilnlOll~ -co Ille plant ·-IWf .. Juno. Jonlih11' dlrectn. WW aay • .,.. .. or "oo' to Uie federil oller. Dtotrl<lt al· · flcia!s · will ....i · 11 7 p.m. In lhelr offtm ~ 112t W. 111\b St., Santa Ana. 1 Comet l}\scl)vered TOKYO (AP) -A Jo-omo<ar aslrChome:r NI dilcovtred a new comet whl<lt ~ .. been conflnned by the ~ Astroflon." .. al' ObMrtlitor)' "and th e SihlUJoonlon INtltutlon. tllrne....,.ptr Yomlurl Shlmbu.a "'po<t<d tod17. INSIDE TODAY Th• D<m<icniti .... po;...i to ucrdsc thcD-.fW>l>io.nd cpn. !Tot of IA< 1fal• l:<~nn to-ctai/. ""'ii< two MWlr elccl<d 1!4u o/fl&U 1oU t,J/if< .. S"'1- fe1 on Paoe P. ~ J • ... • ' -.. .. • • .,, . .. " " " . ' I I • I 1 • • ' I H Tate T1·ial -. . 'Political,' Says Lawyer LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles MlJ\IOll ls undergoing a Ppolitlcal triaJ '' In the Tate murder <:Ille and thould no more be charged with murder than Gov. George Wallace or John Birch Sociely head Robert Welch, a defense lawyer argued today. Irving Kanarek resumed f i n 1 I argumen" for the defense in the s11.and- on&-b1lf-monlh--Old trial by telling the jury that Manson was being charged with lhe s\ayings because hi.Ii philosophies wue antagonl.!ltlc to most of American society today. ''There are all sorts of militant eocleLles tn thla country today," Kanarek 11Jd. '"lbere Is no reuon why Georae Wall•~. the governor of Al1b1m1, or Robett"Welch ol the Bircll Society abou.ld be chatied with murder. "Thil ls I political trial in which Mr. Mamon ia broU1ht here ~au.se he is a symbol of one of the con- frontations that is gOing on in this coun· try today." Turning to evidence that the word ''pig" was daubed in blood on the front door of the Tate home. Kanarek said the defense fell that ke y state witness 1.Jnda Kuablan printed those letters there. Kanarek said it backed up the defense cortlelltiONI that Mrs Kasabian and Charles ''Tex" Watson were the leaders of the bloody foray al I.he Tate home. 'Ibe four defendanll wm'e absent from the courtroom aa•ln tOclay, u.tenln& to • the procttdings by loud.speaker from ~ ·.earby rooms. Kanarek began his final ar,umtnta .ai the trial lut week told SUperior Court Judie Charle Older he would fWSb to- day. Kanarek has attempted to diJcredlt the testimony of the .Ute's key wttnw, Linda Kuabian,, a former 4'Manson Family" membtr who wu granted lm· munity. The attorney. portrayed her as a Mr. M1100-type character who created havoc · but remained unscathed. He also likened the cult leader to 1; Christian being lhrown to the lions and the trial to a Roman circus. 111• lawyer began his iummatlon by showing the jury enlarged co I o r photographs of the victims, Including the nearly nude body of actress Sharon Tate. who was eight months pregnanL At one point, Kan1re.k, whole repeated objecUooa bfve pwic:tuated the testimooy of mmy :witnesses, &ugge.sted tJflt the prosecuUon was out to get him personally. Depu\y District Attorney Vlncont ' BugUosi" objected and Older s~tned IL th e OOjectlon. ~ Bua:Uoat had alt.empted to 1 bave w Kanattk re.moved U an attorney in the case when the trial began contending {I that K1nartk bad a history of prolonging :.. trials by dilatory tactics. Attorney Maxwell Keith , who was a~ ' pointed to represent Leslie Van Houten •· in the case after her lawyer, Ronald -.. Hughes, disappeared on a camplng trip ~.Thanksgiving, wu to follow Kanarek 1 with his final &riUffienll. '· Oil Field Blaze D11!llage Revealed Si&nat Oil and Gas Co. ex~utlves today esUmated that the. cost of I spec- llcul1r oil field fire was about $100.000. The fire, which knocked out aix pump!! fn the co mpany's field along Pacific Coast Highway, broke out New Year's morning. Today crews were repa iring and overhauling piping, tanks and pum· ping unJt.s damaged In the blaze. Capt. Carl Duncan of the Huntington Beach Fire Dept. &aid only 25 barrels of fuel in the lines leadlng to undergroun d wells were burned. An automaUc alarm sys<e m ahut down ~ pumpa and p~vent.d further d•lllll'.e, be ui4. DAllV PILOT oaMO• CC.UT ""9Utft"'9 ~ R•lttft No Wflil ,.,. ................. Jtelr: .. c.-1., 'llcl l'Tel6lrlt ............ lltolflln IC""I .. , .. lt.om•• A. M11r,.hi11e M~lno Etl.., A/111 Dirkl11 Wnl o,.,... COU!lty ~ltw Allttrt W. ltt11 ...__ .. "' ~llOr" """---17t7S letc:h kul1•1rd Mtil!nt Add"1ttn P.O. loc 790, f2MI .,,... ...... 1..-hlcfl: m...,,... •--c... ._.,. w"' .. ., ''""' ........... e.ctll •11 W.t .. _ ......... a.n ~I -Mlrlti ~ C:... ... .. " ' -.. UPI T•~MM Russians Invited To Angel~ Trial WASHINGTON (UPI) -The State Department has invited a growp ot Russian scientists and academicians to send an observer to the murder and kidnaping trial in Callfornia of black militant Angela Davis. A department spokesman said Sunday the invitation was sent ln response lo a Ieltcr signed by 14 ptrs<N who ex· pressed fear Miss Dav is. an avowed Communist, might not get a fair trial. The signers, he continued, represented the letter as an Independent action not connected with the Soviet governmen t. Those kllled were a whlle Superior Court judge, two Negro ron'tllcts ind a black accompllce who took the guns Into court. One of the San Quentin prison convicts"' was being tried on a charge that he assaulted a guard. The other convict was a witness. 1 r-.fiss Davis wa s once 1 !acuity member for the University of California at lJ:ll Angeles and ha~ been active in Black Panther party circles. MADISON, WISCONSIN 'S RALPH VAN HORN CLIMBS THROUGH DRIPT TO PLUO METER la It Conditioned Reflex? Or Fe•r of Meter M•ida? Or la Ralph Ju1t Plain Honest? .\ssistant Secretary Martin J. Hillen· brand "mad e It clear, of course, we expect reciprocal opportwUties." the spokesman said. Hillenbrand wa.s th• ofrtcer who cabled the'reply.-. Apartment Bid ··Hearings Set Reagan Pledges Welfare Reform at Inauguration SACRAMENTO (API -Gov. Ronald R&gan launched his second term today by• proposing that California lead the nation In reformine welfare to weed out ''those whole greed is greater than tltelt ileed." ·1"Ibere ls no greater challenge fa cing the state or nation,'' the Republican Teacher Accord On Pay Issue Hinted Tuesday chief executive said in his second in· '1ugural address. •·u not us, who? If not now, when ?·' asked Reagan, who has been one of the most persistent and vocal critics of Preaident NiJ:on's family 1astatance welfare reform plan. Reagan , 59, said the only alternative -higher taxes to pay for rising welfare C06ts -is the easy way out and tern· porary at besl In his prepared text, Reagan aaid he would spell out the details of his plan and discuss the state's bleak fiscal outlook -in a message to the legisla ture Jan. 12. State welfare spending now totals about $2 billion a year and nearly 2 million persons rece.i ve aid. The legisla ture also convenes today Teachers in the Huntington Beach City with Democrats taking control of both School District may finally reach a Uie Assembly end the Senate -a fact salary settlem.nt at a special session lhat is certain to complicate Reagan 's with district trustees Tuesday night A lans for the welfare reform. In tbt The board of trustees is meeting to outgoing legislature, Republicans con· accept or reject an arbitration decision trotled both chambers. banded to the district tod8y . accordina Reagan's second Inaugural features an to S. A. :t.ioffett, district superintendent. entertainment gala tonight starring Last October, a three-man panel began Frank Sinatra, John Wayne, Jimmy studying the stalemated salary talks Stewart and Jack Benny. between teachers and the distnict. Dr. Welfare was the a.ingle issue Reaean Edgar Jones, a UCLA Ja w profe ssor discussed ln deta11 in bla lnaugural and neutral me mber of tht paoel. com-remarks, pleted his recommendation1 la.st week. "Mandated by statute and federal Mof~eU decliqed to state what set· regWahon, weUare haa prolifm-ated and ti~ baa be\!n IUggesled by Jones I gro,Wn into i. JtVl8thao of. Wl!yPpQl1a~Je and the spoktsmen for teac hers and dimensions," the governor said. tbe district. "l"d rather let our board "I shall propose restructuring welfare see it first. before making it publ ic." . -to eliminate waste and the impropriety Teachers and trustees .stopped talking of subsidizing those whose greed is a?out salaries last spring . when both greater than their need. The present sides refused to compromise further. confusion must be replaced with a pro- Tbe 220-men;iber teacher s' assoc~ation is gram ... that will maximize human digni· eeeklipg a nine percent salary increase ty and salvage the destitute." plus another three percent in such fri nge beneltta as med.lea! services. The administration has refused to offe r more than a six percent salary increase with any fringe benefits to come out of that six percent. On Nov. 2 the teachers' associatio n voted unanimously to accept whatever decision lis handed dO\l.'n by the three-man arbitration panel. School trustees are not bound (and can't be by state law) lo acetpt the arbitralinn decision. Moffett said trustees will hold their meeting al 7:30 in the library of Dvryer School. lt is a public meeting. ~fesa View School Sets Talk on Drugs "Keep Them Oft the Grass." a talk on drugs and children, will be presented at Mesa View Sc hool. HunUngton Beach, at 7:30 p.tn. Tuesday. The talk, sponsored by the Parent Teachers Asl!lociation, will be J iven by Dr. Leonard M. Zunin of the JJ13titute for Reality Therapy. From Pagel NIXON DUE HERE • • • routed the Pres ident from his bed The fire and subsequent arrival of San Clemente volunteers led lo a personal visit by the Nixons to fire headquarters on election day for per!IOnal congratulations for the firefighting eHor1. Aii the fire damage has been repaired slnce the last vlsit, leaving the Spanish borne fresh for the arrival. the Stale of the Union message is scheduled for delivery to Congress at 4 p.m. PST Jan. 22 -the day after 1he new 92nd Congress convenet. The Nlxons, a.s usual. will arrive on Air Firce One at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. then board their Army .lle:\icopter for the short fllght to the land lng pad near the San Cemente teddencti. ~ Nixon will be putting in a buay morning Tuesday be.fore taking off. A Cabinet meeUng is on tap and a meeUng with four Republican governors will lollow for a discussion of the sharing of feder al revenue with the states and of the welfare reform problem . The governors include Nelaon A. Rockefeller of New York. who hu con- sulted Nixon before on the financial plight of the.states. a.nd three: eiecuUvq o( the conference of Republican governors. U:>uie B. NuM of Kentucky is the incoming chairman of the con- ference. Raymond 0. Shafer of Penn- sylvanl11 ls the: outgoing cbalrm1n and Gov. Richard B. OgUvi.e of llllnota LI chairman of the GOP Governors Policy Com1nittee . ' Among thf! entoW"age arriving Tuesdsy will probably be top adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger. who left San Clemente in recent day! after spending more than a week at the Presidential compound. The vialt, kept quiet by White House aldet. ended 10melime over the weekend. Pren secretary Ronald L. Ziegler !&Id the President would take off be.fore 2 p.m. EST Tuesday a.nd planned to remain on the cout' )nto ·the week. of Jan. 11. He aaid" be tlJool)>t h~ mlght eU.y unUJ midweek. Ttie ~t tcday wu cle.rll'lf away Immediate m1ttm requlrlnl . bill at- tention. includl?I. Zlealtt said, som e of 1be lalt batCh « 51 bills from lhe Conpua thit jult ad)ourned. Action on oome « -Is nptcted before the Pre.sldent'1 deparlart and the rest will be hlndled frOm the workina bue in California. 'll>e ~ 1181 been getting a lot of HtaD1lon, to the t1ttnl tha t Georle P. SChullz. director of the Offlef! of Budget and Management, is not nytng to CaUfornla with the Prtslde.nl. But 1 gallry or other White Rouse ofUcllll ll, and Shults will be I Vllllblc for CONUltaUon by telephOne and may •• lo-Call~ Ulter. No dlte h• been tel for getting the budpl Into tho l>IDda ol ConirMI-But Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will sit in on the sessioia. Ziegler said the visiting governors wanted to get tbelr ~ghts on revenue !ih&rlng and welfare fore the President prior to the State of e Uoloa JDelAP, ' Pennsylvania Bank I Lowers Prime Rate Plill.ADELP!DA (AP) -Fl rat PtMJYlvallla Banilni I<. Trual Co., bill· gest in Phlladelphla, today cut the prime Interest rate fron'I I~ percent to S~ percent -the 1lxth reduction ln nine montht -and U.plained "M 'ff rot money and we're lookirll ·far Joana." It .-aa the first major bani: ln the nation to take lhll act.loo. The prime rate Is the Interest charged ln the bank"a best customer•. It has akldckld ste1dUy f r o m 1 hJ&h of 81,i percent Wt Mai"ch. From Pllfle l WEATHER ... were brought lnto Hopkins -one a 747 c1rryln1 381 passengers , some of whom spent the night drinking wine aboard I.be luxury plane. Cblcqo's O'Hare Airport was clogged wtth 10ldiers, nllora, 1tudenls and others trying to get out of town. Aircraft were late due to disrupted schedules. Most of the atorm'I hardahlpa occurred in Nebrub and Iowa. 'Ibere were two dealhl 1a each state attr~ted to the weather. Huodreda ef moUirista were sltanded. Tbe body of 1 man who d1ed Sunday of carbon monozlde remained in a rescue truck wb.lcb wu stalled west of Om11ba. The victim was one of two men overcom e with fumes while seated In a s no w plow. Rescue workers revived the other man. Scores of motorlsta apent the night at tbe n1tlon1l 1uard armory In Lincoln and In Bchools and truck stops. The westbound Union Pacl!lc City of Los Angeles, acbeduled to arrive In Omaha at 3:15 1.m., was stranded at Perry, Jow1. The eastbound City of Los Anaeles was being held in Omaba. At Offutt Alr Force Base, headquarters of the Strategic Air Command, south of Omab1, offictrs told personnel to stay off lbe job unless •lherw:lse in- strudtd. Many of Omaha's streets, in- cluding the main lb•rof1re, Dodge Street, were impassable. That would mean opporturl!Ues for Americam to observe Soviet trials ot policial dissidents or Jews accused ~( skyjacking, he said. Only one of the Russians who signed the letter w11s identified althou gh the spokesn1an s11id they were prom1nent scientists and scholttrs. The man Jden· tlfied is Pyotr Kapltsa, a · top Russian physicist. Hlllenbrand'1 cable stre8lled "complete confidence" Miss Davis would get an lmparllal hearing, the spokesman said. Miss Davis, 26, Is charged with purchasing the guns that were smuggl~ into a Marin County courtroom In S11n Rafael in ap wuuccessful escape attempt in whlch four persons were killed. 2 Killed, 1 Hurt In Los Alamitos Two persons were killed and another critically Injured this morning when a car left lhe roadway In the Rossmoor area of Los Alamitos and ran Jnto a trtt. California Mighw ay Patrol officers said the accident occurred about 10:30 a.m near the Inte rsection of Mo'ntecito Road and Kempton Drive. Witnesses said the car was southbound on Montecito Road al a normal rate ef speed before It swerved. and struck the tree, according to CH P officers. The names of the accident vlctlm.s were not Immediately available. For Tuesday Two projects with a tore! of fiOO apar~ments are set for public hcaringir before the Fountain Valley City Council Tuesday night One, the 496-unlt Ponderosa Homes project, will be lookt'd at with a critical eye by councllmwi who .l"eque1ted a chance to study it. The tenta itve tract for Ponderosa Homes was sppr6ved by the plaMlng commission. But some councilmen felt U!ere were too many apartments for the 18 acres at Warner Avenue and San Bruno Street, and asked for a public hearing on lt. The council could overturn aimmlsslon approval of the apartments. According to new city Jaws the Pon- derosa development has more apartments per acre than allowed in R-3 (medium density) zoning, Planners approved it be<:ause the tenta tive tract is part of another project started before the city's new apartment laws were adopted. 'The other public h~arlng ~oncerns e request for R-4 (high density) zoning on $.2 acres at the north side of Starfish Lane. Classic Homes wants to build 104 apartments there. Planning Director Clinton Sherrod said the apartments con- form to the master plan and have been recommended for approval. The council meets at 8 p.m. in council chambers of city hall, 10200 Slater Ave. ~Ilooo and we love it! Locally founded, locally O\Vncd, we're part and parcel of the communities we serve. That's why we plow back all of O\lI Orange County savers' dollars right here in our own Orange County. It's time to plant ... time to save .•. at Laguna Federal! This is the season to save at Laguna Federal. Plant your savings here and now. Watch them grow and multiply. No Association pays you higher interest on your insured savings~ '' No Association offers you more varied ways to save. Plant your money with us .•• and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to grow! It's our way of saying thanks for saving at Laguna Federal. Op en a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in for your packet of Lunaria seeds-a purple-flowering money plant for your garden-plus a complete, helpful and informative Flower Seed Garden G;nde. _fi~una7«/eta~$~ ' AND LOAN AllOCIATION Oran,e Coun1y'1,Lar1ut, Fir11 and S1ro111..i inde,,enMnt F«leral 3 Mamrch Bay Pla:ra !!!lo Ocean Avenue Ill! N. El Camion Reol Soulh Laguna, Calif. La(ll!>& Beach, Calif. San Clemenio, Calif. 4~75'1 ..... ~.--.,.-,_ ~·1 "'" • . ' ' New·p,-ri Beaeh ED ITi O N Today's Fina l N.Y. St oeks VOL. 64, NO. 3, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE CO!JNTY, CALIFORNI~ TEN CENTS Ni x on Comes Tuesday for San Clemente Stay By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1M O.llY ~lltt II•" President Nixon today abandoned no- t.ions of a Florida vacation and opted instead to brave chilly So u t h ern California for a Hklay working stay at the Western White House in San Clemente. -·- White House aides in Washington an- nounced the President will arrive here Tueflday. Officials at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station confirmed that the chief executive's arrival time aboard Air Force One is scheduled Tuesday between 3 and 3:30 p.m. El Toro's gates will be closed to the public. The President's arrival here will come just one day after his nationaUy televised chat tonight with four television com· mentaton. The program will be aired at 6 p.m. on channels 2 and 7 and in a delayed version at 9 p.m. on Channel .. White Hoos& officers said today that v.•hile in San Clemente, Mr. Nixon will be v .. orking on b~ left over bj Congress and on messages and programs for the year ahead. Most vilal among the work items •N completion of the new budget for the 1972 fiscal year and the drafting Of the annual message on the State of. the Union. This will encompass ad- ministration legislative plans a.od pro- grams for the years ahead • Baroocued SuperpaperlHlck Pacific Telephoqe Co. officials contemplate clean· up job after fir8 early today destroyed. a sWrage building at utility's Ford Road faciJity just north of Newport Beach city limits. Dama~e. estimated at $32.000, included loss of 1,600 telephone books. County fire units doused blaze in JO by 40-foot structure in 20 minutes. Main building at phone facility just off MacArthur Boulevard. between Ur· banus Squ are and Harbor View Homes, was not in· valved in 3:30 a.m. fire. Cause of blaze is under investigation. P olice Offi cer Nabs Suspect I n Kidnap-rape Laguna Beach police Saturday arrested an Elsinore m3n as a suspect in the Dec. 29 kidn ap-rape of lwo Harbor Area teenagers. Office r Terry McClain stopped the suspect "s vehicle in the 600 block of the Sou th Coast Highwa y when the man and his auto appeared to match the description given by the two girls follow· ing their alleged abductions and sexual assaults. Police claim the 28-year-old man was armed with a pistol at the time {If his arrest. lte is being held for ques· tioning on suspicion of rape . kidnaping and carrying a concealed weapon. The pair of hitchhiking teenaged girll! tnld police lhey wer e given a fide in Laguna Beach Dec. 29 · by a man who bound them with rope and raped them in separate SC1uth cowity locations. The two girls. an l~year-old fr om Cost.a Mesa and a l~year-old fro.m Corona del Mar. said they were J11ter dropped off at the Coast .Highway and MacArthur Boulevard In Newport. They · obtained a description of the assailant'• car as he drove away. T wo Companies Di$cnss Mer ger Reagan Pledges W elfa re Reform at Inaug uration • SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. R<>nald Reagan launched his second term today by proposing that California lead lhe nation in reforminiz welfare to weed out "those whose greed is greater than their need ." "There is no grealer challenge racing the state or nation," the Republica n chier executive said in his second in· augural address. •·u not us, who? If not now, when?'' Market T umbles I n First Session NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices dropped sharply today in the first triiding ~ion of 1971. By 2 p.m_ the Dow Jones average or 30 industrial blue chip Stocki bad 111Jpped 1.58 pciinl.!I to 831.33. Decltnin1 i.!sues outnumbered .gainers · on the New Yock Sti>ck Exchange by a sizeable margin. Trading activity was relatively quiet. AniJyst! could point lo no p"art.icular piece of news to e:qilain the market's decline. Some said investors were waiting on the sideline! to see what President Njxon u ys io bit televised interview tonighL asked Reagan. who has been one of the most persistent and vocal critics of President Nixon's family assistance welfa re reform plan. Reagan, 59, said the only alternative - higher taxes to pay for rising wel fare costs -is the easy way out and tern· porary at best. Jn his prepared text, Re&gan said he would spell out the details of his plan and discuss the state·s bleak fiscal outloo k -in a message to the legislature J an. 12. State welfare spending now tota ls about $2 billion a year and nearly 2 million persons rpreive aid. The legilllature also convenes today with Democrats taking control of both the Allsembly and the Senate -a fact tha t is certain to complicate Reagan's plans for the welfare reform. In the outgoing legislature, Republicans con- trolled both chambers. Reagan's second lnaugural features an entertainment ga'a tonight s~rrlng Frank Sinatra, John Wayne, Jimmy Stewart and Jack Benny. Welfare was the single issue Reagan discl1$ed lo detail in his inaugural remarks. "Mandated by statute and federal regulation, welfare bu prolUerated and grown into a levJathan of wisupportable dimensions," the governor said. The annual economic message ls tlfe third major item that will be gelling a going-over from the President and his top aide. here. Mrs. Nixon will also make the trip but other members of the family have no plans to do so. Mr. Nixon's "rest-vacation•• here ap- pear1 to fit in with recommendations of the President's physician, Dr. Walter 'lt.ach, wbo pronounced him in &ood shape after an annual checkup but &aid the chief «?ecutive ought to ease up more in spots like California.and Florida. Reporu said the chief encutive bad planned a trip to bis Key Bilcayne home, but changed his mind at the last minute and opted for San Clemente. The Presklent and First L a d y originally had planned to travel to San Clemente on Dec. 26, but that visit was called off weeks before Chri5tma.s. Thelr last vi.sit to San Clemente took plact during the hectic national elecUOA aeason and was highlighted by the President's casting his first non-absentee ballot since becoming a part-time resf:. dent on the Orange Coast. The vi.!it set a record for unforeseen events, including a riot during a cam· paign swing in San Jose, followed a few hours later by a smoky blaze wblcb (See NIXON, Paae Z) Wharf Plan Sunl{ • Irvine W ithdraws Zone Action An onru:1hing tide of protest has sunk Balboa Wharf. The Irvine OJmpany said today it has withdrawn its zone change ap- plication for the controversial waterfront development across the channel from Balboa Island. James £. Taylor, general plann ing administrator for the company, while standing behlnd the merits of the projects.... conceded the plan "presents man y ques- tions and concerns which hive rendered ll unacceptable to those citizens from Huge Storm Blasts Wide Midwest Atea By United Preis International An intell.!e storm blasted the Midwest today with heavy snow and high winds. In Iowa the storm wa.s descrJbed·as the worst in nearly 30 years. Traffic there was at a virtual standstill. Businesses closed. f.1ail deliveries were canceled. Government offices were !hut down. Hwidreds of motorists were stranded. The Iowa Patrol and Highway Com- mission said the state's interstate road! were impassable. At leut three deaths • in Iowa were caused by the storm, alJthorities said. Two of the victims died of heart attacks after shoveling snow. Additional snow amounts of more than 4 inches were expected from northeast Iowa through northern Wisconsin and Michigan. Traveler• wArnings were In eHect from oortheast Kansas and eastern Nebraska, through Iowa and portions of eastern Minnesota . The new snow acc umulation lotaled 16 inches at Harmony, Minn. The Nebraska Highway Patrol re· quested that Kansas close all roads entering Nebraska because of a ''serious backup of traffic, severe weather and road conditions." The storm ranged over much of lhe nation. Snow measuring 3 to IS inches covered almost all of New Mex.iC{). Schools in A1buquerque and In other co mmunities were closed ~ause of treacherous driving condlUons. One traf· ' fie death was blamed on the storm. Mrs. Dolorea Anita Haas, city c I e r k or Taos, N.M., drowned when ber car alid off U.S. 64: near Velarde and aaqk In the Rio Grande. Near Madison. Wis .• a arlowmoblle was diapatched to bring Mrs. Daine Krueger to a hospital to deliver a baby. Five · 1heriff's vehicles and thrte mow , plows got •tuck trylng to reach her home. An estimated 7 ,500 perSOll!I were 1tranded at Cleveland'• Hopkins lnterna· (See WEATUEll, Pac-Z) the community of Balboa Island." A public hearing on the project, scheduled Tuesday at 7 p.m. at C.Orona del Mar High School; has been can~lled. However, John Jakosky, Newport Beach Planning Commission chalnnan, said the commission will meet as scheduled. The commission is expected to act on the nearby Promontory Point apartment development. Taylor said a representa tive of the Irvi ne Company will be present to ariswer any questions on either project. Winds Strong He Said there are no new plans for the seven-acre wharf property. "If the Irvine Company retains this property," he said, "It will undertake a study to reevaluate the potential development possibilities.'' Taylor, In his letter, told the com- mission, "The Irvine Company. based upon its years of experience in developing projed!I of quality. firmly beltevea that (Balboa Wharf) would be a significant asset· lO the community and, u IUCb, (Sff: WHARF, Page J) Near .freezing Weather Keeps Gr.ip 0 on Coast Downward-zooming temperature• Ind frigid Santa Ana wind! tha:t, gusted up to 60 miles per hour SUndq' will again remind Orarge Coast residents Uiat Oki Man Winter nas w firmly In hls· grlp. O\illed, chapslick-carrylng folb are In for more of the same treatment tonight and Tuesday. Record low temperatures dropped be.low the freezing mark in certain. Los Angeles County spota H Callfornla recorded its coldest Jan. 3 in 18 years. Bitterly cold winds whl'pping tn off the detert created har.ardous conditloaa 5 Newport Boys Wi11 Top P rizes At Yule Burn Five NeWporl Beach boys will be draw- ing for a trip to San Francisco after winning first place prizes at the Newport Beach Christmas Tree Burn Saturday night. .The fi ve are Brad Houston, 5, of 206 Ruby Ave .: Da"nny ·Wayne. 7. {If 5206 Neptune Ave .; Stewart Gaddis, 9, of 1124 Berk.shire Lane; Ron Marley, 13, of 7121/r Narcissus Ave., and Ted Cok, 8, of 930 W. Ocean Front. Deputy Fire Chief Leo Love said tlie fi ve won the first place drawing at the five sites of the city's annual Christmas Tree Burn. About 2,700 r esidents attended the eve nt at whit.h more than 2,800 {)]d Cbii!ltma• trees were burned. He said the drawing for t•o rouod trlp tickel.!I donated by 1.11' California will be held Saturday at the Fire D~ ment headquarters, 475 32Dd St. for campers ind trallers, while heavy snows mantle the San Bernardino and San Gabriel mountains. Orange Cow!ty escaped with jll.!t ter· ribly cold feet, while damiie wu re- corded elsewhere. A U.foot 1Joop and a houseboat capslz. ed and sank at Santa Catalina Ial.and, whU" .a $20,000 yacht went down off San Diego's Coronado Isla d. AJI seven persons aboa.r the Seaquest escaped before· It founderi! , accordin1 to auttorilies. The current cold snap is part of • storm system that has used severe conditions in the Midwes , H that's o( any comfort. "It started off the cen al California coast late Friday and he.n t..be low p~sure system moved ast, a lot of cold air mo'1ed in." xplaiM Dave Wllllams, of the National Weather Service. A high of 62 degr'ees was forecast today. wilh an overnight low of 35, in case you want to get up and check your thermometer. Small craft warnings are hoisted along the Southern California Coast, particular- ly from Polnt ConcepUon to Dana Point. An Orange County Harbor District l])Okesman said wind gusta will be up to 40 knots below coastal canyons, and 6 to 15 knots elaewbere in general Jei. arr!Wl&. and departing from Orange Com!t)'. Alr)lorl were using their inland apptOlcba today, after winds reached a 16 knot velocity durinl predawn hQW'I. "We hnen't been •hove 30 knob 11nce,'' said.a con~l loWf.r duty officer_. The hJPr>l airport Wind rucllnc WU 112 knoll Swxlay. 0r .. ,. C.ut • Cerro Corporation and Great Southwest Corporation said today preliminary dl.scussions between the two companies are taking place regarding the possible acquiaitlon by Cerro of additional Calltomla asseltl cl Creal Southwest. Cerro acquired about $9 million in Great Southwest holdlnp. primarily thlMle or Leaderahlp Boustng Division, In September. Reds 'Invited to Trial Ne~ort Tells Airline Stand -Tl'fe dlvtsion wa.s re.named Leadership Housing Systems and maintains the invious {)ffioes at 901 DoV'er Drive, Newport Beach. The housing 4Jvision formerly wu directed by Gr e a t Southwest's subsidiary, Macco Corpora· Uon. NY Newspa per Born NEW YORK (UPI) -A new newspaper, the Daily Mirror, began publishlng today. 'Mif' tabloid morning paper is the first ceneral interest daily to begin In New Vork since tht short·lived World Journal Tribune ln the late 1960!:. The Mirror, with 32 JNI ... In Ill flrat edJUOn, would IN "toLally independent in Ila editorial pqUey," publlsher Robert ft"arreU said. Soviet ~Qb8erve r' Okayed i'!-Angela Dav~ Cm e W ASlllNGTON (UPI) -The Stale Department bu invited a group of Ruuiln lclentlsta and academicians to send an obeerver to lbe mW'der and kldnaplng trial In Callfomfa of black militant Angela Davis. A department ipokesman said Sunday the invltaUon was 11ent,in response to a Jetter 11ped by 14 petsons who ex- pressed fear Miss Davis, an !'vowed Communlrt, might not get a fair trial. The signers, he contlnued, repreM:nted the letter as an lndependC!nt 11ctlon not COlll1ld<d with the SO'YIOI govemmeni. Al&-1 Secntary Mlrtln J . !Wion-- brand "made It clCar, of CO!llV\'• we . :_' expect reciprocal op~" &be spokesman said. Hl&nbrao4· w11 tbt offleer Jl'bo cabled the reply. That would mean OJ>port.ubtUes for Am(ricans to Gb!lervt Soviet trills of pollclal dWldents or Jews 1ocuse4 of 1kyJadlni, he oald. Only one of the Russi•ns 'fft?o. •lined the Jet"1' WU identified alllliNgb the spokesman aaid they were prominent scientilt.s and scholars. '111e mim tden-- tlfied Is Pyotr· Kaplt.11, a top Busllan physicist. HJUeabrand'1 cabte *-Id "complete confidence" Mia Davis would aet,..an lmpartJal bearinl, the tpOr"""'NIQ. ' ' . Miu Davll, 211, la ~id -purchaaJni lha llflll. lhat wv. omUfCl<d Into a .Marin Cowity --In San llalael In an -iui °ei\:aJ>e. ~!tempi Iii which 19111' _. _. ~. · ,,_ ldu.d wer• a wtllt. Superior • Court Judse. two Ntgro coovlctl and a blade aC<"Ompll<e who tool< the 111111 Into ~· One of the San Quenlln prlaon convicts wu belnc tried on a cttarce that he auaulled a pard. 1be other convict WIS a wltnna. M1M Daris was once a faculty member for the UnlYftlky of Calliornla at Los Angelet and bu be<n acUve In Black Panther portl cir~ Newport Beach Aulltanl City AUomey Dmnlt O'Neil will be: tn San FranCltto 'l"Uuday to 1ppe;r at pre-hearing confer· e~ O{l 1pplkaUcm by two a.lt'llnes for direct aervloe from 0r..,. County Alr- pOrt: to ·Sacramento~ · · · Both Air Calliornla ud Pacific 8'ltltJ>. west Alrlinea (PSA) have Wed a number of 1applkations with the. Public UtU:iUet ' Commiallon (PUC)· !or tbao raull,.ctm· blned with routa wvlclnc 11Vm! other alrpoit1. Thi N ... port Beach City Couilcll his odopted a '""luUon ou_.illl( ti. direct ms1111 10 the at.le c0p1111; but u>alng IMJ'-bo-ved..l11l7...1Lil11.aGllll!er..J>( mghll lo San Francisco ls reduced by .. tqPAI . ..,mber. The confertnce wlh be conducted by ,Wiiliam Foley, a PUC euml.ntr. He:ta apected lo ... dates r..-formal public hurln11 alt.er dilcuaam have bMo CODlo- pleted • .: I l I I DAIL v PILOT N Tate Trial 'Political,' Says Lawyer LOS ANGELE!' (UPI) -Charles M&nson ls undergoing a "political trial'' in the Tate murder case and should no more be charged with murder than Gcv. Geor&e Wallace or John Birch Socltty head Robert Welch, a defeme .J.I""" ll!"gutd !Dday. -Irving Kanarek resumed fin a I arguments for the defense in the six-and: one-haU-montb-Old trial by telling IM · jury that Maroon was being charged with the slaying• because his philosophies were antagonistic to mo11t of Amerlcao IOciety today. "There are 111 sorta of milita,µt IOC!eti• in Siit cou.n1ry today." Kanarek said. ·~Ia no reason why George Wallace. the governor of Alabama. or Robert Welch of the Bir~iety shou1d be charged with murdert.",_. "This is a political trial in wtiich Mr. Manson is brought here because he is a symbol of one of the con- kotllations that is going on in this coun- lry today." Turning to evidence that the word "plg" was daubed in blood on the front dcu of the Tate home, Kanarek. said the de"ff:nse felt that key state witness Linda Kasabian printed those letters there. Kanarek said il backed up the defense Contentions that Mr1 Kasabian a.nd Charle3 "Tex" Wat.loo were the leaders Of the bloody fcny at the Tate borne. The four defendants were absent from the courtroom again today, listening to the proooedinp by loudopeaker from nearby rooms. Kanartk began his final arguments In the trial lut -• told Superior Coon •Judge Charle Older he would finish to- .day. Kanarek has attempted to discredit the tesUmony of the atate's key witness, Linda Kuabian, a former ''Manson Family" member who was granted im-, murufy. The attorney portrayed her as a Mr. Magoo-type character who created havoc but remained unscathed. He also likened the cult leader to a Christian being thrown to the lions and the trial to a Roman circus. The lawyer began his summation by showing the jury enlarsed c o I o r p"°"'IJ'alll>J of the vidini., illcludillg the nearly node body of aclres3 Sharoo Tate , who was eight months pregnanl • At one point., Kanarek, whose repeated objections bave punctuated the testtrnony or m.,:iy, WitoeilrA suue~ Ula1 the prosecuUon wu out to get him personally. Deputy District Attorney Vin cent Bu.glloli objedlld and Older 1USl8iAed ,lb< objection. Bugliosi had attempted to have Kanarek removed as an attorney ·1n the case when the trial began contending that Xanarek had a history of prolonging trials by dilatory tactics. • Attorney Maxwell Keith, who wu ap- pointed t.o represent Lellie Van Houten • in the case alter her lawyer, Ronald Hughes , disappeared on a camping trip Thanksgiving, was to follow Kanarek : wiUl hil final argument.. Front P1141e 1 WHARF. • • would prove itaell to those who now voice concern. "However. aft.er much consideralion the company has decided lo withdraw iU application and respectfully requmli that the planning commission withdrew the zone change amendment snd remove this item from the agenda." Ta ylor said the project had received "wide approval for lt8 uniqueness of character, design and quality and that fts economic viability would provide an e1cellent·end much oe«led t.a1 r!!IOUrce for the dty." DAILY PILOT CltANO• CCIAST PUf.lltMINO CCM,AW'f Robert H. WeM l'r.lcllftTtflllll1"'91 ...... J1ck R.. C.ri.y Vlcol l'rwkl.nl n 0-.1 """,,.._. TI!orn•• Ke•"" l!!Clll'o~ Tlioll'lel /4., Murphi11• .\1-glnt ldl!W L Peter Kr iet N""""°'"' '"d'I City Edltw ,.....,_,.._ .. OM• 2211 Weit 1111.oe l oulev1rd Melllnt-..IJr•tll P.O. lo• 117,, 9266) --c.. ..... • ••t ..... ''""" uturM htdl! ftt ,_, "-HuMI.,.,.,. IMcttt 11171 IMdl '°"''"'"' kn Cltmefltt; JOI . ...,.. •I CtmlM llMI I M-.-.. 1911 DAI~ Y l'ILOT Stiff l'Mlt f!P Pole, With Cheek "the New Year began in a n unusual manner for Helen Sandy, 21 , Corona del Mar. who ponders the pli~ht of her auto. Newport Beach police said the accident occured about 12:30 a.m. Friday near inter· section of Jamboree and Ford Roads, momentarily culling power to traffic signal at intersection. Power was quickly restored. Miss Sandy was not injured, according to police. From Page 1 NIXON DUE HERE . • • routed the Pre!idenl from his bed . The fire an d subseq uent arrival or San Clemente volunteer! led to a p(.rsonal visit by the Nixons to fire headquarters on election day for person11:l congratulation& for the firefighting effort. All the fire damage has been repaired since the last visit, leaving the Spanish home fresh for the arrival. The Nixons, as usual . '"ill arrive on Air Force One at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, then board their Anny helicopter for the short flight t.o the landing pad near the San Cemente rttidence. Among the entourage arriying Tuesday will probably be top adviser Dr. Henry Ki.ssin@;er, who left Sa n Clement.t in rtcent days after !pending more than a week at~ Presidential compowid . The visit . kept quiet by White House aides. ended sometime over the '"·eckend. Press secr'et.ary Ronald L. Ziegler said the President would take off before 2 p.m. EST Tuesday and planned to remain on the coast Into the week of Jan. 1 t. He said he thought he might stsy until rnidweek. The President today wa~ clearing away lmmcdlste matters requiring hill at- tention, including, Ziegler said. some of the lsst batch of OJ bills from the Congress that just adjourned. Action on some of these is expected before lhe President's departure and the rest will be handled from the y,·orking base in California. The budget has been getting a lot of .at te nt ion, to the extent that Gtorge P. Sc hultz, director of \he Qffice (If Budget and r-.1anageme nt, is not [lying to California with the President. Signups Taken For Volleyball Fun in Newport Registration for the Newport Beach girls· volleyball program will take place today up to S: 15 p.m. at various loca tions throughout the city. Sponsored by the Recreation Depart- ment, the program is open to girls in the third through eighth grades. Team1 will be divided into grad~ groupings, with tp'11cieJ; 3-t, 5-6, and 7-8 each in se parate divisions. Praclic~ will start nest (this) week Md regular games will begin Jan. 15. Practice sessions for all teams wlll tAke place Mondays, Wednesda ys and Fridays of each week between 3: 15 and 5:15 p.m., wHh the e1ception of three areas. Teams in the Mariners Park, Eastbluff Park, Peninsula Park, Newport Harbor Community Youth Center and Newport Heights Schoo! areas will follow that practice schedule. Team! Jn ~ Irvine Ttrract Park, Buffalo Hffls Pick a'nd 38th St~t Park will practice on Tuesday• and Thurldays at lhoee aame Umes. Girls .may reg.lat• 1t &he practice toeation nearest the\r home•. Weekly llllll". Wlll bt playocf on Saturdays at ellher Newport Harbor or COrooa de! Mar Hl&b SChooll. Santa Ana .Firm Gets Road Resurface Bid A '9.225 amtrad to rt.Surface Me!it Drive between Santa An• and T\ulin avenutt near Costa Meu 11•1 b@en aWarded by county supervllOn to the _ llandley Constructon COTJ)Or1Uoo of S8 n· I.a Anl. The firm w11 the lowest o( five bidden lrith the high bid at fll,876. But a galaxy of other White Hou &e officials is. and Shultz will be available for consultation by telephone and may go to California later. No dste has been set for ·getting the budget into the hands o( Congress. But the State of the Union message is scheduled for delivery to Congress at 4 p.m. PST Jan. 22 -the day after the new 92nd Congress convenes. Nixon °"'ill be putting in a busy morning Tuesday before taking off. A Cabinet meeting Is on tap and a meeting with four Republican governors will follow for a discussion of the sharing of federaJ revenue with the slates and of the welfare reform problem. The governors include Nelson A. Rocke feller of New York, who has con- sulted Niron before on the flnlftclaJ plight of the states, .and three executives of the conference of Republi can"' govern ors. Louie B. Nunn of Kentucky is the incoming chairman of the con- feren ce. Raymond 0. Shafer of Penn- sylvanis is the outgoing chairman and Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie of II Uno ill ls chairman cf the GOP Governors Policy Committee. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will sit Jn on the sessio11 . Ziegler said the visiting governors wanted to get their thoughts on revenue sharing and welfare before the President prior to the St.ate of the Union mess•ge. From Pqe 1 WEATHER. •• tiorial Airport Sunday night because airporla west of tbere were snowed in. Twelve flights bound for Chicago, Des Moines. Cedar Rapids and Mil w!lukee were brought into Hopkins -one a 747 ca rr ying 361 passengers. some of whom spent the night drinking wine !board the luxur;.· plane. Chic ago·s 0 '11are Airport was clogied with soldiers, sai!o:s, students: and others 1ryi ng to ge t out of town. Aircraft were l!lte due to disrupted schedules. Most of the storm 's hardships occurred in Nebraska and Iowa. There were two deaths in each slate attributed to the weather. hundred& of motorist.a· were stranded. The body of a man who died Sunc!O of carbon monoxide remained In a rescue truck wbich "'as stalled west of Omah.. The victim was one ol two men overcome with fumes while seated ln 1 s n o w plow. Rescue workers revived the other man. Scores of motorists spe.nt the night al the national guard armory In Lincoln and i11 schools and truck stops. The westbound Un ion Pacif.ic City of Los \Angeles, scheduled to arri ve in Omaha 'at 3: 15 a.m., was stranded at Perry, Iowa. The eastbound City of Lu Anaeles was being he1d in Omaha. At Offutt Air Force Base, headquarten of the Slrategic Air Command, south of Omaha. offi cers told pertonnel le stay off the job uniesl citbl!rwlte b slructed . Many of Omaha's slrtets, In- cluding U!f! main thorofare, Doq;e Street, were lmpauable. Many achools ln Nebraska and toWa were cloeed. 'fbe:se<.tnctuOed the Unfnn:J. ty of Iowa and Iowa State Untftrtlty. Iowa's ltveatock market.' wtre closed for the cby. The AOuth_ and sdllthwest ht4 thllr own brand of unuau&l weather: ArklDSU State Pollce reported a tprnldo ti:Jucllied down imar Hollywood, dam.gin, one house. Heavy tbundentorms r a I 11 d through the sl8te. The Ok1ahoma Pttnhandle bad nloe Inches of snow while temperatures in southern Tei:as rana:ed Into the 90$ Sun· day. • Head.I State Senate Mills Ous.ts Schrade - IACllAMEN'IO !UPI) -O.mo<ratlc -Sen. Jamaa R. .. ns today •u elected )eadlr of the state M:nate, oustin& RepubUcan Jack Schr•de •s Democr11A moved to retW lect1latlve po'"·er strip- ped frol]I them two years a.go. (Earlier story Page t l Another Dtmocrat. Assemblyman Bob Moretti, of Van Nuys, was a virtual shoo-in for aSH:mbly speaker as bOlh. - bowel ora:ani&ed for the 1971 seision. Senate RepubUcan1 and Democrats met in private for half an hour behind closed doors in a hearlnfl room .and chose Mills shortly before Gov. Ronald Rea11n 's ln111gurablon. The selection of Milla w11 Nbjtct to expected routine confirmation later '"'hen the Senate formally convened . Schrade. who held fhe post or president pro tern for Jess than a year. emerged fro1n the private meeting early and an- no uncl'd 10 reporters as he rushed to his nei.lr by office thst Mills had received 25 voles, four more lhan the 21 minimum needed . f\1ills later confirmed th1t he receive d 25 votes. He said Sen. Stephen P. Teal111 (D-R ail Road Flat J, received one Vole and 14 senators did not vote. MIDI, or San Dle&o. 11id that a ta x Jncrease lhls year "l• Inevitable" and said that the legislature must determine .. how murh it will be." "We '"i ll pass • tax reform package this )'ear," Mills said. Democrats outnumbered Republican• in lhe Senate 'll -19 and in the assembly 43-37. For the past two sessions, the GOP held bare numerical control of the legislature. Mills, a scholarly ap1>earing •·young Turk ." was nominated by Senate Democrats Sunday to ousl Schrade:, a member o( the S<H:alled "old guard'' power structure of the Senate . Death Claims Model for lpanema Girl Newport A~to Accidents Put Three in Hospital Barbara AM Boyter of Newport Beach, a beauteous redhead who portrayed the famed "Girl from Ipanema" both as a painting model and in the living picture veraioo at Laa:una'a Festival of Arts, died New Year'• day after a lengthy illnes1. Silt WU 34. ' Miu Boyter was selected by Newport artilt WWiam A. Motta in 1965 to model for hil paiinting of the hluntingly pretty mlas who was famed in Latin llOng. Motta won the Laguna Festival'• "Gclden Palette Award" for the painting, the Jut 1ucb award given by the Festival. Mila Boyter then brought the ~inting to ltfe in a llving picture during the Pageant of the Muters. A resident of the Harbor Area for JO years, Miss Boyter msde her home at 213~ 35th SL in Newport Beach. She was a freelance graphics designer and did much work for &nd-Parkhurst- Bond Publications in Newort. There are no family survivors. Her many friends , however, are planning memorial .e:rvices. Pacifir View Mortuary of Corona del Mar is in charge of arrangeme111. Three persons received major Injuries ln separate traffic accidents in Newpor t Beacl1 over th e New Year's weekend. Five-year-old Reid Shapiro, 287 Even- ing Canyon Road. Co rona de! Mar, is listed in good condition today. Overton Burroughs, 37, of 1506 Dorothy Lane is in fair condition. Ronald Erlandson. 26. Aurora, Ill., is reported in seriOUJ condition. All are in Hoag Memorial Hospital. Erland5on received multiple fractures when · he was hit by a car while crossing West Coast Highway test of the Twltin Avenue inteneclion Sunday about 8 p.m. Police said the Illinois man was in the eastbound Jane ne:s:t to the center ·Newport Parks Board to Meet A meeting or the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Jlecrealion Commission will ta ke place Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Jrr City Halt. The commission is scheduled lo review proposed capital improvement! for the 1971-72 fiscal year and will review pro- gress on the development of its park master plan. The commissiot1 will also diSCUS!I com- plainL~ from residents near Mariners Park who ha ve claimed lights from the facility disturb them at night. line when he was strvrk by 11 car driven by Gary Denton, 18, of 118 Ruby Ave .. Balboa Island, The impact lhrew Erlandson into on· coming lanes of westbound traffic and he was struck again by a car driven by Rober t Marlin, 26 , Glendora .. Marlin attempted to swerve away from Erlandson'& hurtling bod y, and his car struck another westbound car driven by Frapk Boyd, 69, Lakewood, police said. None of the drivers reported any In- juries in the mishap. Burroughs was injured early Swiday morning when his car ran into a telephone pole near the Buzy BW"ger restaurant 8t 5801 West Coast Highway. Police said the eastbound car ap- parenUy swerved out of control while rounding the curve at that location and struck a post in front of the restaurant before coming to rest against the telephone pole. The Shapiro boy was injured Thursday morning when he wa! struck by a car driven by Robert Gregg, JS, Garden Grove. The boy was crossing Ocean Boulevard near tbe Poinsettia Avenu e intersec tion. 16 Killecl in Blast AUCH, France (AP) -An explosion wrecked a business-residential building in this liOUthern French town today, killing 16 persons. ~Ilooo and we love it! Locally found ed, locally own e<l, we're part and parcel of the communities we serve. That's why we plow back all of our Orange County savers' dollars right here in our own Orange County. It's time to plant ... time to save ... at Laguna Federal! This is the season to save at Laguna 'Federal Plant your savings here and now. Watch them grow and ·multiply .. No Association pays you higher interest on your insured savings. No Association offers you more varied ways to save. Plant your money with us ... and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to grow! It's our way of saying thanks for saving at .Laguna Federal. Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in for your packet of Lunana seeds-a purple-flowering money plant for your garde}>-pliis a complete, helpful and informative Flower Seed Garden Guide. 3 Moowcl> Bay Plaza South Laguna, Calif. • AND LOAN AllOCIATION llllO Ooean A- Laguna Beach, CalJI. 494·'1S41 601 N.~El Camino Rool s.,. Clemcmte, CalJI. I I 7 I I 7 • .. \ .. Costa Mesa EDITION I ' • • • V<?L-"4, NO. 3, 3 SECTIONS, 34 P,AGES -•'"'"<'•-:---;N" ... ..,_ -~ . -. • Today'• Fl••I N. Y. Stoeka, TEN CENTS .. • Chill Continues Old Man Winter Arrives on Coast Ul'ITt ...... MEMBERS Of' BOSTON'S 'L' STREET BROWNIES ROLL IN THE SNOW BEFORE ·SUNDAY SWIM Nothlnt Like a Dip in the AtlMltlc When the Temperature Climbs Into Hl;h 301 Jury Selection Near Completion In Mesan's Trial Jury' selection moved lntG its final N>urs today in the Orange Cou nty Supetior Court trial of a 1 Costa Mesa man accused of 'rape, kidnap, robbery and tu perversion. Tn!ft .~ ond two alterulli juror• \ave now beeo named in the trial of Gary Harold Pbowix, 29, of ~ W. Wilson st. Both sides expect to eeat two more alternate Jurors and ctfer their opening arguments later tG- day. Phoenix is accused in a cOmplaint listing 33 separate felony charges of sex offenses against seven women rang· ing in 8.ge from 18 to 48. The fonner manager ()f a Huntington· Beach health spa was arrested by police in that city la.st.July 25. Deputy District Attorney Michael Capizzi will ask the jury, if it returns a guilty verdict, to vote for the death aentence l or Phoenix. Jurors and prospective jurors got a ~lly recepUon today in Judge William Murray's courtroom with the failure dur· ing the weekend of the heating system on the seventh floor of the count}' courthouse. They, bailiffs and spectators sat through the morning session wearing overcoats and heavy jackets wbile the heating system was repaired. Sign Contest Deadline Near Time is runrling out if you plan to enter a design for tnarkers to be placed at seven major ectry poinl!! into the city of Costa Mesa. according to the Front Door Contest Committee. Deadline for submission Is Friday and judging in the c.:intest, carryl!ll a $500 fir.it prize, will bei;_n shortly ther~after. Committee Chairman Lucie Pinkley reminds entranl!! lhat they must be Costa Mesa resident!, but age is im· inaterial . , Monument design concepts should be on mounted board with a protective cover and may be left with her 1t Pink's Costa Mesa Pharmacy, the chamber of commerce or the city clerk'• office. Intense Winter Storm Cripples Midwest Area By Ualted Press International ,An i.J)tense storm blasted the Midwesl today with heavy snow and high winds. In Iowa the storm was described as the worst in nearly 30 years. Traffic there was at a virtUaJ standltill. Busines.se! closed. Mail deliveries were canceled. Gove-mnent offk:el were shut down. Hundreds of motorists were ·-The Iowa Patrol and HlghWay Com· mission said the state's interstate roads were im~able. At least three deaths in Iowa were caused by the storm, authcrities said. Two cf the victims died ol heart attacks after shoveling scow •. Additional snow amounts of more than 4 inches were expected frcm northeast Iowa through nOrthem Wisconsi n and Michigan. Travelers warnings were in effect from northeaat Kansas and eastern Nebraska, through Iowa and portions or eastern Minnesota. The new snow accumulation totaled 16 inches at Harmony, Minn. The Nebraska Highway Patrol re· quested that Kansas close all roads entering Nebraska bec~use of a "serious backup of traffic, severe weather and road conditions." The storm ranged over much of the nation. Snow measuring 3 to 16 inches covered almost all of New Mexico. Schools in Albuquerque and in other co mmuni lies were closrd because of treacherous driving condi tions . One traf· fie death was blamed on the storm. Mrs. Dolores Anita. Haas, city c I e rk of Taos, N.M., drowned when her car slid off U.S. 64 near Velarde and sank in the Rio Grande. Near Madison. Wis., a snowmobile was Clispatched to bring Mr1. Daine Krueger to a hospital to deliver a baby, Five sheriff's Yehicles and three snow plows got stuck trying to reach her home. An estimated 'l ,500 persons were stranded at Cleveland·s Hopkins Jnterna· tional Airport Sunday night because airporU west of there were snowed in. Twelve flights bound for O!.icago, Des Moines. Cedar Rapids and Milwaukee were brought into Hopkins -one a 747 carrying 361 passengers, some of whom spent the night drinking wine aboard the luxury plane. Chicago '• O'Hare Airport was clogged with soldiers, sailors, students and others trying to get out of town. Aircraft were late due to disrupted schedules. Most of the storm'1 bard.!hips occurred in Nebraska and Iowa. There were tiro deatha in eocb ota1< allributed to tllo -· ~ '"'-~ _,, stranded. The body of a man who dled SundaJ of carboo moDOXide remalned in 1 rilc9I truck which wu stalled wut of Omlht. The victim was one of two men overcome wlth fumes while seated in a 1 no .,, plow. Rescue workers revived the other man. Scores or motorists spent the night at the national guard armory in Lincoln and in schools-and truck stops. The westbound Union Pacific City of Los Angeles, scheduled to arrive in Omaha (Set WEATHER, Page Z) Police Officer Nabs Suspect In Kidnap-rape Laguna Beach police Saturday arrested an Elsinore man as a suspect in the De:c. 29 kidnap-rape of two Harbor Are• teenagers. Officer Terry McClain stopped the suspect's vehicle in the 600 block of lhe South Coast Highway when the man and his auto appeared to match the description given by the two girls follow- ing their aUeged abductions and 11e1ual assaults. Police claim the Z&-year-<>ld man was armed with a pistol at the time of his arrest. He is being held for quu. tioning on suspicion of rape , kldnapin& and carrying a concealed weapon. The pair of hitchhiking teenaged girls told police they were given a ride ln Laguna Beach Dec. 29 by a man who bound them with rope and raped them in separate. south county locations. The two girls, an 18-year-old f r o m Costa Mesa and a 15-year-<>ld from Corona del Mar, said they were later dropped off at the Coast Highway and MacArthur Boulevard in Newport. They obtained a descrfptlon of the uuUant'a car as he drove away. Downward-zooming temperatures and fri&id Santa Ana winds lhAt gusted up to .60 milj!s per hour Sunday will again remind Orange Coast residents that Old Man Winter has us ftrmly' in his grip. QiWed, chapJtick-carrying folks are ln for more of the same treatment tonight and Tuesday. Record low temperatures dropped below the freezing mark. in certain Los Angele!! County spots as California recorded its.coldest Jan. 3 in 18 years. I Nixon, Plans IO-day Stay In Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA Of "" 0.llY f'llet l l•ff PrtSident Niilln today abandoned n1>- tions of a Fl~a vacation and opted Instead to brave chilly Souther n California for a 10-day working slay at the Western White House in San Clemente. White House aides in Washington an· noW1ced the President will arrive here Tuesday. Officials at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station confirmed that the chief eiecutlve's arrival time aboard Air Force One is scheduled Tuesday between 3 and 3:30 p.m. El Toro's gates will be closed to the public. The President'• arrival here will come just one day after his nationally televised· dll& tonliht with four telev~ com· .. ton. 'lllo JH<lgTam !1111; loa alrM at I p.m. on channels 2 and 7 and ln a delayed ftnlca n t p.m. an °'''"', L ' White Hwae olflceni aid IOday 1hat while in San Clemente, Mr. Ntlon wtl1 be working on bual-left over by ~greu and on messages and pro(ram1 for the year ahead . Most vital among the work items are complepon of the new budget for the 1972 .fl.teal year and the drafting of the aMual me&aage on the· State of the Unk>n. This will encompass ad- ministration legislative plans and pro- grams for the years ahead. The aMual ecooomic message ls the third major item that will be getting a golnt~tr from the PresideAt and bis top aldN here. Mrs. Nfzon will also make the trip but other me:mberl of the family have no plans to do so. Mr. Nil:on's "rest-vacation" here ap.- pears to fit in witb recommendations of Lhe Preside.nt's physician, Dr. Walter Tkach , who pronounced him in good shape after an aMual checkup but said the chief executive ought to ease up (See NIXON, P11e 1) Thief Sidesteps Burglar Alarm Someooe who deftly sldatepped lhe burglar alann'a electric beam looted a Costa Mesa auto supply house of 'llOll in toola and equlpll!elll Saturdiy. Allan H. BltckUdge, owner of the shop at 1521 Newport Bl•d., Cllled police after dilcoverlnl the klll Saturday morn- ing when be opened. Offker Mark Bernal said the blU'glar Temoved a roof vent and lowered ~If onto shelva near lhe ceiling, but aVoided triggering an alarm . He alao med ooe of the atore's tools to open the safe, which contaloed only a 1mall 1mount of money. Designs are suggested to be In log1>- 1t)'le and must bear the words : COsll Mesa, CaWornia. Rob~ry Victim Gets Last Laug!i ·Reds Invited to Tr.ial Bllng the •lctlm or a -int ,.-.y may ha:n been arduoYI for a San Oemente man. but it• wisn't Tf!IY pro- fitable fOI', the three budlll. Thty toOI$ hit wal)ei 1t pnpoinL But It hid no money. Jerry Dale BeUer, 105 Call• RoA told , police ht WIS robbed by lhree men lite SundfY night 1s he w•tked lo ht1 car at 20e S. E1 camloo Reil. One of the men, police ao,Jd. pulltd a pistol 1nd demi.nded lht man'• wallet. Jle complied and the trto lied to 1 waltln& car containing three women. The only "pro8t'1' j n the theft .., .. the sll·pflck of beet which the trio 1l10 look from BeUer. . . . S~iet 'Observer' Okayed • in Angela IFitvis Case , W/.SIUNGTON (UPI)· -Tbe State •Deportment baa IM1t1d 1 croup of 8-adentllta 111d academicians to Rnd an ....,..... to, ibl Jllurder and llidllapq trfal In Calllomla of black militant Anpla Davi.a. A de~t rpoiles111111 Nld Sllnd•Y . the Invitation wu .ent In mponse to 1 letter a~ by J4 peraons who ex· praled fear Miu Davi.s, an avowed Communilt, plight not cet • fair \rial. The •liners, he conllnued, represented the letter u 1n independent action not -wtlb tbe Sovlot &overnJMlll. Aaalatant Socrolary Martin J. Hillen· lrrud "made It dear, of course, w• expect redproc.al oppo<Umllla," tbe rpo'"""'M Pid. HJli.nbrand WU tbe ollk<r who·cabled tbe rtply. That '""1id mean opportunltlel !« Americans to obeerYe. ,Soviet trials flt pollclal diss1dtnta or JfWt aCCUled ol skyjacking, he 111d. • Only one of tbe Ruoo1ana who alpied the lelter wu lda>!Uled although tbe apokesmari aakt they were prominent selentiatl and ICholll's. 'Ibe min ~ tilled ii Pyotr KtpilSI, I top 8-lan physlcl!t. • ) ' llllilnbNixf'• <ollle ~"Cimlplato conlldenca" Mks 1la>il d pt an Impartial hearill(, tbe rpo •Id. •I . ,._ eitterly cold win& whipping ln off the desert created hazardo\18 conditions for campers· and trallen, while heavy snows mantle the San . Bernardino and San Gabriel mountalns. Orange County escaped with just tel'· ribly cold feet, while damage was re- corded elsewhere. A 32-(oot sloop and a houseboat capslz. ed and sank at Santa Catalina Island. while a $20,000 yacht went down off San Diego's Coronado island. All seven persons aboard the Selqoest ' escaped before it foundered, accordtn& io authorities. The current cold snap Is part of a '. storm system that haa caused .evere conditions in the Midwest, if that's of any comfort. "It started off the central CaUfomlt coast late Friday and when the low • pressure system moved east, a lot of : cold air moved in." explains Dave (Ste smVERS, Pase I) Sound Giveaway Owner 'Hears' Stolen Vehicle Carroll Michael ripped out the Ignition wires of a parked car Saturday and Costa Mesa police came. They didn't arrest him when they arrived at the scene, near a shopping center, hut took the driver cf the vehicle into custody when he W8! round in a department store. Walter CUrfman, 33, o( Garden Grove, was booked on suspicion of grand theft of an auto and released on $625 bail Sunday, pending arraignment in Harbor Judicial District Court. How did Michael know it was a stolen vehicle? "It sounded real familiar," he ex· plained. ''That's why l looked up. If you have something you cherish quite a bit, you know everything about it. EspeciallY. if you've been thinking about it for two months. It's bard to explain," he c1>11- tinued. ''But. well, it just sounded like my engine." The young Orange Coast College 1tu- dent and 1 departm~t store employ• bad lavished 11 years' work ind $1,800 on the -1956 ~ Chevrolet 'port coupe be reported stolen Nov. 9 from his carport. He got around vta motorcycle -even in the rain -during the remaindeF of 1970, before 1971 brought a atroke of luck. Police theorize that if he hadn't found the stolen car Saturday he might never have gotten another chance. Curfman was in the store's automotive department purchasing a luggage rack to mount on the vehicle, when arr~ted. according to stolen car det.a i1 Detective Arnold Appleman. A quantity of clothing and 1havin1 kit was allo found in the car, leAdlng police to. speculate the driveT might ¥ve been head,ing fpr parts ~ Boatyard Rearing Slated For Mesa~Council Tonight A public hearing. on whether J(:artn Fenn.'s CO!J.troverJlal boatyard 15 to be acutUed heads a lengthy list of Jtems to come before the Costa Mesa City Council tonight. The agenda for the 7:30 p.m. aession is nine pages long. Feelings among councUmen have been divided toward Miss Fenn's operation at 209'1 and 2099 Placentia Ave. Debate is expected to be lively. Her zone exception pe:rmlt allowing operation of the boat storage lot and trucking terminal in an Industrial wne adjacent to a residential area is at stake. Certain requirements were imposed 3t the time the permit was originally granted , erection of a shielding block wall among them, but city officials charge aome of them have not been accomplished. The wall was built -but only after a delay Miss Fellll argues was the fault of the c!ty ln preparation and approval of plans -and says other alleged ilr fra ctions can be blamed on semantics. One example is a stipulation that only rouUne maintenance, and no major repairs, can be done to stored boats. Councilman William L. St. Clair, who has spoken 1n her behalf before, ~la.red that no major ·repatn are going. 'on at the boat and truck terminal facility. Mayor Robert. M. Wilson offered the oplnkm that be would never have voted for the original pennit if he'd seen whai was planned. The Dec. 21 hearing on revocation wu finally adji;ltlmed two weeks to allow all council members to v)ew the yard and inspect Its operation for U.emaelves. Mesa Policrman ,Flags Down Man Wllat a way to 1tart tlje ·day,.e&pecl.lly Mooday, ·.,, . , Gary A. Olmn, 25. of Im Paraont Sl, c..t. Noa, anaWtred a. ilnoU oh the door at l :lO a:m., to be ~ by Offlcei Pliu Dcioolnie: . . , 'Ibo poUc:enwi wu drlv1D111>":. notlcetf a red, wblte ID<f./!lue ba · curtain 11111 loo~ Ub .m Amorlcin 1l'1ag in the ~ .. Coat Collap atudent'• window. • "COmo ba<k laler. or ·wordl to thit orfoct," Olflcor Dooohue quoted Dun ·-" temac him UroqlJ a cracl:.111 lbe -. ' ~ ..!:,":.,!; ~~ ::i:e or the U.S. NDltary ,and 'Voier-CQde on lla1 daoc:talloil. · ·. . . , ' , ; Ouiin law 'wil•rtWa*d Oii ,"fj\o bliQ. .:rhe dacreptt. llllned .O<JPy of'Old Gi11'1 ·wu'mifllelted u ·e'lldinca. A second public hearing of strong Interest to area prq.perty owners con· cerns rezoning of ·residential property at 6.10 Paularino Ave ., for hl(h density apartment development. - Peoples' Investment C.orporation Beverly Hill!I, has had plans for ~ land for a Jong period of time, but the decision wa's delayed pending a study or property use in lhe so-caUed Golden Triangle area. A revise d city geceral plan ~ by consultants Wilsey & Ham tn con- nection with downtown redevelopment shows mul tlp!e dwelling usage there and the planning commission hiu recom· mended approval. . Old buslnes.1 to be revived Ulnlght in cludes a report on noise problems and parking controls at the Pier, 1976 Newport Blvd. Similar problems are certain to be cited in deliberations over a ione ex- ccpUon permit app!icalion by Don Bull to reopen a popular beer bar on the v.·est side or town. Surrounding landowners have com- plained against Bull's being allowed to continue the Outer Limi~. at 778 and 782 W. 191.h St., while the city 1llff recommend.a against It. Parking and noise problems of the past were IJteviewed a week ago, at which time the planning commisJion turned thumbs down on the JM$nit due for formal action toflight. A loog list of other zone eJ<1:eptloo (See COUNCIL, P ... I) O'ru1e We•tller Fair ond ~\ la the 1ood word from -wutbeaniD for Tutlday,, bllt · _, •111'11 to tbe overnllht , 'durlnr wblcll the mercury . Jt:pJW1p down to tbe ,......, _le. INSIDB-TODAY Tllo D"'7IO<NIU are poia<d to '. nerd.st'. tll.dr 1JCID"/oWld am--· trot ol Ille 1tor. ~ 1<>- doy, !Ohl!< two t\f10ly .•~c;lcd •!ate •flfdoli -•!flu. Sim- i<• .. Pall<~. . ........ =-,_.., "' -~;::c, •• ---., ........ .. ·-..... ..,. ·-~ • n • ' .... .. .. • • .... -w " -.... ........... --. . .,..,.. """" . =---= T ....... '. -.... -· . --D =:.:.-:.i:r ·i: , I I . I •' ' I I • I I Z OAILY PILOT 'Political,' Says Lawyer. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charle1 Manson is undergoing a "political trial'" in the Tate murder case and should no more be charged with murder than Gov . George Wallace or John Blrch Society head Robert Welch, a defenae lawyer argued today. ' Irvlflg Kanarek resumed f i n a I arguments for the defense in the six-and· one-half-month-Old trial by telling the jury that Mamon was being charged with ll\e slaying! because: M_phllosopbies were antagonistic to most of American aocie!y today. ·;~ are all ~ of militant societies in this country today," 16.naret &aid. '"lbere is no reason Y(by George Wallace, the govtrMr of Alabama, or Robert Welch ol. the Birch Sbdety shduld be charged with murder. • "This is a polltieal trial ln which Mr. Mansori is brought here because h_e is a symbol of one of the con· frontations that is going on In this coun· troy today." Turning to evidence that the word "pig" was daubed in blood 011 the front door of the Tate home, Kanarek said the defense felt that key state witness !lnda ltasahlan printed those letters there. Kanarek aaid It backed up the defense mntentiomi · that Mrs Kasabian and <;barles ''Tei" Watson were the leaders ~the bloody Joray.at the Tate home. The four defendants were absent from the courtroom again today, listening to the proceedings by loudspeaker from nearby rooma. -Kanarek t>ea:an his final arguments In the trial la.st week told Superior Court Judge Charle Older he would finish to- day. 'Kanarek has attempted to discredit Ute testimony of the stAte's key witness, lJnda Kasabi'an, a former "Manson f.p.mily" member who was granted im· munlty. · The attorney JX>rlrayed her as a Mr. Magoo-type character who created havoc but remained unscathed. He also likened the cult leader to a Christian being thrown to -the -lions and the trial to a Roman circus. :'!be lawyer began his IUllUilBtion by lbowint the jury en1arged co I o r photogr1pbl of the victims, Including the nurff nude l1<>dY of aclress Sbarm Tate, wbO wa:s eight month! pregnant. _At me point,.~ whose repeated objedlcm have punctultod the t<stimony o1 IDl"1 w1-. ouuested tbal !hf •O&eCUUon .was . out ,to get .bir.O ~rsonally. ' · ( Deputy District Attorney Vincent -lluguost objected and Older sustained the objecti<in. • Bugliosl had attempted to have -,Kanarek retrioved as an attorney in the CMe when the trial began contending ~.that Kan8rek had a history of prolonging .trials by dilatory tactics. From Pqe 1 'COUNCIL ... permits -all recommended favorably by planners at their meeting last ~1onday -are due for council consideration tonigbL The meeting begins v:ith a 6:30 p.m. business session, at v;hich time anyone wishing to speak about 21 items contained In the council consenl calendar should appear. Mosl of these ar:? communications from other cities or county and state agencies. such as resolutions, meeting minutes and liquor license applications or transfers. They are listed completely ln the coun· cil agenda but are acted upon in blanket fashion as a limesaving device, uriles!'l singled out for special handling by a citizen or councijmao. DAILY PILOT OIWMN! CD.UT P'WaJIMHtO t:ralAll't l ob.rt N. W-4 ,.,.~...,..~ J ... 1i: ~ c.n., Viet ..,_lfMT n 0.0.tt M9'1911tt Eau .. , TI!om•• A. Mu,,Mn• MWW91fil Edllor C.... M .. Offtc• JJD W..t lty St1t•t M•llfrtt AU,..,: r.o. hi: 11,0. t161& .,_ ....... llf..,..,t '-di; nn w..t ,,,_.,.. '-"""' ~---121.....-.iA­...,_ .,.., a-Ii ...._,.. ._a.... ..... II'--W • \· Subject ot Bunt J " 2nd Teen's Body Found in Laguna A week-long hunf for e Fountain Valley teenager ended tragically Sunday when his body was found on a hillside near the sile of a Christmas holiday happening in Laguna Be11ch which al.so involved one other ratal ity. Circumstances surrounding the death of Grant Weidenhammer, 19, of 17767 Oak St., were being probed to determine whether drugs were a (actor. Coro11er·s deputies said he apparently died sometime on Dec. 30, after leavin& a group of several friends. back to the site of t~e colorfuJ tvent ln the Sycamore Hills area. and went back there early Sunday to hunt. Four of them separated and two, John Almquist and Russell Hanna, both of Huntington Beach, discorered his body during the early morning hours. ' The viclim wa,. lying about three fourths of the way up a small hill, just east of Laguna Canyon Road and about 200 yard! south of El Toro Ro.ad. His car was found ,parked along El Toro Road, leading Almquist and Hanna to center the search in that area. BarfJeeued Superpaperbaek He had been reported missing Dec. 28, after leaving home following • famU1 quarrel. Investigators said Weldenhammtr had been to the festival -which drew 1n estimated 20,cm ~son.s from all over America -and returned home befDre the argument. No visible signs of violence or physical injury were foWld, leading to the possible drug death aspect mentioned by Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt. Pacific Telephone Co. officials contemplate clean· .up job after fire early today destroyed a storage building at utility's Ford Road facility just north of Newport Beach city limits. Damage, estimated at $32,000, included loss of 1,600 telephone books. County fire units doused blaze in 10 by 40-foot structur.e in 20 minutes. Main building at ph one facility just off MacArthur Boulevard between Ur· banus Square and Harbor View Homes, was not in- volved in 3:30 a.m. fire. Cause of blaze is unde: investigation. Friends µteorized he may have gone 'Visitor' Held In Beer Bottle From Pqe 1 WEATHER ... at 3:15 a m., was stranded at Perry, !OWL Tbe eastbound Cit)· of Los Angeles wu be1J11 held in Omaha. At Offutt Air Force Base, headquarters of the Strategic Air Commaad, south of Omaha, officer! told personnel to stay -Off the job unless etherwlse ln-- structed. Many or Omaha's streets. in· eluding 'the main thorofare, D<>dge Street, were impassable. Many schools In Nebraska and Iowa were closed. These included lhe Universi· ty of Jowa and Iowa State University. Jowa's livestock markets were closed for the day . The south and southwest had their own brand OfJ;Jnusual weather. Arkansas State Police ftported a tornado touched down near Hollywood, damaging one house. Heavy thunderstorms r a g e d through the state. The Oklahoma Panhandle had nine inches of snow while temperatures in southern Texas ranged lnto the 90s Sun· day. From PDfll! 1 SHIVERS ... WUliiimS, . or 1Jie · ""NaDonal Weather Ser\•ice. A high of 62 degrees was forecast today. with an overnight low or 35. in case you want to gef up and check your thermometer. Small craft warnings are hoisted along the Southern California Coast, parlicular- ly from Point Coaception to Dana Point. An Orange County Harbor District !ipokesman said wind gusts will be up to 40 knots below coastal canyons, and S lo 15 knots elsewhere in general. Jets arriving and departing from Orange County Airport were using their lnland approaches today, after wind s reached a 3S knot velocity during prediwn hours. ··we haven't been above 30 knots since," said a control tower duty officer. The highest airport wind reading y,·as 52 knots Sunday. Reagan Pledges Welfare , Mesa Man Hm'l In Ca~ Accident Wife Attack A Pomona we1';1er crashed into his estranged wife's Costa Mesa apartment Sunday -in a shower of jagged plate Swerving to mW a car that made glass window fragments -and allegedly a dangerous Jane change, a Cost.a Mesa attacked her and a visitor wilh man was lnjured Sunday afternoon wilen 8 broken beer bottle. Reform at Inauguration his sport! car went out of control ald ALI three including the husband, ar- SACRAMEN'I'O (AP) -G-Ov. Ronald outlook -in a message to tbe legislature struck 1 power pole. rested at the acene suffered cuts but Sixto Orlando Naranjo, 30, of 261 Mesa th · Reagan launched his second term today Jan. 12. State weUare spending now Drive, suffered 1 head laceration but ethwoman was most seriously injured, by proposing that California lead the totals about '2 billion a year and nearly declined hospitalization, saying he'IWOllld ~:gio~~cerations in the back and pelvic: nation in reformin e welfare to weed 2 million pel"30ns receive ald. get medical treatment on his own. ' h h d h ~-I · I 1 Police said Naranjo was southbound Roy R. Jarrard. 26. WllS booked on out 't ose w ose gree ls greater t an ··~ eg1s ature a so coovenes today suspicion of two counts of assault witn W"Lh D at tak. g Jr I r both on Newport Boulevard near Senta Isabel their need.·· 1 emocr s in con o o intent to commit murder ·with a $50,000 the Assembly and the Senate _ a fac.t Avenue when the 3:30 p.m. accident b .1 "There is no greater challenge facing occurred. several hours ,rter a s1·m1·1,r 81 figure set. !hat is cer1ain to complicate Reagan 's I.he slate or nation," the Republican 1 r th Ir r h crash at the s·'me SM(. He was quoted by one policeman as pans or e we are re orm. Jn t e " l'v . chief executive said in his second in· outgoing legislature, Republicans con· The motorist in the other case -sayding a11 .Y1 man would do the same I d an epileptic unlice nsed to drive _ told un er sim1 ar circumstances. augural address. trol c both chambers. Diana L. Jarrard. 25. of 707 W. 18th h ne'g · d · u I r \ police he had !)uffcrcd a seizure and "If not us, v; o? If not now, when ?" ans sec.on 1na gura · ea ures an Id ht .St.. \\las listed in fairly good cond1 t1·on C'\cr\a . ment g·I· \ "ght \ · " l'OU n't rcectll anyl ng since leaving asked Reagan. who has been one of m ;i a oni s arrin,.. his home ,,rticr. today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, f'ran k Sinatra, John \\layne, .Jimmy h h the most persistent and vocal critics w ere s e was taken following the Stewart and Jack Benny. d · "d of President Nixon's family assistance pre awn 1nc1 ent. Welfare was the single is!ue Reagan H · t M"lt w M weUare reform plan. }6 K.11 d • Bl t er acqua1n ance. J on . ay, 40, diSCU5'<d ln d<l,il in hi! inougur,r I e Ill as f 21661 Br kh t St H . Reagan, 59, said the only alternative remarks. o oo urs ., unllngton -higher taxes to pay for rislna. welfart Beach. was treated and released. · -"Mandated by statute and federal AUCH, France (AP) -An e1.plosion J·-anl h. " •-ed l costs -is the easy way out and tem-..,, 1mseu was u eat a po rary at best. regulation, weHare bu proliferated and wrecked a business-residential bu.ilding Orange County Medical Center for mu1ti· l.n his prepared text, Reagan aaid grown into • levi•than of unsupportabl• in this southern French town today, ple cuts on the hands which will require dimensions," tbe governor said. killing 16 ...... sons. f··~-r care po11·-s "d he would spell out the det.a.111 of hl1 ,-------=-----------''--'-~------------'~:..:::•~::_:..:::.::·~::::-·:..:::•:•=·----- plan and diSC1J5S the stale'• bleak fiac.J Market Tumbles In First Session NEW YORK lAP) -Stock market prices dropped sharply today in the first trading session of 19'71. By 2 p.m., the Dow Jones average of 30 Industrial blue chip stock& had slipped 7.59 points to 831.33. Declining issues outnumbered gainer~ on the New York Stock Exchange by a sizeable margin. Trading activity was relatively quiet. Analysts could point to no particular piece of news to explain the market'a decline. Some said investors were walUng en the sidelines to see what Pre8ident Njxon r;ays in bis televised interview tonight. From Page 1 ~Ilooo and we love it! NIXON DUE HERE • • • more ln spots like California and F'londa. Reports said the chief executive had planned a trip to his Key Biscayne home, but changed his mind at lhe last minute a.nd opted for San Clemente. The President and First L a d y originally had planned to travel to San Clemente an Dec. 26, but ·that visit was called off weeks before Christmas. Their last visit to San Clemente took place during the hectic national eJecUon season and was highlighted by the President's casting his first non·ebllcntee ballot aince becoming a part-time resi· dent on the Orange Coast. The visit set a record for unforeseen events, lncluding a riot during a c11.m· paign swing in San Jose, followed 11: few hours later by a smolcy blaze which routed the President from his bed. The fire and subsequent arrival of San Clemente volunteers led to a personal visit by the Nixons to fire headquarters on election day for personal congratulations for the firefighting effort. All ~ ru-. dam•ce hu lleen repaired since the last visit, leavlng the Spanish borne freah for the a?TivaL The Nlxons. u usual, w\11 arrive on Air force Ont at the El TofO Marine Corps Ai< SllUon, then boanl their Anny heUcopttr for the short nlght to the landing pad near the San Cemente. . residence.. Atnooi"°'" en\our• iurlv\ng Tuesday will ~ly be top adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger, w~ left San Ch;menlir: In re(ent i'laj'il aner rpebdtflg mort than a wetk: at the Presidential compcund. The visit, kept quiet by White House aides, ended 90metlme over tht weekend. immediate matters requiring his al· tcnlion. including, Ziegler said, some of the last batch of 52 bills from the Congress that just adjocrned. Action on some of these is expected before the President's departure and the rest will be ·handled from the working base in California. The budget has been getUng a Tot or a ttention, to the extent thll George P. Schult?, director of the Office of Budget and Management, Is not flytna to California with the Presklent. Bul a galuy of other Whlte House officials is, and Shultz will be available for consultation by telephone and may go to California later. No date has been set for getting the budget into the hands of Congrtss. Dul the State of the Union message is scheduled for delivery to Congress st 4 p.m. PST Jan. 22 -the day after the new 92nd Congress convenes. Nixon will be putting in a bwiy morning Tuesday before taking off. A Cabinet meeting Is on tap and a meeting with four Republican governors will follow for a discussion of the sharing of federal revenue with the states and of the welfare morm problem. The governors include N1!190n A. Rockefeller of New York, who h11 con- sulted N\lon befn on the financial pl\ght bf the sllle1, ll!d Qtr<o eucutlm or the conference of Republt c1 n governors. Louie B. Mum of Kentucky is the incoming chalrm1n of lhe . con- ference, Raymond 0. Shafer' of Pean· eylv1nl1 ii the outsolng chairman and Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie of Ollnolt: ll ehairman·ot the GOP Governon Polley Committee, Viet President Spiro T. Agnew will sit In on the session. Locally founded, locally owned, we're part and parcel of the communities we serve. That's why we plow back all of our Orange , Coun ty savers dollars right here in our own Orange County. It's time to plant ••. time to save .•. at Laguna Federal! This is the season to save at Laguna Federal Plant your savings here and now. Watch them grow aild multiply. No.Association pays you higher interest on your insured savings. No Association offers you more vaned ways ID save. Plant your money with ns ... and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to grow! It's our way of saying thanks for saving at Laguna Federal. Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in for your packet of Lunaria seeds-a purple-llowering money plant for your garden-plus a complete, helpful ll!ld informative.Flower Seed Garden Gulde. • _/ioptmag'~g'~ 3 Mooucli Bay Plaza South Llguna, Calif. AND LOAN AllOCIATIDN 260 Ocean Avenue Llguna Boach, Ollif. ·~7541 ' ' 001 N. El CamhV> :Real Siil Clemente, Calif. .. Ptta secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the Prestdeht would t.lke orf before 2 p.m. F.ST Tueaday and planned to remain on the coast Into 1he week of Jan. 11. He said be tb;ou.ght he might stay w1l1l midweek. 1be Presldonl lodl,Y WU clW\ni IWIY Zi~lcr said the visiting governors wanted to gtl their thoughts on rttenue r;.harlng 11nd welfare betort tN Pl'Mldtot 1---=~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~-prlor to the Slit. of the Union -L • - Saddlehaek EDITION Today'• Flul N.Y. Stoelw VOL 64, NO. 3, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1971' TEN c;ENTS Biting Cold Grips Coast With More Tonight Downward-zooming temperatures and frigid Santa Ana winds lh'at gusted up to 60 miles per hour Sunday will again remind Ora nge Coast residents that Old Man Wint~r has us rirmly in his grip. Cllilled, chapstick-carrying ·folks are In for more of the same trea tmen t tonight and Tuesday. Record low temperatures dropped below the freezing mark in certain Los Angeles County spolS as California • recorded its coldest Jan. 3 in 18 years. Bitterly cold winds whipping in off lhe desert created hazardous conditions for campers and trailer s, while heavy snows mantle the San Bernardino and San Gabriel mountains. Orange County escaped with just ter-- ribly C'(l]d feet, while damage wa.! re- corded elsewhere. A 32-foot sloop and a houseboat capsiz- ed and sank at Santa Catalina Island, while a S20,000 yacht went down oft San Diego's Coronado.Island. All seven persons aboard the ::,eaquest escaped before it foundered, according to authorities. , The current cold snap is part 'of a storm system that has ca used severe conditions in th e Midwest, if that's of any comfort. "It started of f the central Ca lifornia roast late Friday and w)len the· low pressure system moved east, a lot of cold air moved in," expl ains Dave Williams, of the National Weather Service. A ltigh of 62 degrees was fore<:ast today, with an overnight low of 35, in case you want to gel up and check your thermometer. Small craft warnings are hoisted along the Southern Ca liforni a Coast, particular- ly from Point Conception to Dana Point. An Orange County Harbor District spokesman said wind gusts will 'be up to 40 knots below coastal canyons, and S to lS knots elsewhere in general. Jets arriving and departing from Orange County Airport were using their inland approaches today, after winds reached a l5 knot velocity during predawn hours. "We haven't been above 30 knots since," said a control tower duty officer. The highe!I airport wind n!ad!ng wu 52 knots Sunday. Despite the fact lemperatlD'es art 11 degrees lower than normal for thiS time of Ute. yea r, the live-day forecut ii at least for continued fair weather. ~ No smog can be seen in the Im Angeles Basin and elsewhere, aff«dini Southlanders a rare glimpse of &beir neighboring snow.draped mount.ainl.~: IXOll ue ues a on _...oa .s Iowa Paraly%ed I Nation • Ill Grip Of Bitter Storm By United Press l•ternatlonal An intense .storm blasted tbe Midw est tod ay wilh heavy snow and high winds. Jn Jowa the storm wa s described as the worst in nearly 30 years. Traffic there was at a virtual • standstill. Businesses closed. Mail deliveries were canceled. Government offiCes were !hut down. Hundreds of mot.orists were J:tranded. The Iowa Patrol and Highway Com· mission said the slate's interstate road.s were impassable. At least three deaths in Iowa were caused by the storm, authorities said. Two of the viclil'M died of heart attacks after shoveling 1now. Additional snow amounts of more lhan 4 inches were expected from northeast Iowa throu gh northern Wisconsin and 'Queen' Greets The New Year LONG BEACH, (UPl ) -For the rir sl time in three years. Uie Queen Mary's one-Wn steam whistle was heard as she welcomed in the new year . The former luxury liner, being converted into a coo vention center. tourist attraction and museum of the sea, ha d been silent since her arrivaJ her e in 1967. 1be seven-foot long whistle on the queen's forward funnel emitted a series of low-frequency blasts , described as "A -16 notes below middle C,'' wtiich were heard 10 to IS miles 8Vt'8 y . During the queen's se agoing days the whistle was activated by steam, but . compressed air was used for the New Year's blasU. Michigan. Travelers warnings were in effect from northeast Kansas and ea.stern Ne braska, through Iowa and portions of eastern Minnesota. The new snow accumulation totaled 16 inches at Harmony, Minn. The Nebraska Highway Patrol re· quested that Kan sas close all roads entering Nebr.ask& because oC a "serioua backup of traffic, aevere weather and ropd conditions." 'Ibe storm ranged over much or the nation. Snow measuring J to 18 inches covtred almost all of New Mexico. Schools in Albuquerque aJJd in other communities were clostd because of treacherous driving conditions. One traf- fic death was blamed on the .storm. Mrs. Dolores Anita Haas, city c I e rk of Taos, N .. M., drowned when her car slid off U.S. 64 near Velarde and sank in ~ Rio Grande. Near Madison, WU., a .snowmob ile was dispatched to bring Mrs. Daine Krueger to a hospital to deliver a baby. Five sheriff's velticles and three snow plows got stuck trying to reach her home. An estimated 'l ,500 persons were stranded at Cleveland's Hopkins Interna- tional Airport Sunday night because airports west of th ere were snowed in. Twelve flights bound for Chicago. Des Moines. Cedar Rapids and Milwaukee were brought into Hopkins -one a 747 carrying 361 passengers, some of whon1 spent the nig ht drinking wine aboard the luxury plane. Chicago's O"Hare Airport was clogged with soldiers, sailors, stud ents and others trying to get out of tov.·n. Airci:a fl ""'ere late due to disrupted schedules. Most of the storm 's hardships occurred in Nebraska and Iowa. There were two deaths in each state attributed to the weather. Hundreds or motorists were stranded. 74ggurat Has a Bu11er ' ' Road to Health Exercise Key for Doctor, 86 By PATRICK BOYLE 01 ""9 DtllY Pl .. ! ll•lf Senior Citizens often prescribe a secret rormula for longevity, ranging anywhere from a daily shot of whiskey to a yearly trip to Arizona, but a retired Leisure World physician attributes his good health to exercise. Dr. Edward Davidson has been active .since he first learned to milk a C<lW on his father's Montaila farm in the 1890s. At 86, the doctor still walks several miles a day and recently climbed the highest peak in Southern Calllornia with his 53-year--0ld daughter. ne. agile mountain climbcf, who .Uve.s: o w~1 ili& ,.~._al,,4!1"-A yia -~i~, •Eiit;·hlt tlii ttNl'-tllin ana stedr"bandl: of · a middle-aged man. The Oct. 17 a.scent of ML San Gorgonio wa.s his filth lrlp up Jlle. P!"!k. •Wiougil Iba B R-·~·---_.-.~-' Jul <tiiDb --Jn 1IM ..... -!!a U,,..• so-._.,....,. n.-.e was .UU 1 Yount: man of IL He uf4 : James Hall 36 is Governor he hu hiked all his life and doeSn'i · Reagan's ne~ly 'appointed sec-ever plan to stop. . retary of the troubled state "I wu Jn Colorado last ~er with Huma n, Relations A g e n c y . my daughter on her ranch,_ , Davidson says, "and I told her I wish I knew someone about my age and skill I could Lofty Redwoods Being Readied Orange County will have th e ~nly redwood grove so uth of Sequ oia National Park if plans now under way succeed. A grove or 300 trees is planned for the fut ure Carbon Canyon Regional Park in the north area or the county. A five-acre site has been set aside for the planting expected in late 1971- A banking organization donated 300 redwood seedlings to the Fullerton Junior College·s Life Science Club. Members nursed ·the embroyo trees in a gref;nhouse for more than two months. The greenhouse was supplied wilb artificial rain such a.s that experienced in redwood groves almost every day. make the climb with. Well, sbe told me she would be glad to go along ." Hls daughter, Dr. '"Harrietl DaVi8, is only 53 and is lhe head pathologill:t at Burbank Community H o • p i t a I • ToRether' with Davidson's son and hi.s wife , the group set out on Oct. 15 for the drive to tht mountain, about 100 miles east of Lo! Angeles In the San Bernardino Mountairu. They parked their camper at Barton Flats, sometimes called PoolHJut Hill, at an elevation of 7,500 feet. The group spent the fir st ni ght at the flats and bega n their seven mile climb to the top of the peak the next morning in crisp, 20-degree weather. As Dr, Davidson wu the elder member of the group, he did not have to carry a ba ck pack. The two tents. mattresses, food, cooking utensils and slee ping bags were all carried by the three young members of the crew. The climbers spent th e night at Dry Lake Overlook, about half·way up the pea-. and the temperature dropped tG a chilly 19 degrees. Attired In a double set of thermal un(lerwear, heavy woolen aocks and • windbreaker, Dt. D~vldson SCALJR_CJ>THE !!EIGHTS Dr. Elfw•rd D<tvld- says ~ he , sl~t •better ·that· night thin he had since.the laat Umt he •bad camped there: 20 yeai's tbefbrt. • , The group rose on Oct. 17 to ael out for the•summit, reaching the 11,500 foot peak by noon. They took pictu,r:es for the rest of the da y and spent· the night at the summit, the te!'l.perature dropping to a low of 12 degrees. The following morning, the four climbers wal ked down the opposite side of the mountain. Dr. Davidson , who only retired from his private practice in Los Angele! seven years ago, admits tha t he i.s getting a little old for such acti vity. The robust outdoorsman says he used to be able to make Ule entire 15 mile round ' trip on Mt. San Gorgonlo In only one day. The physician also gcaled Mt. Baldy and Mt. San Jacinto in his younger days and is looking forward to another climb. · "I have got my eye on Mount San Jacinto for next yea'.r,". he says. Reagan Pledges Welfare Reform at· Inauguration • • Tbe F1uor Corporation, a large, international firm 11bich provides engineering and cobstructlon ser- vices for the mining and petroleum indµJtries, plans .to make its corporate headquarters in Laguna NI· guel . The firm has announced it Is buying the seven-tiered ziggurat built by North American Roc:t-- well for cash and property valued "in excua af f1J) mlllion." Fluor expecu the transaction wll be completed in the. spririg of this year. ) r • . - Work, Rest Visit Set For 10 Days By JORN VALTERZA Of IM o.lly ,llM lta"' President Nb.on today abai.doned. no- tions of a Florida va cation and opted in.stead to brave chilly S o u t h e r a California for a 10-day ~rklng lta1, at the ·Western White House ln San Clemente. White House aides in Washington an. nounced the President will arrive here Tuesday. Officials at El Toro Marine Corps Air StaUon confirmed that the c:biet eUCUUv4'a arrival time aboard 'All' ' ' ~~·-lod-..­. J! -J':JO p.m.: El Toro'• pe. irUI be doei!id to the p:ibl.lc. The President's arriv,aJ here wflJ,c:ame just one day after bl! natiooally teJeNM chat .tonight wJth four· television, -.. menlators. The proeranl will lie' u.t at 6 p.m. on channe1a 2 • and • 7 ;and In a delayed nrlion at I Jtm: ·oa,·Cfwnitl •-Whi&e House. ofUcer1 uM today 11hl( while in San am.rte, Mr.-NllOD wUl be working · 011 lXllinea left OM' by Coaireas and on meuages and procrama for the yea.c.. ahead. • Most vital among the work Items are completion of the new budget for the 1972 fiscal year and the drafU.oC of" the aMual message on the Stile of. the Union. ThJ.s will encompass ad- ministration legislative plan,, and pro- grams for the yeara ahead. The annual economic mes.sage 11 tht third major item that will be setting ·a going-o ver from the President and · hia top Sides here. · Mrs. Nixon will allO make the trip bul other members of the family have co plans to do .so, Mr. Nixon's ''rat·vac.aQoo" here ·•Po pears to fit Jn witb recommendaUou ol the P..-ideora pey.iclan .. Dr. Woller Tkach , who pr1lll0Ull<;ed him in iood shape after an aMUAJ checkup but said the chief executive ought to el.If! up more in .spot.a like Callfonlia and Florida. Repol't! oaid the chief eucutlve bod planned a trip to bia Key BlscayM honie, b~t cha.'1J!'i hja lllilld •• r , UiO la.st.minute and Ojlted for Sall CleUwP.~ T\l• Pr<sldent and . Fir,i-.'L ~ d ; originally ~ planold_ 10 trajel . !O, ... Clemente oo Dec. :II, b\11 lb.It Till .... called oil -bdGn -- Orn•• . ' j • ' • . . ,I _.,._ '1UIT Praised by ludge· 1970 Grand Jury Complet-es-Duty ·' By TOM BARLEY Ot "-ci.llr ''*-' Slllf Nineteen mmbers of the 1970 Orange County Grand Jury met for the last time today in tbe Santa Ana County c.oorthouse to tteeiYe the coograt.ulations of Superior Court Jud&:e James F. Judge for lht.ir "si.grlificant contribution to the cau.w: of justice and to!JfllY government . "Your work bas been harmonious and San Clemente Gal 'Goes Ape' A female gorilla walking the streets of San Clemente received a stem wam.i.na: from polioe over the weekend. After receiving it, ·she went home, agreeing not to distribute any more handbills. The ape -actually a housewire wearing • costume -was an ad-- verttstne: gimmick for a huge garage Sale con ducted by about 30 families in a San Clemente nelib- borbood ' Police delivered the warning on New Y~r·s Day~ ·The city has a C<>de regutaung distribution of handbilla: -by any· me, even apes. Over 50 Artists Entering Contest In Laguna Beacli With deadline for entries set for Fri· day, more than 50 artists already have · picked up entry fonns for a unique art contest to bentfit mentally handicap- ped children. Chairman Richard Challis llllJIOUllCOd today. · Cash awards totaling $500 will be made Jn the competitioo to select approprJate ..,palntlnp. for the Parklane RestdenUat School of Orange County at 2.1442 El 1 Toro Road in El Toro. ,;. Entries will be judged by students ,.1elected by the facu:ltiea: of the Laguna Beach Unified School District, San Joa· quin School District and Tustin Union High School Di.strict. Since paintings selected wiU hang In the bedrooms and classroom of the new school, it was decided to ask student judges to assemble an ert coUection representative of the contemporary taste CJf young people. Chellis said he hopes many more artlst.s will enter the competition to sup- port the UllU!Ual school, which will open in March and is designed to provide e1ceptional educational facilities for children with mental handicaps. Entry forms may be obtaintd at the Challlil: Gall!ries, 1390 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Participating artists should deliver their work! to the galleries, or to the Park.lane School lo El Toro by 4 p.m. Frkiay. Plaster Ducks Fly the Coop efficient.," Jud&e Judge told the. outgoing panel. "You have made a 0:11aclous effort lo present a unlled st.and on all issues and this fact has boen deeply appreciated by me." Judge Judge ,present.eel certificates to each member of the outgoing grand jury after receiving a copy of the. panel's final report for 1970. The. 150-page volume Contains copies of the 23 interim reports issued during the year by the group. . Judge· Jndg~ wa! the Superior Court's llaion 'with the grand jury during 1970. Judge pyron K. McMillan will take over that duty with the 1971 panel. Judge Judge predicted two grand juries for Orange County in the near future and the division of civil and criminal investigation in the manne r thal is now being pioneered in Los Anieles County. "The legi.!llature just won't let us do it in Orange County but I think it is safe to predict that it is going to happen here very soon," the juris t COl[lmented. The 19 Orange County residents who will fQrm the 1971 grand jury wi!I be selected later today in Judge McMillan's couOroom. . Among. the 30 names which. will go into the ballot box will be those of Mrs. Doreen Marshall, 3Gl Via Lido Soud; Mrs. Frances L. Tooley, 1821 San· daiwood Lane : Mrs. ~farta Lozano, 116 Via Koran , and Martin Mangold. 2144 Vista Dorado, all of Newport Beach. Also nomitiated are James C. Caley, 8252 Snowbird Drive and R a y Lamoureux, 5831 Trophy Drive, both or Huntington Beach; Bill Femandei, 320 Hazel Drive, CCJrona del Mar ; Dr. George 0. Roberts, 5392 Kenosha Lane, Irvine; Waldo Drake, 37 S. La Senda. South Laguna, and John Kamalani, 303 E. 23rd St., Costa ~fesa. Orange -Coast residents ~·ho received certificates today for 1970 duty on the grand jury were Marian Louise Parks, 233 Morning Canyon Road, Corona del Mar; David Clark, 35685 Beach Road, Capi.!ltrano Beach: Mrs. Audrey Cotton, 1509 E. Bay, Balboa; A. C. Achey, 615 8th St., and Charles Mashburn, 503 13th St., both of Huntington Beach and Mrs. Harriet Bmiua, 2631 Waverly Drive, Newport Beacll. Laguna Woman's Funeral Slated Memorial aervices will be held Thurs· day for Winifred Duncan, • longtime L&guna· Beach resident and former newspaper rep<>rter who ditd Dec. 21 at · the Beverly Manor Convele~nt Home in Capistrano Beach. She was IO: The services will be conducted at 1 p.m. at the Church of Religious Science by Dr. Henry Gerhard. There will be no burial as Mrs. Duncan willed her remains to the school of medicine at the University o( Southern Calliornia. Mrs. Duncan is survived by a daughter. Mrs . Heather Watlen of Naches, Wash three. grandcbildre11, two gr ea 1 grandchildren and a niec.e. Mrs. Duncan was born in England and had several books of poetry published in England before moving lo Victoria. B.C., to work on the staff of a 11ewspaper. She came to Laguna Beach in 1944 and was one of the charter members of the Chruch of Religious Science in Laguna Beacb.. ' . I IJ'I Tt l1,hl .. MADISON WISCONSIN'S RALPH VAN HORN CLIMBS THROUGH DRIFT TO PLUG METER 11 If Conditioned Reflex? Or Feer of Meter Meid1? Or 11 Relph Just Plain Honest? Massive Europe Stor1n Spreads Further South LONDON (UPI) -Europe's new year storm spread farther south today, givlnl the Spanish city ol Cordoba its firi;t snow in 17 years. Fifty villages In Spain and another 50 in France began another day isolated. from the outside wor ld. The foggy cold snap that hit Britain durjng the holJday weekend lingered on and , once again forced lhe closure <Jf London's Heathrow Airport foc lengthy periods. One hundred flight.s ~·ere grounded. Eastern Europe's snow woes included trains running up to 10 hour s late, Czechoslovakia facing what was describ- ed as a "calamitous situation," and an estimated 5,000 Soviet soldiers helping clear Hungarian rail lines and roads. Helicopter crews worked t!relessly In Spain, France and parts of eastern Europe to relieve villages cut off by snowdrifts. Radio warnings told motorists to stay home unless their trips were vital. The temperature plunged to an all-time low of nine below zero at Albacete in southwest Spain. Franct''s Rhone Valley, one of the hardest hit regions, suffered through five degrre temperatures. Teams of rescue workers set out at dawn with food supplies for both humans and farm animals in the region . Highway department employes appeared lo be victorious in the battle to open main highways for home.bound h o 11 d a y travelers. French police e!limated 5,000 persons spent the last week or their vacations stranded in schoolhouses, public building! and other makeshift lodgings. Pennsylvania Bank Lowers Prime Ral e PHlLADELPHIA (AP ) -FI rs t Pennsylvania Banking & Trust Co., big· 1:est Jn Philadelphia, today cut the prime interest rate from 6¥• percent lo 61/ii percent -the sixth reduction In nine months -and explained ''we've got money and we're looking for loans." ll was the first major bank in the 11alion to take this action . Quebec Terrorist Reveals Death of Laho1· Ministe1~ MONTREAL (UPI) -Francis Simard, .sell~nfeued terrorist CJf the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ). described to poli~ hOw he and Paul Rose killed Quebec LaDor Minister Pierre Laporte, a coroner·s Inquest was told today. '"Al 5:20 p.m., Paul and I smothered him," said a statement said to have been made by Simard and read to police al the coroner's inquest into the death of Laporte. The star witnesses at the final session of the inque.rt were Simard, and Rose '1 younger brother, Jacques. "We art responsible, ttle three of us," said Simard's statement. The three men took the witness stand, but refused to answer questions. Instead they shouted revolutionary slogans and jeered at the court. "Ulng live the FLQ," they shouted. Boasted Paul Rose from the witness stand: "In 1970 we fought the ~tablish­ ment. We hit at the rij:ht spot and "'e hit hard.'' Judge Jacques Trahan said he would deliver his decision in the inquest - whlch determines whether there are grounds for criminal charges in the death of Laporte -at 3 p.m. EST . "Long live the FLQ of 1970 -excuse mt, or the 1970s," shouted Paul Rose. "Long live Free Quebec," shouted his brother Jacques. The Simard statement wa s read by Provincial Police Corporal J acques Ga· boury. Jfe said Simar~' gave police the statement last Monday, the day the three men were arrP.sted aL an isolated farm· house 25 miles sooth of Montreal. ending Canada·s grealest manhunt. Simard re- fused to sign the statement. he said. S1n1ard said Laporte, kidnaped and held hostage in a suburban house, had tried to escape by breaking a window as polict!; had earlier deduced front cu ts on 1he dead labor minister's body. "He threw a pi llow to break 11 "'in· do~·." said Simard, and v.·as cut when his captors grabbed him and pulled him back . "He cried and he wanted us to take him tn a hospital, but th.ere was no question of that,., said Simard "s 15tate- ment. • ..;, ..... Tate Trial 'Political,' Says Lawyer L06 ANGELES (UPI) -Charles Manson is und~r&Oirig a "political trial" In the 'fate murder case and should no more 00. charged wilh murder ,..than Gov. George Wallace or John Birch SQeiety. head Robert Welch, a defense lawyer argued today . Irving Kanarek resumed r in a I arguments for th? defense in the six-and- one-half·month.-old trial by telling the jury that Manson ~·as ~eing. char~ed with the sleyings because his ph1losop_h1es were antagonistic to most of American socletv today. '"Th~re are all sorls or militant societies in this country today," Kanarek said. "There is no reason why George \Vallace , the governor of Alabama, or Robert Welch of the Birch Society should be charged. with murder. . "This is a polilfcal trial ln which t.tr. Manson is broug!lt here because he is a syn1bol of ifne of the con~ frontat1ons that is going on in th.is· coun~ try t<Xlay." . Turning to evidence that the word "pig"' was dat1bed in blood on the front door of the Tate home, Kanarek said the defense felt that key state witness Linda Kasabian printed those letters there. Kanarek said it backed up the defense contentioHs that Mrs Kasabian and Charles "Tex" Watson were the leaders of the bloody fora y nt the Tate home. The four defendant s were absent from the courtroom again today. listening ta the proceedings by loudspeaker from nearby rooms. Kanarek began his final arguments ln the trtal last week told Sope!'ior C-Ourt Judge Charle Older he would finish to- da~' Kanarek has attempted to discredit lhe testi mony of the state"s key witness. l,Jnda Kasabian. a former "h1anson Family'' member who v.·as granted im· munity. The attorney portrayed her as a Mr. hfagoo-type character who created havoc but remained unscathed. He also likened the cult leader \11 a Christian being thrown to the lions and the trial to a Roman circus. The lawyer began his summation by showing tlie jury enlarged c o I o r .flh.Otographs CJ( the victims. including the nearly nude body of actress Sharon Tate, who was eight months pregnant. The prime rate Is the interC!t charged to the bank's best customers. It has skidded steadily from a high of 8h percent l8!1t March. ~ooo and we love it! A pair of ducks '1waCdled·• away from their perch in a San Clemente yard during the ~·et hours of a Saturday rainstorm Jn San Clemente. U.S. Invites Russians Locally founded, locally owned, we're part and parcel of the communities we serve. That's why we plow back all of our Orange County savers' dollars right here in our own Orange County. But the pair of plaster i;latues had some help from thieves in their flight from the yard CJf Betty Chapin at 318 Calle Madrid. She nported the t.beft or the ~ objects Satwday afternoon. \ DAILY PILOT N..,_, .. Kll ........ ... .... IM IMU! ......... .., C..f1 Mn• S. ~ .. IM OltAHOf COAIT ltUll.tlMIHG c:otiUWlY llob•ft N. W1•4 l"r•ld.,,t lrA ,......,_. J•ck W. C1rl9V Vic.I ,.,..!Octll .,.Al G.ns•t ~ lilo1t11t KM'f'll ...... ]'1.o""•• A. M11,phi1t11 M1'""111'11 ••ltw l ich•r4 P. H•l lolrlll °'"""" c-i., I'll• -Colt• MMe: ,. _..., ,.., """' ~.wport •~ m1 w.1t l•lllOll 1ou11nl'f • ~ kldll.1'2' ,._, "':. t:'~~=~c-.. .:i To Watcli Angela Trial WASffiNGTON (UPI) ~ 'The State Department has invited a group of Russian scient.i.st! and academicians lo send an observer to the murder and kidnaping trial in California of black militant Angela. Davis. A department rpokesman said Sunday the invitation was sent in response to a letter signed by 14 persons who ex· pressed fear Miss Davis. an avowed Communl!t, mJght not get a fair trial. The signers, he continued, represented the Jetter as an Independent 4ction no t connected with the .Soviet government. · Ase:istant Secretary Martin J. Hillen· brand "made It clear. or cours@, we e1pect reciprocal oppor~lie,." the spoktaman • .aid. lllllenbMnd was the CJffldr wbo cabled the repJy. >I 'niat 4 'W<lll1d mean opportunities for Americans tO observe Soviet trials ()f J>Olklal dmldenls or Jews accused of 1kyjacklnl. be aal~. Only one of the Russians who signed the letter was identified althoUih the spokesman said they were prominent scientisll and scholars. 'The man lden- ilried t1 Pyotr Kapltsa, a top Rulllia n phyelcllt. HllltnbrAnd'a cable stres.~d "compltte confldenot:': Hi,. Davis •ould get •n impart.lat hear\ilg, the spoktl"man said. Min Oav\1, 26, Is ch1rged with pirdWll>f tilt 1\1111 th>t ~· amuuled Jnto a M-.rtn County courtroom ln San Rafatl ).o an unsuccessful eacape attempt in 11Vlllch four persons were killed. Tho8e kllltd were a white Superior .coart jucfae , 1WO NelfTO convl<'ts and a blatk 1ccotnpUc1 w~ took the auns lnloC<>UJi. One of the San Quentin prison convlcta • was being tried on a charge that he ;153at1lttd a guard. The other convict was a witness. hliss Davis was once a fa culty member for the University of California at Los Angeles and has been active in Black Panther par\y circles. Neat Burglars Break Into Cafe Burglars With a penchant for rieatne59 sawed off Jocka on a window of the pier-end cafe in San Clemente over the weekend, making off wiUt $82 In caah, Police said the th ieves entered the west window or the cafe, opened • cash re.gl!ler, took money, then found a key to a clgaret vendlng machine.. Arter opening and rifling the mactline, the burglars replaced the key, cloted the regtster and fled. They clOltd the wtndo.w behlnd them and replaced Che nearly aawed locQ to their hups. r~ The breakln apparei'itly took pl1ce late Saturdtty or early Sunday, aoeotdint to Marvin F. Cable, the oper•tor ol UM! diner. 16 Killed in Blast AUCH, France (AP) -An uploalon 'ATtt:ked a bu.slnesa-resldenUal bulldlna In this 10Uthern French town today, kllllna 16 pt!'!OnJ. •• • • It's time to plant ... ~ime to save ... at Laguna F~eral! '.(his is the season to save at Laguna Federal Plant your sa~gs here and now. Watch them grow and multiply, No Association pays you higher-interes t on your insured savings. No Association offers you more varied ways to save. Plant your money with us .•. and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to gro'Y! It's our way of saying thanks for saving at Laguna Federal Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in for your packet of Lunaria seeds-a p~le-fiowering ,money plant for your gardep-plus a complete, helpful and informative Flower Seed Garden Guide. 3 Monarch Bay Plaza South Laguna, Calif. AND LOAN AllDCIATION ' ', 260 Ocean Avenue Laguna Beach, Calif. 494-7541 \ 001 N. El Camino R .. t San Clemente. Calif. 7 , 7 Laguna .Beaeh VOL 64, NO. 3, 3 SECTIONS, H PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL'JPNI~ . MONDAY, ~ANUAlY :t. j9'if, TEN CENTS • Ni x on Comes Tuesday for San Clemellte Stay By JOHN VAL TERZA Of IM Dall¥ 'il•I lllK President Nixon today abandoned no- tions of a Florida vacation and opted instead lo brave chilly Southern California for a llkl.ay working stay at the Western \Vhile House in San Clemente. White House aides In Washington an. nounced the President will arrive here Tuesda y. 0£ficials at El Toro ~1arine Corps Air Station confirmed that the cltier executive's arrival time aboard Air Forre One i.s scheduled Tuesday between 3 and 3:30 p.m. El Toro's gates will be closed to the public. Tht President's arrival here will come just one day after hls nationally televised chat tonight with four television com- mentators. The program will be aired at 6 p.m. on channels 2 and 7 and in a delayed version at 9 p.m. on Channel •• White Hoose offi~l"I !..__Nl,d today wat wh ile in San Clemente, Mf:-Ni..1.on will be working on bu.sines! left over by Congress and on messqes and pr~!ms for the year ahead. Most vital among tht!i work Ile.me are completion of the new budget for the 1972 fiscal year and the draf'L"lg of the aMual message on the Stale of · the Union . This will encompass ad- ministration legislative plans and pro- erams for the years ahead. Th4!I annual economic message Is the third major item that will be getting a going<1ver from the President and his top aJdes here. • Mrs. Ni.I.on will also make the trip but other members of the family have no plans to do so. ,. Mr. Nixon's "rest-vacation" here ap- pears to fit in with recommendations of the President's physician. Dr. Walter Tkach, wbo pronounced him in good shape after an annual checkup but said the chief executive ought to ease !JP more ¥t spots like CllHonlia and Florida. Reports said the chief t!lxecutlve had planned a trip to his Key Biscayne home, but changed hia mind at the last minute and opted for San Clemerite. The President and First L 1 d y originall~~anned to travel to San Clemeplf on Dec. 26, but I.hat visit was called oU weeks belore CbriJtmaa .. ' Their last visit to San Clemente toot place during the hectic national election season and was highlighted by the Pre!!ldent's casting his first non-«beentee ballot since becoming a part-time resi- dent on tbe Orange Coast. The visit set a record for unforeseen events, including a riot during a cam· paign awing in San Joae, followed • few hours later by a sm'oky blaze whlcb routed I.he Pre.sident from bia bed. 2nd Teen's Body Found • At Site of Happening U~I T ......... Unflagging Police Nab Suspect In l(idnap Laguna Beach police Siturday arrested an Elsinore man u • sus:r;,;ln tile Dee, :II J!ldu~ ... ·• -~ teenageif;_ ~· ~ Officer Terry McClailJ ~ auspeat'1 vehicle in the &Git block Of tbe Soat!Mlout lllghw1y when the m111 and 1111 auto aJ>ll!!!l'O!I lo !lllldl tllo -deocrljilon -given bytlle-two 1trll f<lltow- ·tng ltlefr alleged abdlictions and ae:ii:ual assaults. PollOf claim the 28-year-old man was armed with a pistol at the time of hiJ arrest. He i!!I being held fOf' ques- tioning on suspicion of rape, kidnaping and carrying a concealed weapon. The flag he v.'as carrying was uncooperative, but Kenneth Morroll , 18 Racine Wis .. managed\ a perfect salute anyway. Morrall and T0ny Van ~Ielmond . 16. members of the Racine Kilties, were taking part in drum and bugle corps compftition in Milwaukee during the weekend. ' The pair of hitchhiking teenaged girls told police they were given a ride in Laguna Beach Dec. 29 by a man who bound them with rope and raped them in separate south county locations. _ The two girls, an 18-year-old from C'.osta Mesa and a 15-year-old from Corona del Mar, said they were later dropped off at the Coast Highway and MacArthur Boulevard in Newporf:'ihey obtained a description of the. assailant'! car as he drove away. R eagan Pled ges Welfa re R e for m at I nauguration Six Countians Hurt in Lagima Car Co llisions SACRA~1EN1'0 (AP ) -Gov. Ronald Reagan launched his second term today by proposing that California lead the naUon in reform ing welfare to weed out "those whose greed is greater than their need." "There is no greate r challenge facing !he state or nalion," the Republican chief executive said in his second in· augural address. · "li not us. who? If not now. when?'" asked Reagan , "''ho has been one of Lagun.a Ho tel Getting 'R y For Pres s Co Laguna's Surf and Sand Hotel wu Invaded this morning by • small "11\1 nf telephone company worken, working undtr more than UJU.&l preailre to set up the Wet1tem White Bouse Presa Center in preparation for the arrlval of the Presidential party 'I'UesdaY· Learning only Sunday of the tmpendlng visit, Surf and Sand owner Merrill Johnson hastily prepared 70 i'oor'Ds for members of the White House press corp1 and the Pre!!ldential press staff. "We had no Jdea they'd be comlng lhil week, but.. we're always deli&lJted to have them," said Johnson. Members of the press corps stay al the Surf and Sand during tbe President's vlslta to tf1e West.em WhlteJJouse: Preis secretary Ronald Ziegler holds l a\ly briefings in the Mai Tai RoOm of lhi! Outrigger Restaurant. transformed for the duraUon lnto a bo.stling pros cel)ter complete wtlh a battery of phonel, de>b, typewriters. bulletin boards and scurrying messengers. ) the most persistent and vocal critics of President Nixon 's family assistance welfare refom1 plan. Reagan, 59, said the only alternative Six Orange Cout re~idents suffered -higher t.a:ii:es to pay for rising welfare injuries Saturday in two separate car costs -ls the easy way out and tern· collisions at Laguna Beach lnter.sectlorui, porary at best. according to police. In his prepared te:ii:t, Reagan sa id All of the victims were treated at he would spell out the details of his South Coast Community Hospital and plali and discuss the state's bleak fiscal released. outlook -in ·a message to the legislature Three persons were Injured when a Jan. 12. Stale Welfare spending now __ car driven by Robert E. Boehmer, 18, totals about S2 b.illion a year and pearly of 2S28& Pacifica Drive, Minion Viejo, 2 million persons receive aid. collided with a second vehicle at Aster Tbe legislature also convena today Street and Cypress Drtve. with Demncrat.s taking control of both · Boehmer, plu motorl.llt Ernest C. King, t!)e .AYembly and the Senate -a fad 70. ofJ570 N. Coast Highway. and. King's that is· certain· to aimplleate Reagan's passenger, Mrs. Mlnnie Manhall, 57, plans lor the wellare reform. Jn the of 1~70 N. Coast Highway, required outgoing leglllature, RepubHcans con-medical aid. trolled both chambers. The second collision occurred Saturday Reagan's second inaugural reaturea an nlgflt at Bud>ird Canyon Drive and South entertainment a:ala tonight starring P,asl Highway, when one car made Frank Slnalra, John Wayne, Jimmy •left tum In front of another automoblle. S k Be Police said Oavallt Sundrab:s, 11, tewart Jnd Jae any. of 9961 Co~on Drlvt!i, Huntineton WelfMe was th\. single Issue Relgan Be~ch, was t;UmJna off southbound eout dtscuoid In dtllil In h1a inl~ Hipway when It collided with tbe other re~. by llltute ud I :1 ~otorlst Lyle L. Mc~lds, II, of regu!IUOD, wellore bu ~oted -11a-•-· Road and ~ ·~~-or -WW~-, -· grown mw • -• Cbarltne K. Hollowoy, 17, of atm hie dlmtnalona," tile aovei:nor ~d. _ 114)' Driiii.i!Y·ve both In I,quna Nip~ were "I ahlll pn>poee rtSlruclurlng ,..11are -•· 1 bUr1 -lo elin\tnate wute and the tm-rlety w., 1 · of s11hlkftz1na Uw wtioee greed t.s rreater . than ,lheJr need. Tbe pc~t confualon mual be r.placed with I Jl1'0' 1f11111· • ,tJwot will -bwnlJI cltpJ. ty and s.alvqe the destitute,., I Comet Diseo~&>ed TOKYO (AP ) -A Japa.nese amateur astronomer hu ~vtred a new comet which has been oonllrmed by the Tokyo -I Oboervllory and I h e SmiUl!onJan Institution, the newspaper YOl!llurl Shlmbun repotifd today. Alhuquerciue ·Rocked By 12:41 .11.m. Quake . ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -City J'lll"'"1a were·~ In tlletr beds ot lt!Ut.m. iodafby'.Albuquel'que'a oecond ·e1rth tremor In 37 days. There weren't any lmmedltte reports of m1jor damage, but telephooe calla from I~ _.. -"' into polti:e, llOWIPllP" 'and rlldio . llltlon or-o-. . Winds Strong ' Near-freezing W eather Keeps Grip on Coast pnssure system moved eallt, a tot of cold air moved lo," explains Dave Williams, of the National Weather Downward-zooming temperatures and frigid Santa Ana · wind.I that gu!ted up to-IO miles per bour Sunday will agaln r~ .n. e-l;out r~ll tllal Old ·-~· "'firm1;:19'ljiii1flp. • ~ ·• I folkl are SUvl<e. I' :I; -~ -A llli!l ; .t G daii-''\Iii ' IOI di . in f0r · men thl mne treetm.nt tonlchl and-· -· k"_,,,i_ejppenturu dr'lll>ld below u.. U-.. mark in certain Loo_ Angele& C«.lnty spota aa California recorded lta coldest Jan. 3 In 18 yurs. Bitterly cold winds whipping in ofr the desert tt"eated ·hazardous conditions for campen and trailers, while heavy snows mantle the San Bernardino and San Gabriel mountains. Orange County escaped wlth just ter~ ribly cold feet, while damage waa re- corded elsewhere. A 3Z..foot sloop and a houaeboat capsiz. ed and sank at Santa Catalina Island. while a $20,000 yacht went down off San Diego's Coronado Island. All seven persons aboard the Seaquest t.SCaped before it foundered , according lo authorftie8. The current cold snap is part of a 5torm system that has caused severe conditions in the Midwest, if that's of an y comfort. "It started off the central California coast la te Friday and when the low tod<y, wilh In OVlm!Pt .... of, .. In cue i'Oa · wanno •got-1tP iDI dMck your thermometer. 8mlll cnll warnfnlr IN~ tbe'Sciutbern eattr.mla·CloMti · · Jy from Point COnceptlon to Dana. Point. An Orange County Harbor · Dlltrfd spokesn:ian said wind gusts will be up to 40 knots below couta-1 rc:anyons, and 5 to 15 knots elsewhere in 1eneraJ. Jet.s arriving and deP,.rtlng · rti:>m Orange County Airport were Using their inland approaches today, after winds readied a 35 knot velocity ®ring predawn hours. "We 'haven't been above 30 knots since," said a control tower duty offletr. The highest airport wµid reading was ~2 knob! Silnday. Despite the fact tempera.tur.es are 10 degrees lower than normal for thl.!1 time of the year, the five-day for~a.st ls al least for continued fair weather. No smog can be seen in the Los Angeles Basin and elsewhere , affording Southlanders a rare glifl'.'IPSe of their neighboring !now-draped rriountalns. Intense W inter Storm Cripples Midwes t A rea By United Prn1 tnternational An intense storm blasted the ?tjldwesl today with heavy snow •nd tilgb winds. In Iowa the storm was ·described as the worst in nearly 30 ye.art. Traffic there was at a virtual standstill. Businesses closed. Mail de:Uveriea were canceled. Government offices were shut down. Hundredl of motorists were stranded. 'I1ie Iowa Patrol and Highway Com· mission aa1d the state's lnterrtate. road! were Impassable. Al least three deaths in Iowa. were. cauaed by the storm, au1boriU. aaW. Two of the .-ictilTIJ died of beari 1tllcks after shove.Ung Mar ket Tumbles In First Se8sion Additional snow amounts of more t.han 4 Inches were expected from northeast Iowa through northern Wisconsin and Michigan. Travelers warnings were In effect from northeast Kansas and east.em Nebraska, through Iowa and portions of ·eastern Minnesota. The new snow accumulation totaled 16 inches at Harmony, Minn. The Nebr83ka Hiabway Patrol re- quested that Kanlu close all f'Oldl entering Nebraska because of a "lertoua backup of traffic, teYei'e weather and road conclUom." The storm rana:ed over much of the nation. Snow meaaartq S to • 18 Inches covered almost Ill of New Mn..lco. Schools ID Albuquerque and In otheT communitla. were t:loetd .becaUN of treacherous drivinl coaicUUom. One traf• lie deith WU bilmod · OD ' tllo lloml. Mn. Dolores Anlll lf•••ctly ·<lcrk of Tao1, N.M., drowMd 'Wben, ber car alld oll U.S. 114 lltll" Vllorde and llUllt NEw, YOiut' '(APl -Stoct m1rkel tn uie Rl6 G~ . . prfceo droppechhlt1>ly tbdly·tntllo llrlt Nur Mldbon, WU., 11110W1110bO. w11 · tradinl .-.. or 11111. · dlJP.ttdled 1o ~ ·MtL ·Jlelne Kntet;,. · By 2 p,ri1. tM Dciw Joi>el overqe to. I boopltol lo deltTer I blby,_ Five_ of • !O -btao -d1tp stocks bid lherllf'• -lllld -..... pion 11tl>oecl-7.lf polnls·to Gl.13. • · 1ot atuck 117iD1 lo mcb.ber home. t>Oc11nin1 ~ outnumbmcl gainers An allm1ted 7,IOO Pl!IOOI ...,. Oil the N..,. York Stock Exchange by atrlllded ot Cleveland'• Jlop~na Intern. a sizeable margin. Tradinc activity was tlonal Airport 1 Sunday rupt hecauH rel1tlvely quiet. • alrpqrta wm of thera ,... . ..-.1n Analyata could point to no particular Twelve fligbta bound loi-Cbb1o.; Del pl..,. or oewa to e>qlllin the market'I Moines, Cedlr lllplda and . MJl- dedlno. were brought lclo Ito .... -. -L 74'7 • ~ .1aM1· invmton were 'Wait!ng on csrrytng 351 pauengen, t0me of wbom Ille aldelt.., lo,.. whit Pral~ NUOD . spent Ille nl&bt clrll**'C· WIDo, .- 11y1 In bit televlo<d lnttrvlaw lonll)lL the hlJUf)' plue. · · · . t • Probe Set For Drugs In Fatality A week•lang bunt for a Fountain VaDey, teenager ended tragically Stmday When his body wu found on a hll1lide nur tilt tlto of a Cllrlltmoa bolidly' ........... Ill l..quno -. -1119 -. .. ooe otbe! llllll!'f. I ~.,.. ll1lmlUl1dln( Ille dd !,G..tnt W.elitonJ>lminer, lt, of J7711 ~)I.. wele be~ probed to dateimlne wfletllor drop ..... I factor. Coroner'• deputies said be appal'l!l'ltly died 80meUme on Dec. 30, after leavinC a group of several friend!!. He had been reported ml!l1ng Dec. 28, after leaving home foUowinc a familJ quarrel. lny_es~igators said We1denhammer bad been to the festival -wb1cfi dfi!w an estimated 20,000 J)l!rSOnS from an over America -and returned home bifore Uie argument Friends theorized he may have gone back to the site of the colorful tveut in the Sycamore Hills area and went back there early Sunday to hunt. Four of them separated and two, John Almquist and Russell Hanna, both of Huntington Beach, discovered his ·body dW'ing the early morning hours. · The victim was lying about lhrte fourths of the way up a small hW, just east of Laguna Canyro Rmd aqct about 310 yards south of El Toro Road. His car was found parked along El Toro Road, leading Almquist •nd Hanna to center the search in that area. No visible signs of violence or physical Injury were found, leadlne to the possible · drug death aspect mentioned by Sheriff'a capt James Broadbelt Just six daya earlier, festivaJ.coen hitchhiking wt of the wooded area afu!r It waa declared U1 unlawful uaembly . lo~ the body • of. ,11 Costa ·Mesa motorcycli!L He was leavlitg the area J.cte the previous nlrbt. croosinii unr.m~ 1er- ra1n on his machine, when It plwictd oll a SO-loot cllf! ond killed blln lnlllntly. • H I ___ ,; I ) ~ I -' ,. ' • -· .i-.., " 1.971 . Praised by Judge ·: 1970 Grand Ju-ry Completes -Duty By TOM BARLEY Of !tie O.IW rillff 5i.ff Nineteen membet-S of the 19'70 Orange County Grand Jwy met !or the last time today In the Sant.a Ana Ccunly eourlbouse to teceive !ht congratulatkin!'I of Superior Court Judge James F. Judge for their .. aJgntlicant contribution to the cause of justice and county governmen t. "Your work has been harmonious and San Clemente Gal 'Goes Ape' A female gorilla walking the atred.I of San Clemente received a stern warnl.nl from police over die ---After receiving tt. she went hgme, agreeing not to distribute .fiiy more handbills. 'Ibe ape -actually a housewife wearing a costume -was an ad- vfJlising glmmiclt. for: a huge prage sale conducted by about 30 farnUle!'I bl a San Clemente neigh- borhood. Police delivered. the warning on New Year's Day. The city has a code regulating distribution of handbills -by any- one, even apes. Over 50 Artists Entering Contest In Laguna Beach' With deadJine for' entri• set for Frio day. more than 50 artists already have picked up entry forms for a unique art contest to beneflt mentally handicap- ped children, .chairman Richard Challi1 annoanoed toda y. cash awards totaling $.50ll will be made In the competition to iielect appropriate 11aintings for the Parldane Residential School of Orange County at 2.1442 El ~oro Road 1n El Toro. , Entries will be judged by 1tudtnts aeleci.al by the fllCU!U!S '11 the i.,una BuclJ lhdlled Scbool Dlo1rid. Su'IJ ... quJn Sd>ool Dtstr1ot aod 'lllllln Union High School District. Since paintings oelected will ~ la the bodiooms and ·~'"" tho """ IChooJ, ft was decida! t.o ask 1tudent Judgel t.o auemble 1n art collectl.op npreeentaUve of tbe·(ll)fltmiporary .ttrdi "' young people. ·. Challis 118.id • he hopes many more lrtilts will enter lhe competition t.o sup- port the unllSUal school, which will open Jn Mardi and is designed to provide noepUonal educaUonal facilities f<r children with mental handicaps, Entry forms may be obtained at the Ol.alli1 Galleries. 1390 S. Co.a!t Highway, Laguna Beach. Participating .artisb should deliver their works to · the galleries, or to the Parklane School 1o El Toro by -4 p.m. Friday. Plaster Ducks Fly the Coop efficient," 4udgeJudge told the outgoing panel. "You have-made a conscious effort to present a united stand on all issues and this fact has been deeply appreciated by me.·• ~ Judge Judge presented certiJicate1 to each· IJlem~ of the outgoin& grand jury aft.et receiving a copy of tbe papel's Jnal report for 19"0. The 150-pa&e volume tains copies of tile 23 interim reports issu uring the yeh{ by the group. Judg Judge was the Superior Court's liaion ith the grand jury during 1970. Judge Byron K. McMillan will take over that duty with the 1971 panel. Judge Judge predicted two grand juries for Orange County in the near future and .the dirtslon of civil and criminal inveSUgaUon in the manner that i.!i now being pioneered in Los Angeles County. "The legislature just won't let 11! do It in Orange Cotmty but I thtlik it is safe to predict that it is going to happen here very soon," the jurist commented. The 19 Orange County residents who will form the 1971 grand jury will be selected' tater today in Judge 1'.icMi\J;in's courtroom. Among the 30 names which will go into the ballot box will be those or Mrs. Doreen 1'.farshall, 367 Via Lido Soud: Mrs. Frances L. Tooley , 1821 San· dalwood Lane; Mrs. Marta Ui:r:ano, 116 Via Karon, and Martin Mangold, 214'4 Vista.Dorado, all of Newport Beach. Al!o ·nominated ·are James C. Caley, 1252 Snowbird Drive and R a y Lamoureux, 5831 Tropby Drive, bo tb of RUntlngton Beach: Bill Fernandez, 320 Hare! Drive, Corona del Mar ; Dr. Gf!(lrge O. Roberts, 5392 Ket105ha Lane, Irvine: Wai~Q· ·Drake, 37 S. La Senda, South Laguna, and John Kamalani, 303 E. 23rd St., Costa Mesa. Orange Coast residents who received certificates today for 1970 duty on the grand jury were Marian Uiuise Parks. 233 Morning -Canyon Road, Corona del Mar : David Clari:, 35685 Beach Road, Capis:trano Beach: Mrs. Audrey Cotton. 1509 E. Bay, Balboa; A. C. Achey, 615 8th St.. and Charles Mashburn, 503 13th St., both of Huntington Beach and 1.irs. Harriet Bemus, 2831 Waverly Drive, Newport Beach. Laguna Woman's . Funeral Slat.ed Memorial services will be be.Id Thurs- day for Winifred Duncan, a longtime ""1P· ie•cb , r9'"'nt and forwr ..,.,p.pei1 '-"' -who died Doc. 21 1t·. tile Be:Yerly Manor Convalescent Home fn Capistrano Beacb. Sile was 90. The services will be conducted at 1 p.m, a~ .the Cb¥rch of Religious Science Py Dri Heory Gerhard. There will be no burial 1s t.trs. Duncan willed her remains to the school of medicine at the Uni~erslty of Southern California. ?o.1rs. Duncan is survived by a daughter. Mrs. Heither Watten of Naches. Wash: three · grandchlldreA, two &: re at grandchildren and a niece. Mrs. Duncen wai born In England and bad several books of poetry published io England before moving to Victoria , B.C., to work: oo the staff of. a 11ewspaper. She cama to Laguna Beach in 1944 and was one of the charter members of the Chruch of Religious Science in Laguna Beach. • ~:; r{t,f' ;,. '', J Mo .t~~ ....tl'. ... • .... , Ul"I Ttff, ..... MADISON WISCONSIN'S RALPH VAN HORN CLIMBS THROUGH DRIFT TO PLUG METER 11 1t Conditioned Reflex? Or F•ar of Meter Melds? Or 11 Ralph Just Plain Honest? Massive Europe Storm Spreads Further South WNOON (UPI) -Europe's new year storm spread farther south loday. giving the Spanish city of Cordoba its first snow in 17 years. Fifty villages in Spain and another 50 in France began another day isolaled from the outside world. The foggy cold snap that hit Britain during the holiday weekend lingered on and once again forced • closure of London's J-leathrow Airpoft" for lengthy periods. One hundred flights were grounded. Eastern Europe's snow woes included trains running up to 10 hours late, Czechoslovakia facing what was describ- ed as a "calamitous silualion,'' and an estimated 5,000 Soviet soldiers helping clear Hungarian rail lines and road!. Helicopter crews worked tirelessly in Spain, France and parts of eastern Europe to relieve villages cut off hy snoy,·drifts. Radio warnings told motorists to stay home unless their trips were vital. The temperature P.iunged lo an all·time low of nine below zero at Albacete in southwest Spain. France's Rhone Valley. one of the hardest hit regions. suffered through five degree temperatures. Teams of rescue workers set out st dawn with food supplies for both huma and farm animals ln lhe region. Highwa department employes appeared to be \'ictorio111 ln the batOe to open main highways for home-bound h o I t d a y travelers. Fn.Dch police estimated 5,000 persons spent th e last week of their v1cation.1 stranded In schoolhouses. public buildings and other makeshift lodgings. Pennsylvania Bank Lowers Prime Rate PHILADELPHIA (AP) -F I rs t Pennsylva..gjh Banking & Tnlst Co., big- gest in Philadelphia, today cut the prime interest rate from 6¥, percent to 6~ percent -the sixlh reduction in nine months -and explained "we've got money and we're looking for loans." lt was the first major bank in the nation to take this action. Qilebec Terl·orist Reveals De~th of Labo1· ·Minister • MONTREAL (UPI) -Francis Simard. self-confessed turori!t of the Quebec LiberaUon Front (FLQ), described lo police how he and Paul Rose killed Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte, a coro ner's ioquesl was told today. "At 5:20 p.m., Paul and I smothered him ," said a statement aid to have been made by Simard and read to police at the coroner's inq uest into the death of Laporte. The star 'witnesses at the final session of the inquest were Simard, and Rose's younger brother, Jacques. "We are responsible, the three of us." said Simard's statement. The three men took the witness stand, but refused to answer que stions. Instead !hey shoute~ revolutionary slogans and jeerci:I at the court. "Long live the FLQ,'' they shouted. Boasted Paul Rose from the witness stand: "In 1970 we fought the establish. ment. We hit at the right spot and we hit hard." Judge Jacques Trahan said he would deliver his decision In the inquesl - which determines whether there are grounds for criminal charges in the death of Laporte -at 3 p.m. EST. "Long live the FLQ or 1970 -excuse me. of the 1970s," shouted Paul Rose. "Long live Free Quebec," shouted his brother Jacques. The Simard statement was read by Provincial Pplice Corporal Jacques Ga- boury. He said Simard gave police the statement last Monday, the day the three men were arrested at an isolated farm· house 25 miles south of Mgntreal. ending Canada's greatest manhu11t. Simard re- fused to sign the statement. he said. Simard said La porte, kidnaped and held hostage in a suburban house, had tr ied to escape by breaking a window as police had earlier deduced from cul! on lhe dead labor minister's body. "He threw a pillow to break a win· dow," said Simard, and was cut when his caplors grabbed him and pulled him back. "He cried and he wanted us to take hirn to a hospital, but there was no question of that," said Simard's state- ment. 11•" s 1 ~ate Trial 'Political,' Says Lawyer LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles Manson is undergoing a ''political trial"· '111 the T~ murder Case and should no more be charged with murder lhan Gov. Geor~Wallace or John Birch Society hea Robert Welch, a defense lawyer argue ay. Irving Kanare resumed f i n a I arguments for th~ de(ense in the 'siX·and- one·haJf.monUH>ld trial by telling the jury thal Manson was ~eing . charg.ed \\'ilh the slaying~ because his ph1\a.sop.hies were antagonistic to most of American society toda y. "There are all sorts or militant ' societies in this country today," Kariarek said. "There is no reason why George Wallace, the governor of Al~bama, er Robert Welch of the Birch Society should be charged with murder. ''This is a political trial in which r..tr. Manson is brought here because he is a symbol of one of the con- frontations that is going on in this coun· try today.·• Turning to evidence that the word ''pig" was daubed in blood on the front door .of the Tate home, Kanarek said the defense felt thal key state witness Linda Kasabian printed those letters there. Kanarek said it backed up the defense ronlentions that ?\.frs Kasabian end Charles "Tex'' Watson were the leaders of the bloody for ay at the Tate home. The four defendants were absent from the courtroom again today, listening to the proceedings by loudspeaker from nearby rooms. 1 Kanarek began his final arguments tn the trial last week told Superior Court J udge Charle Older he would finish to- da y. Kanarek ha s attempted to discredit the testimony of the state's key witness, Linda Kasabian. a former "Manson Family" member who was granted im· munity. 'The attorney portrayed her as a Mr. Magoo-type character who created havoc bu t remained un scathed. He also llkened the cult leader to a Christian being thrown to the lions and the trial to a Roman circus. The lawyer began his summation by showing the jury enlarged co I o r photographs of the victims, including the nearly nude bOdy of actress Sharon Tate, who was eight months pregnant. The prime rate is the interest charged to the bank's best customers. It has skidded steadily f r o m a high of 81h percent last March. lli@~ooo and we love it! A pair of ducU "waddled." away from their perch in a San Clemente yard during the wet houn: of a Saturday ralnatorm in San aemente. U.S. Invites Russians Locally fonnded, locally owned, we're part and parcel of the communities we sen•e. That's why we plow back all of our Orange County savers' dollars right here in our own Orange County. But the pair of plaster statues had some help from thleves in their night from the yard of Se tt; Olapin at 318 Calle Madrid. She reported the theft of the $2$ ct>Jec:ts Saturday afternoon. DAILY PILOT • ...,... .... II dpa1a... ....... ._. --C...MIM a.a Fr OLVIOI CDUT~~ hHrtN.W ... ,... ........ ..-.. J•c.lt ... e.My V1U Pnaloent _. .. 0-.l ....... lho'"•• K-.vil .. ,., 7lio'"'' A. MIFtp~i~• "'""''"' """" Richer4 P. Ifill """' ~ c.-t)' ..... -°""9 M-: U11 W•f In' S!f'91f ....,_, ... du :tnT W•I ...... "°"'lfYMll • ........ ... d11 m ,_,A~,.,,. ............. Mldlt 17f7J ... di~ ... ~ ...... I.I C#l'lllt 11;~ To Watch Angela Trinl WASHINGTON (UPI) -The State Department has invited a group of Russia n sclenti1t. and academicians to send an observe?' to the murder and ·kidnaping trial in California of black mllitant Angela Davis. A deplrtment spokesman said Sunda1 tbt Invitation w11 sent in response to a letter signed by 14 peraons "'ho ez· preaed fear Miss Davis, an avowed Communist , might not get a [air trial. The signers. he continued, represented. the Jetter as an independent action not connected with the Soviet government. Assistant Secretary Martin J. llillen· brand "mtde ti clear. of couru, we expect reciprocal opportunities,'' the spokesm1n aaJd . Hillenbran d was tbt officer who cab)td the reply • That WOG.td ·..;nean opportunities for AmeriClni' tO ~ Soviet ttlals of poUcial dlukte:nta or JeW1 accused of aky)acklni. lie aid. Only one.DI the llolafans wllo signed the leti« WU idfntllied although the spoktstnan uld they were prominent scienll8tl ind scholar•. 1be man lden- \illed Ls ~ ~pits&, a top Russian pbyllclst. -, · Hillenbrand'• cable stressed "complete confidence'" Miis Da'ria W'OUld 1et en lmperlflt ~ Ule opok-Aid. Mlll :DIVll:' -JI!. · b cblrpd wttb ptlr'C:ha!llng the (UM that were smuggled Into e Marbt Gtiunty courtroom In Siil n.t'atl tn an unsucoe~ escape attempt Jn whld1 fmll -,..,. klllod. -· Those killed wti'e 1 white Suptrlor Court Judge. two Negro convlct.'I and 1 -black oocornpll<o who took the guns (nlo ...... Ooe !'f the Soll QoenUn prison coovlctJ was being tried on " charge that he assaulted a guard. The other convict v.·as a witness. Miss Davis waJJ once a faculty member for the University of California at Los Angeles and has been acUve in Black Panther party clrclu. Neat Burglars Break Into Cafe Burglars with a penchant for neatness sawed off locks on a window of the pier-end cafe in San Clemente over the y,·eekend, making off with $82 in cash . Police sai d the thieves entered the west window of the cafe, opened a cash regisltr, took money, then found • key to a cigaret vending machine. After opetUng and rifling the machine, the bur1lars repl.ted the tey, ..Closed the register and fled. They cloaed tbe window behind them and replaced the nearly 11wed locks to their hasps. The breakln apparenily took place late SatW11ay or early Sunday. 1ct:on11n1 to Marvin F. Ciblt, the -•tor of the diner. 16 Killed in Blast AUC H. France (AP) -An ezplosion wrecked a business·residentla\ building In this SO\lthmi F'rencil town today, kll1lnJ 16 pertODI. ( It's time to plant ... time to save .•. at Laguna Federal! ~is the season to save at Laguna Federal. Plant your.savings here and now. Watch them grow and multiply. No Association pays you higher interest on your insured savings. No Association offers you more varied ways to save. Plant your money with us ••. and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to grow! It's our way of saying thanks for savin g at tiiguna Federal. Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in fo~our packet of Lunaria .. seeds-a purple-flowering money plant for your garden-plus a complete, helpful and informative Flower ·Seed Garden Guide. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ONlllle County'• Largul, First and S1ronge11 independeril Fetkral 3 Monan:h Bay Plaza South Laguna, Calif. 260 Ocean Avenue Laguna Beach, Calif_ 494-75il 001 N. El C..Uno Real San Oemcmte, Calif. I \ • San Clemente Capistrano EDITI O N . Toda)"•IBJll "N.Y.-8tW.ki VOL o4, NO. 3, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, :iANUA~Y ~. 1971 TEN CENTS Biting Co ld Grips ·. ~ Coa·st W 1th More Tonight Downward-rooming, tem peratures and (rigid Santa Ana winds that gusted up' to 60 miles per hour Sunday will again remind Orange Coast residehts 'itiat OJd Man W inlt'r has us firmly in his grip. Chilled, chapslick-carrylng folks. are in fQr more of the same treatment tonight and Tuesday . Record low temperatures dropped below the rree-ling mark in certain Los Angeles County spots as California ' • recorded its CQldest Jan. 3 In 18 years. Bitterly c;old winds whipping in off the desert created hazardous conditions for' campers and trailers, while heavy snows mantle the San Bernardino and San Gabriel mountains. Orange County escaped v•it h just tcr· ribly cold feet. while damage was re- corded @'sewhere. A 32-foot sloop and a houseboat capsiz. ed and sank at Santa Catalina Island, while a $20,000 yacht went down off San Diego's Coronado Island. All seven persons aboaJ:d the Seaquest escaped before it foundered, according to authorities. . The current CDld snap is part of a storm system thal has caused severe conditions in the Midwest, if that's of any comfort. "ft started off the central California coast late "Friday and when Ule low pressure system moved ea.st, a lot of cold . air moved in," explalns Dave Wllllanu, of the National Weather Seryiee. A hi&I{ of 62 degrees was,. forecast today, with an overnight low of 35, in case you wa nt t.o get up and check your thermometer. Small craft warnings are hoisted along . the Southern California Coast. particular- ly from Point Conception to Dana Point. • An Orange C:lunty Harbor Di.strict spoke.sman said wind gusts will be up lo 40 knots below coastal canyons, and S to 15 knots elsewhere in general. Jets arriving and departing from Ora*le County Airport were using tlleir inland app roaches today, after winds reached a 35 knot velocity . during predawn hours. "We haven't been above 30 knots .!iince," said a control tower duty officer. ._ 'The highest airport wind rtadlna: wu 52 knot.. Swlday. Desplte the fad: temperatur• an lit degrees lower than normal, for um tlD)t of the year. tbe five.day forecUt; ia at lea11t for continued fair weather. No smog can be seen in the Los Angeles Basin and elsewhere, affordinc Southlanders a rare glimpse of &heir neighboring snow-tiraped mountain.I. IXOll ue ues a on _____ _..Oast Iowa Paraly::ed Nation • Ill Grip Of Bitter Storm !Sy United Press International An intense storm blasted the Midwest today with heavy snow and high winds. \ In Iowa the storm was described as the worst in nearly 30 years. Traffic the re was at a virtual standstill. Biisinesses closed. f..lail deliveries v.·ere canceled. Government offices were shut down. Hundreds of motorists 'Were 5tranded. The ]owa Patrol and tllghway Com- miss1on said the state's interstate roads l'lere impassable. At least three deaths in Iowa were caused by the storm. authorities said. Two of the victims died of heart attacks after shoveling .6nOW . Additional snow amounts of more than '4 inches were expected fr om northeast lowa ' through northern Wisconsin and 'Queen' . Gree ts The N et.v Yea r LONG BEACH, (UPI) -For the firs t time in three years. the Queen P.1ar y's one-ton steam "'histle was heard as she \\'elcomed in the new )'ear. The former luxury liner, being con\·erted into a convention center- tourisl a!traction and mu~um of the sea. had been sil ent since her arriva] here in 1967. The seven·foot long whistle on the qut>en 's forward funnel emitted a series of low·frequcncy blasts, described as "A -16 notes below middle C," which were heard JO to 15 miles away. During U1e queen's seagoing days the whistle was activated by steam, but compressed air was used for the New Year 's blasts. Michigan. Travelers warnings were in effect from northeast Kansas and eastern Nebraska, through Iowa and portions of eastern Minnesota. The new snow accumulation totaled 16 inches at Harmony, ~r\{-) • , The Nebraska~i w~ ~dlrol re- qu ested that K close all roads entering Nebraska a of a "serious backup of traffic, severe weather and road conditions." The storm ranged over much of the nation. Snow mea.suring 3 lo 16 inches cOvered almost all of New Mell'.ico. Schools in Albuquerque an d in other communities were clostd because or treacherous driving conditions. One traf- fic death was blamed on the storm. Mrs. Dolores Anita Jfaas, city c I e r k of Taos, N.M., drowned when her car slid off U.S. 64 near Velarde and sank jn the Rio Grande. Near Madison. W.is., a snowmobile was 'dispatched to bring Mn. Daine Krueger to a hospital to deliver a baby. Five sheriff's vehicles and three snow plow:i got stuck trying to reach her home. An estimated 7,500 persons were stranded at Cleveland's Hopkin.s Interna- tional Airport Sunday night becau se airports Wff)1. of there were snov.·ed in. Twelve fl ights bound for Chicago. Des Molnes, Ctdar Rapids and Milwaukee were brought into Hopkins -one a 747 carrying 361 passengers, some of whom spent the night drinking wine aboard the luxu ry plane. Chicago's O'Hare Airport was clogged with soldiers, sailors, students and othe rs trying to get out of town. Ai rcraft were late due to disrupted schedules. Most of th e st.9:'m 's hardships QCcurred In Nebraska arid Iowa. There were two deaths in each state attributed to the weather. Hundreds of motoni.sts were stranded. -"-... "f57'~:""!tt't"':;~t~ ... y ~ .. ' • Ziggurat Has a Bu11er Buman Relatloiu Aide James Hall 36, is Governor Reagan's ne~ly appointed sec- retary of the troubled state Human Relations A g e n c y . Lofty Redwoods Being Readied Orange County will have lhe only redv.·ood grove sou th of Sequoia National Park if plans now under v.·ay succeed. A grove of 300 trees is planned for the future Carbon Canyon Re gional Park in the north area of the cal8ity. A five-acre site has been set aside for the planting expected in late 1971. A banking organization donated JOO redwood seedlings to the Fullerton Junior College's Life Science . Club. Members nursed lbe embroyo trees in a greenhouse for more than two months. The greenhouse was supplied with artificial rain such as that experienced In redwood groves alm05t every day. The Fluor Corporation , a large, lnternatlonaJ firm which provides engineering and construction 1er- vices for the minlng and petroleum industries, plans to make its corporate he&d<\Jlarters in Laguna Ni- ~el . The firm has announced it ii buying the seven-tiered ziggurat built by North American Roclt·1 well for cash and property valued "in excess of $20 million." F1uor expects the transaction will be completed in the spring of this year. • • .-I • , Road to Health Exe rcis e Key for Doctor, 86 By PATRICK BOYLE 01 1M D•llr Jl'l191 Siii! Senior Citizens often prescribe a secret formula for longevity, ranging anywhere from a daily shot of whiskey to a yearly trip to Arizona , but a retired Le.is:ure World physician attributes his good health to exercise. Dr. Edward Davidson has been active .!ilnce he first learned to milk a cow on· his father's Monta11a farm in th e 1890s. At 86, the doctor still walks several miles a day and recently climbed lhe highest peak in Southern California with his SS.year-old daughter. The ag11' ..-. .. ctimW, ..Wliveo \riih •'bll "wlf• 'at "'iln.A via · Motl)ios• East', ha's tPte clear skin and s\eady hands of a middle-1ged man. The Ocl 17 Ql"ent of Mt, $an Gorgonlo Wai his fiflO trip up the peak, although the last c:.llmb was rhade in 1950 when he was still a young man of 66. He says he has hiked all his life and doesn't ever plan to stop. "I was in Colorado last summer with my daughte r on her ranch ." Davidson says, "and 1I' told her I wish l knew aomcone about my age an d skill r could make tile climb with. Well, .!ihe told me she would be glad to go along." H:i.s daughter, Dr. Harriett Davis, Is only 53 and is lhe head pathologist at Burbank Community H o s p i t a I • Together with Davidson's son and his wife, lhe group set out on OCt. 15 for the drive to the mountain, about 100 miles east of Los Angeles in the San Bernardino Mountains. They parked their camper at Barton Flats, sometimes called Poop-out Hill, at an elevation of 7,500 feet. The group spent the first night at the flats and began their seven mile climb to the top of the peak the next morning in crisp, 20.degree weather. As Dr, Davidson was the elder member of the group, he did not have to carry a back pack. The two tents. mattresses, food. cooking utensils and sleeping bags were all carried by the three young members of the crew. The climbers spent the night at Dr:Y Lake Overlook, about half-way up the peak. and the temperature dropped ·to a chilly 19 degrees. Attired in a double set of thermal underwear, heavy woolen aockl and a windbreaker, Dr. Davidson SCALING THE HEIGHTS Dr. Edward D•vld1on says he slept better that. night than he had since the last time he had camped there. 20 years before. · The group rose on Oct. 17 to set out for lhC su mmit, reachln& the 11,500 foot peak by noon. They took pict~ for the rest of th'e day and spent the night at the summit, the temperature dropping to a low of 12 degrees. The foUowing morning, Ule four climbers ·walked down the opposite side of lhe mountain . Dr. Davidson,'. who only retired from his private practice in Los Angeles seven years ago, admits thal he is getting a l!ttle old for such activity. The robust outdoorsman says he used to be able to make the entire 15 mile round trip on Mt. San Gorgonio in .only one day. The physician also. scaled Mt. Baldy and Ml. San Jacinto In his younger days and Is looking forwa rd to another climb. "I have got my eye on Mount San Jacinto for next year," he says. !R.eagan Pledges W elfare Reform at Inauguration SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald :Rei:gan Ji.uncbed his aeeond term ioday by proJ>Oslng that Callfornia lead the nation in reforming welfare to weed out "those whose greed is greater than their need." "There is no greater challe!!fe ·racing ·the 1tate er nation," the Republican chief e1ecutlve 11ld in bil second in- 1ugurat addrta. , "U not w:, who? rr not now, when?" ask~ l\tagan, who hes betn one of the most persi.steot· and Vocal critics of &eSldent Nixon'• family · asslstaoce welfare reform plan. Reagan, 59, a:a.Jd the only aitelnatlve -: higher tAll:ea to pay for rising welfai-e 4flta -ii the euy way out and tem· pltary at best. , • In his prepared tell'.t, :Reaaan .said he would spell ool the detalb ol his plan .and d.iscu.91 lhe slate's bleat fisca1 outlook -In a meuage to the legl!lature Jan. 1!: S~te welfare spending now totall •bout p bllllon a year and nearly 2 mlll.lon penona rece.lte a.Jd. .. The leglslature also convenes t.oday with Democrats taking control or both the As!embly and the Senate -a fact that ls certain . t.o complicate Reagan's plar'ls for the welrare ,reform. In the outgoing legislature,· Republicans con- trolled both chambers. Reagan's, second lneugural featuru an entertainment gala tcmight rtarrln&: Frank Sinatra; JOhn Wa'yne, 'Jimmy Stewart and Jack Benny. , Welfare was the single issue Reag~ dlscuUed In· -detail In hi.s lnaUi1Jrll rel'JlMki. "Mandated by statute and ftderal regulation, wtl!are has proltferated i.nd grown into 1. leviatbf.n,of W)Support.able dlrneqakll'IS," lhe aovemor 11i<L "I shall propose mtructurtng Welfare -tll eliminate waste and the Impropriety of subsidtzlng those whosi greed is greater than thelr need. The preaent confusion must be replaced with a proo gram .•. that will mailmlze huinan dlgnt- ty and 1alv11e ~ ~Utule. '' • •• Work, Rest Visit. Set For 10 Days • By JOHN VALTEllZA Of Ille DeWf' ......... ,. President Niron today' abandoned 'm. tions of a Florida vacation and cpted lnste:ad to brave chilly S o u t b e 'r n Caiifomla for a llklay ~ stay at the Western White MOUit -in· SID Clemente. White House aldea in W ashlngtoo m- 1>\)W>Ced the Praldeol wtll amvo ""9 " 'llleada,y_ Offlciala 1t ~ Toro Marine Qtpl Air Station confirmed . tllat the chld executive's arrival Ume aboard Air Force ·One is scheduled Tuesday between 3 and 3:30 p.m. El Toro'1 gates will be closed t.o the public, The President's arrival her! will come JU'Bt one day after bis nationally ~l~viled chat tonlght with four television, com-- mentatOrs. The progrsm Will 6e · iired. at 6 J).m. on channels 2 anC:I 7 and in a delayed version at I p.m. on Cba.nneJ •-. White House officers said todl)' that while in San Clemente, Mr. Nilon.. wW be working on bll.!ineas: left over by Congress and on measages and Prosririil for lhe year ahead. Most vital among the work items are completion of the new budget for the 1972 fiscal year and the clraltine of the aMUa l mes.sage on the State of the Union. ThJs will encompass ad- ministration legla.lative plans and pro- grams for the years ahead The annual economic message it the th ird major item that wJll be gettin1 a going-over from the Presirtent and his lop aides her e. _ Mrs.. Nixon will also make the t.rlaJ but other members of the family have no plans to do so., Mr. Nixon'a "rest-vacailon" here ap- pears to fit in w1th ·~nd.,tloos of the President's physlcl8n, -br_ W\Jttr Tk<•cb, who pl'OClOUllald -lii11> In _ good shape alter an annu:.1 checkup but Aid the chief executive oa&bt to eaae· '~· more in apota like ~ud Florida. Reports said the chief uecutlve .hid planned a -trip to. bit Key Blliajiie home. li<it changed hi.s mJnif ii iht laort mlnute and opted for San ~ The _ President .. '!'d . Flrii _t~d J oriflnally had plaMf\I ,to tra""I to· San Ciemente on Dec. JI. but. ,-thlt vi.a was called off weeia btfore.<luistnlu. Oraage • i) -·. - ""T ...... . . .:. t . "9. 1. I r ' ' -- •• • CllLY '1\.0T SC MW.,., JMMl!'y 4, 1971 • Praised by .Judge-:::.'. . . 1970 Gifan~iJu-ry . -Compl~les ~D~ufY By TOM 81'..RLEY °' ... Dallr ..... , "'" Nineteen membeMI of tht 1970 Orange County Grand Jury met for the last tJme todq m the Sant.a Ana County Courthoule M"rectJve the congratulatiooJ of SuperiOr Court Judie James F. Judge for lhilr "aignlficarit conl.rlbutkln to the C8.1l.'I!: of Justice and county government. "Your wort has been harmonious and San Clemente Gal 'Go es Ape' A female gorilla walking the •treet.I of San Clemente ~ived a atein wamlDg !rom police over tbe weekend. After receiving it, she went home, agret>ing not to distribute any more handbills. 1be ape -actually a housewi!e wearing a costume -was an ad- vertislng iimmlck . for a hu"ge garage sale conducted by about 30 families 1n a San Clemerit. ne'igb. . borhoOd. Police deUvered the warning .on New Year's Day, · The-city hal5 a code regulaUiig distribution of handbilb -by any. one, e.ven apes. Over 50 Artists Entering Contest In Laguna Beach Wllh deadline for entries !let for Fri· ·day, more than 50 artists already have picked up entry fonna for • unique art contest to btnt!Jt mentally handicap- ped children, ChaJrman Richard Cballit • ~imc!d today. Cash awards totaling $50\} will be made lit the ~mpeUtion to select appropriate .,pakitillp for the Parklane RttidenUaJ ~ of Orange County at 234C El ;roro Road Jn El Toro. , Entries will be Judged by atudents 1eleded by the lacuJUes of the t.aiuna Beach Uni.Oed School Dlttrid:. S~ Joa· quln School District and Tustin Union l!Jgb School Dlltrict. Sinqo Pflntlnp aeloc1<d will baog In the bedn>ains and dauroont af the~ new school, it will decided to ask 1tudent judjea to auemble an art collecttan representative of the contemporary tu!e of young people. Challis said he hopes many rnore artists will enter the competition· lo 1up- p<>rt the un,umial achool, wblch wlll open in March 1M Is designed to provide exoepUonal educational facilities for children with me ntal handicaps. Entry rorms may be obtained at the Challls Galleries, 1390 S. toast Highway, Laguna Beach. Participating artl!Ls should deliver their works to the galleries, or to the Park.lane School in El Toro by 4 p.m. Fridiy. Plaster Ducks Fly the Coop efficient," Judie Jwlge told the outgoing panel. "You have made a conscious effort to present a united stand on all issues and this fact has been deeply "J)preciated by me." Judge Judge preseoted certificates to each 01ember of the <lutgolng grand jury after re.ce ivlng a copy of the panel's final report for 1970. The 150-page volume ccnt.ains copies of the 23 interim reports issued during the year by the group. Judge" Judge was the Superior Court's llaion with the grand jury during 1970. Judge Byron ·K. McMillan will take over that duty •Ith the 1971 panel. Judge ibdge predicted two grand juries for Orange County in the near future and the d.Wblon or. civil and criminal invedlgation in lhe manner that b now being pioneered in Loll Angeles County. "Tire legislature just v•on't let us do It in Or,ange County but I think it is safe to predict !hat it Is going to happen here very soon,'' the j urist commented. Tiie 19 Orange County resideots who .will fom) the 197 l grand jury will be ·sete~d later today in Judge McMillan·s courtroom. ~Among the 30 names which will get Into tbe baUot box will be those of Mn:. 'Doreen MarshaU . 367 Via Lido Soud; Mrs. Frances L . Tooley, 1821 San- dalwood Lane; Mrs. Marla Uliano, 116 Via Koron, and Martin Mangold. 2144 Vista Dorado, all of Newport Beach. Also· nominated are James C. Caley, 11252 snowbird Drive and R a y Lamoureuz,. 5431 Trophy Drive, both of Huntington Beach; Bill Fe rnandez, 320 Hazel Drtve, Corona del Mar; Dr. George 0. Roberts, 5392 Kenosha Lane, Irvine: Waldo Drake, l7 S. La Senda. South Laguna, Ind John Kamalanl, 303 E. 2.1rd St., Costa Mesa . Orange Coaet residents who received cert.ilicat.es today for 1970 duty en the grand jury were Maria n Louise Parks , 2.33 MornJni canyon Road, Corona de! Mar; David Clark, 35116S Beach Road, Capistrano Beach; Mr!!. Audrey Cotton, 1509 E. Bay, Balboa; A. C. Acbey, 615 8th St., and Charles Mashburn, 503 13lh St., both cf Hunttna:ton Beach apd Mrs. Harriet . Bemus, l631 Waverly Drive, Newport. Beach. Laguna Woman's Funeral Slated Memorial servicu wlll be held Thurs- day for .w1nibd . Duncan, a Ionittme J,.apna Beac1i. resident .and former newspaper reporter who died Dec. 21 at the , Beverly Manor Convalescent Home in Capistrano Be.sch. She was 1IO. ' < The ,. servlcu will be conduded at 1 p.m. at the .church of Rel!glc;ius Sclmce by Dr. Henry Gerhard. There will be no burial as Mr!. Duncan willed her remairls tp the school of medicine at the University or Sauthem California. Mrs. Duncan Is survived by a daughter. Mr.s. ·Heather Walten cf Naches, Wash . three grandcbi,ldrell, two gr ea t grandchildren and a niece. Mrs. Duncan was born In England and bad several books of poetry pub\l shrd in England before moving to Victoria. B.C., to ~·ork on the staff of a "ewspaper. She came to Laguna Beacb in 11H4 and was one of the charter members t:rf the Chruch of . Religious Science in Laguna Beach. - ~ ... ,, . .. • UP'I T•llltM .. MADISON WISCONSIN'S RALPH VAN HORN CLIMBS THROUGH DRIFT TO PLUG METER 11 it Condition.cf Reflex? Or Fear of Meter Maids? Or Is Ra lph Just Plain Hone1t? Massive Europe Storni S11reads Further Soutli LONDON (UPI) -Europe's new year storm spread farther south today, giving the Spanish city of Cordoba its first snow in 17 years. Fifty villages in Spain and another 50 in France began anothPr day isolated from the outside world. The foggy cold snap that hit Britai n during the holiday weekenCI lingered on and once again forced the closure cf London 's Heathrow Airport fer lengthy periods. One hundred fi ight.s were grounded. Eastern Europe's snow woes incl uded tralni ruMing up to 10 hours late, Czechoslovakia facing what was descrit). eel as a •·calamitous situat ion," and an estimated 5,000 Soviet soldi ers helping clear Hungarian rail lines and roads. Helicopter crews worked ti relessly In Spain, France an~ perts of eastern Europe to relieve villages cut off by snowdrifts. Radio warnings told molorlsts lo stay home un!e}ls t.lv!ir trips were vttal. The temperature plunged to an all·time low of nine below zero at Albacete in southwest Spain. France's Rhone Valley, one of the hardest hit regions, suffered through five degree temperatures. Teams cf rescue wcrkers set cut at dawn with f<Xld supplies for both humans and farm animals in the region. Highway department employes appeared lo be victorious in the battle to open main highways for .home-bound h o 11 d a y travelers. French police e!!tintllted 5.000 persons spent the last week Y1f their vacatlona stranded in schoolhcu.ses, public buildings and other makeshift lodg ings. Pennsylvania Bank Lower s Prime Ra le PfflLADELPHIA (AP) -FI r 11 t Pennsylvania Banking & Trust Co., big· gest in Philadelphia, today cut the prime interest ·rate from 6% percent to 6~ percent -the sixth reduction in nine months -and explained "we've got money .and we're looking for loans." ll wa~ the first major bank 1 in the naUon to take this action. Quebec Terrorist Reveal s Death of Laho1· • 111ste1· MONTREAL (UPI) -Francis Simard, self-confe.ued terrorist of the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQl. described_Jw police how he and Paul Rose -ii'iled Quebec Labor ~Minister Pi~re Laporte, a coroner's inq est was told today. ''At 5:20 p.m, Paul and I smotherrd him," nid a !tatement aa id to have been made by Simard and read to police at the coroner's inquest into the death of Laporte. The atlr witnesses at the fina l session of the inquest were Simard, and Rose's younge r brother, Jacques. "We art n.sponsible, the three of us," said Simard's statement. The three men took the witness stand. but refused to answer questions. Instead they shouted revolutionary slogans and jeered at the court. "Long Jive the FLQ," they !houted. Bouted Paul Rose from the witness stand: "In 1970 we fought the establish- ment. We hit at the right spot and we hit hard." Judge Jactjues Trahan said he would deliver his decision in the inquest - which detennines whether there are groun for criminal charges in tht death Of Laporte -at 3 p~m. EST. "Long live the FLQ or 1970 -excuse m1;. of the 1970s," shouted Paul Ros~. "Illng live Free Quebec;' shouted his brother Jacques. The Simard statement v.·as read by PF01·incial Police Corpora l Jacques Ga· houry. He said Simard gave p<1Hce the statement last J\londay. the da y the three m{'n V.'C're arrested at an isolated farm- house 25 miles south of J\fontreal_ ending Canada's greatest manhunt. Simard re-- fused !o sign the statement. he sa id. Simard said Laporte. kidnaped and held hostage in a suburban house, had 1ried to escape by breaking a V.'1ndcw as police had earlier deduced from cuts on the dead labor mini~te(s body. "He threw a piJl01v to break a win· dow," said Simard, and wa s cut v.·he n his captors grabbed him and pulled him b<1ck . ··11e crier! and he wanted us to take him to a hospital, bul there .... ·as no question of that ," said Simard 's state- ment. .......... Tate Trial "Political,' Sa ys Lawyer LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ch~rles Manson is undergoing, a. "p01it!cal trlal" in the Tate murder case and should no more be charged with murder than Gov. George \Yallace or .John Birch Society head Robert We lch, a defense lawyer argued l.oday. Jrving Kanarek resurned f In 1 I arguments for th!' defense in .the six-and· one-half-month -old trial by telling the jury that Manso n was ~eing _ charg_ed with the slayings because his ph1I010~1es were antagonistic to most of American society today. "There are all sorts of militant societies in this country today." Kana rek said. "There is no reason v.•hy George \Vallace. the governor of Alabama, or fl-Obert Welch of the Birch Society should be charged with murder. . "This is a political trial In which Mr. Manson is brought here because he is a svmbo1 of one of the con· frontations lhat is going on in this coun· try today." Turning to evidence that the word "pig·· was daubed in blood on the fro~t door of the Tate home, Kana rek said the defense felt that key state witness Linda Kasabian printed tho5e letters there. Kanarek said it backed up the defense contentions that Mrs Kasabian and Charles "Tex·· Walson were !he leaders of the bloody foray at the Tate home . The four defendants were absent from the courtroom again today. listening lo !he proceedings by loudspeaker from nea rby rooms. Kanarek began his final argumenl<; In the trial last week tcild Superior Court Judge Charle Older he would flnlSh to. da y. Kanarek has attempted to discredit the testimony of the state's key witness , 1.inda Kasabian. a former "Manson Family" member who was granted im· munity. The altorney portrayed her es a Mr. Magoo-type character who created havoc but remained unscathed. He also likened the cult leader to a Christian being thrown to the lions .and the trial to a Roman circus. The lawyer began his summatioo by shov.·ing the jury enlarged co Io r photographs of the victims, including the nearly nude body cf actress Sharon Tall', who v.·as eight months pregnant. The prime rate ls Ole interest charged to the bank's best custcmer11. It has skidded steadily from a high or 814 percent last March. 11@@~Ilooo a nd w e lov e it! A pair of duc b "waddled" away from their perch in a San Clemente yard during the wet hours of a Saturday rainstorm In San Clemente. U.S. Invites Russians Locally founded, locally owned, we' re part and parcel of the co=unities we serve. That's why we plow back all of our Orange County savers' dollars ri gh t here in our own Orange County. But the pair of plaster statues had some help from thlevts Jn their flight from the yard o! &tty Chapin at· ~18 Calle Madrid. ~ She report..i the lbelt of the $25 objoc\I Saturday aft~. • DAILY PILOT NewpMt le-tt _ ..... II d I I ... __ ........... S-CIO-• OMNlia to.UT rtJILtlMWO a:.ui.-t W.ob•rt N. W..4 Prt11d.-it w!Olll ........ J•clr: W.. <:.rC.y vx. ,.,....,1 .n11 ~ ....... lho"''' KNYil llllltf' 71tol'll•I A. M•rphl"• ............. lllLltl' ttich•r4 P. Hill loWth Or11• c-ty llllllOI' -COllll "'-' .. w..t ..., SI,...! Nl'WJ!Ol1 IMcfl: ttn w.1 11111H aour•nrd • · 1.M-... cfl: m ,_, ""'",. ~'"-"'9-...ct'I• lJll'J a.ell lwlfVW'C .... ""'1'Mll• f'"" 8' "'1\IM a.a To Watch Angela Trial WASlilNGTON (UPI) -The State Department has invited a group of Russian sclenUsts and academicians to &end an ch.server to the murder and -ltidnaping trial in Cal~ornia of black • mllit.ant Angela Davis. A department spokesmal'I uid Sunday .. 'the invitation was sent tn response to a Jetter signed by 14 persons y,•ho ex· preased rear Miss Davis, an avowed Comnwniat. might not get a fair trial. The 1Jgner1, he continued, represented the letter as an independent action not connected with the S()viet government. AJ!illt.lnt Seeretary Martin J . Hii ien· brand .. made It clear. of ccurse , we expect reciprocal opportunities," the !pokesman _p ld. Hillenbrand wu the cfftctt wbo'Clbltd·the reply. ThMt. would Jntln opportunities for Americans to cba~ Soviet trial!! of pollcial dlaaldents or Jews acCU!ed of 5kyjackin1,· he Hid. Onty one of the Russian• who 1laned tht letter wu ltsentlfled a\thou.lfl the 1pok•man 11ld thef were prcmlnent sclentiltl and scholars. The man Iden- ·.tit~ 11 Pyotr Kapltsa, a top Russl•n phytlclll HJIJenbrand'a c.ble strmed "complete confidtn(e'' Mill Davis would get an ln\pir)lat ~. the 1pol!dm•• oald. Miu Dav~. 26. it cliarted wllh purchulnc the (WI that were 1mugled into a Marin County courtroom tn San Rit1el in•nWWucceasful tlClpt,attetnpl In wh!Ch four periom w·en killed. Thole killed were 1 white Superklr Court iudl~. \WO Ntgro convlctl and ..a. black accomplke who took the guns lnlo court. --OAe Cifthe s.n·Quentln prbon convict.I was being tried on a charge that he assaulted a guard. The other ccnvlct was a witness. "flu Davit was onet: a faculty member for the University of California at Loi Angeles and has been P.ctive in Black Panther pll'ty circles. Ne at Burg lar s Break Into Cafe Burglars with a penchant for neatness sawed off locks on a window or the pier-end cafe in San Clemente over Ult weekend, making off with $82 in cash. Police said the thieves entered the west window of the cafe, opened a cash register, took money, then found 1 key to a cig1ret vending machine. After cpening and rifling the machine, I.he burglart repl aced the key, cl<>Rd the register and Oed. They closed the window behind them and replaced the nearly 1&wed locb lo the~ h.u'po. The brealdn appvt:nUy took place late Saturday or t•rly Sunday, ICCOl'dlng to Marvin F. Cable , the opeT•tor of tht diner. 16 Killed in Blast AUCH. France (AP) -An explo11lon wrecked ' a bustntu·re11ldentlal building In thl1 southern French town today, kUl!nr 11 per10n1. j It's time to plant ... time to save ... at Laguna Federal ! This is the season to save at Laguna Federal. Plant your savings h ere and now. Watch them grow and multiply. No Association pays you lrigher interes t on your insured savings. No Association offers you more varied ways to save. Plant your money with us .•. and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to grow! It's our way of saying thanks for saving at Laguna Federal. Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in for your packe t of Lunaria seeds-a purple-fl owering money plant for your garden-plus a complete, helpful and informative Flower Seed Garden Guide. 3 Monarch Bay Plaza South Laguna, Calif. AND LOAN AllOCIATION 260 Ocean A venue L'lguna Beach, Calif. ~94·754 1 601 N. El Camino Real Sill Clemente, Calif. . ' -. - Pro Cage, Hockey Standi ngs NM Yorlr; ...... ... l'•111n1 c-..._. At1111Hc Olvl1ioft w ' " " ,. " Pl'IU1d1lphl1 " " eutt11o " n h ltlmore C""tr1I Olvi1lon " .. Clncln,,.11 " " Allan!• .. " Clr.ie!1f\d ' " Whl....., Conftrl'fl<• Ml...,.ht Dlvltlon Mllw1u1<n ~ ' O.troll " " Clllc100 ,. .. Ph....,i~ " " LMA..;.eln P'1dflc Oi\litlon " " Sin 0 1..vo " M Sin Fr1nc;b<o " " Se1n11 " " Por!l1nd " ~ '"· .Ill .,... ••• ••• .. ~ .041 .llJ -'" .Ill ••• ·"' .>U ,. .ru .,,J "' ••• 51!11rtl1y'1 111111111 Bo•!on UJ, Plllladelplll• ll'O AU1n11 111, New Y...-1< .,.._ 81l!lmor1 108, Oelroil "'·' Mllw•uke1 111. CltV~l1nd 71 Ctnclnn111 llJ. 811!!110 IOl Clllc100 Ill. Porll1M 11) •• • ' M '" " "" • "' •• ' "" • "" ""°"''K 172, Sin Fr1nd1co 116, !oil Sin 0 119<> 109, lo• Anoele1 108 fol) s11nd1r'1 1te111ltl 8<>!>Ton !-If, Allanl• !1! PhoenlK 102, Si n Fran<isco I I Only g~m•• •chedul«I Tonl1h!'1 Game• SNl!le I! Mllw1uket SAn FranclttO ftl Plloeni• Only oamtt sclltdul«I T11n<l1Y'I G1m1s SeaTlle 11 B1l llmo;or1 ~or!11nd v1. Bollen a! Pllil1deloM1 San F•ancl1co at Philadelphl1 0 1troll 11 At11nt1 San Oievo 11 Clllcaoo lo1 An11el" VI. Clnci11ndll 11 Oma~, Neb. ... E111 Division w ' P'ct. •• V!rglnll ~ " K..,tuck" " " )I-York .. " 1'lorldl1ns " " ,.lllsburon " " C1roJIM .. " W11t Divlsio" Ufa II " " lndl1ne " " Ni1m!>hl• " " o ... ver " " Tnas " " 511ndav'1 Rtwlh C..,lina 111, New York n Ut•ll 13-1. Te~111 U)9 Vln,ilf!la llJ, Pltt,b11n1h ll6 1 ndlao~ 114. Ken1uckv ll'2 OnlY oame. 1c11e<iul•d .JI • .610 .•71 .HO ·"' ..~ .616 .~, ••• ·"' .lJ9 Sl fllrll1y'1 R111111!1 ,.itl"lbu•9fl IU. N•w York 10'! Vlr111nia 135. Carolina 12• ICetilUCkY n•. FloridlAnS 119 O""v•r 12', l•~·· 124 Onlv oam•• sclledul~ Tonl11\l'S G1m1i '" " ,,,,~ 11\~ 1 l'I> ,,, ' '"" "" New York vs. Kientuckv 11 ln<111n· 11>0111, Ind. Florld\aru. 11 Indian• Only 111mt 1 1<11«1~1«1 Boston New York Montret1I Toror>to VlnCOl.lver Oe!roll Blllfllo '"' E•ll Olvltlon W L T,.!1.Gl'G• 17 6 ~5911•'6 261 6 51 113 1• 11 12 • .n 119 10• 11 1, I JS llO 109 )4 21 J J I IO!i lJl 17 11 •21 10ti l.H 1 23 6 :10 14 IG W1111 01v111on W L T I'll. Cl' GA Cllk •!IO 26 6 ~ 51 l41 eo SI. Louis 11 I 11 41 99 Ill Mlnneso1A ll 11 7 lJ 11 lOol P!t11bUrO" IQ 11 11 Jt 107 111 Pllllad111...,1~ 11 19 5 :l"I 12 101 Loo. Anoele• 10 n 6 16 10• ll':I Clllf0f111a 11 14 ? 14 Ila 121 s a111r1111'• R1•11•h N'w Yor~ 3, P lnsburon I Toronto \J, Oa1ro;o;t o Mc>ntrHI J, (l lllo:>rnl1 J 51. Lou!• 3. V1ncouver 1 Clllcaoo;o J, Pll!!lt<ltl1>1\!a 1 Mlnne!oQla l. Lo• An!l"le• J, lie Sund1V'• Re1ulh 6.;o,lon S, Plllladelpl\ia 1 NtW York 6, Mon1rt~I 5 oe•roit l. C1IUorni11 l Clllc;e\IO S, B11f!1lo 3 Booton S, Pllll1llelph;11 l ''· Loul• 7, Lo• An"'le• J Only 111mts K.heduled. Tonlghl" G1m" No o<>m .. :Jehfdule<l. T1111ohY't Game T'"'nlo 11 Mln,,.,!oOlll Onh' 11ame sche<lul td Collegia te Baske tb all Scores WEST use &0. LSU 76 co~e•tim~i UCLA. 106, Oevton 11 Cal Sr. (LBJ f.I , Colcr•llO &2 Soutllern Ca ll!orn!1 Collellt IJ, R~d· land1 .15 EAST Fordham II, Prlnce1on JI S!. Fr11ncl• (N.Y.) ,9, Slffla IS Rut11er1 91, Pl!hbu•o" 11 MIDWEST Notrt O.me 97. Mlnflt1ola 71 Ol'llo U. 91. Ul1nol1 St. 7l Ol'llo Si.ti ,J, Ytle 7S k1nt s1a11 11. Clevtland S!1te "' M1rque11e 111, Oetrolt 61 )(1vler !Olllo) IC, Air Force '5 SI. Louis 91. 01rtmo11tl\ 75 V1lo1r1l10 I?, ti.hrv11rd 79 lndllnil SI. 97, Nor!l'ltrfl lllit'IQll •• SW MIS!oOUrl St. I•, C1I St, Ctf1v· w1r"d) 76 Clr>Clnn1ll 60, D•1ke 59 1ow1 11, Wv<lf"l"o 14 Western Mldlloan 90. lovol1 jChlc•· t O) 6' 8r tdl•V 17, Wkl\1!1 ST. 11 Ev1n1vl1l1 97, 11111 51. 15 Toledci to, N. C1rolln1 fCh1rtottll 4' A1llt1nd 71, llrockl'Ort SI. 40 SOUTH ~lh C1rol!t1a IL Clemson Sl l'"IOf"ld1 $!. 101, P-rdl,.. 11 G11&r11l1Tech 12. Rice n Wn.tl-rrl ICen!Ud<I' N, Eat! TenMllN NorlQlk St. 110, Mor111n SI. 77 1.-n n, George Wtshlnv!on 111 c1v1d1on 6', won..., • M•l"T lf'I M1nll1ll 1G1, Ettl Ct rollnt 7' J1c1t1onvl!!• 105. Vlroln l1l1nd1 95 Norftl C..roillll 101 , TUllnt 1' FIOf"ldt U, AulKlr" 1111 Vtndirrt>I" 7', G-911 '' Ml11T1l CFll.) !'Cl Okl11\om1 CllY fJ Au111,, PHI' '°' Mor1hnd St .•• Mun-•I' Sf. 11, Ea1te<n ICenl\Kll;v U S•IOn tf•ll 111. l lKIV"' 7J 9 klfll\tdtY llll. ¥fulul""I t! M!111ui.1 $1. "· T""fll''" 67 T--• TICl'l 1" Middle Ttnne:lMI M-l'lla 11. , •• North r ..... SI. 57 1'"1lrmont st. 7•, Nlorr!1 H1rv1v " IDUTNWES1' TCU IJJ, L1m1r Tll(Ch t• l.9"'!1vlll1 lt6. T11l11 1• Ae>!i.tie (hrl1t11n !Ill, T1r1tlon S1 •. 7f E1it Cenlrll Oldt/W:Wne TJ, E1.,i Tt•· •• Sl1t1 65 I 5! .... !'ltn F. Auttln n. Ang1lo t . 11 SW Loul1l1n.o ''· lp11 IE.I P110! tJ H-MllkO 51. "' New Mt~lco IS MCl'lllnt SI. 1$, NorJhem ArlfOnt 71 Souftlw.11 TllXl l SI. 93. Howl rd ~IVnt II 10\ltrtlmel Ariton• SI. n•. O.l>lllW 1~ llOC11C1•J (.J' SI. !LAl 17, Color1d(t S! 7J 'I\'..., St. U. Mont1n. "' .. ~. . , ..... ..-. Mond.u, J•nllary 4, 1971 OAllY PlLOT %7 • ·- PRE-INVENTORY Prices Effective Today lhru Tuesday, J a11. 5 WIDE GUARD TIRE 36 Months Gu arantee Regular $28.95 Trade-In Price 6.50xl3/C78-l3 Tubeless Black.wall Plu!!i $2 F.E.T. And Old Tire Dynaglass B elted Tires Are Sold Only at Sears ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE Size _ R.25~ 15/(;71~ .. l 5_ _11.:.sx 15/117&.1.'> 8.S:.xl':"t/J;&.J.i ll•IJ'llar Tradr·I• r .ir" 2.'IM --:!.(lit C.u1r•nt-d Aa:.:iml: All ti~ fa1l u1C's o r de(C'cts in rninttiJI or workmanship. J.·u r Jlow l.0111t: For ihC' life of the ori~1n~! ir~'aJ. Wh•I .Si:•n Will Do: In t J• lun.11.e for the tirC', replace' if chargin.11. for 1he proponion of cun-eor $ell1n.11; pricC' plus fC'deral Eiche Tax 1hu rcptesC'nu 1re&d U~C'd. RC'pair nail punc:111res 11 nochar,11e. Cu•r•nlet-d Air•in1t: Tread "l!.'C'llf.(IU{. J.'or llow l..ona: ThC' n umbC'r rif months 1pC'n f1C'd. V.'h•I ~r•,·• ~'i ll IJo: In C'X· r han_i.::e fnr 1he tire, rcpli<ll" it c h1ri;1n.i;: 1h11" current ~C'Jl111.i;: f'r lCe p!111 FedC'ra( l:~cl!C' Tu kn ihe follo ... ·1ng 1llow:11ncc . r-.lonthly I ;u1r1nlre lfl 10 ]4 27 [O 39 '" Allow~nc11 107,; 2or:;, ""' Full 4 -Ply NYLON CRUSADER • Ntw conlour, broad shodltler forgrealer1afe1y •New tread desip;n for all-wealher lraclion •New 6/10.i nch ~hi te sidewall to match Lhe width of the white sidewall1 of many new can T ubrl1•1111 Illa. k~.tll s Your lh01(1· Sizl': 6.931.l '' i.:1.'>xl4 7.75~14 _K.2Sal4 7.7Sa1 S F.E.T. ''"15 95 2.l~' .2.17 E h 2.3..l Plu1 j.~E.T. :l.l•I And 0 1d11rt Whitewalls Only $3 More Per Tire IUIHA 'Allt: TA 1•4100, 121-4Jl0 (INOOA P'AlllC JlilO..OUI 6.SOxll Tubeleu Blackwall Plus 1.78 F.E.T. 1\nd Old Tire I •l MONTI 01 l ·J•11 OllNOAll CN 1 ·100olt, Cl 4.1111 COMl'JON NI 6 •1111, Hf 2·S7t l MOtltWOOO HO f ·5fll COVINA ••t ·tltll IHOllW040 Ofl ••IJ11 Sh•p Ni9h11 M<M. lhru Set, t i.JO A.M. to 9:30 ,,M,, Sunclo)' 12 Hoon t• I ,,M, Sears MOTil\tI:~,~~ 500 $e4'U S µaat fJ~-~ . • 2 tickets for the pri ce of I (o n General Adm iss ion On ly) OH•r qood 11nt1I Jo~uory S, 1971 Riverside Internatio nal Raceway January 10, 197 1 -It :00 AM CHILDREN UN OER 12 FREE IF ACCOMPANIED BY PARENT i\11 k About Sean <:onvenienl t :redil Plans PICK UP YOUR TI CKET COUPON NO PURCHASE AT ANY SEARS AUTO CENTER NECESSARY Full 4 -Ply Nylon HI-WAY SPECIAL Tn d''" Size "~ Ji:..'r::ti 6.50•ll 14.9.'j 6.951tl4 l:i.95 i.1'>1114 !i~ 7.i5xl4 l•.1.115 8..251114 21.11':". 5.60il 1.; 16.'Jr. 7.7511.'i IR.11.'i 8.15•1.• 21.9.i IONO lll (M Ml J-01,1 0\1'.lllll"IC & 5010 AH 1·1211 0 1 Alol01 6J7·2100 'AIUIHA 611-lll t, Jll .... 111 POMONA JCA 9·11•1 ) ·-·· ...... ,..~ F.E.T. •·~11 ... n 17.\!.) 1.;11 111.'li l.9l :?n.•1.1 ,,~ ---2:Z.9.) 2.17 ------24.·•~._ 20.•1.; 22.<f.> 2.~.'.l:t 2.ll ~ ... :us 11(0 ""WI 1·•161' IAtMIA ANA llCI J .))71 SAMIA rl llltNOS t••·tol I y .. MOl<OC.111 IJt: 4-1 711 IOUIM COAIT IPUtA 140·JJ)J 6.5'1xl3 Tubeleu Blackwall Pluo l.78 F.E.T. And Old Tire THOUSAND OAltl 497 .... IM YOlll AMCI 141·1111 U"-IHI fl;t:·I 17 \'AUt1' IO 1•61, ........ v11MC>Mt ..,,,,, • ' ' , l r ' J f l • Uaabrella Sate~lite Looking lik~ a huge umbrella . this scie ntific satellite in Ne' India's first educational television when it is ,i;:uided in to o Controls in 1973. Your Money's Worth '' ' Yo~provide it~y Honeywell Recess~n 111 l 4tl1 Mo11tl1 ~ SYLVIA PORTER Research in New York is Ille November is the NBER's selection aod let's assume that will be ••it.·• How-does this recessioo compare? Jt is now p!"Obable that non-profit i n d e p e n d e n t re11earch organization v.·hich November. 1969 will be has assumed responsibility for formally designated as lhe of£.icially dating business-cycle slarting dale of the fifth turning points in th~ U.S. business ~ession of the past And evidence I s ac- quarter-century. cumulating that the NBER is This means that. as o( t~ getting clos~ to _agreeing that first business day of 1971. ih; ,,.,ovember,. 69 1s th~ month current recession is entering when weaknesses in_ . l h e its 14th month. ec:onomy became suff1c1ently This a!80 means that il "'."'id~spread and serious to already is the LONGEST of JU~tdy the tag or a turning any of the seven busines~ point. downturns in this genera· Ho"•ever, the NBER isn'l t1on-going all the way back yet revealing when -or ever. to the-catastrophlc deprc~ion whether ....:. it will break 115 of 1929'-33. silj!nce and make the tag of· But I hast.en to cushion ficlal. And no one knows today's ·gtim column with a whether President Nixon will major bit of encouraging admit that bis economic ract news: As af th ls point in the has blotched his e n t i r e downlurn, lhe Nixoo recession Administration to date v.•ti(n is not as severe as recessions he ~li vers his messages on of the post-\Vorld war JI era. the State of !he Union. the While many authorities will Burlgel and the Economy in continue to insist !hat the cur· late January-early February. rent down t u r n began It's a tortuous political qucs- earlier-in July, 1969, when lion as well as an enormously industrial production peaked com~liCa'.tW. and de Ii ca I e and iitarttd to slide -the economic-social decision. National Bureau of Economics But let's assume t h at New York to Co11struct ,. New Plant for Disposal NEW YORK (UPI) -A plant designed to !peed up the. natural decomposition of solid v.•ast.e from 15 years to 15 days will be built in New York City by the Jargest privete garbage removal firm in the East. Ch.a rles MacAJuso's New York Carting Co .. has obtained riermlssion from J\.1ayor John V. Lindiay's administration to build a plant on a 15-acre Pier site on the 1-ludson Ri\·er to process 3,500 torus of waslc d a i I y. t\iacAlu~·s flrm has bct>n paying the city 5500.000 a year 1n dumping fees for de- posiling garbage. as "·aste and landrill. The nev.' plant e.xpecl~ 10 handle all of Nev.· York Carling 's refuse and a substan- tial additional amount supplied by the city. The process to be u,.,ed ~hreds tht v.·ast& into lin:-" granules "'hicti are turned into a liquid sludge, fermented and dried. "This actually is a speeding up or the natural process of decay from seven to 15 years to seven to 15 days." MacAluso said. The mixture then 11 aeparat· ed into two producti'. nutrifill. a powder having the. ferUliling power of topsoil. and steriflll, a coarser matrial completely sterile. It can be used in land· fill withoul causing rat.infest· ed areas as garbage landfill often doe.J. Shredded and ground meLal also it recover- -ed for pc>ssible !crap melting. Some or the waste products delivered to the plant ~·ill be burned as fuel for the decom· JKISition processing. r..tacAluso controls the steri· fill and nutrifill process. A number of large corporation~ arc engaged in develop i n g other garbage and solid waste recycling processes. a mo n g !hem Gcn~ra! Motors, f.l onsan· to. Westinghouse, Aerojet lien· eral a n d RCA. l\.t<icA I us o pointed that these finns all are manufacturers and said his long experience in \\aste collection and dealing w 1 I h public sanitation offic1rils had given him an advantage. ··Landfill a n d incineration. the pre~ent methods of solid waste dispOsal. simply are no longer adequate," said Mac.Al· uso.:' We are going to be forced lo go to recycling on a big scale sooner or later:· In dollar volume, !Olid wastr disposal has jumped from in· significance a dozen years ago Into the ranks of, the top ID industries in the. country t1>- day. Federal and municipal aulhoritie!I In many cities say they would not be surprised if both· the ionl)age and the dol· Jar volume doubles by 1980. ~ proble~ with lan'dtlll disposal of waste are finding dumping sites, the cost of transportation and lhe risk of creating large rat infestation. Incineration ceuaee air pol - lutloo and is 'wasteful overall. The rederal government i~ anxious to MCOUrage recycling or solid wasle. The Re!IOUrce Recovery Act passed by Con· gres1 this year authorizes the governinent to provide 75 per· cent of the funds Jot ~n­ ent waste recycli.ne plant! U they bring nejghboring com- municlt.cs into a joint aanlt.ary recycling program. In duration. at 14 1nonths, il beats them all -back to the 43-month <'rash that begar. in August, 1929 and lasted lo March, 193.J. •K1tl1ie~ j /l1-61lt 11.,.IC.JI 11 1•1a,,. l l >l·ll.\• 1/17-M.ll j /6G·7/hl ll/ff.1 111 M"'t~o ~ur•llltn " • ,, " ' • " In depth. a! or the firsl 11 to 12 months after the November peak. it ranks a~ the mildest of the recessions. Tile follo1ring comparisons which illustrate this are ~·Ith the first Jl~l2 months (afler the peaks of 1957 and 1960 I in order to make I hi ~ scrupulously objectl1•c. •19.10 'H-11 ''7·!1 .. ' ~· N°'"!•r"' •mPIO• • I~ • 1 l~ • l It J1)bl•" ·~!• .. 1.1 • 0 ~· • 1,0'1 l""u<t. Proaud. • 6 Of • 0." · I.II'/ P•"· lrocome -1-j.ol t 1.o. ·t-l.D• 1t~e1 oers. Income . 0,10 .,. LU • I 411 A•t•ll , ... , + l.J? • l .IO · 1.1' Reel re11ll ~•11• • 0.51 • J.9t · • l' Me"~· Ir-Wlf• + 0.'1 • 2.60 • •.ll lll•a1m1".1'.111tJ ·OJ~ ·1 '1 ·lh GHP CM"."' • ~ J.U • c.n . I" GNP tell • 0.15 • I 0 • l.•5 ~llor·ll< po-~llt. • 1 .• 1 ·11.?J 11 JI ll ullneu 111J"''' -+l~.;>t t •\ 7• 't ll,1• kOoU•lno •••rt• -t7• .... 2.tf 11!.IO j"Real means the percen- tage change aft.er elimination of the impact of price in· creases.) John Bissel Heads Firn1 Bisse ll Inc ., a privately-held firin v.·ith annual sales in ex· 1·ess of $30.000,000, has named .John t-.1 . Bissell lo be president and chief executive officer lor 11s worldwide operations. The new president joined the firm in 1966 as corporate controller and most recently "·as vice president in charge. of marketing. Before joining the firm he had been a rinan- t•1al planning manager ol Aeronulronic Division of Ford Motor Company and assistant controller of Raytheon Com· pany's romputer division in Santa Ana. t-.ielville R. Bis.sell 111 will relire as president of the com- pany and from active manage. menl on January 1. He will remain a director, consultant and active member or the international operating and planl'ling commiltees. M. R. Bissell II will remain chairman. Harry J . Bloem will continue as executive vice president and g e n e r a I manager of thr United Stales Division. Bissell Inc. was founded ln 1876 as a family enterprise. lo make carpet sweepers. 'The flnn today is a leading pro- ducer (lf products for home a n d instit1:1lional cleaning, p r i n ci pal l y cRrpet andi uphol!ltery cart devices and cleaning ,agents. ll6 principal 00Uet1 are housewares , groctty_rand discount start retailers. :USHER~S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH . STARTTHE NEWYEAR OFF 'lt galnow ... WITH ~IG 82.00 SAVINGS $11" .... 9111C!' ...... ,..,~..., "" tmWll•-~···"" '• Prl'~~e . I Complete-New York Stock List Steel , St rikes Affect Pub'lit A"'°<11i FO Abo!LD I 10 AC .. lhd 2 ... AcmeClev ,o(I A<m• MU 2to Pf'M'SBURGH, Pa. !.\;!>) - '1ti1 prtlty much' a foregone concliuion lher!: will be a steel !!!trike in 1971. But ·whether ·or·not there is, John Q. ·Public will suffer. · · ln anticipation.of a strlke. big buyers of steel a're putftng in tbeir orders now so they will have stockpiles available.- if the Un!:e-d Steelworkers shut down the industry in August. This is called hedging. The hedging, r~gardless of . a .slrike, will leave a void in production in the late sum- mer and fall and workers no doubt will be laid of. f. Unemployment would go up; the economy d!)1vn. The effects of a strike. itself · Course Set Nex t W eek On Credit Bankers, merchants and per.!IOJlnel o( credit offices of Costa J\fesa will be given an opportunity to attend a short course in Cilnsumer credit and collections, January I&, according to an aMouncement by International Consumer Credit Association, SL Louis. Missouri. The program will be held from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the NCwporter Inn. Conducting Jhe course ~·ill be Sterling S. &Peake, in· structor in consumer credit and collections. of the lnterna- Uonal Consumer c .r edit Association , St. Lou is . J\1issouri. Speake is a credit specialist and field lecturer for ICCA. Costa Mesa ha.!1 been selected as one of several cities to be included in this year's Credit Education pr1>- gram oftered by the lCCA. Credit schools have been con- ducted throughout the country for the past several years, and have been acclaimed as a practical and interesting study of successful methods in the handling or consumer credit, ICCA points out that the course will be offer~ at a strategic time, considering the large current volume of con- sumer credit and installment credit business, and the fast changing economtc a n d bu s in e s sronditions . "Creditors should take full ad- ''antage of th is unique op· portunity to helP them bring lheir credit and collection pro- cedures up to date and learn the latest approved methods," says the ICCA. Topics to be discussed in this course include problems affecting credil: credit ap- plications: credit interviews: investigating and evaluating the applicant; accepting 11nd rejecting the applicant: col- lectlons and related suhjeets. A small enrollment fee is the only cost which includes a Manual and su ppl irs. F'urtber information may be obtained from Sterling S. Speake. Jnternat 1onal Consumer Credit Association, 37ti Jackson Avenue. St. Louis, l\t.issouri 63130. Aorm!:' tJ:.e ~Miili• .:-0 •re evitent. Nol. onl y ..,on:t>.•1 .tw sttelw9rlteis but others w"-~-"•,...L1• 1.«1 • •1110<1:" Afl,..LI t: 2 jobs· are tollched by the steel ~~~·1nc0 industry, would be hurti11g. :I' PR:2 ~ With little money coming in, ....J 1-.r""" h ' be k Allton• le pure ases will ept at a ... 1. G11 1.10 minimum, and thi! will hurt ~i~~:OC1"'.~? reta·ilera'" and ot"her:~'....':1~ businessmen. :r~~n!t~':' _;: Should the-re br a strike, ~l::i..~ ~ as nearly all experts and iJt. ~ll:LP': ~~~ dustry watcher& a~ predic-~~~.~~ •.-: ting, the subsequmt settlemmt :::=11~d·'~ is likely to bring about a hike :rn::s'lu~:O in steel prices. And as it .t.1111 c11 .0)11 . ' . A1l•T111Aut .611 always does a price luke "P11•PC . .o. Id f. d .'" . h AICOf 1.IO W(lU 1n l WIY into I e ~~,l~li .!J'° pocketbook of the conswner. Am•• e. 1.20 A spokesman fo( a major :~.~ .... ii~ appliance manufacturing firm ::i1tii11~~--~ jn the East said he had no ~m8,~k•f 10 doubt that the steel industry •m8oc.\ 1.10 Am ce,,710 will seek price increases !m'~i,,:,t.1,;~1 , regardless of a strike or what :,;ntJ: 11i.:i se.tUement is reached with the ..,,,.~"10 1.:u ' --' k "And" l. .• AOhtltl .~ S =1WOr ers. , 11e S3l , Am Ou•IVeU "if we have to pay more for ~~e~~,.!''·r~ steel v.·e'll have to charge !i:ie~~P ,,\'~, more for our appliances."· : ~~~~"!11~10 1'he probability of a price ~'H~~1:1i:: hike v.•:ic ~onfirmed in rtcent " """'•Pf l ~----r"•· ~ . Am Ho•P .26 ren1arks ~ Edwin ·Gott, !m~r~i"~' chairman of the nation's " MtlCt• 1..a A MllCI~ pf ~ largest steelmaker, U.S. Steel Am ~1ou · •N•tu•I 7.111 Corp. Am Pl'loto .1• "J rtai"nJ •••~ that ij ARfiOv .1lt ct Y Wll,,._ Am S.111.,. I you look at the profit sheets !ms~~:r i~ of the steel industry that there ~~~:· 1,;7o is no question that there has N.1:11.75 to be some price increases," ~r .. ;1~1 ·" Gott told n:ewsmen in New !::::: -ltlk ~~ York Dec. 17. = 4i:\~ i . .u One reason, and probably ~~.\'r" ·:8. the most important, why in-...,,.,i 1..C .sa AMF Inc 90 dustry ei.pert.s are ll\Jre of ...,,,,.c ·r. a strike, is the list of demands ~:! -~p USW president I. W. Abel says ~:f:."'i ;'o1 he ·u be asking for when the !~:::; ,"'.;,61 negollatioru; begin. ::::.i:-~·~i'.90 These include ,;a substantial :~~.~~c 1 1 wage icrease."' cost of Jiving """ ,,.,. 1.20 • "'""'Ch<!Cp .l~ escalator, increased and ad-:~o0c 1.l9r ditional benefits and a four-ARA sv~~l.°' ""C•!I .I .. day work week. Arc~ oe~ t The minimum. a union X11~n~so ~-?,.' spokesman said, the USW ~·ill ~~osp1 ',-~ be seeking is what the United ~;:1 "l:'.1~80 Auto Worts got f_ro_m !~;'c~p1..~ General M rs Corp. 1n its Arvl~ I"'!! 1 '1a. .... ·eek str" e in the fall. The ::~:g 0~1~.a1fl Gltof settle l called for a ,;",!:," ~""f.20 . ....., So 1.2011 30 percent wage increase over ..... o Tran•o the next three years, plus ::~'71 1111, some very expensive benefits. ~i\~fvE~is:ai • One st.eel i n d us try !\\"~th~~f5 spokesman summed up 1971 :\\,.,,~~cho1"1.1o like this: "Booming business" ~I\:! 'c':.':: ' for the first· seven months: :~~"'~"',.·~ "the doldrams" thereafter. :~~.n~~~ The.hedge ·bu ying ap-:~~~c':'!, parently has begun. After an ,ovco oil 20 Avery PO .XI industry slump caused by the "v""' 1 .. c auto workers p;trike. :~~~r,.0;1i.fo orders have taken an upswing. Aitec: 011 .731 "ln the pa.st 212 v.·ecks B•IK•W .~ orders are up sharply," said ::~'0ci't" 1.~~ a spokesman for a msijor l::t ~1 :t~ Eastern .steel company. "And l:;:op Pu;1 th"'e aren•t counting what we Ilk oiceri1.:1-1 81nl< of HY l ex~t from the auto in-1:~~',Ji~ dustry." 8:;~ C~-~~ Jn line with I.he upturn, 1•1ic Pll.50 those mills ~·h ich laid off 11::: ..:"P• 1 . , l•th Ind .0 ... workers during the auto strlke 1•th1~ pn 50 ced I t •u.1-ehLb IO slump announ p an!I o ,., Lao .11 . It A SI l 8•vt c ;o .50 begin a reca . rmco ec 1•~ri'1' 1 in r..1iddletown, Ohio, said it l:kma~' 110 was going lo call back I 12 :;~f:f! ~~ laitl-0ff worker!I the wee.k after i:rgP•~,~~011 Christn1as and 342 more by e!i~~ .. 1 ~2o1> the ftrsl of the. year. l:l: 1~f.~Q;,60 Jones and Laughlin Steel 3!i.'d'.'. <1o~o Co<p said its companywide 8enc1;. DI> · . 11 ..... uc11 1 llO furlough rolls have remained 11 ..... 11 11u.1e1 • 8•"•11 "")(I constant al about 4,000 since B•nll 11111 }O b h 8t "'lu•! early October. ut I al Bonoufl 1~ ttb k l.~ b th 8er~ev P"o ca ac s are upec t:1.1 y e Re'" s11 1.10 first of the year. ll~c~hr6: e~0 ----------------------------lg11r._~J~~a ·:a Sanaple·ehtttier John ShiPl>Y a medical technlc1an. double checks performance' of Bn Autowell, macWne be.fore ship-- ment from lhe Picker Nuclear Plant In North Jl av· "en. Conn. The aulometic ssmple.chanjt'.er here is lowerin~ a le.st tube into the well In a scintillation detector where radioactivity is measured . • lloc.kHR. .3' lue 8ell I ?O tlobblt 8rk• Boeh-.p Co . .a 8oi•C1s .lSb Bond lro:I • 8110kM!ll 1.!I llonlen 1.20 llorvW•r 1.15 8orrN,,.. . ..n a .. eo1, 2.74 eos Ed Dl'l,11 ...... ~ lr.nt Air JO •19951 2.«I. an.1 M, l."10 llthtM., pf 2 arr1 Pel .Ot llr PH ,,,,ole "I"' .... pl, Gt .60 f~U~0 1.12 1-$11 .... _,., •-Sltoe 1.50 ·~·r: -" ~ ~T.10 i:;;;j o"'I ...oa,. ,, ·'° ,,.. .. "'1.11 =··""'~ ~, ,,.r::: 11r Hiii' .17o ~ NDr ol.U --~ Vrl"Oll• AO ,,., + •• U>o + I. 2tlo -,., --· JJ\oo .• loo -l o ll-1• --· » -" 11 + \1 7\• .... '• 11'9 -~~ 17\o + h 111'; ... \of ?I .. -l o lll't -'• ~l\• -\~ .,...,, + 1 .. ~-:-h ll11 -t-1•~ u•,.-'' 11\o -•t tl!a ••. ~ri; :: . ,.,,_4 11"0 ... '. ,., .. + •.• l214 - 1. ~ltt ='··' ~~V. :+P, '' -.. 2l'• + ,. '» + '• 51\lt .. n•.o -'• ~. -'• JR!, .... 1, 11\~ -h 6.5 +1\1 tJ'O -!'o 1~ +" lS\o -'• .s. _, •• 79"> -~. l:.': = '.! 19 •• • ~-··· "'' =1:{ ..... -·~ r. -'• ,,~ ;+. 'lo 50!~ .. 1911 -1, 1• -~. I''' ..... 11 -•\ J\'4 -~. " t •• JP) ~ Jf}!+,·· lPt -•• JH'I . 7':Ho ->1 "6\.t-!-> 1•'~ + '" "". !Oh + \• .o~• + '• 11\ll -Vo ,, -1 """-l'I• 1tr1 .; '• '" -Vo ~,~. + ~. 31 -i, !& -\lo 16 + \•• ,.,,, -+ •• "" -.... wt=~; llU,-1/o t \1 + l!a 1t .... I'> '"'"• -·~ 60\ii .... '"' 1611> •••• "~• 12\1> -loo " 4 '4 -+1 '° -., 1'4 -~. I I ' ' ' ' " ' .. ' ' 'PILOT ZO Monday's Closing Priees-f..omplete New York St6ck Exeliange List Complete. Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List .... .... (IMl1 I •• H1t11 LIW CltM Cl! .. .... .. 1114'·1 Mllfl LIW Ci.. C..'11 "In (Itch I Hllll Uw C .... Cllt. Street Gets Better Name PaUenU: at the Huntington Valley Convalescent Hospital will now be residing on the m o r e r o m a ntJc-aound1ng Florida.Street rather than the form,er Stang Lane. The Jhmtinllton Beach City Councll ordered the aarne changtd 1t lta ttetntJ,y alter r<eelv)nr a -from the h OS pit a I~ I adrnlnistntor. Robert Zlnnlll'abo, , ZIMlf&be "Id tlio •llorl street, nea'r ' the nv. Points area. wu formerly ICnown as '.Florida Street imUI a route chaftge left it known as Stang Lane. • "All ot ~ ~umi and oar bus! ... 1.,.,,. aUll hod u.; Florldi-Slroel address which crutecl a m a 1 a conf\lsloo for *>mt people," be uld. , The chant(t of ' n.me gOH Jnto effect lmmedlately. •• • " • I ' ' • .. . .. . . ,• : ' ... ;~ ~ .•. ........................ ''""'"'"1-~.,; :10 O,lll Y PILOT Mondry, J.nllll'J .t, 1"171 l JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRCLE' SPACE FOR YOU ••• ~ ~ ~ ~ c=;;-1 , If you sell a service and 'don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the ha rd way· The Service Directory (classifications 6500 -7000 in the cla,.ified ad section daily) g' v es you an advantage you get th rough no other adver- tising medium . It reaches customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn't !isled, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone r ig h I now and reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" ' Your Direct Line to Directory Results OWSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT • Classified INDEX Advertising · l.__-_'_ors111___,I~ I s.vkes•ndRepmrs I~ All ullder d111.it1C¥1-__ •• 1• (SIHClf'I' .,.. ,._ kiwi 0.-rtl la<• •• ., l•lbN c;,.,. ••l-........ . l11t1M ..... 1111~i. •• ., ltl•"41 .. .,, .... l1¥M>Oft1 ....... .. ., (tit ... ,..111 <•Oii• .... """' c .. r. "'-"' OtM Poi"' o. ... , lil'lorn ''" lllvff F•111111ht \ttlltY Gl ... fl\ GrtYt Htrtiw' Hl9tlla1do Hijlllllltf ... l .. Cll t4Ulllllltl ... H1..-r lrvl111 Tt<rt<• Lltlllll ••• , .. l19UNI HUI• Lil9UIM Hltllt! l ido Ille l l11d1 h!I Milw •l M•r Mtu Vlf'•• Mldw1r en-, M LsW. Vi.i. H9W!Mff ludl HtwPort Htl"'ta "-' lllorft $111 Ju•11 Cwl1lru,. $•1'1• ...... s ... ~ ""' 1Mi111t1 S""wt ltt cll IJ11IY1r11fY l".il"IC Wtll<tllf W01tm1111t1r Real Estate, [.8] General l-----' ,l(rMtt fw "11 ,,., .......... 151 A1>11'lmenii for ui. ............ 1s1 IUlhMH PrtPtrlt ... , .. •••••••, l" C.,,.tlt rT lt!J/Cn•1h ...... , .• ,IM c ... m1rci1I ""'''m ............ 1» Con<toml11h1rl't for Wit ,,,.,, .. 16t OUtlt Yfl/Unlh 1111 ••. ,, ,, ,.,,,\If Ho111n M M m ... .a " , , , •·. , , .. UI l11com• '°rOPH'f\r ,., ........ .,, 1" l"du1lr(ll ,.,.••rlY ............ , , .. u.11 tor l•I• •... .• .. •.••...•. u • Meb!lo Home/Troller Pt'111 ... 111 Mounl1ln, 0.Hrt. A111rt ..... 11• OrlnM C1. ""''"rt" .......... 11• 0..1 ol SU•I• ,.,_H'fl' ••· ..... Ill •tftCll H , 1'1..,,1, G""'ll ••••·· .. lM ..... f_·t!lll (•<~•"" .. ltt RMI £111!1 '1¥1Mt<I ... lt.4 All-loll l ffYkl .....,..11-.. ••Hk' a rim IVll-• St,...k1 ··-Ct l>IMt"1 ... 1"9 Coltrl""' c .. 11n1t Ctm,,,1, c_.-111 Cllll• C'IN CenlrldW Dr1n1o<1 Oroptrl" OrlYIWIYt •11<:1rfc tl ...... 11111 GltH H1u:1n1 H .. 1111 Club1 H ...... l .. nln t Jnum• Tao ·-·ltUI Jt nll'Ol1tl t..IMIKIPllll M'llol S..-..kt Mtlnttnt nct MtMllrY Mt¥lnt ,.,1n11111, Sltn "•!lot """'"•••"" ,.,.I S1Nlct a IMllllano.. .. _ ....... 1. R.0!1111 tl'Wllt9/All..-.tltrlt 5~1rp1t1ln1 n 11arln1 T1l .... lll0t! Ro1t lr Tllo T'"' Sell Tr11 StrYIC• Tulorl111 IJ•helll•.., Wln•tw CIHnlnt ..___Employ_ment~l [Il] Jt b W•nll,, Milo .............. 711 JM W1nt1•, 1'1....,l1 ,.,,,. ••.•. 71! J1'• W1nt..r. MI I" ......... ,.7~ H .. • Wont••· M a ,. ........... 711 .__I _. Finan_cial ___,J~ .__I _Mercha-ndis•~I~ A'lll1U1t .. .. ................ "' l111ln11t OPPOrl .... llY ,. ........ lit 8111IMH Wtnl.C '••••·· 1lt ln¥nlmtnl OoH•tun"r ........ no 1"""'"'""' W1ni.t • , .... , •••,. 1lt "'°" .... IO LOI ft ................. 1 .. ,,........ Wontod .. • ........ UI Mor'llllfft, Tr111t D~s •• , ••. UD I ,.-1 -Hous-es-forR-ent-,]~ H-• lwnlllllllll • ······-··" JOO H-""''""· , ......... lllK H-• t~m. or ""'turn. ...... llt C•nd•unlnlu••" furn. ... , ...... lll C1ndo'"lnlvM1 unl\lrn. , , , , . , . J'IO C1ndo. '"""· ...-gnlurn. . , , , . , :ns T-nhou .. IUtll. •·· lto ,.....,.l>OU•• un1urn, JU T....,~oute, hl'n. ar '"''"'"· , llO Du1l1•H l'u•n. • 10 Dli.lo•tl Uft!U,,.,, lit DUl>!t•••· furn. or unlurn. •• JU Apartments for Rent \ 9] Aots. fur'! .•. •• Ao!. 11n!urn. .. ••• "' A•t1., 111rn. t r "'"""'"· • lll l.___Ren•_-''' ~I~ ......... ·-· ................ -llHm I. lllfd .............. , .<MS M1t1l1, Mtlel1 ................ 41t G-f MOmt ............ 4\S lt.Wll""" 1111\ltlJ. • .. .••.•. ... .. GI Y'ilull•• ""'''" ................ •1s Rlllltll No S"-r• .............. UI G1~11n fw a ... t ............... 4l l Office "'"''' .................. , .. ......... It"'"' . " ............... , ....... lrlll ltlfllll .. .. .. ... . ... .,. llortM . ................. 4SI """'" Wonlet' ... Ml-111-111 Rf0!1111 ... • 41.1 A•Pll1nc11 .................. , , . 102 Aucuo" .................... IO• ......... '°' C1mfftt & e<1ul1m1n1 ........ IOI Fuml!Mr• ............. l !t 0•••9• ,,, ................... 112 Htu11hol• OllClt ••.•••••• , ••• , 116 M'clllntrY ..................... 11' Ml1c1111,...ut ............. 111 Mlwellt-u• W111tltd •. , ••.••.•. no M111lu l ln1lr11m111!1 ........... '11 Oltlc• 'ur11lt11rel •1ul1 •..••.•.. ti• 'l1nol./Or"lt fl1' . , ............. '" s.i.!111 ...... ~ .................... 12• 5"'11"• ....... •. . ..... -... l:ltl Slan. R11l11H'1nl, ••r .......... W l•I P1 ...... ". C• TV, lll tdlO, Ml't, l ttrte 13• Pets and Supplies [ ~I ..________, ''"' G1111r1I ................. Ml Cl tl ........................... 1151 00•• " ....................... Mot "'"'' ...... ... .. .. ........ .,. ~!~1tllll'-..... ' .... hi Boat• and [ • .>(' ] Marine Equipment tc. .....________, G1ntr1I , .. . _;.... . .••••.. Ht I H I>. M1lnl./l1rvlct , ........ l'OT 1o'l1t/Marl111 • ...,"'· .. , ......... - 8Nlt. ,._, ....... , ........ , ... •••"· .... ,1c""" ... ············- ... "' 1111 ...................... - .. 111, llllt•IDl<lit ............. tit •••'•· s....r • '" ........ ,, , 111 1 .. 11. u...... ... .,. t JT ,__An_n_o_un_c_•_m_•n_t_s ~I ['Ft~ I '~--Tr_•_n•_pcrl_•_t_io_n _ _,I ["' l ""-'"'-'' .. • ••••. JOt C1r1f .i T1'"""1.11~ M-rlll"' .,,.5 Lffl l NIJtlc.11 ................. 511 Personals I [ •I .....____, . AU" tT1-rt1tl9ol ............. PS ,_, ..................... ... 11 1tcr•1t ......................... tis Clln"rl' 51Tt/AtM , , , ......... tM C1c1.,. ll~n. 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UM .,. , ...... , •• . . . . . ., fM • DAILY PILOT WANT ADS General General * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * BEST THINGS IN LIFE ARE NOT FREE ~foney , . time .. and good taste created this beautiful 5 BR + pool in Corona de! Mar. VU of ocean & hills. You own land . $92,500. EXCELLENT FAMILY HOME! $73,500 5 BR + pool and forma l DR in Baycrest. Newly decorated & cptd. Ideal for lge fami- ly. Transferred o~·ner. Good fin ancing. ''Our 25th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills NEWPORT CENTER Road 644-4910 * * * General YOUR FIRST HOME? Then you are fortunate In. deed, for ...,.e have for you the "little honeymoon rot. tage'' in Corona de! r.tar. So many dream oJ and so few find. Plenty of room for expansion on rhi,, l!OUth..of· the highway R·2 lot ancl only 10';0 00\VN -NO 2nd T.O .• NO PRt:PAY1'1ENT PEN· ALTY AND NO LOAN FEE because the owner \\-i.U car. ry a 90';, loan. ONLY S.'16.fiOO Don't Delay Call Today 573.11550 ,o ·THEREAL \~ESTATERS '< r. ''• ' •I • * * * General • • MRS. H. V. COX 464 Hill Street Laguna Beach You are lhe "''innl'r ot 2 tickets to the Southern California Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show at 1he ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER * J anuary 2nd thru 101 h Please call fi.12·5678, ext. 314 bctwrrn 9 and 1 pm to claim your tickets. (North County to!J.!J'ce number is 540-1220) * * * 675-3000 '12 ·year s of Real Estate Scrvicf' In Th<' 1-farbor Arca OCEAN BLVD. Corona del ?tlar Duplex • 118 fr. front. • fabulous ocean viev.·~ 4 BR. 2 Ba. PLUS J. BR., l ha. apt, Both uni!s I~ General PAY YOURSELF $1 .000 The most outstanding valut on today·~ n1arket in a tux. ury 4 nearly 1900 i.-<J. fl.) ! bc.-droon1 hu1nr. Consider thcS(> featurl's: Jargr separ. au• family room with V."et h.'l1', I o rm a I dining, '2% barhs, !K'arly ne"' i;hag Cll!'· pet, heavy shake roof. PLUS a huge 40 x 62 weU land· scaped rear y11.rd with lot• of roncrete. And only 10% Clo"·n ro the new reduced price of $31,500. Ca.II 673·8550 \0 THE REAL ~ E~'.f {°''.fERS REDUCED $1300 NOW $21,700 \Vhal a i::-n·nt hargain. Add \•r ry Ji1tle rlown for a doubll" bargain. Spotll'lls 3 Bed- r1JOn1s, sparkling kopl>f'r ketlle kirchen. Large living roon1 wil h while brick fire. plllCI", Quif'l neighborhood. Large lree lined ground11. All types financing availabl~. Exr.cllent starter home. Bet· ter hurry, 645-0303 FOREST E. OLSON REALTORS 2299 HARBOR COSTA MESA 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Carpt>ts, ilrapes, patio, dble gar<ige. large fen ced yard 1r/ rooin for boa! & camper. etc. $24 ,750. f~astside, C.M. * Slceprr • 2 home,.: on • corner In 1 in Newport Heii::h1s. $29,7j(). Wells·McCardle , Rltrs, 1810 Newport Rlvd., C.r..t. 546-7729 EASTSIDE SLEEPER BUCCOLO BUILT -Three Bdnn. Two Balh home with BIN Kit ., Dinig a rea and large family Rm. with used brick fireplace. This ramb- ling red"·ood siding home "'ith heavy shake roof is ]o- rated in nne o! Costa Mesa's finest resirlential areas.near school!! and shopping. Frl'sh· ly pa1nred in & out • fully carpeted and draped. Con1· ple1ely fenced • well land· scaped yards. A MUsr SEE a• $28,000 "'1th FHA • VA TERl\IS. \\'ilh frplcs. 2 Car garages. '"""""""""""""""!!!!!!!!!!"" Prict> just reduced to ! MESA VERDE M. M. LA BOROE, Rlt•. 61&-0:lj;) Eves: 6464579 • 4 BEDROOM * 2 BATHS * FHA-VA TERMS Sa\'t Now! Fantastic Tl'rms! Assume lov,r ln!errst 5% % loan or buy FHA or VA. Irs an extremely wrn kept 4 bedraim. 2 bath hOmt> ln Cos!a Mesa. \l/alk !o aU schools and s hopping. $27,95() ~16.2313 \O 'THEREAL ~ESTATERS I ' • ' • DUPLEX iuo.ooo. POOL 'miiA\· ,\ llE.\fll' . 1tEA1:1·v 1~r. , 'EST 1 ~4'1 ~--61S_1oorU 2-407 E. Coast Hwy .• CdM "CATCH THE JOY" Ot Jiving 1n lovely Nl'wpor! Shorrs Treat yourself ro lhls co~fortahle 3 bedroom. Hett's a bt:-auly ·:\bedrooms, 2 haths and family room home with .a spa.rkJing ht>af. ed and tillered pool for fun living. Quiet nE"ighborhood \\ithin \\'alkini:t rlisl&nce to shopping. 1\1uch more to see fnr only i31,9~. Call now 5'16·2313. ~o·THEREAL ~ESTATERS 2 bath horn(' \\'\1 h new car. l -~--~~~-~~-·I pets and pain1 . Enjoy mem. L 0 r· s I 'HI'. • I • ' "'"hip in the comm""'"' ease p mn a e nnd !o!al use of alt of its facilities. trollnis L"Uur1, pool and clubhouse. You owe ii to yourse.Jf. Only $31 ,800, Call 646-7171 \D 'THEREAL '·~ E~'.f}\!E~S Sparkling J br, 2 story, fr!. ]c\'el v.•/formlll d ining, huge family & all bl!n~. $300 mo. or assun1e low interest loen w/minimum dov.·n, Ca 11 545-8424. ON BAYFRONT FIRST TIME \outh " {. oast P irr & f1oat, .i.·i u hold 40 f1 ADVERTISED . -. hnal. '.! BR. :.ha. up!J('r: 2 1 ,\ 1101'1E: THAT 01-'fERS \\I of C1ff1ce prest12e hom~, RR. 1'~ ha. J,,\\'l'r, Price· EVERYTillNG•~ •Custom 811.! IOI, fruu !!'C'rs. quiet S11)7,000. huilt • Cll't'tllar poo! • st. 3 & Dt'n. 2 ha, S2·l,~['(). Call: 673·3663 968·7015 E\'es ocean vlt'W • priva1C' bf'arh :1•~ l.oan Gl/F1TA OK SlOOl. associated IAOKEA~AEALTORS 2025 W lalboa 67l·J66J * prime loc;1tion. Call to I SN-. Pai;:e 1087 Yellow Pages. """ '""""' ~ uintard ~ ~ REALTY ___ ___ Coldwell Banker Sin<• 1946 DOVER SHORES 1 Downtown Cotta M1 .. BRAi'\D new • Q11al ity bl! lron1 courlyard pool, panrll· t'd l;in1 r n1: 11·e1 bat. frplc • ro sunken liv rm ""'va ultPd reiling_ 4 hr, 2 ha 1· pv.•dr room. f\1as1rr BR, liv mi. 1hn rm & ki1chen all on View, $108,900. Roy J . \\i'ard, RJtr. 646-1330. Open Daily. UNUSUALLY SHARP and certainly \\'ell pric ra 11.t only $11 .~. for this lotl'ly One·~IOI")'. 4 & family P~· s<'ltC'r. Many custom exttas. llurry! 5'6·SllCI ... cir-. .... • u~~~Y. 3 BR CONOOMINIUM Tn choice 11ectlon of 7'.fonllceL lo, to br completely red~· orated including new cal-· Jlf'I&. Priced below markel Act fast on thi~ one. $20,500 PERRON 642·1n1 REPOSSESSIONS Sparkling clf'an home1 !!Orne newly paintrrl Ir ca~ted. 2, 3, 4 & 5 bdrn1s. Some wifh pools. FHA·VA conv. tt:mlll, fmm S17.00o 10 $40,000. ~ H~!'110R 642-2991 833-0700 644-2430 12. Minutes to Beach Big h1•0 slory 5 bedrom & lamlly room plus pario play. roon1 . f\tovP..in rondirion. $3.1.500 ASK f'OR THERESA ALLEN Coles worthy & Co. Rrallor Ne\l'JJOrt Beach Office lO'l8 Bayside Dr. 675-4930 GRV $33,950. Sharpest Meadow Home in city. Fully carpeted & drap. f'd, 4 bedroom 3 b111h. 60xl20 lcnct'd 101, hellvy shake rool, big l:ree1, well landscaped, Wood burning firf'place, la.rg~ kitchen with all mod· tm bltn appli11ncts + big .. mily room, l"Ovtl"C'd patio, dble pra51:e. BAY SHORES-- BC'aut. Early Aml'r. <I Br .. 4 ba. Strp!!; to hcai.:h. THE HOME SHOW aosed Circud TV ror armchair hOUSC'hUnhni: m~• E. Coast Hwy., CdM 675·7225 All Expenses Paid By seller for Vtt!I;, No rlown payrnent , no cln~ing cos ls. ' r·flA buyers need only u1ulll f"l!A down and impound11. Builders n>PCl~f's~ions now \'11.cant, 3 & 4 be.dmi, Crµts, : drps, all extrnii. For dell.Us . call :.40-1151, Heritag~ Real· · lor.s. USTOM FOURPLEX . Ctmict' Nf'wport area, 3 BR : & 2 BR unitll. ldcal owner OCCTJpled & tax shl'ller prop. erty. $9.120 Inoome. $12,000 1 Down. S75.000, PERRON 642.1n1 · INCOME! 2 Fumlshf'd h1u:Mlor unlta , close to beach &: 1hopping, $Z'l.OOO George Williamson Realtor 673-4350 645-1564 EvH. BEACH SPECIAL Collln!! & \Vatta: lnc. 8843 Adam!> A\'e, 962-5523 e \\.'ES'T'CLlfF CONDO e 2 BR. :zi, ba. Clubhouu . Pool, Sauna. Owner/earn" , II or LtaN/ option 4 Bdrm1. 2 baths. Xlnt cond. 4 , R .• 2~~ ba .. trpk. 2 Car St~ps lo ~an. Only $33,9!:i0 git. 3 YNI . old. 2'20() Sq. Ft. · Terms. •·1 Cond. Vacant quick poa. CAYWOOD REAL TY • M! s. Call today! 6306 W. Coa~t Hw).f, NB E11iJ1t C.~I. :t OR. :z Ba . VA e Bill Haven, Rltr. 5'1-1290 nodo"·n. fllA $1650dnwn. 211~ E. Co11~1 Cd~t 673-321 1 '----------·I FORTIN CO. &12-.'iln! r ' i "l\fAKE Room 1'~or Dad. b rou ad In tlle classWl'd d y ' ' . . c I e 11 n out t.h, ANY Day is the BESf d11y to SElTION! Someone I a I g1.r1~ .• your trMh is CA~i run an 11.ii l Don 't w11lchlrl2' ror it. D I a I I with• Dally Pilot Outdlled . "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 df'l1ty .. rail today, 6-12-5673 6(:~5678 today! 11d. ~ ~~~~~~~~--~~~~-----~-~~--~- " • r . I I .. •· J Ul'I T•llpl'lell JOHN BAUGH !LONG HAIR ), WIFE National Guard Puts Him on Activ• Duty Wig Gets i1i Hair Of Military Brass BOl~E. ldaho (UPI) -Offers of legal advice and money poured in Sunday for a folksinging National Cu<i rds rnrtn v:hn \1·as ordered ta active duty because he wore a v:ig to drills. John Ha ugh, 2G, conlends he y,·ears the wig lo cover the shoulc/C'r·length hair he finds necessary for his singing c:1recr. He was first ordered to report f!Jr active duty tod ay, bul then kJ<iho Adjutant Jenera! George Bennett obtained a 10-day reprieve from Sixth Army headquarters in Sa~ Francisco to give Baugh "every chance ta present evi- dence ll1c1! inight have been o\•erlooked." Baugh has served in the Guard for 51h years and was scheduled for discharge Feb. 16. For the first year of his enlistment he wore a wig. The military fir st approved, then disapproved, then approved again and finally disapproved. The Army is to hold a hearing on whether guardsmen ran \\'ear wigs to drills and pass inspections. A decision then is to be made on whether Baugh gels discharge papers or orders to Ft. Lev:is, \'lash., for active du ty in the \\'estern Pacific. Dust Fed Explosion In Mine Filibuster on Filibusters Will Confront New Congress tVASHINGTON (UPI ) - Senate leaders. frustrated by a series of filibusters that crippled the body in the clos- ing days of the 91st Congress, are mapping a new assault ;igainst rules v.·hich a!JoY•ed th e slO\\'downs. The move ·will trigger a new fi libuster v.•hen the 9 2nd Congress convenes Jan. 21. At lrast sc\·cn effective 1 filibusters made a shambles flr the la1e goill.I! in the 9l st session. \1'hich en ded Satur- day. Reformers have an- nounced plans to reduce from two.thirds present and voting to three-fifths the number needed to choke off a filibuster. The attempt will be countered by the u s u a I filibuster by small-state con. servatives and southerners. Senate fili bustering during the recent session helped stall action on a number of im· portant proposals that again will come before the congress early in the 92nd session. Early action has been pro. n1ist"d by W i I bur ~t ills (0- Ark.), chairman o( Uie House Ways and Mean,, Committee, (In increases in Social Security benefits. The increases will be made retroactive to Jan. I. President Nixon's proposal for welfare reforms. whlch would include a $ t • 6 O O guaranteed income to every ramlly, al~ has been pro- mised early consideration. Other Important issues In the backlog or legislation In- clude a plan to revamp the Selective Service system to provide an all-volunleer Army, import quotas, and revenue sharing with the states. Meany Calls Nixon's 21id Year 'Big Zero' In addition, t he ad- ministration is working on a new health insurance recom· mendation. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, the Republican leader in the Senale. has said he would like the 92nd Con- gress "to be known as lhe "Health Rights Congress." V.11\SHl ~G'fON ! UPI) - AFL-CIO President George j'.'feany has assessed Presi dent Nixon's 1970 domestic record Rocky Tells Humpl1rey's VP Offer NEW YORK (UP I) -A spokesman for Gov. Nelson 1\. Rockefeller said Sunday Rockefeller turned down an (lffer to be vice president Hubert IL J.iumph rey's run- ning male in 1968. He gave no specific rea~n \l:hy the Republican govet'fiOr campaigned instead lor Presi· dent Nixon. According lo reports since 1968, the invitation w a s relayed b y f orme r Massachusetts Gov. Endicott Peabody. The questlon or whether Rockefeller might ever consider the v I c e presidency came up Sunday v1hen he appeared -0n NBC's •• r..1cet the Press." He shrug- ged off such an Interest saying, "I have had that IJ~ portunily ,on v a rl o u s oc- casions.'' The 11pokcsman confirmed that Rockefeller hod been Ask- ed 10 run a:t 11 DemocraUc candidate In 1968. "lt w1s not appropriate to tallr: about rt l,Ultil now, Il N!:Vtr ca.me up.'' tie 53id. • as a bigger zero than his first year in lhe White House. ~1eany. who once said Nix- on's 1969 record was "one big goose egg," said that "speaking in terms of domestic problems and the domestic sJblatlon generally, I'd say this is the second goose egg, only bigger." "The second year of thtl admini stration has been even worse than the first," uld Meany, saying he was res.tr le. ting his remarks to domestic is.sues. Meany made the comments during a UPI Washington Win. dow interview. The 76-year~Jd l•bor chief said the penlstence of hJgb prices and bigb fnterest· rates wilh rising unemployment Wll proof ot the Nixon Administration's failure. Cold Stymies Teton Cli1uh MOOSE, Wyo. I UPI) Paul Peboldt. 82, the "grand old man" of Wyomlng's 13,766- foot Grand Teton peak, led his team of climbers down the side of the snowswept mountain . today after falling ln another New Year's Day effort to reach U>e summiL Petzoldt, who beads the na- Uohal outdoor le ad er s bi p school, radiOed range.rs in Grand Teton N'aUonal Park Sunday lhlt utreinety Icy cond.JUonl and temperatures of 30 below zero had forced him lo give up the c:llmb. .' Boy, 5, Killed Trying To .Save Grandmother TACOMA, W11h. (UPI) ,... A ~year .. ld boy died tryJnc to save his 61-year--Old arandmother •fter a Christmas tree caught fire and namea swept their home. The grandinothtr, Mary O'Hara, died SUDday o( bums .!U£fered in the blue. When a strifll of Chrlstmu trff Ughta lhorted out Sat- urday nig'ht and Ignited the. tree, Michael T. Kolbu, 51 and hiJI father Lciln escaped lhe bhr1ze. But while the father was distrtcted for • moment, the boy 4a_,hed back Inside the bUrnin1 home and ran upstain to waken his sleeping grandmother. • He. wu trapped bf the flamtl and firemen found his body at the top o{ the stair•. ' Mondu, J11W111 4, im OAlLY PILOf 1ij Tax Men Goof _ Nixon Will ~old Queries Deluge Girl, 17 • TV Chat Tonight Art reproductions of original oil painting by Red Skelton ... -~, .~ Ill .. Available only at " ~ Imperial Savings now thru January 15th Some PY1.some Mtlltfft, ~ · comfmslonate-nd~ the min)' moods of "one (If America's lrltttlt dowrJa'f- these widely prai.sed Jri:lt&.,.. ftOw )Qlrl free thru speclll amnpmtnt ~ Imperial Slvinp. c.ocne In, set.ct your 16•JC20# frM Pffnt. Md lllrt lllVi"I where your funds .. m Amer1ca'S hl;tiast rettt on insured NVln&s. Your savinp eam Interest day in to dly out, ...S of course all funds placed bJ' tht loth ear'n from the 1st wfliWI .held...,_..-.- so vb~ YI"" -Imperil! SMnp off .. -· Ono print per hlml!y plteM, whll• llipply lasts. 5.25" ~",Ell[ 5.75" ~~\, 6.00" ~it:: ' •• _,_,. ................. :::i.:=::-, lmPERIAi. SAUlnGS • I • -~of ...,.... Coipil#iltloR., Mmb: Newport Balbo1 Savings' new name Ena4W OHk« 1316 VII UdO. "-'°'1 INth. 61!-3130 Maln~tlt SolJO LIMA......_hudlNI, 795-MAI ODreM dll Mer°""* 580 Mltllport c.r,., DrM. Newpoft &each. 644-1461 3870 Ult fooOlll loutMrd,,,......, 1"-0447 tJ4 NDtttl ~,..._, 0....., SJS-4043 Woodlencl HUia .Oltim: 1l900. v.-.. ad.. WoodMnd HUI&, Calil 346-U20 artd Loan ~lation of Nw!port-?a:sadiM• - ' \ • I I I ' ' D A.AY PILOT EDITORIAL P A.GE. County Problems • Ill '71 While cities along the Orange Coast art wrestling with civic problems carried over from 1970. and con· tending \\'ilh new ones 1971 \vill bring, county govern· · ment will have its own set of concerns. · Many of them a re pocketbook items directly af· feeling all county taxpayers. including : -Budget. State and federal funds ror mandated. pro~rams such as \Velfare and mental health have been .slashed. Add lo this increasing costs due lo gro"•th and inflation and the Board of Supervisors are up against the moment of truth. Orange County's proud stat.us as the county \\'ilh the 1owest tax rate atnong all major California counties may not last lonj(. A tax increase. the sol ution least desired, appears to be an inevitable answer. -Airports. The problem that simply v.•on't go av.•ay. much as county government would like it to do so. is "'hat lo do about airport service in the air age. Orange County Airport can't grow. Residents nearby demand an end lo jet noise. damages, new ·member! of 1!fe Board ·i>f Supervlsor.s will try to dump the land exchange. They will be joined by Superviso: Robert Battin. It's safe to predict this dispute, already hoary with 8.ge, will be a legal ' sn8rl for years to come. -Orange County Medical Center. County govern- ment . has found this to be an increasingly expensive load to carry. One wi shful suggestion is to turn it over to the University of Cali!omi8 at Irvine. if the ~iver­ sity will accept it. But the university's budget is in v>'orse shape than the county's. Combine these and other county problems with the presence of two new members on the Board of ,Super- vistors and it's a good bet that 1971 news generated out of the halls of county government will ha ve a .'(real- er than usual impact on Orange Coast residents in 1971. P ity the Football Wido \v A bowl can mean a hemispherical vessel for hold· ing liquids. Or som·ething to drink out of. Or a weighted ball for lawn bowling. Or a round ball for llJilln bowl· ing. ~ . · Large sums have been spent studyin_g potential new airport sites. Now generally accepted is the conclusion that the county simply has no land available which would serve as a suitable regional airport location Limited joint military--civilian use of the Marine airport at El Toro and Camp Pendleton as the future site of a regional airport are again in the forefront. The major Political decisions required to bring this about make 1971 shape up as another year of much activity and little progress in airport matters. ·For many a harassed Qltisewife. however. a bowl is just one thing -a post season football game, a house· , hold distraction that keeps her widowed in her own f · Jiving TOOn1. on weekends from Nove1nber aln1ost \ through January, Unless. or course. she's in that m inor- ( -.lY among women, a football nut herself. -Irvine Ranch and Proposed City of Irvin~.-Goun .Y <lfficials Rrc no"' thinking about slov.1ing the growth originally planned. Because of its cenlraJ location and siz.e, and long.range impact. the city of Irvine project wiJI require the major share of county planning talent and attention in 1971. -Upper Newport Bay. Despite threatened suits for As though New Years· Day bowl s \11eren't enough, yet to come a.re the Pro Bowl, Lhe Super Bowl, the Senior Bowl and the Hula Bowl. So maybe the ladies deserve a bit of understanding if they're heard to grumble this Monday after the pigskin orgy, "Happy New Year? -what's new about it?" Senate Do-v es D e lay War Settlement S hould B e ' Fall for Propaganda Ploy \ WASHINGTON -The joys of the .. . ~, Wilsdn Christmas season were not enhanced.._ ' \._ by Hanoi's release thr?ugh two anti·w~r ~icJiard senators of the previou sly known hst _\ .. _,,I of U.S. prisoners held in North Vietnam. ~ -·· There was nothing new in the !isl. The names were pre11iously knov.·n through official and unofficial channels. Relatives or nearl;.- aU of the men had received letter s from them. Yet Sen. Edward Jl.f. Kennedy sent his personaJ lawyer to Paris to receive the list and hastened to a. be first to cal( a news confa-ence to an- nounce his great coup, thus beating Sen. J. William Fulbright to the draw. The 011ertones of this contcmptib!e in· cident playing upon lhe hopes of the families of men sti.11 missing and unac· counted for by Hanoi are ob11ious enough. HANOI WAS USING two oul.slanding opponents of the war in a Christmas :<:easoo propaganda gimmick which Secretary of State Rogers denounced as "a maneuver calculated to divert attention from the failure to comply with international law and the elements or human decency." Rogers, undoubtedly in the forgiving spirit or the season. said the :iienators probably acted in a manner they believed would scr11e the national interest. Others are no t so charitable. There were other ways thJ:o; matter could ha11e been bandied so that the senator11 could ha11e avoided appearing undressed in public. They could have acted through the President of the United Slates instead of thtmselves dealing with the enemy, JN ANY OTHER WAR this would have been regarded not only as natural but imperative in a mailer so closely related to a peace settlement or cease- fire. Or, short of that, the senators, ha 11ing recei11e<I the list. could ha ve bttn at least as diligent in stnding I.heir emis- saries directly to the President with the list as lhey were in sending them to Paris to get iL So, the President ""'ould be enlitled to conclude that his ad11ersaries in the Senate wished to get the betler or him and demonstrate that they, not he, could carry on ~uccessful transactions with the enemy in Hanoi. That. might v:c,y well have been the effect had it ilot been for the fact that the list of the missing was already well koown to th ose most vitally con- cerned. Nov.· all that has been demonstrated is that Hanoi will give an "official" list to anti-v.·ar senators. but ·will nc:it do so to the go11ernment of the United States. THE SAME A TTITUDF.S are e11ident In this case as those wtiich ha11e motivated so ·many other individual!! without authorJty. ln what must be one of the strongest circumstances in all the annals of v.•arfare there has been a constan t parade of Americans to the capital of the enemy -journalists. students, religionists. educators. Many of them, except for some of the Journalists, ha11e sought to circum11ent, i£ not to undermine, the policy of the Un ited St.ates. Hanoi has received the innocents and used them for its own purpooes, sending them back with various 11ersions of American brutality and venality. The delusion of a settlement with Hanoi through the offices of well-meaning citir.ens and 011er the head of tile Pres1· dent of the United States has persisted for years. President Johnson had to li ve with it constantly. The experience of Senators Kennedy and Fulbright would suggest there is little to be gained but embarrassment lrom such singl!Hlanded efforlll to con- duct foreign aff1!1irs. ·• The further lesson or this regrettable incident is that so long as Hanoi belie11es Jt can e:w:ploit the American war op- ponents, just so long will it delay a aett.lement Police and Citizen Action On today'1 horizon figures f lgn to an orderly society rush 1... loca l and na.Uonal scenes spreading , in· dignation and concern. Becau&~· 1 • their lawlessness there is utter disregard for the welfare of people interested in p~ viding constructive measures in their community. Poli ce risk their Uves whenever a melee bqins. 'Miey must have citizen support ff they are to effectively bring Jaw and order Into control. Working with law en"forcemcnt agencif!! via cilizen action is one method or insuring the safety of our .&lreets, the return~f. calm to campus and to some extent, t<J'Orldge the 1eneralion gap. IN OllANGE COUNTY'S "Cop On Campus" program a police officer dreM- ed In casual attire, reports to school at 7:30 each moming . lie talks to !iludent.s In classrooms and on campus, explaining the many problems they need clarified. Opportunity to become famil iar with duties of an officer on patrol is a new --WI- Monday, January 4, 1971 The cdUorfat page of tht DaU11 Pilat ,.,q to inform and 1ti~ ulok .,._.,,., bV prtHfttfnO thil netoipaptT'1 opmlonl end co~ menta'I °" topb of illt'1"e1t ond llgnj/i<:anu, bv providing a forum fo,. th• tzprts.rion of ou,. readef'1' opinio1L,, a11d b11 pre1entfna the dli•erse v1c-w- pofnt1 of inform~d obscrvtf"I ond ipokt1mtn on topics of tM r1av. Robert N. Weed, PubUsber .. ·. Gues t' epQ~ ' .. ;-,\ -fl" . '"· -lJ.;.· . . -•. t development in Orange County's ••Ride Along Program." Students, teachers and ir1tere.sted cilllens ire included in a regular patrol schedule. riding along to view first hand the e11enta taking place in their own commimtty. As a result of being on patrol with an ofrl~r, adults and teenagers deve_lop increased ap- prec_iatkm for the total poli~ deparl· ment. A PART Of THE Uniform Division tn operation since July I is Costa Mesa·s helicopter program, Emergency Action and Ground Law Enforcement (EAGLE\. The new police operation functions much the same as lhe cars on the ground. Under the supervision of Capt. Robert Moody, commander of the Unifonn Division. the 'birds' are used for patrol reconnaissance. If activities on the ground need closer scrutiny, black and while cars are radioed lo examine the situalio•. The two helicopters are also used for emergency measures, such a~ transporlina a .seriously JJI individual lO the hospital. POUCE DEPARTitENTS from ~ven Orange County cities have joined J1w enforceme.nt agencies from 21 olhe.r California counties in 1n informaUon program aul<d and pnopared by the Los Angdes County D~trlct Attorney. Known ar "Le1al lnfOrmaUon for Law Enforcement," the progr1ms m11 be :qeen on either closed·circuil te:levl1ion, film or tape. Subscribing agencies frpm Orange County are the p o I I c e departments in Costa Me.sa. Oau·df!n Grove . Hunllngton Beach. Fullerton. ~n Clemente, Ornnge and Newport Beach . Purpo.~e of the. programs Is 10 ncqualnt la"' t.nforctmenl agencies with b>urt dcc,l!tons and bo1' they affect Police "'ork. Typical program titles arc "Stop and Frisk • Detention," ··Search and Seizure," ''Search Incipient to Arrest."' "Lineups," "Implied Consent and the lntoxictttcd Driver,'' and ''Criminal Prosecution· of the Intoxicated Driver.'' Jnitial financing has been pro11ided by Sears, Roebuck Foundation, Helms Poun· dation and Los Angeles County Peace Officcr;s AlSOCiation. IN, THE FORMATIVE stages is a plan to rttruit youths in lhe Law E~~reement E:cplorer ' program. Capt. Wilham Savage of lhe Costa r.1esa Police Department heads the new project. . Private cilizeru; can help fighl crime 1n other programs lo aid a troubled society today . Warring on poverty, in- adequate housing and unemp loyment is slriki~g against crime. A civi l rights law 1s a law against crime. J\loncy for _schools Is money against crime. J\led1cal. psychiatric and famil y.counsel· · ing services are measures .agaiilst crime. Every effort to improve life in our community is an effort against crime. fllrs. Thornu &eckwlth Dear Gloo111v •. Gus: The majority l&n't &llent; it Memr the 1ovemmenl ls llard of hearing. -S.S. T. . Tilh ... -..,.. rffl«" """""' .,.__.., ,,.. --rllJ flllM 9f tlle ....,,,Hr. , .... ,. "' ...... 19 '""'"' Otn. Ololtr ~llsl. No Monopol y In Politics J\1y dinner partner a fe\11 wetks ago asked me what I thought of \he unprecedented election of a ••third party" senator in New York State, where James Buckley, If' the Conservalivt! Pa.rt y candidate, beat both regulars. , J replied thal it was a healthy thing, e11en though r dJs. . a&-fee wi.lh abou( 00 percent of ""'hat Sen. B.w:kley stands for ; and that it was high time the conserva- tives in New York began to get some repr~sent11lion . This considerable group had bec.n frus- lrated for n1ore than 20 years. as the stale conllnua!ly voted ''Jiberr;i ls" into national offices. And 40 J>l'rcent of the voters -which is what Buckley got -e11en though not a ma}or· ity is sti ll an awful Jot of people. They needed a 11oice. POLITICS Rt;COi\fES too 'polariU'd'' lo use I.he Fashionable word. when a majority controls an Breit orer a long period, and the minority ha s no l~gil i~ate n11~lel For its h;ustrati~ns. Thi" :;1tuat1on bnngs out the pohtirs of e1ttremisn1. and many vo ters turned •·conservative·· in Ne w York simply because the y felt there was litt le choice between the two established poht1cal p;irties. Whal ls needed, it seems 1.n me. is a system of ''1)roport1onal represen1at1on.·· so that a senator who may gc'l fn 1\·1th nnly 51 percent of the vote> doe<>n·1 have the power wholly to obliterate lhe 11·ishes of 49 percent. -.. UNDER SUCR A. systen1, a 11r nalor's 11ote in C-Ongress might be "\Or·e1ghtc<I" in aa..-ordance with the percentage or his victory. For instance, Henry Jackson of the state of Washington , \\.'ho v.·on last monl.h with 84 percent of the \"Ole, ce.rtainly represents all lhe people of Washington more. adequately t he n Buckley. who represents only a mtnorily in hi~ state. 'Mte voting po"·er of a repre~entali\"C oog.hl lo be directly prQporlional to !he percen t.age of people wbo voted for or against him . A candWate who squeaks in by a few hundred votes obviously should not have the same voting influence as<ine who ls a massi11e victor in hts district. When he does, the attitudes and interest.s of n lerge number or his ronstituenls is being ignored or nouted. PROPORTTONAI. representation v.·hich 11 not hard lo v.·ork out technically -would be fairer to the dcmocr,atl: concept, but would a)SQ act as a 6QCial and psychological brake on disaffec1ed minorities. who ,,,.ould ha11e some say in 1¥ le5islatlve process, rather than f~ling' totally ,hut.. out· 11 long as they remain a numeri cal minority in their area. The full spectrwn ot political belief~ needs to be renected in our legislative bodie$, so that even the smallest group might have 1 platform for its pollcie1. Monopoly In government is no less dlstuleful thin monopoly 1nywbere else. Quotes fllrs . Gary Samut.11, ranorama Cily - "My life 11..' a \1.'om11n i~ a fulfilling rolt . The curTcnt breakdo\11n of the! role of a 't·om11n can only bring the breakdown of !Oclely.'' -----·------·-·---------- · GoiJv/ o~r our Chri811Ma bill8. Aristocrats in The Worst Sense .A small minor1ty of students Jn a small minority of colleges and un i11ersities (JOO f'lUt of 2.500 in the U.S.) created almost all of the much· publicized campus crisis of the past few years. However, tis Norman P o d h Qr e 1 z observes in the Dece1nber issue of ··Com· ment.ary," the Re· pert or the Presi· dent's O:Mnmission on Campus Unrest ha.• unfor;tun.ately · gi11m ·the dissident .student cu lture ··a kind of diplomatic re c.ognition'' by treating it as co- equal with the cuJ. ture of the ''elders" by which i:s meant the middle-class cultures lo which both non·sludents and a vast ma· jority of student s st ill subscribe. Accorcling to the report. the "crisis of understanding" which has led to a ''crisis of violence" is that which dh·ides the. counler-culh1re wiMi its idealism and humane aspirations. from the mid· dteclass culture, which with its '·materialism and ~mpetition," has lost its "sense or human purpose ." That's how. in the Commission·s report. the deck is slacked . Moral insight and human concern are apparently all on the side of the dissident. PODHORETZ Al.SO remarked that the counter--culture·s criticism of middle. class culture is expressed •·i n \t'rms that are rirenched in arroga nt contempt for the lives of millions of people. the \'ast majori!y of v.·hom ;ire. cnnsiderahly less affl uent and less pr1v11egf'd .. Jhan the typica l counter-culture loyalists.'' He asked , "Is it humane or idealis1Jc to identify ont''s 5elf v.•1th all moral virtue and dismiss everyone else as beneath moral consideration? I would have th ought that epilAph.~ like in· sensitive. incurious. unimaginative and sm ug would be somewhat more precise." To Mr. Podhoretz· list of adjecti11es de scribing the counter-a1Jture mentality, 11 occurs lo me to add another: •·Aristocratic." I do not mean aristocratic In the -best sense. but in the worst -what the founde:rs of the United States had in mind when they decided they v.•ould have no aristocracy in their newJy.foWld- ed natioo. BORN TO SPECIAL privilege and in·\ herited wealth. aristocracies ha11e been, .... ·ilh a few notable exception s, arrogt1nt, Jazy and given to lives of pleasure--seek~ ing and selr·indutgence. They were con- temptuous of laborers. clerks, merchants -anyone who worked for a livlng. Aristocracies also delighted in shocking the peasantry and the mJddle-<:lau by .!ICandalous behavior, obscene langUAge, and outrageous dress and manners, which they regarded as btyond criticism ' . • Ha yakawa -. exce pt by themselves since-lower orders ,\·ere by de rinition not entitled to criticize their betters. What happened is that somehow or other. despite our hopes for a democratic society , we have unwittingly nurtured in our colleges something very much Hke an old "'orld aristocrary-principally children of executi11e and professional class families who. because of !he eco- non1ic and educational privileges, ha ve an inside track for admission to Harvard, Swarthmore, Berkeley, SI an ford , Brandeis. Columbia -and who, once there, have done their best In make a shambles or these grea t institutions. r LET ME EMPHASIZE that I'm speak· Ing only of a minority of students in these and other troubled universities, but they .;ire lhc ones v.·hn. like all aristocracies. attract a dispropor tionate amount rif attention and admiration. If you have 1vnnde rcd why most college ·!roub les seem to come from the liberal arts and social science dcpartmcnls, r atn forred to reply, although I am 11 liberal arts and socia l science man myself. !hat these arc suhjrcl~ most often chosen by those least concerned about the ir economic future. These disci plines are the cornerstones of civili· r.a1ion. but l cannot help ollserving !h;i t they se rvc also as reruges for the academi call~· un -motivatcd and ind11lenl. Contemptuous of the useful arts and sciences. the Ill'"' ar1stoc r:its rr1ect technology and co n1n1rrce. \\'hich •he y blan1e for "'dehu n1an17.ing·· humanity. Th is sentiment is understandable if 1Jne remembers that to an aristocrat ::ill work is ungentlemanly and !heref"!re ''dehumanizing.·· lN THErR COJ\'TEMPT for the ideas of others. they seek confrontation. backed llp by I.he threal of force, rather than debate. Gi11en to self·indulgence and eair;il y bored. they are quick to take up drugs, sexua l freedom-or revolution. Anyth ing for a ncv.• thrill. Jn their scorn for the ordinary cil 1r.e n anG the business community. lhf'y create these terrible rifl$ between Town and Gov.'ll such as came to a tragic climax at Kent State. Of course our troubled society needs men and women of superior abilllies and attainments. But how can our uni11ersities avo id producing instead a. class of sclr·indulgent, anli-democratic, arrogant princelings? The problems posed here are nol mere- ly those of education. They arc problems fundamental to the continu ed develop- ment of a democratic society. By S. l. Hayakawa Prt1ldent San Francisco Slate Colle1e I By Ge o rge --------, Dear George : I didn"l dance good. My glrl sa.id lt'arn. Another girl wa1 teaching me. Jfer boy friend threatened me. My girl tried to de.fend me. Her husband hit the: other girl's boy friend . My problem Is thil'i: The other girl keeps lrylng to lead v.•hcn we're danc1ni, Whtlt ls the btst thing to do? WJL.LIE J\1. Dear Willie M.: Just dance l~ dances where " the partners never get close. \Vitb yow-Hie style, all you need lo know about leading l.iJ never lead with )'OU'r right and kttp your Jell up. YOW' bonus answer: Keep smil· Ing, and perhaps learn 1 h e harmonica -populerlly will come you r way ! (PC!l !l lmls li c about. how everything in life is iOing to lurn out ? Write to George, and set bow rar THAT geta you.J \ • ··s basi walk says epid koow clOf'C' wr ite genll worn see HAL given be ()[ nex1 ind ic B unall and ::in e New unau lo kn she c All 7.eal;i ly th <~oo ffustr· in a to se l f he tna!c. i:l evot lo h horse <I t " girts. you lhe r;tanc from Ze;ila cu. "D his .... Fl G Accoufl f'ORAJI ()f Chap Cod• CALIFO • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I • ,. • • I • ••• ••• f'AJtfff,'t' CIRCVS b11 Bii Keane ••• ·-...... ,, ..•. ............ -..... ''S top it , PJ , or I'll give you o good tickling." • CHECKING •UP• Abe's 1st Pl1oto"' Take11 at Age 3 7 DO ''OU SUFFER from basinphobicf·! 111at's fear or walking. Our Language man says the ailment. now epidemic. originated in Detroit .•. '·DO N'T 'l'OU REALLY linow \\'hy a Y:on1an always C'loscs he.r eyes during a kiss'!" writes a Lewiston, Id a , , gent!ernan. "It's because a wo1nan just can't stand to see a man have any fun ." . . APPROXIMATELY llALF the new salesmen any ~iven firnt hires this y~ar y,•i!I be orf sai d firm's payroll by next year. Or so the statistics indicate. BF..ST Pl.ACE now for an unattached woman between 30 and 60 years of age to rind <in eligible man. it's said, is Ne\I: Zealand. No doubt said unattached woman will want to kn<1W what kind of citizen she can expect to find there. All rig ht. the typical New Zeal;ind fellow is tall and fair· ly thin. 1 !e's quit•t, a Gary Cooper type. and pretty in· dustrious. What he likes n1ns! in a !advfricnd is the ability lo se\v, ~'Oak and keep house. Tr he finds such a n1a1ri111nni;1I n1ate, he tends lo be a high)v devoted hushand. nnl inclined tn horse around n1uch. By hnrsr. around. I 1nc;1n y,•ink :it y,•aitrcss~s. pat grocery ,::iris. flirt 11'1lh sa lesladies. you knn1v, the sort of thing !he Los Angeles man, for in· siance. so enjoys. Plane rarc from lh~ Co;isl to Ne1\' Zealand. madarn. runs S.J!l2 CUSTO,·IER SEHVlfE -Q. ''Docs President N1xQ11 darkrn his hair~" 1\ llC' !'.il }'S no • • • Q. "Arc there ;i ny photographs of Abe Lincoln as a young man?" A. First picture of him was taken when he IY3S 37. A CAB DRIVER of long ex- perience says the average man needs about a half minute lo pay his fare and get out of the taxi while Ule averagewo- n1an takes about two minutes to do likewise ... "ODO BUT TRUE," claims a Virginia girl who says she has wo rked in a checkroom for six years, "is the (act that when donning their coats. most '"'omen put the right arm into the sleeve first while most men put the left arm in first." IF YOU WERE BORI' between 1910 ~ lMOc. you showed up wbft a different sort of death was going on. In those 30 years, the bo<lies of approximately 50 men a week, average, were found near railroad tracks. Killed in jumps off and onto freight cars. Or clubbed down by guards. Or knifed by the original hiiackers. Clearr-up crc\vS listc1l these dead men · hy numb~r. not by name. And little publication was made or ii al!. Nol until years later did the researchers find the fa cts in old casualty files. HE'S J UST no t a topnotch bartender if he can't mix at ]earlt 26 drinks from memory. Your qtteltlom and com· 111r11 fs are tvelcomed and 1v1/I be used in CHECKING f lP itherever possible. Ad· rfress letters to L. li1 . Boyd. P.O. Bo.t 1875. Newport Beach., Calif., 92660. ·....-v-....-v •v •v • FIRESIDE ACCOUNTS GUARANTEED 10 s10,000.00 Accoun ts proltcled illl lo a maximllm of $10.000.00 by THRlfT GUARANTY COR· 'PORATION or Calilornia onlr, as provided in ll'le Calilornia Financial Code: A c~y C>f Chapter 8 iGuaranly Thrrtt Accovnts! of Division 7 ol the California f1nanc1al Code may be obtained upon request. THRIFT GUARANTY CORPORATION Of CALIFORNIA IS NOT AN INSTRUMENTAL ITY Of lHE STAlE OF CALIFORNIA. • N1tlonwld1• wlllll Cotton lllllllln. 133 count* 63X108", 72x108" ~~:.i1~~".:'..~~.:::.... .................................. NOW 143 Full 81x108" flit or full titted bottom. Reg. 2.29 ....... __ ,, ........................ -.... .MOW 1.11 Pillow case142x38". Pleg. 2 tor 1.09 ................... NOW 2 tor lie •e1e1ched and finished. Plncall"' white percale Combed cotton. 118 count* Twin 72"x108" flat or twin fitted bottom. 183 Reg. 2.39 .............. ------·-.NOW Fu11 e1x1or· flat« full Uttod t>ottom, AOg. 2.69.-·------2.1S Pillow~ 42>c38'' rwg. 2 f0t 1 39 .NOW Z for 1.- •e1NChed ilnd ArNshtd Penn-Preet• wllllll muaUn 50% cotton/50% po!ynter Twin 72x1CM." flat or ~.;. 1~~s"::.~~:~ .. ----···················-NOW 177 Full 81x104" flit or full fitted bottom. ~g. 2.99 .... .._ ........ -............ --NOW 2.37 PiUow cues 42x3e". Reg. 2 tor 1.69~ ...... ~ ......... NOW 2 for 1.37 P1nn-Pre1t• white perc•I• 50% cotton/50% poly81t1r Twin 72x104 .. flat or :;. f~tt~.'.'.°.~:~: ............................................. NOW 237 Full 81x104" flat or full fitted bottom. Reg. 3.99-.. -... --···-·-NOW J.'7 Twin fitted top. Reg. 3.59-...... -... ,., ... _..,_ .. NOW 2.17 Full fitted top Reg. 4.!59 ... -... -··-·-.. -·-·---·-NOW a.11 Pillow cases, 42x36". Reg. 2 for 2.09-NOW 2 far 1.17 Oueen pillow c--. 42MO''. Reg. 2 fir S.Ol-INOW I fw 2M King pillow ca-. 42x4S"'. Rog. 2 fOr 3.39.--1lw2.71 Queen flat Of CIUMll . ·-bottom. f'lilg. ... ' . -.... King flat or Wedltft king fitlod bottom. Reg .... , _________ 1 ... Penn·Pr11t• mueln In Flor81 prtnla 50% cotton/50% po!ylltlr Twin 72x104" flat or ~:;. ~11;, -~-~'.'.~.~:·····-····--·-··· .. ··-·-2 1or *5 Full 81x104" flat or I full fitted bottom. Reg. 3.99-........... -NOW 2 tor 17 Pillow cues. 42x38". Aeg. 2 for 2.49.--·· .. --. NOW 2 for 1Z Penn-Prell'" muaan f•ahlon colora or ltrlpea 50% cotton/50% poly11ter Twin 72x104" flat or ~:i~. f~~9-:.~.~~~.~:.._ .. _ ........ _, ___ , 2 for s5 Full 81x104" flat or " · tuU fitted bottom. Reg. 3.99 ........ --.. --NOW 2for17 Pillow caset. '42x36". Reg. 2 for 2.49 .. --.-NOW 2 for IZ 2'°'3ss· Speclal buy! Polyester flHed bed pillows. Cotton ticking. 2 !or e.oo• Vehlet POlyestet fWI sunoundla.,.... ...... to.fteote. 2for8.0Cf &oft.~ Dlaaft9 pot;•• ,. ..... lfc....,lllo .... ... ..._, 1'U11t. 2for12.00' ......... Toueh plllowa.loft, mdulllortiml......,. DlaNn9 pofJ1•1rwttllloallGCft. • Ouewilia.---· .. -· ...... Siandanl 29P8.. ""'9-·------··•uo- J ' 13.00 nch. Tlloul-ln""""' ...... __ _ Ill I ......... OOllDft dll:rpooof tlotdng. "'4onday, January 4, 1'171 Penn-Prial~ percale faahlon color 50% cotton/50% polyeater 72x1o-4" ~:~~~·:!.~'..'.~~~.'.~~~.~~~=~·-···-.. ···HOW 357 81xt04" flat s heet or twin tilted bottom. Reg .... 99 .... " ..................................................... _...-, ... NOW 4.51 Oueen flat or Queen fitted bottom. Reg. 7.99 .. : ......... NOW 1.11 King flat or We~tern King titted bouom. Reg . 9.99 ... , ............... _.~ ..... _ .......................... NOW 1.41 Pillow cases. 42x36". Reg. 2 for 3.09 ... " ........... .NOW 2 for 2.77 Queen pillow cases. 42xAO". Reg. 2 for 3.59 .... NOW 2 for 2.10 King pillow cases. '42x46". Reg. 2 tor 3.89 ........ NOW 2 for I.DI Penn-Preat~ percale mulll·floral or atripea 50% cotton/50% polyester Twin 72x104'' flat or :1.;. ~tt:..~~~:· .. -.................. ,. .. -............ NOW 411. Full 81x104'" flat or full fitted bOttom. Reg. 5.99.-......... -................ .__ .. NOW lli.11 Pillow cues. 42x35". Reg. 2 for 3.59 ..... , .. ,_, .. ,.NOW 2 tor 3..11 -Penn-Preat" Percale Companlonette 50% cotton/50% polyeater Twin 72x104 .. flat or :;. ~t~9~ .. b.°.~~-~: ........................................... NOW 41 a Full 8tx104" flat or full fitted bottom. Reg. 5.99.H ............ _ ............ N ...... NOW 5.11 Queen tl1f.or Queen fitted bottom. Reg. 8.49 ............ NOW 7.22 King fl•l or Western King fitted bottom. Reg. 10.99 ............ ,_._.,, ........................ NOW t .'4 Pillow cates. 42x36". Reg. 2 for 3.59 ................ .HOW 2 tor 3.11 King pillow cases. 42146". Reg. 2 for 3.99 ....... .NOW 2 tor S.SI • Value. It still means something at Penneys. I -t DAI LY l'llOT 7 • ' -· ,. .. ' l [. I . I i •I J 1 j •• ( I l -I • f DAllY PILOT Mond1y, January •. 1971 Democrats Regroup Mo ,ve to Take Po ,iver iii Legislature SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Den1ocra ls moved today as lhe Legislature organized for il! 1971 session to retake the power stripped from them by Republicans two years ago. Assemb1.vman Bob Moretti of Van ~uys was a virtual shoo-in for Assembly speaker while Sen. James R. Mills or San Diego carried the sup- port of most of his Democratic rol leagues for election u Senate leader. Bo t h hoUSes conveoed at noon lo elect off icers. De mocrats outnumb e r Republicans in the Assembly 43-37 and in the Senate 21-19. For the past tv10 sessions, the GOP held bare numeric;al. control of the Legislature. Mills, a Scholarly appearing "young Turk," was selecled by Senate Democrats Sunday lo replace Republican Sen. .J ack Schrade as president pro tern of the Senate. Schrade Is a member of the so-called "Old Guard'' power structure of the Senate. r-.1orelti: like Mills a protege of former assembl yman Jess Unruh, '>''as nominated to suc- ceed Republican Robert T. * * * Democrats Warned on Revamping SACRAMENTO (AP) -The vice chairman or th e Republican State C e n t r a l Committee warned today that an y attempt at "Democratic gerrymandering'' in 1971 rea~ portionment bills will be kill- ed. Putnam Livermore, who is expected to become state GOP chairman late this month, said: "If the Democrats use their narrow majorities C21-19 in the state Senate and 43-37 in the Assembly) to create unfair self serving di strict!, Gov. Ronald Reagan will veto the legisla- tion -and his veto "·JU be upheld." A lwo-thirds majority vote In both houses i.! required to override a veto. The San Francisco attorney said he is hopeful that A!lisemblyman Bob Mo~tti, !!l ated to become Democratic speaker of the lower house, .. .,.,,ilJ be as fair tn his opera- tion or the Assembly as was the man he succeeds - Republican Bob Monagan." 111 Sacramento today to CO!).. fer with Republican legislators and administration officials as the 1971 session gets wider v.·ay. Livennore said he hopes ''that the lawmakers of both parties can work together this year on some of the serlcvis problems that have bttn feft unsolved by the political blockades of the past." ~1onagan of Tracy as speaker of the Assembly. ?i.1onagan, speaker for two years, narrowly turned back a challenge Sunday from Assemblyman Paul Priolo to his leadership of the now minority Republicans. Essentially the same major unresolved issues as con- fronted them in 1970 will face Ca Ii fornia's $19,200-a·ycar lawmakers in 1971 -tax reform, school f i n a n c in g . revi11ion of welfare. preserva- tion of the natura l en- vironment and lhe 18-year-old vote, among others. But a new Issue pol!Ucally sensitive rea ~ portlonment of congressional and legislative di stricts - must be dealt wilh. Gov. Ronald Reagan has threal.ened to veto any reapportionment bill be considers unfair. Mllls was announced as the "overwhelmtng'' choice of Senate Democrats S u n d a y after a three-and-a-half hour stra tegy meeting be hind clos- ed doors and he qu ickly forecasl his ouster of Schrade. a fellow San Diego lawmaker. "I hope everybody lets bygones be bygones," said the bespectacled and balding 43- year • old form er museum curator and school teacher. Although t h e Democrats agreed to support th e election or r-..1 ill s. Sen. Randolph Collier ID-Yreka) remained a con- tender for the pro tern post and left the strategy meeting Sundfly before the f I n a I balloti ng v.•as complete. Veteran Sen. Stephen P. Teale of Railroad F I a l withdrew from the r ace In the interest of "party unjly." Younger T ~.kes Oath As Attorney General SACRA?.1ENTO (UPI) -glare of television lights, Surrounded by 150 friends and Com pton !urned to the crowd supporters, Evelle J. Younger and said: "Ladies a n d early today took the oath of office as California state at-gentlemen. I give you the at- torney gen~ral. torncy general. .. " The rest The brief ceremony \\'as of his comment was drowned held just after midnight in .: out by applause and shouts a hotel conference room. The of "Oh, wonderful !" oath was administered by Younger, ! 0 rm er Los Justice Lynn Compton of the State District Court of Appeal Angeles district attorney, said in Los Angeles. the ceremony was to have As he co n c 1 u de d ad· been h~ld Jn his hotel suite ministering the oath under the with only his famiJy and * * * Riles Takes • School Post friends allending. but "ii jusl grew." Compton is a former chief deputy district ;1\lorncy unde r Younger. l n a reference lo his polilical fu ture. Younger said, "All l 'm going to do is try to be the best damn attorney SACRAMENTO (UPI) -general this state has ever Wil!on C. Riles, the Ii r s t had." Negro ever elected to Younger has also scheduled statewide office in California, a reception Jonighl for sup- takes the oalh today as state porters. He said about 800 "friends rrom around the superintendent o( pub»c in-state" had accep te d in- struction. vitations. Riles picked Chief Justice Donald R. Wright of the State Supreme Court le administer the oath in a ceremony at the Department of Education building. Wright was also chosen to administer the oath of office to Gov. Ronald Reagan. The 53-year-CJld educator defeated veteran stale schools chief hfax Rafferty in the November election in a major upset. Rafferty was seeking a third term in the non- partisan post. "We just decided that an early ceremony would be ap- propriate," Younger said of the oath taking. Busch New DA For LA County LOS ANGELES (UPIJ - J oseph P. Husch, 44, officially lakes office loday as the 32nd district attorney of L o s Angeles County. C1iiU1 Slain; Couple HeUl LOS ANG ELES (UP!l - Riles was deputy superinten- dent under Rafferty before be decided to challenge his boss for the top job. He won 54.l percent ()f the votes in the election. Busch, selected for the post Dec. l by the boa rd of supervisors, succeeds Eve!le .J. Younger, who was elecled state attornt'y general in No vember. A young Vietnam veteran and l----------------------1 hili wife \.1-'ere held today on suspicion of murder in the fatal beating of their 2~ year- old son. The child, Terrence Ross, v.·as admitted to Children's Hospital Wednesday for treat- ment of a bead injury and bruises on hi s body. He was in critical condition and Erwin J . Ross, 24. and his wife, Alice, 22, were arrested the same day in charges of en- dangering the life of a child. When their son died Satur- day, the parents were booked aga.in, this lime on the murder charge. Police said Mrs. R o s s Jipanked the boy "for going lo the bathroom in his panls," as ahe explained. The father, a Purple Hoeart and Bronze Star winner, also punished lhe chJid ror ~ same reuon, pollce aaid. Headless Man Found by Road o LOS ANGELES (UPI) ;-- A headless corpse, a man 1n ~ mid-~. has been found rn the Newhall area, lbe U. Angeles County ~her I It'• Departmen~ reported. The body was not lm· mediately ldentlftled. Jt.s hands also were severed. A hiker dl8COvcred the corp1e lying pro~ on an . ~mb~nkment nur California IS two mlJa EARN with daily interest Passbook Thrift Accounts ol any amount earn 5.5% per year, paid from day Invested to d111y withdrawn. Your funds always Imme diately available. Interest credited and compounded quarterly. Now 85 offices lhroughout Callfomla, backed by 55 years of proven m1nagement experience and • perfect record of regular Interest payments. Fund• invested by Jan. 15 e•rn trol!I Jan. f. , Morris Plan 673·3700 Newport Be•ch-3700 Newport Boulevard •WI of U.S.•· •------------------! • It still means something at Penneys. Value Tallor9d curtain panels of white Dacron• poiy91t9r dtiarqu iaette. U11 alone or under draw draperies. gge40x81' Value Slip-on long sleeve blouse or sllnky, shiny trlaedtate. White, black, brown or navy, sizes S..M·L. 2.88 • • Value Ladles' elastlc leg brief of soft, comfortable cotton. Sizes S..M-L. 3 lor 1.00 value. Infants' cotton knit sleeper, akld·ruistanl. plaatlc soles. Sizes 3-8 3/1,00 3'"' 59.~-4 CHARGE 1'HESE. VALUES AT YOUR l.OCA1. P~ STORE I Clearance Men's pullover sweaters in V·ntck and other favorite styles. Fuhlon colors. Or!g.12.98to13.98 NOW8.88 Men's card igan swtiaters in favorite styles and colors. Orig. 11.98to15.98 NOW9.88 • f I F ot· Tl1e Reco1·cl \ ~t~e~:~~·,~~ I ,., &"~ ''" u. '' ,,,, .... !!' • i~'•"I A~•!I"• \"I'~ P&d t.)v I • ~' <! \ W>'••I<! l t111;a "" t, ,..., 'r'""' 'T1 ',T• •' I <>V' '·''" v '"' , . ' o~'~"'h" 10 1 ~a /' • ·< • , 11,,, ,.,. ,,, ... • '"'" ·<• f'''" 1 ~I "tAf ! • Ii'• •O~ ~,,, Jo1• ! f'l A1"'"~ ... ~.. p ' ! ,, '•' '' '' I /, ' ~·-o II "•I I> II r1· ~· "' . . .. I , .• ,' ' . • .• l ,. ",. ! ""' > ' "•"' ' " II .... 1 ...... t ,. , •• ! ' ' ' r.• "' ,., t•. <. -~~·· '" lh ''~· ,, ...... ,, 11 .. '' ',. ' , I "''"', "'"""" 11 ' ll•· ~ .. '• "'"" r• , J)issol ufions 01" iifcr r1·i11nt• Cn•c1r• D••~mb"' 11 ... '~'" '~""" L ·"•<I~, ,.. , r" • r .. 1 ,,,., ,., , '' Cat~•1n '"'"' ~·i ~ t! ,. ' t,-" , ' "'•', J n• I I ' 0 " ',,. "'''''" ~ "''! , .... , .•• !•'' tc••· • ,,.,,,,.,_ r ~"'' ···~•!! • · , , ~' "' J•• 'tL""'"'" ,,, . ., """'' I '• I ·•I ! I'" lo <I ~:mon 1 ( I ', o!. I . ''" I ' ,,. J,..,., ~· '" ' ,..••0 •• f'l<1.,•1 ,.r<r,, I • ':• "'" < "<I" ''" V, ~ i>no•• ! C.·b·,()1• •"0 ·~ • C:·•• ·~·l "'""'"':~ llo '"'" Ir.><• ""' • -,~,, r ' " I &orl I ,,1 '~" f•n'n• r " • "" r ·l'~<n """ .,, r ....... ~"" 114'"''"'"~ ' ' l """ """•'" ~ le h••n """ N•••~ J, • • · n•r·~J •~d T"o"''' 1 1 '-.. ,., ~ ~ •. le• l>H•" I• I ;·:, ·~· ' Lf~'••CP •na Clv!le o<tr I j r,•'t. •·dfl4•h•••J' ' ' (·a• r• '"~ "''''" J f •, 11•· "'' • ' ~"" .lnn~l»I • ' '" ""'l~·<l .11,u,4.., •"1 ('U, • l>l~o 1'<1.,u.•••• •"d t••h·1 ,, .... ! " I '" ,. II•~·" ! < I> ·, '·' •<Ir 0. I •. r , 1•-•·"~J t.fYCP \' -'\ .'• I To , " u • r· .• l~" I\•~·~ !:l••e o• '"'" r "<"'''"' " •,·.,• 1 ,,, '"" """ •I ""''"~(• ,. rr,. 1 ~. r••'• D .,, " f fl•·•• 'f I••·•• ••1• ·••• IJ" I.', . .,, .. ,,. "' 1,,., .. ,. ~'"" 11 "'""" .-• .1nrr" II "' q•.ot·n rt·'ll't" r e,.rM •· '"' '"II t .n., "1~no'~•· Mt ,.,,.,,.1 f ""'"''"' 1>1 • • '°'"'d c~'" Soo1te• l •~ '"' r"·"'I r· 1, 1'1"•"'"'> E ' O II• I ... --'"'" r I o• ' I o ', -·' ' " ,, . ' llO'!'f[t> , '' r 1' ' 1j•'I ~t •11 ,1 ""'" '~"I '••'" 0 (hr:'ll\ ''"• ,, . " r l\llOV" •• , ,1, I ,, ·•' •'I 1,. • I !• ""'" I n o I r ·1 ! "" -• fr>' r "' , < .,~,., , I " M · • ti•" t'"'· '· .... " .. " ','r A ( ""r(l>,\f' V••"'""'' '/ ~ • II>. M~"ott. "fl' f""q D ~ l""Gl~Y. f'IG"<I•' n·~ n•~ 11·~r . ....,.n a"•I q,,..,,. "" ~····~e· '""II he ""'a ,,,,,,...,.,, • "" W•r" [ n,.coc>.•I (hu•t"· • ., ""'' 4,. I '" "~ !\"••" "'''" I'"•· P••••' \ ' ""'• '"' o• "''"q lnu•'I· Cc· ,., '' •' .... ,. <"n~•t" ''" """ ~''~'" '.\;•·~··"·"" V •''"' 1 •Qco~ II• " '~·'''""' P·· '·" "A ~V~ '!' ' ".. • r • h I' ' ~ '"' ~· ,., ' ,. ... (> •' . ' . 4.0' • " •r • .. r ~ • " t , 11 t .,. ,, ~. t ... " ' ··~•"'' ". ' .... ,.,. • '''! Wf· • <! I ' 1• '' I. ,,, /, ' ,.._ r ' r1 I••' I • ,,. ! 1, • • v • ., I,~,, ·~"'" '",. ' ' ' . . MondAy Jan11.1ry 4 1'171 -----Ollll Y PI LOT e__ Glasphalt Roadways Loyalty Oath Bill Planned A new S!all" loye11ly 113!)1 will be one or the fir.;t :i nd t'Ont·1~r la11J.,.1.1gl' v.ht>n a public 1•n1pl11~· th,o l '" It ll lh" iwuplr ul ('.il1furni;1 1111hnul ,111 •1<1lh iii loyalty 1111111 P \l 'f~ JU.Jhllf' ~l'l'\301 ." lt>g1slat1\'f" measures tha t voc.11te.~. or 1o;, ~1101•.i11~I} a Assemblyman Robert II . n1£'rnbC'r· of tht· l'o111111ll!li ,1 Co1111Ju1iy Paves Way to Futur.e u1~·111~ 11 11!1 til e~ aud we've had u\l to 30,00U ton concrete ~cdetlges do11"t shredtires. Burke 11\-\luntlngton Beach\ party, or an) uC 1o·1 •J1~;11111,.1 ··wt11le there aren't any ap-"'ill push 1n 1971. lion and subscnbt's tu ii.~ go:il ~ More Security With trucks traveling on it." Scott parent adverse results from The ass em b 1 Y ni an an-or the ovt>r!hn1w ul our ~rut1 11d ll!l n::rn<iin s of rnorc nounced today that he \Viii 111,111 ;i rnllhun used glass bo!-said. "Nobody pa ys any al-the glasphalt, at the momenl e1gain introduce 8 sl<ilc con-govcrnnienl by lurrP ;;nd 1 '1 'l.Ll::llTCl:'\ ~ !11 O...·lulJt.•1, :i g!J~\ cun1p<1ny paved a :-.ll't'l'I 111 Fulll'l'lun 1111h the FALSE TEETH Whil e Eating, Talking llt'., ;ind Jan.. tention to the [act that it's we 're hesitant to make any stHutiona\ amendment u.•hich. vio lence , ii would b1.: .sufficu:nt 1' , " n on'l b. ao 11./nud ~h•• your tallle And nu one hJs rei>0rted gluspha!t." s weeping recommendations he says, will meeet ton-l'ausc {ur d1sn11ssul , Burke tN,th wu1(om ~1oose or dro11 1u•t ·~ D ·1 I I c a lh l h Id tl1e wrunK lime. l'or nour~ _,cirH~ ;uiy ~lin•ih.lerl lirt·s fruni driv-ur1ng 1 s 1 re e -Y r a everyone s ou use tentions of the eourls and explained. 1 an11 ~01nto:.n. hfr1nk1e •"AST r.tTu• 111~ ,in 11 ,\('l. .iccording tn rlcvcloprnent. rrsearchcrs said glasphalt in the future. \\1e'd critics that the old oalh wa~ Rurkc. contends 1hc .recen t ~~~~-'"p~g~t:'J..¥'HPfi~1~1~' ao~~l?r~~ l'iel.l'\l Stolt. S'")l.L':-.inan fiir thf' p11ving passed illl sign1l 1-hkc to wait at least a year ~·==---'~=--="-"=='-----' "unduly vague. uncertain and U.S Suprenic c.:ourt rcfu~:il 1;11•:.".'.1011~"' MukeM rMt1ni: .,uier. r r;u1t test!'< before bei ng tried and see how this street hold s The DAILY PILOT-b•oad." d 1·11si.i,:t:r11 ' 6 1101 K•' 10 No 1umn•7, 1)11• 1 d;1t-s t 'un1:11ncrs torp. • lo rev itw •t le 1·r;.1! panrl rul· "''''"'Y P~·n· ta..1r n~"'"'e~ tti•~ ti\ .. 111 Fullcnon, although the up before sayiog lh;it it's J\)() ··The new oath wh1"··h ,., con· 1 h h lh c I ro .,., """'11'1~1 10 hP~\1h lffr your 11 \t·•·rns to bl' '"'rlorni l'' h C '" ng, in w ll' r a 1 rn1;i <1r1J11~1 rt1n1!mr1v Grl "••)'•to-uu : """ u,. :-.l reet 1s being care ful l v prrt·cn1 proven," Stolt cx- 1 The One Tat a res fained 1n th13 an1tndment oa!h \\a ~ ftiunO lo hr un f'ASTl:E'.TH •t•1l'1ru~""unl'"· 1•'I1 iq H ' Ju· ~:lid ul tlw 11iill'h('d to ma kt «C'rla1n 1ai:,·__'P:':•~m:e~d~. ----------'·'====-=====-,==o!__b~•~•~k~a~l~ly~'~'~"'.__f~o~c~lh'._'i~o_;.c~le~•~':_~co~"~'~'~"~"~"~'n~;~•l~.~··~b'.'":'~"~"~'~'~l~h-------------MM! l•illl )lu1g l<.1.\ rlll'f :\I f'!lllt' _ - -.1 ,1 1'f'1·l which 1s <·umplctcl y Jl.ilr d Ill gl1i$]lhtill ' 'l'h~· ,1r·c·t•I 1:-. thr !!rs! public toaJ 111 h1• p;1v1•d l\'l!h the 1111Jd 1.l!·L 11hu·11 11 <1~ Ocvelof'l("d 011•1 .1 fll:1"111d of rhrce years 11nd1•r ;i fe1lrr;d!y sponsored l""'l'<ll'•'h progran1 at the l 1111crslly u[ 1'.llssuun . 'l'hv 1~l:1s11hall 11·h1ch c·o1·£'rs l!;1~jlltT All'llU(' I ~ a blend ,,i I:! pilrl'i hrok!'ll gl:i5s. s1~ l'-1t'l :-.\0111· dusl. onl' pari :1~ph;1l1 <l!ld a h;il( p;irt limr laid in :1 thrrP·tnch applicil\1011 ni't'I' ;i has4• ol :1ggregat1?. l'\;1ymrt A1 1·11ue is in the n1·w Fullert1Jn Air Industrial !'.irk The s\recl 11>\IS laid Oct. :_o1;. Since 1t11:n it has been 1ra1clcd dai\~ by construction 1'11 rl.er s and IH'avy trucks and 1•quipn1e11t. but no regular p;1sse ngt•r tralf1r. "So far th('re are no pro- W eshninstcr 'l'rio ]:< :l('C l•'clon y Ila ps !-.:\t\TA A\1\ Three \l'e;;tn11nster rnc·n indicted by \Ill' (lrang1' Coun1y Gr<ind J11ry "n .,1r med robbery ch1-1rges l1a\ r bet·n ordered to {<ice trial I·\ b. :.'•l in Su pc n or L:uurt .ludg1· Janics 1'". Judgr st·\ 111;11 d.11!' a: lh•· a;Taig111nrnl 11! \l.11 h\S Thun1;1~ Cocrcr1rr. ;•.!1. J)111i<i ld .Jcfferv 1\\;1ness '.!" ;ind ~\1f'h<11·I · \\' ;i. y n r l't•rhu1:-. 2:1 All ~re 1rcP on h;11I uf S'!IJ.000 1•ath. Thl' t nu I.." accused of ;i series ul armed robberies. three uf them in ilunttngton Beach. 1\11 \1cre committed. u1,·1·sl1ga1ors ~3.\. in a 15-d;iy pcnod starting: .. 1:i!h the rob- h1·r~' .luly 22 of the Ga;rlen •ir111 i' hr;int·h uf the Pacifit· I· 111; 11 u • · f'11 \ll 111rt·1· rkfcnda111 :-. arr ae· t'lh•'d Iii t!w nJlihf't } !;1~1 1\ug Ii 111 llll' Fr;11\C(H~ Supp1·r Cl uh . 1:1RI :• Jl4·;1rh Blvd 1hr holdup ,l11lv :!:, "l a Vos1•·r Frec1.1' :-1\•t'f'. ;tl~o 111 Hunt1ngton );l';1t"h .. 111d tl1c arnlf'd robl'K-r,\' l;1,,1 1\ug Ii of thr Albrrtson\ V1M.1<l (<'ntcr l5ll Edwards SI Sale! Come clean-up on our washer-dryer team. Sale$225 s ... 2us. Rog.2"9.95.-• Imperial prog~w-. Eight pr091ammed ~togs. automatic soak 'nwash. automatic detergent and rabric conditioner dispensers. White..~ harvest gold. Color costs no more at Ponneys, Sale.$180 Save 19.95. Re!!. 199.95. Penncrest• 4 speed washer. Four w ash/spin speed seltings, two water level settings, <'Ill over porcela\n enamel finish. •Wh ite only. SaleS120 Save 9.95. Reg. 129.95. Penncrest• eleclric dryer. Three temperature settings, rotary controls, porcelain enamel finish top and dru"1. \Vhite only. Penncres l., gas dryer wi th~ temperalure settings. Reg. 159.95 , Sale st5o. " ' r "' ' ,, ..... , -Students &iles-t40 ' ' , ' ' '" ' ' I ' ' I ~ ,. •• ' " •~• I 1 ' ••. ' ' ... ' .. " ..... ' ,, .. ~ . .,,,. ...... •· ~ r •' ~·-· ~~ '"'"" r rTTY J01'" 0 ' ... " l • • ' .... ' , . ., ' " '. ,.,~ ' • fl• • ,. ···~ 'l\ ~I l 'I. ' ' -• l• " ,,, " "' ' ·'· :.. I , ... ' ' ' .. •, . , , .... ... ,, 'I .op I 11-..• 1, ~· r" " . "•~· ri•·"" r "~ I~'!< ~I fl~ I 11•0•~ ,r,1tt'fKLV. .s. so~ '' t'~lr!:H ;\l nrluary r.:; E. 1;1h St .. C'osla ;\le:"a 616-·183!t • I\ \l.TZ :'llOHTL .\BIES rornna 1tf": ;\[Jr ... 011 3-9~;,o r11s ta ;\l t'~a mi 6-242:4 • P.LJ.L BH01\l1\\'A \' ,\HlllTL'AHV 11 11 1:road11u}', ('n~ta ;\lcsa I.I 8-343:.l • ~lrf.flll:'lllt.:I\ LA GlJNA HEACll ;\IOHTt::AHV t:!l.'i Laguna fr111)on Bod. 49~.91!5 .... • 11 Ari Pl(:'\'! E\~ \JE\101\IAL l'A HJ\ C('tlll'lf"r~ l\lortuary Ch;ipcl 3500 PaC"itic \"icw Ori\'t: l'\r.wporl RtRrh. California li14·2100 • PEEK 1-'A~llL\' COLONIAL .. ~usE nAL H0~1E 7!1nt nnli:a \\r~h11in s1l'r • Ave. 1193-35Z5 ~\11Tl\S' i\lORT\..!AH \' li2i \lai n St. 11unll ngh••1 Rrarh 636-f>~:lll ,,l p pointctl To Boar</ \ll\ I\!·: -A ~r;irl1i<1tr and .111 tH11lt'!'J!r~1duHIL' '!II d c n I li.11 (' lJ,•, 11 ,1ppo1111cd b y 1 h;11Hl·ll11 r ll.11111·! i : 1\ldrich .I 111'!11(' "11 lht· I[' IT\lrlf' ~tllcll'lll I· .tl'Ull\ Honrd f1 I Ht•\ 1• \\ ltn h1·i1: lllJ.: SlUdl·nl tfl,( ljillfll' '.1 ,., \i >t111)11\~·d ;+l'f" .)1•)111 I )\Ii. l'I _, ;.:1,+rli 1;it c ,,l11d~·nl J 11 ~d· 1111111 1r;i11nn l n•t11 \,on Ii l',1.1lh .. 11.d J1,,1 1d Bre11·t'r. a p111111r 111,1J••1 111g in p11l1tical •t 1o·1.1·,• ln-111 S.1n Rl'rn,1rd1110 \ 1h11 d 'tlldC"n! ;1!n:;1dv ~1·r\ 1111: "11 lht• hn<ird i ~ Claude p.,l','I• '' ""·' Ill h1~lof\' frOITI :-;.1r1l,1 .\n.1 JI~' hit°' 0 Serl'Cd ~1n•r lht• 1•11ep1 1011 ol the bo;•rd la'! ~-0111n1r! F;u u\\y rnl'mbcr~ 'tr\'IO).l on lh!' h•lard arc !)r su~an Br,·an!. ll'rlurrr in h1nlng1<"<.1l >-1 11·nrl'". \\'i!han1 II Pa rker. :l';~OC'l<th! prote~~Of uf ph\'SIC'S, ;1nd Stuart l\rassncr. a"sOCiatc pr11ft·•-~<'r nf hi r. 1 n g i r a I ..,t'1cn<t·s r h<iirn1.1n. Supe rvi sors Stave Off Hankr11 ptcy SA:-.'T A ANA Orange ('nun1,· h;i~ rt'5Cllf'd it:-.1"1! lron1 1t·1np11rary bankruptcy again .,,·1th the Board nf Su~rvisors ;1u1horiz1ng Aud1tor-C.:OOlroller \'1e lle1n1 10 horro"· $19 mil- 11011. The cwnty borrou.·s money c~ch year for short pe.nod~ because a prineipal sourCt' of inmml". prope.rty ta:ces. are p;.i 1rl onlj t111ce H ~car . lf run asks bids lrnrn bank~ 1 on lht \01u1 Tiu.~ vear·~ Joan l1i,:1u·f's lune bC'0l'J1 ·!hl' t11ghe~\ 011 n ·t·nrcl h1 Au_gu~1 the Av4i\abl1 roun1\' b1H·1'0\led S18 1nilhnn lo l·a;r·~· 01·<'r un!il No,•embcr. Save 11.95. R99-159.95. Penncntt:t~ •lecttk dryer with automallc tlme ... controL Six dryirlg :irograms, porcelain enamel finish lop and dn:.m. While. a YOCado or hetf"Wesl gold ••• colot costs no m0<e ar Penneys.. Pe,,.iaest • programmed gas dtyu wilh :>iu toll\atic tJme control. Reg. 189.95, Sale $170. CALL...(714) m+tOt Sale$21Q S•n 19.95. Reg. "9915 PefllterMt• proQr•mmed •••her. Eigt1t programmeCI wash settings. 3 water level selections. Wh'te. avocado or harvest gotd .•• c.ok>f' COits no liaOf'9 Ill PllM9)'S. P•nncrwat 111 compact apln~drylng waah•r. Aequlms no special plumbing. Rolls on wheels. Ea sy to slore. White, avocado or harvest gold , • • • color costs no more at Penncys. Value. It still means. something at Penneys • • at th11e Penney stores : FASHION ISLAND , Newport Center; HUNTING TON CENTER , Huntin9ton Beo ch . Buy ii on P•nneys limo Poymenl Plan. ' I tO DAILY PILOT M~d11. Janu.t'7 4, 1JJ71 Otliers Can't Match Wil.d Egyptians CAIRO (UPI ) -\\'Ith a midp\aced senst of pride bordering un 1·t\ ere n e e , r e sident s of an y great metropolis will ad1nit drivers In lheir city are the worst in the world. C:•iro. of course. has the l\'orst motorists any\1•hert' Tokyo and Ro111e have Lheir Ka1nika:d-s1yl~ d r i v e r s . ~l illion~ of cyclists a n d n1 o to Tc y c I ists, v"eaving obliviously in every directioo, make motoring virtu::illy im· possible in Saigon. chaos by blithely continuing to ignore the invenUon ol the n1otor car as they boldly step into the strtet without as· much as a glance ln either direction. A strang-er happening upon th.is chaos might inquire about traffic lights or polictmen, but a Cairo driver might reply, ''whal pOlictmen?" hundreds of impatiently honk· ing vehicles. Au oc-casional d o n k e y or camel meanders slowly across main intersections. Cyclists seemingly are irn· mune to any law. There are vritually no park· Ing lots In a city which , with a population of fi ve million, is the largest Jn . Africa and I.he Middle Easl. The result is that from 9 a.m. until late at night, sii:·lane highways are choked with five lines of ir- regularly parked vehicles, leaving only one lane of mov- , Phlllpplnes Pressure U.S. Prodded to Return Ai1• Base ~1AN ILA (UPI) -Agi tat ion llds begun in the Philippines fol' lhe rclurn of Car11p Juhn !lay, an historic ,U .S. Air r~orce installation 0 n t (' described as a golf course camoufl aged as iJ rnilltary base. Cam p John llay, an Air Force installation 'vilhout an air strip, settles on 11&1 rollin r: acres in the foothil ls of the niounlains surrounding thl' Philippines summer capital of Baguiff, 1600 niilcs north of Manila. the return of the Snnglcy Poin t Naval Air Sta!iOn, Dec. IL, Several F1l1p!nt1 p11l1til'iiHIS Joined in. The United Stales al rcudy has returned part of C;irnp John Hay. On Del'. 13. l!ltiti. then Ambassador \V i I l i a n1 Blair Jr., and then P)1ilippinc Foreign Secret;:iry Narciso Ramos signed an agrecrnent under y.•hich the United St<1t es agreed to give back <111· proximately one-fourth of 1hc reserva11011 for a f o re s l o;:iid to ht> Prc.!:iidcnl Ferdinand ed tu dv1·111rs and f'nglnct•· !:-:. ~larcos' fav on\(' cuur'se. ;1L s;.ihu•ics ranging from • 111 \\'h ilt• !lit' 18·ho!t· golf t.:Vll!.!:ie IV SI GG mont hly b::isll' p:iy_ is the do1n1n<1t1ng featu re or ,\1 aj. Jan1cs l311ll, l\laywood. the base. thtrt also are Callf<orn ia. l.iose con1rn<1nd t·r. ""'' 57 U.S. n1i11t ;1ry pcrsonnC'I facili ties for tenn is, baslicl· trnder his eonini;uid. rn:111y or ball. sk;1ling:. <ir('hcry, ~ket•I 11 to,ini \\'ill . l9wcr th eir ha 11- shoo1ing, playground;;. p1cn1L' di('lll~ ilunni; their tour of nreas. furnished bu e he I o r dot)' f~rnily village:. .. clubhouse fur 1 -~:...:.=========, d1n1ng and dan t tng , a hosp1 !~d. 1 <:On1n11s_sa ry SIOrt'S, b<1k er1l'S . I fAJNDYINs a$To,, and an indoor sports arena. 110 HQ I residl'nt s of Baguio are gursr 1~~., 4i."''1 Ap11roxin1ntely 500 F1lrpi1111 • , •-tir Y$J:'t' I reserve and watershed rnenibcrs. 111a ny of lhl'rn ~vid . .., ""'• It "'as in the US. am-Can1p John llay. nan1ed for players at lhc \1•rckly btngll l ·~· • But London, New Yor k and Paris have yet to equal Cairo in producing dri\'crs so "ob- \"iously dedicated to the total disruption of a stable traffic system. Cairo police are the most lgnored-forct In the world. Though two or three unifonn. ed officers control each city intersection, driveri, a n d pedeslrians generally 'tgnore them as they steam through red lights and stop signs. ing traffic . ------------" ... L " garnes at t ie nuun e u on bassaclor 's summer residence p, e • ,· d" " t 'I " K '"l"l'' I · I b I on lhe Camp John llay Secretary of State during the !ht" base. Others a v a i I Drivers of lhl" city'~ I.200 red and \\'hile buses are the n1ost obvious offenders . \Vith rubber flapping wildly from threadbare tires, engines "'belching f lame and .. O\'ercro\\'ded passengers han g. ing precariously from win· do\\'S. these drivers hurl their buses around \\•lt h 2 to!al disregard for both pedeslrilfns and other vehicles. Autos. unable lo match 1he menacing bulk of a bus, duel \l'ilh each other or pedestrians, Yt'ho add to the Adled to this visible chaos is the unbearable cacophony of thousands of vehicle horns being blown for no obvious reason. It is qu ite common to hear a motorist at 2 a.m. traveling down a main throughfare with not a pedestrian or other vehi· cle in sight merrily blowing his horn. Cairo, both physically and emotionally , is still not ready for the mol<lr car. Young boys roll huge oil drums or other hani'l'o'are down the center of main streets. effectively blocking Frustrated police issue traf- fic tickets. freely (last year enoug h fines were Yt'rillen to gi\·e every registered motorist in Egypt 10 tickets ), but the fine s are light and often are forgotten after the exchan ge of a small bribe. The national driving lest is perfunctory, being more dif- ficult to fail than pass. A person is reqlJVed ooly to drive in reverse a few yards (though police say many peo- ple do fail by backing into parked vehicles). At night, praclically all of the city's buses run without lights. The authorities have at las t Fun games, fun prices. Game tab.le sale! Sale$344 Save s50 Reg. 1399. Foremost Custom 01lu1.e a· pool labl1 with 3 y1ar guarantee. 2V2" Steelit e• honeycomb pleylietd, wool and nylon blend cloth. Furniture styling . Includes balls, 2cues, 1·Jood 1r1ang1e, cue repair k•t chatl< and rule book. J year guarantee; W1lhin 3 (three) years or purchase, we will repair or replace, as we find necessary, any part of )'our Foremost Pool Table !hat is defective in material or workmanship. All la bor cog!s a re included. Just contacl u9 lor servic e. Sale$444 Save s50 Rig. '491. Foremost prolenion•I 1tyle I ' pool table with 5 year gu•ranl••-Genu ine¥•" It ali an slate playlield. wool and nylon blend cloth, Ad· juslable leg levelers. Includes balls. 2 cues. bridge. wood triang le, cue repair kit, chalk: and rule book. 5 ye•r gu1r•nt1e; Within 5 (live) ye11rs of pur· chase, we will repair or replace, as we !ind nee· essary, any part of you r Foremost Pool Table that is defective in material or workmanahip. All labor coils are included. J ust contact ua tor 0 0 C. Tlllle Mnnill llL • paddles, exlen .. sion polt. net, 2 ballt. rules. 4.n 0 . P1dl·P•ll: •lor .. age reek. Holdt '- P•ddl .. and II balls (not jncluded). 2.• E. Taltlt ttnnlt ...... ''°'"' '· 2 pc. wood cue. "" G.Ftber .... cu .. ' 1." F. G. begun to lake notice. A spec ial cabinet session was held recently to discuss !he cr1s1s in pu blic transport and th!:re is also talk of building an underground rail\1·ay systcn1. But with the et·on o111y str;.i1 t· jacketed by the demands of th e war with Israel and the need lo expand heavy in· dustry, it seems unlikrl y anything effec1ive can be done quickly to allegiate Cairo's traffic problem or educate its drivers v.•ho are, mo s l definitely, the WO[."SI in the \\'crld. reservation that J a Pane s e Spanish-Anicrican w21r'. 11'a'\ thernselves of the farit1tics of Gl·ncral Ton1oyuki Yan1ashita. coinmissioned in 1903. Its uc;cs "lhl' \91h hole" and "hal111ay the "Tiger of ~1 alaya," signed in the early da ys a r c house.'' thl''-'~docurne"Jts of surrendl'r somey.·hat shrouded In the The ba~r einploy:. ;1boul JOO in .xpternbcr. 1945. at the end •no·st• of l'l't<JC)'. F f k'll ~ " · il1 pinos ranging ron1 uns ·1 • ol \Vorld \Var 1 l. Today it is basic:illy a rr~l I A painting hangs over the and rccrealio11 center for ~---------- fireplace in the arnbassado1"s ni ore than 2_000 persons a Andy's Fun Gff fll! GINUINE IURTfR ffiRSTER 1 "Tllrust·Sadl' Collor' TOILET TANK BALL ............. ,.,,, ... s.11 .. breeze-swept southern colonial rnonth, not only for Anir.ricans Ask any kid, "A~k Andy" Is tun, ' '"''"" ••o•'dl ·r t The etr.<;••! Wai .. Ma"••'""""~~ "aD• 11" "· .• '1. y, 1 no eK-from Southeast Asia. but for See it Saturdays in the DAILY •h• Ila .. .,1 .. a••• ah•• eD<h tlv•h·~;. actly art I .~ t I ca~ 1 y. ~0~-F'ilipino politicians and in· PILOT. 75( AT HAIOWAIE STO~(~ n1 c n1 o r aling Yan1ash1ta s r~fl:u:c~nl~i•:l..:b:u~<~'":':"~"~":":....~11:....i:s.:::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:::, ___________ 1 downfall. _ The Philippine government I has made no forn1a l request I for lhe return of Camp John llay, but the volatile ri.laniliJ colu mni st corps immediately set up a cry for its reversion following the announcement of ONE WEEK ONLY e JAN. 4-9 I I J I I eandOnly 'ion Washer ----·· ---.--.-~ -- YEARS LABOR WARRANTY ' . ....,., < • , .. .............. ~~-~· ....... -..... "if!:'' • ~-~»~ .. ' .. ~,(''\"• i, 11"1 •• 'j" ... ,. -~:.:.. -r "!" '<i..;.'i'.. ::rt::;: :::""""'"'";~ ....... ~ l ........ _, • ~!A ... ~ ........ +:""......_i .......... A • ' . YEARS PARTS WARRANTY You Won't Pay One Cent Extra For Parts or Labor For At Least 5 Years! Uron9e11 F••t•d•ir• N•hO<!W•O. ptol«IPOn pl•n In n11!ory! Ono-ve•r wa.,•ftl~ for r cp1!r of •ny dtft(I, plu\ • !Our·yHr Pro!ec:li<>fl Pll n !p1rh anlyl tor turnlll"nt rtplactmenl for 1n, llPl«h•t P•M in !lie <ompltlt Hin~· mlU"'"· dri•t motor, l<ld "'"''pump. ll•<•ed by Gfner•I MOIOrl. Sl•ontt•t Oa•il Bro•n Stnlo(t .t.9,..,m..,I '" n111ory! D••" Bro•n •Ill prov"'• O•i9in1t P<I«'>•••• •II l~l>o<" anor partt ntl:<led lo ma,n .. 1n !~e •••h•• '" norm•! oPo••h"" <"ndihon lo< S yo•n •lier <Onlr•<I d•lo, Th•• 1tnk• 19rtomen1 11 no! ,n 1ub1TllU!• lor l'rigklllrt"• W•ff•n11 or Pro!ec•ion P1-n, but " '" •ddllion lht•~HI lor 1Wr1• •nd !•Dor""' <overlfd lht .. nr. FRIGIDAIRE • ., j Sale 3999 JET ACTION fleg. 49.99. Foremost '/1"' roll·away playback table tennis tabl•. Made !or individual or doubles play. U.S. Plywood Novopty • top. Rolls on 4 casters. Folds for easy storaoc Sale price~ c ~!ecl1 ve lhrough Satu1day. A. Cue rack and bat! sland. Holds 8 cues and set ol balls. Walnut fini sh In hardwood. 10.99 \ \ ALL FOR ONLY WASHER • BI G FAMILY CAPACITY • 2 SP EED S • DEEP ACTION AG IT ATOR • 2 JET AWAY RINSES • DURABLE PRESS CARE 95 FEATURE FOR FEAT.URE • DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR WE HONESTLY BELIEVE Tl\llS OFFER HAS NO EQUAL! h1legri111 n11d fle p e11dn blli111 Sin ce Jl).17 !. A.nn~;;-.. ~···· .. ··· .. ·-···· U1e Ponneys Time Payment Plan al !hue slorei: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center; HUNTINGTON CENTER , Huntington Beach. Sho~ Sundey, loo, 12 lo 5 P.M. COSTA MESA ~ 411 E. Seventeenth Street 646·1684 DAILY '·'· SAT. ,., EL TORO - Laguna Hills Plaza In••' 10 s~v-On > 837-3830 DAILY 10·6-llilON.-r:RI. 10-' I I ' I I .. ( DAILY >ILOT JJ• Young Campaigners Already W 9rki:qg Toward 1972 the 1,1urk <is a .i.ot1.illy j C• ct>ptable "'llY to bide Lln1e. years·lat!r, he helped org<tnize Robert F. Kennedy's Cllm· paign In the Rocky Mountain Nelson. who saJd he wootdn'l lion lo work' for any olher have qu it his job w It h candidate, was a&ked whal Americans for Democratic Ac· he'd do H' Bayh decided not to run. ''I don'l hke to lhtnk about It," h! said. WASH1NGTON ~AP) -A sizable number of young peo- ple frM'I across the C"Ounlry isn't getting the message that ~1uskie, McGovern, Hughes and Bayh haven't made up their minds about running for prtsident. Alan Baron, a 27-vcar-old businessman from SioUx City, lnv.·a, is taking time out of his n10 1•ie theater operation to push the darkhorse can· didacy of Sen. Hi:irokt Hugh66. fl10RE CO:\IPLt::X ··The 1notiva1ion is mor" ro1nplex lhan just a lol o( slarrJ'-Cyed kids r u n n I n g around," said Eli Segal, 27, since. s;;11d :.he turned .:J..,v.•n a $10.000 job at the Dc!pnrt· 1nent of Health, t:nucalion and \l'clfar£' to wt1rk ·;n fHs' tam- paign for about $6,000 a jcar. !!ttlt!S, after working IJnder.--:;:::============================:::::--hlm in the Justice Depart.I There's no communications gap. It 's just that th iJ; group of young people is too busy to llsten to public protestations of polit ical Innocence. They're manning the Washington of- fices where the senators' canl· paigns for the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination are \\'ell under way. And, while the candidates themselves are loath t o c11.scuss the subject. "'ilh clrc- tion day still tw o ye<1 rs aw ay, the staffs of what 1s kno.,..·n hereabouts as .. the other or- J1ce'' have no rel uctancc to talk about what they're doing, and wh y they are here. REJECTS OFFERS Lanny Da vis, a 2l·)'ear-0ld savs he turnl"d down lucra11\'e sa.Vs he turnel down lucrative offer~ from ~everal "1all Slrcet rir111s to try and <'lrct Sen. Edmund Muskie prC'si· dent. Ga ry 1-lart. 32, gave uri his $30.000-a-year la w practice in Den1·er In run Sen. George S. McGQvern"s presidential cai:ipaign. And 32-year-old Ve. r lri n Nelson resigned as lobbyist for Americans for Democratic Action to lake a hand in In· diana Sen. Birch Bayh's unan· nounced campaign for the nominal ion. \Vhal makes bright. tun. bilious and eager young people put iiside their jobs, and fr<'- quentl y lake a pay cut. while they. 1,1·or1; to put a Democrat in lhe "'hite House? "~!oney or nothing else n1:d- lers until the eountry has lhe kind of national l£'i1clersh1[1 that g11·£'s prople hop",·· ~aid Dal'tS, an organizer 111 t:en(' ~lcCarthy's 1968 campaign v.·ho now has charge of putting togethrr a student C'Oal1tion for t\.fusklc. Like Dal'is, the other young campaigners show no cn- thusiasn1 for Nixon. but t h e y have varyi ng re;isons for particiriatlng in a pre~1drr111al campaign. Some see it as an Oflport11nity to niake polltic;i l l'ontacts. Others h:il'e their f'l'CS on the \Vh ite House jobs tha t will go Lo the loyal troops of lhe ""'i nner. And there arc a few who, find ing themsel ves in a tight job market, see a Hughes ca111p<1 ign organizer ' Jrom Brooklyn who brings to th e organli<illon experience fr orn 1\-IL'Carthy'~ can1paign. "H11.1!hes has that ex Ir n d1n1Pn~1nn l'rn lo:iki11g for ." .\luskie·s L Strc~t offic<·. \\luch houses 20 "alaned st;,i[. f•·rs ;u1d SO 1ulu11tc1·r~. 1~ hv f;ir the largest or the c<t111• p;i1g11 headquarters ,-1 n d .\h1..,kie l\Orkrr~ ~.iy 1hr1· 111.I dfluhlt· or !npl1• thl' -~11,n ·t• ;u1d C'llurl s1:1rt1ng llt'"\t 1nont11 Like ~t:i1frrs 1n oth1•r c·:in1· p11i:.:n offi1·11s, 111 .. <;t 1 r !he i\lu.:k1" 1·r1·w 1.~ 11rll 1ir1·s ... 1·1!, c<ir£>ful!y groomrd and 1·nn1· plrlcly clcd1l'alrd !o the 111an they cal! '"The Boss " lUGll T .\IA~ "ll :.ounds so corn~·, b1H I re11Jly think ,\111sk1r> is th1· ri ghl. man," s:iid K ar f> n Klein1an, 21. ;inr of l11r 111- l !'iligcn~·r w<;rkcrs \I ho :-.pr11 I 12 !n 1ri i1011rs :i d:11, _,1;..: ;ind S•)tlll'l llllC"i Sl'I rn d11ys a 11 L•1•k on pnl1ticnl rc:->t·arl.'!1. :\l 1~s Klcirna n, \l'liri hadn 't mr t the :.CnHlor bcfor=-~lie signed up with hin1 ;ind h;is spoken ll'ith him only onrc "I fc!t that, 11t 2~. I don't lla 1·c lo care th11t 1nuch aOOut 111oney," said the pretty, dark- hairrd young won1a n. Her bflvfnend. she added, buys her a lot of n1eals. Across lown, in a srnali ground-floor ofrice of a forn1cr 111;.il t·~tate !inn. Gary llart 1,, organizing the ~1cGovern c.'ln1paign efforL He has fi ve salaried helpers and s 1 x roluntel'rs who work nights and 11·£'ekends . !\'f) :\IA'.\' PO\\'Efi \\ h;11 .\lcGo\•em 's g ,. '"' 11 p l:1t·l.s 1r1 1n:tnpo1,1•er, Jl inakes Up ltl OplltTI!Slll. "1\ Jut of thinAS can happen in 11111 \ears." said the tall, hlnn1! tlart as he 1h111'"lhrd thr11ugh lists of past and pro- sp?eli1 c convention dell'gates. "Right no11. our chances of \l lnnin~ are fair to good . The 1nain unknown in the wr.oJe equ :l!ion is tin1r." Like n1ost of the young can1- p,1ignt'rs. Hart said the first rnan t•l intcresl hint in polilit"s 11'1s ,John !:. KC"nnedy A~ :i st lldl'nt al Yale La11• Schr1n!, H ~l"l J1clpcd o!'j:antze 1-\('n· nl'rh 's 1~60 prcsi1tcnt1a ! rain· pa1g"n 111 Connec'tic'uL Eight men!. Though he said abandoning his Denver law practice lo beco111e McGovern's national palitic11l coordinator did n't in- vol\'e a subst8nt.lal fi nancial sacrifice, build,ing up the prac- tice again is "a nightmare" he doesn't like lo think aboot. Campaign workers for In· diana's Birch Bayh anci Iowa 's Harold Hughes admit their c11ndidat.es lag behind !1Iusk 1r and .\1cGov ern 1n p u b Ii c rccog111tion. "Our first job is to get hun cxposurl'."' s<iul Ala n Riiron. who hC';:icis HuRhc5' i1 1·c·r11;u1 c;:imapa1.lln office 10 a two-story house on Capitol Iii IL BE'J,'ER CHA NCE Hughes. wh o traveled 30 slates to help fello w Dcn1ocrat s in this yc<1r's cam· pa1.{.!11. is considered by smne p(llit ic<1I ohsl1rvers to h<il'e a hl·tlcr ch;ince at the No , 2 spot on the 1972 (\ckct than l1 C' docs at the top one. J uli::! Holn1, <1 27-ycar-old housC\\'if<> fron1 \Vinter:;el, !nw;i, said she put her two chilflren in M y-care schools to \1·ork for Huihes. Modern living rooms furnished here a_t sale prices . Penneys furniture prices Include delivery within local delfvery area. S ale.,~c•• etftcliv• lhru"'S'iturd1y. reg. 9.50. 'Heiress' looks as rich as its name. A deep, thick, dense shag of nylon pile that cleans easily, hides foot marks. 11 decorator fashion colors. Sale 7!.~d. Sn• •75 on 50 sq. yd. purchase reg. 11.50. 'Tropic Isle' is a deep, toe-tickling 3'' sha'g. Nylon pile cleans easily. Stunning three-color tweeds in a fabulous ch oice of 16 combinations. . Sale 9~q~yd. Save this week only on these beautiful pieces. Seat and back cushions of Fr-irtrel® polyester wrapped urethane foam. Luxuriously covered v'ith tough vinyl. Dark 'mecca' finished kiln dried hardwood frames. 81.:tr;k or tawny olive. Modern style sofa._ ........ reg. $249, Sala $219 Modern style love seat ..... reg. $199. Sale $169 Modern style chair .•••••••• reg. $149, Sala $129 Modern style lub chair. ... _ . rag. S 159. Sala $139 reg. 5.99. 'Comet' is woven in multi-level loop pile for an interesting sculptured-effect surface. Famous Dupont 501 •nylon is long wearing stai n resistant. 11 fabu lous colOrs . Sale 4~q~yd . seve s 100 on so sq . yd. purchase S1ve '50 on 50 sq. yd. purohll• Expert Jnstillatlon 1v1ll1ble. Bring In your room dimensions fora no obligation estimate. l\nnelfl Use Ptnnoy• Tim• Paymont Plan: FASH ION ISLAND , Newport Ce nter: HUNTI NG TON CENTER, Huntington Betoh . Shop Sunday, loo, 12 to 5 P.M. ,_ MORE FOR YOUR MONEY at America's Largest ,. . MORE PROTECTION Alff "YOU ANO YOUR MONEY," the 1971 Gulde to Family Financing, an e xclusive Home Savings service. • Get your gift c-qpy at any Hom:. Ser:vice f Center. Now over·31n Billion Dollar1 Strong •.• #1 In America ln both assets and · actual · dollar reserves. -..,;••a•~nw1 .. "." ~ ',,:,a:1··~1.J ~~ . G : '-··· ··~'"'-."'· r i . ' .:-... -.. ·: .. -:-/ 1 ·~· . > .... •• "· . MORE IN INTEREST Now paying aavera at the rate of $398,000 every day ••• the all-tlrn11 record among all assoclallOl)I In the nation. Also Free at any office, your personal copy of Home's Annual Report. See for yourself why Old Dependable Home serves more savers ••• and finances more home- owners ••• than a ny other association. ,, -i, .. i ,. ~· ~v ... ~ , J, ,,Jlt~ CbriStmas t 97t 'You can ~eep maiiy accounts at ''.·:,· ·· ~~.io·N~'t: thl time to ttart your special Home, lntured to $tCJ,ooo each by fund for next Chri&lmaa. Home offers Uie FEO~RAL Savliigs anCf -loan speelal extras, plus 5Y. Interest, lnauran~ Corporation. Alk: any compounded daily, and paid day-Jn Hom• ma .. naQar. to day-out. Compare Home's returns to other Christmas plan1. Shouldn't you be at Home? Over Over 82 Years SAFE $3 Yz Billion STRONG ' • i'•.tl:•i.. ; • • • ....;;1--;..,. -· "• r• -~t\: .. ,.,1. ~· 'I.' ' 1 -~~~ .. ct ... ";,,, .. LOli~;..,.a 0~'1CI) tti.u..or;~ltlC ,'1..0 :,~-,..,"'."'!.TD 111;a. ,,..~ Ttut • to014 ' 1)"00 H. '1i •ro• st. ' .r"""'·-1 £ l"oottrinr 1""6' . .t flt,........ • , (alJ)627·7t1Ji ; : !'"'ys.·81• It. to04l l :' .• ':"'-·. '. 1a • 0'14) 171-11HO ALHliMIU t J·• 2111 254•1114 "-' \ U ... ltNAJHllNO 401 f;Y1llay1~.~lertlr Vllbi ttot.Ltw0Dc1 rt(.,., tot' W~;·I lshl•nd ... .,., 1Jto1•t211)~·1 . l&OOH.Yh1~ftlU ftAI-t•d •l2406 AHAHlllrrl 1 • .'-toOZI • (211)466-11 (714) 2-3321 101 •. H•rbor•~lt LJMoen Htii«iWf"Olrf P'Alt,c'. 9Af( FUHCllCO 12I05 • (714) IU-1¥1 7!fl rac:lfh:. ll11d... UQO tr'lt alon St. •t2l•tle.. AltCADIA 1 , ' fldr•rie• • I0211 \. tfl\10 • (418) 641 .. IOO '° E••t HurttNtofl·6rtvt l2.l;:a::.}.. 11 ' •AN Jotr M"rtt•91~ ··• LA ,· ~ ~2(UncolnA- (2lJ)44&-lla1·• ~ 4to9L 11¥i:. 1~ ;\t;l'o .il!OW Gl tn Dlltrfct MatTOW , J •. :i. •to.iAmo.•90711' ,, 1, ': l~,•(408)211-0107 '"tU2E.M1ln .ilt.l81IU,.,I (219JP4-410t · · , ' 'tlll,~1~AN~AM I __ ,. aflonfn1 C..-. • .• 11 LA ... MOA • • ... ·ra ·~ort" ' n •<o .. (1i4)256-2 1ll ~ .;, •. · J!l2at.Rottcrtnt"Avi... • •' •~ln!tonA111. I •IVllJl.THtw.I ·.' • l:11t of LI MlrJdl •1...C ·~2 01·• ()" 4) &41•Hl ' ta-41 W'llshlrt MllC . to6SI • {714J 121•11Hf·~ tfilNTA MONICA ,. ... ltt>lford Drhlt ·•10 LIVvtMditi 2600W119h1,..1:1·.r 2ldl (213)213 ..... _ ~· 2711,"K"lt.ttJl'f lt. ~O~I~~ 1 ff~A ,. ..... ~, •.' l4S&O •_l~lll-tf7-4MO • ~051 Y1ntut11 ~:;. · b08••~h , L~' . ~·, . , 'V#,' "•'""'. 201 ta 9l u..e~ , urtl C•n)'Oft . ti .4J l21~ ~' tolOI• i 4Jt.al1 ... ' 13)763-7)41 MJrlK N.... MOtftllll.LO , .. ~"fOltltAlrfCE • 1rn111<1oe1 , )4zt·W,'~.,., , 1Jl1 Cr•-1Ne. er 1u,1>1n~ 11'.'(ll. • lll02 1t ,..__.;,, (211] 72Mbt7 'a' 1~',"J::;2~· ~1 UIJl 14!-7211 · '/ · . , , , : COMm»M ll01 N. ~ 2=80~~· 4 .¥1CfOR'ttLU JaOl 1* .. 9Mc11 9IYd ft o.141'" . ..,. ' Mir tM Vldilf" v..l.t.. IOH1•cuiJUM7JI ,., •'41 )~ Wl°li~~;A•· ' . I jl 'rfJ,."':dufll IWrif. PAMDIM WUTCOVINA" !tAIMll!IW •l11'1 MO b9'~8tvd. l OOV1ne-1t A~=·· (211)7-.oao 1 ftlalll•llJOl l tt!Mlln .. 1'11 frw, MIMI 1211> 111-1174 J7'0 • C213) tM. 1rMtt:1111ft11... PtCO '"VutA WHITTIU irfil!i o tzt40 1121 L Whlttltf l'Ml. Jat 15121 111! Whlttllr IWr4I. C114) ~ of"°''""""• IOl.o •l St l'll• G1rtrv4-. •LINDALi (211) 4"'1071 9060l • 121S) ffl-1711- 120 N lrtM IW. POMONA Wll.IHtftl CIMTllt ' tt th•'VlfltUr\ flwi, • 11203 100 romon• Mtll WMt 17&0 Wll1"1lf9 '""·et Oxford (211) 241-410I • 117ff • (11 41 &U-2411 IOOIO •(Ill) JM.n71 .. i I I • I J DAILY PI LOT LEGAL NaMCE OfVHIOll II CITY Ofl" POUllTAlll \tAU•Y. AMO POUJllTAIM YALLllY S(MO(M.. OllT•KT NOTIC• IH'llTOIO 110$ l'CMI Tflll COMl'L•TE U.NOIC.ti"( COIUTlll UC1'!0Jll OJI COLONY l'Allt U:GAL NOTIO: ltlOTICf 01" TIUJTll'$ IALI UtfDl!I 01.lO 01" TltU5T fl• ttttl 1..0AM lit. ...... "f1lJ lltlG •1 Ht NOlltt " l\t•etly •lw1n !1'111 WE 5l$10E IN Tloll CITY l>I' l'OUNTAI• \IALL•Y TlllE COMPANY. A Limit.., N rl'M'rlolllP HOTICE IS HEltEl'I' GIVEN "'-' •• lf\lt!H . <>' 1uc<~HO• lni1t1N, °' !hf; School Ol1lrlcl ol "-'•Ill v 111e •• 1u1>&11tu•t<1 '""'" 1>U"'11•nl la ~ -ot C1fltorN1 •IN rec•lvi< Wllold ,,_.1, '""' ~AK\I""' I>• "'"!.PH c. FLEE"!£• 11Mll "'-lwlur at J:ot l'.M. on J1,,.,1-v ... NO SHAAON L, FLEENElt, HUSIANO It. ltJl, tot <_ .. tot lt nOiUN <Oft> o\NO W!FE •nd tKO<CIHI NOY. J. !Nf In 11r...:lloft of COLONY PAJllC. 11 Ille tMXI'. I TIO. ~IH '42. fl OlilClt! 1l11;;oro1 In Cltv ol """"'•In 11111" 1 .. .-:<:e<d•nc• rn• ol!l(e "' 1114! '"""'~ J!Kor<Hr en will\ the; p11n1 1n0 111>Klllc1tlon1 Incl Or•noe Counly, (1!11ornl1, 1/ld l'Url\1.,,1 •1>«111 ..,..,.!lloft1 ,_ ..., fl~ In ""-"' "'* Nollt• ot 0.l•ull -EIK'llon lo offlc1t ot tl'lf Olreclof flf ~le Wri• Sill '""'"",_ •tcOl"Otd Sftrt. 1'1, lt70 In ot .. Id Cl h All ,..._., """'" bit boo~ •t01 o...-.1t J1l ot .. Id Offlcl•I ..,.,.ltd "LA'<OSCAPE CONSTll:VCTION ll:ec"'1!1. wlol .ell, on J1nW1ry It, 1t71 11 FOii: COLONY PARI(", •<!Cl milled or !1 •00 1.m .. II l1'1t NOHl'I lronl ff'llr•""' lo <Mlhllftd so •• 10 1>o lfl '"t l'ltnO• '"" O••t111t c"""h' c .... rir.o..u 1oe1•td •I ol ~ AOM!N, II$ t..r 'oo p M, 1(111 Civic C•nlt• Orlv~ '°'""'• lormotrlv on FVSO No I LIOMflOuW lll'I .•• W1t~1 .... s"""'· S•nl• """· C•lllorl'll , ., -lcl'I !lmr 111 Old• •~<•••"" .. 111 bf oul>llc •u<l•on, to "'' l'llOl'lf'\I b100tr lor put>lltlY -""· e•1ml-. -<IKIUN, ,.,,, (O•••t>~ •I ""' II~ ol .. 1. 1 .. Bldcffr> '"'" ""' Publk ... •n•I!"" IO l•wtul ,,,..., •• 01 '"" Ul'hed Sl•l••l •II bit -n n1 •• "'" <10<1ir111..., o1 ••Ml •lol'll, tlH1t. '"° In'""'''· '""""'" 1o .,..., I"-" ,,., .. !>ti~ I>• II "-••la Ottd In '"' ,..II l>•O• so •Kelvtd . .:.1mllled 1..a 1><-nv •lhJI~ In ••la Counh •n<I $1111 llet:lerfd ... 11 bit ............ l>I' "'• AO• <llfK"-... IOlk>wl . MINISlRAlOR llVSINESS SERVICES"'> LOI 11Tr1ct111), In lk• Cl!y ol COii• '"" Cl•• O!•tc•or ot 1'1,1t>Uc •"" t,.. Mew. C"""'' OI Or1nee. St•le at CllY Anorne• lot th«kl,.. •NI ,....,,. C1llfotnl•, •• ,.., ,,..,., •Kot-In llDO• to "" Clh Councol ti II> l"fltUl•t N Plttt 11 1nO 11 ol m•pt, In ll'lt Oltoce "-"""on F1bt.,••• 1, 1t11 ol 11'1• Coun•• l!ecoroer o! 111<1 Count• Prlot lo c ..... m.ntl .......... "" tll"-,. l(,A. fl' Wll>Ofl S1'H1, (Oii• ,...,,.., tr1c1or. 1na •" l\J1>ton111ctor1. "'~II C1!Uo•nj1 . ..oraln 1 "'"'""' lic•n ... '""" "'' C"• ~.,., >11• wltl ~ m..ie. bur w,tnoul Of """nlaln V1Hev In Ktorcl•nte w11n tool••n•n! or *•"•""· e•""'" _or "" """ Cl" Oraln1'1<• No. 1 r~ .,1,.., •~$.1•0+"9 t.ur, "°'~'"'"" ,., AU n•d• "'&!I onth"'• all la.-. '""'""'bt•'I<.,, 1<1 •••!llY I~ IAC1el>l1tOne" m•trri1 11. ,,....,1om .... 1, 1001• •na (.,. •rtu•ra bv >•l<I Otr<l. lntl""inlt rnr ••e .. aen111• '" co.malt•• 111 woA •• '"° •~11«1•e• ot 11'11! tru•IH I nd Of tn1 lna!t•ltd on ri.• .,,.,,, """ n•"I" ''""' ttr1tNI '"' ""'" ae#'d, •dv1nt•• ~aec!liNI 11.a; •noll I>• • ..,....,.,,.., on tn<'euntr~r. "'''" ontr •e•I ~• aruv1oea '~· "'""' Of -!OllOw•tlO K...OUI• ,_rln, •n<I .... ""Pele! pd~(•P&I "' !ne .,, won. ITeft' tt0l1t >ecureC! bY ••!a a~. 10-w11 NOl lC (• $11,119!.111 wltn lnrerrll 1ri.reon '"'"' Aorol J ni• btd " • laonl """"''" bot!wffr> I. Jtlll •• orovl<le<t in ••Id"""· '"' C•tv ancl S"'-1 Ol1trkt Atl ~ur.ii•• 011M. OK•mber 11. 1110 bona• •tc ••• lo bit m•<llf ""'' fll wesrs1oe TITLE COMPANY Clh . /toll 01ymrnl• wl!I be m•d• bv ·~ •uth Tru}t~ Coh· Stt\oor D•JI"'' "'' wotked ,.;,,. 8v Wouern Deed Corl>Clrtnon I~• trcn1rec1, l>'"'"'NI tnt we<lllt•lla•"· 8> W•vne >!. Ma!1'tw• win 1avor1l1e """ r0<elvt bid• wl'lk !I Aufl'lorllPd Officer will be 1um,.,1r!11d 1n<1 for...oroeo '" sPs un1 Director nl Public Wort.1 '°' """'"""t f>ubli'n"" Or•rig• Co••' 01nv P•IO! •'Id oubml11!0<1 lo C(tv •"" 1 Covncol, D"'l'.•mber 11, 1910 l l'ICI Janu•r> •. I\, IT"E M 011111. .. O."ri. 1"11 1!9070 Magnetic Trai11 Proposed STANFOB.D CAP l Magnetically suspended train.5 zipping along just above tbe ground a( half the speed 0£ sound or faster. are wilhtn lhe range of niodcrn science, a University of California scientist reports. Jn a paper presented to the American Physical Society's annual midwinter meetJng al Stanford University, Dr, Paul L. Richards said the building of such trains may depend more on economic a o d political considerations than upon severe technical prl)-. blems. Richards, a professor or phys1cis at UC Berkeley, said the !dea of hp lding trains otf the ground through the prin· ciple of like magnetic.: poles repelling each other 1 s already being developed 1n Japan. ,... 11•w 11"'":====---==========I I l vma ~um Comol•1t t1natt1Pel ---- ---- Ht: said small groups of e)i- perts in the United States also are working on v a r i o u s research phases of the prti- b!em. Con11rucr!on "' callNI fOf on plfn• .,,., /to> >PP<lli.., IOt COLON'!' P4.llK •~ 1tto•d~nc~ wlrto lh~ 1>•0'1,j1!ons ol sec11on1 11711 to 1111. incl<11ivt, "' '"" l •l>o• Codr al tnt S111r of C1llfo•n!1. f'>t CllY Council ol" t"" (II"< 01 Founl•I" V1llr• h1> ~· r~sotutkln 1scu11I- 10~ NrwPof1 lllvd. (~~·• Mua "u'•u•nl lo !UCh lnl..,!ion. l1'11t una~r­ ''9Md h 11>1>lv•nu In 1n~ Deo•rlmtn! ol .o.tc0f1n lo< e ... ~,•~• Contr ol •or luu1nct bv tron•!or o! 1n •!COl>olic ffverage 11cen1• IOt 11,en1t.1) tot thn• Orf"11••• Who Cares? No fAbii'" new1paper in the w«ld caret •boot yoor com· munlly llkt your community daUy _,.!paper does. Jt'1 the DAIL T PILOT. LEGA L NOTICE Richards said the b l g technical problem ahead is providing magnets s ma 11 enough and powerful enough lo do the job. lie said the best promise lies in the field o( supercon· ductors. because o r d i n a r y permanent magnets or elec- tromagnets would be much too big and heavy. The su p erconductor achieves conductivity totally without resistance to current when cooled lo near absolute zero -459.7 degree s Fahrenheit below zero usually by liquid helium car· ried on !he train . One of the systems v:isualiz- ed by Richards em.bodied a train rolling on rubber tires until it reaches 50 miles per hour. then electromagnetism would .. repel" the l rain upwards, -------- IAll: 2,tl I Ul"ERIOR COUl!T" OF TMf STAT( OF CALIFORNlll l'OR THE COUNTY OF OR1UllGE Ht . A·•114'1 HOTICI! OF Hl!All:ING ON P ETlllON FOi l'll:OIATf OF Will ilNO f OR lETT liltS TEITAMENTAl!Y E"11re ol >lerbltrt, E. A N OE11~0N, Oece•U'<I. NOTICE IS 11e11e11v C.•VEN '"~I l"'Nt( OF AM ElllCA NT & ~il ha' t,fr<I h~•eln a aell!o<111 or P roba!• ot w;o1 end tor 1u11•nce ol L••t••• T•'1a""'~"M'• to o•llllDl>f•, '1!1rrence to wkl<h 1' mlM:le lor lurtn•r t>1r1"ult"· '""<I In~• 1'1e Tlmt •..0 pl•c' ol h•arlng '"~ ••m• n1• ~n "'' •o• Janu~,. • ltlt. 11 f .)O •,.. I~ '"• (G11•r•C't'"' ol OH11rl,.,~nr No l o! •l•<I '""'' al 100 Cov:.: Cenlt• O••"' ...,e•.T "' Th• C1tv'c1 $1nla """' (•hlo•n 1 01te<1 O«r,.,bor 11. 1910 W E ~! JO>IN Caunl• Cle•• ll:Ol.t.NO E. lltlGONG[ I tH7 Mii~ !lrffl Yott>• l i<!Cl1, C•m tltU Till: 111_. .. , Ali.r111tY '°' l"f!lr•on•• P ubll1he<1 O•enu• """'' D•n• r '"' Oecombltr '" .)0, 19711 aod J~'\"~·~ " 1911 HI I In LEr.AL NOTICE • ' Britisli Sex Change Operations Number 45 IJ'JNDOX •AP) -At lc<t-·t Y.111 1·11rry out a :;eli.thange. ror or against ~urgery, !he No line under 22 i.c; treated, they have lived !or a year ~S Rrttish 11icn and \1•on1e11 u~r<1l1un rvery n1unlb during patient's background a n d or 1s ilnyone ~·ho is a partner as an acct'pted member of h<1ve undergoll<' sex-chang1' 1971. sources said history are r i go r o u s I y in a working 1nartiage. the sex of choice,'' .said a overaUon&, many of 1he n1 !or 11efor.e ·:_:'h:':'~'-i:s~a:n:::yc_:d:ec::is:i•:n:___<~h~ec=k:ed::_. __________ ._'Tchc•~Y __ mu_s_tcp_rnc'_':__'•_u_s 1_ha_t __ s_u_r=g'°'_'_· _______ _ rree un~r Bnta1n '.s Nalionu1 --- Health Ser\'ICi'. nt l' d i ca 11 sour<'t"s reportct:l !od!ly The st'rVJL'e 1.:> financed out (lf general 1t1x31jon. The a\•erage cost of :1n O[>erat1on is $720. but sonic npcrulionli l'Ould t'o~! $2.4116 and n1ort•, according tr• Olli' rri1or1 An off1c1<1I uf lhl' r\lb;in.v T rusl. a chan1:iblt' oq~r111n:i· lion \\'hich help~ sexual dr- viants. s aid "H 11uuld bl.· outrageous if .su<·h op1•r::ilion~ "'ere available onlv ri H111~t· .... 110 could aflurd io p;iy ftJr theni. ' The frtf' :-ui·~t•ry. rarril'd out 1nusll\' 1n J, n n d 11 "I hosp11als. 1~ :J\'atlable only 10 British patien!s Tra11sst•.1:ual 111<.1!1·' h :. \ l' their sc;i,. urg;,n'i. n ·11111v1•d :1nr! <tn <1rttfu:1ril \•ag1n.i erc:1tcd The~ art• i.;ivcn h"rrrHln~·.; ro develop lh!!Jr h re 11 s t s . Tr<.inssexual r~·n1;1lt·i: ;1 r f' upcriltt•d un si) tlit1I lht•lr n111ll' :;exual l'hara1:trr1~11cs bccun1t· predo1n1nanlly ev 1de11\, One spec1ali~t ~aid. "Those \1'ho ha\'C the~(' flJlPr;itmn'i arr seriously dis1 urb1•d peoph·. In add11 1un 10 1hr1:;:l· trt';111.:d on the National lh·;11!l1 Se1·v1t'l' a s m;111y a g<u n p;1y f11r thr1r 01rn I n . .::11 n1en1. · ' You Work Less Keeps things cleaner without effort, eliminates bath tu b rings You Save Money Soap and clothing la st longer Smoot~r. l':asierShla1·c~ t~u.ctry i~ · (,lea Mr Ui,~lt•~ Sparkle Uial>t\I"~ ,~rt OtllD('I" Ask About Sears Conve ni ent Credit Plans Comple te Ins ta llation Av<1 ilable ! Jus t Ask! [Sears I ••-..ootlUCl-~o. So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Ph. 540-3333 Buena Park USO La Palma Ave. Ph. 828-1400 Sa nta Ana 1716 So. Main St. P h. 547-3371 One J.nndon lv"piLil ;1l\1nr -'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Penneys Foremost 4 ply nylon cord tire with 18 month guarantee 1888 700-13 size for popular compacts Blackwall tubeless Size Price Fod. tax 775-1 4 825-14 825· 15 12.88 14.88 ~ 4.88 18 MONTHS GUARANTEE WITH 4 MONTHS 1000/o ALLOWANCE 2.17 2.33 2.36 r o-emo:!>t llratrcli1n C11.1r.iinle•. Your For9Tl<l!ll til'9 0'9-- lectlon ru•rilnltt cOYers all r~m~t sia1seneer ""'' Ir •teot our ~ial aoolie.ltian lit1!s wilh .M'l>"r.tle &I.Yr· ~n1H:i>) a gilin1t all 'oed h.ataTd or defect t11ilurn. You ~rt orolecled for the enlir" slilted montns ol g1.111r.tnlH'. • tl your lire lil ll~ during tho: 11uarantee period, retu'" it to us ana we W•ll, at o ur ootlon, rep;1or ~our tire. or m.k·e ,.,, •llow .. nct tw ... d on 1he o•'!iioal ourcna~ price, ,.~. rludoni; aophc1ble f"ederal [Joe,,... l a•. 10w••d th<'! pur- <hilso: a l• l>f'W tire, Vie will allow 100~. ol the ori&onal p1.1rch•s<'! orite, ,.•ch>dinr.: apphc111>le F~•al U:cise Ta~. du•+n11: the 100•.w 1llOWar><'.e. Pf'•lad. Tl'le.rC'allrr. -W•ll allow 50% or 25% of lhe 01i11:io•I pure:haSl' or:ce, t•t1ud- 1ng aoo11ca!11e rederal Excise -;at, tow .. rd the. purch11se ar a new lore. !Seot chart ~low). Ft'llrral CJc•se Ta~ 10- JUS!<nent •11,,...ance win be made on The bl 5il of ll'tn percent ol the oriRinal tro:ad re.main•ni;. r Oll(MOST PROTECTION CUARANT[C CHAllT HERE'S HOW VOUR GUARANT [[WORKS; [n!ire 1uari1n!tr ptriod. .. _ ..• ,_ ,. 11 menlltl 100°0 ;tl!awance ptnod •. , .• , 1·4 mon111s 50~. 1llowance O•flod .. . _ , . . • .• s,9 monll•• '56• •llow1nce puiod._ ... , -·· ·-·-· .10·11monl~I Tt!ad Life Proleetio11. We buHd in!o eve!'f Foremast !Ore sate tracrion ind lcatol"5. Thev signal when your tire ~1'01.1ld be replaced. II your *"' wears out {e•cept fcw incorrect.a.li~nmenll we will m11~e <tn .t.Uawa"4:e b3Y!lf on lh<'! "~'"-'"~' pun;haY! 1»1ce, e•clucli1111: .t.pplieabfe fed- erAF [WC•M' T.1r, IGWJrd !he 1:n.1rchase of• new tire. W• win allow '; durini: the fir~! half« y, durln1 tr.. second hall of lhe staled montns of R~r•nte<'!. rede.,r C.cise Ta-:tdjus!me'tt 11llowanc<'! will be m11de on thot blrsis ef the ~rcen! of the crlglnaf tread remainin(. lnn; 11uarantee •~not lr•nsl<'rab". II is only for privale 1.1.1s~~ger cars or pass!n11@r stat•on wa~s. Special Buy! Penneys 'El Tigre' 12 volt battery. 40 MO. GUARANTEE Sizes for most Am•rican cars, Features solid rubber case . Engineered for heavy electri- ca l demands. Larger plates I\~..,;;;~'""~ :' Yes, you can shop 12 to S Sundays too, ._,+ any of these Penney Auto Centers: FASHION HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunt in gton Beach. Use Pen neys time payment plan . ISLAND, Newpotl Center; Mond111, Jan11ary 4, 1q71 MILY PILOT J3 .Lincoln Intermediate School Lauds 284 Students Lincoln School. Corona del )!;ir, has named 284 seventh and cighlh grade pupils lo 11s pr1ncipa l's list and honor roll for the fall q~arter, Students with grade point 111 eragea between 3.5 and 4.0 arc eligible for the prlncipal's l1~t. There were 43 ~1ghlh graderS ,qualifying. They are : Arthur Allen, Don Arlhur, Jun Ra!dwin, Kevin Baltz , Ken B:1!l'S, D11ug Bcliakoff, Don Bender, T11m Benvenuti, Adele Ca netti, l\Pv1n Cavanaugh, f{it hard Dale, Lydia-Davis, K.i!liy Davis, April de Fabry, Jlhill(l Dixon. !11erilcc Dunn, Beth J·'.nf.:land . Jeff Fraass, Brian Vrankov1c, Yuriko Ga rno. :-i.1!ly Jacobus, Chu c k J\ilratrick, Bill 1.angsdorf, ;----.; Cindy La rson. Ann Loftus, Scott f\tacOowan, Colleen Matt, J.B. McFarland , Liz McNally, Ronald McNamara, Nancy Munger, 8 t n h Nguyen, Sue Olander, Ellen Prince, Louls Rayptond, John Reese, Bill Rose , J im Ross, Patrjcia R~Je.annie Rush, U llra Vanesse, Connie Wagner and Dall ace Winkler, Eigh th grade honor roll sludenl.s at Lincoln numbered 87. ·n1ey are: Andy Alison, S h i r ley Anderso n, Ann Arnold, Sue Ashley, Jennifer Austgan, Gary Bognall , Tim Ben- \•enuti, Barbara B I o d get t , Ellen Bwoker , Molly .Boyd, William A. Brown ll, Nina Casey, Linda Chase, Trisha Clark, David Cully, Ste ve Davis, Di an n e NOW IN Dickson, Ellen Ebert, L<e Ed· dJngton, Susan England, Kent Euell, Tom Forsyth, Missy Fowler, Randy Hanson, Randi Heilig,' Liz Higgins, Barbara tlof- fman, Patty Humphreys, John Grffnwood, John Jerger , ~lie Johnston , Candy Jones, Marllan Jones, Julie Jonell, Scott Jordon, Molly Keating , • Andrew :Ko, Darlene Ko~er, Donna La.Borde, Nancy Loge, Kelli Light, Julie Lewis, Val Lewis , Tina Llmb, Susi Llmbeck:, Glenn Lipson, Ba r ba ra Loitz, Bill MacGowan, Mark Maxwell , Scott McAd am , John McCormick, Robert McNally, Rob Mill er, Bill Moseley, Carol Munroe. Kellie Newcomb, Chris Palmer, Cur t Is Parvin, ruchard Paulsun, Don Pennington, Scott Richard, Nancy Rose. Va ne ssa Rossi, Lisa Rubenstein, Kathy Rush, Jane Schnorr, • Karen SchweitLer, Cindy Shaw, Patty Sheldon, Jeff Smith, Lori Smith, David Sowa, B ro oke Thompson, Scott Uhl , Brete Underhill, Anne Viergever , Bruce Voga!. Ca rol y n Walters, Juiie Watson, Loma Watt, Gregg Weinberger, Dean West. Arlye Worrell, Jim Witt.er. Joe Young, Anne Zillg1tt and Mary Zuzog. Sixty.nine seventh grade students made the principal's list. They are: Lynn Amundson, J e ff Behrens, J anine Benner, Pat Brucks, Pam Butts, J ean Cavanaugh, Alison Child, Teddi Converse, Corin Coulter, Tono Crone, El liott Crooke, Philip Doyle. Tommy Feldman. J o h n 1''redkin, Kevin Franklin, Lei Fujilsubo, W'endy Gam- bill , Mimi Gehler, Kirk Gorrie, Mark H i nr I ch s , Bill Hoofe. Jon Hughes , Ki m Hutchi ngs, Mary Be th Irwin, Jeff Johnson. Karen Knox, Jim Kobers- tein, J ohn Kunze , Lesly Lane, Bcrnedette Luciano, Jay Ftrgusoo, Morghan Floth, Lisa Folino, Keith Franklin, Doug Garn, Ca roline Barrett, Liz Gold. Dona Grabb, Leslie Graney, Chris Hall, Jean£>tle Hawes, Leslie lliggins, D o n n a liolden. La urie Hostetler, J udy Hoyt, Richard Iverson. Frances Jayne, Mark Jensen , Sue Johnsoo . Aleta Kellam, Pamela Kloss, Dick LaRue, Brian Loftus, T r acy Lyna m , Pele MacKc~ie. Stacy Manahan, Ron Marley, Canda et Mason , Julie M c Co r ke 11 , Marg aret McElligoti, Mike McNalley, NOTIC .E. • • • Is Given of The ANNUAL MEETING Of Life Members of The SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL In The Hospital Auditorium Wed., Jan. 6, 1971 at 3 P•IJI~ Reports will be given and election of new officers will be held. - P---.J l FULL Lisa Monaco, Billy Moore, ----------------~ ti PROGRESS I Rl ,~~j Our largest inventory right after Christmas forces a drastic cut in prices. "OUR GREATEST VALUES" "YOUR GREATEST SAVI NGS " HURRY FOR BEST SELECTIONS 186S HARBOR BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA PHONE SU.Sill Tom Me yer, Richard Nebb, Elena Ohman , Chris Palmer, Donia Prince, Kelley Pope, George P. Qu ick, Andrea Rawlings, Lora Ricca, Becky Rohde, Jim Root, Eileen Rose, Dou g Ru therford , Tomi S an b o r n , John Sch.nciderman , Chuck Sword, Marjorie Ta ylor, Mar k Thomas, Heather Trent, J.I e at h e r Valdes, Bryan Watson, Rob Weber, Andrea Well s, Tracy Westervelt, M a t t Wharton. Kris Wildman, Jean· ne \Villiams. Kevin Wilson, Charles Wingard, T im Bayless , Heather Burns, Steve Messenger . Stuart Orr, Megan Qusen , Steve n Richmond, Jeff lluzicho and Sue Smith . There were 85 seventh grade pupils named to the nonor roll. They are: Pat Ahem, Laura Asbury, John Aynes, Julie Baldwin, Steve Baugh, Nancy .Bechtel, Rand i 1'eck, Allison Beach, Ricky Be.II, Julie Blair, Ta ra Blanchet, Lori Blong, Frank F rowne, Kathy Bruce, Barbara Bunn, Debbie Ca rroll, Victoria Case, Eric Chase , Diana Clark, Lisa Creamer, Jerry Dola n, Ronald Dorn, Tracey Earl. James Elliott, Kim Farris, Penneys Scientific Testing Center t\!l'l~'I· Charge it at any of these Penney Auto Centers: BUENA PARK (Ortnoelhorl)e at ValleyVlflwJ CARLSBAD FU LLERTO N HUNT INGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BE ACH ORANGE "THE CITY" Dl1gno1tlc l1n11 open Mond•Y through S1lurd1y. ) / FREE - TAX RETURN PREPARATION DEPOSIT $5,000-to a new or existing savings account at Pacific Savings and receive FREE preparation of your personal Federa l and State tax returns. Some peo- ple will save $200 to $300 or more in accounting fees. Of course, this offer doesn't apply to corporation, partnership, business or s imilar returns. PROFESSIONAL -qualified tax counselors wm ·prepare your personal returns and make sure that you receive eve ry possible benefit under the tax law. Each return will then be tri ple-checked fo r lega l and accounting accuracy by highly-trained spe· cialists. All work is done in the privacy of yo ur Pacifi c Savings off ice using the tra ined person nel of Skousen Tax Serv ice, Inc. Th e Skousen firm, start ed in 1946, is the second larges t tax com pany in the United States . They currently empl oy over 3,000 counselors and have prepared more than 1,000,000 tax retu rns . WORK GUARANTEED -by the Skouse n Tax Service, Inc. Guaranteed Accuracy. Returns are triple-checked for accura cy of mathe · matics and reproduction. If the compa ny mak es an error resu lti ng in any penalty or interest charge, th ey will pay th is pe nalty or interest. Guaranteed Protection. 11 your return is qu estioned by the Government. they will ha ndl e all the details at no. charge including representatio n at an aud it conference. BRING OR MAIL -the attached certificate to Pa cif ic Savings when you open or add new fund s to your account so that it can be val idated. At the same time, we will s et up a specific appointment fo r you to meet a tax co unselor at a la• ~r time most conven ient to yo u. PLUS -you get a FREE Safe Deposit Box, servi cecharge FREETraveler'sCheques up to $2,500, FREE Collection of Notes, FR EE Notary Service and FREE Financial Cou nse ling. AND -your deposit ea rns 6% per annum in a two yea r Certificate account -5%% per annum in a one year Certificate account or 5% per annum in a regular pa ssbook account, all compounded dai ly. REMEMBER -to qualify for this free offer you need on If to make your deposit and get the attached certificate ·validated. If you have an ACCOU.NT ELSEWHERE, let us have your passbook and we will transfer your money to Pac1f1c for you. Offer good un til revoked but not beyond April 5, 1971. SO HURRY -make your deposit TODAY -or call me, Rick Jack, Manager, at 5404066 or stop by our.office for more information •. Pacific Savings and Loan Association SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET, COSTA MESA, cALlfORNIA.92626 \ ---------------------------------------------------------' ' ---" . ----... ' ' . . . . • .., ....... -• ' j ~ .. ' ' • • ,. l • . ' . • • • • • • • • • ' • 14 DAILV PILGI' ' • Wrapping Fis h E ng land Dish Tli reatened? LONDON (AP) -The pur-We mU!t ·persuade her to veyors ol fish and chips areff prefer fish and chips to , being warned they must whatever else i.s potentially smart.en up lf they want to on her menu." Taut, at the Bar • Dance s tudents at UC Irvine take their "'ork a t the bar rather seriously in this s ilhouette study of a d ance class. Stretch ing muscles into compliance is the task at hand for students usin)! the new Fine Arts Village d a nce s tudio, v.'hile a classmate takes a breather. Freew a y Landscaping ·May be Da11 g erous be mowed and is susceptible to few diseases. keep going. F~h t riers and thei r Generations . of En.lishmtn customers are not so sure. have staved off evening Ray Rya ll, a spokesman of hmger by ,wandertng about the White Fish Authority , eating -fried fish and potatoes commented: out ol a wrapPing .made of "People like their fish and newspapers. Now other at-chips in newspapers and they tractions, such as hamburgers don't like change. But we have and take-away packages of had complaints U1at 11 's Chinese food, are competing. unhygenic. We ;Je not laking In adlition there are cries sides, but it is '9art of the about hygieot. British tradition." Tony Williams, chief or Ryall added that some fish Associated Fishers' caleriog a!ld chips shops in the United division, says in the Fish States import old English Induslry Review: "The in-newspapers for wrapping in duslry musL shed ils fish and the time-honored way . soggy chips in newspaper im· What the English call chips age if ll is to survive. We ar e known in the United Stales musl compete for our share as French fries. The lhings of the housewife's purse today you know as potato c h i p s and much more in the future. a re called potato crisps here. (Adver1J .. m..,1) Artificial Teeth Never Felt So Natural Before Now ••• Plastlc Cream Discovery RevolutlonlzH Denture Wearing \ For lhc first time. 1eierla offtt1 a ... c.U """'" cnifiw/ably. You may pta1t1c cnam thal holds dent~ bitt harder. chew better. ea1 more a11hey'••t !lever bftn held before-natllnllly. lonn1an chu.hc membrane tb:iit I.ti/» Fui;ooENT Ja1u for houn. Resists Ito/' YOW• 4m1Nrr1 C. /l&f rt-'>n•l lu-moistur ... Dentures that fit arc c1- 1.u, i.J "°"' ""'ulll. ll!Tlt1al to health. ~ your dentcsl lt'• 1 revolutionary di~ovtry r~l:uly.~tc.a1y-10-u'!e F111oot:i-:r called F1lOOEl"T" For daily borne Denture Adhc11vt Cream at alt u11t. (U.S. Patent fJ,003,968) drua: counter1. FtJ:OOl!NT hdd& da:itutQ flnner LOS ANGELES (A P) - Don't make freeway landscap- ing so attractive thlt it distracts niotorisls and causes accidents ls the guiding prin- c;iple of the California Div ision of High ways. Ivy is more expensive lhan,I;::=================:;:;\ ice plant so Paine recom- llichard ~f. Paine, the di vision's senior landscape architect and J ohn Smith, a state landscape specialist, are concerned with growing things along 300 miles of freeway in Loo Angeles. Orange and Ventura coun ties. mends it only where a more "'refined" appearance is need- ed "In most places we are blending in with a rough natural terrain and ice plant is more appropriate," he says. Other types of plants and trees used w improve the ap- pearance ci( the concrete raceways include a c a c i a , oleander. honeysuckle , ;asmine, bougainvillea, palm and eucalyptus. Smith says "nobody would look twiee at a dogwood tree in Atlanta but one in full bloom off the Hollywood Paine says he does not use Freeway would pr 0 b a b I y pine and fir trees which arc cause a mile-Jong fender being killed by smog in some bender." mountainous a reas near the Los Angeles basin. J\'y and the large leaf ice The higheways d j v j s ! 0 n plant, called hottentot fig, are plants between 10,000 and common plantings a I o n g 15 000 trees Southern California fr~ways. ;:-=-·====--"'====o.11 Paine says the ice plant ts ideal ground rover in this area because it doesn't need much 11;a\er, doesn't have to R<ad Gra ffiti By Bill Leary , I See by Today's Want Ads e Grt twalthy whilr you v.·ork! Position open at a local Heallh F.:lod StorC'. Ck HELP \VANTE D. • Thr key v.·nrds, "CllJI,.. OREN OKAY!" If you're in the m.1 rkr! for a n1N', large Apartment -Ck RENTAL.S. e It's tlme for you lo "BOO. GrE'' In your new "BUG'' Ck our autos for sale class NOW! Before it's too late! ., ' •• Residents of Newport Beach Two questions of interest to a 11 Newport Beach home- owners and residents are being studied by the City Plan• ning Commission this Tuesday night. '· 1 l Should the Promentory Point Bluff be developed into 620 Adult Apartments bringing with them more traffic con• gestion to Pacific Coast Highway and Bayside Drive or shauld it be develaped as single-family residences which would compliment the surrounding area? f2 I Should the Villa Marina-Ken Niles area be developed into a shOpping center and restaunmt complez to be called "Balboa Wharf" or should it be developed in accordance with its present zoning into. low density 1apai h11Wts simi· lar to the "Newport Apartmem" adjacent to thiS area? If you have thoughts on these two prolected develop- ments, we '.,rge you to attend the special public hearlnt1 of the Planning Commission. Tuesday January 5, 1971 7:18 p.m. Corona del Mar High School Little Theatre If yw can..:it atl9nd the Tuesday llMl•tllMJ. please send a letter or telegram exp~ lftCJ YO!I' ti1au9hts to: ,. • Mr. John J. Jakosky, Chairman NeWJOff teach PlaMl"'ll Comrillssian 3300 Newport 1o.ie'WGrd N.wport leach, Calfonlla, 92660 ' spon......t ..., tho ·l<llboo hi• nd lmpr ... ....,,1 A•-••tlon Torn HoontGn,. PrMldonl -206 lluby, B•lboo ........ ' FRESH EASTERN GRAIN-FED PORK CHOPS Center-Cut Rib 79c CENT~'·CUT 89¢ lb LOIN ..... 1b. EASTERN -GRAIN-FED ROASTS Pork Loin Roast ~:~o" 49:. Loin-end Roast ::~·:.. 1b. 59~ • If you at• a h011_l ... you will lio .. 10 coak al ln•t l09l meol1 l~ 197 1. Wlicif • thought , • , 109.S ,...,.10 lo loak fonlof<~ 10 ;., •1971-iwl do"'I Ire! , • •TI.• - "'o t.elp ol>001ld lo. t our 11.<gh"orhoocl Vo•u 111ork~l. 11 al"""f• ho• tho •-"' ...., 1.t. ... .., ill .Ml~•• dar i• oMI dor ""'· AA -r horna"'o~•• who 11,opt "' v- ,,.J,.,.hor &ho llat •ver bee" .tuck for o menu id•o. !ih•'ll toll you !hot Voru ii • ho111~ ,.0U r'1 porodi .. for MW food•, , • Ne••• o dull meal or on u•intff•li"9 ~hoi>Pi~g trip. loller ""'" o•king •, . <-• Oft ;,. youl"Mll. S!llfl 1ho ,..., )'.of oft n9ht -.tth _.. tho• 109.5 ,._ food tdoo• ol y-lingertip1. EEF GROUND FRESH -EVERY HOUR GROUND FRESH HOURLY GROUND FRESH HOURLY Ground Chuck I Ground Round BAJ<-B-Q 75' I LEAN, 89C FAVORITE lb. ! TASTY lb. OSCAR MAYER • SARAN. REG. OR THICK 69c SLICED BACON I r~~. WAfEl 12.0L NG. 7.5c 2-1.L THICK $1 .39 UNIC SAUSAGE ............ 1-ta Pll:G, 79c PUREX BLEACH = liill111111111lll~UIUilllllll~UllWll!MLUJI l""""M1•111·-~1111u~11m111~11111m11Hlll ~~1u~m1!tmmmmd !•l'(lj;ii:t1 :i 1lf11J•llJ\ilµ;II91µ51fj :J51111:J!Jii·1MliD I LAUU SCUDDER'S MAYONNAISE ~ Di li1111111H111111111m•mmm11m--•1~10011111111111111111mw111111111111111111111111111111m111H1. · KITCHEN-FRESH DELICATESSEN Cottage Cheese PINT CTN. OVEN-FRESH BAKERY BUYS 31 c ROLLS ~~~~ 39c JERSEYMAID-FARMER • LO-CAL. CRM. ORANGE or CINNAMON MONTEREY JACK CHEESE7.0~: ~~~~"7... 89¢ Vons Pound Cake ~:·:~;~" ...... 39¢ fA'1olft .IOM N 31 c I PlllMUrt OI I AllARD 3 . 29¢ v F h B d ~NUCHI O • WlllT[ 35¢ BRAUNSCHWEIG ~ BISCUITS 1-0L ...... ~ ons res rea ;,~:~~" .. ~ "· • • l B. • lB. • • LB. LB. SAVE W IT H VO NS FROZEN FO OD SPE CI AlS VONS MUT PIES Birdseye Awoke f.OL .................................. 39c CHICK'N • •tEf e TU .. tEY 1-0L Larrys Poor Boy Sandwich lS.OL ............................ 79c Mac. & Cheese~L Roal Whip Whipped Topping QUA.IT ....................... .o19c Vons Urnas & Ham a.oz. .............................. 27c Leo's or Danola Cooked Ham «>L rm ........... 61' C.H.B. Pancake & Waffle Syrup 2'-'>L .......... 33' Green Goddess Salad Dressing Wl$HIONE wz. 4Sc Italian Ro.e Sa lad Dressing wisHtON• ><>L ..... .ol5' Sia Puff Fabric Sof!ener O'-L ...................... '1" SCHILLING Black Pepper .ol.OZ. CTN. 53' IMPERIAi. Mgrgarine DIET-1-LB. SOFT-l·LB. 46'' L-t••• Hlli. Pima, II Tof9 11 012 lffch 11..t., Hw.tlllftH ..... 17910 M .. 11.Jlo, '""NI~ ..... ' • INAU ·GURAL FANFARE COLOR·FUL ~ County Contingent Celebrates SEN. AND MRS. DENNIS E. C ARPENTER BEA ANDERSON, Editor Pitt lf On stag• tonight will be Harborite John Wayne (abov•), ·~ in th• audi«tc• will be Assemblyman and Mr1. Robert Burk• (rljftt), ., An Impressive number o[ Orange Coast residents are caught up in the whirlwind of inaugural fesllvities, climaxing tonight with a star-studded Entertainment Gala in Sacramento's Memorial Auditorium. Heading the delegation is Edward Mills of Laguna Beach, co-chairman of the inaugural c<lmmittee, Y:ho is serving with Holmes Tuttle of Los Angeles, chairman, and r-.trs. Hale Ashcraft of the Bay Area, co-chairman. Beginning last night, several area couples attended a posh preinaugural black-tie dinner dance in the Woodlake Inn, Sacramento, where music for dan- cing ~·as provided by Ernie llecksher's Orchestra from the Fairmont llotel, San 1'"'rancisco. This inaugural fund-raiser \Ya s sponsored by the CommiUee of Inaugural sponsors -those \Yho contributed $1,000 or more. Invitations were malled to an exclusiYe guest list, and tickets lo the affair were $250 each. Today opened \Yilh a prayer breakfast in the Senator Hotel and the s1Yearing-in cerernonies on the west capitol steps, follo~'ed by numerous parties 4"ti a beer garden festival hosted by LL Gov . and Mrs. Ed. Reineke. GERf\1AN GARDEN The three-tiered state parking lot near the capitol was turnedii.into a German garden where beer and a buffet IW1cheon \vere served'. An art show was plactd in the rotunda to further carry out the festive spirit. Tonight will be capped with the Inaugural Entertairuncnt Gala, 1.\'hich some 5,000 are expe<:ted lo allend. The program ~·ill be presented by an all-star cast including Frank Sinatra. Dean i1artin. Jack Benny, John \Vaync, Vikki Carr, Jim1ny Stewart. Buddy Ebsen and 'l'he Young S:.iints. Participatin g in all festivities arc Sen. and r.trs. Dennis E. Carpenter of Newport Beach. For !he prcinaugural ball, Mrs. Carpenter wore a Christmas red velvet gown with matching full length coat. Trimming the sleeveless empire gown and edging the collar and sleeve!'! of the coat was jeweled silver beading. She selected silver slippers and bag for accessories. Also during the w e e k e n d , they entertained the Robert Grants of Linda Isle as their housegucsts. The Grants took in the inaugural ctremonies and will attend the gcila. Assemblyman and ?\1rs. Robert Burke of Huntington Beach are making the activities today a family affair. All ~·ere s pectators al the swearing-in. lunched in the beer garden and are looking forward to lhe excitement tonight in the auditorium. BALL HIGHLIGHT Also making the Sunday nighl b11!1 a highlight of their New Year's weekend were· Mr. and Mrs, Arnold 0 . Beckman of Corona del Mar, the Robert Beavers of Fullerton, Assemblyman and Mrs. Robert Badham of Newport Beach, f\1r. and Mrs. A. Patrick Nagel of Corona del Mar, Mr. and Mrs. He rbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach and Mrs. Donald K. \\'<:.shburn of Corona del Mar. Mrs. Kalmbach selected a sleeveless gold and white brocade gown and "'hite pcau de soie accessories. while ?\1rs, Nagel chose a je"·eled paisley gown "·ith a round neck. f\1rs. Mills wor;. ,. long-sleeved gown featuring a silver· and gold brocade bodice and '-Cht pumpkin chiffon skirt. · Other portions of the inaugural "·cckend "'ere high points for Orange Coast residents. A!lending the sy,•f:.iring-ln ceremony for Evclle J. Younger , attorney general, were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnes or Newport Beach, and in the audience for the gala tonight will be Dr. and Mrs. D. 1', Friest .vl Costa Mesa. The Roy E. )unes o! Costa Mesa have mndc a lull weekend out of the inaug,aration, with. sightseeing tucked in between ceredlonies. Since Mrs. JUn'e is making her firl!lt visit to Sacramento, they toured the city Sunday and today'l'I agenda included a visit to tbe govemor·s office for her. Before returning to the Southland tomorrow, the Junes also \Vilt attend the gala tonight. • Ready for the ball ore I above l Mr. and Mrs. A. Patrick Nagel and I below ) Ass e mbfr~~n and Mrs. Rob ert Ba dho m. They joined 500 others for a Llcc:.-ti e affa ir in th e Woodlake Inn , Sacramento. I , .Jf OAILY PILOT Monday, January 4, 1971 Second -string Players Sure .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a liwbman at a Midwest.era university and: l ·uve ln a dorm. I hope you'll amwer in the pa per because if a letter from Ann Lander! showed up for me I'd die. The problem is simple. I can't a:et a gll'J. I've had a few blind dales but wbeD. ·I ask a chick on my own J strike out. l.'m not the ugliest guy in the world and J can't figure out why I'm poison ivf. I see real jerks sco ring left and right. One kid in th is dorm who is a case of arrested development actually gets phone calls from dames. I'm a fairl y good conversationalist and I really dig a solid rap session. Can you suggest sotnething? I like chicks as well as lbt next guy but they don't like me. ANN LANDERS &] What 's the word ~ -THE LONER DEAR LONER: You 1ay you like cblck.t as well a1 tbe next guy -but who JS lhe aext guy, and bow well doe1 be like girls? Doe1 he like them well enough to try a second or lblrd lime after be'1 been turned down? And what t1od of chicks to you chase? Tbe camP'ls beauty wbo ba11 12 other cll1 rullillng after ber? You might bit fly dirt by eaUlng: that quiet, not-10- gorg:eous 1al who doesn't seem lo h1t1e much going for bu, You coWd solve YOUR problem and hers, too. DEAR ANN LANDERS: That was a terr.ible Jetter from the woman who ca lled her molher senile just because she couldn 't remember the names of her children, Our own dear mother lived to be 88. There were 11 children in our family. We' were all born before Mothe r \\'as 32, She could ne ver remember any of our names so she used to ca ll us by our birthdays, I was "Jan 3. '' Everyone Harborite _ Says Vows S!. Edmund's Church of England , Pagewood, Australia \vas the setting for the af- ternoon nuptial rites linking Cheryl Ann Lundin o f Maroubr.i. Australia, a n tl Cary L. Peterso n of Glebe, Australia. The bride is the daug hter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F'. Lundin of 1'-faroubra and t h e bridegroom is the son of Mrs. June Peterson of Ne1A·port Beach and the late ~1r. Harold W. Peterson Jr. The bride was escorted lo the altar by her father for . the sirigle rii.ng ceremony, which was followed by a receplion in Aar on bro ok Lodge, Coogee Beach. A graduate of Randwick Gir ls High School. the new 1'-1rs. Peterson attended the Univ~ity of Sydney wherl' her h sband , an alumnus of New t Haf'bor High School . is s t Ud y i n g aeronautical engineering. Winners called n1e "Jan " for short. (They still do.) The two youngest In out family were lwins. Mom called Harold: "Boy , Feb ~ · :ind Burdette, ·'Gi rl. Feb. !I." My oldest brother is called "Ape" by everyone. (His birt hday was April 8.) The only confusion was with my sisters .June and ~tarie. Wh e n Mom would holler "June I" she was calling f\-tarie, bvt son1elimes June (whose birthday \\'as in December ) would answer. Outside of tha t mi xup there was no trou ble. Some people thought this was verv strange. We never did. It seemed perfectly natural to us. So please print my letter and remind your readers tha t every n1other has her own little oddities anhthis doesn 't mean she is nuts -Jp . 3 . ' I ' ' I . ,, I .Fontana ".& • Dating Game DEAR JAN : Thanks for lettlnr us know bow It Will la )'OIU" fa mily. Mi mother called us by CM&r names. Sometimes abe'd call three names be fore lihe bit the right one -but she always made it eventually. argument was aboul. She replied, "Nothlng important. BUI came to the office lhis afternoon and we straightened everything ouL" Is this sufficient? My husband and l th ink it's not. If she were your dauehter wha t would you do? -CONCERNED PARENTS DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our daught er is 18. She is a high-minded, moral girl , holds a good job and has never caused us any trouble. Last night when her date was leaving (about mi dnight) he slammed the door and yelled, "Go to hell ." My husband is a sound slee per and this awakened him. He asked me if J had heard it -and 1 had. DEAR CONCERNED: I'd mind my own buslDess. The h11ale wa1 between them. Stay oat of It. At breakfas t this morning our daughter said no thing. This evening at the dinner table my husband asked her what the When romantic glances turn to warm embraces is il love or chemis try? Send for the booklet "Love or Sex and How to Tell the Difference,'' by Ann Landers. Enc.lose a long, stamped, self-addres.sed, envelope and 35 cents in coin wnh your request in care of the DAILY PILOT. 72790 Peering Around ~fOOEL DECOR earned a check for Mrs. Donald Ben- nett, chairman of the Women's Information Coun cil of Laguna Niguel. for participation In the Christmas decoratio n cont~ of the Lido model home in Lake Forest. Mrs. Bennett and her com- mittee received a c h e c k from Donald Wilkinson, pro- duction manager for Oc· cldental Petroleum Land and Development Corporation, on behalf of the Parklan e Residential School of Orange CoWlty. The school, presently under conslruction on a IO.acre site in El Toro, is designed for the care of mentally retarded children. KEN HALPERT of Newport Beach participated in the weekly Nastar Race I n J ackson Hole, Wy. while vaca· tioning there over t h e holidays. lllAUTIFUL CLOTHIS .,. Only SUQhlly U11d lly ,,.,. who C•n'I Mr llO M •- !wlte In "'' wmo dreu . Thelr L.ou -Your Gilt> THI SECOND TIMI AlOUND -E. 17111 fl., CMl1 ,,.,_ 0...,11 ,.s-MWlllll THE BEST lt 11den hlp polh pr• .. • "P11· n11h " i1 0111 of the werld'1 1r101t pop11l1r co1r1ic 1tript. ll11cl It d1ily in the DAILY PILOT, 25%to 40% OFF Students Sing Out Fontana of Rome shapes your future with this • ~. "" :i. ' • 'I) . r' : ' !j·~·lh ' ~ I .... : .. : . A J oylul Happening will be presented by the Laguna Beach High School Choral Readers for members of the ~iuna Beach Branch of the Amerita'f\ Association o f Univeriity Women. , Tbe program. written by the high school writi ng class, will bei;in at 8: 15 p.m. tomorrow in t)\e high schoOI auditorium. Through use of music, da nce and v.isual effects, a day in the Art Colony from sun rise lo sunset \Viii be depicted. The Choral Reader prog ram flri~inated a! the high school under the direction of Charles Schiller and has received na· lional recoriltion. superbly draped dress. 'J'oP..s litching n1a kes the V·neck. pocket and deco rative side opening a stand out. Note the charming slit a t the hem and the button trim. The zipper is set in the center back seam. Fabric sug~estions : jersey, gabardine, wool knit, synthetics or lightweight wool. 72790 is cut in Misses Sizes 10-18. Size 12 requires approximately 2 5/8 yards oC 54" fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea De- si~ner Pattern produces a better fit. •DRESSES •MATERNITY TOPS •PANT SUITS • SLACKS •BLOUSES SPECIAL COTTON TMLL &DENIM PANTS only 14111 re. upto '81' Order 72790 : give size, name, address and zip. co.n1 ... G,... ",,,.., Cffltt• S2 postpaid. Address SPADEA. Box N Depa rtment or•n•• ,.11u ""C:.~.,,..~ •• ~1•'- CX·IS, Milford, N.J. 08848. Pattern Books by Cl ass· ,l'1:~.~.:'!'7.~..... ,. ,...1111on 111tof ification: Coats a nd Suitsl r~$1::::::po;;:st~p~a~id~.=====d~~=-=--=-:=-=:~~~~~~~·~"~~~"~'~~~·~"~~~~~~~. Duchess Co llared The Du t chess or ffoing Brings· Femin inity ~ Mollie Parnls' boutique spring 1971 collection comes this e vocative l~eeved black matte jersey ·topping a gathered red and black chiffon '~ skirt wi th ruffle that cascades down the side to border th e ank le l~ hemline. The waist is belted in red and black ribbons. . . . The public is Invited to at. ten d the presentation \\"hich ..,.·i ll follow a business mee ting at 7:30 p.m. t.1 a r I b o rough, formerl y Consuelo Va n d e r bi I t, is credited with sta rting the W •i'st W•tch ers craze ror dog collars. .... .... She wore 19 strands of TOPS \Vaist W a I c h c rs pearls on her S\l'an·like neck . assemble every Thursday :it 7 a fea t that has never been p.111. in Ci~le View School, equalled, fashio n historians ·... -... , •. Come in Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday and get our "Festi val " budget perma nent inclu'ding hair cut, shampoo and style set. Just 944 'ULLl a fVlll ltt.IWT~'l'Olf ••Aall Nh"°*T •&ACN 0.~ C...-H""""9• C...... Fltfl"" h lW 1,..j IW. 11t-4U ,.... ,._,, ..,.m l s.. ,_,., •u.n11 0,.... """' °"""' ~ ... .. , . Hunti ngton Beach. say. l ieii;:;;!.i~ .• :ii~,~~~~~ .. r~i"i ~t:.vF;~"!1i::iiiii~~::;i~~iiii~i!.i!ie]~ill!lt'i~"""iiii·~:>ill~ Second . .J~eduction in our Semi-Ann~l 'QualiCraft . @ill®~~~~ . --· ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • were 5.99 to 7.99 -,_ ...... ,. ....... E 0 • • • • • • • • were 8.99 to 10.99 Now even 1reater 5avings on America's largest-selling fashion shoe'1 StJll Jots of terrific styles to choose. Hurry In now to enjoy the best s election In your size and fevorlte colors! Handbags reduced, now 1.97 to 4.97 FASHION ISL AND Newport C•nt•r HUNTINGTON CENTER Huntington Beach SOUTH COAST PLAZA Coi t• Mesa FASHION SQUARE S•nta Ana I I ROBES UP AT HOME WEAR TO DRESSES COCKTAii: ~ FORMALS CAPRI SETS SPORTSWEAR COATS OFF 3424 VIA UDO e NEWPORT BEACH ON E OF THE LIDO SHOPS MON.-FR IDAY 9,30 A.M.-.1,30 P.r.\. SAT URDAY 10 A.M.-4 P.M. ' ( • Monday, January 4, l q11 -DAILY PILOT J 7r , To avoid di sappointment, prospective brides are ieminded to have their wedding stories with bl~ck and whi te J?lossy P.hoto- graphs to th e DA ILY PILOT Women s De- partment one week before the wedding. Christmas Game: Much Ado About Nothing:-'· By ERl\1A BOMBECK For years I've been telling educal.Ors they put school Jevys on the ballot at the wrong lime o( year. If they had mothers vote during the Christmas vacation, t h e r e isn't a levy in the country that would fail . ) AT WIT 'S END • ••• make beds, empty garbage furniture, then we'll get out "I'm getting too old," I said. not here. W11nta corn.e over or dry dishes because a vaca. of your hair." "\Vanta look for loose change and bounce the ball in lhl lion is where you're supposed ,;Could we have three mason in the chairs?" house~" to have nothing to do. j:i.r.i the wheels off your "That 's boring. We could "It'll pass the time lill"the ' hide from the kids ." kids come home," said MU.. They cannot wa t ch vacuum s"'·eeper, a box of "!l's no fun when they're ine . television because that is cotton, two pieces of foll and ----------"-----------~ something to do when there a banana? We got an idea . ," is nothing else to do. As I was telling m y '"''\,Ii/,/./,, ~ ~/ ~ ~ Pictures received after that time 1vill not be used. There is somelhink about being trapped in the s a m e house for a week with a kid with a bouncing ball that makes money unim portant. c batteries lbat arc avallable The kid with somelhing lo neighbor, Maxine, yesterday, do drives you nuts because "Kids today ha ve no stimulant only at a Japanese discount whatever he does it involves for imagination. The dolls eat -.....:::::: AS110 ::--ifli\.~ · -·SCl£NC£ ::::_ ~ ~-;, CENTER ~ -... ~ ~ For engagement annou ncements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted si x \Veeks or more before the \Vedding da te. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories. forms are available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions lvill be answered by \\/omen's Section staff members a t 642-432 1 or 494-9466. N ewport Home Linda Yohe Marries house three miles away. you. ' and belch, toy cars go 70 They cannot possibly invite "If you could run in and miles an hour, their planes anyone in because then there pick up Charlie and Tim and fly, thei r rockets ·Jaunch, their would be a group of them stop at the store on the way sto\•es cook . their games light with nothing to do. back and get some ice cream up and TV takes them all I don't know which is worse : the child with nothing to do or the child with something lo do. They cannot go outside and chocolate syrup, we could nver the world. They 'r e because they w 0 u I d meet make a mess in the kitchen." bored." The kid with nothing to do wants to talk about it. The $200 \\'orth of Christmas toys are all dependent on four size someone else with nothing to •·we're waiting for you to "Yro're right." said Ma xine. do and be doubly bored. get down the sled that Daddy ''Whatya "'<1nta do today! They cannot da homework,, l-;;;;'"";;;;e<l;;;;;;;;"";de;;;;r;;t;:he;;;:J;;a;;w;;;;n;;;;T;;a;;k;e;;a;;n;a;;p;;';;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Country Club Setting Chosen for Ceremony Helen Taylor and Gregory Taylor. brother of the bride. ,J. Kermgard were linked in An hono1.s graduate of marriage during afternoon Newport Harbor High School, rites read in the Costa r-.1esa the new Mrs. Kermgard will Country Club by the Rev. For-be graduated in February rest Aldrich. fro1n Pomona College. The bride, daughter of rv1r. Her husband. an alumnus and Mrs. Stanton J . Taylor of Occidental College , is work- of Newport Beach. was at· ing toward his masters degree tended during the double ring in public adrninislration at ceromony by r-.1iss Cherri 1'.1ax\\·ell School, Sy r a cu s e \Varehouse open to publicu.Buy at dealer pricei1. Custom frames available. Buy early for Christ- mas.Lay-Away· on Master Charge and BankAme1·- icard. ''An Oil Painlin9 Is A l asting Gift" Hours -9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Mon. thru Sat. Sundoy, 11 a.m. ta 5 p.m. ORIGINAL OILS, LTD. 1619 E. Edlnter, Santa Ana ithone 835-4608 DEALER SHOWROOM /z ,,...._ '/'j'l'\'\' . ASTROLOGY- WE ARE CONTINUING OUR SPECIAL INTROOUCTOll.Y OFFER! FOR A LIMITED TI ME O~lY YOU MAY STILL RECEIVE : YOUR INDIVIDUAL PERSONALIZED HOROSCOPE YOUll. IN-DEPTH 197 1 FORECAST COMPLETE WITfl CHARTS AND A CASSEn' TAPE OR A PERSONAL APPOJNTMENT FOR YOUR ANALYSIS OR I OTH IF YOU WISH All DONE IY A NATIONALLY FAMOUS ASTROLOGER • P'LUS • A COMPLETE HOME STUDY COUllSE IN ASTROLCGY M EMBERSHIP IN THE AST RO SCI ENCE CENTER ( m••lin91, l•clu•e•. 9 11e1t 1p11ktrJ, t ic. I TWEL\IE MONTH SUBSCRIPTION TO THE ''ASTRO SCIENCE NEWS." All this el ci~r introductory 0H1r of onl y S4'1.§0. !Ycu wo.,ld 11pt tl io p1y !hi, much tnd more for • 9ood Horo1cop1 1 lon11) T1 rm1 1r1 1v1il1blt, , , • p1y 11 VD~ lt1rn, Coll •r Writ•: ASl'.11.0 SCIENCE CENTER 17141 543·8100 1100 N, laOADWAY #Jll SANTA ANA 92106 Newort Brach v,oi!I be home for Jerome Thornas Bashe and his bride, the former Linda June · Yohe, \Yho \Vere wed during afternoon ceremonies in the St. A n drew's Pre s byterian Chapel, Ne1A'port. The double ring_ rites ·were solemnized by the l~ev. Dr. Charles. Dierenfield. Lynn Myers, maid of honor. University, New York. , The benedict, son of 1'.1r. __ T:h"'e~y'..:w~ill)ll_:_r:_es~id~e:_ill\n'_'S~y:'.:ra~c;tlu~"'.:·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~'._~'._~'._~'._~C~'..::~C~=~~~~ and 1'.1rs. Paul M. Kenngardl- of Granada Hilts, asked his b ro l her , Edward 1.1. Kenngard ta be best man and usher was Cha rles Scott The bride. daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Perce P. Yohe of Laguna Beach, \Vas attended by her sister, Mrs. Edward Bell as matron of honor. Bridesmaids v.•cre r-.f rs . ~fichael \\I. Bashe. sister-in- law of the bridegroon1, and ~tiss Roxy Fowler, niece of the bride. Art Buffs To Travel Flower girls "'<'re Janet and Kathy l\ernott . cousins of the brlde, and ring be<irer \\"as Derrick Bell , ncphev1 of the MRS. J . T. BASHE bridr. Chapel Rites Traveling to famed La Ciene ga Boulevard to visit the art galleries will be members of the UCJ TO"'" and Gown Art Interest Group on \Yednes- day, J an. 6. Bashe served as h i s -------- brother's best man, and guests \\'ere seated by Robert Yohe, brother of the bride, and Bell. The new Mr s. Bashe at- tended Orange Coast College and is a graduate of California State College al Long Beach. 1-ler husband is an alumnus of \Vest Coast University. Valley TOPS Lettuei!-B-TOPS convene at 7;30 p.m. each Tuesday for programs in Fountain Va lley Elementary School. Chapter Meets l\irs. Richard Guinn will open her Garden Grove home tomorrow al 8 for a meeting of the Beta Alpha Pi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. A bus will leave Irvine Coast Coun!ry Club parking lot at 9:30 a.m. and will return In mid-afternoon. Bus tickets will be $2.50. Mrs. E rnest Vcrre available to give further in- fonnation and to take reserva- tions. l-.1rs. Don Kracht w i I I present the program entitled, Absolute Music. Also on the -=======-"="01 agenda will be a speaker from Golden Wesl C:Ollege and a discussion on a dime-a-dip din- ner to be i;:taged sometime lhis month. Andy's Fun Ask any kid . "Ask Andy" is fun. See it Saturdays in the OAlLY PILOT. ROBINSON'S JANUARY NEWPORT I SALE PRICED SUPER RICH BUBBLY PERMS REG , 30 ,0 0 VALUE. NOW 16.50 COMPLETE WITH CUT• REG• 25, 00 VALUE• NOW 12 . 5 0 COMPLETE WITH CUT• HURRY TN' NOW AND COLLECT A HEADFUL OF BEAUTIFULLY BOUNCY CURLS • JN OU R BEAUTY SALON. • RESTOR CONDI TIONER REVITALI Z ES YOUR HA IR. '\o CONSUL T OUR KREE EXPERT 11'1 P ERMAN£NT HAI R REMOVAL, ROBINSON'S • FASHION ISLAND • 644.2800 • The Glendale Fe•ral Savings ''Try us•• account. \ Reassuring. These are trying-times. Probably the perfect time to try us. It's ea sy. If you can 't visit one of our 23 neigh- borhood offices, just phone. We simply transfer yo!J r savings into a "Try Us" occo unt ... ond you try us. With $5 or $50,000. How much and how long are up to you . The "Try Us" account, our new Umpteenth Way To Sove, is comfortobl e. You try us on your own ~erms. So you bosk, with a quorter of o 'mill ion others, in the warm security of over a ' I I • ~ " ll' • -'. ~' . billion in assets. It's a nice feeling. Then when ' you want your investrnent;we give it'bock with ' interest. Just remember. Once people know us, they usually stay. So come try us. Then you can relax and enjoy the other good things in life. "'-=-=-.c=..J Trust Glendale Federol Savings ... yoo can't lose. Costa fvlesa 1833 Newport Boulevard· 642471 I '. " . I i h'-.. • ........ . . 1....... .... ·-·· -.-.. ·-.. f8 WLY '1LOT MOllday, JanuM"J 4, 1CJ71 ' ' Luncheon Announcemen t Wedding tn Offing Horoscope: Romance Indicated for Pisceans Dulin£ a cha1npagne Jun. cheon tn the Huntington Harbour home of Mr. and Mrs. Alton C. Wat~n, the hosts revealed th e engagement -0f their daughter, A n n Christine Wat.son to Thomas Joseph Barrack Jr. Attending the par1 y \\"ere relatives and close friends or the betrothed coople, who have selected June 19 as their wedding date. Miu Watson , a National Charity League debutante, is a graduate of Arcadia lfigh School. She attended lhe University of S o u t h e r n California where she pledged 1 '· Delta Gemma and now is a ! ~nior at San Di ego Stale College. TUESDAY JANIMRY 5 By SYDNEY OMARR Astrol t>gy dtals wlll1 Umt and encompa1st1 aubjecl.I from tht'" "A'' la alchemy to lhe .. z .. In zodiac. It wag and rtmelns o vltal so.urct of kno~·ltdge. Not al1 persons agree about the validity of the astrological techn ique. Bu• very few people ca.a Ignore Musical Scores New Year the subject. The blgh and the mighty and t.bt low and lhe lontly all find some relation . to the planeta &"ad t.be r.odl acal slg:na. The wi1e man controls bis destiny and astrology can point t.be way. Finish rather lhan begin proj-these arc part or your current ects. You may be startled personal rhythm. One at a by what I! l'Onfided to you. d~an<.>e makes request which Keep a secret. Bt sy mpathetle creates netd for sonle in· and avoid casting first stone, vestlgatlng. Ch«k various Play your cards close lo chest. poss ibilities. CANCER (June 2l ·July 22): LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22 J: ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Accent 00 relief fmn recent Money from i n surance , Be wary regard i n g pressures. You find that some publishing is high on agenda. poosessioos. One who whispers wishes are close to realities. In some manner, yo. are sweet nothings could be after You can speak your piece and repaid for past eUorls. There your valuables. Word to wise gel results. Ile independent, are obstacles; there also is should be sufricient. Add up confident. Friends arc in your red ta pe. But it will all piece credits and debits. Take stocJI. corner. together. Dec. 21 ): There could be con· ruct within fa mily circle. Emphasis is on service, basic matcriaf. pets. Don't blo1v minor dispule out of pro· portion. Maintain logic. Keep potential in sight. CAP lllCOHN I Dec. 22-.lan. 19J: Cood lunar a s p e I."~ coincides \Y it h speculation. abll!ty to produce drantatic effect. Affairs of he a rt don11nate. Love is firmly en· trenched in picture. Emotions could run ramp<tnl. TAURUS (April .20-h-1ay 20 \: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22); SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)· Take initiative. You have Hunch could advance career, Impatience can ruin best of AQUA R.IUS (Jan. 20-F'cb. \ personal magnetiml going for other areas which require add-plans. Wailing is not to be 18): Leave frills to others. I you. Your appearance im· cd push. One in authority is interpreted as ineffecliveness. Concentrate on the basics. nd d · d ·th \ ~ake time to know terrain. proves -a so oes your 1mpresse w1 your s ncr'r· ' You can make some solid pro- t.iming. Older individual pays ity. Accent on position, claims Deal gingerly with mate. gress. J>ropcrty settlement meaningful compliment. New to farne. Show your best side. partner. Improve public rcla· coold ·work in your bchaJL starts are fa vored. VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Sepl. 22): tions. ·rake Jong-rangC' vie\v. Gear PISCES (Feb, IS.h-iarch 20): Relatives make requests, pay vistts. You may have to 1nake decision 1vhich pains some. But your own welfare deserves consideration. Bel p only those willing also lo aid themselves. IF TO DAV IS \' 0 V R BIRTHD:\ V you arc going to 1nake some major domestic adjustments. Home -0f your own. residential change could be pa rt of year's high lights. H single , n1ar nage is strongly Indicated. You are attractive to opposite sex, fond <:J writing and expressing yourself. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Airs. Thomas Joseph Barrack of Culver City, is an alumnus or use where he affiliated with Kappa Alpha .and was GEi\flNI (l\.1a y 21...June 20): Travel, movement, writing -SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-actions accord ingl y. 111c Wil liam F'ackiner fam·liii.ii~~~~~~~"_~~;i--~--_.:~~;;~;iii~~;,;;.;;i;;;;,;:. ............ ~~---..;;;.-.-.-;;.;Oim.;;;;;.;;••••---------------4 ily "ll'ill provide music al cn.ler• tainn1ent when the Musical Arts Society of Orange County meels Sunday, Jan. 10, in the Fu llerton home of Mr. and .r.1rs. Frank W. Chance, ANN WATSON Betrothed a member of the rugby team.---------- 1-le now is enrolled at the University of San Diego, School of Law. Fluid Lines 9289 a.16 In; 11f ,,.i ... 1Tf r.."1' .... I!11erywhere , everyday beau- ty inakes you feel great just to 'know you have a dress like this to slip into! Just enouab shaping, button trim. Send! .P.rlnted Pattern 9218: NEW Wimten's Sizes 34, 36 38, 40, 42j:44. 46, 48. Site 36 (bust 40):takes 2 3/8 yards 4f>.inch. :~ .. nVE CENTS for eadl pattern -add 25 C!nts fmi· ieach pattern for Air Mail arid Special Hanlling. Send le> .Marian Merlin, the Dail y Pilot, 442 Patte.rn Dept., 232 Wtst 18th St ., New York, N.Y, 10011 . Print NAME, ADDRESS ...._,.ith ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. What is Yoga? Vital it y? Peace of mind? Beauty? Will Power? Success? Creativity? A Good Night's Sleep? Youthfulness 7 ••• Partly Find Out Why Yot• 11 Mr youl FREE ClASS: • t .... ~.J , ... • w ... ....-...... e n.t. llftlrit. I p.-. Or •fk •~t o~r I wk. Sot, ~ w,4, 1110111i11t cl•••••· YOGA CENTER ... II. 1mi II. -· Cnl• M ... ..... , Co1110 •• yo• 010 News Told At Party The engagement of Frances Anrl Gloza and Gary Lee Eller has been announced by JI.fr. and Airs. 11athew Arthur Gioza of Costa !\tcsa, parents of the bride-to be. News of the betrothal \\'as revealed to families and friends during a party in their home. Parents of the benedict.elect arc !\Ir. and Mrs. Vernon El· ter. also of Costa J\1esa. The bride-lo-be is a graduate of Mater Dei 11igh School , Santa Ana and atte11ds Orange Coast College. Her fianc e. a graduate of Estancia High School. attended OCC prior to joining the U.S. Navy. No da1e has been set for the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. llomer Moses hosted the last meeting when the Chan1bcr Singers, cUrected by Gary Unruh, presenled ex- cerpts from the Elizabethan Christn1as Festi val. The group or 17 5ingers and instrumental· ists were dressed in costumes of the late 16\h Century Olde English Yuletide celebration. Concluding the program, 11iss Olivia Robertson repeated portions or a pre\•ious concert. Spring Goes To Softness ln fashion. the spring spirit ls one of softness, color, less construction and more fan· tasy. Chorol Group Every Mon day at 7:30 p.m. members of th e Prospective Aliso Valley Chapter of Sweet Adelines convene in Mission Viejo High School. SALE! TWO WEEKS ONLY! Large, lovely 11 x14 portrait of your child locredlbly priced at 95 ONLY Here's your opportunity to havo a tine 11x14 prof111lonal Salon Portrait ol your ch\ld (or 1nY,· one In th1 famlly) for just •2.95, Come In now and remember u.you can charge Ital Penney's! Av1l11blt •t lhtat atorn: CANOGA PAR!\ CARLSBAD DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY· SAN OIE"OO FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH· LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "'THE CITY'" RIVERSIDE VENTURA Llk• It, .. Charge Ill Sylftnia portable color TV model CB3.C wtth 102 gquare Inch picture t ube provi des the sharpest picture anllable. . SALE PRICED l\f $259" lHE 'rhis: is the sales event that smart btlyers ha9e been ~it.in&: !or. Now. for limited t.ime, you can get all the q~ty t. and engineering excellence Sylvania home en~ products are famous for ... and with up~ $100 in ~p. But don't delay' if you miss this opportun1ty y~u ~ay have to wait a whole year for another chance at bargains like these. SAYE s100 Now Only $84988 TV RECEPTlON SIMULATED iM-TtGt!t"'orl s,1..,.:0 rlo<!•l< ~...,;,,..~, '' Sylvania 9" dini;:. mras. f'"r"''" li&\V portable TV. llas huill·lri Vli F & UHF antC'nnas. Conv<'lll· C'll l c&.rrylng handle. 11odol J\!1"· GBI\. SAVE Now0nly$84" Phis Three Feature Pack Color TV model CL883. The bigg~l co~or . · · ·1 bte· 2""' (diag me"-) lnslanl Push-butlon Tuning g1ve6 screen av11 a . ~ · • . IG1iiri\-~ ~ 1 perfect color pic_tur.e.inslantly. Sol id stale 1 ra\tar 1 the u\Umat.e in reliAbibty. Scand inavian slylcd color TV model CL828 wUh the biggest sc reen ever: 25" diag. meas. !las the lon1-li ft Gl br11\t.ar'" ch11!r:>is wilh AFC. SAVES4Q NowOnly $579'~ TV R.ECEITION SIM ULATED lM-:1..---. ~· liooo4< ,,_. ... .S,v1vAnla 11 lcrC'o C'\Jmp11n1·111 niodrl ,\IS:Ji9 -c.ompll.'tc \1 1!h ~r11ll'tl Air Su~1ir11i;iun ~fl('al:i;l'r ::;y:-:1.-.111, 1111~ ~nlid i;!:ll" Ffll 'A:\-1 plus Ffll :-.11•1·ro radio. SAVE Now Only $299" f rrnch Classic slyli•d ~trrrn n1odrl SC<l2'1C Includes AJ\1/Ft.I plus f ~t slerro radio, autcimatlc s lrrl'(l lurn. tnblc anO air suspension i>p('akcr sys. 1rn1. SAVE ~•ml l~t !o lllu~l•111<!" Now Only HURRY! QUANTITIES LIMITED AT THESE LOW SALE PRICES! I I ' COSTA MESA ' 411 L S..utMtttll St. '4'·1614 dollr 9-9-S.r, 9·6 EL TORO LAGUNA HILLS PLUA !N1•t to $, ... onl ll1·Jll0 4ollr 10·._Mott.•frl. 10·9 . . .. TUMBLEWEEDS WHOA, PAJAMAS! MUn AND JEFF WHAT$ THE MATTER, DON'T Yoll LIK E T HE SWEATER MY WIFE KN ITTED FOR YOU 'FOR CHRISTMAS? JUDGE PARKER . T R"YIN6 TO PISC.OVER' WHA.T H"S 14APPENED ro ELMO, SAM DRIVEi<? LEARNS TH.A.T HE HAS BEEN SENT TO MEXI CO CITY 6V MR. T! PLAIN JANE • OH DEAR! HE'S GONE TO SLFEP AGAIN! OH SURE, MUTT.' IT'S VERY GENEROUS OF -HER! I'M SURE !T WILL COME IN HANDY ' ,_,, w~o·s w ANO SS ) A M,l..W 6¥ l(f:Pli'.E<:>ENT.6.TIVE IN THE N.6.M E MEXICO CIT'f ? (); MAUR1: By Cliester Gould By Tom K. Ryon Bu Al Smith • By Frank Baginski MQM,DA[>_.~NTERTA\N lo\ILLARD W lLt I GET MY W.T AND COAT. I DAILY CROSSWORD ••. by R. A. POWER 1 AC ROSS I ··· ;;Que~k • ~~~t 9 E-...imlries c lo~e l~ 14 Me!ri~ ~1111 ! of ~re~ 15 ····· Gree!!e Actor (b Coastal i11c!eJJlat ion l 7 'lihilsvnday Jq Lackol ~1lal eneryy 20 Furn1~l1 fonds 11 Sea : Fr . 22 Fore st humus 23 Cease f(om ac tia11 24 Aspect 2fi Flavor 29 Hill Jl ••• a11d feat~er;; 32 Oisagreeab!e smell 3) Peaceful )fi; Pipe pJ1 t Ja Out •· · ·nmb : 2 word~ 39 Quicklv : 3 word s • l Soiltd •l M a~e lac r •4 Go in search ol bar9a ins 4fi Enc lose ' ) " " ' -4 7 R epetil ion of sound 4, Over: Comb , form 50 Sc rtwb al I 51 S1 er ling Atibr. S2 HJS a marked elfe't ~4 Gem SS Tt a>e ti() Zod iac s l;n bl l1 1ql1 way leature bl Beat1ty shoo Pfl'.paratooq fi4 Teacher's res Pons1bi I ity t.b F1intrai 01 ation 1;7 Lary····· bB C•tra\t i\.bbr, b9 Bad~trl1ke animal 70 Exhausted 71 Old nanie of Tokyo DOWN 1 Canad ian export ZGirl in • 19141 san9 ) HariqS 4 S~e in of ya1n 5 Ad ·--: For the en::I al h'nd > 6 I ~ Fragrant:~ 7 B •Id loo~ 8 Pldces o! soll!udt q Fo11ne1 11 ame. on A~ 1a 10 Wholly 2 words 11 ••••• Sextell e 12 Dec Ima I ~yst em base 13 Animal encl osure 18 Wa lk unsteadi ly 2( Rise In r.\ ream dut to ra in 25 Ot!lr ium 27 Roman dale 28 H l9hway feature 30 Burden 33 locations 114 '71 :H Represent 35 "I would . ····-... "; 2 words 37 Llsl of available disl1 e~ 40 Beyond 1edemplion •2 Ex,:ress by action: 2 WQfdS 45 .l.mass t d ~!I Colar 53 Insect ss ···•· t•o Sb Shun 57 Slow; Musle 59 Sc cit bl Tiil '12 Posst5$1Vt ward b3 H lgl1 no!t b5Hasthe ~b llHy • 10 11 IJ 1J MISS PEACH ' l . STEVE ROPER PEOPlE \IMl ~ FOR HUDSON rM SURPRISED AT YOU, OAt<Nf:MOR: USUAl.lV GET THEIR odLLY/-LETTINGTHAT WA'( IN THIS TOWN, MR: CHAUFFEU~ MAKE WU ROPER! Wmt EVEJlY· DRIVE OVER THE ONE EXCEPT • BLOCKS TO GET MY F~THER, i OUT/ 1~T IS.' PEANUTS . -- -- -:d''.<....----1 ~ ---. :..r., _ ':"" • • Monday, January 4. 14n ., Ll'L ABNER DAILVPILOT {9 .t By Al Capp TRAGEDY Mr. and Ml"£t. Dan'I DewQrnec!!t. were evict.ad from their hometoday, for failure to pay a $+3.7 5 rnort.gage. The elderly cruple h~ve lived int.his same hoose Since SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS DISASTER 111e e:1ueblrd M~ttress Fact.ol"f laid off Its entire mattress testing f arce t.his. morning. tneoning Li 'I Abner 1s now unemployed. 1·4- ANIMAL CRACKERS ' . •... , ___ _ --- -WA>ITAOS- A FAIR WEEK'S PAY, FOR A FAIR WEEK'5 WORK WE WILL PAY ONE MILLION DOLLAAS FCR ONE WEEKS WORK. APPL'< IN PEl<SO-l,Ar By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola . • By Ferd Johnson ~ ~ By Roger BaUen • -AIJD '(1-leQ OOD011'HlS IS J.otJI 5- IClfGJ.11!1! ! " I'M GONNI-WONDER M~ ss-reR's •11'11£ ; GET'CHA I-WH<I WI' ec</ ! • ~'S SfAWJ& l<ITCllEE! z \\lrf>l Me~ 1' l<JHl•I'. KlTCHliEI • ICITCllU! ' • ' -· ' By John Miles By Mell By Saunders and Overgard By Charles M. Schulz :I'M C50NNA 6'ET'CHI-! SUCKOOR 1HlJMBS. MR.MUM DENNIS THE MENACE ~·­Hr 'WHATSOORZ IPcoa;~AGAJN,!lcM?' • • • ' \ l. . " .. t •, . . I ..... . ... ---. ~ ..... 20 DAILY PILOT Monday January 4, 19n ~lusie (;enter Attraction . Rudolf Nureyev Superb in 'Raymonda' Ballet MOND AY JANUARY 4 6:00 fJ llif N"'5 (C) (15CJ) k ny Ounphy. o roe NtwMtYict (CJ (60) 0 The AUH Sbow (C) (90) 0 Si.I: O'Clodi Morie: ''Ptoplt Will Ttl~" {drama) '51 -Ctf} Grant. Jeanne Crain. A phys1clin. subjected to acr.usations or malpraclke by 1 j~~lous co llela:ue. btcomu iR¥olved with a girl he le1rns Is pn1n1nt. 0 Diel Vin Dykt (30) m The rliigstonu CC) (30) ID @ (]) St11 Tiet (CJ {60) ED 1971 Calif. ln1111111r1I Crrt· monies {C) (60) /jf' ({) cas Hews (CJ <JO) @El Fishrr f1milr (30) aJ Noticiero 34 (C) (60) a;, Win111 lo Adventure CC ) (JO) (ELI Ho11 f1111Hi11 con Patricia W News in lht hvnd (CJ (30) 5:30 0 Candid Ca111tr1 (JO) m Thi flyin&: Nun (C) (30) ill @ NBC Mews (C) (30) W(i) ltlr Favorite Martiln (30) m Social ~curity (C) (30) ffi The DtKrt Report (C) (30) a!) FugiHvot del Am111 (30) Cil ABC [venina: NewJ (CJ (30) ':(S etl) Musicale 7:00 @ CBS [yen ina: 'ltws (C) (30)• rJ @n NBC Hia:fltly Ht11U "-Cl (30) 0 What's My Line! (C) (JO) ID@{j)I l.oYf Lucy (30) tn• s~fldlc111·1 11m111in1 ~pe,,1iol In the Caribbe•n. m Will Bill Cosby Quit *TV? He tells David Frost Alt! Tonight! m D41rid Frost Show (C) (30) Bill Colby 1uull. Q) fllNy Sci111d (C) (301 iii)~· for livin1 (30) C[l) Mipllitt V11dt.t Slltw (JO) 9:00 IJ QfJ (ii M17btny R.F.D. (C) (30) Goobu is jailed in a 1amblin1 raid on 1 poke1 11me alte1 Sam nom· inale~ horn to be • church elder 0 0 @ €?;) NIC Mondt r Mo~le: (C) "fr• ol tile Car (suspense) '69 -Mfthael Sar1a7in, Gayle Hunn1. cutt. A young man w1 lh an 1b1ecl ltt r of call become the innocenr fl)·bet!lloen in • dia lic1J plo! to usurp an eccwlnc om111's tor · lune. 0 Tbt l (60) 0 @ (]) (D ABC MondlJ Mo~ie: (C) "'S1t1rl1CU$" Part If (speC!JCU • lat) '60 -Kirk Douglas. l au1ence Olivier. Jean Simmons, Peter Ustinov. Slory ot 1 re~olt of g!1d1&!ors led by Spa1tt eus. wh ich shook lmpe11at Rome lo i1s !oundatiOo~ In the l~sl century belore Ch115t. (Conclus;on o! Sunday Night Movie} m I j,1,1AL I Rid• a Steel Horse (CJ (60) [~plore the history ind mystlQue ol moton:ydine ind learn what Si!ety progr1ms ind regula · lions are being effecled. El!) Realities {C) (&:l) (R) "In Search ol Rembrandt," James Mison nanalu this Emmy-nominated dOCU· men!ary filmed in Holland. g;) JO Min.te1 a> Koy (30) tIJ Dria:Mt (CJ (30) (0 •itatlll (60) 123 @ Ju!i1 (CJ (30) ffJ Spetbllllon {C) (GO) (R) 9:30 8 ~ (j) Dolls 01, ~CJ (30) R~n (29, [~Truth 01 Consequentei (C)I HaNty uses Oo11s M1r11n lot bait on €?!}Christ the LiYint Word (C) (30)1 an •_ttempl to hook q.uar1e1b11c1'. _Joe ttJ Ros.ar'o (30) Garrison (guest star Richard Gautier) a!) Simpl~mente Maiia (55) for an interview for Today°} \'lorld CD Mow!e Cu11e (C) (JO) maga1ine . 0 Candid C~mer1 (30) RECITAL SET Ma ralin Ni1ka Mi ss Niska Sets Recital ·• At College Soprano Maratin Niska will be heard in recital Jan. 10 when the Harbor Area Corn - rnunity Coneert Association opens the 1971 portion of i1s four-concert season, The Nev.• York Ci ty Oper;i slar will perform at 3: 15 p.111. i11 Oran~e Coast Col 1 t' g e auditorium . Cosla f\1 L' ~ ;1 . Admission is noL li mltc:I to mcn1bers of the Con1n1unity C-Oncerl oq~anization . f\liss Niska, a native of San 1'£>dro, performed in lcaltll'C'I rol es during the New York company's recent season in Los Angeles. She became one of th e co mpany's· leading sopranos after playing ke y roles with the Metropolitan National Opera Co inpany. 7:3~ IJ elf; 00 Cun1mokr (C) (60) m Musk ale I -~ Richard Baseha'.t gu~st .ste1s In !hel m Concier1D ck ~I mas (30) • BALBOA rnle of "Ca ptain Sligo' 1 1ugged , ~ea ~apta•n who decides lo rna~e1 9:4S~P~stars Desk · • • 673-4048 1 hOme Jor him~!f and his pe1,lO:D0 0 ~1t_1 Carol 8u1net1 Show (C) • • OPlf~ buffalo in Dodge City, (60! Art C11rney ind P~t Car roll 6.45 • 0 RED SKELTON SHOW! 1ues1 7" E. l1IM. · · * LAUGH RIOT! 0 Bii S Newt (Cl (f>O) K'v1n 1.111tN P•nlnsula By TOM BARLEY Of 11'1• Dell\' I'll• Sl•ll Hudolf Nureyev has made il known for some time now that hls ill ustrious service to ballet will not end on ttie day he hangs up his dancing pumps for the last lime. His fu ture, he believes, lies in the creation of dance forms for those who will follow him and he showed an enthusiastic Los Angeles Music Center au- dience Saturday an inkling or his ability in that field with a "Raymonda" that was neve:- !css than highly entertaining nnd offerep, in s e ve ral ~egments, a glimpse of what n1a.v be a vital new force Jn classical ba!l~t. There 1vas very little of the 1.1ng1nal Petipa to be seen in tile cl10reography treated for !he Australian Ballet b y Nureyev an<l it was y,•ell nigh nonexistent in the segments dancetl bv the redoubtable Hussian . To be sure, Nur~yev had Nurevev in mind v.•hen lie pcnne~I the dance form that bl£>nds so delightfully v.•ith Alexander Clazounov's music '1nd those who lake on the d~·1neaning ro!e or J ean de Brienne ll'hen Nureyev isn't around lo tlo it \viii rue ru!ly wish thal he had set his sights a Jillie lower. The plot matte.rs very little in this beautiful!y staged and exquisitely costumed ballet: what we have i.<i a series o( set pieces, each designed to display the many facets of classical ballet. a La Tchaikowsky's b a 11 r o o m scenes, and each allowing Nureyev to write in his 0\\'11 interpretation of those varied depictions. But that widly cheering au- <--enterpiece of a highly en- tert.aining three-ballet pro- gram: Sir Robe11 Helpmann's "Sun Music," superbly scored by Peter Sculthor pe and even more superbly dancf'd and in- terpreted by these gifted young Australians. In "Mirage," a bitter, despair· Angeles season. You ean co r dt' h back do"'n under with the ing dant't' o at ~ o knowledge thai you made magnificently interpreted by many An1ericans recognize a the in!'plred Alder . vital new force in our ballet Our greatest tribute to world. Sculthorpe ·would be to sayi;-fi~i~~~~~~~~~~I that his "Sun Music'' score II caplures the spirit and essence or his message without the ballet. II is a work that will be quickly ad- ded to our record shelves l'or Helpmann, rated by this critic as being in the top half dozen of the world's male dan- cers in his priml', has, to 1Jur mind, become an even ~rc:tter choreog rapher and thi s brooding. moving "Su n prolonged future enjoyment Music" must be his greatest and analysis. EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN achievement. He d e p icts, R oun din g o1u\ the through five dance forn1 s, fiv e Australians' final performance I tnfluenc~s ct' Lhe sun on our in Los An"eles was "Les : dience's prime interest, or 1· $ ·1 r th • ll'CS -01. nurage, g ow · Rendezvous." Sir Frederlckl GIVE'EM HEU,JOHN course , was 111 lhe soaring Russian and his own magnifi- t:£>nt con t ri bu ti on to this beautifully danced ballet. No less distinguished , as it has been so th r o ugh the Australians' wee k -I o n g eng agem ent, 1vas the pcrfonnance of L uc ct t c Aldous who has shown, Bl very short notice, an affinity to the mood and style o[ Nureyev that has won her man y friends among this area's ballet love rs. Nureyev is notoriously dif- fi cult to dance with as ;iny prima ballerina ;vill quickly comment. Miss A Id o us ' triumph can. perhaps, be suin · med up with the reflection that she made it look very easy. But for au the glory Hf this glittering ··Raymonda." !he genius of Nureyev and lhe unfailing grace a nd Brtistry of ·Miss Aldous. (his critic's thol1gh ts ioday <1re 1·cry much on a ballet that \\'as ne ver intended to be the energy and destruction -and Ashton's high ly entertaining I saves for that last movement ballet based on Aubcr 's music the stressing of a n1ood of and cleverly reproduced by hopelessness and despair that Peggy Van Praagh. 1 pervades this brillianl work . As in "Raymonda, ., a very1 Through it all hove rs a thin plot is nothing more lhan : relentless sun, burning its way the delightfull_v contrived ex- dov.•n on the \\Tithing and cuse for thcs<' hap p YI tortured dancers as l h e Australians to show us their I centerpiece of \\'hat must be 1vares in a series of dances 1 one of the most effective and which draw heav ily on cl assic skillfully created backdrops in techniques 1vhile aliov.•ing thei r1 today's b a 1 I et repertoire. exponents lo blend in the 1 Congratulations to Kenneth variations so cleverly created Ro\vell for his crcalion of the by Ashton. I scenery and costumes and lo Taking the eye in ''LC's l Kelvin Coe, A.Ian A 1 d er , Rendezvous" 1vere i\1arilyn Robert Olup and Josephine Rowe. Alan Alder, Kcll'i11 Coe Jason for their faultless and (a brilliant youn g ma I e rnoving interpretations of dancer), Patricia Cox and He!pn1ann ·s featured roles. Gra ham Powell. William Chap- Ba\let lovers often tend lo pell's costumes were all that overlook the role of the com-they should be for this poser, par!icularly t h o s e lremely pleasant and 1vhose scores arc the in-fervescent production . ALSO GP spi ration of our contemporary Well done, Australia . you dance forms, and it would V.'ere fair dink um in you"r:;:Lo::_s"=-::===~===~ be crin1ina l in this instance --~------~ to not offer a special tribute lo the genius of P e ter Scullhorpe. There is a great dea l of Schoenberg to be found in his dissonance and particularly in Wltt'I Audrey Meadows Sinde,s. Bun,1·Mo11is I 0 @@ mRedSkelton '.:1 (30) 0 BJder Ward Newt (CJ (GO) eNOW-Ends Tue&daye Audrey Meadaws 2ues1t. ID NEWS SPECIALISTS: 0 l'IYPO (C) (30) * George, 1-fal, Pete Wf ARE PROUD TO US'HElt IN Cu1·tain at 7 :30 l1is application of the human voice to key seginents of a ballet that is a 1 mo s t surrealistic in at least two or its rnovements. Those voices. chillingly reproduced <1nd ominously intoned, y,·erc hea rd to their greatest effect GIVE 'EM HELL, JOHN! f.ll @@ (DThe Younc lawyers Tom and l~iss Rona TH£ HEW YEAll: WITH lHIS (C) (60) ''False Wilness," Aaron mGeorg1 Puln1m New1 (C) (60) GREAT FILM - Solverman bellev'' his chtnl inno· tIJ Trt<1~uie (C) (JO) I "A SALUTE TO A REIEl!" Broad'way Change Debated ceni. even thoug~ she pawned solfc fr! f lrlna line (CJ (60) "Oesegre· cl I~' 1ewelry she I! ch1r2ed woth gation : How F~r Should th~ G.overn·1 ~tea!in1i. menl Gol" Je111s Leonard guesls. Q Million S Movi•: "ll Rut M1de· iil Lut1tit1 (C) (lOJ leloe" (drama) '45--h mes C1gnty, a;) Telt-CinemJ Ara:enlino (2 hr) ' A111bell,, Rithlrd Conte. IO:J O QI Bill Johns Ne'"t (C) (30) m T111th or ConstQ11enus (CJ (30) ttl lJ f<1mili1 (30) l1J II flktt a Th.it I (CJ (60) 1J :00 fl ~ (ll €!) News (C) EI!J Gowrnm1nl film (Cl (JO) Q ~ f1) g;) Hews (C) el) No Crto tn los Hamllrn (30) . g C,Pn You lop This? (C) 1.5~ CI!) Cues!ion de Se111ndo1 Q l!Il Newt (CJ 1 I.DO D ~~ m L1u11h·IO (CJ (60) "Movie: "M1c1bre" (d•amJ) ·5g -William Prince, J1111 Backus. Wee Samm~ Davis Jt , squerts olt 1n boAmg ung against lowering Will m Movit: "Isle of lh~e.i:i" (m l"· "The S!ilt" Chamberlain. 1ery) '45-Boris )(11lolf. (lien 01ew. 0 Vilginia Gr1h1m Show (CJ (&0)1 ~ @j~t~f; ~::n (C) (JO) IR) Gues1s ire Jack Albertson, Susan tT:l World Piets (C) {R) Olwer, Htrberl Punkin, Alan Sues ! l:JO .,... = 'T' MeN Giiflin (C) 1he Charlie llyrd 1 !10 and Lean Long f O_. .':f:-,· ~ _, 1 h '· 1 11 · :.:. l'V =i o nr.r .... rson (C) m0;~ Tell th"e lrulh (C) (30) :)ammy .Davis subs 15 hos!. I ffi World Press (CJ (60) f.I Mov•r_ Game (CJ €!;) Mtn ot Vis.on (30) 0 Cl) Dock Ca~eU (C) Tony R.in- €IiJ Mus.it• J Utr~lta$ (CJ (60) ,-~I ~~~:.:\5."ltrricade" (advtnture): J:OS a!) AQu1 Trr1 P1l1nt1 (25) '39~Warner 8ade1, 1:30 0 ~®Here'• Lue, (C) (30),12:00 0 Movie: ''5cot11nd Yaid l"spet· l ui:y has been lat' lo wo1k so cllen 101" (mystery) '52-Cesu Romeio. lh.1\ accord.ng 10 Hairy, ~he hal• li7) (J )Dick C11ett (CJ 11sed UP her 1·acal'~n. !>O she pl101112:10 m Alt·Ni1~vhow: Munumtd Wom· to it ! heiselt 111 I en." 0 (ff (Jl ffi The Silent fCM"ce (C) 1:00 £)Movie: "l'li2ht C1eatu11s" (hol·' IJO) '1~e B•nk,r," Par! I, The Silent ron '62 -P~ler Cusll1n~. I •~r ~ lnQ be~ins Jo 1nvest1galion ol O O News (C) . TUESDAY 9 JO Q "War h Hell" (drama ) '64 - lo~v Ru~1el!, Ba~nes-Barron DAYTIME MOVIES 9.00 0 "Tiie Devil •~d ~i5J Jones" (comedy) '41-Jean Ar1hur, Rober! Cummings . "Chetts tor Miu l illlop" (dnm1) '41-Matlh• Scoll. 0 "52nd strMt" (comedy) ·37 - Kenny Bi ke,, ZIMI Pitts. QUEENIE ' '· .. ' W "G!lfs' Town" (drama) '59 - Mamie V~n Oortn, Mel lormt. 1:00 W "In Old Chicaao" (drama) '38 -Tyrone Power. Alice fare. I I 2:00 0 ''Tilt Anlll Hills" (d11m1) '59 -Rober Mitch um, Gia Stala. I 4:30 I) "L1ui1 Come Home" (i1dven- 1ure) '43-Roddy McDow1ll, £1i11- beth T1vlor. By Phil lnterlandi I . , .. ''This-may be all very n:U f or )'OU, but &II J'm get· ting ia jiggle, joggle, mumpl~; rrumble, biabble1 blobble ••• 20.•e ..... , ••.•.• ,. •. , l"A'l"l'C•N -CU1••au:C SHOWN 8:40 OHL Y ALSO-IONUS FEATUR( NE\V YORK (AP) Broadway begins its great ex - periment tonight , ringing up curtains at 7:3U p.m, -an hour earlier than usual -in ;111 effort to increase au- diences. Som e restaura teurs clourty forecast a flop . Producers and businessmen \l'ho depend upon the theater trttde hope the move will ap- pc:il to suburbanites because thcv taf't gel home earlier ;ind to those who dislike being on the streets late at nighL • 1Wl(IJll ..-r "'fstll1 Ali lladirn • Ry111 O'Neal I I Hll\llllO&MmSKY-IRIHUR ~LLER P;oollC(.,. .iOhn M1rtey Ii Ray 11m1nd ER~ S<G•L iRiHuR H1Lu• ~lRos.11J"5KY lVMDSi'rfN fRANCiSUJ ,~i.:: lft,l !$CUMllROlllJUillUWIU Oll'~~1 l!af•,.:::::':':..• ~--,,-·) PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT e NOW PLAYING e I I The League of Ne w Yorkl ~c.c=c=c=c=c=-=.======;[I Theaters gave those reasonsl 1vhen it approved the move1 last September. Bu t there arc plenty of 1vorried doubters. I ~[lJ]D@!{ I NlWPOllT BEACH • OR.3·rl5b' 1 "If you lake one hour av.·av: rrom so1nelhing. you\•e gOt one hour less,'' s a id Gilbert I \llicst. manager of a theater district steak hou se. "People , might eve n forego dinner , altogether. They'll have three l or fo ur drinks and go to thc l theater stoned." 1 Natalie Waod Pobert Culp IN "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" -Al $0-I RI 1\latter Matthau "Cactus Flower" "I think this move y,•ill do a great dea l of har1n to thc j restaurant bu si ne ss in general." said Jerry Bates, co-01>.·ner of the 21 Club. "As it lis now . people are rushing through dinner to make the'I theater at 8:30." 'L,-----------' Behind every "successful" man is an understanding woman ... or two ... or three! "I LOV E MY ... WIFE" ' 01 LOVE MY •.. Wlff" ELLIOTT GOULD 1N A, DAVID l WOlPffl Prod~C!oon "I LOVE MY ... WIFE" ·-. BRENDA VACCARO· ANGEL TOMPKINS .,_., D,.,....., -.. ·---1 ~•Ul''°"ll • •< •l\l•n .a1""' llAACIAIU •0.Wlll lwa."" """"""'S•l •cr~•I • TICl#l!CQl.Of!• Iii• PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • NOW PLAYING • I JOHN WAYNE A Howard Hawks Production ':'RIO LOBO" 11- MATINEES DAILY FROM 12 NOON IN THE WESTMINSTER CENTER "COMPLETELY FASCINATING TO WATCH AND MUST BE PRONOUNCED A TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT! Redford is nothing short of stunning! Not si nce Brando has an actor had more presence on the screen! Lucille Benson 's performance • (as Pollard's Mother)-'Best . --: Suppo_~,i~m~~~~!~!~~1~tuff'!'fj·-. '.'I -\. "FAST! ROUGH ! EXCITING! ~ .. , Robert Redford, as always, · - is tolally devoted to the character, He's inside it. What looks out is a charming liar, thief, lover, deserter. brave, not lucky, and a man who'll never stop trying. Brilliant!" -Atthtt Win1ten, H(W YORK POST " 'Little F JUSS And Big' Halsy' is a REAL THR ILLER! Robert Redford takes another giarit step "~ forw a_rd as the ~ost exciting ;tJ, ~ leading man since talkies!" ~ ... : -1 v.·~,f -Ver-. kott. U .... I ~ ~~ nuOO.u J. -· .. POLUlllD ~ t.mU FAUSS AnD llG HALSY < ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • NOW PLAYING e EDWARD$' 'I ~ • •. . . Mond•J, J1nu111 4, 1971 o~Y PILOT 21 Hope on Wrong Side of Youth (ap? JUghly Predictable Some TV Events Certain By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -That crystal ball, used by tcle.vis1on executives and television <.·ol· umnists with approxiinall•ly the same amount of skill, "grows c loudier with eal·h suc- .ceeding year. · •Some matters, h o 1v e v e r , ~em highly predictable: ; Midseason prograrn shiflS , ~,sl:arting almost immediately ori all three networks, will be explained by all eoncerned as putting entire network !!Chedules into ·; b ct t er balance," even though in some instanC'es it nicans returning tune to local sta tions for fill· ing and, io others, plugging an extra lime period by letting fe11turC' films run their'Ciriginal lengtll. One. or at the outside, two Jtl.idseason rcplacemen!s will :~crate enough steam or public cnthusiasrn to win Jl('fY.'ork renewal for a return iJC'xt September. Youth-0rientC'd :incl Ilic so- callcd "relevant" series star- ring teams or enrnrst youn~ p.copll', til e big vuguC' last Sep!r n1bC'r, is in .January as dated as lhC' hula hoop. CrC'ative minds v.•ill drcarn ur> lleW conceplS about Old West lawmen, dedicated doctors, eriminal lawyers, private eyes -..,d funny folks-next-door with i,;o children. :·At least one big motion pie· lur e star who finally decides to strike it rich with television series will come a bad Nielsen cropper and blame t h e resulting cancellation on everything but its real cause: bad shov.·s. The best of the variety pro- grams will be rC'nev.·ed: the n1argina I sucCesses will disap-o pear along v.·ith the first daf- fodils. Abou~ 20 top. actors -singers, singing groups, im· pressionists and stand-up com· edians -will move from one variety series to another the \1ay another generation of headl iners traveled from theatC'r to theater. Telc\•ision stars with their ov.•n programs will continue In swap appearances on a one· ff}r-onc basis. \Vhat with taxes ;Jnd tighter budgelS, it seems lh<' only way they can afford to book top television stars on their own shows. Oucu incntary makers will con!inuc lo C'oncentrate on l.rc.atnients about drug abuse, conservation, pollution, urban b!ighl, endangered species and the younger generation, most of ·v.•hich V.'il! reeeive high praise and low ratings. Bob lfope and Tiny Tim \Yi!l conlinu<' lo pop up on everything from ' •Sunrise Seme:ster" to the late, late show. Johnny Carson will con· tinue his four-day work week \Vhile rumors will continue - and promptly be denied - about the windup of "The ·;'CATCH·22' IS THE MOST MOVING, MOST INTELLI· :SENT, THE MOST HUMANE-OH;TO HELL WITH ITI -IT'S THE BEST AMERICAN flLM l'VE SEEN THIS YEARI It comes as close to being an epic human comedy as ~ollywood has ever made! Alan Arkin as Yossarian provides the film with Its continuity and dominant style. ~kin is a deadly urious actor, he projects intelligence civith such mopo-maniacal lnten·sity, he Is both funny ·and heroic at the same time. Nichols remains, as he was before One Of OUr fine st direCtOfS," -VIHC<HT CNIBY • .,.. t H.'f. TIME$ •rr·s ONE HEll OF A FllM' A COlD, SAVAGE AND CHI LUNG COMEDY! Firmly establishes Nichols' place in the front rank of American directors." sRuccw1wA11SOl'f, rursor "Viewini Arl<in is like witching Lew Alci1dor sink b!Skets or Bobby Fischer pl'J cboss. A Yirtuoso pl2Jer eaterlni his r1dlest period! A triumphant performance!" -nMt llAGmNc EDWARDS HARBOR lWIN CINEMAS HARBOR CINEMA 2 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST. COSTA M!SA 2 MIW SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FWY. 646-0573 l\fC'rV Griffin Show." New game and parte.I shows wHJ appear in day -tlme schedules, most based on parlor ·word games, and most will soon deparl. And local forecasters will continu<' tu make \Yeather- worricrs of us all, explaining later v.•ith the help of charlS why it didn 't work out that way at all. Opera Night At Fullerton An evening of opera will be presented by the Cal State Fullerton music department on four consecutive nights bcgirming 1'hursday, Jan. 7, in the recital hall . Performances Jn English o( scenes from opera! by Mozart, Puccini, l\1asscnet. Verdi and Britten will be staged at 8 p.m. under lhe direction of Clifford W. RC'ims , associate professor of 1nusic. The operas lo be performed are SC'enes from Moz.a~t's ''Casi Fan Tutte," Puccini's ''La Boheme." Act IV, MassC'net's "~tanon," Verdi's "Don Carlos" and Brillen's "Albert Herring." Tickets may be reserved by calling 871)..3371. By LEON DAA'IEL BANGKOK (UPI) -It seems to 1ne a sham~ that Bob Hope had to be stung by a report thal young Gls regard him as a:: establish- ment figure, which or course be is. It must have hurt the old trouper when he read that the kids don 't lfke him as much as their fathers did, "'hich of course is also true. The 67-year-old comedian built a career, u well as a fortune, by needling the establishment, but a man who plays gott with presidents bas to be part of it. At Uta pao, the BU bomber base south of Bangtok, Hope and his ?~member troupe on their annual Christmas tour for Gls got a standing ovation. That is a generou.s way to say the fellows kept ap- plauding as they got up off the grass al the end of hi s show. But it was the officers and the "lifers," the older ~areer noncommissioned of- ficers, who clapped the loudest. They were old enough lo have been in !he audience the frirsl time I saw, Hope bring down a house. It \\'as a college performance about 20 years ago, Hope never took h I s Christmas lour to Korea dur- ing the war so I missed him there. But last year I followed him around the same hospital ward in Japan where I had spent some time recovering JACK NICHOLSON NIW"'""' f "Jl!'6VE CllTKSAWAIDS Tl .1m. Fl.M OlllC10l ',::t~~~: f ERBJ! SV'P01TINGAC11lS1 · .. ~ :_\· . /~11:.'CES IBJ ~ wiltt Karen Black 1nd Susan Anspach NO RESERVED SEATS! ••· '"°' 11• 11o1P, IUTlllU Oii Wffl.U.TllDATS lo SWBAR 2•M l 4'°'P.L ME1110·GOlDWVN·MAVElt Pl'•••nl• ... -t---Ryans Daughter ~'"l rra:m ~ TI'IE'O'! 1-<M'ARO ~.DES .c»IUU.S lfOM>l':EHtl .,.S>fWl::J)S llSllYfO SUT U:Zi!Jiiifj eox OfflCf Cf'fH 1100 NOl'lf'0.9.00 P "-· [).lt YJ .... ,1u.s.1it0,.-. nn.&u.r.1,., ... U TlllUWIJl.U.I.& RI .. t• .-. GET WITH THE CATS WHO KNOW WHERE IT'S AT! ·: DAILY FROM 12:00 NOON AT EACH THEAT~E ' EDWARDS CINEMA / HARBOR 1 VIEJ01 CINEMA . ~ TWIN THEATRES MISSI VIEJO COSTA MESA SAN D~GO fREIWAY HARBOR AT WllSON Al LA PAZ TURNOFI" 2 Mi. r: of S.D. f"I. I l 3 DI "6-0573 ( , Lctl!'PI Stodlytn ) Or"'9 l'I IDWAIDS CINEMA 1 WEST l• WESTMINSTER WUT,loVrfSla II GOl.DIN wtST ............................ DIAL 192-4493 ; • (lxcllJ)t At SladilmO.I.) NATIONAl G!Nrul • CHMAWll 141tt ..... l'fdi,~ 6a1.7io1 OUT OF TOUCH ? Boil Hopo lllghli&bt.s or his 20th annual Such overblown press agen· the I""'· the youngsters who Chri:ttmaa tour will be col-try .sttms part of another fight yfS, the ones who hive orcast by NBC tbc night of the le'f. to galn and the moll J time. a si mpler lime when to I<>' in them. a~l4film no doubt will be people were absolutely certain IJ) if !,My don'l ·like hl111 h U _., d Alf "-d thl!lt qui~ from a funnyman --·.11 ucb u thtir Ja""-·a did, eav Y c:wte · luc crow s could make a man maimed lllr'' "'ou should be enthusiastic. All the In war feel better about It i1aeems to me tbat la a lines alioi.ild be botfos. all ;ame. rt probably will include As 1 !ald, maybe It could. on. the tlther 1 han~, maybe sorrte of the jokes on marl· Anyway, Hope is still in there one-liners doo t MY much juana usage that got a lot trying with ail his con-a~u~ what the grunts are of laughs from the youngsters siderable talent to entertaii thinking about these days. in Vietnam. 11ope's flacks ln·[~~~iii.;iiiiiiii,.iii;;;iiiiii;~i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-! terprel those laughs as p roof f ! that he is still making it as ~· 17J-6J6t ""M·A·S.H" 11 th• big as ever wilh young Gls. jl.. beat American Here's another quote HopV:'S ... • war comMly · flacks were handing out in since aound Bangkok: ~· i::110•:~1 Dr:;.i,,..:r· um• inl" "This year Bob not only ~ ~ found himself one of the 10 20DIC.U,foiprelellb most po~ular Americans with teenagerS in a nal.ionwide poll of high school students, but third in their esteem, ranking next to President Nixon and the kids' own parents." tnt:o P1emin1• Production ...,fii1 Colof by OELUXl' ~ _ Panavision"' ~ -ALSO PLAYING- from a wound during the His advance people didn't The ~tory 1 a beautiful girl'S lifetin1e betweerihe ages of 19 and 22. NAllONAl,fN[RAI. PICTUR15 l'm«ot$ Korean War. say Y:ho conduC'ted that poll JI seemed to me th en that but they offered up another the old rapport with the Gls one by the Reader's Digest 1 was beginning to fade. which showed A mer I ca ' s ''Al ease, men," he quipped. youngsters "picked Bob and ,,,,~ . ..,,.,,,,.,. ,,, .......... ·~ "Don't get up ." th e Beatles as the top stars j The broken young men from of the past decade." "';iiiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:i Vietnam grinned but the crack [!i"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ • did"'' quile come orr. NATIONJl GENERAL THEATRES The distance between hills named Pork Chop and Ham- burger is measured in years, enough of them to change at· titudes. J thought about this again just before Christmas when an Army information sergeant handed me a press release written by one of Hope's flacks which said: "His (Hope's) classic call of 'At ease, men. don't get up' when he walks into an orthQpedic ward has done wonders for both broken bodies and morale." I am old enough t o remember a hime when such simplistic nonsense actually seemed to help, hlaybc it still does. I don't know. Wbat r have observed (s that few people seem in· teresled these days in the state of the morale of youngsters f I g h l i n g the 1' Indochina war. !lope still care!!.. about such thing! and. beC'ause enough other people still do, filmed ANIMALogic • • .ssHUMru-- A"RPDRT -l'IRT DUii .AllCASTER ·MARTIN JUNSEBERG ·JACQUELINE BISSET GEORGE KENNEDY HELEN HAYES I. \JtUVtRSAl PtCTUllC n01NICOU)ll• "'"°""'=«! ~ 1000 ,\()• rriTALL-."""""111~ ~---- "\\\OlO\ISl ~ .. f~~!' cu-• o-"" ·· THIRD BIG SHOW TIMES-Fll:IDAY-SATUIDAY-SUNDAY 1-2:50--t :4D-6 :JG-I :J0-1 II: 10 Mondor lhru "Thurwl'lry 6:30 . 8:20 • 10:10 • AUO "Anne of the !Thousand Days" '"'"'"' ll:ICHARD IUITON GENEln'I IUJOLD lll:INI PAPAS Co11th1•0•1 Dcrtlf GEORGE SEGAL RUTH GORDON HOL. SAT. &: JUN. OPEN 12:45 Mo11. thru Th•rt. or•N 6:11 WELL. SU95009E 1t) ONE!!!! AND MAKE lT 1ilE DAILY PllDT JOST CALL 642·4321 . FOR HOME DEU\QY l .. •• '/ I • I • ' I I ' • ' ' r l .-• I • I '• I I I ' I I • I I I ) I I I I I ' " •• • • Mondi)', Janu.ry 4~ 1971 Fi' ker Slickered? Turner "\i~ YqcJi~$ma1t of Year Titl13 For U,e finl llJ!!O l:t' the hla Mujeres race which history ol the Martbtl & · • followed soon after the SORG. Yachtsman •nd Vat~WO • Other ocean racipg Vlictories of the Year Awards, AmerlCa's cup skipper did in ,~ls converted U-meter cet top ti.lling. American Eagle included the Bill Ficker of Newport Oyster Bay to 1'lewport (R.I,) Beach, 1967 · defender of the race. He made excellent sbow- eup, was edged oot. for top ings in seven other racis~ national llooors by Ted Turner In one-design races TUmer of Atlanta, Ga. . · ~ won the 5.5 meter Scan- t~ was one of the close.St dlnavlan Gold Cup, and the contests in the history ol the' U.S. 5.5 cliampionships. ?t1artini & Rossi yaehti1tg 'l'hi! Martini & Rossi panel awards. Turner beat out awarded a total of 101 points Ficker by four points. to Turner and 97 to Ftcktr, Turner was voted the winner Third place in tbe slanltings by a panel of top yacbtln \Vent lo John Dane Ill tif writers in t.he 'U.S. :~ted(. New Orleans, La.~ wit!t 60 br Bob .• Bavier, execultve \ points, In fourth 1 pla~ was vice president of Yachting ti,(pe all·A~can collegiate the brother team of John· and Magazine and himself a sailor from USC and Earl Jim Linville. wbiie, B 11 I former Am e·r i ca 's Cup Elma. w· er « tb N t' 1 Buchan of SeatUe, Wash., defender. The DAILY PILOT :-~· F e a. iona placed firth. 1 bo 'tjn~J:dkor ·Almon.,..· $nipe Cl¥5 c~~loosbipiJor The scoring was based on Lockabey/alacJ ~s ·8 member the ·.· fifth cons~tlfe · y~ar. 10 points for first place,' seven cf the panel . Campbell and Eil:rJs shared for second and five fol-third. In the women's competition, a loth place tie Wjlh Lynn Others in the first 10 were 1970 Adams .cup wjnner Jan Williams. John Jennings, 6th; James O'Malley of Mantaloli:ing , N.j , Turner, .who sailed /@ total (Ding) Schoonmaker, seventh: won the Yachtswoman of the of 15 jmporlant ..races \tiring RJchard Nye, eighth, and year award by four points o.ver the ~ear, too\ .first pl~ in Willi<1ms. Campbell and Elms Jan Pegel of Chicago. Third · eight events. l:b was 'l.rst tied for ninlh. place went to Timmie Larr overa,11 in the Southern ~n The winners will receive o( Oyster Bay, N.J. Racing Circuit, which inclu~ elegant Tiffany-designed sail- Other Southl&nd skippers wins in the St. Petersburi Ing trophies and suitably named in the 'first 10 were . Venice, , Lipton ~p. Na.uaa'i engraved plaques. The four Argyl~ Camp~ll or Balbpa Cup and , Mia~· N a s s u a \runners-up wi~l re c e i v e Yacht Club, winner of the 1970 _events. ' b a ndsome Tiffany-designed Congressional Cup and three-He also was the winner in j\aques. I . ,\ Winds in Extremes For Sunkist Series Both the December .and ~RF -(1) Dolphin, Milt January races of Balboa Ailione, LIYC : (2) Starshine, Yacht Club's Sunkist Series Bill von KleinSmid, NHYC: lived up to the name as far: · · as the sunshine was con-··(3) Vagabond Lady, Len Sho- ceoied. but wind conditions , melln~YC. went from one extreme to MORF -(1) Sequoya, J. the other. E . Moore, SSSC; (2) Impulse, The December race wa11 so Ed weber,' B'YC; (3) Aloha fiat that nearly half the boats 11 GI "--d SSSC did not finish, and the J anuary 'ENO~AVon' _ (1). Stormy. races Satµrday and Sunday Amies'&i Ea3tman; BCVC : (2) wece hit by 20-30 knot winds, AphrOOite, Bill L a n g j a h r • resulting in a wealth of non-SSSC; (~) tie betwee'n Jo-El. starters. Leaders after the first two John Blaich. VYC and Fidgin Fain: RObert Steele. •BCYC. race.S of .the µp-te .race ser~s RHODES·33 No starter~. are: TH Is TL E (I ) CAL-ls -(!) Loki, Roger Sheila'niia'i'ls ,'lto6'rt Van'Riet;· ~ville, LIYC ; (2) Celerity, . ames. Rudy, BYC: (3) tie SSSC: (2) Fire Cracker. Will tween .Niki 11 .. John Kinkel. Templet-On. BCYC: .(3) Sagtt;: BCYC, and Minolaur, Doaald ta, N. M. Hodgkin., BCYC. , H . BYC INTEMATIONAL-14 -(1) ~~~NG -No starters. White Tornado. Peter Galee, LUDERS-,tS _ Es Velero. BYC: (2) F<1 x, Tim Murl~n. 'Paul , Jacolis. SSSC: ( 2 ) VYC ; (3l Patch, John Slat> Adaiante, Barry Fenn, VYC: tebo. CYC. . (3) f. E n l Le y WINDMILL ·-(1) Home re· m • ro B o. H k. CBY Suther •nd, NHYC. rew. ·~'/. as ins, C; CA.L.25 _ (1) Veloz, Ken (2) Chari;:e, James Johnson1 Ros:s, BYC: (i) 't;soeranza, PVSA : 131 Tiger,,John Stiles, Boaz & Ker •. e~ey, BCYC : (3 ) Anacapa YC. o LlDO·l 4A _ (l) Serious, Cenh_eus, De:nnls u r g an, BCYC. <A.;ant Cup Re ined by •• 11ans The Unive 'ty of Hawaii sailing team ith Ronald Beers as skip some gu.rty goln suc~ss·rully def e Grant Trophy in the firs Pacific Coast lntercollegiate , Yacht Racing Association se s of ' Uie ne\v, year. The seven 'fCC series v.•as nailed Thur~y and Saturday. . In addition to Beers, tli .Hawaiian crew included Ron Gui/an and John Higham. The ', series WM sajted in Shields Class Sloops. Runner·up was San Diego State with skipper Andy Marcus and crewmen Dave Faulkner and Craig Galbraith. Third was Orange Coast College with skipper Peter Parker and crewmen John Daigh and Peter Wilson, Area Man Gets Marini Jack Coulter, BYC: (2) Lcwly coRONAD().25 _ (1) Tie Roman, Rally Lohmann, BYC ; betWeen Wind Child, Lee 13! Old Pokey Too, Marty Armstrong , VYC and Lockney, LIYC. ln sh. K & Robert Aronsohn of Newporl LID0-148 -(1) Hellion. par er 10• a PP es Willard Hell man, WYC: (2) Matson, BYC: (!) ·Bebetoo, Beach feturned to his D E P Z.11 Bob Da rnell, VYC. mainland home after catching e scue. reston ~1 gett, CAl.,.20 _ (I) Tex ?11 aru. BYC : (3) Rag Doll, Tim Rudy, Barry Mason, BYC; (2l tie a 162~~·pouncl blue marlin orf BYC . between Taco 2. NoPh L~m-the famed Kona Coast in METCALF -(1) llassle. SMYC rl PJ p . I H .. Jack Scholz, BYC.· 121 Tired. port. , Fin , ra1s er awau Tuesday. & Wilson, ABYC. A h l 35 . Dick B1'1tterman. BYC; (31 ronso n spen minutes Semi, Ed & Doug Weber, reeling the priz~-catch in on BYC. D • • 80-pound test line after spen· KITE ·A -(ll Vortex, lSlncl fling two weeks of futilit y in Brue~ Tw ichell. VYC: (2) No. 733, Steve Ross. Lahalna. YC; H p the \Vaters off the coast of (3 ~ Tvr, Nina Nielsen . NHYC. 0fi0J•S air lhe Island of Hawaii. KITE 8 -· Cl) No. 109, "Tuesday was my fourth try Bruce McCord, BYC; (21 No.. c·t " h · lh Co t at marlin fishing and I was 593, Brent B~twick. BCYC: I auons onor1ng e s a - ' ' be a friend-finder and receive a have your friend open an account at Newport National Bank and do both of you ' . a favor ... (OFFER FOR LI MITED TI ME ONLY) IT'S REWARDING AND FUN TO BE A FINDER ••• Find your friend (a relative will do*) and bring them to Newport Nat ional Bank! Arter you have introduced your friend to our New Accounts girl and your friend opens a new 53;4 9& Time Certificate of Deposit Account for $10,000 for 60 months or longer, we will gi ve you, as the "Friend·Flnder," a FREE SONY COLOR TV SE T. You r friend v11ll receive a FREE SONY AM DESK RADIO for opening his new account, Which pays a big Sl/40/o interest compounded daily, paid quarterly or FREE TO FINDER: • longer at your option (the highest bank interest allowed by law for commercial banks). Certificate may be used as collateral for Joans • Your SONY colortelevi sio n set and your friend's SO NY AM desk radio will be SONY Trinitrori" 12" diagonal screen, Automatic col or 1:onlrol, greater brightness, sharper focus and many' other special features. Easily' moved f rom roon1 to room. FREE TO FRIEND·DE POS ITOR: given immediately when the new account is opened with cash. cashiers check, tellers t heck, or cert ified check. Other passbooks b'4Ju ght in or sent in will be transferred free. (Pl•ase allow other checks and pa ssbooks time.·~o clear before claiming gifts.) Acco11t1ts may be opened jointly, in trust SONY AM Desk Radio with unique for dil f&rent individuals, or as slide tuning and volume control for greater precision and brilloant performance. Beautifully finished in rich walnut. Lays flat or lilts up. cu stodian for minors. Prior to maturity no principal may be drawn. •Not a me rnber of your househofd. 3 3 .PER ANNUM ~MPOUNDED 0 D~ILY YIELDS 4 5.917% PER ANNUM FREE SONY COLOR TV sns AT ALL 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES Airport OU1ce Mi,helson at Ma~rthur 83l .Jlll • l111id1 Ofllc1 B~ys1de at Jamboree 6\2·114 1 to11~.r:e P1_rt; OUice r-lutwood at ~ommonwelllh 871·2900 • Sunn1 Hills Ollice Harbor at Brea 871 ·72911 Supeno1 O!l1te Supeoor at PlaQ1nt1a 642-9511 • U.ivt11ity Offltt Et~I Chapm•n •I Stale College 879-4840 Wtsldifl Offict Weit!;lill at Dover 642·311 l --·········--····-SPECIAL IN~TRUCTIONS IF OPENED'BY MAIL.- NEWPORT NATIONAL BANIC P1ease. ~pen my Time Cerlific3le of Deposit Account , (Acecunt$ mil' bf opened 101ntly, in t1ust for dil!erent individuals, or n custodian lot minon. All atcounts npened by 1111il must have gifts picked up at the office wllere .itcoun1. 1s open.ed, by Ille fri1~d-F1nder whose sirnature appea!'l below.) sony, we~nt ship •t. We w1U notify fuend·finder when to pid. up 1itu.. Depositor'~ full Name-----==-~-----CP!ea1e. pnnt) .Addre5$---=--~~-~~-------C•1~ State Zip Soc.al Securi!y Number ______ fnclosed Is $ ___ _ 0 ~10,000 for 60 months, or lona:er. D f'a &sbook &nclosed Si.e:nature of Depositor====~--------­(Mu•t be lnclt1dt<I for eaeh .iiecount) rinde1's Name ______ ==c-=:=------ CPI•••• print) 13) Chinook, Bill Lapwotth, Mesa-County Water District's about to give up. It is NHYC. Man and Woman of 1970, staff disrouraging watching other SABOT A -(I) Racing membersk "Wh')!Je_,,,work bears fishenmn come with big ones AddrB$$ ___ =,-.,.----~=----~-- Machine , Mark Gaud i 0d the mar of d=1cation and citv St•1• Z•p · e 11 h b (in the 400-500 pound class) . • ••. NHYC: (2) Breezy, Davi ex c enc e , ave een Soc1al·.,.,..unty Number, ____________ _;_ Seil Bc1clt 011itt Leisur e Woi ld, Seal Bei'lt 596-2711 •\a111n1 Hills Olli'9 Ltiw1e Wor!d, La1:una H1ll18JO·J200 Sigler, BYC·, 131 Sea •··-r, .presented. and not be able to get one 1 ~·~ Ed B ~ d M Finder'~ S1n1ture _______________ _ John Gr1tnath, BYC. a1n:a~ ftn arge yoorself." SABOT B ~ (I) Aloha Robinson won the coveted Aronsohn w .. l lo Ure lslands1-------------------------------•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_:•:=•:=•:•=- Maru , Steve Reed, sssc:· (2) honors " a ri'n·ounced last 1 N 6256 T D S I Bye 'J'hurstfay · 3.t the a n n u a t ·especially to nm for marlin. o. . . . pang er, . . H . I l D , SABOT c ....,. (1) Noony, CM~D Christmas party and e is a :regullJ' a aveys Brad Blocs, SSSC; (2) .Mja:~y,. service awards nlght. Locker In Newport Beach. 1-------------------------------------------------- 0reg Hoose,: SSSC; (3) NQ. ' Bartell ls "Ware ho us e1;:;=''='=' =======;! 5032, Chuck Scranton, BCY.C. !Upervisor for the CMCWD. L 11------------------------------------------------------ 0CEAll . MCING -, (I) handling ~,<".i,de VBCiety of LOCA II Tcend, Jim Lindennan, BY¢;. expensi~ '• illM ~ eophisticated No oth•r new1p1p•r t•llt vou .(2) lu4:kf , Chance, J Q h n' equlpm.,, used ln providing morf, •v•ry d1y, •bout wli1t'1 Bromley, BCYC: (3) Sparltle, conslsteiiUy high quality water gOln; on in th• Gr•1t9r Oran111• Co•1t thin tht DAILY PILOT. Alex Irving. BYC. · service. ' c stere.o103FM f -· .. the sounds of the harbor ,, . ' ; ' _:1d~~7 if you like good • music ·. , I ... I • Two B'ig Plays Put Cowboy·s By GLENN WRITE ot .................. SAN P"RANCISCO -Dalla&' CowbQys .,. ooe atop awa, 1rom. .. .u. becomil1& br~ -the dubloua • -they've earned·· over the put four years by aluml>Un& In Natlmal Football League playolf pm°"' And u 0.UU 'coach Tom Landry told the illlILY PILOT Sunday foDowi!ig the ,. ~wb$ri1.' 17·10 vlctocy over Sin FranclJco at Kezar Satdlum : "You can't tinagine how it feels lo win today unleM you've suffered like we ' bavt the last four years." · Landry's forces had at last WOft Ex-county Star Unsung Dallas · Hero Special lo the DAILY PILOT SAN FRANCISCO -1bey had survived the .shower of cushions, beer cans and other missiles as they escaped Ked!' Stadium's playing field Sunday afternoon following a 17-10 conquest of the San Francisco 49ers in the National Football Coilference championship decider. 'Ibey wei:e moving throUMh a tunnel and toward the anttquattd locker fadllties. Their facet! falltd to reflect the kind of ""°'ion you might expect from a team: such u the Dallu Cowboys. After all, they· were still on the uctnt fmn their journey out of the doldrums, wha't ·with a Jan. 17 ·Super Bowl date agalQ.!t Baltimore pending. AMi they were '8.500 richer by virtue of havlna whlpped the 49er1. Yet they appeared unusually aolemn -bwdnesallke, Jf you prefer. However, that maequerade was quickly em:ed" once they steppfd Into the relaUve privacy of !bolt dr"'lng .:hombero. "1.eto )'ards on punt rt;tUl'lll (for SF) • , . how 'aboutthat!" hollered bnt chap. "GOO, we won!'' 1aid linebacker D. D. Le:wia as he huaged an assistant coa.:11. "'Ibey wrote .us cff too 900n," e1· claimed another Cowbcy. A~ it went on. NeiUed back in one corner cf the dressing room was one of the Cowboys' unsung heroes • . . a fellcw who once starTed at Se!'vite High School (Anaheim) beiare moving to Stanford UnlvtrSity then 111baequenUy to Dallu u a fifth l"OWld, draft choice ln 1988. Bla1ne-. Nye is not of the -inen who toil> the IDWll -..:corded team· ~ like Bob Ha,ea, crllg Mortoo, J.14~. etc. Bui ht llW'Oly deserved a larp lhare ol et!dit for Sunday's triumph. 'the-M. 251-pound guard continually cut down the defense, sometimes nailing two at •· lime. ,He al90 kept a drive ali11e with 1 key fumble recovery late In U>a-lam•. And he was one of those plain lineman Who made the Dallas running 1ame an awesome force. San Francisco linebecker coach Mike Giddings indirectly credited Nye'• work with his postgame comment. "Dallas made more yards ruMlng than We th<>ught thty woold. But they didn't do ·anything we didn't except -they jwt stuck It to ua. "nty'd block t.he end and then cut down our bacb with thtlr pulling guard and tackle. That's why they were able to run so well to our right side," the dejected former Newport Short! rtl!lldenL told the DAILY PILOT. Nye was one of the pulling guards Gkidings referred to. Nye was particularly modest co~ cerning his efforts for the afternoon, saying only that be felt he htd don• hi• job. Regarding the Cowboys' resurgence after 1eemingly be.lng out of title con· tention with· a 5-4 record a couple of months ·ago , he said: "We ju1t became another team •.. the pressure to win was off. In the past' we were expected to win. When we did no one paid much attention but when we lost wt-get taken over the coals." ,\nd Nye • discounted any renewed preuure wil;h the Super Bowl date c:om- ln( up. "I guess you could 111y our last four pmea have. betn &aper Bowls became we had to win them an or we were out of tt," utd tht e1~tte player. .Dlllaa coach Tom J .. andc'y had special pralll: . for Nye, say.tng. a vitally Im· proved offemlve line wal!I one of the big re,.. Oall•sl rwminl game has been IO effective th1I year. And he said Nye hu been one of the mainstly1 in that for.lfd wan. Re credits ·the aMJtlonal· ym "' uperlenc< for Nye's improYed pla:t Ulb IHIOl1. Morton hit Reggie Rucker on a , lhird down pass late in the gam:, keeping us from having to punt." And so It was. Wilh the score tied 3-3 early in the third quarter, Jordan picked off a defletted Brodie throw at tbe San Fran· Cisco 13. Then on the next pl.ty classy Diume Thomas raced to a touchdown and a llt-3 lead with lO:Sl left in I.he period. Morton 's pass to Rucker came in the fourth quarter and pulled the Cowboys out of a hole. 'Ibey were hanging on to a 17·10 lead and were roosting back on their 19 with third down and II yards to go. If San Francisco could contain Dallas for one more play the 49era figured to get the ball in good field positioo. However, Morton came up with one of his infrequent completion.s, threading the needle between two defenders •nd -picking up 20 yards as Rucker made the receptiOn. When Dallas finally had to give up the ball only 4:43 remained and the 49ers wire shoved back to their own 23. ·Brodie m1de his desperation bid to 1et the ti~ and force an overtime, moving DALLAS BACK CLAXTON WELCH (42) IS PULLED DOWN BY SAN FRANCISCO DEFENDERS. Big Challenge for Prothro ,. New Ram Coach Inks Fat Contract By HOW .um L. HANDY Of ... DAii»' 1'1191 ll•ff LOS ANGELES -Tommy Prothro will bring a wry sense of humor along with one or the outstanding football minds to the Los Angeles Rams es head coach, His philosophy can be outlined briefly in remarks made to the news media immediately following his selection to replace George Allen al the helm of the Rams Saturday. "I am not the type who loves to work. { Jove the results of work." That In a nutshell i11 the makeup of the new head man of the Los Angeles profeS.!lional football team. Currently he is engaged in the first order of business, selecting a staff of eiJ:ht assistants to work with him on the Ram staff. "I have some people in mind but I haven't talked with any of them yet. 1 would like for some of the current Ram assistants lo remain but you can 't work with two, three or four philosophies. ''At least one of the assistants should be familiar with the league and the players in it." Another thing Prothro feei.o; strongly about is that the coach must have com· plete ·authority over the team. "Every athletic director 1 have worked wiUi has told me no at one time or anOther. 1 have always ~n able to accept a no. The thing I cannot accept is a watt and see attitude -pro- crastination. ·'.'I think I make decisions fa irly fast. This one wa! a real tough one. I hate to · leave the players at UCLA. J have a· lot of treaaured friends there. I also treuure the cooperation guidance and frieDdlhip of J. D. Morgan (Bruin alhlelic director l." A!ted how he decided to take over the re.igna of. the Rams when his security at UCLA wa, unquestioned, he replied : "Some of the gre1t Ram players I will ha ve to work with had • gre.at deel to do with It. I would be lying if l didn't alllO include money," The ft.ams did not discloae the terms of ' Prot.hro's contract. but It was learned from I · relilble IOUrce th1t it was for five yeara and considerably more than l TOMMY PROTHRO New Ram Coach 1he $45,000 salary and $20,000 bonuses paid to Allen. So me observers said he would receive more than $90,000 a year. ''Thill job is something new and challenging and you people in the med ia had some influence on me. It is a prestige position and you have made. it that way. Crouthamel Ne~· Dartmo.uth Coach NEWTON . Mass. -Jack Crouthamel, a former all-Ivy League halfback at Dartmouth who molded one o( the toughest de.lenses in . the nation the past two seasons at his alma mater, was named today he ad football coach at Dartmouth. Crouthamel , 32, I.he youngest head coach in Ivy League football history, succeeds Bob Blackman, who N"!igned recently after 16 seasons to become head coach at llllnois. ·CrouU\amtl. it • defensive backtleld coach who hu been a member of the Dartmouth staff strioe 1965. "1 have been at UCLA as head coach for the past six years and during thlit time 1 have been convinced that pro football is bigger than college football in this area." What about a winning season in 1971 with the Rams ? Is this going to be a rebuilding year? "T don't buy that bit about a rebui ld· Ing season one bit . I'm too old for a long range building program. Jf I didn't think the Ram s were going to be a winner, I wouldn't have taken t.he job." When asked If ttiere might be some player resentment on the Ram team becau se of the Allen situation two years ago when the players were responsible for rehir ing the deposed Ram coa ch, he said : "I heartily support players being loy al lo their coach. I don 't know the Ram coach-player relationship at all. 1 personally want respect. not arfection, from the pla yers." Tbe new head man feels more can be accomplished on the pro level because the players aren't concerned with a full class schedule in addition to playing football. His plans call for a minimum amount of time on the practice field with little or no contact work during the season . Prothro talked of security in a , job by staling simply that most contracts he had ever signed could be broken in two weeks time by either party . He also feels that being head coach and general manager at the same time is too mu ch responsibility for one man. In looking over personnel,_ his ideas are based on ability and experience. "It would be great jf you coul~ combine ability With Youth and ttperience. Personally, J don't care how old a player is. 33 or 13, as long as he can do the job." Prothro met Ram owner Dan Reeve11 in New York after Chrlstma.s and the two talked for about four hours on every phase of the job they could think of. Reeves said upon hiring of the new Ram coach: "We promised to ·try to Iind the hen possible man for our pl•yers and fans. It i11 my conviction we have dOne. jll$t tbat _ and that Tommy (P.rothro) will prove It." Thin Chance for lrish--.Parseghian DALLAS (AP) -·In a 11111-mlnulo maneuver for the national champlouhlp . title, Notre Dime co.ch Ala P1rseP1an llald SW>day bit Flihtlnll lrlsh "ace<pted a Jll'eller dlaflol!P"' In playlq Tau In 1be Cqllo!l'Jlqwl than ~did Nebr- In Uie~~ Meanwhile. • .,..._ for 111e.c.41an llowl aald Ille 'Mllidloa ~ had Nked Nebr.a,;i!ot . to be . iDO ioaly 'hi ... pUnt "'" Orin(• Jowl bid. The <imuoJUM bid ubd NebrUD to lorestall lta deciaSorl for 1 net. .. The "-lated "'-' final poll W. week wUI name the: national champion. P111119Chlan admits the Irllh bav~ a slim chlnce at the Utle slnoe Notre Olrm• ended the eeaaon with a 1~1 """'1 wblle Nebrub flnlah<d with Ill+ I. Bui, PlneJhlan 1Aid, "The aulomatlc 11111mptloo ,that they 1hollld be No. I dilt.w'bl me.· Out team thould 1et 1 l"'ll dul of credit tor acttptlng the cballen1e of playing tile fop-rank>d team." Texas was No. 1 ln the lut regul ar staaon poll but Notre Dame shot them out or the saddle New Yu.r's Day with a 24-11 victory. Friday's victory abo ended the .Lonahorna' »came winninfl streak. "Ntbraslia. WBI deflnltoly '°"'lderM strongly," the Cotton Bcwl apokeaman said. "We didn't luue Ui~m an invitation, but we detinJtely let them know we were Interested. We told them we ~ bably wouldn·t be able to make 1 decision • tor another week or IO, but apparently they weren't lnteresttd enough tq wait." However, contad.ed It bis MJami , S..Ch ho!A!I th~ morning, Nebraska coach Bob, Devaney said: "I'd 11.ke to know Who that.. spaMsm.ln Wf:I!"' No ant aUed 'us td watt .a week:. _' ' "I cllled Prneghi•n io try ·lo find out where they were goi.ng to play, but he couldn't tell me. He Jllal' didn't know 11 ·the 'time. The l>oWI 'j,Oople didn't give U$ the time," be added. I Mondl1, J111u1ry 4, l m DAIL V PILOT 1;J f Bowl • ID Super hi• matea 21 yard.a before being hurled for a Jos.s of nine. That did It and San Francisco's bid for a fii-st-ever circuit crown was· ended . Dallas' running game waa crushing with Thomas and Walt Garriton making a 9hamblet ol the 49er1 delente. 'l'homU had 14.1 yards in 27 uniea·wbl.l~.Gar· ri.!IOO urned 71 in 17 attempb, "We figured we could run 1ga1Mt them (49er1)," bndry Aid later. "After all, running ii OW' ltnnlth and if we can't do that we'" iD trouble." And as San Francl.lco umtant .coach Mike Glddinp (ex.Newport Shores res1.; dent) pointed out, "We've been abll to win breaks do it" this year by making the tW , • . today we 1imply couidnl. .DllMa CewboYt • J 1• 1 -11 -..n ,1e11CIK• -· ) • I ' -10 JP' -l'G °"''"' '' 0.1. -'G Cler111 i1 O&I• -Tllomu IJ run (Clt rlr -lc~J 0.1,' -Gtrrl-S pesa lrom Morton (Clt<ll •k~J ' II" -WlkMr 1' PtH lrvm l rodle !GOU.-11 kk-J Al'l.nd•r>e:t -lt.42S. f<lr.i .,...,.,, Y•rct• rllll!lnl v •• .,. "'"'"' lt-tn Ytrd•O-'•n• '""''' ~ .. '°'' ~Ill•· llllltllc• C•-Y• " "' ~ " 7·12.tl •• • " ••n " .. ·~ ' '"'' .... • .. Colts No Longer Called Outsiders BALTIMORE (APJ -The Baltimore Colts, doubted by their followers And outcasts in the American Football Conference, are on their way to the Super Bowl. Farcing the breaks which coach Don McCafferty said would make the dif· ference, the Colts polished off the Oakland Raiders, 27·17, to win the AFC title Sunday and debunk charges they had yet to prove themselves. Now iVll on to Miami for a Jan. 17 Super Bowl date against the Dallas Cowboys, The Colts will collecl a minimum $8,SOO for whipping the favored Raiders, but there was more money at .!take. "Maybe this will wipe out our game against Kansas City which millions of people saw on television," said Dick Bielski, coach of Baltimore"s receiver.s. Even Baltimore fans Were willing to wrile off the Colts after lhey were manhandled, 4.4-24, by the Chiefs in the 1econd game of the season. Nothing the Colts did later changed the early season opinion!. Even when they won the Eastern Division with an 11·2·1 record, the Colts were accused of ha ving faced patsy opposition. In addition , as one of three former National Football Uague teanu switched to the AFC with 10 onetime American League teams, the Colts were coruidered outsiders. But the Raiders were the la.rt of the old AFL teams left, and the Super Bowl will match two long!Jme NFL rivals. A 68-yard touchdown pass from 37-year· old J ohn Unitas to Ray Perkins. after Oakland had pulled to within 20-17 rarly in the fourtll quarter, sent the Raiders down to defeat. Perkins, bothered by a broken lot and suffe ring from a fe ver which limited his practice during the week to 20 .minutes. broke free as the Colts used four wide receiv ers In a play patten'! tried for the first time this year. George Blanda , Oakland's i3-year-old wonder whal!e last-minute heroics during the regular season brought the Raiders to the title game. rallied them again after starting quarterback 0 -a r y I e After 49er Loss Lamonica was hurt in the second period. But the Colts n\oved ahead to stay on rookie Jim O'Brien's second field goal, and then made it 20-10 when rookie Norm Bulaich scored his s e c o n d touchdown. Baltimore's rugged defense, which blanked the Cincinnati Bengals, 17~. in the playoff opener, dumped Oakland quarterbacks five times for 48 yards in losses and picked off three in~ terceptions. In addition. Sam Havrilak of the Baltimore special team recovered a fumbled punt by George Atkinson to set up a second period TD which put the Colts ahead IG-0. "This was our best performance-of tile year," McCafferty said. "But I don't think we've reached our peak s:.ince mak· ing adjustments after we suffered some injuries. Our best football is still ahead of us." Bulaich, Baltimore's No. 1 draft pick who blossomed late after overcoming Injuries and an early tendency to fUmble. gained 71 yarlb on 22 carries. Unitas comp leted jtl!t 11 of 30·· passes for 245 yards. but lost only eight yards behind the line and wasn't intercepted. The Colts, who lost to the New York Jet! in their only previous Super Bowl appearances, sent the AFC's leading passer to the bench when end Bubba Smith smacked down Lamonica and in· jure_d his groin, "Thi! ls ~s big if not blgger than playing in the Super Bowl,'' defensive tackle BilJy Ray Smith said oC Sunday's game. "No one thought we could do it. . ' Oo•l•lld lll•kl..-s 0 J J 1 -11 Btl!lmort (Olh I 1 10 I -'t1 1111!. -FG O'Stll'll 1' lloll. -9ultld> J f\ln fO't•l•fl tic-) O••. -FG Bl•ndl 4 0 11t, -lllehilkOlf • """ lf"D"' l ltncl• (&ltrodl t ick! lfll. -FG o·ar/tn 1J B•U. -8ut•lch 11 run IO'Brl.., kltltl oe•. -w1111 IJ .,.u lrom Illar.de 1a11toe1i Ilk~) 11111. -'••klnt U l).IH from Un!111 IO'llrl.., kick I Finl down1 Ronflln(I ¥••def• P•nln11 Yt•dtO• Rtturn y1ro111• PIHft Puno Fumbl .. loot V1rcla ptntlir9d 11.tlll.,-. C1t11 It ti 101 116 m 2l7 1~ )?J 11-J.S-J 1 !-2'.0 M ._., ' . " " Fickle Frisco Faithful S1wwer Cans, Praise SAN FRANCISCO -This is the place where fans are so fickle you never know whether they're going to shower their l!IOmelimes favorite footbalJ team with praise or beer cans. That's the reaaon they had to build a steel fence around the tunnel that leads players from Kezar Stadiwn'• playing field to its ancient dressing area. San Francisco 49er quarterback John Brodie has been doused with beer, 1pat at and cut lo ribbcn1 by insults after letting those wild 49er Jans down on various occasions. Once, In fact. an official was clouted by • bag full of llquor bottles (empties, -__ __.. WHITE WASH at that), after they had aroused the .ire of Kezar faithful. Another Ume when Brodlf' w11 walking off tho fwd with B~• Johnny Unitu, 10meone burled a cu, of beer • at Brodie, but nailed Unltu. n.w: the fence. fn:im the Anchorage (Ala1ka) Time• declded agaln1t 1Uendlnc the game at the l11t moment Ramon per1tst that II was too cold .here for ltlm. * * * They have put a wire fence completely around the playing fi,Jd to separat1 it from the stands at Kezar for one reuon: Does the nickname the fenca has (Drunks' WaU ) tell the story for putting up the b4rrier? Fans here are 30 volatile that 150 -special secur ity policemen were hired to lry and maintain order fOr various gamei this aeaon. SUnday they queDed a few fights but there was nQthitlg ·out of the ordinarj , . . at least not out or the ordinar:Y for this wtld area. · However, one Oallu wotnan did I itood job of marshaling her Own show, While waving a banner proclaiming thf Cowboys No. I, a man grabbed UM hoge paper and took off running. She •as In full pumit, however, an4 got It back despite falling head nrst Into tht seal.I during part of the c• Then •nother fellow began to bit bet banner with a atk:k when she apll rafted It. Sc>me ~bow! * * * They were a bit wUd here Sunday after the 4ter1 fell t.o Dallas. A few cans were tossed. Cushto .. came, too. FOLLOW ON THE JIM PLUNllEli And people leaned onto the (ence CONTROVEl\S~: thoatlrt • wu elJ to 1bout their dlaappointment 1t already \ cdleat la I '• Rote Bowl vletor] dejected 49er playm. .• ever ~ Sf.a saret, dttenei But there were 11.lo a few of tbt-'1a,pl111r of a.e 11me awifd. faithful who ne11ted thole adiona. They But ,... "81• ..... , Mil m a a• .t -outalde tho ...... ,.,.. ror .. an ·-,.,~,r ~ despite ... hour and every time Ille doGJ! .oil.oao!I ' ~ ,..., · • ' • ':Ii· -•I .., lo U. SF d..,.,inr room, Ibey obantod: ' llWil lsP ....... · Dome's Joi "W'. "Ill love ~ou." _ • • ~r ..,...,~~ my - *' * * .bl ti! l -~~ .... """,.... rt yMa'rt azp..terbtr w eow 'I ni 1 P.I -.iu ..... lllllill;'ftllilmaaa _... at Jteur, bear 11111 II mllld : A reperier dowL ! I ! I I "I I 2l DAJLY PI LOT Wild Pac-8 Race Begins ---VCLA, Troja1is Remairi Un.defeated By 111E ASSOCIATED PRESS Fou r \l-eek.s of preconferen('t', mostly intersectlonal play lend credenct to the 1reseason remarks of John WOOden, whose L;CLA Bruins seek I.heir fiflh consecullve NCAA basketball cham- pionshJp. Coach Wooden "'on'I predict a 1970-71 championship but he has stated that the team lhal survil·es Pacific 8 play should be Hie fa vorite in post-season LOuman1ent gan1es, The Pac-8, said \lo'ooden is the nation 's strongest conference from t-0p to bottom, Led by top-ranked UCLA and fourth· r:.ated Southern Cabforn1a, Pacifir"'8 1nembers open conference play this Fri- Uay night after winding up the pr elude with a spectacular ,744 winn'ing percen- t.ag e -58-20. Sports In Brief Southern California eked oul ao 80-76 overti1ne vict.ory over Louisiana State Saturday night ln the Trojans' final preconference tunaip. 'Tbe comeback triumph ran USC'.s record to 10..(I. · UCLA's Bruins, meanwhile , romped over Dayton 106-82 for a t-0 record. In other games Stanford beat visiting Columbia 85-76 for a 6-4 record, Seattle whipped Washington 86-31, Cal State. /Long .Beach) pverpowered Colorado 8-4· 76; Los Angeles State n.ipped Colorado State 77-75; Nevada·Reno edged San Jose State 65-6.1, San Francisco State beat St. Mary's 7~72. and Peppercline Io s l al Florida Slate 10 1-82. USC hosts Washington Stale, 9-3, in the opening Pac-8 game Friday night and coach Bob Boyd said after the victocy over Louisiana State. '"Now we have everylhlllg to look forwud to.'' With the Trojana lraillni 7~. Boyd ordered a "black preu, ")>utting man.to-. man pressure all over the court on iile l'lgers. - Led by guards Denn~ Layton and PauJ Westphal, Southern California overcame the deficit in the last five minutes and went on to win 80-76 in overtime. Wooden, whose Bruins open Friday against Washingto n, 5-5, said he wu happy with his team 's 10tJ..a2 defeat of Dayton. He said he was particularly pleased with 19 points produced by Henry Bibby, who bu been in a scoring slump. Sidney Wick• netted Z8 and Curtis Rowe 2Z for the Bruins. Lave r Pockets $10,000; Year of QB Spills Over Into 1971 S uper Bowl a Tos s-up JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Som< resplendent TV publicist dubbed 1&"10 Colts in 1969 and the Minnesota Vikings _Jlte "Year of the Quarterback'• in col-NE \V YORK -Rod Laver of Corona dti Mar successfully opened defense of his Tenn~ Champions Classic cham- pionship Saturday by d e f e ~ t i n g Australian Ken Rosewall , 6-3, 6-2, 7-5 in Uie opening round o( the new series of winner-take·all matches. Laver breezed through the first two sets before 7,252 fans in Madison Square Garden. The third set was decided by 1he 12-point tie-breaker systen1 with Laver scoring an ace for the final point and victo ry, The win was worth $10,000 to Lave r and r:ioves him to the second round of the 1911 competition against John Newcombe atlRochester, N.Y:, Jan. 9, Trailing 3--1 in the first set , Laver took the next five games to win the set, then took the first four games of the second set. ·aver. who earned more than $200,000 t tennis purses last year, said he felt , at going into Satun:lay's match. 'I never stopped playing .last year I never lost my form. I love playing nis and it's a great way to get ld, doing something you love so much rs been good to you. ·1f I keep pa cing myself and the ney keeps improving, l feel I can y forever." • S VEGAS -Jimmy "The Greek" der, the oddsmaker , said Sunday the per Bowl is a toss-up . -le listed the odds as even for the n. 17 clash al Miami, between the ltimore Colts and the Dallas Cowboys. nyder missed the past two Super y;!s by wide margins, picking the n1all College layer~ Spark I West Gridders OAKLAND (AP ) -Don PasWrin1 and ~n Burns played their collegiate foot· ball in Lhe so-called !mall college ranks, bat both were big reasons the W~st beat the East in the 46th annual Shrine c~anty game. r ;islori ni threw a touchdown pass . lO flltssoun's Mel Gray on a pla y covering c:. \"a rds and also contributed a ·~-yard f1e1d goal. longest by placement in .the history of the East-West compet1t1on. as the West won 17-13 Saturday . The 6·foot -3 quarlerback from Sant.a Clara won hooors as I.he game's outstan- ding offensive player. Burn~. a 225-pounder and twice a Little All-American From Cal State (Long Beach ). was a late addition lo the squad. He came on to rush for 88 yards nn ?2~ carries and also caught a pass for Btl'lher 22.p Of 1he Santa Clara product, coach r..ddie Crowder of Cnlorado. who headed lhf West staff , declared, ·'He"s ll remarkable football plllyer, excellent now ari:I he'll get ~tter." ft was Crowder who put in lhe play ,,.hi.ch electrified the Oakland Coliseum cr0wd of 54.000 as the West scored ;in' a ~yard return of the opening kickoff, Norm Thomp~n or Utah took the ~ick at the one and reversed to Gray, wDo scampered the remai nin1t; 87, '-We scored twice with the play al :otorado In 1969 and a playrr with Grty·s 1'peed (9.2 for the 100) can go a.II the way· if we gel him some running room." Sea Kings Tangle Wi th LB J ordan Perennial Irvine League buUtball ch11mplon Corona del MJlf Hip will go through Its finJI paces, tonight , In 1nllcipatlon of Wednelday t opening salvo or circuit games. Coach Tody Giili•' sa Klngi hott Lo~ Beech Jordan ill 1 ?:JO 'encounter. ffic Sea l!IJ)8I l'O"'plled a M mark In December "ltl\>ce Don Killian sitting out t11U but two of the games wth a inuscle car above his knee. He'• not erpect,ed to 11uit up tonl&ht. ••vlfW reinjured the knee. a year ago. /-Iegiate football. • Jt has spilled over into 1971. . Courageous Joe Thiesmann ignited CAMBRIDGE, Ma~s. -_Joe Rest1c. Notre Dame to its Cotton Bowl upset coach of .the Hamliton Tiger.Cats of of toi;ranked Texas. the Canadian F~tball League for the TeMessee's Bobby Scott wac a brilliant past two season~. 1s !he new head c:oach southern general in the Vols' easy victory at Harvard University, the Associated ()Ver Air Force. Press learned today. . Heisman man Jim Plunkett'a golden The appointment was approved by,..-:?-arm Jed Stanford to Its Rose Bowl tumb l· Harvard's athletic OOard and the HarvariJP" ing of No. 2-rated Ohio State. Corpo~ation and was to be announced Jerry Tagge sneaked across for later 1n the day. Nebraska's deciding touchdown in an Re.stlc reJtlacts John Yo v i cs i n , Orange Bowl triumph against the herald· Harvard's winningest coach who said ed defense of Louisiana State. last spring that 1970 would be his last That's the way it we.nt New Yaar'I season because or doctor's orders. day, but the: finest h ea d • t o ·he a d e quarterback fight of them all probably came during Auburn's 34-28 victory over Mississippi In the Gator Bowl INGLEWOOD -The Los Angeles Kings lost another National Hockey League game, had their leading scorer injured , then went behind closed dress!pA room doors to search among themselves for a way to win. Bob Pulford, also the Kings, IDp penalty killer, was sidelined with a knee injury six minutes into the first period Sunday night when he collided with St. Louis, Bob Player. -It was 1-0 Blues at lhe time. 3-0 seven minutes later and lhe B I u es· skated to an easy 7-3 victory . • RALEIGH. N.C. -Un defeat e d Nebraska, the Orange Bowl winner, has added another prize to ils trophy room -the Grantland Rice award as the nation 's outstanding college football team . Selection of the Cornhuskers, 17·12 con. querer of Louisiana Stale on New Year's Day, was annourred by the football Writers Association of America. Nebraska, which wo• 11 games and tied one th is season, lacked nnly two points o{ a perfect score in the voting by the fi ve-man selection committee, association presidenl Dick Herbert an- nounced. • TLTLSA, Okla . -John Dromo. head coach of the 17th-ran~ed University or Louisville basketball team. Was listed .in serioos condition at St. Francis Hos pit.al here Sunday night, suffering from wha! was diagnosed as a coronary insufficiency. Dromo, 54 , was taken to the hosp ilal ('arly Sunday and rem ained in the cardiac c<rre unit, where tests and X· rays were being conducted. The nation's total offeme king, Auburn 's Pat Sullivan. hit 27 of 43 passes for 351 yards and two touchdowns against the Rebels before a shouting crowd of 71,138. Ar chie Manning , performing with a still-mending broken left ar m, conne cted on 19 of 28 for 180 yards and one score . The S.foot..J redhead aJso scrambl· ed seven times for 95 yards in an in credible show of cunning and speed. "That's the tiredest I've been," drawl- ed Manning, the marvelous senior who cracked his Heisman Trophy chanees with th at pale left arm, "I wasn 't supposed to run so much." he said. ''Bu t we got down 21..(1 and had to pull out all liie stoppers. When ] left the fi eld that last time, r felt like I might die before 1 got to the be nch." Manning's eyes walled like a stago dummy's follow ing that final !Jeramble for Ole Miss. He sucked on an oxygen mask for five minutes and then stumbled away in a crooked path that would do justice to a career drunk. "My physical shape never returned after spending so much t l m fl recuperating." he said later. "I just never quite got that hospital bed off my back." Au bum was in control all the way, but Ole Miss refused to quit. The Rebs kept coming back behind Manning's ru n· and-pass greatness and were within one touchdown striking distance when the clock quit on them . The Tigers Jed 21-0 in the gecond period, but Archie cul the deficit to 21 -1 4 by ha1flin1e . Auburn stretched il to 28·14. but then saw Ole Miss get ~·ith1n seven at 28·21. The relentless Tiger offense scooled ahead 35·21, but Ole Miss again pulled near at 35-23. I Anteater Five Host s Tough Colorado Next By HOWARD L. HAND\' UC Irvine will play host to thf: University of Colorado Wednesday night in Crawford HaU in the top basketball attraction of the se8SQn for coach Tim Tift 's squad. Colorado, a prominent Big·Elght. con· ference contender annually, finished in third place in the recent circuit touma· men l by defeating JO\\'a State, 70--M. The Golden Buffaloes handed UCl one of its worst defeats last year ln Boulder, ColG., 80-65. Cal Poly (San Lu is Obispo) also won by 15 points In a late season game, 103-88. ColGrado began its invasion of Southern Ca lifornia Saturday night agaln1t Cal State (Long Beach), losing 84-62, and will continue action tonight at San Diego Stale Co llege . "They have three pl•yers tn the startinR lineup that opened •&•inst us Jaat year," Tlft reflects. Coach Russell M. "Sox" Walseth of Colorado Is one of the deans of university b3sketbfill coaching circles. Meanwhile, Tift gave the Ante1ter1 three. days of reat following their dlshet.rtening loss lo ell S t 1 t e (Fullerton) In the finals of the 1nu1l UCI toUrnament Wednesday night. Irvine returned to the practice court SundiY afternoon. The UCI record now stands at 7·2 for the. ye11r Md arter the Colorado 11me Wednesday t\lenlng, it wtll host Fullerton Saturday .in a repeat of the tou rnament finals. Meanwhile Phil Rhyne le.ada the Irvine scoring race with a 21.8 aver•ge followed by Bill Moore with 1 15.6 averagt. Jerry llulbert's freshman team, un- defeated in four outin&• before the holl. day season, returns to action Tuesdly night at Cal State (Long Beach) ln a 5: -45 encounter. Wednesday night it will be the Loyola freshmen in Crawford Hill in • preliminary to the COiorado game. Rick Mosier. former Marina High star, is leading the yearling scoring parade with a 15.8 average. The froah team is averaging 91.7 polnb a 1ame to Bl.I for the va rsity. UC lltVINI' VAllllTY l'·J ) "ftll ~lll'nt 8 111 MM>rt G•rv Fo~ ec1 eurllllflltm Rkll-.cl Clt rtl 8 rtd hktl" '"'V Rollll! 1'1111 MllfltWlt 81!1 Gt'OrQt Gtrrkk lt1r 80f> ll•Cll JO!ln "'""'II •'•"'' ,,, .. 1,. '"'°140 ' l4 ,. 11 t2S1' ff I • ·.· ~ ,,~, .. • 11 u " ' u u ., 1 H j )l 1 l • • I J I 4 t • 0 0 Tott.11 t tl7 uo 1)4 UCI •111tMMaN IM) • • • lll:ltk Motl« 4 2'11 11 G&r"t' °"'i.,., 4 to lt Ao'll"t' Ht"1"' 4 M 10 Cll•rl .. t .. mpld"I I 11 1J Si.vt 1'1"1Qlnl • u t "'"' lunc1'1 • 11 • HO-..t•d H,t""'lll• I U I T,..... to• l ' J Jtll Jf>•cllft J J ·• .... S!•lt-111'14 l J l ll'Mr l'lt'lrlll• J fl J JIM kl'll'rlt l!Mttll 1 e 0 TOllll t U2 ll l • ., " .. 4 " " ,. " .. ' ' • ., •••• '" U.t '·' '' '·' •• " " '·' ••• ... ••• t 1.6 .... 1).1 U,I 11.1 11.1 .. ••• '·' " I' ,, 'I •• fl.I '· Sea rs ·- SEARS BATI'ERYGUARANTEE Free replacement within 90 days of purchase if bauery proves defec1ive. 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" .,.._ --••"'• .. oNic• '¥ALllT ...,fllC-61T ~ ·- ,_. Villa Park Tabbed In Crestview Loop "I wish t was g oing someplace else for the next two monUis." That's Orange H i g h 's veteran coac h Waller Ha1ner's answer to the riddle of predic- ting the upcoming Crestview· League basketball race which begins Tuesday v>ith a full slate of crucials. And after scrutiny of past performances, players, st8.ts and records of the circuit con- sidered as the toughest in Orange County from top to bottom by many. Hamer's suggestion might be the most sane idea of the tot. Another successful tu tor. Tom Danley of Kalella, sum· marized his team's aclion "'ith most opponents as a "ping. pong match." And the shufning of teams from week to week could also resemble the yo-yo trend, Most teams will be running and shooting with abandon lrith only Foothill -and poSsibly Mission V i e j o - slowing do\\'n the action with tactics designed to neutralize the potency of fast breaking u nits like Villa Park, Katella a nd Orange. Villa Park ¥.'iii survive the blitz with a 12·2 record if the DAILY PILOT has picked jt right and the Spartans were selected primarily because of their &-5 forward P a t ~1clnally, who seems to do it all. f\1clnally has averaged 20.6 points per game and has haul· ed in an average of 26.2 re· bounds per outing. And he has help from several other outstanding players. Here·s how the circuit is viewed, in order of predicted finish: I. Villa Park The Spartan~ have rolled to an 8-3 mark. The losses were to CIF powers Compton, La Serna snd Lasuen. Helping Mclnally are three other lop notch players in guards Ron Todd 16-1 sr.) and Steve Tarabilda 15-10 sr.) along with forwa rd Paul Lacher (6-3 sr.). Todd, a lefthander. has averaged 17.9 while Lacher has a 14.1 average. 'The Spartans' major tactics are to press and fast break, but Jl's the a cc a s i o n a I in- cansistency that has coach Gary Snyder worried. '"We're not as quick or ag- gressive as Katella. a n d sometimes we hurry a little too much," says Snyder. One of Villa P ark's big weapons is the guard tandem of Todd and Tarabi\da and Snyder admit! he couldn't ask for a better combo. "They work \vell together and tend to keep lhe offense running smoothly," he states, Despite the talent on hand, Villa Park enters league play with only three returning let- termen (Mcinally, Todd and ·ra rabilda), of \\'hicll none l1·ere slarters last year. Z:. Katella -Coach To1n Danley's Knights make their debut in to the Crestview loop and the 8-4 Anaheim·based unit gives the already tough circuit added depth. Kate Ila's forte is the full r:ourt pres!! and Danley ans~·ers his critics thusly : "Some say \\'e play sixth period PE ball. but that's not true. \\'e try to neutralize the ball between "the free throw lines. And we think we have the stamina to outlast the taller kids." It's a typical Katella squad v.i th the lallest st arter measuring 6-2, Jeff ~lutton hold! down the center position with that height while other major factors in the Katella annor are forwards Stan Whieldon ( S.-1. jr.) and Stan Bair (6--0, sr .) along with guard rifark Steinmeyer, a 6-0 junior. The Knights lost a 11 • everything Rick Aberegg to gradµation but Danley r;ites his squad as more rounded. 3. San ctemente -The Tritons have racked up a 7-5 record which includes three two-point losses. '"We haven·~ played up to our capability yet, but i( ¥.'e can put it together offensively and de(ensively we might have a darkhorse shot at the title," s;iys coach John Baker. "We seem to have a tough time with the expected easy games. Games where v.·e ap- pe11r to be the underdogs we seem to rise to the occasion." adds the Triton mentor. Leading San Clemente is 6-7 senior Steve Kalota (1 2.2 average). 6·31,~ senior Howard Valore (12.5 average in the la.st six games) and 5-10 guard Craig Anderson (14.0 average) in the scoring deparlment. Brad ~lcCasl in, a 6-2 1! returning starter from last year along with Anderson, is the team's leading rebounder. And the Tritons have a backcourt ace in diminutive lransfer Rick Bauer (5-3), who is an expert ball handler. 4. Orange -Coach \\'all Hamer is in his 14th year at the Panther institution and his teams have compiled a remarkable record of 218 wins. 124 losses in that span. His rapid Panthers are 7-3 this year and included in the list of vklims is 1..-0well (10·1 ) and Rancho Ala mitos. And ifs one of the biggest Streaking Sacldlehacl{ Faces Gross 1no11t Next HEMET -Sad d I e b a c k College \\'armed up for thf' start nf the hrctic f\1 lss1on Conferenre basketball race with a 77~4 victory O\'t'r "f\ll . San Jacinto Saturday night. The victory 1va:-; I h e Gauchos' third straigllt and Bucs Take Wee){ Off 0 ,lft .. CNll U l l .. • " ~ l•d>e• • ' , :1 ... 111 ... ~· • • ' 011n, ' • ' ' Goo"Wll .. r ' 1 , • M'l.tndOt'I • • • .. c-w ' ' • " ... ..,,,1,., ' ' ' • w.,,.. • • ' ' ,.,. .. • • ' • ...... • • ' • Tot1l1 n " " " Clltffw !ffl ,, ft ~ • ...... ·• • ' ' lllllfY ' , ' • lloUn ' • ' • C•••men • ' ' " "" 11 ' ' " M•CJ<l'I' • • • • S"'I"' • ' ' I T11t•I• " " " ~ tl•!!llme C:~•'"" )!, CCC: ~ VW BRAKE SPECIAL •ellM 4 wtte.f1 Mac:hlne 4 Drum• Overhaul 4 WhMI Cyllnd•r1 ,..-Mllol UlldMtlleMI ... , ..... ffltOT ... MATIOI $39.95 YW SHOCKS ···-·······-$7.'5 intaW 100,COO mile guarantttd (not l)T"O·ratcdJ. WE DO ALL FOREIGN CARS. e DISC IUll SPICIAttn e COSTA MESA STOH ONLY Ji i l H-t-m.tl. , .. , .... n ... l4t-z21t ELMER COMBS Team P icked Se cond ' . . M o11d~1. January 4, 1?71 DAILY PILOT f5 . Marina Five Sunset Pick Yikes Ha ·ve Edge • Deptli Depart111ent lit A transition period wtll b4.> \\'es Thomas (S.2) and Steve the loop crown last seasoM outslanding player!! and we're nlOSl don11 na 111 in the 1970·71 Hrooks (&-3J . and he has a number or his 110t ve.ry big a t all.'' Sunset Le a g u e basketba!l HO\vever, Combs ciles in-playt!rs from that squad forrn-race. expcrie11ce as being a possible 1ng this year's varsity, along Tile ~alled giant.II on tht To begiu \l'ith, l'ounty cage telltale sign in case of a tighl with letterman and team Anaheim roster are 6·1 leapers followers figure the AAA A 11tle chase, lender 5-11 Taras Young, Norm Andersen and .f<~ranlC Stniset will be down a dr. "Until \\'6 get a polishf'd. Onl'e it shakes the injury Shou sh. The latter is th~ gree on a tcan1.to-team bas1:> l>Oised teiJJTl, ~'e \von "t b& and sickness bugs, Newpo1'l team's leading scorer while with m~1 o( the loop's eight tough.'' notes the longtime Oil has potentially adept board Andersen pulls dowa Lhc mos&. men1bers having experienced Ci1y resident. strefl gth in 6-3 Bill Jones, 6-2 ' everr graduation loss•s. I J' S I k ti 3 9·11 M K" rebounds. ~ '"f\1arina has the r aw Jm · w c , · . 1 c inney Of the eight Sunset entries. material. size, shooters and and 6-4 John Kazmer. 7. SANTA ANA -New no fewer thait four 11•ill ha\"e experien(·e f() make the dif· Hagey concludes, ''~1arina coach Joe Cucinella, last rookie coaches allcn1pllng In fcrenC'e. So, they're the 1eain should be first but there won't year's junior varsity tutor. ha! dernonstrate their lradersh1p to bear " be an unbeaten team.'' a basically senior ootfit which l"<ipabilities. 3. \\'ESTERN The 5. WESTti.flNS'TER -Rated l'OUld prove a spoiler when The fou r newest cage chiefs Pioneers \\'On back·to-back In the middle o( the pack 6-7 ce nter Bill Pallet recovers fire Dafe Hagey at Ne¥.·port Su11Set diadems in I9M-65 but or even in the lower echelo• from a boae chip in his ankle. ' •!arbor, Joe Cucinella <it Santa have f:,i.iled to lurn the trick by coach Don Leavey, the Forward Randy Heman and Ana. Anaheim's 'Torn 1'.-1iner · · guard \Valt•r '1•ad ha'••--•' d T y . h again since. Lions "'ill be gunning for I.heir '" "... .. uct: an om oig I at Loar:1. Another veteran <'a g e second consecutive title. carrying most of the load up Voight should have his \rork lcaeher-lndi'ana nato"• '1ar" "IV h 1 · 1 to this point with lleman hav. f I . • .. 1• • e ave t 1e potent1a to cut out or um on a l\l'D-fuld lllen>k•r _ "·ei"omes bock ing filled in at Pallet's vacao>. b ~ " ... ,::et up there again if we can asis. t · t I o ; k E d · I · cy o·n lhe P•"•ot. l·lc·s: starting out in his fir:;t rl' urning s Jr ers ouc · n1 c JUSt JC I and 1f our four juAior • \•arsity coachi11g posi1ion and Ui·IJ and Lee Gragnano (6.0) starters get together. It's a 8. LOARA -The grfm The laticr is the ..nuad's 1vor1d of ifs," lan1ents Leavev. rea~r ... ,·11 more than lt'kely lt"s Lo;1ra's initial Sunset flin" ~-i ,.... ., after spending a nunibcr 1j lcadiflg scorer at !8 point:.; Six.fool-eight senior Efic make its effects kno~'Tl to the fruitful years in the AAA pt'r game and has tea.med Southwick currently learns Saxons before the campaign Irvine League. \l'ilh s:ophornorc find Mike 1v i l h j u n i or s T e r r y is concl uded. Dunn (6-4l~I to gi ve the Meisenhei111er (6·3). Glenn "'"st ) a boss Tom Voight ~1 iner acquired the Anahri1n r tr · 'e r job midway through 1 he Pioneers a devastating one-Lantaff (6·1 ). Gordon Blakeley replal'es Virgil Webb and in· Colo~lisl.s' preseaS-On s tal e l\1·0 punch. Gragnano is side-(6-0l :1nr.I Jay J ohnson (6·11 herits a SQuad which was fr()m forn1er Sanla Ana men-lined for three weeks with a to forn1 the Lions' starting decimated by bidding farewell tor Neal Reid. ~·ho was knee injury, <11ignnient. to all 12 of last year's varsity, censu red by the Jcap;ue 's 4. NE\V POR'I' HARBOR -6. ANAHEll\f -Tom r.1iner performers. fathers for a lleged recruiting "\Ve 're looki11g to surprise a only took over the reins at The top pl ayers in rebuildi•&, . f . h fr11• people." C'onfides the lhe Colony a little over a efforts by Loara are 5·11 Joe practices a !er assuming l e To • I D le II h b h I d Rhodes, 6-2 Denn1·s Cao.n and h . . , rs new coac 1. a · age_v. n1ont ago ul e area y '7'S Ana eim reins. H h d N \ 6-3 Deono·s llurford. lalles!" 4-t consensus of opinion agey C'oac c ewport's realizes a coupe of thin#!s. DON LEAVEY Defends Title aml>ng the loop m entors 1_i_u_"_;o_r_"_'_'_ity_1_o_a_sl_ia_r_e_o_f __ "_w_e_d_o_n ·_,_h_"_e_a_n~y_r_e_a_lly:__o~pe_ra_1_;,_e_o_n_the_r_os_l_e_r_. __ favors ~1arina , which was edg- ed out or the top spot last season by s urpri s in g \V estminster. Chargers Roll Past Argona11ts Herewith is a rundo\v n on Lhe Su nset picture in the fornl of the DAILY PILOT"s predic· lions : 1. 1\IAR INA -J im Stephens begins his scco111d season at the Viking-helm and the ex· (;3rden r.ro\'e head man figures his side could have an edge i( depth enters the picture. USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START THE NEW YEAR OFF ~1 WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS ' •tr~o score~ l'IM•s.c.1 -M P'llOOI" .r.owti.rllltlWI 01111~tlts c~, .. llJUISYIUL Kf. • 1'11 ~ '/2 gat:now. .• $11'1 By PlllL ROSS 01 I~• 01;ly Plllll STiii S I e p he n s s a y s " l he d e pt h I :-~iiiii-iiiiiii::iiii:iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiii,;iiii,;iiiiiii:iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,;iiiiiiiii,;iiiiiii::::iiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiii;;;;i,;iiii,;iiii,;iiii,;iiii,;iiiiiiiii~ ts definitely a great asset and I~ The Edison Char~crs r 3· 7) began a ne1v win streak u11 the basketball court Salurday night 1n a 71·64 \\'in over the hos! Garden Grove Argonauts. And. coach Dave l\Iohs' Charger cagers hope to add a second straight victim to that string Wednesday night ! 7 I when they host the Est an· cia Eagles in the opening round of whal. is expected tu be a wild I r v i n e League chase. Against the A r go n a u I s Edison blew a 20·poin t halftime bulge 140-20. its bi~­ gest. or the contest) and had to hold on in the fourth quarter while a makeshift group con1posed of Garden Grove starters and reserve.i; warmed up consider:ibly 1n the scoring deparl!nenl. The Argonauts roared lo \\•ithin six JXlints I ilt 66·fifl and \\.'e 're i1tarting lo pick up. "\Ve're contenders but lhe 1vinner "'on't go undefeated. Huntington Beach ha s lo be ·[ a contender with other strong learns li ke Wes"1'n, Ne1vporl I and Westmi111sler. none of which will be easy." Kipp Baird 16-5), one of 1¥."0 returning letlennen tthe other is G-1 RUMd Bill McGuire), is slarting to pick up after early seaSOfl woes. And . bi,:? junior varsity J!raduatrs Dean Bogdan (&-61 and Brian Sa•dcrs (6-4) are improving with experience, 2. HUNTINGTON BEAClf - T:>t.•an of Sunset CO:lches Elmer Combs has a solid starting five in Garth \Vi se !6-0), 'Tom Crunk 16-1). Jim Worthy (6·2). Arca Spikers Run in LA 68-62 1 !l'!•ice in the last 11'2 A Jone individual ttntry ;ind [ n1inutes. But a dnving ltiy·in a single relay team will be by reserve guard f\1ike Smith representing the Orange Coast and subst>quent free lhrO\\"<: area Saturday. Jan. 16 in the by Bob Wright 11 I and Bill Sunkist Invitational indoo r I 1l1on1pson ~21 counteracted rr ~ck and field meet at the any Argonaut hre11·orks in !he LOS Angeles Sports Arena. I \\'aningminutes Cos t a ~1 esa 's Doug· Edison played all of the f\iacLean ls tentatively slated lhird quarter and mo~1 of 1he 111 com""te in the second sec.1 rourth wit hout John F'isher. . "" f its ~ center \\'ho ~;if nn !hr !1(1~ or lh:it c~'enl bench \\•ith foul Jrouble before \\cstn11nstcr s mrlc relay 1 picking up his fifth ~nfraclion _ft!.11n is also C'ntered I "'ilh 6·51 to go in !tie gamc. ..... ·,L.h, ..o F'ishcr had accounted for .._ P "-~.7.-L> I 11 p<iint~ tinfl a dozen rcbound'l NOW THRU IA• II I in the first h;ilf ;ind endl!d ~..... I up with 13 poin ts. ANA.HEii! COliVENTl!J4 CDTER E<lllO~ (J)! 9 BIG SHOYi l••~m"n Wr1Qht l'l\h~.­ ~ .... 11~ I• II pl COllll•l"f•DI i ~ ~ f\Jtl Fill\ THE Wtrolf f~wt1\.'f\ . , • • . ' ' ' . ' . ' 1l ?~ 11 G1rdtn GrQVI (U) .. .. •' ,.,_., fffUTAtl•Elr II T•E I WATEI' 11 ntE ITAIE " gfl/l.6d TRAVEL FILM FESTIVAL Mauldin's Own Favorite ~ • • . . . Still Relevant Two wars liter, Bill Mauldin's cartoons still say it all for the guys who •r• "up front" doing the dirty work. Mauldin onc:e selected the cartoon above as one of his own favorites from World War ll 's "Up Front" series, He said: "Once I thought I did a very funny cartoon (about) an old.time cavalryman shooting his jeep .•• It has simplicity; it tells a story; it 'doesn't ne ed words. It is, I believe, the very best ~ind of cartoon." Mauldin is still doing some of the world's 11 very best ~ind of cartoons." A few strokes of his talented pen can make some of the most biting editorial comments to be found on today's iss ues. If you're looking for relevancy, loo k at Mauld in two wars later. Look at the . Editorial Page of the DAILY PILOT . • • • • ,, " ' .. " • j J " ~ .. , ..,. . " i I I /- I I I ' -' 6 DAILY PJLO_T _________ M_o_o_O•~'~· _J'-"-"-"~'-'~·-'-'-71 CdM Picked to Win Irvine Cage Race There have been a lot of things sa id about how even the Irvine League basketball race shapes VP as the circuit girds for opening b a 11 I e \\.'ednesday night. But despite th111· lhe mind vacillates bet"·ee n teams in terms to predicteti firush. one school rontinually pops up. \\'hen irs e!os,. -and irs i::oing to be -the Sea King banner at Corona de! i\far High is usually at the head of !he pack. Desp1!r lhr inju~ies that have p!;igued ('Uach Tandy Cill1~· team. the Sea Kini;i:s i::ct the uneasy nod as the re;in1 to beat in the super balanced Irvine eircuit. Ace Don Killian. <in a11 - 1eagtie choice last year as a junior. played in CdM 's firs t 1110 . practice games lboth 11·ins~ but has missed t.he re- mainder of the non -league season with a muscle tear just above the knee And re-injury to !he knee may kee(l hi1n out or the lineup in the early goings. lorona de! f\far has com· piled a 5-6 mark to date. Last ~·ear Gilli ~· crew had a 4.7 record prior to I e a g u e hos!ilitics. but the Sea Kini::s ('oppe d thl' Irvine I i l I e ;:in v11·av. 1\ clue !o Cnrona"s abilit y n1ighl be best found in its l<is! ou1in~ -a twl}-POinl loss to high!v regarded Villa Park. 1\nd the Sea Kings have '1hippcd Tustin. Pacific of San Bernardino. Do\1·nev, Newport JJarbor anr! Cal High. But most imPorlant. Coron11 de! f\1ar. year-in and vear-out . hns the poise lo corne through '1 hPn it counts. Here "s ho"· the DA ILY P ILOT sees the circuit in order or rinish · 1. Corona llt>l !\.tar -\Vilh (Ir v.·i thout Killian. Gillis' pa- lien! offensive t'f""' ha.;; a habit of staving 1rith 11nvone. The big ffi3inslav on. the ho<i ri:is is [unior tlti ke Sevie r. a fi..4 specimen 1vith strenl!'.th . An Achilles tendon injurv la st spring-ha s 11ampered his i1111Jr(•ve1nen1 sinrP la sl year. fl l;irk Grigsby has come on fn !hf' ~coring deoartmenl. leading the Sea Kings 1vith ]6.0 <1\'eragc. Annlhl'r key f1 gUrl', II' i 1 h ret'f"nt injury problem~. is soohnmore guard C11sev .Jones. but he's rear!v In roll now But 1he big ingredient in Gi lli s' plans is defense. and I h r s1vi1 chinc: rnan-!o-man pressure that Corona de\ f\1a r has \1•on ll'ith in th e past. ls still thrre No one has scored in thr r.o~ lo date agai11sl the Sea Ki ngs "\\lr"re ~olng to have to TANDY GILLIS T •bb.d to Repeat rely even more on our defense." says Gillis, con- templating that his 6-3'".I converted guard 11 Killian ~ 11•ill miss the first tllree league games. Z. Los Alamitos -The (3rif· (ins or coach Ezra Van Horn are similar lo Corona del Mar with their slow down , pa tient attitude offensively. Van llorn"s quintet compiled a healthy 7-4 mark in non- lea.gue play. The Griffs ha ve one of the best for.1•ards in Orange Coun- ty in junior Rick Quinn (&-2) and Van Horn is working sophomore Bruce Roeland 16- 31 into the lineup at center. Fritz Miller is the third non· senior s tarter for the Griffs. lie"s a 5-11 guard and is the brother of rormer Marina High standout, Mark t1il!er. Despite heavy graduation losses. Los Alamitos appear!!! sitni!ar to last vear with its half court man-tO.man defense and patient offense. Indicative of Los A I' !!I stren gth is a ~6-47 \\"in over r.1arina . the top choice for Sunset League honors. :t rounraln Vallev -·r h t Barons have lhe fir'epower 10 gD all the 11•;iy if they f"an find a w;J\' lo snlve the slo1v down t<iclics. \\'hen they run the Baron:'! appear to have things going their \1•ay wilh Davr Lv11ch 16-:l \ 3nd Ken Shibata ·t &-21 leading a sqt1ad or 13 seniors and o n (' sooho1nore 16-9 Seo!! Re ider1 F'ounta1n Valley might bf' the toughest le11m in Orange Co unty to predict. Coach Dav<' Brown 's up-and-do1vn crev.· polished oH the likes or Katel\a. Los Alamito.~ and Orange ~·et lost t o 'Vestminsler 13-8) by 28 . The ups and dov.·ns art further reflected by all four Good Nucleus Back For Lion Gridders One n[ th<' 1.ru!v amazing transformations on "the Orange l'nast ;irea foo\ball scene la st Jal! \1as prflv1ded by the J:rflw\1ng \V est miflsl t r Lions. l"n<1rh Bill Bosv.·ell's t~ioos. norinall1' a("l"ustorned t o chall<'ngi ng 1hP l ike~ of Anahein1 for Sunst'l Leaguf' ~uprcinacy on a regular basis. \l"t'rr µlagued by a b!:-ick cloud nf dismay in lhe first half nf the 1970 season and postr.J ii!l 0-5 s!atr. However. I hr Lions re- bounded to put everything together 111 1he second half of thf' ca mpaign and the result \1"8S four decisive vittoril'~ in suctession at the tailend of Sunset host ili11e~ The second hair stre~k rnabled \~'esln1in~ter to catch upstart ~1arina and tie th<' Vikings fo r the third spol behind co<hampions Nev•port Barbor and An~eim. Boswell is looking forward to 1971 and rubbing his hands in anticipation. UCI Loses Swim Relays Ile says. ··we"re encouragtd by vnnning lhe Last four ga tnes and salvag ing an otherwise di smal ~·ear. •·\Ve dn have a good group eoming brtck and should have the nucleus of a good football team.·· Three-fourths of the Lion offensive backfield returns in the ptrsnns of quarterhack Jeff Siemens. tailback Chuck \Yink\e11 and wingback Kirk llarris. Siemeng \\'ag lhe hottest single commodity in the area in lhe !11tter portion or the '70 grid y,·ars and the classv signal ,-.;:illt>r ~hnuld be one of tht Southland 's best v.·ith ;:i vcar's experience under his belt. \Vinkles. meanwhilr. paced the versatile \Vestminster at· lack on the ground v.·ith 605 y8rds 11nd six louchdo1vns 11·hile Harris WAS a pas!!I receiver who exhibited a Oalr for being in the right place at the right lime. Returning offensive 1 i n e starters include split end Gil- btrt Rosales. center Martin Schroeder. g u a rd s Jim \\'isklrchen and .Jerrv Thomas and tackle Gary ,Jeniiings. In the defen!!live trenche5. end Ira 'rhorpe. tackleg Tim Mack and .John Johnson. f.(uards Bart Frankhouse and .lim Holland will fortify a front wall backed up by linebacker Kevin La n1 b . Holland is also a prime can- didate for lhe 1t.artin1 fullback job. Linemen M a rt y Trujillo, Br11d Greer and Bob Hanley and' defenslvt bAcb Garv Runao and Jeff Noon Hguri: prominently in the Lion plang arter having ~rved jun ior varsily apprentice8hips. Boswell may also shift thrf'e olher lctlermen lo nr11' po~i­ tions with amplt d e p l h il\'Ailablc to <'flf'Cf s u r h change$. losses in the Barons· 11-4 non - Jeague slate. The margin of defeat has been by 28, JI , JS and 24, The eight wins makes thi s yea r's edition the best ever at Fountain Valley. "I think u·e·re capable of playing as good as anybody. But v.·e lack height and rebounding ,'' says Bro""·n. 4. Edison -Coach Dave Mohs' Edison tean1 h a s perhaps the most deceiving reCQrd of all with its 3-7 mark. The Chargers· CIF AAA football championship squad contained several ke y players and they're just now rounding Into shape. John Fisher (6-6) and Mark Harmon (6-4) have b o l h scored 20 in a game since. Joining the squad. "Football h a s definitelv taken its toll . F1ive days Or practice and five non-league gan1es isn 't enough to get ready. lt"s going to take a while to smooth the offense oul and get the rough edges off." says Moh s. Mohs has lour returning starters in the fold with Mike Arus and Bob \Vright joining Harmon and Fisher. Too. Edison"s offense has changed considerably with the latter pa ir now operating at a double low-post. S. Costa Mesa The tl1ustangs seemed to pull out of earlier preseason doldrums by recording a pair of overv.·helming lrium phs in last week 's Newport tourney and Li>ach Emil Neeine thinks the Mesans are ready to put H all together. Neeme !!lays. "everyone's talking about hav - ing injuries and things. But we"re playin g good basketball now vdthout our top two players (Pat Sweetland and Scott Friested ). " Sweetland and Friested are slated to return to action son1etime early an. February 6. Sanla Ana Valley -'"If 1 wa.s in first and playing !he eighth place team it v.·uul d mean trouble -the league's lhn1 lig ht." Thill' . ., a quick su1nn1ation of !he bungled up ~itual100 in the Irvine a~ des cribed by Falcon coach John Kubas. . f\ub as ha s a good big man in 6·6 J im Keyes but the big SA Valley problem is getting 11nother player to help Keyes out on the boards. S1x-fool-lv:o Edwin 'foung could be tht help Kubas is looking for in 1he rebounding departn1enl . 7. r.1a~nolia -The Sent inels' head man . Gene Frohling. hopes his charge.~ ca n at lcasl !itay IJp In the middle or the pack t-.1agnolia is rcl al il'ely in- PXperienced with nnly 6-4 junlor £or\\'ard Bob Stewart !the squad"s lc.1ding scorer at 17.5) arou nd from last sea~on·s starting group. The only other players back 1"1·ith varsity experience arr 6-2 Charley Richie and 6-.l Greg Ra chunok. who help give the Sentinels better than a1·erage sile and balanee. Frohling feel~ his te:im lack.11 depth, though. and regards defending t i t 1 1 s ! Corona del Mar 11s the h~arn to beat agR in. ~. E8tancla -The Eagles fall short in a crucial depart- ment -height. La sl season Estancia had lhe DAILY PILOT's loop player or the year in nov.·· departed center Skip Williams t6-6l but the tallest starter l"!n tht current Eagle squad is only 6-11;. The onl.v ll t'A s oned performer for rookie cOach Gary Carr is 5-11 Gary Orgill. 3 smart driver .wl1o i:'I best v.·hen isolated in one-nn-one situat ions. Carr reiiards his cre1v onl y as a spoiler and pick!!! Corona del Mar and Los Alamitos as I.ht most seriious title con· te11ders. GWC Cage Tilts Moved Because of continued delays In construction or acce~s road~ leading 10 the Golde n West gymnasi um . tht Ru s l I e r ba.~ke1ba11 1eam will play it!< .January home garnes ii\._ lhc Or ange Coast Colleae aym~ fleavy winter rain has fore · ed delay in the surfacing job or the roads severaJ tin1es In the last month. • The Ru stler!!! f11 te three Southern Ca I i for n ,\ 11 Con· rerence opponents at horne 1n January, btginning 1v it h Cypress \V ednesday and Rio l~ondo F'riday. The Jan. 22 game wilh LA Harbor has been n1oved to J11 n 2.1111 Oran1r. Coa.'11. Sears SAVE 320 to s30! Men's Custom 1,ailored Suits s \ Cuo lom Tai lorcr l Suits Gi1•c \<HI f latlerinl!: Fit, Cho.ice Of Fabric and Prn•onalizrd Stylinl!: r•<,,1' li•ll \.Hl h,ll(" Iii(' i.(IJ1101.ln1lln)< )011k nr ft l!Jit t u~t•Hll iailnred e11clu~1vclr l<)r 1<1 u, ,u 'ubsr,;.ni1al ~-"·1n,.:s dur1n,1< (h o ~ l1m1t1."d ~air-<.li1"1't' ln1n1 n1dn1· t.1hr1(1 111 easy -car<': syn thet11.' bltu,J,, Jll \l'nol ""·or ,!(·,I ~ 1n a \\'tdc ra n,1tr ol ll:eavc~ ;1nd p.inern~. And ht·'t of <1.l l. you choo~e 1he sryle. the.· shape, 1he 1..1il· "roO.£ besr tor you and _yo u alone ••. "l\•1rh prC'\l~C'" 1nt·a~ureme nr~ an d prole ~51ona l !dilonng to a~.~urt" \ou 1he he~t fit you've evtr 11.i.L Hegu lRr $99 Regular $12.i 88 88 Hegular SI 70 88 88 .4•k .4.bout Sror• (:onrP.rrirnf (:retli1 Pinn~ !Scars! ~TAILORING l• .. !A rl ''"NOi \AHIA ,..0Nt(A IOV1'1 CO•I T l'\A1 • 1'40Ut•Nt O•WI •O••ANC' Yl•MOMT I I Pro Cage, Hockey Standings ... 1.,,.,,.~· Al'llonflc Dlvllloft Hew York .... ,,,., Phll1<1tolphl1 llufr110 W L .. d .AI JI 12 .11t Joi 11 .515 ' ,. It .Ht I 11 l2 .2}6 10 .. Ill more Cet1Jr1I Dlvhl9fl " " .~ Ch1clnnau " " ··" '" A t11r1t1 " " .m ,. Clw9'1nd ' " ··~ ll'li Wnlt1'11 C"llll'l' ... ce Min.tt Dlvllllefl MltwtukH » ' .111 Detroit " " ·~ • Chk100 " " .... .. Pl'!Otnlx " " .... •• .. Miiie Dlwht.11 l°' AMt ln :12 17 ..14t S111 01119<> 2J 20 .DS I St n l"•t ncfKo 22 JI .,n lY, Stt t11t 1' n .4'3 4 Porrl1nd 12 :IQ .116 11!.'i lllh1Ner'1 •-1t1 Boston 12.S. Pl'llltcNlpti~ 1211 At11nl1 112. Nt W York JOI ••lt!mc>rt JOI, DIP!nilt " Mllwtukff 111, CltYtl.fnd 13 Clncln11all 1JS, l utlt lo ICJ • CMC t lKI 136, Portltncl Ill Pi.:..n1¥ 121, San Fr1ttellCO 116, lot) $111 Diego lot, Lot Anoel•• IOI (oil Su1>111r'1 lttsulh l!loston 1'1, All1nr1 Ill Phoenbi: 101, Sin l"r1nchto IT Ofllp t1t m11 •ch9du19d Tonlthl'• tl1111<11 .!N iii• II Mllw1u~ •• Stn Fr.,•ci1co ti Photnix Onlr Dlmff 1chedull'd Tu..U.r "I Ou"" S11tt11 11 81111mort PGrll1nd YJ. Bellon •I Phlf1dehohl1 S•n Fr•l'ICllCO 1! Pllll•delphl1 t>elrolt 1t All1nt1 Si n DI-•t Chlt•llO I.Oii Al\81'111 vs. c 1ncrn111t1 11 Om111.i. "~· ... E11t Dl•l•ion w ' "''· Vlroinl1 » " l(entuckv " " H-Ycrk " " P ll>l'ldlan• " " ~l!t•burvll " " C1rclloa " " WtSI Div/lion Ul11'1 " " lr>di•n• " " Momplli• " " tlenv1r " " T t11• " " Sund•Y'l R11ultl C.-ol!na Ill. New York 99 U!ll'I 1~. Texas 1119 Vlr1lnl1 ll7, Pllhbur11ll 1'16 lndl1n1 13'. Kenluc kv ll2 Only g1"'°" K M-duled .114 .610 ·'n .•HI ·"' ·"' .616 M' '" .39S ·"' 51turclav'• Rtoulh ,.i!l•bureh JtS, New Yor~ 10'1 \llr1lnl• lJS, Carolin" U• KenllickY J2j, Florldlan• 111 Denver 11'1, T•••• 11• Only 111me• •<hedul~ TDnlt M'• G•rTlff •• ,., " "" ll', llh '" ' 10"• "" New York vs. Kentuckv u !nd••n· •PCl!J, Ind. Fto-ldl1n• 11 h><llftnt Only 111me• •tllt<111led Bo>!Of' N-Ya•lo. MO!> Ir Ml l orOf'i<I Vtncauver Dtlf"Dll Bllflt la ""' E1il Dlvlllon W L T P l1.GFGA 11 ' s 39 119 96 10 1 ' 51 lll &• 11 11 I "1 129 10• 11 1• 1 :lS 130 109 i• 71 3 31 105 llJ 12 11 4 11 106 1S1 ~ .. : 20 ,. 10 W L T P ll.GFGA Chlc•QO ?6 6 ~ SI l•I 11!1 sr. 1.001\ 11 1 lt •1 ?9 Ml Minn•"''" 13 11 1 l3 I! 10• P ltr•t1Vr11h lO U 11 l! 101 11; Phl!•delP"li8 11 I' S 1' A1 101 l°" An....,lt S 10 19 6 1' 10• ll'l C1llfornla 11 1• 1 1• 88 111 s1r11r<11v'1 R1•11H1 N•w Yori< J, Pl1hbur11h I l oronto 13, O•!foll 0 Monlr1al 5. Calllcrni• .! 11. 1.0\Jil J, V•nCCllYtr 1 c.,1ca110 J, Pn!1edel1>M• l Mlnnet.ola J, Lo~ An11el" J. t•• sundtY'• R1111111 Boslon s. Phll1dtlPfti1 I New Yori< ~. MOf'lrtal 5 ~!roil J, C•ll!ornla l C.ftlca'10 s. 8111t11D l B01ton s. Phl1aaelph!• l sr. 1.0011 7, l.o~ Anwlt• l Of>ly 111m ... ochl!'!luled. Tonl9t1t'1 Gt m•• No 111me<> scnt'duled. TU1•hV'I G1me l""'nto at Mlnnoso•~ OnlY 11ame $CftO'CIVI~ Collegiate Basl\.etball Scores WEST use •~. LSU J6 '"""''im•I UCLA 106. Oav1on 87 C~I Sr. ILBI 8-(, Colorado d1 Souther" Calllornla Coll•9t IJ. Rad· l1n<11 !S £A5T Fordham 11. P•ln<.ion 11 St. Fr•nci. {N ,T.l ~9. 5;...,, •! Rutger• 91, Plt111)oJrgh 11 MIOW•IT No!rl Deme 97, Mlnne1ota 73 oi.10 u. 91. llllnoh sr. 73 CIM<I Sta re ,3, Ta!1 Ii ken! Sitt• 11, Cl1v1lan<I STtle ~ Mtra11ttll 10, Oelroll '1 Xtvler !Ohiol IO, Al• Foret 6S St. l.<1UI• fl. Dartmoulll 7S V1lp1ral10 n , Htrvt rd 1' ln<ll1N S!. "7. NcrtMrn llli...,is t i SW Mluourl 51. I•. Ctl St. (H1V· wtrdl 76 Cin<\nnatl 60. 0••~• 39 lowt 11. Wvomlna 9' We1•ern Mlehl11an w. Lovola ((hlca· "' .. 8 r•d!IV 17, Wk hl!• 11. II Ev1ntvlll1 n, Bill St. U Tolf'do IO, N. Ct nlll ... (Clllrlotr.l ... ... 11\lt nd 11, llrOC:kPCrt St • .1(1 SOVTK S.OU!h Ct rollnA 11, Cl1ms"" 51 P!o'l<I• SI. 101 , Peaoer<llnl 11 G110re!1 ltch 17, Ric• 72 Wn l•rn 1C911tudlV ... E••I Tll'nnl Ht• Norfolk SI, Ill, Mo,..n SI. 11 BrorNrl 72. 0-W W11hlnvton 70 0.vldlan U , Wllll•m & M•rv ., M1tJh1ll 107, E11t C1rolln1 7t Jtdltonvllle lOJ, Vlrtln l>l1nds 95 N011h C.rolh'rt 101, Tult ne l't FIOrld1 6', Aubl.lrn to \11,..rbllt 76, GwrtM f9 .Mla"'I IFl•.J l'O Ot1•"°""' Cltv II Austin Peer to, M••hMlf It. 11 Murr11 st,. II, 1!:11ttrn ll:enl\ldlv Ji Sttan Hall to. lllK1YM 7S • ICM!tud'I' 103.-.Mll1l11lppf ~ Ml11l111pp1 sr. ''· T'""'"" 61 T_.. T1dl II, MIOdt. T..,ne1tft M-hl$ SI.' If, Not"lh Ttxas SI. SI F1!rminl St. 71, Morri. H1rvt v M IOUTMWl"ST TCU 11$, l.&m1r Ted> ti LO<lbVl!I• 16. Tulw II "'bl'-CIM'11111n 11(1, Tarltton sr. 71 Eu t Qftlrlol ~ n. E111 T••· I t Slltw t,I Ste.lltfl F . Ave.llfl 71, Atlff10 St. 11 SW LowhllM 11, l .. 11 'fl! Pila) 6' N"" """1ileo st. II. N-IM•ko t! MofltlM St, 111 Htt1Mnl Arll-It Sor.rltr...,. T ... I SI, n, Howtrll ,.IVM •• lav.rtlrnel Arlio ... $!, 111, 0.PIUW ,, •OCKllS c..I It. (LA) 11. COloritdO SI. 75 .,-v...., SI. A Mani-6' Mond•J, Jan udry 4, 1971 DAIL' PILOT Zl PRE-INVENTORY Price s Effective Today thru Tuesday, Jan. 5 WIDE GUARD TIRE 36 Months Guarantee Regular 528.95 Trade.In Prirr Dynaglass Belted Tires Are Sold Only at Sears K•••I•• Sol• Sl.Zf' i · •• ,1 •. 1. T ... .4 •• 1. rn.~ r.i • ., J.'.E.1'. _____ , __ ---- 211.2 1 llAI• 3l.7 1 ' .. .... ,. 2.•n :?.IUI 2.fll 6.50x 13/C'ffl..13 'fubeless Blackwall Plus $2 F.E.T. .i\ndOldTirf! ALl.STATF. PASSENGER TIRF. GUARANTEE Cu111"•n lf't d A•11i n•I : Id[ 1irc failurrs <Jr Jcfecis 1n material or .,'Orkn1lnship. J•or llow Lons; For 1hl" life of 1heori)>!1nal n .. ad. Wh11 S .. an Will Do: lnc:xchan,ice for 1he 1irc. replace i1 charginJt for 1hc proron lon of c11rrcn1 scltin,ll pricc plus Federal El'ciM: Tu 1h11 rcpn ·srnfs irc:ad used. Repair n•1l punnurc111 no char.l(c. Gu 1ranlec d A11•in.1: Tread "'Cat-Our. t .. •r llnw l.n n1t: ·rhc numhcr of mon1 h1 specified. U "l1wt ~ ... ,.,. Vt'ill Uo: ln e r· {ha";:<' t1ir 1hr 111c, r(·pl•<c 1t d11r~•11.J! rhr 11Hrtnr ~cl11n,: pri<e plu1 l·c.Jrral l.KCl\C Tu kl• 1hc follo.,.1n,R allo .. '3no:. 1'\lonrhh· r:uar:intrl' I~ IO ;'•I 21 rn .:.') "" . .\J111 .. auce 11 I",; ..!O';f. 2~~ .. Full 4 -Ply NYLON CRUSADER •New contour, broa d 11l1oti!dcr for greater 11rety • New 11-ead desi~n for all-weather traclion e New 6/IO·inch While 1idew1ll to match 1he "iidth of 1he ~·hile sidewalls of many new can Tubeless Blnckw Rll !> Y O l't ('hou t• Size F.E.T. 6.'Ji:tl4 ''"15 95 7~1.';x l4 ;·u~-_!.7Sxl4 ~.I , E I K.2:;.14 23~-M( I ·· ·-Plq• F.F..T. ;.;s.1s ~.1 •1 AndOldTirr: 6.5-0x lJ Tubele11!1 Bl1ckw1ll Plus l.78F.E.T. And Old Tire Whitcw1111 Only S3 More PerTirtt IUINA PAIK fA 1·4400, SJl·41JO CAHOQ jt, PAIK J 41S•O••• COMPTON NI •·J Sl l , Nt '2·17•1 ~IA.l~,llllllUll;A;>.fll•I, CO'llNA t•t•Otl t Shop Ni9ht1 Mon. thr1.1 s ... 9:30 .A.M. to 9:30 P.M., 11.tndoy IL MONTI 01 J .:Jfl l OUNOAU (N J .1o0t, Cl t .1.11 NOUTWDOO HO •·lt41 INOUWOOO 011 1•1111 12 Noon 10 J P.M. Sears MOTifvI:~~~ 500 SeaJU Sftui4 tJ/k!:_- . l tic kets for the pri ce of 1 --1J~-' (on Ge neral Admissio n Only) 0Hfr g<10d u~!•I Jo~uory 8. 1~71 Riverside Interna ti onal Rocewoy Jonuory 10, 1971 -11:00 AM CHILDRE N UNDER 12 FREE IF ACCOM PAN IED BY PARENT PI CK UP YOUR TICK ET COUPON NO PURCHASE AT ANY SEARS AUTO CENTER NECESSARY A1k Aboul Se11n ~ :onveni ent t~redil Pl a n~ \ Full 4-Ply Nylon ID-WAY SPECIAL T'"doo iR Size 1'1-i·~ J;:.~~":ft 4'i.5(tJ;JJ 14.9!; 6.V5lll4 1:;,9:; i.1'>1114 17.'I:; i.iS1114 l'J.'l."i 8.%.'i1114 :? l.'J.i 5.60w.15 16.•J.'> 7.751115 Ul.9.1 1.2.;JOl.i 21.'J:i U~NO II,\(" NI S·Olll OlTMPIC a &OTO AN 1·1211 OIA1'f01 •17•1100 '.llAOINA •11·1111. J)1••1T! H>MOHA HA 9 -S I• I ·--··~ r.;_ ... F.E.T. !•""'-" ll•••lt 17.'1.l I.ill JH,t,1.'> ~.-~ii --_2fl.t,1~ "~-n~ -·-_:2_:_'!'.!___ 2.17 24.•J:O 2 .. 13 20.1,1.i 1.75 22.95 :?.19 :?.l.9.i 2.3.'i ' -PICO WI 1-'111 IANf A ANA IC! 1·ll7 1 IA,.TA fl IPllNOI Mt·I Ol l IANlA MONIC,\ 1• 4 •• 71 1 SOUTH CO,l•f P\AtA 141-i lJl 6.50x l:l 'fuheleu Bl1ckwall Plut 1.78 F.E.T. And Old Tire fNOUIANe Oo\•I 497-41 .. TOllANCI 111.1111 lll'l.INO •tl·l fJJ' VAIUT H> l ·l411, "4·111t \ICIMONT ft 9°1911 .. '., ..... '• • I ' I I l }_ ' I • ' ' D.All .. Y PILOT s V uabrella Satellite I Price Bike I Steel Strikes Affect Public PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP) - Jt:,~ pretty, much a foregone eoO<ilalian,there will be a steel strike iri 1971. But whelher O!' not there i!, John ·Q. Public will suffer. In anticipation of a strike, big buyers of steel are putting in their orders now so they will have stockpiles available if the UnHed Steelworkers shut down the industry in August. This i5 called hedging. The hedging, regardless of a strike. will leave a \"Oid in produclion in the late sum - mer and f4';ll and workers no doubt will be laid 0 fr • Unemployment would go up; the economy down. The effects of a strike itself are evident. Not on I y steelw<lrken:, but <lthers whose: jobs are touched by the steel jndwtry, would be hurling. With little money coming in, pw-chases will be kept at a minimum, and Ibis will hurt .retailers a nd o ther businessmen. Should there be a sln"ke, as nearly all experts and in- dustry wet.chers a re predic- ting, the subsequent settlement is likely to bring about a hike in steel prices. And . as it always does. a price hike woukl. tmd its way into the pocketbook ()f the consumer. Lookin,g Hke a hu2e umbrella, this scientific satellile in New York will provide In dia's [irst, educational television when it is guided into orbit by Honeywell Co ntrols in 1973. Course Set Next Week On Credit A spokesman for a major appliance manufacturing firm. in the East said he had 00, doubt that the steel industry \Vill seek price increases regardless of a strike or what settlement is reached with the steelworkers. "And," he said, ''if we have to pay more for steel we'll have to charge more tor our appliances." Yo11r ltJ01aey's Wortl1 Rece ss ion h1 14th Mo11tl1 Bankers, merchants and personnel of credit ()ffices of Costa Mesa will be given an opportWlity to attend a short course in consumer credit and collections, J anuary JS, according to an a~ment by International Consumer Credlt Association, St. L<luis. Missouri. The. program will be held from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Newporter Inn. The probability of a price hike was confirmed ia recent remarks by Edwin Gott, chairman of the nation's largest steelmaker, U.S. St.eel Corp. Hy SYLVIA PORTER Tl is now probable that J\'.o\·embcr. 1969 will be fcnnally designated as lhe !'tarting date of the fifth b usi ness recession or the past quarter-century. This 1neans that. as or this firs\ bu siness day of 1971. the <·urrent recession is entering Its 14th monlh . Thls also n1eans that ii 11lready is the LONGEST of vny of the seven business downturns in this genera- tion-going all the way back lo the catastrophic depressjon f)f 11129-33. But I hasten to cushion today's grim column with a major bit of encouraging tle'\\"S: As of this point in the Jo1o,•ntum. the Nixon recession downturn, the Nixon recession recessions of the post-World ~'ar ll era. While many authorities will ('Ontinue to insist that the cur# rl'"nl downturn began ~arlier-in J uly. 1969. when industrial production peaked and star1ed tO slide -the National Bureau of l::conomics Research in New York is the non-profit independent research organization which has assumed responsibility for officially datin~ business-cycle tuming points m the U.S. And evidence I s ac- cumulating that the NBER is getting close to agreeing that November, 'fig is the month when wea~ in the ecooomy became sufficiently widespread and serious to ju!tify the tag of a turning point. However. the NBER iso 't yet rev¥-1ing when·-or ever. whether -it will break its silence and make the tag of- ficial. And no one knows "'hether President Nixon will admit tha't his economic facl has blotched his e n t i r e Administration to date when he d~livers his messages on the State of the Union, the Budget and the Economy in late January.early February. it's a tortuous political ques· lion as well as an eOOrmoosly complicated and de fl cat • economic-social decision. Bul let's assume that New York to Construct New Plant for Disposal !\E\V VOR.K (UPI l -A plant designed lo speed up the natural deco mposition or solid waste from 15 years to 15 days \\"ill be built-in New York City by the largest private garbage removal firm in the East. Charles ~1acAluso's New "York Ca rting Co. has obtained p£'rrnission from ~l ayor John \' Lindsay's administration to b111ld a plant on a !~acre pier .i;ne 011 the Hudson River to process 3,500 tons of waste d ;1 1 I y. ~1acAluso's fir m bes bct'n paying the c ity $500,000 a y<'ar in dumping fees for de- pcJs1t1ng garbage a.~ Wastt. and l;1nr!fdl The nev.· plnnt expec1s ln h<indle all of New York C~r!1n1fs refu se and a substan- ti al addit H>nal amoW1t supplied by the ci ty. The· pr oc ess to be used i;hrcds the v.·aste inlo tiny (:ranules \l'hich are. turned 11110 a liquid slu~, fermented and dried. "This actually is a speeding up of the natural process of decay from seven lo 15 years lo seven lo IS days." ~1acAlu.so said. 'The mixture then is separal- 'd into two prod11cti;. ·nutrifill , a powder having the fertilizing po"·~r.: of !-OPSOil, and slerifill, ~ coarR:r matrlal completely sterile. It can be used in land- fill wllhoot causing rat-infest· ed areas as garb:igc lahdfill often does. S hr edded and ground metal also Is recover· ed for possible scrap me lting. Some of the waste products ... 1,lll"S OP OIL PAINTINGS WNOUIALI WAllHOUSI O"" TO THI PUILIC $5 and up 1'1t L •CMM91le, UilrtA AMA l"MOMll ..... OllAL.llaS W.t."1"•• delivered to the plant will he burned as fue l for the decom· position processing. MacAluso controls the steri· fill and nutrifill process. A number c;if large corporations are engaged in develop 1 n g c;ither garbage and solid waste recycling processes. a m o n g them General ~1otors. ~1onsan· to. \Vestinghouse, Ae.rojet Gen- eral a n d RCA. MacA I u s o pointed that these !inns all are manufacturers and said his long experience in v.·aste collection and dealing v.· i th publlc sanitat ion officials had given him an advantage. "Landfill an cl incineration. the present 1nethods of solid waste disposal, simply are no longer adequate," said MacAI· usu.·· We are going to be forced to go lO recycling on a blg scale sooner or Jilter." In doll ar volume. solid waste disposal has jumped from in- significance a doz.en years ago into the ranks of the. top IO industries in the country to- day. Federal and municipal aulhorities in many cities say they \\'ould not be surp~ if both the tonnage and the dol- la i-volume doubles by 1980. The problems with landfill disposal of waste art. finding dumping sites. the cost or 1 ransportation and tbe risk of creating large rat infestation. Incineration causes air pol· lution and is wasteful ()Verall. The federal govemment is anxious to encourage recycling or solid waste. The Resource Recovery Act passed by Con- gress thiS year authorUes the government to· provide 75 per· cent of the funds for perman· ent waste. re.cycling plant.I U they bring neighboring com~ mW1lcitet Into a joint sanitary recycling program. November Is the NBER's selection and 1-et 'JJ assume that will be ''it." How does this recession oompare? In duration, at 14 month.s, it beats them all -back to the 43-month crash that begar. in August. 1929 and lasted tci March, 1933. 11...:•"l•n Sll1·6/l8 116-10/ IS 11/ .... lQI'"' 1/13·115• 7/Sl·ll~ 51.0-71~! 1116'1·1/11 "'°"'h• ..... , .... " • ;. " ' • " l n deplh, a~ ol the first 11 to 12 months after the November peak, it ranks as the mildest of the recessions. 1'he following comparison~ which illustrate this are with the first 11·12 months (after the peaks of 1957 and l!lfiO I in order to make t h i s scrupulously objective. ..... NOl'!l•rm emplol' -1.115 -1 lS -J.lt JoblfH ~•It + 2.2 -0.'I • 1.0'1 hwlutl. ll'l'"Ollucl, • I.Of -0.91 -1.0!' Pe<•. Income + J . .o + 1.0I + 1.G-t llf"i l "'""· Inc--O.lt + I.Ii -l . .iJ 11.tr•ll ••ltl + J.:n -J.60 • 1.7' AM! re1111 w••• . o.sr -J.fl . •.lS M•nu. ll lde Wlf~ + 0,17 -1 . .0 • 1.ll !;le•I m61'1. Ir. WI" • 0 JI · 1.11 • 7.54 GNP Curfenr I + 1.SS • O.l2 • 1.1' GNP •~•I -0.25 • 1.U • J.oS Alie<·!" "'olllo -l.11 •17.23 ·12.JI l\uOlneu 11llurt• + !Ol.2t + '1.21 -+ 11.1 1 HOOJ1ln' •1•••• +21.6' • 1.lt -t 11.70 l"Real means the percen- tage t.'h.Bnge after elimination of the impact or price in· creases.) John Bissel Heads Firm Conducting the course will be Sterling S. Speake, in· structor in consumer credit and collections, of the Interna- tional Consumer C r e d i t Association, St. Lo u is, Missouri. Speake ls a credit specialist and field lecturer for ICCA. Costa Mesa has been selected as one of several cities to be included in thi! year's Credit Education pro- gram offered by the JCCA. Credit schools have been con- ducted throughout the country for the past several years. and have been acclaimed a:ii a practical and interesting study of !UCCessful methods in the handling of consumer credit. ICCA points ~ut that the course will be offered at a strategic time, considering the large current volume of con- sumer credit and installment credit bli<iiness, and the fa5t changing economic a n d busines s co nd i t I ons , ••creditors should take full ad· vantage of tbi~ique op- portunity to hel em bring thei r credit and co lion pro- cedures up to date and learn the latest approved methods," says the ICCA. 'Topics to be discussed in this course include prob~ .affecting credit: credif ap- plications: credit interviews: investigating. and evaluating the applicant; accepting and Bissell lnc. a privately-held rejecting the applicant : col· f\rm 1o,·i1h annual sales in ex-lections and related subjects. ('£'SS of t.10.000.000. has named A small enrollment fee is . John ~1. Bissell to be president the only cost which includes and chief e11:ecutive off icer for a Manual and supp I i e s . ils \vorldwide operations. Further information may be TI1e new president joined obtained from Sterling S. the hrm 1n 1966 as corporate Speake, 1 n t er n at ion a I cootroller and most recently Consumer Credit Association, \\'a! vice president in charge. 375 Jackson Avenue, St. Lollis, of marketing . Before joining Missouri 63130. •· 1 certainly think that i£ you iook at the profit sheets of the steel industry that there is no question that there has to be some price increases," Gott told newsmen in New York Dec. 17. One reason, and probably the most important, why in-- ·dustry experts are sure of a strike, is the list of demands USW president I. W. Abel says he '11 be asking for when the negotiations begin. These include "a substantial wage icrease,'' cost of living escalator, increased and ad- ditional benefits and a four· day work week. The minimum. a Wlion spokesman said, the USW will be seeking is what the United Auto Workers got f r o m General Motors Corp. in its 10-week strike in the fall. The GM settlement called for a 3Q percent wage increase over the next three years. plus some very expensive benefits. One steel in dus try spokesman summed up 1971 like this: "Booming business'' for the first seven mooths: "the doldrums" thereafter. The hed ge -buying ap- parently has begun. After an industry slump caused by the aulo w o rk e r s strik e, orders have taken an Up!Wing. "In the past 2Yz weeks ordet'3 are up sharply," said a spokesman for a major Eastern steel company. ''And these aren't COWlting what we expect from the auto in- dustry." In line with the upturn, those mills which laid off "'orkers during the auto strike slump announced plans to begin a recall. Armco Steel in Middletown, Ohio, said lt was going to call back 112 \aid-off workers the week. afler Christmas and 34.2 more by lhe first of the year . Jones and Laughlin Steel Corp. said its C001panywide furlough rolls have remained const.anl al about 4,000 since early. October. but Iha t callbacks are expected by the first of the year. the firm he had been a hnan------------------------- ('ial planning manager of Aeronutronic Division of Ford Motor Company )Ind assistant controller of Raytheon Com· pany·s computer division in Santa Ana. Melvllle R. Bissell JTI will ntire as president of the com· pany and from active manage- ment on January 1. He will remain a director': consultant and active member of the international operating. and ptanntng comtnlttees. P.1. R. Bissell II will re.main chairman. Harry J . Bloem will continue as eiecutive vice president and g e. n e r a 1 manager of the United St.ates Division. Bissell Inc. was founded In 187& as a family enlerprise to make carpet sweepers. The firm tod ay is a leading pro.- ducer of pnxlucls for home a n d institutional cleaning. prin c ip a l ly carpel and uphol stery care devices and cleaning agents. It& principal outlets are hou sewa r es , grocery and discount store retailers. ·usHEn GREEN SfRIPE SC01CH '11 plnow. .• Sample-changer ,sTAfft.THtflEW.~ OFF. WITK BIG '$2Jl0 SAVINGS $11~1 --1 J ohn Shippy, a medical tec hnician. double checks performance of a n Aut9well machine before ship- ment from the Picker Nuclear Plant in North Hav- en. Conn. The automatic sample--chan~er here is lowerinf{ a test t ube into the well in a scintillation detector w here radioac~ivity Js measu red. I Finance Briefs PROV!DENCE, R.I. (UPI) -Metalized Ceramic• Corp. said North American Rockwell ~fichroelectronics Corp.. has issued a stop-work order on $800,000 or a $1.325 millk>n order for 42-lead integrated circuit packages. P!llLADELPlllA (UPI) - JNA Properties, 1nc., and Bankers Securities Corp. have announ~ a joint venture to build a $4.0 million hotel-apart· ment complex caUed Ceote.r City in Pb.iladelpllia. I t will i n c I u d e 250 condominhun apartments. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Maroona Corp., a joint ven· ture of Cyprus Mines Corp. and Utah Construction & Mining Co., announced a Peru- vian subsidiary will spend $25 million to expand its Iron ore mining and processing com- plex at San Nicola, Peru. NEW YORK (UPI ) -Die casting <lUtput dropped 9.8 percent this year largely because ()f trucking strikes a nd the General Motors strike, the American Die Casting l nstitute reported. Yet, in dollar value of output the in- dustry had · its second best year. $2.35 billion. Brass die casting ~ad the smallest drop, 3.8 perceat. Magnesium casting was down 12 percent, zinc casting 20.1 percent and aluminum 16.5 percent. WASHINGTON (UPI) The Securities and Exchange Commission revoked t h t dealer registration of Sentinel Securities, Inc., of Wichita for manipulating the price. of shares of Investment Centers, Inc., a Wichita holding firm which owns the brokerage house. Leroy Warner Giltiland and Don F. Reed were suspen- ded for 12 months for their parts in the affair. GREAT NECK, N.Y. (UPI) -Vernitron Corp. has agreed to sell for $S.8 million cash {\\'O ocean going tankef1 it bought in December, 1!168, In order to discharge short tenn bank Joans. Vernitron also has agreed to sell Allied Bio-Scien- ce Corp., acquired in May, 1969. AKRON !UPI) -Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. has denied a report by a German magazine that It has sold its 'n percent interest in Phoeniex Gummiwerke to Muenchener Rueckvesicherungs Co. and the heirs of Moritz Schultze. But Firestone conceded that such a sale is under con· sideration, DETROIT (UPI) -General Motors Tuesday refused to comment on an announ«menl In Tokyo by Isuzu Motors, Ltd .• that it is willing to con- sider allowing GM to buy 35 percent of Isuzu if the Japaneseg~emmenta~ proves. However. the govern- ment is reported to fa vo r n GM investment In Isuzu of no more than 2fl pcrttnt. COI.UMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - Hamilton Cosco. Inc., has an- nounced tennination of opera· tions at its national blenders division at Alhambra, Calif. .. rami!ton COSCQ ~aid the com· pany had big losses this year and last after being profitable in 1968. NEW YORK (UPI) -The property-liability insurance in- dustry had a 13 percent gain in premiUm income this year and a much lower un- derwriting ICtSS, the Insurance Information lnstitute reported today. Investment i n come jumped 11 percent tG $1.9 billion. Premium income rose to $32.8 billion from S29 billion last year and the unde.rwrit.ing Joss was ooly $275 million compared with $500 million a year earlier. When adjusted to reflect the l.nsurors' equity in unearned premium reserves, the underwriting loss would be c ut to $100 million, the institute said. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) - Executive Jet Aviation , lnc., said Tuesday a Delaware court hu approved the l)Ul'ller last July 1 of retired Air Force Brig. Geo. 0. F. Lassiter fl'()m the company's presidency. Ctn. Lassiter had sued to upset his repiacemenl by Bruce G. Sund lt.n , a Washington attorney, who was elected to the post by the Detroit Bank & Trust Co., holder of SB percent of the company's stock as trustee f()r a 1ubsidJary of the bankrupt Peno C e n t r a 1 Railroad. PHH.ADELPHIA (UPI) - Uni vac Division of Sperry Rand Corp. has obtained a $2.5 million order for an elec- tronic co mputer from .. Who Listens To Landers? SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does That's Who You Cen 'Listen' lo Ann L.nclers DAILY PILOT Lockheed Missi les & Space Co./ at Sunnyvale, Calif. --------------------' ' --•, .l . - THIS . MATTERHORN ,i I I ) " t I I i ' ' . I ' • • • •i "---,_ j Yes, you're right. There's nothing really funny about a fractured leg. But -pardon th e pun -it does give our friend, here, at least one break. He has time to thoroughly enjoy the DAILY PILOT as he takes a leisurely meal at the outdoor restaurant in Zermatt, Switzer- land, in th shadow of the real Matterhorn. But you don't have to break a leg, go to the Matterhorn-or eve n to Disneyland, for that matter -to share our friend's enjoyment. ' We're happy to deliver the Orange Coast's finest hometown daily newspaper to thousands of homes ful l of whole-limbed readers every day. If it turns out'this seasonyoo're notas great a ski whiz as you thought you were, turn a bad break into a good break. Take time I . to get even better acquainted wi th the . . . '- / • ' ~ t ' .. ' , . • ' . • :1 ' < - " )o '· I I J --- '" ... --... _..!,.._· -•• -. -· .. I 30 DAILY PILOT f..londQ, Ji:n11V7 4, l ~71 I ' I JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR YOU ••• ~ ·~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don 't aavertis e in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business th e ha rd way· Th e Service Directory (classifica tions 6500 -7000 in the cla ssifie d ad section daily I g v es you a n ad va ntage yo u get th rough no oth er adver- tising medi um. It reaches cus tom ers who are ready to buy. Be t here when your pros pects com e int o t he market looking fo r the service s you have to sell . If you r service isn 't listed, we'll start a category just fo r you . Pick up the phone right now and reserve your space in the "Sell ers Circle" Your Direct Line to Directory Results 642-5678 ; Classified INDEX Advertising . • I~ __ r_orSll•~I~ I Service• ind Repairs I~ All ...... c•Wfk•ll .......... IM IS•te:llr 1•M frtllll Mlew) ._no l td! •• , ••I .... C.VM a.1-.. 1.-nl! .,. ... ,. .. 11t1ui. 11v ltl•llf .. vtrnl l1vMwn IMf;HI l•r c.i•-•-c.--~~ CMr. M.,. t> .. Y f'.tllf o. ..... -" •• ,, l lvtt 1:1 Tori l'-1•111 \/•lit~ O•NH Ort Y1 "' ..... 109'11•11 .. H\lllll"l lOlt IN(fl Hu"11nttt11 Hlrtleur lrvl,.. Ten.i:1 l.11111'1• lllCft L•..,n• Hltll Ll1unll ,,.,,,,.., LI• 111<1 LllMl1 1111 M ... •I Mar -\letll• Mlft•J CltF Mlutt11 Vi.11 H_,..., ... ch ..__,.. H-4•'1 M-1 Shins ........ s .. (lln\ ..... S111 JN11 c w11tr1111 Salll• "'"' Slflllll AM H.t.tl1'1 SMI ... ell Sllnl.,. 5111111! 1-.c!t UnlVlrlll'I' Park WM!cllff Wnttnl"ft" Real Estate, General '------~ [j] Ac• .. .-tw 1a11 •.•..••. -•.••• 151 •••rt"""'' ,.,. ................. 1n lu1lnHf "Nt••tll' .....••.•••... lM c"""''"' L•h/Crrptt ....... .,.15' Comm1rd1I ,.,..,,..,., ............ l N C011domlnl11m1 m .,.11 ........ u• D111l1•n /U111!1 u l1 ••.•.• , .•.•. l•J MIMI In hi " m"M ............ l iM l•<ome l"._m ........... , ... l U l•tut1r\11 ,.,......,.,., ............. 161 Liii ... s.11 .................... 11• M&blle Hom1/Tr1lltr P'•°'I• ... 171 Mlll•lt ln, OIHrt, JllMl'I ••· .•. 111 Ort llM Ce ... NtPl<l'I' ...... ., •.•. 11, Ov! 9f 111!1 PrwM'IY . ··•··•··· 111 ltt11Cllf l , Jl•,.,,J. ·-••••·.,. lM 11 .. 1 E1111e ••c"'"" .......... 1n 11 .. 1 l:lllhl Wlflllill ........... , llf All ..-,. tWIHlllCllll'" ........ ... Awlil-•-•r & P.m .. .,,,ltltltl ··-c"""""""''.,. (1'""111" <--........ c.itni11 cem ... 1, c.cn11 ClllN CW. Ce!lf.-.ctw l)t1rtlo!• 0.-. •• 1 .. Dr1VllWl~I •l•Urkal ,_11,, '"'" J111m1tur1 Glr1l111l111 0 1111 H.u;1,.. H•IMI Ch1•1 """"" ... fllflt lflllfnM Tt• ·---· ..ltn!Mrlll LlllflCll'"" 'Mt"' SWvlct M1lnl-nuo Mtvlll9 f'1l11!1111 I ... -~ ......... Pl1tf9r, P1!dl, ll•alr f'lutnMlll ""' s ..... 1uo 1 '""''i.11111 11_ .... I & ltl!ltlr ••11111 S.wl,,./ AHtrallefl1 s111..,.nl111 'M!llOfllll Tol ... lllOll lllHlr Tiit T .. S.11 TrM llff\llct T11torl111 U11!1Mllf1' Wlllll-(IMllllll ..__I _Emp-loymen_t _l[Il] Joi W11IM , Miiot .... , •••..•••. 70t J • Wtn19f, Plfftll<t ........... 101 ..1.-1 W1nh1<1, M & JI ........... Jt<I H-41 W1111H, M • JI •••• ., •••• 711 I'---· Fl-n-•nc_1_a1-~ll •I -'-.. -,._-M•_·~-:-~-i••-... -... -_l[~I I Wt.lftMI (1-IVl'llll' .......... "' .., .. _ WentM .............. Jlt ............... o.-""'"' ......... :n• l""tlll'Mftl W1111H ............ Ut Miii" 11 L .. 11 .................. U• Mtnfll Wa11tM ......... ut Morto-111, Tr111! t>eldt ,._, •.•. ut l.__H_o_us_•s_i_or_R_•n_t __,J I j~ I MOllln fl,Jfllhll.-.1 ...... ,. JOI Hiii-....,111r11, ........ JlllS H..,111 IU"'. Of" un l11r11. . .... l!~ C•""mlnlllm• turn. 1n CoRd<>mlnlumo ""'"'"· JJO Condo. Ill•"· or unfurn ••••. -JlJ Townflouw furn. JJI To.,,,hlllw unfurn. JU T1wnh11111. !urn. or 11nf\lrn. Joa D11pl••n fU rn. • . 145 D111i.•n 11111ur11. nl Dwlu ••• tvrn. If' 11nl11rn. •. JJ$ Apartments for Rent '------~ ~ "'p!o. turn, , , Ael. 11nt11•n. A•ll .. turn. or 11nf\lrn .• , •• •• .... l lD I.___ _R•n-tals ~I~ 11...... .• . .............. -- It...,... I l otrd ................. tU Hel1ll, Mllt ll .................. •1• GUHi Ho!nt .................. 'IS Sllltlmfl" f11H1l1!1 .......... · · • · · f't v-.~1i.11 111""''" ................ •n lt ..... 1. ,. s..... . ............ 01 G1ra1 ... tor 111.,.1 .... . . • •U Ofllc1 ll1nlll , _ wa •wM11e1• 111 .... 1.1 .. • .... -.... •o ....... tr••• 11 ... 111 ....... -•... '" Sler1M ......... , •• , ... , 4H 11t1111t1!1 ¥1'11!1.. 4U f110w;elll-vt fltfll•lt fU I'--_Anno_unceme_""~I~ All_IO(...,eftl1 .. .. • . • Ml Ctnl 9f r11111111/ln M1mor111"' • SOJ l ... I Ht!l(tl .. ,. • . . .• ltD ._ __ P_._'_'0_"_'_1' __ _,] I \b J Aute 1r1fltMrU tlN .. •• ........ n s "-"''' ................... . A11'il111c11 ...................... 102 Auclletl ......................... '°" 11111,1111 Mat.,-1111 .............. IW c 11nw•t a lttl1m1rrt ......... • Jlurn"u" ........... 111 G1r111 1•11 .................. 112 HtllUllOI' G.-dt , ............... 111 Mll<hlnlrT .. . ............. ,. IU Mli.cell1""°111 •.••••.•..•• 111 MIHtll11111111 W111tM ..... ·•• . nt M111it1I 1n1tr11m-." ........... tu o nlco tturtoll11•1l••ultt •••••... 114 ~1111et/0•11n• .............. n• s .... 1111 M•chlnn ............... n 1 Soorlln1 ~· .. . .......... I.JO .i1or1. 111Htau•tn1, I•• ........ lll 51-,.. ~· TV, lll•dlt. H"!, St1rte ll' Pets and Supplies I ~ I ~~ "*"• G"'t•t l ...•. , . •• 150 Cl h •• . ......... Ill o.,. . ".. . .... ... ... .. . Ill HO"PI o ,,. ,. "" • l~I LIYHIK~ 111 Boats and I• JR I Marine Equipment 1'. ~~ ....... , ............ IM I•"· Mllfll./St,...k l .......... ttt lfflo/M1rl111 l:•ulll. ••••••••••••'l'M ...... ....... .. ....... ' .. ""' a...11, fl•fll/Cl\firllr ·····-••··· tot I N ll, Sall ...• , ••••• ••••••• ... '°' 11•11, IH•o/Dffl<I , ., •••• •••• .. 911 ... , .. s.-• h i ............ 111 INlt. Shir•,. •• t i ) Transportation [ dJ] ..______, ............ t U C•mlllft, l •ltl lll.•111 .......... t 1' cvc1.,, l lk11, ''"'-" ........ ns l"leflrlc CU'l .................... t Jt Mtbll1 Hlltllt •••• , .............. tJJ Mat9r """"'' • ............. ., .. tilt Tr.iltrl. Trt¥11 •• ,.,,.,. ....... 'hi Trtllt n. Ullllll' • ............... '41 ~~:.:·:~d .. F~~·······I ~I c -•• -~-:-10_·~·'°-.'-.~-.. - 1·-... -.. ~.1.1 ~·I ~ Urff •di) ............... JSI A~l*'-'/Ci.1t1c1 ........... , •• , ff.J Lnt .. . ................ J.IJ o-1....... . ............... '" 1"'11, lllH I, •Ml ····••·• .... , .tSt Trvd!I ......................... ""l ~--'"_·_··_u_ct_io_n __ I I 1• J Au .. LMll"' . , ............. "" Awte St•wlu a ,..,,, .......... tU "'"'" w ... ,.. • .............. , ... Autff. lin-i.ill ................. t l'I Sd1ttlt • t"'Trvclllllf ....... l'J "'"'"· ",.. .. . . ... .. .. .... .. .. fMl!flc.t.I • ... .. . ,... Aul11, U1 ................... '91 - ...... DAILY PILOT WANT ADS I~ General General * * * * * TAYLOR CO • PAY YOURSELF Sl,000 The most outstanding \'aJ~ on IOfl11y'"' u1arki'1 in • !ux. ury !nearly l!IOO .sQ, ft.I l be<lruo1n hoinr . Con~ider thf'~ features: Jar;:" separ . a ll' fan11ly roon1 y.•ith 11'1"1 bur, I o rm a I di11ing, 2'/, baths. llt"arly ll!'IY shag car· pe!, ht>111·y shaki> t'OOf. Pl.U5 a huge 40 x 62 well land· scaped rear yard \\'ilh Jots ol conere1e. Anrl only 1or .. down to the new reduttd price ol $31.500. Call 613.85..i() General YOUR FIRST HOME? Then you are fortuna1e In- deed, for Y.'e have for you the "little honeymoon cot. rage" in Corona d e! Mar. So many dream of and so fe\Y fil\CI. Plenty o! room for expansion on 1hiit p;0uth-0!- lhc highway R-2 lot and only 10% OOWN ·NO 2nd T.D. - NO PREPAYMENT P EN· AL TY AND NO LOAN FEE becau.se the o\\·ner \\ill car. ry a 90':'1> loan. ONLY $36.500 Don't Deifly Cali Today 673,.855() EASTSIDE SLEEPER BUCCOLO BUILT • Three Bdrm. Two Bath home with BIN Kil., Dinig a rea and large family Rm. with used brick fireplace. T his r aml). ling redwood siding home \\'ilh heavy 11hake roof is lo- cated in ot1f' o! Costa !lfesa'1 finest residential areas-near schools and shopping, Fresh- ly painted in k out • fully carpeted and draped. Com· pletely fenced • well 1111\d· scaped yards. A !11UST SEE a• S28.COO \\i lh FtlA • VA TER.t\IS. M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. 64&.{lj5.) ' Eve~: 646-4579 * 4 BEDROOM * 2 BATHS * FHA-VA TERMS Save Now! f"antastic Tenn!!! Assume low ln1erest 51.4 1° loan or buy FHA or VA. It's an extremely well kept 4 bedroom, 'Z bath horn~ In Costa Mesa. \'lalk 10 all "'chools and s h o pp i ng. $27,950 546-2313 ~O' THE REAL ~ ESTATERS ,, ' .. ·.· .. DUPLEX ON BAYFRONT Pn•r ,~· n11<1I , hoal. :? f-IH. HR 1'~ b<i. $1 01",f"~l. will hold •It} II 1 ·1~1. Upp."r; 2 lo11er. Prll'e • Cvtl: fi7'.t.-.'llili.~ %1\-701.i t:ves associated IROKERs--REALTORS 2025 W. lolboa 67l·l6•J General * • * 'O THEREAL ~ ESTATERS ' . REDUCED $1300 NOW $21,700 What a RJ"Cat bu rgain. Add very liltle do1vn fnr a douhle bargain. Spotless 3 BOO. rooms. ._park.ling kopper MRS. H. V. COX k ettle k11chen. Large livmg 464 Hill Strfft room "'ilh l'Jhitc brick f.ire. l•51una S.•ch platf'. Quiet neighborhood. Yoo are the winner ol Large trC"e lill('d grounds. All 2 tickets to the types financing a vailable • Southern California Exc<'llent starter home. Bet. Sports, Vacation ter hurry. & RetrHlional 645·0303 Vehicle Show FOREST E. OLSON at the ANAHEIM REALTORS CONVENTION 2299 HARBOR CENTER ''"""" '"' ''"' 1mh COSTA MESA Please cllil 642-5678, ext_ 314 1 """""""""""""""""""""'! b••w"" ''"' 1 pm " "''m 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath your tickets. {North County toll-tree number is ~1221)1 • • • 675-3000 22 Years of R eal Estate Servit" In The Harbor Area OCEAN BLVD. Corona de! 1'-far Duplex • 118 ft. front .• fabulous Ol'f'1111 view! 4 BR. 2 Ba. PLUS J. I BR., 1 ba. a pt, Bo1h units w ith frplcs. 2 Car garage.~. Priee just re duced in SUO.OCKJ. 2407 E. Coast H1vy., CdM "CATCH THE JOY" Ol )ivinR u1 lovely Nrwpor1 Shores. ·rrcat yoursrll 10 this comfor!alllr-J hrr!roon1, Carp!'ls, (]rap<."s, patio, dblr: garage, Jirrgr fe nced yard w/ roo111 for boat & camper, t'tc. $21,750. East.side, C.M. * ~ll"f'prr • 'Z homf's on A rnrner I () ! i 11 Newpor1 llrights. $29.7~.lO. Wells-McCardle, Rltr1. 1810 r\r"·port Blvd., C.!11. 548-7729 MESA VERDE POOL lfcre·._ a beauty. 3 bedroom!!, 'Z halhs ;il'KJ family room home l'.'l!h a spark.Jing he11.t- t1d and !il11'red pool for fun livi ng. Quiet neighborhood \\'i1h1n \\'alkinp: distance fQ :-;hopping. !lluch more to see fur only $31,950. Call now ;:..1G.:Z313. 2 bath home "·ilh nc11' c·ar. 1 ____________ 1 "''' '"' '''"'-""j"' '"'"'· Lease Op11·on Sale bcn;hip in 1hc coinn1u11ity and !otat use of all or iTs facill!ie~. tennis court. pool and l'lubhousc. You 01\·e H to )'OOMit'H. Only $31.800. Ca ll 64&.7171 \O THE REAL \~ESTATERS '-.. ' I I " I''• 11 ._ '•r.• FIRST TIME ADVERTISED ,\ 110 :\1F: Tl/AT (lrFF~RS E'V~'.rtY'l1 1l :"·iC;1 1 • Cuslon1 hu1lt • 1•1rr11Ja r fl'"'! • OC\•:;n VI('\\' • 111'1\'alf' h('.<tl'h * pnn1r JoCa1JOn. Cali to ~rr. $i9,'.l()(I, ~ Coldwell, Banker ~ 833-0700 644-2430 Sparkling :'l lir. 2 ~tory, tri· Jeve\ 1v/[ormal d ining. hugl' frtmily & all bl!ns, S300 mo. 01' assuml' low interest loan \1•/minin1un1 do"'"• C 11 1 5-15.S.12·1. \outh , {-oast . -. \\' or 0U1f'r p1'1"'st1ge hQme, B1i.: Int, frut! t1·t'es. quiet st. l & f)f'n. 2 ha. SZ.1.950. ~,~, I.nan <;1, F"llA OK $HOO. 51,,. Pai,:c lf)!l7 Yellow Pa~1. ~uintard '-"' REALTY S ince 1946 Downtown Cott• MeM 11 71 HARBOR 642-2991 BAYSHORES -DOVER-SHORES- BR,\:'<U n1 ·w • Q11a l11.u lill fff)lll C'Olll'l}l1n1 f)(lOl, p.11\f"JI. rd f;-;111 n n ; l\'r! har. frplr • 10 ~unkrn l1v rrn l\'/\'BUl !r d ceiling_ 4 br, 2 ha -!· pwdr "'"'"""'"'"'"'"'"'"'"' I Br11ut. ~:arly An1rr 4 Br 12. M·inutes 4 tia . s1rp"' 10 1>c111·h. nion1. J\la.~rer BR. J1v m 1• THE HOME SHOW din r m & k11ehrn 111! nn to Beach Vif'iv. SlOR.000. Roy J . \\lard, Cln.~d Cireuit 1-V [or Rhr. &lf>.1:..;o. Oprn Daily. Bis:-rwo story :1 l)('dron1 f.· arn1rhair househuntini;t farn1ly l"l:)Om plus patio pl<1Y· :r1J;-, E. Cni:r.!lf II\\')'., Cd M UNUSUALLY SHARP 8nd Cf'rlainly 11·f'll pric('d Al oiily S•ll)100. for 1hi!! IOVf'ly onc·"'lory, 4 &. family PAC'e· srHt>r. l\1any c us1orn extras. roon1. \\IO\."f'·lll conditl(ln. 675--7225 Sll500 ASK FOR TitERESA 1 -~A~l~I -.E~.-pe-n-,.-,~P~a~id~- Al .LE;.J By SC"tlrr fr1r Vf'ls, No down Colesworthy l"YmNol, •~ "°'"" ''"''· FHA huyrrs. ner.d only usual ~~HA <lo11·n and impounds. Hurry~ S45·Sl80 ""'"cineM tt.ttl) UEGEREALTY -·-& Co. Real!or N!'11w rt Beach Offi ce 1028 Baysid!' Dr. 3 BR CONDOMINIUM 1---..=67-.:;.,,,.'.-'30=,--- ln choice ·ser.t1on of Monticel. CRV $33,950 lo. t<J l)f' corniilc!C'l)' rcdec· Sharpes! 11e11clow l lome in orated inchiclln~ nc1v c11 r· city. ~illly carpcled & dra p. pe1s. Priced below n1arket. cd, 4 lwdroo1n 3 ba!h, 60xJ20 Act fast l'n 1hfs one. fcncert loC heavy shake roof, $20,500 lliR" l.rt'e11, "'ell landscaped, PERRON 642-1771 wood burning tirepl11.f'e, large kitchen "i lh all mod- R EPOSSESSIONS em hltn appliances + big Sparkling clclf.n homei, !!Orne ramily room, covert'(! palio, ll('\\"IY pa1nre<:1 &. cafl)('tcd 2, dble garage, 3, 4 & 5 bdrm11. &>ml' \\'i!h poolfii. FHA-VA conv. !trm&, from •SllOOO to $40,<n:l, Colllns & \Vau,. Inc. 118-13 Adrtms A\·('. 962~ -.-WESTCLJFF' CONDO e 'Z AR. 211 bA. Clubhouse. Pool. N!ullil . Ow~r/carry. Efl!!l C.:.f. l BR. 2 Ila.. VA no do"·n. FHA $1650 do1vn, ., ill.ige Re.ii EstJ te f62~71 ( :::: ) !146-111] S.11 or lease/option 4 BR., 2~ ba., ffl)lc. 2 Ctr g1r. 3 Yra. old. 2'200 Sq, F t. A·l Cond. Vacant quick pos. !M'S!!. Call today! • Bill Haven, Rltr, 21 Lt i.:. coa~t. Cd!\f fiU..J2l 1 FOH.TlN CO. fi42 .. -(XX) l!t you ad in the ch!.l!Sltled ANY D11y is 1hC' REST <lily lo SECTION? Somecne Is I n1n 1111 a d! Don't I 1\·11tchlng for lt. D J a I delay .. call tod11y. 642-.'\673 6':::.-5618 lotl1L.Y! j Bu 1ldcni r('jl0!!.'!e.'l!\10na now ''arant. 3 ,t· 4 bC'drm, Crpts, drPs. all f'Xlra!I. f'or details ral! 540-1151, Heritage Real. loT!I. CUSTOM FOURPLEX Oloice Ne11•por t area, 3 BR & 2 Bit ltnH!!. Idea l owner occupied ,t, tax &helter prop. f'rty. S9.l20 Income. $12,000 Do~·n. $75,00(l. PERRON 642-1n1 INCOME! 2 Fur nished barhelor un\tA close to brach &. shopping. S21!.000 Georu Wllll•m1on Re•ltor 67~350 645-1564 E w1. BEACH SPECIAL 4 Bdrms. 2 baths. XJnt cond. SICPs to ~an. Only JJJ,950 • Trrm-'. CAYWOOD REAL TY 6.306 W. Con111 Hwy., NB 541.1290 ":\I AKE Room f Qr D11d. dy '' .. cle 8 n out ttwi l{llMlge .. ;vnur tr111h l!I Ci\Sll 1\·lth a Dall.v Pilot 01111Uk-<1 ••• ------- * PAil Y PILOT 3 _ ........ ]~[ J~i l I ~ _ ........ l~I 1~1 ft.el l•lll•. ..... .. l ~I I ~! "°'"' fot Rent General EXCLUSIVE EASTSIDE COSTA MESA 2 TRIPLEXES PLUS POOL General Gener•I N•wport &.tch RARE CHARM RMI li•t•t• W•nt.d 184 Bu1ine11 W•nt.d 210 HouM1 Unfurn. 305 Hou ... Unfurn. _H_A_V_E_IO-,fl00--.,,_--,-w-,-,-,-3IH-A_V_E--._$l-S-,000--1-,-1,-.-,-.. -1,·l ;.G:e:n:e:r:e~I ------University Ptrk br/2 ha hM. \Viii Msunit \\-el\ est,. s I ab l ~. non.1---------- 305 3 BR. i tam. r m. In early f~ Paptt. Send addreu & defense b us 1ne:g 1: •s * QUIET * DON'T OE LAVI Amerie&n chann. Natun.I pa.rtieuJl)"l io: P O &x full oy,·l"\("r Qf "-orklna $135 . Clean 2 BR. Collage . CALL US TOOAYI One-slory 2 bedroo1n . l ba th units. Built-ins , refrigerators, carpeting, drapes. Filtered pool. Fenced. Cul De Sac street. Complete privacy. Shopping, public transportation just steps away. Shows excellent s pendable. CaU for appointment to see. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 11'00d pe.nellni, beam etil-ll'2, Nlf. l:l660. P 8 r I n e: r · Mu~t l!tand Stove crpts drpa lrg pat io. 7 BR 2 baths S27S 1h o rou a h inv"st!&atton. BL0UE 0BEAC0 ON · ....... . I"••, uae<t brick trplc .. ~w 1 ~ 4"' 2 ba "El Toro $275 ... NB-C~t area. PO Bo:ic DJl-. • •••• cpts/drps, modtm bit · in flnanclM • M~20l3. Dall)' PUot, 330 W. * 645-0111 * El!a:ant 3 Br 2~ ba •• M2::i 26 Lind• Isl• Drive kitchen. Large yard. rar. . B C 1\-I ~ BR. 2\.S baths , .•••••• $350 on a.Jley. Fine Helrhta arta, ay 51• ·1 • LOVELY Lido l!!le 3 bedrm. 3 BR .• mG. to mo, •••••• $35l! Decorator furnished. 5 Br. 5 bath home fac- in g Ji arbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready for immed. occupancy. \V/dock $200,000 $31.900. Bu1lne11 2 ba apt, bltns, $350 mo. 3 BR. 2H1 bathB .••• PQG-s.125 CALL ·e · ••'·1 414 Opportun1ty 200 lnvtstmtnt Al!IO f'.;y,•pt He igh1!1 home, 3BR 2Ba tnhouse .••• ;:wo 'kA{r;~ I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-:-Sh~:~7°:p=l~:~u:nc;':~n-,-.-,-:S;I~=. 0:1 ~:0Zr~32~a~,:m w;\·ha~~ 0 r' eel h·111 For compl•t• information on •II homes & lot1, pleas• call: Nt•, N1wper1 , ••• Ofrlrt IF YOU HAO 5 ACRES J EAN" s:-.irrn, RLTR • Lachenmyer 1860 Newport Bl vd. Caste Me s.a BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dover Or., Suit• 3, N.B. 642-4620 REALTY O\\'NER 'S SACRJFICE Prime loca!lon w I urvlct <t00 E. 17th Sr .. CM 646-325.1 Baycrest 4 Br, pool, lam MAILED THIS s.t11 tion comer . Part.ntr11 B Ibo C Univ. Park Centtr, !Nino rm Fee title, Save: $$ ~pl1tin<. Subordination to ,d. • • OVtl Rea lto1 c.11 646-3921 or 642-0185 Townho'"9 Fum. 330 G•n•ral I G•nar•I NO DOWN COURT DEMANDS ----------1 Closing Cost Only DISTINCTIVE N•ot homo °" oom" lot IMMEDIATE EXECUTIVE wHb room foe 1wo •ddHioo· SALE!! HOME al unils. The e.~isting home is in excellent conr!itlon and Probate cou rt sale. A r hance ha,!"'""'-Livin'" Rin, "'°my f b.d ' --4 •-1 -.; 3700 SQ. ft. of CHAR!lt! ! ~.. ... or your J ........ ge ,,.,1 -Kit. with dining counter. C I t N * !\laz:niflcent view or the room. omer o . ear ·· TY•o bdnns a nd conl"rete bf>aeh . Sunken forniat li ving 1!11.rbor ..,.,clo~ed p~tio. Delached Sf d. t I f * Loo.ded \l lth i;pecial feil· , . ., rm. ep-up 1n ng or or-tures Dbl. ga ragl'" _ plenty of room mal occasion!! Separate, fo"' hoa! or irailer !l!orag•. · f ·1 lh -Buil t-i n vacuum system • nialls1ve am1 Y r in 11'1 AN EXCELLENT BUY AT f I 0 ' h. -l~lectronlc oven <:OZy u-epace. rur111 .c; ln,i:s ONLY $21 ,000 11•1th low r I v ! -!n1ercon1 alsl'I or sa e. ac11nt an( h F.11.A , p•i•nl"n1 .o:. h b -Pi·ire includes y,·as Pt ... ready lo go, urry and c M. M. LABORDE, Rltr . " t' C II ITI<l ~z ~~o· + dryer, re!rigerator. .,rs · R "" • .,.,,,.). 646-0j:J,'l 644-7003 FOREST E. OLSON -~;,~,'.-';, •'"" ''" 1190 Glenneyre St. Call Anytime 833-0870 >48-828 I NTH huyer. SACRIF'ICE! 7141'1;;;;:;;;;-;-c;;;;;~:;;;;:;;;;;;;: I !~!;;;~!!~~!!ii~~~ A MO AGO ';)-16-1266 Days or Eves. !BALBOA Coves y,·aterfront. Newport Heights Decorated J BR. 2 Baths. _you mi ght aJrrady be \',"ell Mone y to Lo.n 240 illnnth To month. $350. GLASS WALLS OCEA• v;•w-4 be, 4 ba, s ,·t1 G-·-"•Y RI '" "7 ~20 1---------1 011 your y,·ay 101\"&rds earn-• .,,..., u. "" ......., • * * lge rumpus rm w/ba.r, lie '-;:----:;:::-7---·1==========; I { 3 flOO ft in~ extra incomr . 11 TD L H. D. BOURGEOUS Cu~1on1 home built in a semi-111' rm, i-plc. . sq t Coroni del Mar t"it'clf' 11 ith glass .,,.·alls to + 800 sq rt unfinished. \\'e"r.e proud 1~ talk 11.~ut _our $ oa 0 335 A. Woodland Pl. "" 540.•-1 business. Its fasc1nahng. J)C'n111f a fantastic ocean $49,500. s.t&-S7uu or ~• Co1ta Mesa viciv h"'nl all •oom•. Circu· Dynamic. Ideal for the sn1all 71 ~';'~ INTEREST LRG 3 Br. 2 Ba, best area, h -• ., ' lnve!ltor. No experience 2 d TD L trplc, bhn!ll. cpts/drps. You are t e v.inner .... Jar fa n11!y roon1 h11.s Cathe-Univer11ty P•rk ~tcessary. With 1·ery lir tl!' n oan 2 ticket& to the dral crlli ng & fire place. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;,;;,;;;;;;;;; money you can achil'\'e fin. T 1 673·690-I South•rn C11ifornla \\"oocJ & 111"0ught iron thru. LOWER INTEREST . 1 . ta ti . k. enn!I ~on equ ty. \\'INTER Rental : 7 Br, ~ncl Sparta V•citlon out 4 Bedroon1~. 2 haths & R.atf'li are avflilable ? \\'e can ~c~~ 5;,~s .... ~s::.n-;t:~1~" 642·2171 545-0611 yard & 1ar, dshwshr, & Re~reatlon•I m 11 n Y !Hxury fraturrs. now olfer low interrst &: low to decide Srrvin~ Harbor area 21 yrs. "\\'!lhr/rlryr . Rt'll. 642-7912 Vehicle Show $19,:.00. Call · doy,•n naymt~. on a.11 o! our Ours 1, a · vending m11.rhine: Sattler Mortgag• Co. 1t the ~· 3 Costa Mesa houses &. 101vnhouses. Blly prorram. The besr. \\'e sell 3:6 E. 17th Stl"!'et ANAHEIM NO\V before pr ices KO up! you Ussery m11chincs, t,~· CONVENTION \re-have from 2 to 4 bdrn1!ll. tablish rou~ loca tion P1'(). Monty Want.d 2SO 3 BR. HOUSE CENTER prieC'd fron1 S25,000 to vlde flne11.t line of ·snack 2 BBlh5 • Fireplact" January 2nd lhru 10th $·1j .000 .•. CALL TODAY! itf'n1s. \Ve tr ain. rounsel. COMr>tERClAL STABLES Gardening provided Plf'a ~ clll\ 642-5678, ext. 314 Laguna Be1ch Genaral _.!Otan REAL ESTATE lnC'. Reallors 19131 Brookhu1-st A\'t . * Spacious bedroo1ns * Un ique, Tri.le\'el-Con· 49•t.9-l73 549.-0316 BY THE SEA PAKOP.A\llC OCEAN VIEW Lu.xury & romfort by the sea i\lul lilevrl re d wood . <t just !'19 steps a1vay. <t bed· b a lconi e s , 3 BR. guide, hold your l1and until Construction &. permantnt Childrt'11 & pet 0 .K. between 9 and t pm to claim you're tirn11y .!n1renct)('d. financing needed. $35,000. Clos!" to your tickets. (North County / NC' experience nectssary. Oivncr 67l·2259. schools & shoppinh to:J-frtt nurnbe:r is 540-1220) i)red hill Huntln&;lo n Bearh Vacant Condominium ten1porary dt'sign * Prire -Un~Liel'able $67,000 546.2J13 T"OOms -5 halhs. Entr.rtain Jibrary-<lrn, 7 BA, uv, Realty in paneled fa mily room al-!!hop lrpl, am /Im, beam!!. Univ. Park Center, Irvine n1osphere or formal livi ng cptd . beaut drpi, 1 yr old. Call Anytime 833-0820 room. both have mas.c;ive Pric~d for quick We, Jui;t hoots\}·, integrity. 11111. * J ust oH Irvine Ave. * * "* * • tnane:u to listen. work and RICHARD PINCH Avail. mid.Jlllluary r:lve iood •ervic!'". $200 Month You ntl"d a car and at least 305 11th St. $600 to Sl500 as a. minimum Huntington Be•ch J[~] ~o 'THEREAL ~ESTATERS f·,-pla'''· \l'•tch th, Spi n-•·•2.000, Qu•n•r 497-16.30. TRANSFERRED owner Y.i!h comfort and convenience ... ... .,.... "'"'' Q ll f s 17811 A · •kers sail by from the <>las.'>-I -'~~'='~""~~=--I ~n o , caria &. 3 Ja,..,.,e bedroom.-: Il's "' EMERALD BAY ...... L 3 b 2'1 b• Sta' Investment strictly for equip-"You 11.re the: winnt r of me-nt and inventory. No fee 2 ticket!! ro the Duplexes Furn. or extra of any kind It<!Uir· South•rn California <.f't •, • I , • ., · ed pa tioon theroof.The.re.'s ,,ee n. r,' · ,,-been treshly painted and thf' liiiiiiiiliiii..,iiOiiiiiiiiOiii I Just listed! Attr. traditional ford lo\••nhse. 7 frplcB, ed Be an1biriou!I and Y.11J-Sports, V•c•tion OCEANF'RONT \\intt'r ftn- tal-2 br upper lnchxllnc garage '1. util. No children, no pets $200. 6'12·3429 '""-t' ,., nicely <lo•ood a special inrome featur,., 3 BR B l'v -d XI t bool ~" • MUST SELL If 100• A rare value at S69,j(X). · 3 a., !tP. 1 • ..... , crpts. rps, n !C s. a.nd ifs in mo\'e.in rondition. ,. J ust call 646-7171. din. rm. & fam. rm. cl:;':;'·=OOO=====~r::::i ini to expand_ Cash busi· & Rec.r•ation•I Real rors 673-4400 with good location, no ma111. 716 Emerald Bay $75.000 r ttnance. Just S20,500 11·i!J 011•ner has bought a nothe.r Shown by a11p0t_ Re•I E.11111, [..8] ness. Origi nal investment Vahicle Show t:an be returned in short at !hf' tln1e. ANAHEIM lmm•diat• Occupanc.y make it yours. home 51) this 4 bedroom. 2 Bill Grundy, Re•ltor G•neral ~lory house is pricPd to sell. 83.1 Dover Dr., NB 6424629 Requires only 6 to ~ hou~ CONVENTION Eastslde. S21D. 3 Br. 2 Ba . Duplax•• Unfurn. 350 COATS & WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0ptn Evtning1) * flRST TIME ADVERTISED .. $27,9.::C • :'\le~a Dl"I i'>Tar * F.H.A. + V.A. Tcrn1• • l &drooms 2 Baths * SHARP • Call 5'1&-ZJ\3 \oTHEREAL '.'\.. ESTA TERS I •I' (' rr·s Beach house: time. Bir- itlit selection evtr! See the DAILY PILOT Cl11..11l!ied Occupancy a vaila ble aftC'r J anuru-y ~th. Ideal location, I========== clo!e II) elf'mentary school. Fl!A-VA 1ern1s. S32,:iOO. Balboa Isla nd • COATS 3 BR. 2 ba, gar, patio. i;m & lo!. S10,IXXl down. carry 1st. WALLAC! 138 Topaz. 67J-0252 REALTORS I=="'====== • 962·4454 e Coron• del Mer OJMn Evening1 "'lll~~~~~~~I FIXER UPPER • Special! 3 Bdnll., 2 !)11th: l NEWPORT HEIGHTS blk. to lho l<'<h N"d' lol• 2 Homes On A Cornt'r Lot A Good ln1"C'!lmen1 Al $29,750 W•ll.-McCardl•, Rltr1. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.ilf. 541-7729 Suburbia Qr 11·ork' J u ~ r n:duc-ed SJ.000. 011 ner sailing Around thf" 11 orld & 1ra11 1s 11.ct.io n! $·l-l,950 OeL•ricy Re•\ Estat• 2828 E. Coa~1 Hv.y ., Cd:-01 644-tli!l Costa M••• Lido Isl• C•m•t•ry Lots/Crypts 156 per \\"l"ek of seriou!I alten· CENTER \Viii If.I'll ]ow down to exi st-----------1 tion L!ke: gttting retirtmtnt ini;: 51'.li~ 1'1-IA. Evts. Bkr. D•na Point pa.y, annuity or pension -J11nua1·.v :hid lhn.i 10th !13!1-6341 ' be I • Please rllll &12-56711, ext. 3141-~~-'-~~.,.-""'-.,,--------------1 enly better cause t KfOW!I. be:tll'et"n 9 and I pm to rla im 4 & Family, fl.1esa VErde. ATTRACTIVE 3 br dupl ex. Spacious Lida Home FOR SALE: 2 ceml'te:ryblots •••••••••• yOur ttcktt~, (North County Availabl~ Fl'h. lilt.I $E26j.l $230 mo. Ch!ldre11 ok. 33902 . 1 Harbor Rest, plot 341, P one toll·free. number is 54().1220) 4 BR/!an1!ly + poo , as -Alcazar or 870--0424· Pri1111? 3 r r. 2 ba. singe s.t&-6283 E-1 * • * side. Btst offer. Option slory. 3 Sunny patios. On NATIONALLY also. College Rlty 546-5&80 strl'."et to st:reet comer Jot ADVERTISED BR.A.'lDS Huntington B••ch & '!..Reduced tn $81.500. Condominiums division of UII Mortgag•S, 2 BR. unlurn. Crpts, drps, 1----------·I Prime Lido Nord for aale 160 1275 PROFIT DRIVE Trust D•eds 260 I child. No pets. $145/mo. 2 BR duplex -Rtove, retrl1. 5 BR., ~1~ ba. "iatertronl TIBURON TO\VNHOUSE Rr-DALLAS TEXAS 75247 l----------I 20i7 \\'a\lact, Apt 6, C.'\l. dshwshr, \\"shr/dryr, frplc, f I D k ' ' · t ~&f~&-~2~1~l9~·=='°"'""'=::7::: crpts, drps. SITO. Ava.II Jan hl•me, 60 t. ot. tc , Plt'r !!a lP, l Bedrm, 2 bath. one I 11.m 1n!cresttrl in mar(' in-2ND TRUST DEEDS 1: 1S. Adults 0~1 ... 1508 O\lw, & tloat. S2,'i0,00(). story. carpets, dl"&pc!I. Jo1·e-form&tion ahout making !or Sfl ll'. r.!ESA VERDE Exe.cuUve :)36-J52l '"'¥ Prim• Tip lY priva1e patio, dble gflr.. money In the \"('nd1ng hu~i-* CR ll 67:,....74~ * lloml'. parlilllly furn., adj l=========='I of Lido Isle air cond itioned. T11.ke over ness. t ha.Vt a c&r and 6.8 to gall rourse. Avail Jan. •.tA ··"" · 15th. s::oo1 mo. 54S-3569. Apts. Furn. .-u BrRut. 4 BR., ~1,.;, ba. homt GI loan 1vith only S24:..0 C~• hours pPr '."'eek &parr ti!"'-I 1~1 1 ,.'.;:;~"';:::~;.::.:.;;==-I·-'--"-------- \\"l!h 56 Jt. \rarer frontagt. + low closing rosts. O I can in1•ti;t S600 in a Houa•1 for Rent fl! 2 BR. Duplex. Gar. r\o pet~. G•n•ral Roon1 !l)r Ji.;ge-boat slips. Larwln Realty, Inc. route. . Adult~. St~tmo. 773 W-1 -----------1 Pr1t r S;j)(),000. 962-6,18 Anytime o I can inwst Sl:)(X) in • \\l ll~n. 54S-28D2. 'l RENTING> FURNITURI Bill Grundy, Rltr. ==========! route. Houus Furnished 300 2 BR. New crpl.!, drps, paint. COSTS LESS 81'.l Do\'r.r Dr., NB &12-4620 lncom• Pro,,.rty 166 Name ••••••••••..•••••.••••. gara.!:t . $155/mo. Cple only. ON STRATA CENTRO ::.:.==-'-"-"-::':c---1 Addrcs~ ··••••·••·•·••••••··· Gen•r•I No ~ts. 5¢S-1405, 64&-6i62. section now! Assumt 51;,,-.. VA Loan l;iiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiOiiiiiiii~ Spa c1011s 2420 sq ft. 5 bed· BEST BUYI 3 Bdrm~ .. 1 1~ ba!hs. Cuslon1 hu1lr. Pnced to i;cU a ! $24,000 4 B~roon1s, 3't Baths WANTED City ·················•·····•• 3 BR house. V.S Ba. Fenced l:'i Ft.+ Lal St.ale ............ Zip·······* NEAR BAY * yard. S225/n10. S2IO/mo yr. Street to Strata 15-25 AC 01' LAND P"OR P hone {o! ;··Z969A"""""". SIOO..Coniplelt'ly furn . Berhe. lease. 646-1246, 64M96L Complete: 1 BR. Fum. as low a!I sn per mo. I 00 '/. PURCHASE OPTION CLASSIFIED HOURS 8:00 s..m. to 5 p.m. fllonday lhn t Frld11.y 9 to noon SRturdey Advertiser.!! n1ay µlace their ads by telephone COSTA f\\ESA OFF1CE J30 'V. Bay 642-5678 f\'EwPORT BEACJT 221 1 \V. Balboa Blvd. 642·5678 J-IUNTINGTON" RF.ACI-t l 78i!i Beach Bh·d. 540·1220 LA r.UN A BEACll 222 t·ort>st Ave. 494·9466 SAN" Cl.E:'ITE:\"TE 305 ;-;. F:l CRn1 ~no !:ca.I 492·4420 r\Of":TI ! C0 Ul"TY dial frl'e 5•10-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Dl'lldlln,. for ropy &. ld llg it 5:30 p.m. lht> day be- fore p11bli c11 1inn, PXCf'llt t o r 1'11onday Et1ltlon 1vht>n deadline is Sa tur· day, 12 noon. CLASSl~IED REGULATIONS E.RRORS: Advt>rliSf'l"!ll shnuld check their ada daily i.. report f!rrors immediately. T HE OAJLY PILOT 11.s8ume11 l!abillly for the first in· correct insertion only. CANCE LLATIONS; Whrn klllln~ an ad bfo 11ure-to make ll rrr.<.1rd of the KILL NU!\IBEI? i:"iYPn you by ynur Ad taker u rttelpt of your 1 cancellaUon. Thi' kill nu1nber mu~l be pr€- sented by the-11dvertl1cr In eate of a disputt'. CANCELLATION 0 n CORR ECTION OF' NEW 1J:J BEFORE RUNNING; Every effort Is made to ktll or correct a n~w 111d that has ~n ordered, but \\.'t> cannot JUtlran· tee to do 10 until the ad h•-' appeared In the pa - "''· Ol?tiE·A-U NE ADS : Thn. atb Art strfclly cath In advan~ by mill or at any onl! of our of· flaL NO phon• ordtr1. Tl1'E DAILY Pl.LOT tt· 1trvts the rl_c:ht to cl11i1· .11lty. rdtl, cPn.!lor er rt· fu1e any adVi!rlt1tm•nt, ind to ehan1e lt.!1 ratr:it l. r1P1i\lll\liot11 without prior 11otl cr. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. O. Box l:W., Cost11 ?lfrs~ _,_ ___ _ CORBIN- MARTIN Si2.500 A 5 STAR p . \or Apl. Also 1 BR. $125. LEASE • 3 BR + family, LICO REALTY INC. MOlllL.E HOMI 'AR.K Av11.il no1v, 1 yr old. Xlnt area. Optlon 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 C11ll 1111 Dul•l1 * * * BLUE BEACON tn huy It pref. $275. 5.57-7653 REDUCE D S4 500 , 215 + 545·71 66 + JOHNILER * 645-0111 *3BR.Covcredpatio.Fncd R.avt'nnR, ..... ·ell fu rn. s.mall NEAT 4 pltx. lovely hii;: 2033 Port Brl1tol l=========""I yard. 7 gar +. Clttn! housr. lgf' Junny lot, Sjl .9:..0, roon1~. Xln! return, lncomt Nawport Beach SlS:./mo. Call 548--0336 ~ B•lboa ltl•nd Ind. Item selection 2·1 hr. delv. Month to r.-ID, CUSTOM Furniture R111tal 51 7 W, 19th, C.l\I, 548-M31 Anaheim 774.280() room , 3 bath, Fan1ily Room. Forn1111 Dining roon1. large rnas!l'r Bedroom. 2 flre. placrs, brick patio, C(>ncre!e drivey,·ay 'Vi!h room for boat & frailer, e-xcellr nt neigh borhood k location ho . • Beach. school!!, & s pp1ng. S•l2,900. Call now. 546.2313 10% down. 01\'ne r 675-~o43. S:.30 Pf'r fl11'l. Can arrana:e "Yoo al'f! the winner of REAL TORS 644-7662 ;-;-40• lot-Clean 3 hr, l financing wtSJOOO down. '!tickets tn I.he 3 Br new carpets otw pa int, 1----------:1 i;:11rdenPr, S2\0' mo, 1988 SO. Bayfront. winter !se. $.150 Pomona MD-9001. LaHabra 694·3708 ha, Newly rlf'{,'Orated. Large S-11.500 full prict . Owner. Southern Callfornl• 5 HOUSES patio. STl,500. Kl $-2jl2 6i3·7l78. Agt. Sports, Vacation On 60 X .10:1 lot Eastsi dc al1er 6 pn1. CORONA dt'I r.tar/4 incomt & R•cre1tlon•I n 1') VIC'\\': 3 Br. lite. pa!io.1 ~~~~·~"'-0-""'"'"""' I gar~·. 11·~hr/dryt r. Dock !or LG, 4 BR, 2 BA, new paint, 18 Jt. boBl Also other yrly lg. play yard. \~a..lk lo & '\\•ntr rP nlRl5. J ~la nd Rlty M"hool.!1 and park. S:i7-6898. 673-1200. 67~j3 evr 7 BR. Unlurn Dup!t x. Crpt&, PALM MESA APTS. iU'f'a. GOOCI monl'y·m11.kf'r:t;. 1 -.-.-4-0.~1,-t-.~c-1,-,-,-3~b-,.~7 unl!f. on 2 adj Jots, open V•hicl• Show Income S82-0 lllonth. Asking ba . """'ly re-clf'rnraled. beam ceil's, frp\',., under 1 BR FURN. S149.SO Bachelors Furnahe:d from $140. S69.900. · 1-1 500 $60,000. 01vnr 837-~47 e\·e i..argt' p;i.tlO. I . . a t tht" ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER r!rpg. Elderly <"Pl. Dayli 518-5390, eves 548--0422. $26 500 CALL e 646 •1414 KI 5-2:-.17 af1e:r 6 pm • l A.:.J."" Lots for S•I• 170 Corona dal Mar 2 BR apt.a $17!; mo. mo.I mo. OK e POO L Maia V•rde I i"!t:ALTY 7 On Tht Lot. 2 Btdroom ~ftr Ntwporl Po1l Offlft 1---------- ~!UST M'll by O\\'ntr. R-1 Jot co1•ner Do ver Or & liar-J anu!ll)' 2nd ihru 10th VIEW-VIEW . VIEW Huntington B•ac:fl Please call M7·S678~!. 314 QI tht oct'an tram this beaut. 1:i.1l\tAC. Ex. Jrg 3 Br, 2 behl•et.n 9 and 1 ,fml ia~m 3 BR. 2 Ba. !urn. home. Ba, duplt'X . Crpl, drp s, blt- your ticket1. INo_n.h ty Ava il. Jan. ls!. thru Junt tns, lr1t lovely priv. yard. e SAUNA e JACUZZI llnll~ & 1 Bedroom Gara;:;r. I JUST REDUCED Apr. nn l11r.c:e. E-side. lo!. Try !O S::."i,7:l(J for f!l st sa le! \'a· 10,. r do11"n. c-11.nr for fa~f p0sses~1on. 2000 Soi. fT , 4 l)l'drn1, !11.n11Jy $: N•wport !"PArale rl 1 n 1 n g. N('ar ~choo\s & ~hoppi ng. BArg~ln hun!Pr~ M'f" 1 hi.~ fa nt11.sr 11" fa111 il v h11mr. Fnr 111! dl'ri.il5 r1111 5!0-1 151. !!Pritagc Real ,, F•irvi•w 646-1811 !ors. (anytim•) 1-========= Founta in Vallay HOME ZONED FOR BUSINESS Sh11rp 7 Bedroom W/!iepAratt gar&~!'" + att11ched room in 1hri vina: busint~:I district. Vicinity ol 17th & fle\V Build. er:1 Emporium F'ull Prict $2:1,000, Call nOw for appl. to .see. 646· iltl \0 THE REAL ·'"'\.. J.:STATERS Macnab-Irvine Rt-alty Comp&.ny ESTATE OF ELEGANCE Ant l<nrt-door1 from 11 Vil la In Spain • lcadt'd window'° ~ 3 lireplace1 • brk:k court· yard and :'i,000 11Q. It. or ~le­ gan1, liva ble home \\'Ith • forever vWw or Ba)' afttl ~1ountllina: in Oovtr Shorts. $169,000_ Macnab-Irvine 642-1235 675-3270 REPOSSESSIONS Sparkli ng cle11.ii homea, 50me nc\\·ly painted & carpeted. 7, 3. 4 &. 5 bdrm~. Some: ·with pools. F1-IA-VA conv. tcrm.&, lrom Sl7,000 to $40.IXX",. Collin!! &. Watts Inc. 88'1.l Adsm1 Ave. 967·5.'iZ"l Huntington Be•c:fl DOUGLAS "F.i\tPLOYF:ES ATTN! \Valk lo \\'ark:! Sharp -4 hr, :l ba, alt bhn1 c.rpt1 lhn1- ou1, near !lchocil!I. Ut.e your GI Joan or take over 4 yr old GI 1011.n w/tola.I mon!IUY paymenta of $191. L•rwln Re•lty, Inc. 962·6911 Anytime $1000 Below Mark•t Assume GI Loan An )'Onto qull.l lf!e1, y ou r rerm!I!~ 3 Bc!dmi, l~t. b&, trplC. Nflwly painted oul- sirlt'. Im m ed poase:u! &47-8507 m,;4§ 11!!..'I WOW/$25,9501 01/FHA Termt L« k:Hchen. famlly rm. hrdwlf noora, crpt11. drp1. covt"red Fa. RESULTS YoU can Dre-parm. tl~rry1 peDd on. call the Super-HAIEFDAL RIAL TY s 1 I e • m , n .. oa.11y ruot 142 •• 05 OIU&lllt'd 642-Sliill a place · '°'=""'""'=·~-., your ad 6 Chllf'lt 11! LOVF:LY 3 Br . 2~\Trt- 1 t'd lth . F'onn din rm, 14x2(1' Tll E F••le11f L1t llw In the I p!\Otled lan1 rm ,..,./frplr. I \Vt"11t ... 1 D11il_v P llol fl.1a 1nt frrt_ll1h1ed bck yd. Cl11.~~iht'rl Ad. 6-12-~78 I o \\'nr 967·01 1C, * t·or M.le By 0Y>ne r * ft!W Pl. C.r.1. \Vinebrt.l(ht. Can-lrf"!' Conriomini\lm. Ex· 456 1th ~r Santa r.tonica rlu~11·C' j\\e~a Ver rl e . t 2131 :193-4019 Chn~tmas house, rt'd ci.rpet 1 "o~C~E~A~,~,..,,-,-, -to~C~o-.,-t~H~,-, 1rt11tn1t'nl , golO !.. rcrl rl r~pes R·3 proptrty, 11pprox. 12.000 t0ll ·fl'f!e nwnber 11 54(). ~ J5rh. Gar + huge prk"_::. Sl95. !!!!!!!"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I • * Call : 673-3663 675-8886 Ev es. Respon. married ad It 1 . HOLIDAY PLAZA 1561 .r.tesa Dr. C01ta MNa Phon• 5-46-9860 Frp!c. all blt~1 n k1 tch. 3 ~CJ. fr . Xlnl bu~inf's~ or home RH 2·1', ha Pool . Sp11n i.~h .,.1., "-, - A·rrr.NTION 842-32 .. 7~6--=::--""::---:::::;-DELUXE Spaclou11 1 BR D, lb t N -"ed -.-furn apt S135, Heated pool. 1str U ors •~ 1\10V F: Jn now l\lint. cond. po.~s1 1 1 y. ........ .....runa , <i rl'11:n 1...o~~ly gro u nds . SllO.fXXJ. t2l~l 244·1197. Perfer t 11.dul1 living. Ca.II I · Ill\ S Ample: parking, No chJJd. HUNTS new niu li·m on 4 BR. fa m &. d1n·.ll' rm, ren • no pets. 1965 Pomona, 11d\·ert!~rrl ~na.rk pac pro. r.t ere d i th homes nr cluct! NEED NO\\'~ rch11blr Broo kh llT!lt & Adams. $295 Cl\t_ nicn or won1 t'n in So. Calif. per mo, l~e. 842-4:>26. =-="'~!l--0='=''=· ·======I Ranch••, F • rms, · L h ,-,c-c-;o;;;o Balboa l1l•nd N t B ch to &e:l'Vice fast moving con Newport Beac 4 BR. 2 BA. 1 fitory S28.i · ~·~w~eoc::c'c.:...=•~·=----1 o""'rated products in co. g.e-...... mo l ·-. I•••• Call G roves 110 -LOVELY 5 llcte hl"lr~e no nch. "'" TOIVNHOUSE be I d ·~· ~· ........ DUPLEX new 3 br ranch hou1e c11tte: localloni , Commt'rcial t · au · me -Joyce 644-1791 , 546-2313. 2 2 • Bdrms., plu! owner·1 \\'/!ihllke roar + 8 11 fActory Part or lull ti me. ern, 3 br, 7 .~ ha, trplc. pa-1 ========== hidra1\·1y. f .A. heat, partial-amenities for co mplet e 10.12 ~s per v.-eek. No itll· lio, pool, 2-car jiaraee, all Ligun• B••ch ly furnished &. good terms. pleu ure. While fe~ pit'· ing. CA S ll REQUIRED. bltns, crpts, drp.o:. IA11.11e1co.==.;_o.... ____ _ 0 11'ner really anxious. ture book &etfin1t. r.tuat 1&c $1900.$3900 WrHe tor person-S375 I mo. Mr. Ruppert, OC EAN Canyon View: 7 br, DUPLEX • S500 r!own to reliable ~ ln1e~Y.'. glvl nr na me, 523.-1710 or 846-5991 eve1 or r!t'n, lrplc. w/1v crpta. Ap. \-2 BR., t.J BR. Good rent-b11yt'r. S29.~ full prll"~ ii addres1 &. phOnt no. to Dis· wkndt. pl/1valt. $235/mo. 494-Sfi25. 111 Joe Orterr<l for S41 ,950. Mild thla ~'etk. ~1766, trlbutonihl p Div. 51, P.O. <t Br. 7 ha, ls:e hoUle oN "You o~·n the 111.lld! 682-11'i7 Box Z4851, L.A. Calif. !m24. ~ach. 71Dl !'e-uho re. A.van Mes• Verde MORGAN REAL TY For an ad ta .ell around TIPED of that old turn.lture! thru Jun JD. S28.). CZlll d 2 ba f ed 667~3;~664~2===~6~7~5-64~S~t~~u.,~-~·~·~dfal~~M>-06~~~71.=d~l~r~;,.~ell~y~no~t~fha~l:::;;henl;;;:l;''96-==L9';:;l2~-==:====j3ya8:.· len.blk t~ ~~ls. ~ Sen Clem•nt• S730/mo. 1671 Gigler: By General Appl Only. 540--0093. G•n•r•I Gen•r•I SHORECLTFFS lovt'ly l br, RENT·LEASE or Leue op. 7 ba, view. Golf Course. tlon, 4 BR fl'f!1hly painted Adults only, 492--0360 In & out. $715/mo. 5-15-4083 5 R~f 11.pt, 2 BA, WIW crpts. V!ew. $325 mo. yrly, Dock priYf S. £73-7728 DARLING 7 BR. $185 tl'lcl utilities. \V\nt tr rental. C&ll mornings or e:ve11. 673-1978. B•lboa Peninaul• 301 Edrewater Ba,ytront two beautiful units. Choice Jocatlon. 3 BR, 7 BA , FPL. Private beach. From $250 mo. \Vlnte r. r.tr. Reblmon 642-7000. PENINSULA -1 3R furn. Adults only, no pets. Winter The Puzzle with the Bui/t,fn Chuckle. Sant• Ana Ntwport B••ch rental. $130/mo, Mi-0753 l;:;.:;"'-------1 alt.'6 PM 0 Jleorron~ lett9t1 of th• ,.--,,_ four Kromb!ed word1 be- lciw ro form four ,Jmpl• words I i Et i A,~ /1 I · r-N~Y ~G~A~M~_,1 jl . I I' / · I . r..,D7 E,.W_P..,_.I r-1,, !. , I' I I I Tho now longer skirt lengths . _ . . for women wlll become pop~ ;::::;;:::;::;:;'.;::_., lor bec:au• !My'JI cover o I C L A H E B I muhliudo of -. • e Com,1ttti "'' thU(lde 'qu11.ci I I I I I' ~ ::v:/!"Y,~ ~:o ~"I:'~. 0 ,.,NT NUMBE•fo lf1'JeltS IN ,, r I' 1• I' 1 7H~Sf SQUAlfS . _ . • • • e u~~l!~~e~N~~~~l llTT~lS I I I I I I SCRAM-Lns ANSWl!RS IN CLASSlflCATION 800 OLD 2 Br hie on ll aert. 4 BR/21,9 ba, 2 &try, -Y~EARL~~Y-2~br-.-W-.~...,,,--.-,,.-.1 $180. mo. t:l'fll.!/drps, pool. Clbhse Just painted, Ba,y view, l:==*="='-='='"=*==:7:1 Priv. Lae S!SO/rno. Inuned firepJace. $225. 67S-21M I" acc. &42-3U2 OCEANFJ'tONT l BR $Ul 1_H_ou_ .. _,..,u_n_f_u_,_n_. __ 3_os_1LG 3 Br. turn/unturn llrepl. yrty~ l " BR S125 wmtar, Gen•ral parktnr. ~t $XII). 2804 utU'a incl 673-4724 N•wport Blvd. NB. 931-9790 --OCUNi-aoNT Al'Ts * .IOCJ To lffCh University P•rk Vll)'. CLIWI SIS::. • Lovely 2 BR.. New * f'D..4921 * ~ri:~tlo, nice yard, Tot&: 4 BR., Fam. Rm. A din, nn. Coron• d•I M•r BLUE BEACON 211 ba. T\utJe l\ock .. 1361l1--------1 * 645 "l l I * 3 BR, D.R., 2 ba ....... $320 "V 3 BR, hm Rm, 2\1 ba. .. 13Dfl 1;,,_,B"'Uc;RM~-. "'+-,r"a::m:;;u::,-::.,.=-.,•fltllw.1 4 BR, tunfl)' nn., ~ ba. dlnlna: nn., hllllt~lrll.. brk. ZOO Sci. Ft, • • • • • •• • •• ·P'11 $300 a month. NO TEE, WE HAVE ona:RS! Newport, :WO.DZ. 3 BDIL\t., f'amUy rm .• par1c llke yard. Cotta Meaa . Kld1 OK, brk,, $200 a month. NO FEE. 54~1720. 11IE "Ye!Juw P11es•· of cla~1ltled , .. Dally P 11 o I Sf'rvloe Dlr.ctory. Chtock ti rnr rl'M> M.rvlr.• yon neM. ' I ' I I' 1111 1·llil I: 1·11l l11r "SIN lat W••tern Bank BldJ:, , University Park D•Y• lli.0101 Nlghl1 ._ ___ _ Pvt. bl.eh. nn A bL Nicely tum'd. No c:ookf.,., •n.eao< 1 BR, panellnc, w I• c.arpat1na, Pfl.lt. No peta. ... 11M9S2 .. l Bedroom F\lm apt wJ llrl;~. nrstmo. • Call 6~. * "MAKE Room For DJ0 dy'' •• c ltan out the 1u11e . .your truh ta 'vlth • Dally PUot "a•lftffl 1'd. J I ' • . Sf ttJ.ILY PILOT Mondaiy, January 4, 1971 '****************************~ Find -Your Name See .The~-Big Show FREE If your n•m• 11 li1ted In a specl•I •d.-lt could appe1r under any cf111iflc•· t ion, ao look at them 'all-phona 642-5671, Extension 314, betwHn 9 a.m. and t p.m . to maka arrangements to pick up your 2 frH show tickets at •ny con· venient DAILY PILOT office. ****************~************* .L -·-~ ~ wmr.u /~ &IOAn .. lmJ . 1£. ~ -· : • -_,~ lACIU DGPUY YACATIOl IDW • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Apt1. Furn. 360 Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 1-'-------- Costa Mesa Newport &.ech A New W•y To Live CASA de ORO in Newport Buch CASUAL Calif. Living in a OAKWOOD GARDEN ,varm ;>.tediterTanean atmos-APARTMENTS phtorr SpacioUll color t'O· On 16th Street btwn nrdin&ted apts • designed & Irvine and Dover Dr. furnlshed for style & com· I ,.,=-ol~71~4~1-o64~2~-l-1_7~0.,..~ fort e Hl'ated pool e Kitch. \\'TR. 2 BR. Util paid. Nr. en v.'/ indirt'<.'! lighting • bch & tilOttS. Sl45. 300 34th Dt>luxe PJ O, Adults only, No SI. N.B, See Bert Merriman pets. or tel. (673-77271 <539--3.3461 l BR.·S175 fun1. alt 6. except on \\"ed & UTI LITIES INCLUDED Sun 36.5 \\'. \\'ilson 6-\2.1971 OCE.'\t\FllONT • brand new, &.~autiful ] & 2 BR furn 3 br lowl'r, all e-xtras. $375 or unfurn apts. OFFERING: ffio Iii J unt! Li Will ton.<1ider :;eH clean. ovens. D/W (1n yearly lease. Referent-es 2 BrJ displs, shag erp!s, req'd. 548-9743 drrs. jacuzzi & Sauna balh. Just for Single Adults Huge Pool. FOR ADULTS SOUTH BAY CLUB onlY. APARTMENTS MERRIMAC WOODS Nawport Beach 42fl i\lerrimac: \\'ay 880 Irvine Ave, Cm;la i\1rsa (Irvine and JG!h) • • • • • • • • • I (714) 64.S..0550 $6 nite up $27.5() v.•k up STUDIO & l BR Ap13 * * $150 i\fONTH • 1 br • Color 'IV, phone sen:, pool apr, utilitles paid. • Linens, maid serv avail. * 304 3lrd SI. * Social dubroom.billianis, etc OCEANFRONT 2 Br, (rpl, Costa Mesa FROM $135 Spanish Garden Apt1. Con\'enirntly Located 1 & 2 Bedrooms Builr-ins Carpets & drapes Enclosed Garages Pool "-Recreation Rm. See; 160 \\', \\'ilson ... INVESTMENT COMf'ANY Real ton 673-4400 ORLEANS APTS-. ADULTS ONLY 2 & ~ Bli. Ava il. Private pa- tio, pool . !ndiv. laundry fac. (Nr. Orange Co. Airporl ; Tus. 11n at 17lh Sl; nr. \VeslcHlf).1 1741 Tuslin, Costa Me-sa. i\lgr, :\Trs. Thompson 642-4641 • • PICl.UP • WIPOS Live v.·here the tun i!! gar, $175 '\\i nter. Also 2 Br., THE GABLES . I • 23i6 Nel!.·port Bl\'d. SU.975.5 gar. $165winter. 6'73--0088. THE SEVILLE ApartmentsforRsit 11911 ApartmentsfrKRent jfiiill Apartmerrt:s fcrRent 1- • • • • ••••• I }"URN. apt. Util pd. $27.50 2 Br, 11J Ba, \I'/ gar. Adlts,1 ======::::'..'.:::::::: ~ . ~ 365 * 2 BR. Fum, $155. week. 224 Newport Blvd., crpts, d111:s. rangr, toed yd,1- POOL. Bltns. crpts, drpt;, o0 NB. &lli-9944. patio. 636·4120 Apt. Unfurn. children, no pets. 325-J E, 2439-G Orange Ave Sl:J5 17rh Pl, Cill. 548-273"' Apt. Unf'trn. 365 2li!S-E Santa Ana Ave Sl 55 Costa Mesa F':JRN I S l-I ED Ap t-S90 General VILLA MESA APTS. Bachelor apt Jor 1voman. ----------l 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. Sl4j • 2 BR. Ne w drps, crp!s, U!il pd. 181 Broadway. $l75 NEW APT. 2 cllr cncl'd gilr. Childrrn stove. Adults, no pets. Call 548--4316. ll'(')COlllf' no JlP\ll Jl\Case'. 642-58·18 CLEAN. l BR; 2 Brt, l 1::i • 2 BEDROOM • Sl6~ nl~. 719 \V. \\'ilson.13'-e~R~.-,0-.-.,-,.-,~11-,-,.-,-n~,, BA . Crpts, c!rps, lrg closets. • BEST LOCAT!ON e &16-1 2,l\ Swln1miJ1g pool. $1iJ. 10.JS-A Pool. Adl!s, no pets. Uril Bltns, lirep\ace, :shag car-NS Misslon Dr. 543--1882 ~ · 10 03~" pets, drape!, private patio HARBOR GREE I"'· ;>'"""" ,)(), DELUXE 2 hr. Adults O\'er $25 Per Week & Up & garages. GARDEN & STUDIO API'S 48 yrs only. St:iO. 26J--26j BACHELOR & l BR. 356 E. 20th St. Bach, 1. 2, 3 DR's. from SUO. 16th Place, CM. See Mgr. C.osta i\fc.~a 642-4905 ""00 I' t W CM 'JV & maid serv avail. ~370 e crson ay, · · LRG 2 BR. Crpts, drps, J 4:(1 Victoria, CJ\f, t·hild ok. Sl35 + dp. 211~ FIREPLACE _ sm. patio, \\'TLSO;'\ GARDENS AP'TS College A\•e No, 2, &1&--0627 turn & util paid, 1 Adult RENTAL FINDERS 2 BR Unfurn. Newly dee. only, No pets. $1Jj mo. Fret To Landlords ;o.·c,,..· c11L<i & drps. Spac East Bluff 64~20. gn1u11d.~. Adult<;, no prls., _________ _ 645.0111 Sl~O mo. T.l83 Fountain \\lay1· FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. 4J§W.1,rti,C•t.1 Mew t.:. (l!arbor, turn w, on <ho.·ner's home apt, 3 Br, 3 Exceptionally nical \\lilsonl. Ba. dl'n, frpl. eni;l dbl gar 2110 Newpor'f Blvd., CM LGE., comfortable 2 BR, Quiet Adult Living 2j()(} sq. tt. "I.JO/mo. 675-5033 elec! kilch, fircpt, nntio. Nr ....... ,,_ .. __ 2 BR 2•· BA 2 BR. Furn. 2nd floor, no ,,.. 1 & 2 BR, Shag cpts, bltns, '"' '"""'""· • '' · ocean & bnv, $195 vr!y, Bltn !cpl <-I dbl a• children, no pet~. 1563 Santa -v ~· ho•auf lndscpd. Sl50 & S1 70 s, · c, '"' g •· Ana Ave , Apt D, Ci\t. I='=''"='='="=·=======: incl aU utiJ. Adu I ls only no 752 Amigos \\'ay. 675-50:-13. 5-IS-966.5. Balboa Island per~. F t • V II I ROO~f, bath & ki1chrn, 1----------2·11 Avocado St. 6'16-0!li9 oun a1n a ey fol' nice Rduh person . S1!1.i, COZY l Br. apt, yrly, No LUXURY APT. 110 :\IE ALL NE\V VALLEY PARK Apt. Unfurn. Huntington Beach 365 Apt. Unfurn. Huntington Beach 365 cfa· Quinla fiermo:Ja Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her· mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree- lioed walk ways to yo ur apt. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED I BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $180 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings: live within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. 1'erraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ seculded seating con1pl. w/Ramada & Foun· lain. * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect li9hting. * Deluxe rang• & oven' * Plush shag crp_tg. * Bonus storage space * Cov. carport * Sculptured marble pullman & tile baths * Ele9•nt recreation room. FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Blk from 1-Iuntington Center, San Diego Frwy .. Go ldenwest Colle£e. San Diego FrY.1y. to Beach Blvd., So. on Beach 3 blks. to fl olt; W. on I-Iolt to ..• LoQu;nto Hermoso 714: 847-5441 utir pd. 2191 !£arbor Bl\·d, pets. Squarrs only, Refs. l\1ESA VERDfo; AREA S200 C~t S165 + util's. 673.15'.13. 3 BR., 2 Baths, f1rrplace; 1 BR. New. BC'aUI , furri . LSE 2 BR, 2 Ba unf. Slove, lnrge, private patio, 2 car For FA1'1JLIES \Vith pre· l-"'='='='='='='='='=="''='='='='='='='='=:o= No mo to mo. Adult! only. r<'lrig, cpts/drps, AdJts i.:arai.:e. NL'nr f reewa y. school children only. Newport Beach Huntington Beach 2220 EldC'.n. 64&-9278 eves. only. No pets. 67;,...-0486. Arl11lts. ~1-16-4016 '.l & 3 BR and 2 BR Studio • BEAUT. Bach. & l llr. l'E\V Unfurn 1 B:r. apt. S160 to S215 1---C-A_S_A_d_l_S_O_L--IP-A--R-K_N_E_\_V_P_O_R_T __ -,-a-,.- apts. S35.00 \l'kly & "'· Balboa Peninsula \V /bl!ns, crpts, d r P s, 37236 South Euclid, FV e J 1· lk •-I 51 • d~hi~·hr, nll util inc I . (Just South or \Varnt'rl rce 1vg OVt'r g Int'" \~·ater. Furn., incl ut! · !1-16--01 • OCEANFRONT 2 BR $235 SL10/mo. l nq. 301 Avocado, (714) 540-4785 Charniinl!, casual, nrw apts 7 pools , 1 tennis els $/:iO,OOO ACAPULCO Apt~ atlractivr, yrly, util'• furnished. Ph: Apt !I. 6~~S~. at the ht'!lth. Sra .. From SIT:> to $.-15().. Pool, Uri\ paid, Garden 673-4724 H . B ch Bach. l or 2 Br. Also 2 living. AduHs, no pets. 2 BR * * NE\V 2 & 3 BR. Shag unhngton e a l Bit Frn1n $14:1 sly 'J\111·nhouses. Elec. kl. S175 • 1 BR S145. 1800 Corona del Mar C'rpls. d11'hhr, gar. Only 3 2 Bl{, :Fron1 S:ll:.i pn. pat or bal Subtm parkg, \\'allacr Ave ., c .:-.1. neighbors in your Bldg. Sublease On Beach 21661 arookh11rs1 ~' llB '1P1 ma id scr cp1s, drps Just Child ok. Nr. S. Coast (7 14 ) 962-6653° N I F h. ! t t J l BR. furn. apt. Heated l'ool. Pt .. 0 1913 54-2321 · 0 as ion s 8 am-aza.""""' · or ;>--L...,. 1 Bit, Oruy $200 AITR,\l . 2 n r. lro1n $139. horee &. San Joaquin !!ills No pe1s. Chlldr"f'n ok. See ~ -"'' at 126 "°lontr Vista. c:-.f . ~.,,, NEW TOWNHOUSE 2 Br, 2 Ba. Only S2'li AU f':1;tras. Pool. K1rls & Rrl. &1-1-1900 for leasing info. f:1, --· 2 BR 1~.;, Ba. & 2 BR. Crplg, 2 Br w/ocf'an view&, Pf'IS ok. 11441 l\C'elson-D. sE,\CUFF ;\laoor A pts . JC~~rt:u~ ~~u!:~~~:~ ... • drp~, seH deaning gas ov-484 sq' priv d!.'Ck, Only S300 847-Sl.l\ fl68..7.'>\0. Spcc. holiday discount + ON TEN A,......,..,. rn, e.ncl gar. Patios, 548-3605 1''urn11ure availablr n1on1hly disr. $1~3--$160. 1 & C:\l. fi.16-1160 or 545--0760. ~ H •. gt p ·1· L B • 2 R , B I d 377 \V, \VJlson. un 1n on ac1 IC aguna eacri R, 1 ~ ' . crpls, rps, Be The Guest of -the DAILY PILOT .................. 1~1 ... ·---*--*---*---*--~* Trader's Paradise Sant• Ana Apt. Unfurn. 365 VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Unfurn • Di11hwa.sher • color coordinat- lines times dollars ed appliances • plush shagl'--------------------' carpet • choice of l color schemes • 2 baths • stall CAPISTRANO C.7.0NED showers • m!rro:-ed ward-•I + Ac1'l's, free & clear, robe doors • indirect light-SIJ0,000. TRADE FOR ifl- ing in kitchen • breaklast L'On1e or ??? bar • huge private fenced REALTOR 548-mI palio • plush landscaping • Owner 11·lJJ trade 25i11 equity brick Bar-B-Q's ·large heat-u1 6.)l\I Exc"c::utive 3 Bil 2 ~ pools & lanai. BA hOme in Arcadia for 3101 So. Bristol St. be<1cti or Ori1ige Co. units. (lh IVli. N. of So. Coas: Plaza) ZIJ-:l~).7372 C"Ollrct. Santi An• PHONE: 557·8200 f'ully equipprd fllill & rotd "ll~~~~~~~~~ laundry est 12 yrs value • --Sl2,000,' suit coupl~. Ex. CAN'T BE BEAT """'' mobilo 0' m"0" home or sm hOusc. 518-:i&ID SINGLE STOR '{ South Sea Atmosphere 2 BR. ~ 2 BAT!{ cat'pets & drps Air Condilloned Private Patios l!EATED POOL Plrnty ot lawrr Hide-8\\'ay-Fantas!ic recre- ahon 40 ac. Nr Lake Sha.sta. Only S•W7.5() ac. S4.000 eq for hse lot ? Add 80 ac avail. ~Ir 0Meyer 549.1366, 54&-5880 * * \\'ant mobile home hom!', land, or ? l!AVE 1966 Olds 4-dr sedan, also trust deed!, View R-1 lot, $16,000 equity, fo" income, TD or ? 'farbell Realtor ,:. 5-W-1720 ~ Ask for Naon11 One acre zoriet'I rommercial nr professional across from hosruial, Exchange for uni~ TD's or land. l"ortin Co. 642.:JOOO. HIGH DESERT for Heal!.h \\'ANT Calif • Nev, 2-3 M elev, HAVE Cl cor. 90x 117 2 bldgs, '68,llOO eq • ;~2.000 inc. $415 mo, Own- er, c r.t 64&85511. * * Carport & Storage lHDDEN VILLAGE GARDEN APTS. 2500 South Salta Rentals I~ I ···1 ·'· I~ 1-=====1 Santa Ana Q S.1&-l 52:i Rooms 400 Office Rental 440 COSTA l\lesa great !l:>r SUPEH .. DELUXE QUALITY Westcliff student furn & util paid, 1·2·3 room, up lo 3,00) aq, ·--------11 mi, tron1 OCC $5J 1110. I t. oflice .suites. lmmed. DC· Sl65 . 2 BR. N{'W shag, bltns, &12-8.120. cupanry, Orange County. d 1 b d ·r 1----------· I /.irport Irvine Commerc· ht . poo • m cei Lngs. FEMALE Only Jdeal for Complex, l!dj. Airporter Quiet adHs no p ets, · . . 64z..2514 • student Furn & utU. paid. Hotel & Restaurant, banks, -==========I Close to schools ;7.l mo. S.'ln Diego & N'pt Fwys, -6'12-8520. UNCRO\\'DED PARKING Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Rentals to Sher• 430 General NEED Girl lo share LOWEST RATES Ownrr/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr. Rm. 8, Ne,,..•port Beach 833-32'13 Courtesy to Broken Business Rental 445 ----------1 beauh!ul Bal lsle house 2 BR. Unrurn S l 4 O · \\'/same. Your $hare SIIS Cpl~/drps, bltns. Gar avl t c ll 613-160:> aft No pels. 71 I Indianapolis. pe -mo. a HB. Also 1 Br. furn. Adlts.1.,:5p~m=, ----~--7 IOf'FlCE, STORE, nr. N'pt. Pool. Carport. 560 \V . SECTi'" has furniture, :seek· Bch. P061. Ofc. & Greyhound Hamilton, C~I. S.15--0760. ing apt/home w/1voman. depoL 1JX22. S7S mo. lse. ===='=======I Non smoker. Local refs. Graham Realty 646-2414 Costa Masa 646-S:ilO. STORE. 826 W. l 9th St .• Ci\1. =;i~~~i.ii!iii~jiiiim f i1~VA~N~'~T~E~D-C~o~o~g:'"~;~,t~ta~d~y:;:to $115/ mo. * 548-.1761 I 5hr love-ly NB Bluffs him. VILLA CORDOVA """'· all privl. SSO/mo, Industrial Rental 450 644--0369. NEW NEW NEW SflARE my wat{'rfront home w/ dock. Man, 3G-60 yean;, $150/mi;>. 675--4331 Luxury 40 Unit Adult Apartment Complex 1 & l BEDROOMS FURNISHED OR UN FURN. e SJX"('ial cabinrt space • l..Qck garagrs w I lg slnr • Bm Ct'il • Lndry • Patios • D1vhr/di~p] • Gas s!O\'e • ~pecial soundproohne; • Shag carpets, drapes GAS & WATER PAID (NO POOL ) • COUPLE WANTS TO e SHARE 1-fOME * * 645-3787 * * Offic• Rental 440 • * * GEORGE ANDERSON 684 Thalia Laguna Beach ''ou are the winner of '.! tickc!s lo the Southern California Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show SMALL UNITS COSTA MESA $95 & Sl-15 010. l mmed OCCU• pancy. 66(). 775 sq ft , * NEW BUILDING* 1280 sq ft units: ollicc, rest· room, ll0·220 power, plenty o! parking. l 81h & \Vhlltler Avf'., Costa r.1csa. C. Robert Na1tns11, Realtor Oisla i\tesa 642·1485 NE\V Bldg. 1728 to 2300 sq. fL Nr. Baker and Fairview, l yr lease. Sullivan , $-W-4129. RENT ~1·1, 112;; sq fl. $125 mo. Jl'l:l Ul~an, no. 4, Co1ta l\lesa. tiT;>o--5116 u .. ~11~1 P~~;:arC•pgl~·. p~ Y!~: l~;la:-Jurnpn'•.ltp&~~ BRAND NEW Eas!side 1 & 2 patio, pool, children i1-rl- ., ,_._, RR. l & 2 baths. S155 to OCEAN \'II<\\' • Lrg 1 & L'Omr. 1~25 PI a Ce n I i a, 900 Sea I...a.ne, CdM 644-2till S195. Crpts, rps, s "' r, 7u. Ocean Ave ., JI.[;, • • 1111 urn ap1:<:. rps, · ' · 2323 Elden Ave, (MacArthur n:-O»st Hwy) self clean gas O\'rn, e!l wtr $36-]4~7 drps, b!1-1n~. pa1 1os, \\'alk. * BA YFRONT * CM Huntington Bead1 & gas pd. lltd pool. 321 E. ing diloltnnt·" 10 1011·n. 100 :11 thC' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Sl.l5. 54S-140j, 646-6762. Poala. Tenn:ls. Contnt'l Bktst. d d h h APARTMENTS ,, Bl' 1 C 1 ~-1~~'2 ~ T11anagcrl by Ct rr ,, '. B I ll1i.;h-r1sc '2 BR's from $2'9.i. L•L ""32 642 11 BEAUTJF'UL FUfu"J. AP'l'S. NEW DUPLEX 20th St. 646-9148. ~'i\liam \\.alter' Co. i r , ... aguna cac i -uv or • 21 $l·ll}.S J65. Quirt, priv, par io, 2 Priv. patio. Enclosed garage, l -i!G:<O~LinD.-;;MAEE1Dl.AULLLIICO~Nil-,2~;B~d~'.'....::.'.'.:~2~8~t~h,-· 11="="='-=''-'"~'======= 3 s1dr 11e slips 11\'atlablr. .Tanu;iry 2nrl ttiru lO!h ll>'arrlrol>l's, frplc, dressini;: Cl\rpt'led & drepe,J. Comp. i\!odern 2 Br. l ~ Ba. crp\1, rms. • 3 fil:?.2"..02 BA0-!ELOR5oNLY_J_BL; ~cnse f'rill 6~'..'·5678· E'lit. ~14 rm, lockrd l'il'p, gar, Pool. built-Ins. Jmmar. landscap-drp~, CE kit. Encl. gar. Irvine 2 BH, carpetrd, draped, 11car <tpl al! util's paid. Call •twcr,.~ .. ~ nn ~pmhl0Crla1m !'iaunn . Rec rm. N o F-EE RE"T hra,...11 S\illd!'Ck, ~ai·age, 5-lfi-7!172 your 1..,..<'ts. (, o.rt ounty lng! 3 BR, 3 ba. Price re-Many huury rxtra~. r. • \\'«'ks ·"' " .. • . .1 I========== I' It r •--540 ·~1 17301 Kt>e.L..on Ln. (I hlk \'/. "''<1sh1ng lac1. Ye & r l y , o ·rec 11un1.,.,r is ..,..,....u .... 0 .. ,, I [j] of Beach Dlvd. on Slater). duced to S::OO ?Cr mon!h, hus . Sl55. Adults.120 E. Wtl1 SJ50 J\fONTII . POOL NOW LEASING! 61~:-lfl7S eves b "'knd~, * * * 1 r ,75.,050 0 , B" 2 BA. Sunken living l n<"I cpt/drp~, kids OK Huntington Beach Announcements 500 * 8-IZ..7848. "· ""''lo\ "'-I H .B N"ll'. family and adulL~ unit~ e VIEIV \PT L" t'm room, frp!c, balcony, "'v.<OJ ucaware, . 1 • • .,. ., LUX, 1 Br. 220 12th St, --·e·rrrra .. a. SlOO/mo. \~') Bak<"r. Avail . &l2-2'Z21; al!Cl' 3 p.m. 5.1.6-11116 11-·lrh total rocrealion club fin•pi., Ki1c11. ha, 1 Adlt-Huntington Granada lLB. 1 BR.-2 BR, 2 BA. l/\/71. s.IO--OB9G, S.l0-'2.i70. I BR. near ~ell, ne\\•Jy and PN'-School. 1. :t, & 3 only S\7j, Util's. & gar. *DELUXE* Office ?<par e available, Tl\'O executive suitc1 <no sq Ir * * * See Mgr, '219 l:lth St, 11.B. * CORO O TS bdnns fron1 $150. Nr. shop. lnt"l'd. 6~2-6889 LID AP * l & 2 BR. unturn. Pool. Elec decorated \\'/pool .St40 per pins:;, golf, :s1:hools. Jusf I o-=~~c"-7.-~~~ 1 BR t.Tedallion Cc.ndo: All 2 BR Studio. Unfurn. All & 11,tr pd. Adults, no pc"ts. mo .. Also. 2 br.. bltns & south of SM Diego Fwy. on 2 BR. Sludio, 1 ~~ BA. Crp\s, bltins. relrig, cncl/paHo, elec. dshwhr. dbl .... .......-& MESA MANOR. "'l IV. "· frig. c,rpts & drps. $150 drps, fishwhr, bltn o\'en . ...... .,,.., • ..., Culver Dr., Irvine. 833-3733. ,,,. ''' =o 4°•1911 pool. Quiel. Sl30. 675-5034 lrg pool. JlOO & up, 673-3378 \Vilson Ave, CM. 548-7405 incl ur~l s. a. .....,,,,,,, or :.+. • I , ba I TrndC'W1nds Realty, &17-8511 PARK WEST 1 BEDROOt-1, n<>1r heh. Sl30 EXEctrnW: ' Br, 2~1 Ba, 3 4: bdm1s , new crpt.s APARTMENTS Thank you for reading our :;~~l Tradel\'inds Rt'alty, 2300 .sq. ft. Frpl, bltns. gar. drps. No pels. Chldrn~ OK, 2 BR unrurn. Sl40 / mo. Owned and l>IAnagcd by classified ads, hope "''e have S 3 4. 5 Im o. Is e, 714 A1·aJ1 Jan. lst. $165/mo, Crpls drps bltns ret'.ri~. The ln•ine ~cnnpa.ey ht>l()ed }'Oil or can do llO in S1Z'>-Sl35. LGE, modem l br Golc.enrod. 968-8658 54;,..72~5 Caraie avail. No Pets. 711 the Juture. nr bch: rl'J)ts. drf)ll, etc. 2 BR, FrplC'. Stove/Re!rig. NR . nriv 2 Br, 11;1, Ba , Indianapolis, H.B. 545--0760 409 Calif. ~261 . 847·5169 New 1hg crpt, encl gar. cpt/drp~, :;tv/dshwhr, gar. DELUXE Bachelor Uni!s • S195fmo. No pets. 6~1109. A,·] now, 7&6 \V, \\'Uson.I~~~~~~~~~"" Walk to Occan. Ulll pd. 2 BR-Upper, crpl!, drps, &12-79"j$ WALK TO OCEAN LINDBORG CO. 53&-2579 sk:lve, rt tr i a:.. ~ar, ATTRAC. 2 Br 11~ Ba Studio 1 BR. Crpts. drps, some \V/ wa1h/dcyr. Sl90. 67!>-7478 apt. Crpls, ' drps, bltns, lrplc & patios. $130-$150 per 1 BR. apt unfurn. for adllit ~lr\1:. Pool. No pets. mo. Adu I ls. $135+ utll/mo. 646-6610 LINDBORG CO. 5.1&-'2.S79 SINGLE, TV, pool, pet1 ok. $25 & llP v.·kJy . DANA Marlo.a Inn 34Ul Coast Hwy. Call 837-2941 eves. • NEW LUXURY 1 & 2 Br. BEACHBLUFF Apts L•tun• a..ch * RENTALS * LAGUNA BEACH !A). 2 bdrm. turn. wilt, lge. tree &haded J)IUo, 150 )«is. to beach. Lease @ n 65 Mo. CBI . 2 bdnn., 2 bl.th, view, clolc to beach " eveiythlnr;, P'lreP~. charm. Okltt Costa Mete DELUXE TOWNHOUSES ON NEWPORT BACK BAY 3 le 4 BJt.3 Ba. Frplc, tam room. double 1arage, Buul lounie. Pool. Billiards. Adult I: Oilldttbl area S250/mo. 64UIJIO, &t0-5147 .,. .. wt """' pandllne. • MAR11NIQUI! • Lruc @ l2SO Mo. ""· IC.) 3 bdrm. oldor "'""'· Pork-Like ... -Intl CkJM tn JocaUon. T\n'l)lace.. DELUXE 1·2 A J BR APTS. Kitchen w/ruwe I: f'llffir. Aleo JURN, BAOIELOfl Ol.oh.W ....... @ $300 Mo. ,.,,, potlao * Hid Pooll MISSION REALTY Nr lhop'r • Multi onl¥ 985 S. Coast Hwy. lTn Santa Ana Ave, CM Phot'le f94 ·0T31 --Mir. Apt lll e 646-550 nrE Faa1ell draw ln t?M! \\'est . . • Dally PUot Clu1ifled A('!. 642-567& $1~ • LRG J Br, crpt.s, drpL bltm, pa.Uo, no pela. Wkda)'.s aft 5:30, 5'1~1867 I Uwhr, !hog crpl, gllTage". Ne.w l BR, 2 Ba, di~h\\'SSh· Pool & Rec. Quiet adult e~. p:x>I, patio, 8231 Ellis, living &12-i470. 84Z.S.177 or 847.3957, S30 v.·k-1 pt>r, "'/kit SJS. WALK TO BEACH 11 Maid ser, linent, TV & tele. LOVEL).".NE\V l & 2 BR's Seal.ark M~tel 2301 Npt Crpr!', drps, dii:h"'&.shcra: Blvd. ~744;:i. 709 PA.1m. 847-3957 * DELUXE 1 & 2 B.R. A1TRAC. 2 Dr. from $139. Garden Ap!s. Bit-Ins, priv. All extras. Pool. Kids & patio. ht'ated pool, frplc. pets ok l744l Keelson·D Adulls. $145 mo. 546-.'il63. 847-833.i.' 968-7510 · SHARP L&. 1 br, crpt/df'P3, STONEHENGE bltins, Qult't bld'g. Infant Ext'lusive 2 Br 2 Ba furn OK. St.30. ~ o r $185, Unfum si.ss. c;aj1 now ~2682. SJG.3\0'7. \V~'re fri~y. :t\i BR. 11it BA. l!IKI peUe, NEW 2 br, '.l ba, trplc, 1hag pool, w1h/dry, tctv/n!I, cpu, crptz (!rps bltns gar Nr drpz, Pet.Ink. ;180. 8JO.S886. beach. Sl75'. ~1. ' BRANO NEW 3-PLEX * l hr uni Apt. Enci()5{'d 2 BR. Garage. Dt:!raa, garage. Adult. only, SIIO I l<'!L Sl 7!'). 64~3.'>-ti mo. 84i-t549. $180, 2 BR, 2 hi! 1!udlo, NEW 2 DR. Crp1~. drp11, redrc, c::pt/drps, adj 11hop·g. stove, patio, ga r age . 548-8301, 2.ll/Ml2-.l227 $16a/mo. Ph, ~ Apt. Unfurn. 365Apt. Unfurn. Fountain Valley Fountain Valley :Jounlairu MediterranfMlll Sryle Luxury 1&%Bodn>01111-Zllalhl Adalt 1Jvln1 Flanllllod A VDlanlisbod 365 1 BR. From S135 anrl 708 sq fr\ e.ach \\'ilh 3 WILLIAM THOMAS 2 BR. 2 bi\. }"rom S15J oHiccs. Large receplion 231 F Avocado St. Sep FAt\.nLY SECllON for roon1s, Cooocl storage, Ade. Cost• Mesi children ur.drr 5. quatc parking. Located )'ou are the winner of Just South of \Vllf'TK'r across from the Orange 2 tickets to the on Golden \Vest, ll.B, Cou11tY Airport, 4:PW can1pus Southern California (714) 847-IOSS Dr. Newporl Bch. ·Contact Sports, V1c1tlon ~~~=~~~~--! Pacesetter llomes for furth· & Recreational 1 & 2 BR",,, FROi\1 S135 er info: S.1&8801. Ovrrlooking beaut garden!----------· t V1hicle Show pat;o & htd poot. Adwt•. DESK SPACE "the JO:ta 12th St, across from 22Z Forest Ave nu~ ANAHEIM Lake Park. 5.'!6-2692 CONVENTION logune Beoch CENTER Newport Blach 494-9466 January 2nd lhru 10th ::,::VA::l:'."L-::N::Ol::V-. ::B::E::A::u=T=IF=u=r.l~-o=E~S~K=S;:;:P:.,A_c=E~-1 Please call &12.fi6711, e'lrt. 314 PARK NEWPORT. Luxury • between 9 and 1 pm to claim living in Bache lor apt 305 No. El Camrno Ra•I )1'.lur tickets. (Nonh County overlooking pool & ocean. S•n Cl•ment• toll-tree number Jz SttJ.1?1>) Phone 644-5703 6.2-4420 * * * R1nt1ls Rooms CORONA DEL MAR II~ J 2 Rm suite, pvt ba, pvt enlr. Prkg, crpl/drp, uUI pd, $145/mo. Owner. 673-6757 400 lXt..fi00-1.aJO liq, ft. l!UNTINGTON' Be11.ch -stu-OFFICES, S60--S'90-S1SO. dent pre le1i'Cd kllchen & Co11t11 1'-lc!la. 64S.ZT30 bath privileges. S7a & $55. * XLNT OFFICE Space Fum, ulll paid. 642--8j.2(), Now Avail. LIOO BLOG. ltOOM Jor working man. Kit·l'°':n;;~-~V=lao=L:Okbc:=·=.N-'B"'.°"613-1="°"'°'=>1 chen Priv. E. CM 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB * 6t2-<ml6 • ON nl!: BAY * ru PER Wttk • up 615-2.464 or SC.fi032 wlkltchens. S17.50 per ftf!k 1670 SANTA ANA. AVE, CM • up Aplll. MOTEL. 548-9755 35c 8Cf. loot LARGE pleasant, Working 675-2464 or 5"l·5032 I man orily Costa Mesa area. WILL Provide omCE for Call &l&-7504. • a Sec. Service in exchange • • \V H IT E ELEPllANTS" for services. S.~9689. j overrunning your house? * NEWPORT BEAOf Civic I ··cash". ,q,1.1 1hem thru c,nlcr 300 ft to 1000 ft. Daily Pilot Classified A.nzw & M?CtttariAJ 675-1601. Personals 530 WILL PAY N~ ride d111ly to & from work. Live in Laguna • Y.'Ol"k in Costa Mefl8. lloUNi & to 5. Call &t2-t3Zl, e~I 270; hOme 494-5739. YOGA FOR MODERNS Fn!e Intro clU!lt'e: Tue1 alt RI 3 pm, Thurs nite (Jan 71 a~ 8 pm, Also Sal &: Wed mornings, ?rot teachen. Yoga Center 4'5 E J7U. St.C.M.~ • S'WINGER Orange C o . Guide. F'rtt Info OCSG P. 0 , Box 2111, Anaheim, 9280-1. 5.19-!mT . ALCOl lOLrcs Anonymout. Phone 542-721 7 or write lo P, 0 . Box 1223 Costa MHa, DAil V PllOT 3!J Mad•-1~1 --. J[j] I -... ·-I~ I l[Il] I -~·· J ~I ILilJ I l[Il] I l[Il] I J[Il] I Li ...... ln\lloJn••t Announcements 500 Announcements 500 Roollnt WANTED OVERWEIGHT /LADIES statistics for rapid permanent weight loss, conducted by qualified physical culturists. Mu st be a minimum of 20 pounds over .. weight have transportation and not current· ly under doctor's care. All inquirie s complete- ly confidential. For weight reducing program to establish BEFORE You bizy, r.all T. Guy Roofinc Co. Raaiw.r 1 peel al l 1t, &4 5-:l'TMl, ~9590. Sewlne/ Alteration• • Dreuma.kin1 -Alterations Special On Hem• Cal Jo * &f6...M46 Alterations -641-5845 Neat, accW'Ate, 20 yean exp. Tile * Verne, The Tile :'\.1an * Cust. work. Imtall & repslr.i. !:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!No job t.oo smJ. P1ast~r paictiing. Leaking shower 1 l~=='=~='=..,='="""==!'::q~j ' ""·-·._.-,.,..,.,.. ,~ repair. 847-l.9!!7/&46-0106. . . -y,.....,. CERA.;'VllC TU' work. f"Tff est No job too small. S>;-"'6 Found (fr•• ads) 550 Contractor ---------ITop Soil SMAW.. Ork blue baronet ROO~I Additioru-. L. T.1 -~-------- purst>. vie 19th & Placenlla Construction, Sin1le story or Top Soll; Sandy Loam 950 Dogwood. 2. Estfm., plans -' ia)'l'.lut. LYMAN LANDSCAPING f'OUND Beaulilul rlox1e red 847-tatI. 633-7636 female Vic ol cr..1 5J~TI81 :L C7.1c=·~o~c=,-,~ •• -.~lt.~m-od..,..,l~i,-.-. I;==========:::;;::::::; 5-12-7096. add~ru. roofing, painting &: Employment I[ I I ] repairs. 540-7858, 54(1.76&(, . f Lo st SSS Remodeling * Additions SlOO Rl::\\'ARD lor re1urn or inlo l('Adin):: to return ot \Vh1l('/Apricot Toy Poodle, fem!, lost Ch1Uhnas eve Vic 161 h .Sr Orang(', C:\1. Owner very gricvP.d . f\46-9516. KARL E. KENDALL Licensed-Bonded 5.JS-1537 BEAUTY Adviso r "' G demonstratf' exciting nl!w ardening producl.!. No door to door AL'S GARDENING Sellin~ required, new com· cam., ... Equipment Holp Wolltod, M & r 710 Holp WontoO, Ma r 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M & F 710 IOI Gxec Office Mana~er Top position with fast grow- ing property nanagem.m.t • group. Mu.t bti familiar with accounting, data pro- • COOK'S HELPER -:!I JIOUSEKEEPEJt, Live In. daya each Wttk. No nltea Spanish apeakina: 0 , J\. or week ends, TntJn for 49!>-5438 after 5 p.m. CHE F, Burrou1h'a HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. Cafeltria, Paul Maxwell, Ceor&e Allen Byland Agen- ?.lgr, ll(l...l23.2 Ext 433 cy 106-8 E, 16th, S.A. CUSJ'ODIAN 011.)'!I I o r 547--0395. sel"Vice contractor. Counties 1 -~H~U~N=T~IN~c=ro=N~B~EA~' ~a=i-1 finest bide., ~n'I clHlllna:. UNtON exper. only, So ulhco, JIIGH SCHOOL DIST, S46-M22. JtEAVY DUTY DENTAL Assistant. Ma.lure, exp'd woman over 28. Musi be neat, meticuloua:, in- terested. Work with )'oung dentist 4 days a WN!k. Good benel1l.! .r. salary. ca.11 from Mon. Jan. 4 on. 645-1060. DENTAL RECEPrIONJst .. Dealr: only_ Exp'd, Proficient with Insurance. Afternoon to eve bra. (l~ or 9 pm), 80me Sat'I . Salary open, trlflle beDefita, Ph: anytlrne (H.3. area) 8 am-9 pm_ 846-35«1. D.M.V. -Ml:::CHANIC- $686 to $848 MONTH Required: H.S. graduauon or equ iv . a.nd 3 yrs. journeyman eK~r. in automollve me<::han1c.s. Ap- plications mu~t bf.-in the Personnel Ofc. beJrore 4:30 pm, Jan. 7rh, 1902 -l71h St. Hunt. Bch. cnsini'. &: all genen.1 office Contract girl, exper. proetdures. Typ.nc &: SH. Xln't opportllnlcy. only. Leval S'ec 'y Xln 't uoominr a must Young &. mAture. Secretary CASHIER &-rvice Dept. auto agency, Must fyf>", NIGUEL PERSONNEL AGENCY Salary Open, Exper. req'd. Under JO, Gd cypist, lite SH tS!enorette also usedl. Love- ly N.B. ofc. Hrs 9-5. 'lR.V!NE PERSONNEL SERYICfS_..,AGENCY Clerk Typist bene!its. SERVICE CENTER Employment Agency · *Bookkooper .... $60Q 1 Girl of~· w/CaTftr f\J tw'c/ t>XIWrlanttd to c!Olilln~ & T.8./accur typi&t/fee split & rr.lmbursed. *G•I Frld1y .... $400 1'""'ron! otc, bUJy j;>b W/xln't SOL.AGOR telephoto leN 80Clmm F.S Bnnd ne'IV PIO. 54f.-0776 Gar19e Sale 112 MISC i'lcluMhold items • furniture. Se.t lo-t, 2420 E. 22nd SI. Back Bay, N .B. Household Goods 114 co/i d typlng, but oo SH LIKE NEW rcq'd/ opror !or Bdv1n1. Kinr 11~ Satin beadapread, *Keypunch Opr. $430 shocklng pink, cost ovtt $80 Min, 1 Yr exper/punch to new. Sell tor only PJ. tape or card. 6444687 *Steno/Typist ... $450 --------- An xln'1 job for someone ""ho Miscellaneous 111 loves 10 type & is &d at it. ----------1 Top co & benefits. * * * Other Free/Fee Jobs STEVE LEGERE 500 Newport Center Dr., NB SU!te ~ I 644.4981 SERVICE STATION AT· TENDANT &ll ahilt!'I open. Apply i.n person, 4678 Cam- pus Dr., Nev.-pt Bch. SERV. estab. Fuller Brush rle, $125-$175 \\'k. to st., also pt time . 5-16-5745 SERVICE Sta.Atte ndant graveyard shifT. Apply at 3195 Harbor Bl"d. C.M. TYPIST 126 Cadiz San Clem1nt• You ~ the winner cl 2 bcketa to the Southern Callfoml• Sports, Vacatkwl & Recreational Vehicle Show at Ute ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER "CHARLIE"', Blk. ma I e Beagle terrier, vie. Bolsa Chica & He ll. Re: 846-3466 a.nyti1nr. for Gardening&. sm&U land-pany-le!s grow toie-ther. acaplng services call ~fil98 1 cc~"71=84,-7 _ _..,~"-· -----Frnt ottief!, public contact. Serving Newport. CdM, Cos. YOUNG Attractive woman 1a Mesa, Dover Shores, seeks pos. in secy/recpl, \\'estclill. PBX or adverHsina; field. ---~------1 Very dependable & in- 27635 Forbes Road Laguna Niguel 131-1477 Newport Personn•I Agency 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3870 Pleasant informal of'Ua! In Tustin. Good general ottlce background & typing. Br1£11t & flexible, Young group. $<100. Fee paid by c.o. Good typist. Call Loraine, 645-mo, \\'estcliff Personnel Agency, January 2nd thru lOtti Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 bem.'een 9 and 1 pm to claim your tickets, (North County toll·free number ls ~lttl) * • .. 2043 We1tclilt Drive (Al!iO * AUCTION * t"LUFFY Gray male cal, vie. Orang" &: i\1ai nolia 121211 .!)48-MOS. STOR.~ REPAIR telligent MS.8149. 'f'ree work, surgery, brae.inc; 1 ~="""-~----­prune. Landscp in al.irtt AIDES - For convalescenn!, ln1tructlon 1 1 J• ] cleanup jobs. Time open. elderly can or family care. Profess Gard!!ner. George l="='=m=•=m=ak='="=·="='-6681.=== 646-5893. Schools & instructions "AL=·s~1.an~7,~-•p7;,-,-. """'T"",~•""'e Help Want•d, M & F 710 lll removal. Yard remodeling, ARTiflCIAL LIMB Trash hauling, lot cleanup. • MANUFACTURING • Discov•r a Gre•t New Car11r With Th• Repair sprinklers 673-1166, MATURE, CLEAN-CUT, EUROPEAN LANDSCAPEH. H.S. GRAD, SER VI CE Clean up • Trf.i Surgery COMPLETED. AIRLINES Reasonable. Eves. 4~l We will train for molrl· GEN Cleanup, tree &. sprnklr ing al plastic, artiifcial i;l;'n.'. Rototil . HllJldym&n, feet. Phof"ll! for appointment odd jobs. Reas. 646-5848 ~ KlNGSLEY MFG. CO, * A natuni.1 for young people who want e-xcitement plus! Ticket Agent? Air Freight? Station age n t7 Reserva. tions? Ramp or travel 11gent? \Ve'll train you for theSe and mart', day or nite. , We include placement as-- sisW!ce. EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener 548-6116 10 am lo J pm C umrlete Garden i ng Servlce. Kamalani, 646--4676. BA B Y S I T T E R /Hskpr. 2-children 5.7. Live in, Eng Complete Yard Carel speak. Ref's. 893--7892. Jlt-.1 540-4837 1 =a~A~K=E=R~Y7.~MC:-.,-c,,--m-,~k• donuts. Work 6 nites \\'k. Genera l S•rvices Perm. Clean cut. Trotter's RAIN Gullers Inst 11. 11 e d , Bakery, 2.'H Fol'l!st Ave., Est 71 yr'!, ApprovM for Laguna Beach. V t Et. 'hi · tl!Uti. Quahty \\'Ork. Reasonable. eerans, 1g1 eins on BE Au TI FICATION under the federally Insured Free est. 968-2208. ==========I movemcn1 nf'ed& ~pl~ 11·ho student loan prorram. y,•i!i \\'Ork for xlnt P•Y· Hauling Airline Schools Pacific 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana 54:1.6596 PIANO Lessort~ your home certitied te-achers. Music Sy1tems. Mr. Hathcock. 64&-1368 , ............ ~ .. I~ * * * A. E. BAUMGARTNER 1807 Port Seabourne Way, Newport Beach You are th& winner of 2 tickets to the Southern C.elifornia Sports, Vac•tion & R•cr•ational Vehicl• Show at !he Babysitting ANAHEIM LOVELY lge cl~an home !or CONVENTION your baby. CoOO care. CENTER. Rell.'IOnable . C:'ol. 64&-5537 ,Tanuary 2nd Ihm JOth BABYSITIING n1y heme Please call 642·5678, ext. 314 any1imt. Ironing, $1 50 p<."r bt'twtcn 9 and 1 pm to claim hr. C111l 645-3092 your tickets. (North County I~="'="""'~"-~~~~ toll-free nun1bcr is 540-1220) YOUNG J\lother y,•\11 babysit * * * 2-3 yr old in my home , Call 673-5417. TRASH & Gan.ge clean-up, 7 I========== I days. $10 ll load. "Free est Carpenter Anytime, 54S-5031. CARPENTRY I Hou1ecl•aning ~fTNOR REPAIRS. No Job . . Too Small. Cab~ In ar-1 Mesa O!!aning ~n.'lce . g Carpels v.1ndo.,.·s floors etc. a.ge8 & othe r cabinet!. .Re.s i_ Commc·i 54.S-'lUI 54!Hl175 U no 11nswer leave · msg at 646-2371 H. O I HOUSE OF' CLEAN Anl1ersnn Comple1e House Cleanlnt 642-6824 QUAL1TY 11 nodcra l1 Gen.========== tarp, s111 ;;rn. conc::tr fr('P Maintenanc• quole ,t., dci;li;:n Call J<cn. 6-l;>-0014: 64&-2C12 llA:"D\'.\1A/'ol will do plum· RJ-:~lODELING & P.cpa1r bing & moblle home repain . Spt>cialisl. Comm'!, residr.n-fi~114.i tial. Panrling, c 11 h l n e Is. I========== marlite, formicll . 64·1-7598. Adtlition~ * Jtemodelin& ('.erwick & Son, Llc. 67l-f>(Ml * ~19--7170 LET !he Swede do it. Repair, remodel &: patios. 673-$417, 494-'7R.'"i3 Carpet Servi ce Diamond Carpel aeaning New Year Special! fl"t'e J\.1\nor fup11lrlng Wl1h Cle&nlng 400' SM. Free e11. 64!>-1317 C•ilings PAINT Accou~tlcal $1 0 f'A or trade. or 636-3110 Cell1ng11, 531-&927, Moving "F"REE HELP" pl&r1ning "MOVrNG". Cut moving costs. For inJonn11tion • John or Dorolhy Fuller 492. 775L Painting & Paperhanging No Wutin£ *WALLPAPER* When you call "Mac" 548-1444 646-lnl YNT/Exte:r painting. Free est. Local rers. Llc'd & ins. Accoustical Ceili.np. Call Chuck, 645-0809. INT/Exler Painti.ni. Free. est. Ref's. Immed, SUvlce. 646--0210, &U-3014. Cem•nt, Concret• PAINTING. Ex t-Int. 18 yn. ~xper. Ins. Lie. Free est MORE Conett!& patio for Ac:coust. Ce ilings, 96S.9126' Jess money. Artl1tlc setllna. PAJNTING: Qualicy int ' Lie., call Max 11t 614-0687 exler work. Insured, free l'JtEE Est. Sii.wing, break· e,1, 673-2276 alt 4pm. 536-4084 . BLUE OOLPHIN e FRY COOK . Apply in per. !90n, 3355 Via Lido, Newpon Beach. BE a koscot coametie11 re pusentative. F"an!utic oppor. for qualified (>!!non. We train. Guar. Clientele. 548-9840 or 646-2919. BOOKKEEPER Rental E.xp. C11U Loraine, 645.2770, \Vcslclif! Personnel Agrncy, 2043 WestcliU Dr., N.B. CARRIER BOYS WANTED for the DAILY PILOT Dana Point, San Juan Capiltnno Md Ol.p1stra.no Beach. Cont.act Mr. Seay flt DAILY PILOT San Clemenle of.lice 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 COASTAL AGENCY A rncmher of ~nrll1ng &. Snelling Inc. SALES MANAGER Dtper. In mobile homes. Must rclOC11te. Sta.M Sl5.0CO + bonus. Call IIelc.n Hayes. MEDICAL RECEPT, Fron! desk. plu&h new ofc. Some-exPt'r. in in11.1n.ntt forms & ml'dicP.l term1. Gt-flt'ro.is fimt' for lunch Al home, Start $400. Call Urda ..,,_ MGMT. TRAINEE Shafll In handling people "- mrocy. Br\ght Mure. St&n $5700. Call He\l!n Hayes. GIRL FRIDAY Looking fot' advanttnu~nl. tn a we:ll known f'.irm ? SH k typlnc skills. GN;at futuJ'!'! S1art ssoo. eau unda ~"" SALES COORDINATOR Mohi.le bonv:1. F\iture f!X' eneraetic penon. S t 11 r t se&OO. Call Jiel<!ll Ha)"l!s. Ing, hauJlng I tktploldlng. PAINTING: Honest ruann. Service &. quality. 541-8663. teed work. Llc'd. LOcu re.f's, CEM ENT WORK. no Job too Call 6'5-5740 ..rt 5, CASHIER ·•maU, rcA!Onahle. Free l========== Exper. ~ fQr pl w/1yping Estim. H. StuRlck, SU-8615. Pl11t1r, Petch, Rep1lr &kills. l<koe.J loc. Start u;o. ee CONCRETE. Floors, Call Linde LM. I job ... *' PATCH PL.ASTER.ING patios. Aey a te ....... u . C.a.11 Don &t2--8514. All type.s. F'rM ettimatn GIRL FRIDAY !='"'======== ~==C=ol=l=540'68Z====I Fuetnatina oppor. fl)r Mn· Child C•re bHI~ ll!C:'>'· Pub!le c6n· 1----------Plumbing tact, hv)o phonta. Start ~. EXPER. Child Cani my 1------------I Ct!I Htlt'l'l Hayer. home, Warner A Sprlnada.I• PLUMBING REPAIR area, 84&--.'"i7G Nd job too small DAYCARE: 7 Diiiy ~k. Hot e 642-313 • mc11.ls 11nd play area. In S£U.rNG Your boat? "Lil:t"' 'C.M. &f6..&llT with u11 .. sell it fut. Dally You don't need a run to Pllot Oassified. 642-5678 Dnw Fast wh&n you plact THE SUN NEVER SETS oa 11.n ad in the DAILY PILOT PUot Clu11fltd • 540-6855 2790 Harbor Blvd. Coet• Ml1• T.YPlni & SH. Some ac<:tngl~~~~~~'!"'!!!!!!!!! & hasi""' Good ....,ten· EXPERIENCED Den t a l Loon Processor 1~ Job•). Fine Furniture pure ·-.· ..-chairside asziliuint. South Salary Open. Female, exper · VA R IE D Sa I e s -Sa 1 es & Appliances IBA/VA, Spot, single fam-Girl Friday mgt.-pcrsonnel exp. College Auctions Friday, 7:30 .,.m. tlal. Laguna Office, Mon · Fri. X..;a,ys. Send resume to 32341 Cout Hwy, So . Laguna. ily rr.sidence 11-4 units\. .rrad., married, d~itts pos. d Package on tracts. Lovely 1 Girl office. Bookkttping w/challenge &: 0 pp 1 y. Win y's Auction Beim ne1v ofcNof eiitab 1 Jirm. 10 T.B. Abilicy to \\'Ork \\1th Resume on rr.g, p h : 2075% Newport, CM 646-8686 ewpor 962-1453. Be.hind Tony's Bldg. Mat'L Accountl Receivable Experienced Hole! Maid 6 days a week CALL 494-1196 Personnel Agency the public. 1 "wcAIT=RESS==-.---. w-.,,~,-..,.,.,..by GAS r an g e $35, Chest! 833 Dover Or .• N.B. health rr.staurant, Must be d rawers $8 a: Jl.5. 642-3170 neat, a ttract. & ettlcient. TV works KOOd ;J.S. le Betwn 21·l5. Call 64fr9780 Coleman kel'Ollene he&te:r betwn 5 6: 6pm or &ft ll:30 $20. Comp kitchen dbl 1ink pm. & cabinet $25. Lots ot Uled \VAITitESS, exp'd. Apply everything. Jake's, 117 E . 2052 Newport, C.M. Brunch _18=".c.:S~t.~C~·~"~·~~~--I FUU.ER Brush sales & eerv. Property manaaement & N. B. are& $2.65 hr to at. r.1ANUFACTURING Engin- 832-05-18. ~ or. Tec~iclan to cle-Company w/good if"O"ll.1.h op- computeT exptr. helpful. * FULL CHGE BKKPR '-elop Jigs. fixtures, aSM."m· H'.vy d'"-. A•-Ove lo * COsr ACCOUNTANT bly procedures. M11.cGregor porttmlty requires lop call-"" •uc• Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia, . . Call for appointment 962-7776 Cosla Mesa. ber secrt"lary. >.1n't Wary. detail. Young enttusiuhc Mon/Fri. .,.,,., .. c"r°'R"L-•~·~/re::::t>~il°'<=ro~d~l~I -.,=re ~~l~AL forOff~~k n ~~i~e~ exf>t'r. Must type, neat ap. Must be able to type and Acct./ Bookkff~r House. FOR SALE WELCOUIE Wagon I nt' I. Used double lier locken. Fair needs Hosttisses, \\'ell condition. J\.lr. Laney, Dally groomed, c ar nee. Pllot. 636-3292/~745. PIANO Kimball Coflkllette pearance. Perm. p:>aitlon. have general knowledge ol ITI4) 846-335."i/ (213) 11~1 592-2900 office procedures. P. O. Box Full set or books thru T.B. Merthandlst .. Secretary . 598 Laguna Beach 92652. . *' GffiL FRIDAY, part time I N=o~R~T°'HW""E~sr""'o~u•i'-,~1o=rm:::,c. & Dnancial rtatemenu. Per '=======::'.:=:::: walnut tlnish, Xlnt cond. $450. Lg dlx chair ot· loman $250. le awing set $25. 675-4595 sales Re-ceptlonist and GeneraJ R 1 Girl ot!ltt. Must bl! ofc. Possibility ol full lime lion. Alaska j oh Op· tential! Newport area, Antiques 800 F OR sale: Used 4' fluorn- d. ·o..,. at latrr dal•. 171 w. 1711, portun!tie!. "* LABORERS oriented . Dutie11 1versi =· S ~50 -.1·k. * TRUCK Typina: &. SH. A CArttr po- SJ ti on! Medical Front Office Exper. neoeuary. Hoo rs 9am.tipm w/'2 hr lunch. No Saturdays. Unilonn op!:);)n - •L Junior Secretary SI., Costa i\1esa. DRIVERS 1775 v.·k. For in- i----------form. send sell addressed enw-lope lo P.O. Box 1521, Dentel Assistant HELP YOUR HUSBAND I Ontario, Calif. 91762 Front ottice &. cha.ir assist--O~PE~RS="-~~l~Nc'G~LE~~N=E=E~D~LE,,­ s""". mach. Exp'd only, ant. Pre.fl'.'!" l'xptr. girl. No You can earn up to $12.50 In ·~­ an hour takin.r orders trom sportswear, gd. pay. N.B. weekends. your friends, neii;hbors and ~""=-"~'~'~· -::=:-c:::--""-:;-: relatives !or Studio Girl's Prr Frr opp:ir w Div of G•neral Office beautiM Good Housekeep. Gen Fooda $25-$100 "''k up. ing approved WIGS, WIG-Help w e:xciting cosmetic LETS, F AU.S and cosme-hu1, learn prof beauty ttca! 11ecrets. No exp nee, No Good tlq>ioi:, door to door. B-12-2664 Construction Top prnlitJ. No territory ~- 1tricttons. Also 1ell wherl! you \\'Ork. Fu!l time-or spare hoUl"l'I. Side line OK. Phone PAINTER, Full time, Exj)'d, 11rray & brush req'd. cusrom helptul.. ln!erior furni11hings. f7141 5"0-2860 . loJl frtt ll()0.62l4mi or write I -----------1 STUDIO Gm.L HOLLY- WOOD, DEPT. NC-11>4, lJ461 '1'ypins 50, Sl1 70. A good Hart St, No. Hollywood, Ca. PBX Operalor, answering 11erv, e-xp. prel'd, ?t1idnight shift. Steady YJOrk. 5£8881 . SPECIAL 91605 for l ull inJormation training position for n.reer Rnd free samples by mail. QUIET, middle-aged couple desitt woman for general cleaning 2 mornings a "''e!!k. Own transportation. PH minded )'OUnl lady. Secretary For a fut grnwing import carnPMy, Good t;ypiric & SH llkil\11, Front ottict ap- pearance. No one will call on you. All replie!I confidential. Phone 1oday. OR 3-2618 HOSPITALJTI'JI OSTESS REAL ESTATE SALES SERVICE, haa openings in Join a going orianiza!ion & W!!stmirt1lt'r lor mature ~tart the new year rlih!: y,·omen looking for In-Bonus CQmmlssion p I an . teresting, p11n hme work, Only 2 openings. Call for Jn . y,·elcom1ng nf'\\'COme?':'I bl tf'rv1rw, Bud Cor bin • Paul your area. Se.l!!s e xp . J\.larUn. desirable. /l.1ust have car. CALL: ~7..J095 CORBIN-MARTIN 1---------1 REAL TORS 644-7662 SPECIAL SPECIAL * * MIKE BOW 1018 B Mission Costa Mesa * cent fixtures, $5 each, u ii, Contact Mr. Laney or !\In. Greenman. Daily Pilot, 330 West Bay, O:lsta t>.1esa You are the winner o1 :2 !Jckets io the Southern California Sports, Vacation & Recreation•! V•hlcle Show .. ""' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER January 2nd thru 10th Please call 642-5678. ext. 314 betwel!n 9 and l pm to claim your tickr-ts. (North County toll-free number is 540-12:20) • • • SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS AC'Ct'ss -J\.fangy -Wiped - Ble&ch -SHINS The new longer skirt lengths for won1en will be- come popular because they'!( cover a multitude of SHINS, 21)% oli e-n lire slOC'k during JAN. Gl11ss , china, flepression glass, furniture. Bric-A-Brae Shoppe, 850 w. 19th, C.M. CARPET Layen have lh&g & oomm'I twttd crpll, Deal direct. Exper in!taller. Can finance. 539-8327, 8774740 MUSI' Sell all: Fur:n, app· .. .l:randma clock, col TV, piano, toys. 962-2119. Miscellaneous Wanted WANTED 120 Parts for Honda 25().3()()..JOS Scrambler. Gas tank, rear fender, carburetors, chain guard, iieat, wirina, etc. 962-7689 2 YOUNG GIRLS ?fttd FREE Furniture, in &ood C1lnd!tion, PLEASE CALL: 64fi...6972. Office Furniture/ Equip. 124 Refin'd 34xOO wood dealts, $69.50 • Refin'd wood arm rotary chain, $29.50 • We have the largest stlectlon of used oruce 1um 1n um ..... Me Mahan DeUr 1800 Newport Blvd. 642-8450 ==========I LT. gree-n Generalaire met.J Applianc•s 802 de.!.k w/file-drawer . In addition we will be :W"x60". 646-8510 SF.ARS Kenmore Ranges-=:=:o=========I TIRED of that old furniture~ ti's rf!ally not that hard RESTA URA1''T; ~1ale, nites. General Office to ~place. Just watch thr. f·emale, part llme days. lnt•rviewing this wtek furniture &. mlacellaflE'QU~ Exp/Req'd. Apply aftr 3P~1 coium!ll! 1n the Cluailled JEDRO'S. 3000 B r isto l , for a VERY SPECIAL Drlll'lif!. P/tim~ rm-'1 months, Secti()n. C.M. F rei&hl damaged, savings up lo S·IO. fully ~11ran1ecd . Sl::ARS, Adams at J\.1agnolia liunt!ngton Beach, 962-7781. P ianot/Or9ans 126 thrn run time. l Girl ott!ce. -EMPLOYER that Help Wanted, M & F 710 H•lp Want•d, M & F 710 Is FRIGIDAIRE auto. washer, FINAL YEAR END CLEAR OUT Must have 1ood. stneral st•fflng • ntw office In & \Vestinghouse <'lee. dryer, good cond. Both !or $6.i Guar. & delivered. 546-8672, 847-!!115 of Pianos & Org•ns ?t11lny at wholMale pricet \VARD'S BALDWIN sruoro I819 Newport Blvd, 642-MM Hammond, Steinway, Yamaha. New .l uRd ptanoe o~ most make!. Best bu;rs bl So. Calli. at Schmidt Mw:Jc Co., 1907 N. Main, Santa Ana.. Receptionist For an attractive )'(llJJ'l lady who l'nJo.Yll public contact & heaY)I phones. 'I)pin& 50 up. Secretary 1 to 2 ye&n EllCt'OW t)(J)tt- 1~. No Sft Ooeing 111tate- mtnts &: funlliar w/docu· inents. Al•t. UIMlentriter PerM>nal line&, ~tine on MllOI .l tQ:neo O'l!r"Dttl. No trainee. • 411 W. CHOI Hwy. Nowport ... ch ~n Restaurant ANNOUNCING ANOTHER Exclli"ll Cocoj AND We wlll accept •ppllc1tions for - • WAITRESSES • BUS BOYS • DISHWASRERS • HOSTESSES •COOKS • BARTENDERS • COCKTAIL WAITRESS!S Starllnt Docombor 29 f :OM :OO Dolly Apply In P•rson 24001 Avenlcla de 11 Carlota L.,uno.Hllls Santa Ana or San Diego Frwy. to El Toro Rd. -Corner of El Toro Rd. and Avanlda de la Carlota. Owned by Far West Sorvlcu, Inc. Operators of Snack Shops, Coco's Reuben'&, Reuben E. Lee, 'The Whaler, Jsador1'1 {' I this are• ••• REQUIREMENTS ARE: Typi"ll &/or 10 koy added. A ple1s1nt out· KEN:\lORE auto. washe-r, xlnt cond. $65. Guaranteed &. ~hvettd. 546-8672, 847-8115 * LARGE CLEAN REFRIGERATOR $35 * 64&-7820 AMANA uprl&ht fr eezer. Clean. $115. "'~""' Auction KIMBALL consoktte walnut fln~h. Xlnt cond. "5(1. 67>-459• S.wl"ll Machlnoo 121 vol"' """°"'111y. good m;0iiiNiiidiiut"iuiiiciTiiidNjjiiii grooming & llta work 1970 Sinpr Zi1-Zaa .Auto, beauttflll walnut console. Make1 button h oles. overcuta .earns, b 11 n d helTlll", desl1na etc. Guu. $44.44 celb, or smell pymts. 545--tl238. b1ckpround. THESE OPENINGS ARE IMMIDIATEI ANTIQUES-IMPORTS UNREDEEMEO PLliDGES *REPAIRS* Clean, oil A adJUet your ma. chine In your hOme. Spec. COAST PAWN & ial $3.95, oil 'Mlrl< ......... AUCTION HOUSE -'""""'"-· ......,..;.;;;.;;;;;;;.;...· ---1 Jin. 6, 7:30 p.m. 642-MOO 2426 Newport Blvd., CM ---~--- Sportl"f Ooodo SURPBOARDS 6'10" "GrHk" )ow nUtt, clean 1Mpe, MO. '1'0" '"Gl'ffl" ptnl&U SZ, fM.1742 '88 E. 17th {at Irvine) Fumlture 110 --------TV, Radio, Hll'I, Costa Mesa 642·1470 I DREXEL doubt. dnut.r Steret .. '"°· Kl-bd~ llOO. I --''-"''--------1 Both beautitlll cond. MAGNAVOX U'' ~ 6'U929 TV • stand, ,,._. A lllli LOVELY Sofa, never u.tld, n&w, acr'lfioe. ~UU quilted ttora.. acotchlUli'ded 23.. Motorow ~ color' Sl.25. Mstchlna loV'tttat $15. TV $150. 130-8337. • 66-3911 .. * CUffl>M J"O'RNiriJRE DIAL dlNc:t iiiiiiii. i5l0iP RtNTAJ,. ~ ad dUI your ad, t:ben sit "'* and 4000. C.11 5404481 u .... "' !II' -rlnot ' I • , I • I f ' • l!!f DA!l.Y P110T -· ~ •, ltn _F_REE_To_v_ou_ll n-' l[i]l nn;u·~ l[i] I .......... !§] 1. ---I§] I .......... l§l I ,..,...... l§J I ..... .,... !§J I ......... l§J •,e=.rahM~~~~l-'T"-ruc=k;.;• _____ N2 __ T_ruc_kt ______ ff_2 Auto Service, Perts ff6 Auto1, Import.cl ~...,. ' ~i • • • FIAT 910 Auto., Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, UMd VOLKSWAGEN BUICK 990 Autoo, UMd FORD "° n= ,,bou, 1 ,..,,, ..... G. M. C. TRUCK CENTER ~~Np~:~ cement ..m and W'lg!"&ded· ''THEY'RE HERE" Coit• Mesa Sl'lvel. You haUl. 962-02S1 71 GMC CAMPlrt SPECIAL Yoo are ine winner ot V< H D I I $ 2 tickets tt1 the 3 Year old female minWare Power braket, ' • apt ngs, 3295 Southern CaUfornl11 ~,_, P.?U trainelld<. ply,,,..,, ready for big campi11r. Sports, Vacatjon ~l><Wl (11 055n (Stk. # 1005) & Rocrutlonal FREE adult New Zealand CALL 5 4 6 . 6 7 5 0 V•hlcl• Show TOYOTA '66 VW '62 BUICK Sk;yla.rlt, V-8, auto ~ BILL MAXEY C-n with oon-Int~-tra .... -'°""·· $300 ... "THINK" IOl\1dl (Al '°'· "'""' .xhaual, """ like """ ofll'f.' ""°"' ~l.182 IT • T new. STL-1$84999 l~a:::ft"'er~5"='p"m.:;.=w;: .. =,kda.,..,.y-;•o;•,,,• "DJ0fl i•t B"•Cff llLVD. CHICK IVERSON .~·~~:;,;:'.':'.::~..,, Xlot 'liJlj .,.. r• condition. $12&1 ~ Hunt. llffcft 147-15-YW .,. ""' • TOP mAI .. CLEAN USl.D .CAR.I See Andy Brown THIODOlll rnale l"l.bblt, 00-8223 before 24 hr. Phan• 3 ppi.. 114 EW 124 CPc. DEMO '"""""°'""-·•""' • -at I.he $2795 ,69 TOYOTA 549-3031 Ext. fi6 or 67 QUICK ~ '62 Buick Spec. 2060 Rar~·Btvd. 1 ANAHEIM S.. 1970 HARBOR BLVD, ALSO '62 Pontiac Temp. Colta Me.a I ROBINS FGRD FEMALE Poodle""" good SALES e SERVICE ;:~hlldttn 4 "' 0i1i UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE CONVENTION ''fRla.& IUllm'' Cord11• Station 'Wagon COSTA MESA Wag. $199 ea. TI4: 646-5312 IQ.0014 . R WLAIWU\ White w/black interior, Like 1--,,,69=""vw='""s'"eda-.--n-""' I CENTE 1n,. llACH ILYD. oow. Llo. XWW8 CADILLAC 1'66 Fairi&no · l!lO Stallon •I DUTCH RabbU 6 4 2-8 2 2 3 2150 Harbor Blvd., Coste Mesa January 2nd thru 10th fHwy. Jf) $1299 ---------·I Waa, air, kl~ mil. $1.18). 1 11 Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 893-7566 • 537.QU CHICK IYERSON Radio, heater. IZSR.939) CAD. l965 SEO. OE VIll.E Call crlg. owner. f0..6Hl before 3 PM. 1/4 between 9 and 1 pm to claim NEW.USE0.SERV. $1595 Factory a Ir cond!Uontng, li'i:"°"='=':maey=::;"":::::;"":;:'===I your tickets. {North County VW ,l=="="=.,.=:::-:::::=='.'::f~::::".1 1 _c_•_m_po_r_.,_s_._1_•l_R_•_"_'_920 __ M_o_b_1_1._H_o_m_•_• ___ 93_s ~11-tree numi: is 541).~ ~ ~~6R66Brv~ :1i!~ ~~ !~~:: ~ MERCURY > N •71 D_..un OUR New Year's Gift to You. '68 V\V Engine, 1£00cc, gqm·· fl COSTA ~ 053'· SI66G I Dogs IS4 ew Ul;;J Chapman had a good year nu::e can1, $275: Plus trans, • -~~~=~~~--1 • NABERS • '62 MERC Colony Pk win-. 1--"--------l 160C. OHC, Pi.clrup wiPl earn~ J YEAR'S FREE front end floor pan & par13. '69 CORONA tsnl BEACH BL, 842-4435 auto, r&:h; p/1, 'Vet)"clean. .. * * * * er. Sale price $2099 dlr. RENT _Cal==l='='='J-=·=935=2=.====ol Hardtop. Vinyl roof 4 ipttd,,1 __ H_U_NTIN __ G_TO_N_B_E_A_CH=~1 CADILLAC "N"r_"'=w_tltt_•_._,1'6907_. !14_9-0'rl=r'"I.' ) Le a r n to enjoy ~ ®': C # 4.5945.f) Will ta.l:ce ca.r 1n AU homes new & sharp! -/ / lmmaculate, Sky Btue. Sae-'68 VW aut. Sacri1ice $1150 Fact. Authorized Cadillac Dlr '67 Mercury C:Olony p ·: 'I Specla.1 cluaes for puppies trade. Will finance private nJ.M.INGO 24xEiO Autos Want.ct 968 he ' riflce. Will take trade or in a hurry 2600 HARBOR BL., it.a wag, mllll)' atru, AJC. ;~ i Jan. clllS5E's fonning now. party Call S46-8736 or S-05S2 ................. $l3,91Xl 71 finance pvt. pty. Call Sid, * 536-3107 * COSTA MESA •, ~~i ~= ~.;,:; l=O":='.Qlll==· =====I FLAMINGO 20x57 WE PAY TOP j dlr. 54').3100"' 494-T"'" a.It. '69 VW BUG ~9100 Opeo SUnday MUSTANGi S.0074 · ·••· •••· · · ... · · $10,995 CASH 10 a.m. XTS 343, LATE '70 Coupe DeVille, on· .. -'. FREE to good hotfle--!JIUSt Cycles, Bikes, srAR 24x43 NOW ON DISPLAY '71 COROLLA ly 2600 mi's, gold w/wht l----------1 give up blade: ~ min. Scooters 925 S·6967 ................ $9.~ .. Radio, heater, (TUR124) dlr. Landau, lthr etc. Pvt party, '65 A-1ustan( convt. Auto., VI. J poodle, appralC 6 yn. old, UNIVERSAL 24x63 auto apart Uu. Must sac! Will take older $5950 !lnn. SJG-4719 Good cond, Movfnc. f1'IO or • &:OOC.. companion. 499-lOSO "•u .. 29 114 400 fo• 0-~ --• '-·-ks t..~t Rad lo. hea!er, disc brakes, car or f.inance, 546-8736 or .;;o:;:~~;;;c:.;;:_--;c: otter. Ml-4993. :' ! aft 6 pm 1/4 - - -.... .,,......, .............. • • ocu ........ "'""' J...., Authorized SHARP! 1967 Coupe De "1 I ........ -• CONTINENTAL 24x55 call us for free ~timate. SA.LES 8 SERVICE faclOr)' air, low, low miles![-,.....,_,~=·~===~-Ville. All Xtra.rt. $2895. Will $1800. 675-2947 541--0lt. i: S:\1AlJ, bllw:k toy Poodle Pup-THINI s.2383 .........•..•.•. $13,600 GROTH CHEVROLET e PARTS Take older car or small vw LEASING Trade 496-4345 . ,• plel 1 male, 1 female. HO ........... a CONTINENTAL 24x55 9625 Garden Grove Blvd, down. Under fact. warranty, • Tax & Lie Down OLDSM~llll r ,J &f6..Qlt2 or 548-11ll2. 333 E. ~ .. ~ S-2386 ................ $14,85'.> "-k fo· •• , .. M·-·ger 5.17-7777 Call Collel"t Call Maury dlr, aft lo am . $50.87 per month CHEVROLET i 17th St. CM 116 CONTINENTAL 24.x60 _, ' .,... ...... 540-310(I or 494-7506, 037327. • 36 month open end lease '62 Oldsmobile SUper •Ur 11 G .. Sl6 ""' mu Bead> Blvd. • 68 FIAT 850 CARLO HT. >'uU •'"'· ........... ~~pberd~:Ptiies ~~~~e~ ''fRIEDLANDERnt S·i4:RTON.MANOR' 24xro 1147~untinctoo Be~h9-3lll SPYDER TRIUMPH 1971 vw :Tg CHEV. '10s.~~~TE clean. $295, $.774' ~ l1 Blk & tan, .f wks old. ,.,. dAOt (NWT • .,, S-0602 ................ $13,300 RDSTR. Red With black in--•• -,T-R-'.-Good--,-,-... -,-.-r.I CHICK IVERSON ONLY ll,600 MILE'.! 6#-5308 aft 6. 557-4847 537~ • $75116 Rent up to S90 per mo W£ PAY CASH lerlor, Like new, YQYB34 '" .. .. Hydramatic, power steering 'fii Olds-1...wcury St! d an. r.rusr SAC. Aust Shep pups. NEW-USEO.SERV. CHAPMAN $9'9 RecentJy Installed . rebuilt VW -disc brakes -windows, Fabuloua rond, new tiNa; ·.i Reg, Blue Merles, #bots. MOBILE HOMES CHICK IVERSON clutch. Top, tonneau rover, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. AM/FM multiplex, stralo brakes, sOOckl, paint. Muat , Come see .r. make ofr. 1.2331 Beach Blvd, GG FOR YOUR CAR radio. A good buy al $850. CX>STA MESA bucket seats, full gauges, .;:".:''°' .;:".:;'~--""::.· ~-~--1 .,' 64.Z-MOO, 1-6 pm. 6f.f-8160 (n4) 5J0.2930 YW Ph: 546-7.050. CAMPER Westphalia, w I 2 tilt wheel, factory air rond., e '62 OlDS Station Wqai:i e DALMATIANS 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. CONNELL 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 TR 3 '59. Very good con-bed Eng, Pop-top, gas htr, chrome sport Wheels, wide Gd, Trana:. Pvt. pty. $2515. ·1 AKC e ... (714) 531.8105 CHEVROLET 1970 HARBOR BLVD. dition. Hardtop & con-xlnt cond. $305. 540-1135 track bcHed tires, auto load 549-:mT Mt 3:30 I! **' 642-l937 ** (213) 86()..5210 COSTA MESA •1ertlble. $575 or best oUer. La S •--t' n Jeveler, etc., etc. B.3clance of I 2828 Harbor Blvd. 54~. rge enn;; 10 factory warranty. This is an PLYMOUTH AKC Mlnia. Poodle p!Jpe, blk Complete Package Costa Mesa 54(' .. 1200 * '69 FIAT SPYDER, good Of YW C absolutely go__..us automo. CRUSADER 24°<• t op lo -=~~=~~7;;--1 ... TR. 250 Tr; ump h, ampers, ·•·-& silver. S75 each. ,.,..,,, se cond. $300 &. Take ever bile. You'lJ have to see to ** 545-8558 ** park near Koott's Berry WE PAY TOP DOLLAR pymnts. Call 347.1358 overdrive. Must seU. T.O.P. Vans Kombis appreciate. (944BEA-f) '69 ROADRUNNER Farm. Dishwasher. combo FOR TOP USED CARS 548-5358 aft 3 pm. I I $3m 12 COCKAPOO Puppies washer / dryer, awnings, U your car is extra clean, ====='=====I Buses, New & Used ""'' "· ""'· carport, ""' ·-· d•'~' ''" "''""" JAGUAR VOLKSWAGEN 1mme<1;a1e o.nvory • NABERS • * 54S..2716 * porch & steps, util shed, BAUER BU!CK CHICK IVERSON CADILI...AC IRISH SE'M'ER puppies. completely landscaped. S· 234 E. 17th St. JAGUAR '66 VW Sunroof Fact. Authorized Cadillal" Dir AKC "'" Champion blood 2051. $1 2.995. C.•ta M"a 5' .. 7765 HEADQUARTERS _,, Y-" YW 2600 HARBOR BL, """"' Immaculate couu.ilion. o.iow lines. Call 846-""'" CHAPMAN IMPORTS WANTED 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 COSTA MESA S · The only authorized JAGUAR "''ilh pin stripping, new tires rAn 9 o s nd e ST. BERNARD pups, MOBILE HOME Orange Counties 1970 HARBOR BLVD. J'f\l• 100 pen. u .aY aL Top ' BUYER dea1er in the entire H&rbot' & engine guaranteed for .90 AKC, ~-Show qu (714) SJ0.2930 Li YPT905 COSTA MESA Looking for a car? * 962-7537 * fn1 ) 531-8105 BrLL MAXEY TOYOTA AreL days. c. • EASY DLES * 18881 Beach Blvd. C.mpl.., $I099 VOLVO of * ~l!!RY'S POO Triple Wide Cornell H. •--·h. Ph. 847.&555 SALES CHICK IVERSON '---------Call Auto Referral free Yr euu puppy Ule, groom-Hillcrest e Flamingo °""" SERVICE 1· charge, We have sellers tng. Free pk-up. 546-2848. WANTED Paramounl e Universal PARTS YW UVUVU waiting, All types & prices. Pa~. !or Ho·"a ~·.0~ 0~ Auto• Imported 970 <'-"-A,__ I VERY-nice female cat, ll,9 '"" ,,... ~J<N'.lUJ Ban1ngton e Broadmoor ' BAUER 549.3031 Exl 66 or 67 """"ut:ni....,,., \\'P come. )TS. Allet'IY in 1a.mUy, Scrambler. Gu tank, rear Contl.11ental • Star RICA 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ~ TKIN& 6424431 !140-347! 114 fond,., oarboreton, ohaln c,,..,ra1 e Hill""t AUSTIN AME BUICK COSTA MESA 'VO!.VO'i A"lo Ref.,.,.,] &Moe guard, seat, wiring, etc. HAPMAN IN POODLES AKC: 8 wkl oid. 962-7689 C USTIN ERIC" 62 VW Seda '64 OIEVY Bel Air 2--<lr '5llV<r, Cho<olalo & White. MOBILE HOMES A AM " COSTA MESA • n v .. stick. 1""'- "'"°3i8, 6'!3>'135l.--J HONDA 00'•. 1-s""''· 123:11 Boaoh Blyd., G.G. Sal ... """'"· Paru 234 E. l1th ....., "FRIEDLANDER" • 64&-6728 * •tJRMil•~ .. ea. t (male) 8 mo. 1-Trail, 1-Scrambler. All * TI4J530...2930 * Immediate Delivery 548-'"65 Radio, heater. (ZX\V 2(17) •60 2 DR. Chevy for sale, ~ like new-call alter 6 pm ~~~="7-.c-::=;-All llodeh $699 111M 1aACtt fMWY. 1') -pld. 6CS-0391 -114 weekday•, anytime Tripi• Wide Cornefl ~~ _ 893-7566 e 537-6824 1150. FREE~ whit•, 6 mo week-<ods 162-2737. C.ntlnontal • Panmoonl MERCEDES BENZ NEW-USED-SE RV. -old 6#-.f675 ll4 1970 Yamaha YS C..J 200 Barrington • Universal cc •t••ot Saamb!u. 1.200 ,,.,,,.,.. • """',... ~ ___ C_H_R_Y_S_LE_R __ miles, Xlnt cond. $475. &roadmoor • Star Call 646-9705 154 Horses 383 V8, automatic, JIOWl:I' steerlna;, dlr, Exoe!Jent con. dition. Low mile•. (UEDlG) Will take car In trade f!1t finance private pert;y. l\ID price $1899. BARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 S. Cit, Hwy., 1B '94;-9171 PONTIAC: '70 OTO 455 CU, tri. Ram Afr, close ratio 4-1peed, hood tach, Ride A: Halldl'1 pkg, PIS, P/D/B, ~ &:: Dealer, New ~ Wide ovals. "ALL BJACK- Make o~ or tJ'adeo .1111' late model Fcni trw$. Hllla"'t e Cambrid,o lB1ll BEACH BL. M2M35 • VOLVO S42-'7967. CHAPMAN 3100 W. Cout Hwy., H.B. HUNTINGTON BEAOI WANTED MOBILE HOMES ..,._ !140-1114 WANTED Al 71'• Ar• H.,.. WESTERN SADDLE for sale, $40. 644-8896 .......,. 1 OWNER, 11!1U under warr, 'lll:::::l:::::l:::::l:::::lili: '69 Chrysler Newport, $2600. i 646-7300 eves. '70 GTO I~ Any year 250 or 305 Honda ll)6 N. Harbor, S.A. Savings Up To • ~ &nomblu , not running. ---,*;;;n';;;<1~53";-1.&li;::ll5r;*;--l--....::D.:A:TS:.:.:U:N:.:.___ ru pay top do11&-'"' """' $466 . 1'.. VOLKSWAGEN today, Call ."c.:.~:;16'0~~~~""""""-Want To Live In a.nd a•k for Ron Pinchol. on remaining 70's (U8782) 1970 Honda SL 100 COSTA MESA '68 DATSUN PICKUP !14~3031 E><t. '''"· 673-0900. o.,, &a, Del. Spo<, Like new, 150 nilles. Make LocaJ spaces available now! MG 07 BOSTON WHALER: 13',1 _o_uc_r~·-"-~----~--If you areserious aboutbuy. Radio, ht!sler, dlr., 4 speed.[---------'61 YW BUG S-65 Johnson 4.0 hp elec * * DESPERATE, mu.st lJI!!' a mol>ile home. , .Now's (WPP 762) \Vill take car in MG Xlnt. cond, Good transporta.. General 900 CONTINENTAL '66 LANDAU COUPE, 58~1. LEATHER, AIR, PO\VER. STEREO TAPE. $149::... 213; SS'l-2418 -45.'I cu. in. Ram Air, clOAe ratio kpeed. hood tach. Ride ai Hardi:"& pkg, PIS, P/D/B, ltadtt & beater, Nell( ~ Wide ovah. "ALL BLACK" Make oiler or trade for late model Ford truck. slart, trlr, fully eqpt.' $1000. sell 1965 BSA. Rebuilt the time to see trade or finance private par. Sales, Service, P arts tion . &IS.14i2 Eves, D ays: engine. $550. 646-85511 BAY HARBOR ty, 546-87?.6 or 494-6811. Immediate Delivery, 507-<191 •10 YAMAHA Trail Mutor. MOBILE HOMES '67 DATSUN WAGON All Mndob -fierut Lewi& IMPORTS CORVETIE $499 ............ !!!!I .... -~ CHICK IVERSON 1966 Ha-. C.M. li4~930l l --------'68 LE MANS, fnll I"""; I · Di•t • •-t --. Qean, 1425 Baker St, (at Harbor)' Bo,ts Marine • "' "'""" a~-¥ c:•n n•70 $300. 96.Z-9960 COfita Mesa .,NU-'" '66 Volvo PllllO. Very clPan '67 VmE air, amffm, tilt wl!).1 .xlftt. YW \\'hi!e wfblk Inter_ 4 spd, Fastback _ "427'', 4-spttd, cond. $1750, 837-3421' Equip. 904 1--~~~~~~-I--'--'------'70 YAMAHA-LO Ml l'llcCULLOCK 4 hp outboard. $400. e 548-98S4 :l yrs old. Like new cond. II l '68 SU ZUKI 150. Good cond. 1~' Tandem Tralll'r, a stec. Call a.rt 6 pm weekdays • 11 " Must sell soon, $:22()/best welded construction. -,.. Anytime \1.'eekends 962-2737. .~,,., o[fer, 54~3259 Deck plating. 545-...,.,i or BOAT Bath 20 .. floating. 7 ,47 HARLEY DAVlDSON 642-5845. \ViU trade on Pick Mo's old. Beiow i,.t price. u $100, 846-9518 KNUCKLEHEAD. Xlnt I ='°''"·==--=..,.--,=~ cone:!. Sl~. 497-1987 air 6. FLATBED Trlr. 4'x8'. 4 947 T railers, Utility Automatic, dlr. Rad lo, hea:. er, special wheels. (VOE- 95l ) Will trade or finance privnle parly. Full price $1099. BARWICK Il\1PORTS rNC, DATSUN J}rtu po rt 311npol'l~1 3100 W, Cout Hwy .• N.B. 642-940.5 54().1764 549.3031 Ext. 66 or 67 O.D., radio. 837-t498. M1/Fr.-t radio. New poJy. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. glass tires .• Excellent con-__ _:CO::'.:S'..'.T:,:A_:M:::::ES;A:;.,.~-l -A_u_lo_•_,::U::'::":-:d~---990-· I dition Driven easy, . $2850 1960 vw BUG SPECIAL '" fo, M•. c .. oo;, "~''" Red, with mag wheels, wide DISCOUNT CLASSIC Vett·'58, fabulous - -~ oval tires, 11ew engine guar. SALE cond s!ick shil!, mags. ..-------,,.. anteed fOO' 90 days, IFTI.74 head'ers, !aJ'I(', iach, ne11.· RAMBLER ·5~ RAMBLER Stn Wq. I cyl, stick, O'drive, Gd ConC $500. 6'1;N432 STUDEBAKER sides. Haull ng or Mobile Homes motorcycles. $45. 646-2238 22' Tempest + trlr, sleal I -;::;;;;::;;:::;:;:;~::;:;;;;;-aft 6· 40' Dsl Aux. Try-$24,500 I I========= & THINI $799 molor & paint, 2 tops. ~lust "MmG" CHICK IVERSON MONTH OF DEC.,..;;"=";;"='-'="=:'·==== 1960 stud•. s1a. w,.. !lZI. VW (Grandkids need new shoes) I -call 9 am..Jpm 50 CARS COUGAR • 962-68'4 • Boat•, Sa il 998 So. Cst. llwy, Lil 494.9m '68 1600 ROADSTER .,. Bay ~iP. good lo<ation ·1!:[?tJ 11!>!:J•J1 }1Jf,-j Genoral Pac Yacht Sales 673-1570 1---------- • HDER'' S.l!J..3031 Ext. 66 or 67 To choose from. No do"''Il on 1---------1 ========'==! Roody to gn• di•. fWEZ 7101 ''fRIEDLA 1970 HARBOR BLVD. . \Viii take trade or finance COST\ MESA approved credit. '68 Cougn.r, auto, p/s, p /b, f·BIRD 950 13' Banshee Sailboat cnn1· plete. Sa.crUice $ 1 9 5. 675-8990 eves. Surroundt'd by Irvine Oranges! '67 OlEVROLET Sportsvan II pas, 6 cyl, au!o trans, r/h, l ownr, prlv ply, $14.50. 4.92-7465 1 1 ty 546-8736 or 1s111111ACM f"WY· n1 _,,, _____ .. ll'JU-""'--· vinyl top, low mileage, lm-1 ---------~I pr vn c par ' 893-7566 e 537-6824 1968 VW Bug. Radio, rear ,~ ,~I ~";,;"~'~'· ~*=:;C:;:"~I ~4'~'-~2~07;::20,. ==I '63 T-BIRD, Fully equipped. fu!al rural living yet close to oct-an, shopping & recreation 4M-68ll. NEW-USED-SE RV. seat 3peaker1, S1375, pr!. pty. 2100 Harbor Blvd. 64>04.66 1 · $395. See at Cout Auto '68 1600 Roadster --------.iooc. ~...,~.~~"'~··~·"~':!•m~·-~ 1==:=.:=:===" I FORD °'~'" c....... JOU "· lli' GLOUCESTER Dory & trlr. Custom bit In '69, Xlnt oond, SJ50. 6*r3488. ALL ELECTRIC '63 OLDS 88 4 door, auto trans, air, p°s/b, A buy for $500. 548-1686 aft G:30 pm ~ '66 VW, 65,000 m i's, ori~. BUICK Coe.sl Hwy, CdM. Excellent condition. Low owner, top cond, clean. $97::i. '70 COUNTRY Squire-429. FINEST Trans. ottered tor mileage, (WEZ710) $300 un· PORSCHE Phlnc Mr. Ward, (714) BUJCK '67 RIVIERA Loaded, air, all xtras. $5865 $499. 1964 full pwr, a.i,. K1TE No, 846 ~ one: seuon. IrnmaCutate. $bl. 64l-9686.a.fter 6 PM. Dune Buggies 954 dcr Blue Book. 846-1455. Dix. lfardtop Cpe, w/factory New-$4300 Now. 532-:2548, Beaul.l.ful. 6GD37. · $1395 '66 PORSCHE * '6SVWCAMPER * air. fuU power, vinyl roof,t="-<-~10-3937c.~-=~-c-1'64 T ·BIRD, Outatandln& Booh, Slip•/ Dock• 910 15'.JO' •lips avail for po\\'C.r boats. Bay1;ide Village, 300 E. Coat1 Hwy, N.B. '"G11 Available" ' Choose from 105 floor plans, you name It! HEAVY silver meta.Ilic blue Manx. White vinyl hardtop. A he11uty $1!50. K New e.....1ne. Fully ...,.,,;pped. ste~ multiplex, tilt wheel, XLNT 2nd Car. '6: Wagon. _ _. p · "-Whl,. BARWIC Coun-912. 5 ,,_,, brown ''l!i' -.. -4001 & COrlU, n!:mlum •u.,1, , ~ 557-9359 custom inlcrior. (TFB New trans, tires, auto 1675. Orig. owner. 6T.M7Ui 1PO INC "''l1h black inlerior. Brand $2222 · O 1 $6."iO S~ JA-RTS , uew P<!rrelli tires. XYJ47-i * i:' VW CAMPER, 1965. e air. n Y . . DATSUN $3299 Clean, New tires. Pvt party. • NABERS '63 Ford Sln-wgu V-8 sllck, VALIANT 998 S. Cit. J.lwy, LB 494.9m CHICK IVERSON S1325, 548-2692. CADILLAC O'Drive 8 track stereo S37j ---------! '70 VW BUG Fact, Authorized Cadillac Dlr 1 ~'~'.c''~' .;.67~3-<..::.)209"--. -~~~ '65 Valiant 2 doot. Peppy .1: DOT DATSUN VW Xln't cond. 548-5349 2600 HARBOR B~, '59 Ford convert-New tires economical little car, Good 548-5766 or 548-5.171 Trucks 962 SUPS -AVAILABLE, JS' to 40' Aclulto-Pol• O.K. Prlv1to Club--$300,000 Recreation C.nttr '66 Ford ~-Ton P.U, OPEN DAILY 549-Jt'.131 Ext 66 M &: 1~~-c.~-'----.-..,~.,-1 OOSTA MESA & muffler, good top, clean condition lbreuch••it. AND ]97{) HARBOR BLVD, VW . nv. custonuz .top 541J.9100 Open Sunday appear, $125. 644-0222 673-1103. 1· 1.-... ... l[i] SUNDAYS condition new motor, pe.1I11.J;:=:====~==:.!.2~"'-="='====~;:=:;::=,====-==1 VS. 3 ,~, radio. healer, COSI'A MESA tirt"s and m .. s. etc. $650 I'="' 18835 Beach Blvd. eU)'·lifl tail 1ate. {48SOBC'l }funtlngton Beach '67 !Ill, 5 • spd, Wcben, nu 1-'p_h_6_75-_7200_. _____ 1 14 BEAUTIFULLY $1399 842-7781 or.,....., ,;,,,,, 48.000 ml.,, l3950. '65 vw Bug S I /R -"u11··NISH"'b . "UI -.,,,..:;,~"""~i;;;;,;;::-,:=I 543-8105 dnyw, asll: for Greg. C•,nf!:!r•, • • on!,.. r c BA,.nlCK l967 DATSUN lGOO Road""· .fAU CAMPER. MODELS IMPORTS INC. V•ry good <nod. gd mi RENAULT AM/FM, < '"""· (NNKU!IO) <Dir, TIU93) DATSUN W.kd y1 714: 633-9393 ext 165: 1---------Full price 111 flDliUM wknds & eves 714: 673-1811 1964 RENAULT R..fl. Needs $799 .~llMltt 1•••1 Jetfr.v Rd. 998 S. C.1. Hwy, LB 4.94-9m No cash down, take over some work. 0nr • ._ bnrid ""' , 'IOU •1 P""'""· • ,.,..7196 * BARWICK 11 ., u IL -,..,. In r...:..: Auto Loulnt ""l========I·--:-::=::=::::-::---IMPORTS INC. . ~lied"' ·. 1111111 __ L_E_A~SI___ FERRARI SUBARU DATSUN . s49· ·=~L 5 ml. South of Tultln, .rid A NEW l9Tl l---'-F..:E.:.:R.:.:RA...:.:.R.:.:l---l-,.,-SU-BA_R_U_360 __ D,-lx.-M-od'1,-:-.I 99r: S. Cit. Hwy, LB .a.rm · t.'=:: ~ ~:: ~-~f ~~ ::::::j $50. 100° mo. N:'eou1;:";.:":,;':uu! ::: ~;U••I._ Cl'"1l '66 vw ~·· Bus ....., ... ,. .., .-c1oo1u (36 mo.I """ ••a1or • TOYOTA ~t £YBY. mt ~ 832-8585 opon o'ld SALES-SERVICE-PARTS l------- fof-loto-U.00ft RENT 3100 w. """''Hwy. JUST ARRIVED! )CIUI' truck or a ....,_ JJhr A NEW 19Tl Newport Beach ·, TH&l>DORI 1 COSTA MltA PINTO ~-!l40J764 ALL 'lOBJ~fOR.I>' ~. ~=-"..,!;\2 ' $4 DAY Autoort"" '"""" o.a1.. 1971 TOYOTAS • .-,AV!). -on d!spl" 1n 5 Star AND NOW'S THE Corollu -Co..,.., coa'A 111E14 -· ~--GRliENLE'AI' PARK· 4• llULE TIME FOR M1 rl< II -Pickups '64 flfd CllJJ~ :,...w:::.,,,~-=-:uso :i.A~ QUICK CASH R.~:;-<F;.rv~r:.ry ~P"'"" -"'"' • """' Goad -10 b1k 1JFE1 THROUGH A .......... bmJ,-dlr-1..='°.::'="":.:•::,..:;llc;;OOO.::.·.:;-"-=.;._' c-1 THEODORE DAILY PILOT R.4dlll t!ra. 1 owner. <lJED. MCE llld None trann. tn ROBINS FORD "" wm .... car In -adult park. No ..... l2300. -HARBOR BLVD.. WANT AD or ftnonos, IHM73I or 2111 Hltbor Blvd., Sp 1t COSI'~ 642·5678 J96fi llarbo•, C.M. 646-9303 494-68ll. .°';:;:;·----------~----'----'----.---·~.:.__;;.;.~_;_ __ _ .Derut Lewu .IMPORTS I . . 8 Puse~r, radki. he1ter. !SV'l'D78l $1562 Har bour V.W. tsni BEAOI BI... 342M3S HUNTINGTON lil:AOI '66 VW BUS -Rebuilt ene -hee.ders $995 6U-ll85 IT'S Beach houi.e time, Bt1- 1ttst selection ever! See the DAILY PlLOT c .. tfled aectlon now l .... ,, •I i· I· ( i I ~ ! 7