HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-01-11 - Orange Coast Pilot17
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Mesa Wonaan Collapses ;:~;.DAILY PILOT
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MON DAY AFTERNOON, "ANU ARY :11; :1911:
'I.' ' ._,. ·' ' Chasing Purse Snatcher
....... ll'OL. "-MO. t, I SICTIONl. M PAe ll
•
• ......... aSSIUS
S1noorhathon
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U~I Tt..,"4119
Pat La cy and Greg \Vi ke are cheered on by friends as they v.:ork their
\ray past the old marathon kissing record (20 hours, 14 minutes) to
new standard of 30 hours. Pair set the record during the weekend in
a dorinitory at UC LA. They remarked later that it was not an alto·
gether unpleasant way to pass the \veekend, but complained of chap-'
ped lips. ·
Supreme Com~t Will Hear
Cass i11s Cla y Draft Case
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Gassius Clay,
ltrmer heavyweight boxing champion,
won a new hearing from the Supreme
Not-so -Routine
Birth Recorded
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Mrs.
Robert Davidson 's first words to
her husband after the birth of
their daughter we re routine, but
i;ls reply was not.
"Congratulations. You have a
daughter/' Mrs. Davidson, 26, an·
nounced.
"Should T stop at the police
station?" he asked.
Mrs. Dav idson, whose 7-pound.
t-ounce daughter wa s born in the
back of the family station wag-
on five mintues 'after the David-
sons left lheir suburban Deep..
haven home for Abbot t Hospital
In Minneapolis Saturday, advls·
ed her husband to "keep going."
A hospital spokesman said Sun.
day b o t h molher and daughter
were doing well.
Court today on his conviction for refusing
induction into the Army.
The action means that C I a y ' a
multimillion dollar tiUe fight with the
present champion, Joe Frazier, can go
ahead u planned in New York on March ~ .
The court 1aid In a brief order it
would confine arguments in the c a se
to Clay's claim-of conscientious objection
because of his Muslim religion.
Clay -who now uses tne name
Muhammad Ali -also contended that
the government had illegally tapped bis
telephone conversations, but the .coun
decided not to consider that clainJ,.
Arguments will be heard in the case
and a deoislo n handed down later in
the term.
At Its rlt'!t ses.ston of the new year,
the court turned down an appeal by
lh< alrtady tmpriao~ proeidenl ot lh<
Teamstets Union, James R. Hoffa, from
his clnvictlon of defrauding the union'•
pen1*>n fund. Hoffa thus f1ce11 an ad--
dltiOn1I fi ve-year prtson 11tntence In ad-
dition to the eight years he now iS
servtng at Lewilburg, Pa., federal
penitentiary for jury tampering.
The court also:
-Rtfuscd to hear a chaUenge to
organized bl9l!blll brought under tht
(Seo COURT, Pqe II
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• IDS ~ourt oun
• 0 • • • •
Grenade Blast Injures
Viet Brawl 29 Gls • Ill
·•
Home of.Industry
Leader Bombed
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Two f~ebomb3
were hurled early today at the home
of indu!trialist William R. Hewlett, whose
partner Is d8puty secfetary of defense.
Hewlett. 57, multimillionaire president
of Hewlett-Packard Corp., wu awakened
by the muffled explosions of the Molotov
Cocktails and put out the fire with
extinguishers recently placed in the home
because of anonymous telephone threats.
Hewlett's partner, and co-founder of
the electronics manufacturing firm, is
David Packard, the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police a a d Hewlett-Packard
spokesmen believed the fire bombing was
due to Packard's Washington po.St and/or
!he company 's government contract!. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray aaid
Man Talked Out
Of Hijacking
By Stewardess
DENVER (AP) -A Trans World
Airl inea atewardeaa 1ay1 1he talked a
man out of a thriat tO force a New
York-Denver flight to divert to Las
Vegas.
Unda Barnard, 26, t.old the pilot of
the conversation Sunday. He tadioed
Denver and when the plane landed there.
agents of lhe FBI and &he U.S. marshal 's
office arrested Patrick Miranda, 25 •. of
Bound Brook, N.J., and charged him
with carrying • gun aboard an aircraft.
Miss Barnard, of Atlanta, Ga., -uld
Miranda told her he had to meet
!Omobody Jn Lu V-and WU going
to hijack the olr<:rlfl -be only
had 12.
The man began talkfn( -,,... lbout
an hour alter the plane 11tft Niw York.
asking about dil~ from Denver to
Lu V<iU and LUe Tahoe, she gld.
He uked wbetllor Miii' Blrnard would
like to ro 'to. LUe Tohoe. Uc!. wbin
she anrwered yes, be •id: ''WeU you 're
goq to pl to ..... palled out I small
pistol and J11d ll In lbe polm ol hil
hand, she 111d..
They talked r..-about ball an hour,
she oald. Finally .i., relalod, l'1e man
told her be ... ·1 ...... ldjli:Ji !he
plane and aabd lier not ..:Id ...,.,..ry. The Glbtt. _ ......... _ .. .,..
ofU..1ltualloo.
"I think It wu jlllt a 11p11r of lht •
-thlnl." 14111 Jlamlrd.llld.
thl!re w~ no au1ptds nor any pogitlve
Jeadt.
Neighbors told police they 11w two
white men. run from Hewlett 's home
at the time Of the attack. The men
climbed Into a dark-colored Volkswagen
"Beattle" which had been parked nearby
with it.s motor idling and lights off.
!hey drove off without turning on their
hghts and witnesses could give only
vague de1cripU0111.
One of the firebombs 1lruck the rambl-
ing. two-story home between the first
and second floors and fell harmlessly
to the ground. The leeilrid hit 1 transom
above the front door and fell to the
porch, where it started 111 nre.
Hewlett, whoae 1hares of Hewlett.
Packard 1toclt are worth more than
a quarter of 1 billion dolhtra, used 111n
extinguW>er to quell the bl111t.e. ~ fire
was out when firemen and pollct arrived.
Damaae wu minor.
Hewlett and his wife were ln the
house when the gasoline-filled bottles
were hurled about 12:30 a.m. The home
is located in an older, upper middle
chm retldenUal area ln the flatlands
of Pala AJto, abcut 35 miles IOUth. of
San Francisco.
A company spokesman uld the In·
dustriau.t haa recetved anonymous
telephone. threats in recept _ montN,
usually Wlll?Tllng of 1ttacb on hill ·home
or hiJ tam.Uy. They were considered
crank calls, bat company security of.
fldals pl1ctd the fire e1Ungulsber1 in
hia house.
Pollet Sgt. Robert Monumlt.h aald
the firm,)las been barllled.ln the put
by radka)I becal!oo ol lts work on
government contrattl.
SYLVIA. ST.4.RTS
SA YING .SERIES
I ~ Anny .Plans
Tunne11 Tal k•
U.S. Senator John Tu nney
<D·Calif.) said Su.nday on NBC
television 's ''Meet the Press"
that his friend, Senator Ed·
ward "Tedd y" Kennedy ( D·
Mass.) will not be a president·
ial candidate next year.
EWerl y Wo rna n
Collapses A fwr
Purse Snatching
Chasing 1 Jong-haired purse-snatcher,
a '13-year-old Costa Mesa housewife col·
lapeed in a shopping center Friday but
waa revived alter being presumed dead
on arrlval at a hospital.
Mrs. Marjorie F. Lee, of Yl1 W. Wilaon
St., was listed as trriproved today, but
atllJ-in strtOUI condition at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital. -
She is believed to have su!fered a
heart allack. • •
n.r green he-g -emptied ol an uncJei.nillried • .....,. ·or ,.....,· L ;; ...
founcf.ln Foimllln · Vallt1; t-.bOur•
after the 1· p:m.-'ttCldent.. ·
Police llald· .mr'al jiettons ·Wi""'"'1
lh< <lfoo(arm lhel\ al the K,Marl Sbo!>-
ptnj ~ttr r 2200. Harbar Bi.w.ileYlfd1 but
hid no time to-lriternne. · •
. )frt."Allce: Donlg1n. and 'ber ,teenqed
d1uct1ter, ol ·MIHetli Ptaco, CQila -· told lllvesttgatorslthree ·M jl'p I e • t JP'•
youtha 18 to 20 years old were hrlolvtd.: • Ont> •got 'out .. ol a ltd" Valbwl(en
aa Mra. lAe WN pulhing a 'S'OCfl'Y
cart through the tot ani1 gr1bbed her
purse from ll n. ran back lo the vehicle -with
the eldtrly woman In purault -jumPid
(See Cll.IBE, Pap II
Full Probe
In Saigon
SAIGON (APJ -The U.S. Army ii
Investigating a disturbance outa.ide an
enlisted man's club Saturday night during
which a fragmentation grenade injured
29 U.S. soldiers.
Six of the Gts were hospitalized, one
In a serious condition.
Military sources said It had not bffn
determined whether lhe grenade wu
throWil, or .,.,.as dropped and exploded
by accident.
The disturbance occurred 111t Tuy Hoa,
11. U.S. base on the central coast 260
miles northeast of Saigon. Military police
were called to the club after trouble
developed between members of the 1st
Battalion, 22nd Infantry, and C Company.
75lh Ranger Battalion. The sourcea aaid
the cause of the disturbance waa not
kn own, but possi bly there were racial
implicalion.s.
The sources aaid the MPs tried to
break up the large crowd but nmu,
had to use tear gas to diapene the
Gls. In the conllllllon, the fragmeutltiaa
grenade es:ploded.
On Thursday nlg'bl, a U.S. Army major
was killed and another was wounded
in a post-mldrilght argument wJth . fiTit
enlisted men at the Quang Trl cnmbit
base 16 miles south of the demilJtarbed
tone. The oUlcera were teyin& to ~
the enllrted men to lower ·tbe vohane
of their phonograph.
The Army said three· of the enlilCed
• IS.. GRENADE, Pap J)
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DAllV PILOT s Mondi)', J.nu.,, 11, lffl
S~ns New Record
Richard Ford, 30, is something of a disc jockey. He jockeyed a disc
called the Playland Park ferris \\-·heel in ~ Francisco for 20 days.
16 hours and 30 minutes. setting a new ferris wheel endurance
record. He comple ted bis one-man revolutions Sunday. The 40-foot
wheel revolved d uring most of his stay, except when he \\'as sleeping.
Oemente 1-Iospital G1·oup
Seeks Billboards on Site
Officials cf Olapmon General Hospital
wilJ sttk permission Wednesday for two
billboards and a construction head-
quarters building for their new hospital
project in San Clemente.
Planning commissioners will hear the
request by the Chapman 1-!anagement
Corporation in a public hearing Wed-
nesday.
If approved Lbe conditional use permit
will guarantee the launching of the
.hospital project in coming weeks.
Official.a of the bospital plan 11. con·
valescent and boar~and care facility
to be built along side an out-eare hospital
on acreage along Camino de los Mares
in the extreme northerly area of San
Clemente.
Dr. Ralph Graham, "-'ho led 1 suc-
cessful eUort to wrest official sanction
Smoker Ignites
Weekend Blaze
·At Union Bank.
A delayed-i&nition fire caused an
· estimated S300 damage Sunday in the
basement of lhe Union Bank building
at Newport Center in Newport Beach.
Investigators said the hre '>'"a! started
when a cigarette. \lo·hich had been
smoldering Ln building materials of
Unitersity Plumbers and Heat Company
since Friday, Ignited the materials.
Smoke from the fire \\'as vented out
of the basement through a pipe """hich
released It on the 14th noor cf the
building.
The smoke was spotted by patrolmen
in the Newport police helicopter who
called fire units to the scene.
The $13.8 millK>n building is under
construction by the C. L. Peck Company.
CompleUon of the IS.story structure is
slated for October.
DAILY PILOT
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l"r•~ld1111 ••• l"11~1111Mr
J•elr l. C11rl•,.
Vkt l"rts!.,..,I .,.4 0-11 M t M$ff
Tho'"•• K1 ... a
l!:dllW
T>io"'•' A. M 11rp~i 111
1'1•""1"1J Ellfw
Rich1tcl P. Hill
Siillh Ori """ C-rt Edlllr
0.1• ~: m Wei a.y Sfrll't H"""'1 l tid'I: trn ..,._, 11901 ..,"""~ ~ IM<IU 111 l'MMI Awn11t
M\1111"'9'°"' ... di: 11't7l ... ch aouievtrd
J.ion Cllm.trli.: JQS Mwltl I I (.1m1no lMI
for 11. hospital in San Clemente from
a competitor last year, bas promised
his San Clemente General Hospital \lo'ould
open its doors to it s first patients before
tbt end of this year.
The use permit !or the construction
information office and billboards is 1lhe
l.ut official c ity act.ion needed to launch
the large building project. except for
routine approval of precise plans.
Other action planned for the com·
mission's 7·30 p.m. mttling includes
further cons.ideration of a request by
the South O:iast Girl's Cub, wbich ·is
asking to use a Jot at Bonita Canyon
Part for a pennaoent club building.
The land would lie near the ei:isting
Boy's Club facility. Commissioners will
receive detailed information on proposed
financing for the girl's clubhouse.
, In another recreational matter, com·
missioners will conLinue discussion of
the relocation of the two tennis courts
at the community clubhouse to a new
site at the new \lo'ater reclamation plAnt.
The recurring controversy over ac·
cept.able home occupallons will also
receive Commission attention Wedne5day.
City sWf members have compiled a
list of acceptable home occupat.ions in
other Orange County cities.
City councilmen have asked that the
c.ommission review the entire home oc-
cupation picture in San Clemente after
t\1'0 separate complaint! -one 11ver
designer Eric Boucher drafting plans
for the nt''i'" community clubhouse from
bis home. office.
The other issue developed wht'n City
Enginttr Phil Peter bought a city licenge
to operate a private consulting bwiness
from his home.
Burg lars Se ize
Furniture Haul
Newport Beach poliCt' today are in·
ve.stig.11ting the theft of furniture valued
al $1,337 from a T\ewport Heighl.!I home .
The home and furni~h ing~ belong lo
Charles A. Rector. 61 , of 647 S Coasl
~way, Laguna Beach. He told pol ice
he bas been trying lo rent the \·acant
house for the pasl month
The burglary was spotted J&n. 2 by
real est.ate agent Virginia htorrlson. but
she did not report it for a \\'eek because
she \lo·anted to check with Rector to make
sure he bad DOI removed the furniture
himself. investigators said.
1be burglary apparently broke inlo
the home by smashing a rear kitchen
window. Rector reported a coffee table.
.111 king site head board and an ea.5y
chair among the missing itemJ.
Arraignment Set
In Checks' Case
Arraipment 1& upected todly for •
Million . Viejo mim arrested Frklly by
Newport Beach police on charges of
forging two check.s worth more than
17.700.
James Leonard Disch. 41. of 21912
Via Del Norte. waa arruted at Applied Dilltal Symms. 3843 Campus Dr ..
Newport Beach, where he bu been
employed u an accountant for a year
aod a half.
Deltctlves assert that Disch forged
the company tuasurer's namfl to tww
checlu: whJcb he had wrlUen to himself.
The case reportedly came to light
wben the company's bank called the
firm to verify the signatUA bdore
=llJn& !ht IWO Jar1e cbecb.
• •
Court F ()ii$
'Refused Calif y
Order to Fire'
Bid to Halt
Oil Drilling
.. , .
BJ Wlrel ~
Fr. BENNING, Ga. ~ A second
YeterlD Jrt the M,y Lal SWtJep tl!IWled
for the aovunmtnt today tbat be refused
a direct order by U . William L. Calley
J r. lo fire in1o a group of. Vietnamese
ci•lliam in the ba.mlet.of M1 Ui.
The witness, Ronald D. C. Grzesik,
26, of Holyoke: hiass.. was the 36th
prosecution witness in ita attempt to
convict the 27-year-0ld former infantry
platoon leader of the premeditated
murder of 102 civilians in My Lai on
htarch 1' 1961.
Grzesik testified tbal in hil capacity
as a fire team leader in the -Calley
platoon, he. came across Meadlo crying
in the middle of the village and tried
lo talk with him.
Grzesik said be could not recall exactly
\lo'hat Meadlo told him but could give
an impression of the Import of bls word.
A defense objection prevented his giving
hls impression.
Later, he testified. he came upon a
drainage ditch in wh.ich the~ were 35
lo 50 civilian bodies. He said be saw
Calley at the ditch.
"What did he tell you'.!"' 11.Sked Capt
Aubrey M. Daniel III. the prosecutor.
··ro take my fire team back inte
the village."
·'What else did he tell you?" Daniel
asked.
"My impre!.!ion is that be said
something in relation to 'finish 'em off.'
"What did you say?"
''I refused.''
Grzesik said he was about 25 meters
away from the ditch at the time. He
said he refused to "finish 'em off _"
"What was Lt. Calley's reaction?"
"I don't reeall. I wasn't paying al·
lention," Grzesik said.
"To what were you paying attention?"
"Staying alive."
Gn:eslk, a dye maker now. testified
he never saw Calley do any shooting
that day.
The defense earlier loday won the
right lo subpoena a witness \lo'ho it said
would testify that the task force com·
mander at ont time was on the ground
with the troops during the alleged
massacre at My Lai.
As the court-martial resumed after
a %4-day holiday recess. chief defense
counsel George W. Latimer asked he
be permitted to rec.all to the stand
Jerry L. Heming, 21 . of Jackson, hiiss.,
who had testified for the prosecution.
Latimer said he would tesLify to the
•·presence on the ground during the
operation" of Lt. Col. Frank A. Barker
Jr .. commander of "Task Force Barker,"
which directed three infantry companies
in the My Lai sweep. Barker J11ter was
killed in a helicopter crash.
Tbe defense disclosed it was ready
to call three psychiatrists to testify
that Calley was sufferimg from "certain
mental conditions which exist in con·
nection with the slresse~ and strains
of con1bat and the confusion that exists
1n the issuance of orders." Latimer said
this testimony "''ould go to the questions
of malicious intent and premeditation.
County Traffic
Accident.s Kill
3 on Weekend
A South Pasadena woman .,..,.hose family
moved to the Capistrano Beach area
In live only Friday died there Saturday
night. when tlieir car slammed into a
truck stalled on Pacific Coast High\1-'ay
Orange County Coroner's deputies .said
a pair of motorcyclists also died of
accident injuries. bringing the wttkend
fatalities to three.
De11.d are:
-Mn . MarUyn Taylor. 36, of South
Pasadena.
-lJDda M. Wlllon, 20. of St&nton.
--CrafC B. HPdspdh. 16. of F'Ullertoo.
California Highway Patrol offkers said
fl.trs. 'hylor was killed Saturday night
on Pacifk: Coast Hiahway ,outb Of Be11ch
Road, near the Capistnno Beach Club.
She wu dead on arrival 11.t Sooth
Coaal Community Hospital in South
Laguna.
Her husband. John L. Taylor, who
spent the night in the hospital along
with daughter Christie, 9, uld he realiled
the stalled flatbed truck wasn't moving
too late to swerve and miss il
The vehicle's emergency light.I we.re:
blinking, CHP officers said.
Pollee said Miss Wtbon was injured
last Thursday in a cycling tragedy call3td
whe n shi? tried to miss a basketba11
th11t rolled Into the !trttt at Lola Avenue
and Wasco Road .
She lost control and was thrown to
the pave:ment, suffering a skull fracture.
Hudspeth died shorUy 11.fter his
motorcycle slammed into a car huning
left ooto Ford Drive from Euclid Slee.et
ln Fullerton Saturday night.
The accident U ltill wlder in--
veatigation.
Fro11t P .. e J
'GRENADE •••
men Wf're. held for ~. and the
JnvestigaUon was at.Hf under w&y.
The dead man wu Maj. Robert
Dagren. 34. of Buffalo, N.Y., a Weal
Point graduate and the lather ol Ulret
c:hlldren.
•
Meanwblle at Ft. McPherson, Ga., the
defeme opened lb case in the fl.1 y Lai
asaault tflal of Sgt.. Charles E. Hutt&
with tbe contention that the young soldier
·'did what be bad been told to do -
pull tbe trigger."
Hutto, 22, of Tallulah, La .. is charged
with inl,eqt to commit murder by firing
his weapons at Vielnarr.ese civilians dur·
1ng the alleged My Lai massacre. lluno
h11.s made a &tatement. admitting he
fired. 1be defense contends he was mere-
ly following orders.
Edward Magill, Hullo's civilian at-
torney, said in his opening stalement
that the late LL Col. Frank A. Barker,
head of Task Force Barker, of which
Hutto's platoon was part in the March
16. 1968, s\lo·eep from My Lai, had wanted
lO ''remove this thorn from hi s side."
Ma gill said abOut 30 members of Huuo·s
C Company had been killed in a mine
field near My Lai a week or so earlier.
Magill said Barker. Col. Oren K.
Henderson. commander of the 11th Light
Brigade, which was over the task farce,
and Capt. Ernest /\iedina. the company
commander, planned the assault. I-le said
Medina conducted a memorial service
for fallen members of the compan)" the
day before Lhe f\ly Lai S\lo'eep and gave
the men "a pep talk_"
Magill said the d.e.fenst would prove
that Medina ordered the company to
\lo'ipc out the rillage and everyone in
it.
The Army has finished closed hearings
that will determine whether Medina 9o'ill
be court-martialed on charges that in-
clude responsibility for any civilian
deaths at My Lai.
The last of lhe lengthy hearings \\'as
held at Ft. ~lcPberson Sunday. Those
who appeared were Medina, his Ja\lo·yers
and four former members of Charlie
Company . .,..,·hich he commanded.
Ten former Charlie Company soldiers
testified Saturday wben the bearing
began.
Ethiopian Youths
Stage Protest
At San Clemente
About 40 students d e s c r i b i n g
themselves as Ethiopia's "cream of the
crop" chanted for the death of their
leader nu.r UJoe gates of the Western
White House.
Shouting "Death to Halle Selassie"
and "death to fascist pigs," the students
spent about two hours near the. pastures
of the Elmore Rancb next to tbe Nixon
Estate.
jSf:e Photo Page 3)
Ostensibly. the demonstration. the first
of the new year at the Presidential
compound, was asking for the cutting
off of foreign aid to the northeast African
country.
Spokesman for the Ethiopian Students
Union in North America. Los Angeles
Chapter, said the aid was being used
to direct weapons against fellow citizens.
prim arily in the area of Eritrea.
The spokesman claimed that in the
past few weeks 1.000 Eritreans have
been "massacred'' by Selassie·s troups .
The demonstration by the students
be.11.ring large placards drew two Seeret
Service 1gent1 from within the Nixon
enclave and a few San Clemente police
officers.
There were no incidents
Be.sides their placards denouncing
feudalism and Imperialism within their
country tbe college-age students c:arried
small red cards containing h1ntJ; on a
person's rights "'hen he is arrested by
police.
In each segment referring to police
nn the cards. tbe word pigs had been
inserted. instead.
Be's Condidole
Rev. Clen non King, Albany,
Ga .. has announced he will be
a prestciential candidate in
1972. In a newsletter he dis-
tributed . King says he be·
lieves "whoever is elected
president of the U.S. in 1972
v.·ill be the reinc:arnation of
Jesus."
Abse nt Attorney
Dela vs Manson
.I
Trial Furtl1er
LOS ANGELES (UP I l -The oft-de-
layed Sharon Tate murder trial hil a new
snag loday when the critical illness of
the daughter of 8 defense attorney
caused him to d e I a y his final argu·
ment.
Maxwell Keith , who replaced the m"'s-
sing Ronald Hughes as counsel for Lealie
Van Houten, said his daughter's surgery
during the weekend had so concerned
him that he had been unable to pre-
pare his final argument.
~1W Van Houlen is one of lhree fe-
male codefendants of accused hippie
leader Charleli Manson.
The judge considered a defense mo--
lion presented by attorney Paul FiU·
gerald to declare a mistrial on grounds
that there had nol been a public trial,
due to the fact that the majority of the
courtroom stats were reserved for the
ne\o,·s media.
From PIJRe 1
CHASE ...
in and the car spun one circle around
the dazed and gasplng vicUm before
roaring away.
Miss Dunigan. 16. said she realized
a strongarm robbery had occurred at
that point.
fl.irs. Lee began lo run. pushing the
cart, lo.,..,·ard the K ·~1art, presumably
to report the theft.
Witnesses said she sudden]\• turned
pale. ·
''A guy on the other side caugh1 her
and I caught her glasses," said Carolyn
S. Wilson, another witness.
Fountain Vall ey police notified local
nuthoritits later in the dav that Mrs.
l..ee"s purse . stilt containing Various iden·
l1ficat1on cards arid p<ipers, had been
fou nd
The handbag was turned in by a citizen
at 17110 Santa Lucia St., acoording to
detectives.
ON ALL NEW AND USED
ITEMS
~EWELRY
~ UPTO
MUSICAL
STRUMENTS
UP TO
50°/o OFF
WASffiNGTON (AP) -Victims of the
1969 Santa Barbara oil &pillage were
turned down t o d a y by the Suprtme
Court in a bid to halt further drilllngs
in the California channel.
The Santa Barbara officials, bualness·
men, boat owners and conaervatiOnists
wanted !he court to enjoin drllling of new
v.·ells and construction of a drilling
platform until a public hearing has been
held.
The court made no comment as it
routinely announced il had decided 7 lo
O not lO hear lhe dl.spule. Justice Wil·
Jiam O. Douglas and John M. Harlan
did not participate and gave no ei:plana·
lion.
Last April tlie U.S. CircuJt Court In
San Francisco ruled hearings ~·ere not
required under Interior Department and
Corps of Engineers regulations. The is-
sue of whether the regulations are un-
constitutional is now before a three·
judge federal court in C~lifomla .
The Santa Barbara people, all dam -
age victims In the January 1969 oi l
spillage, said they could show new drll·
lings pose a danger or leakage and con·
lamination. The Justice Department, in
oppo!ing the appeal, cited the finding s
of a scientists p a n e J that continued
drilling and depletion w o u I d reduce
pressure and Jes.sen the likelihood of
blowouts.
In 1969 the Interior Department 11.dopl·
ed a regulation authorizing public hear·
inp for a proposed leasing program
but oot requiring them. The leases in
the Santa Barbara case wrere award·
ed in 1968. Therefore. the Justice De-
1,:iartment argued, the public hearing
regulation \lo'Ould not apply lo Santa
Barbara even if it was mandatory.
Union Oil Co. has begun drilling new
wells in the channel and the Corps of
Engineers has decided to issue platform
construction permits.
Front Page I
COURT ...
antitrust laws by t11o·o d ism i s s e d
American League umpires, Al Salerno
and Bill Valentine. The justices without
comment let stand lower court rulings
that baseball is exempt from antitrust
action under 1922 and 1953 Supreme
Court decisions.
-Rejected an appeal by a white
Mississippi parent who challenged a tern.
porary court order revoking federal tax
exempt status for new white ac:ademies
wtiich do not have non-discriminatory
racial 1ehool policies.
-In an about.face, sent back to
a lower court the question whelher non-
English speaking voters in 19 states
n1ay be requited to use English in
answering questions to register. The
court voted March 30, 1970, to hear
arguments in a case involving a group
of h1exican-American farm workers in
Yakima County. Wash .. but reversed
this apparently on grounds the justices
unanimously upheld on Dec . 21 the right
of Congress to outlaw all literary tests.
-Agreed to hear a case involving
the right of L.S. Customs inspectors
to require a person to strip as part
of a search for narcotics or other con·
traband. It accepted for future decision
an appeal by the J11s11ce Department
from a ruling of the 9t h l·.s Circuit
Court of Ap~a\s that surh a search
"'as legally unjustt f1ed in thP case of
a young "·oman found with heroi n at
San Ysidro, Cahl.
HarYa ril i\a1n es Bok
CAMBRI DGE . ~l ass ! AP 1 -Derrk
Curtis Bok. dean of H a r v a r d Law
School. today was n;imrd 25th president
of Harvard University. the nation's old·
est unive rsity, by the university's Board
of Overseejs.
l olt R1citi
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. . . . . ~ ... • .. _ .... _ ·--....... -
Buniingion Beaeh Today's Fba•I
N.Y. Sted• EDI TION
YOL. 6", NO. 9, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 'I f, 1971 TEN CENTS
Ribal Calls Ou·ster as Trustee 'Hatchet Joh'
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
ot 1111 D•Hr "U•t "'"
Dr. Joseph Ribal today described his
removal from !he H.untington Beach
Union High School District board of
trustees as a "crude political hatchet
job."
In a letter to the DAILY PILOT,
Ribal, a psychology professor now on
sabbatical leave in Scandinavia, caJled
the act "unlawful" and "cunning."
"The prematurity of the board action,
UPIT .........
MAY GET LONG COUNT
Te•m1ter1' Jimmy Hoff•
its odd urgency, the secrecy and surprise,
and the compl ete lack or propriety
in following ordinary resignation pro-
cedure and courtesy were only the subtle
indicators of the motives behind this
back work," Dr. Ribal said.
·0r. Ribal's seat was declared vacant
Dec. 8 by his felliw board members
after he had failed to attend board
meetings for more than 90 days. The
state Education Code allows absen<:i!s
of up· to 60 days, but the board had
UPIT1 ........
STILL IN THERE PUNCHING
Boxer C•uiu1 Cl•y
Supreme Court Will Hear
Ca ss iu s Clay Draft Cas e
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Cassius Clay,
former heavyweight boxing champion,
won a new hearing from the Supreme
Court today on his conviction for refusing
jnduction into the Army,
The action means that C I a y ' s
mu!Umi!Bon dollar title fight with the
present champion, Joe Frllier, can go
ahead as planned in New York on Marcil
8.
The court said in a brief order it
would confine arguments in the c a s e
to Clay's claim of conscienlious objection
because of his Muslim religion.
Clay -who now uses the name
Muhammad Ali -also contended that
the government had illegally lapped hi!!
telephone con versations, but the court
decided not to consider that claim.
Arguments will be heard in the case
•nd a decision bonded down later in
the term.
At its first session or the new year,
the court tur ned down an appeal by
the already imprisoned president of the
Teamsters Union, James R. Hoffa, from
his cinvi.cti on of defrauding the union's
pension fund. Hoffa thus faces an ad-
ditional five-year prison sentence in ad-
dition to lhe eight years he now ill
serving at Lewisburg, Pa., federal
Rei1istate1nent
Hearing Resumes
01i Beach Officer
City personnel commissioners 9Cbedur-
ed a marathon seuion from 5 p.m. today
wilh the hope or concluding all testimony
in the reinstatement cue crf fired Hun--
tlngton Beach poUCi!man Gilbert. Coerptr.
Among the witnesses to be produced
tonight by defense attorney Cecil RiCks
is Reece Ballard, the Mayor of Garden
Grove and private investigator who wu
hired to loot into the circumsfancts sur-
rounding Coerper·s dismissal.
C'.oerpe.r, a motorcycle patrolman, was
fired Aug. 21, for allegedly rrUap-
proprlaUng merchandise given to him
by a dep11rbnenL store for transmittal
to the Polko Wlfts GuOd, a'clwity.
Police Olief Earle Roblt.aille relieved
Coerper from duty for allegedly keeping
l(lme of the metthandl.lle and then refu!.-
lng to cooperate with an administrative
tnvestJc11Uon.
Lone Quad Survives
" SALT LAKE crrv (UPI ) -Tiny Joe
Anne Springer, 1Qnc survivor or quad-
ruplets born In Idaho, Is in "critical
and unstable" <.'Ondltlon in an artificial
resplrl10r bec•U!e she no longer can
brealbe for herself.
penitentiary for jury tampering.
The court also;
-Refused to hear a challenge to
organized baseball brought under the
antitrust laws by two d i s m i s s e d
American League umpires, Al Salerno
and Bill Valentine. The jwtices without
comment let stand lower court rulings
that baseball ii exempt from antitnut
action under 1922 and 1953 Supreme
Court decisions.
-Rejected an appeal by a white
Mississippi parent who challenged a tern.
porary court arder revoking federal tax
exempt status for new whil.e academics
which do not have non-discriminatory
racial school policies.
-In an about-face, sent back to
a lower court tile question whether nor,.
English speaking voters in 19 states
may be required to use English in
answering questions to register. The
court voted March 30, 1970, lo hea r
arguments in a case involving a grou p
of Mexican·American farm warkers in
Yakima County, Wash., but reversed
this apparenUy on grounds the justices
unanimously upheld on Dec. 21 the right
of Congress to ouU.w all literacy tests.
-Agrttd to hear a case involving
tbe right of L.S. CUstoms inspectors
to require a perlOn. to strip as part
of a .seartb for narcotics or other co~
traband. It •ccepted for future decision
an appeal by the Jwtlct Department
from a ruling of the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals that 1uch a search
was legally unjustified in the case of
• young woman found with heroin at
San Yaidro, Call!.
Fountain Valley
Taking Initial
High Rise Look
Foantatn Valley P l 1 n n t n g Com-
m.iuioners were tehechUed to take the.Ir rust loot •• (IOLlmtlal rulea ,.. hllh
rbe apartmentt In a ipedaI stu4y .... 1on
laLe Liii.! ·-·
The lily aJmlltly ·-""' -any rules oa &Jch rlat opartmeota. "The commlulon i. _......., the
potootlal of It," Clllll<NI -. ~
director, eiplliined. ·~we're looklng at
possible desip stand1rds, but no loca~
tiona or definite rtgul.at.lons."
Three stories 11 the Umtt f o r
1partmentl now, though commercial
buildings can go higher.
"We'fi have more talb on It, and
If the commission w1nts tome tort o{
high rt,. laws there wtn be public hear-
Jnp, '' Sherrod "1d.
I
granted him s 30-day extension.
• ' T h e accompanying back·stabbing
personal attack by the board president
reported in one local newspaper should
make it quite clear lhal these trustees
were seeki rig to arrange an ignominious
end to my seven years of service by
harming my personal and professional
reputation in the communily with un-
favorable publicity," fulminated Dr.
Ribal.
He added that he had intended to
resign at the board's De<:. 2.2 meeting,
allowing the board to set a "legal"
elecUon date of April 20 for his vacant
office.
"The County Counsel told us what we
could do and what we could not do. The
law says he must be removed. We had
no other recourse," school board presi·
dent Matthew Weyuker said today.
Dr. Rlbal , on the other hand, con-
tends lhe board has broken the law by
setting the special election for April 20,
also the date for the regular election.
•·such an election must be held within
l20 days of a decla red vacancy accord·
ing to the law. Assuming the validity
of a Dec. 8 declaration of vacancy, this
law requires an election to be held by
April 7," he argued.
"Not only was lhls a very shabby po!i.
tical stunt, it almost became a $15,000
liability lo local taxpa yers which would
be the cost of a special election to fill
the few remaining months of my term."
A check at the Orange County EdUCI.·
tion Department did not 1upport Or. Ri·
bal's contention.
Officials there iJ>Olnltd out that the
professor's seat was not tedmically
vacant until the minutes of lhe Dec. a
board were received by the county sup-
erintendent. That date was Dec. lt. A,dd..
ing 120 days to Dec. 14 ltll1 would not
take it to April 20, but another section
of Ute education code was cited to tx·
(See RIBAL, Pap !)
Industrialist Bombed
Defen:;e Aide's Partne r V ictim in Palo Alto
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Two firebombs
were hurled early today at the home
()f industrialist William R. Hewlett, whose
partner is deputy secretary or defense .
tlewlett. 57, multimillionaire president
of Hewlett-Packard Corp., was awakened
by the muffled explosions of the Molotov
Cocktails and put out the fire with
extinguishers recently placed in lhe home
because of anonymous telephone threats.
Hewlett's partner, and co-founder of
the electronics manufacturing firm, is
Nixon Tax
Ea sing Seen
On Business
There was speculation today that Presi-
dent Ni:lon might announce that tax
burdens on business will be eased.
The expected move is aimed at
speeding economic expansion of the Uag-
ging national economy.
The only news briefing scheduled by
administration aides today wes set for
12:30 p.m. in Laguna Beach, an unusua ll y
late hour. It coincides with the time
of closing of the stock. exchange in
New York.
Treasury of.ficials have completed
drafts of new regulations to grant
bus inesses faster tax writeoffs on
amoun!Ji they sper.d on new equipment
and pl ants. This would mean a tax
savings for business running into billions
of dollars.
The plan is to perm it businesses to
deduct more for depreciation of equip-
ment in the earlier years of its use.
Presently companies deduct from taxes
the cos t of equipment on a yearly in-
stallment basis ta king into consideration
the useful life of the machinery.
A presidential panel devised the new
rules. It was said lhey would reduce
government receipts by $1.4 billion in
the first year. $3 .7 billiori in the second
and more thereafte r.
The idea is to encourage modernization
of equipment and exii"nsion of pro-
duction. In recent months industries have
spent frugally on new p I a n t s and
machin ery.
Nixon is expected to leave San
Clemente sometime thls week but •
firm time bas not been announced.
It b: expected be will make an ap-
pearance in Washington late Ulla week
before members of tbe Republican Na-
tional Ccmmittee. 1be committee ls to
name a succeSsor to Natior.Ji Chairman
Rogers C. B, Morton. Il is expected
the choice ~ti be Sen. Robert Dole
of Kansas, a Nixon stalwart. The White
house isn't saying.
Since fiying here on a 11eml·vacaUon
Jast week., the President has taken a
few swi!Tl.!I in Uie heated pnol of his
eeas ide villa, has walked on the beach,
driven in IOUtbem Orange County and
visited Catalina Island.
He walked down to the be&ch Saturday,
his f)8th birthday, taking two dogs with
hlm and occasionally getting h1s feet
wet in the aurf.
SYLYIA ST A.R'l'S
• SA YING SERIES
Financial columolat Sylvia Porter'
comes to the rucu1 of tlll lnllatJon...be.
sieged -.~"lodsy, In •.
-ti -_, ' doal..,ed to befp.you "" lrOm· to fllty percent
and more "' ~.:rou boy. Thia Is not a clabd', it't a fact. that
by buying wi5ely, ~ t!le hidden
<Otta which ~· -the'
unwary. by watcbln; Jllices, IUIODI,
11les and iuarante1111 clostty you can
roll back the strain on your family
budget. and uve thousands of dollars
a year. Follow SyMa·Pwtiw!1~tllltlDn
beallng O'.llumn.s tbll wee~
David Packard, the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police and Hewlett-Packard
spokesmen believed the firebombing was
due to Packard's Washington post and/or
the company 's government contracts. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray said
there were no suspects nor any positi ve
leads.
Neighlxirs told police they saw two
white men run from Hewlett's home
at the time of the attack. The men
climbed into a dark-rolored Volk.!wagen
"Beattle'' which had been parked nearby
with its motor idling and lights off.
They drove off without turning on their
lights and witnesses could give only
vague descriptions.
One of the firebombs struck the rambl·
ing. two-story home between the first
and second floors and fell harmlessly
lo the ground . The sec;:ond hit a transom
abo ve the front door and fell to the
porch, where it started a fire.
Chilean Import
Ex change Student in Fo ste r Hom e
)!y TERRY COvn.LE
Oftllll ..... ,l~Nft
Terua Hedalfo, 17, is tba darlt.eyed,.
dark·halred beauty from Chile who
wanted a home ln Huntington Beach.
It was t0uch and go for a few week!!,
but, with the help of Edi.son High School
Principal Ernest Pascoe, she found It.
Teresa arrived at her new home
Wednesday -with a great sigh of relief.
"Yes I was nervous," she explalnl
In Spanish. Teresa s p e a ks no English
yet. She's here to spend si:1 months
es an exchange student at Edison.
"I've wanted to come to the U.S.
for many years," says the girl from
Concepcion, a city of about 200,000.
She's been adopted -for six monlht
-by J..tr. and Mrs. Marvin Kleinberg.
21832 Kaneohe Lane. The Kleinberg• have
three daughters. all of whom are learning
Spanish rapidly.
"We heard of Teresa's plight and
thought it would be nice to ha ve a
foreign studen t here," Mrs . Kleinberg
said.
Teresa is a small package of soft,
dark features. At first she is shy, but,
with time, begins to talk more of her
home and the distinctions between Ch ile
and the U.S.
"We don't eat sweet and sour foods
togethf!:r," she said. amazed lhat her
American family could do\vn a salad
wilil vinegar and oil and a pieei! of
chocolate cake al the same meal.
"We eat a lot of chopped beef, with
rice. We also use a lot of spices."
With just two days In Huntington
Beach, Tereu. became hooked on oruon
rinp and root bef!:i-, a delicacy she
never tasted before.
Her lrlP. here nearly didn't comf!: or:r.
Before P'8coe. 1slued a plea for help,
tt looked like there wu no home for
her.
AJ It WU she had to h\l!tle, Officials
of Jnternl.tJonal Fellowship told her on
Dec. 30 abe could come and on Jan.
I, she was here.
"O:llle bas no city like lhla," ahe
DAILY PILOT $1•11 P~o!I
NEW GIRL IN TOWN
Exchang• Student Hed1l90
remarked, referring to the spread out
size of Hun tingto n Beach.
Most Chilean cities are tightly packed ,
she explained, and the highways are
not so large.
Teresa would like to return to the
U.S. for study In one of the universities.
She'd like to be a pediatrician.
Her father, German (pronounced her-
man), lll a government WtJrker, specializ-
ing In lhe field of lnt.rnal tax ...
"Some friends of mine came to the
U.S. once. When they came back they
saJd it was unfriendly, No one talked
to them ," Teresa said. "But everyone
is vuy good with me."
"We're delighted with her," Mn.
Kleinberg said.
Long-haired Students
Face Expu'lsion Threat
-·· lool'-l!alrod -.. t Loa Amlgoo Hlgb SCbooI In FOlllllain Valley
faced .._ion today !or lpOrlng an
edlCL to cut lhelr Iocb.
"I daa't know a many. but tllero
wlD lie tome IUIPfDlionl}" Aa11t.aDt
Principal Fr<d Goyette, said thia moru-
lng.
Frtday, about toO Los AruiSOlll students
11thered on the lchool quadrangle to
protest the dress code and an attempt
by a G.nlen Grove ..... le. Mr. and
Mrs. Keoneth Llnlcl<, to pt rotrr t<achen
and 80\mll!:lor 1l lol!· AmllQI fired.
,,,. Llnlcu ba" charged the teacbera
with 111tn1 me\llOda aed ,maLerlalt which
vlolaLe the famlb"• mora~ rellcloua .and
(IOtriollC bellell;
' I\
Goyette said l!ttldenla at tba rally wve
peaceful, but many were warned they
wDlllcl be """"'ded II they didn't cut
their hair by Monday.
The Garden Grove U~ School
Dlatrtd dress code .. ,. hair 1111111 be
dean and ...n groomed. IL canoot haac
pall tbe collar line or a dml shirt,
nor cover the eyes or ears. Beards
and mouatanchts Brfl not allowed..
Goyette uld I.he protest rilly wu
held at the ume Ume u a pep rally,
and when the pep .r•llY broke up so
did the . protest.
Im: AmllJll ts ·tn the: · ~rthe111t comer
of Fount.aln V•lley aod .,.., students
from Fountain Valley, Sal)Ja A!lll wt
Garden Grove.
;l
Hewlett, whose sh.ares of HIWfeU-
Packard stock are worth more than
a quarter of a billlon dollars, med an
extinguisher to quell lhe blue. The fire
was out when firemen and police amved..
Damage was minor.
Hewlett and his wife were in the
house when the gasoline-filled bottles
were hurled alxiut 12:30 a.m. The horn•
is located in en older, upper middle
class residential area in the naUands
(See BOMl!ING, P11e !)
Hand Grenade
Injures 29
At U.S. Base
&AIQON (AP) -The U.S. Army is
lnv..Uiiitlng a dlsturbance oullidt an
enlisted man's club Saturday night during
which 1 fragmentation grf!:nade injured
29 U.S. soldiers.
Six of the Gis were hospitalized, OM
1n a serious condition.
Military sources said It had not been
determined whether the grenade wu
thrown or was dropped and ei:ploded
by accident.
The disturbance occurred at Tuy Hoa,
a U.S. base on the cenb'al ·coast 240
miles northeut of Saigon. Military police
were called to the club alter trouble
developed between members of the tst
Battalion, 22nd Infantry , and C Company,
75lh Ranger Battalion. The sources said
the cause of the dis turbance Wat not
known. but possibl y there were racial
im plications.
The sources 11aid the MPs tried to
break up the large crowd but finally
had to use tear gas to disperse the
Gls. In the confusion, the fragmentaUon
grenade exploded.
On Thursday night, a U.S. Army major
was killed and another was wounded
in a post·midnight argument with five
enlisted men at the Quang Tri combat
base 16 miles south of the demililariz.ed
zone. The officers were trying to get
the enlisted men to lower the volume
of their phonograph.
The Anny said three of the enliated
men were held for questioning, and the
investigation was still under way.
Schools Get Grant
An 18,000 grant under the Miller-Unruh
Buie Reading Act hu been awarded
to the Fountain Valley School Dlsl.rlct.
The staLe money will provide utra
teaching time and materials fer stadeotl
with special ru.dlng problems.
w .. o.er
TuOlday'1 aunahlno wW be of
the hazy variety Oftf the Oranp
Coast with tome drilale seen kll'
Inland ara.. Tempenatura will run from 11 1o a ....,_
INSmE TOQA'Y
A M1Dlf cl<c:ttd _. ... "'°" in. prie.S'a clo'1Ung1 ii ell
Id to QO GI 4 D......-....
retentative fr1:tm lfCUNChUdCI.
Page 18,
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-II =··:.:..c.. n
-u .....,,.. ,... .
........ I ,,... .......... --.... "
1
-._ " -... --.. --u --. =-..-....:: = ...,. ........... ,,...
--~ ...
...
j! DAIL V PILDT M"""1, .s.n..ty 11, L'7l
~Deatla to Sela••ie' R il F" · ~ a ~r
. .
Ethiopian Youths
Stage Protest
•!ELGRAVE AVE. To Request
• Aid Funds
About fO students des c r'1 bing
: themselves as Ethiopia's "cream of the
: crop'' chanted for the death of their
: leader near the gate5 of the Western
WIPI< Howe.
Shoutln& "Death to Jiaile Selaule."
and "death to fascist pig s," the student.I
; spent about two hours near the pastures
: 01 the Elmore Ranch next to the Nixon
• Estate.
• (See Photo Paa:e. 3)
: Ostensibly, ttle demonstration, the flrst
: of the new year at the Presidential
: compound , \.\'BS asking for the cutting
: off of foreign aid to tbe northeast African
: country.
: Spokesman for the Ethiopian Students
· Union Jn North America, ~ Angeles
Chapter, said the aid was being used
to direct weapons against fellow citizens,
primarily in the area of Eritrea.
The spokesman claimed that in the
past few week! 1,000 Eritreans have
been "massacred" by Selassie's troups.
The demonstration by the students
bearing large placards drew two Secret
Service agents from within the Nixon
enclave and a few San Clemente police
: He'• Candidate
Rev . Clennon King, Albany,
Ga., has announced he will be
a presidential candidate in
1972. In a ne,vsletter he dis-
tributed, King says he be·
lieves "whoever is elected
president of the U.S. in 1972
will be the reincarnation of
Jesus."
From Po11e 1
BOMBING ...
of Palo Alto. about 35 miles south of
San Francisco.
A company spokesman said the in-
dustrialist has received anonymous
telephone threats in recent months,
usually \1-'arning of atlacks on his home
or his family. They were e-0nsldered
crank calls, but company security of-
ficials placed the fire extinguisherli in
his house . '
DAILY PILOT
ORANC.5 CO.UT ,UILllHING '°""'AMY
Roi•rt N, w,N
'rulllt111 •r.d ,wo-1-
J,c.k It Cwrl1y
Vl1.t l"rn1<1..,r •r.4 ~r•I ....,.Mt.,.
Thom11 Ktt vil
EltiiOr
Thom11 A. M11r,.hi11t
M111111111 Eti,Of"
Al111 Dirki11
Wt1I tlr11191 C1111111~ •t11tr
.A!btrl W. 11111
Au«lt lt Editor
H•11tl1tttea lffcll Offlc.•
I 717!i lt1ch lo11l1v1rd
M•ili111 Adclr1111 P.O. lo.: 7,0, '2MI
-°"""' t..OllM •tte111 m 'IN'•' "'~'""'' Cotti Mftl7 .U0 Wnl It~ 51rttl
HIWPl"I •••ell: 2tll WMI l•llMll 1ou1 ..... re llft C""*'°ltl a.I Mirth ll C.mlftl AteL
officers.
The.re were no incidents.
Besides their placards denouncing
feudalism and imperialism wirhin their
cOuntry the college-age students carried
&lil{l1l red cards containing hints on a
person's rights when he is arrested by
police.
In each segment referring to police
on the cards, the word pigs had been
inserted, instead.
2 Boys Survive
550-foot Plunge
In Silverado
'I'wo teenage boys were seriously in-
jured Sunday night when their small
car plunged 550 feet down a Silverado
Canyon wall.
The youths were removed from the
canyon four hours later after a rescue
effort carried out far into the cold night.
Orange County firemen direcl.ed the
rescue which brought out David Burk,
16, of 28216 Thisa Way. and his passenger
Mike McCormick, IS. of 29181 Sleepy
Hollow, both of Silverado Canyon.
The accident occurred on a narrow
dirt roadway which leads to Santiago
Peak, about five miles above. the
Si!verado fire station.
Burk is suffering from a compound
fracture of the left leg and McCormic k
incurred chest injuries, officials reported.
Their car went off the road about
~:30 p.m. and was reported by an
unknown person using a citizens band
radio to reach firemen. Fortunately, the
accident wa!J witne8$ed by a following
car driven by Raymond Hamm. 15 of
Lakewood.
Hamm, his brother Gary, 15 and Wayne
Bentley, 16, of Norwalk climbed down
the steep canyon to the injured boy.
Burk told them he lost control of
the car when he applied the brakes
at about JO miles an hour on a curve
which threw the vehicle against the
mountainside and then back across and
off the lG-foot roadway.
Jeeps carrying members of a car club
followed and one of them had the radio
by which the distress call was sent.
In all 24 men were involved in the
rescue including members of the 1herlff1
department search and rescue team and
Cleveland National Forest officials.
The youthl had to be puUed up the
1lde of the c\lff by winchea. They had
been placed in litter basket!.
New Toastmaster
Slate l1istalled
New office.rs of the Westminster
Toastmasters Club were installed at a
dinner in Huntington Beach over the
weekend.
They are odnald Lewellen, president;
Chuck Hightower, administrative vice
president; Al Bentley. educational vice
president; S t e v e. Mullins. secretary-
treasurer, and Bill Longfello"" ser-
geant-at-anns.
The club meets every Wednesday at
&:30 a.m. at the Copper Penny CoHee
Shop, \\-'estminster.
Together Again
"' "' _,
0 "' WESTMINSTER
On the Market
FOR SALE
,_;
"' TRASK
"' 0
"' " " 0 ..,
22
" "'
I-"' ..,
" z ..,
0 _,
0 "'
AVE.
AVE .
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Trus~ of
the financially aillnf Pt!nn c.entral Trans~rlation Co. have decided to •~k
for almost all of the $125 million in
e1nergency loan guarantees Congress
authorized in December.
The court • appointed trustee.1 said
they wlll apply for $1 lO million h1
loan gu3ranlees from the U.S. Depart·
1nent of Transportation to keep the na·
lion's largest railroad running through
March 31.
The loan guarantees are avallable un-
der the Emergency Rail Services Act
pa ssed by Congres~ Dec. I.
The trustees said the $110 million wi\1
be rai~ed through the issue of two cer·
tificates. one for $6 million to mature
Jan. 15. 1976. and the other for $5 million
to mature Jan. 1.'.i, 1986,
The brokera ge firm , Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner and Smith Inc. will re-
present the underwriting group. The
Federal Reserve Bank of New York will
be fiscal gent for the certificates.
Map pinpoints 46 acres in Westmins ter being plac·
ed on the block by the state Division of Highways.
State officials say the land, zoned for single family
residential housing. is one of the largest and most
valuable parcels of surplus property ever offered
by the d ivision of highways, which has set $1 .25
million as the minimum acceptable bid on the land.
Bids are due March 2 at division of h ighways of-
fices in Los Angeles.
The application must be approved by
U.S. Dist. Judge P. Fullam, who is over·
seeing the railroad's affairs since It ap·
plied last June for reorganization under
federal bankruptcy laws. It will be pre-
sented to him Monday.
The Department of Transportation and
the Interstate Commerce Commission
~lso must approve the application.
Senior Citizens in Beach Trudeau Pays Visit
MATHURA, India (AP) -Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of
Canada, en route to a meeting of British
Commonwealth leaders in Singapore ,
stopped over for a visit to the birth
place of the Hindu god Lord Krishna.
To T emple of Hindu
J
Trudeau was welcomed into t.ht inner
sanctum of a temple Sunday by priests
who applied sandalwood paste to hls
forehead and put a saffron scarf around
his neck. He placed a garland ol
marigolds at tJie foot of a statue Active Social Whirlers
Life begins at 50 for many folks in
Huntington Beach.
When they reach that age. residents
find it's the passport to heady trips
to Las Vegas, Tijuana and the Santa
Anita races.
1t ·s all part of the program of the
Senior Citizens Club of Huntington Beach
which arranges a social wh irl for the
elderly that many younger persons would
find hard lo take.
The club, which has an age minimum
of 50 as its only membership re·
quirement, bas S50 persons on it.s rolls
and is one of the largest and most
active groups i.n the community.
f.lrs. lrene Edwards, !be tour director,
attributes the interest to the outings
the club organizes.
"Some people have little opportunity
to get out. "she said. ''They grab the
chance for a day at the races or a
couple of days in Las Vegas ."
The club recently elected nev.· officers
and reviewed its 1970 activities. A total
of 22 tours v.·ere arranged, with five
to Las Vegas and others to San Diego
Zoo, Solvang, Lake Tahoe and Tijuana.
A minimum busload of 41 persons went
on each trip.
The members v.·iU be trying their luck
out early this year with a trip Tuesday
to Santa Anita Racetrack to help feed
the horses and on Jan. 18-20 they will
journey to Las Vegas.
"We never have a dull moment," said
Harry Boyer. publicity chairman.
He reported that members unable to
go on the tours attend parties. dances,
and card-playing sessions the club ar-
ranges.
Anyone "'ishing to join !he busy group
can do so by attending the meetings
held at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
city Parks and Recreat.ion Center at
17th Street and Orange Avenue. The
members play cards after a brief
business meeting.
All the 1970 officers have been
reinstated for 1971 by unanimous vote.
They are: f.'lrs. Helene Pound, presi-
dent Mrs. Esther Rivelli, vice president;
Jenny Siebert, Mrs. A1ary Perkins, Mrs.
Mae Conant, Mr s. Dorothee Giboney,
f.1rs. Evelyn Bartley and William
Bartley.
f.1rs. Helen Evans, treasurer; Mrs. Rulb
Sears. secretary. and Mrs. Edwards,
tour director. Other officers include Mrs.
l'rotn Pa11e l
RIBAL ...
plain bow that lime limit could be legal-
ly extended.
The section quoted reads, "Whenever
a vacancy occurs within four months of
a regularly scheduled election for the
governing board In which the vacancy
occurs. the special election shall be held
at the same time as and shall be con-
50Jidated with that regularly scheduled
election.·• •
"We could have declared that vacancy
after 50 days, but the board felt serloua
enough lo allow him the additional 30
days." Weyuker said.
"\Ye simply wanted to be fa ir with
him. I'm very disappointed in him
tirading us."
During his term as school board
member. Dr. Riha! had nften engaged
in vigorous debates on educational
philosophy with Weyuker and other board
members.
But throughout the disputes. Weyuker
said no one ever attacked him personally.
"He seems to have. some kind of complex
about that. I feel no malice toward
him. I disagree with his philosophy.
bul I have nothing against him
persnal\y."
Spi11s New Record
Ri chard Ford. 30, is somethin g of a. disc jockey. He jockeyed a disc
called the Playland Park ferris \\heel in San Francisco for 20 days,
16 hours and 30 minutes, setting a ne\v ferris \\'heel endurance
record. I-le comple~ed his one-n1an revolutions S11nrl:iv l'hp 41).~~ ... t
wheel revolved during most of his stay, except when he was sleepini'.
ON ALL NEW AND USED
ITEMS
,A._ JEWELRY
~ UPTO 50% OFP
OVERSHIPMENT OF
GUITARS ....
lf,,I
WILL SELL 10% s1 2•s ABOVE OUR COST
COMPARE .
.,_ .. o.ttwl .. ClltM .._
PEOPLE IN THE KNOW SAVE MONEY EVERYTIME THEY BUY IT IS NOT EASY TO BUY
FOR CASH, BUT IF YOU HAVE CASH, BANKAMERICARD, OR MASTER CHARGE YOU
CAN SA VE TREMENDOUS AMOUNTS ON EVERYTHING EVERYDAY.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
Pat Lacy and Greg Wike are cheered on by friends as they work their way past the old marathon kissing record (20 hours, 14 rhlnutes) lo
new standard of 30 hours. Pair set the record during the weekend in
a dormitory at UCLA. They remarked later that It was not an alto-
gether unpleasant w1y lo poss lhe weekend, but complained of chip·
ped Ups .
Raeitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
1838 NEWl'ORT ILVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COST A MISA a.twMn Herbor & Bro.dway
-
1 I
' I
I ·1
I
. ~ . . -.. •• . . . ' ' . -·-
MOlld•Y, Jllluary 11, 1~71 H D.lll Y PU.OT
GI Decla1·es
He Spurned
Lt. Calley
By Wlre1 Strviu:s
FT. BENNI NG, Ga. -A sect1nd
\releran of the My Lai swttp te~lifled
for the government today that be refused
a dirt('\ order by Lt. William L. Calley
J r. lo fire into a group of Vjetnamese
civilians in lhe hamlet of t.1y Lai.
Tht v .. itness, Ronald D. C. Grzesik,
26. of Holyoke. t.lass., 11i·as lhe 36lh
prosecution ~1itness in ilS attempt to
convict the 27-year-old former infantry
platoon leader of the premeditated
murder of 102 civilians in My La.i on
t.1arch 16, 1968.
Grzesik testified that in his capacity
as a fire team leader in the Calley
platoon. he came across f.1eadlo crying
in the middle of the village and tried
to talk with him.
White Hotase West Protest Grzesik said he could not recall exactly
what Meadlo to\J him but could give
an impression of the import of his v.·ord.
A defense objection prevented his giving
his impression.
Later, he testified. he came upon a
drainage ditch in which there were 35
to 50 civilian bodies. J1e said he saw
Calley at lhe ditch.
About 40 s l udents in school throughout Southern
California are sho\vn at gates of Western \Vhite
I-louse in San Clemente during Sunday Tnorning
demonstration. They urged U.S. to withhold foreign
aid to Ethopia, funds they maintain are used for
\\'Capons directed against leftist students. Slogans
such as ''Death to Haile Selassie (Ethiopian em·
peror)" were chanted.
ls She, or lsri't She?
T ricia Nixon is u•earing a ring on h er left hand. Is it an engageme nt
ring? 1'-taybe so. maybe no. Tricia isn't saying, but columnist Betty
Beale or the W ashington Sta r re ported Sunday that Tricia, 24 , will
marry Edward F. Cox, a Harvard law student, June 14. So far, tber~
has been no official announcement that the couple are engaged.
Court Rejects Attempt
To Halt Ne'v Oil P1·obit1g
"Whal did he tell you?" asked Capt.
Aubrey M. Daniel III, the prosecutor.
"To take my fire learn back into
the village."
'"What else did he tell you?" Daniel
asked.
"'1t1y impression is that he said
so mething in relation to •finish 'em off.'
"Wbat did you say?''
Tustin Board to Conside1·
County Office Support
"1 refused." ' Grzesik said he v.•as about 2fl mctrrs Tustin Union High School District Renewed support is necessary, accord-
away from the diteh at the time. He board of education tonight will consider in~ to a staff recomm endation calling
said he refused lo "finish 'em off.., a resolution supporting the county schools for tht' resolution, "berause of financial
office which recently came under fire and phi·sical aid •-lh•"s d•'slr•"•l" "What v.·as Lt. Calley 's reaction?'' ..., ... · "I don"t recall. 1 wasn"t paying at· from the Orange County Grand Jury. Trustees also y,·ill consider setting a
tention." Grzesik said. Reacting lo the grand jury report trustee election date of April 20, during
"To what were )'OU paying altent'•on'.'' calling for .ibolition of the countv their meeting which begins at 7:30 p.m.
"Staying alive." superintendent's office. trustees will muil in the conference room of Tustin High
adoption of a re1.lutian "in support School, 1171 Laguna Road , Tustin.
Grzesik, a dye maker now, testified of the continued exi, ence or the depart-Two board niembcrs' terms expire
he never saw Calley do any shooting menl, the Orange C unty Superintendent thi.~ year. lhose of J-loward . I,. Sellec k
that day. of Schools. and the county board of and Hobert C. Bartholomew, both of
The defense earlier today won the educations." Santa Ana.
right to subpoena a witness who it said A similar resolution of support was A conslruction change order authoriza-
would testify that the task force com-passed by the Tustin board a year ago, lion that would result in a $658 credit
mander at one time was on the ground a district spokesman said. 10 the overall cost of building University
with the troops during the alleged High School carries with it a req uest
massacre at f..iy La i. for an extension of the contract com-
As the court-martial resumed after N R • pletion date by 25 days.
a 24-day holiday recess. chief defen se ot·SO· 01iti1ie The extension request moves the con·
counsel George W. Latimer asked he tracted completion date to Jan. 8.
be permitted lo recall to the stand Bi'rtJi Recorded Originally. the new high school was due Jerry L. lfeming. 21. of Jackson. Miss ., to be finished by Dec. IO.
~·ho had testified for the prosecution. Three reasons are offered for the
Latimer zaid he would testify lo the f.111\'NEAPOLIS (AP) _ Mrs. delay. including 21 days extension due
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Victims of the required under Interior Departmepl and '"presence on the ground during the Robert Davidson"s first words lo lO the July and August strike of
optralion'' of Lt. Col. Frank A, Barker h h b d ft th bl th f h l i.t k lhr d f 1969 Santa Barbara oil spillage were Corn• of Engineers regulattdns. The is-. er us an a er e r o s ee me wor ers. ee ays or a .,.... Jr .. commander of "Task F'orce Barker." their daughter v.·ere routine, but district-approved change order to install
turned down to d a Y by the Supreme sue of whether the regulations ·a~e un· which directed three infantry companiP~ his reply was not electric wiring for an outdoor kiln. and
Court in a hid to h;ilt further drillings constitutional is now bef o re a thrct-in the My Lai s\.\·eep. Barker later was "Congratulations. You have 21. an additional day for delayed pouring
in the California channel. judge federal court in Californi.3 . killed in a helicopter crash . daughter," ~1rs. Davidson, 26, an-of concrete due to installation of un·
The Santa Barbara officials. business-The Santa Barbara people, all dam-The defense disclosed it was ready nounced. derground utilities in the auto shop.
men. boat owners and conservationists age victims in !he January i969 oil :~atcC!'ue~:s :rr~~l~isft;0~0"c~:,~:~ st~.t~~~~.1? h~ ;s~~d. at the police u~:~~~i:~u~~~~ :nndJ!~~u~~Ytl~~o~~11Jr~~
~·anted the court to enjoin drlll ine of new spillage, said they could sho w new dril· mental conditions which exist in con· has yet t.o be finished. ··No notice of
II a d -nstru•t•"on of a dr,·11,·ng d f I k d f..1r.~. Davidson, whose 7-pound, ll-"e s n "v " lings pose a anger o ea age S:n con-neclion with the stresses and strains completion has •·en filed for board ap-
1 " 1·1 bl " h · h b 9-0unce daughter wa s born in the m: P a1.1orm un 1 a pu JC earing as een taminalion. The Justice Department, in of combat and the confusion that exists proval,"' a district business office held back of the famil y station wag. · opposing the appeal, cited the finding."i in the issuance of orders." Latimer said on five mintues after the David· spokesman said . Until the notice of com-
The court n1ade no commen1 a~ it of a scientists p a n e I that contin ued this testimony would go to the questions plelion is approved by the board, the
h d d ·d d d ,_ · I d d sons lcfL their suburban Deep-routlnely announced it a ec1 e 7 to drilling an =pletion w o u re uce of malicious in tent and premeditation. haven home for Abbott Hospital contraclor cannot be paid, she said.
0 not l.o hear the dispute. Justice Wil-pressure and Jessen the li kelihood of ~1eanwhile at Ft. McPherson, Ga., the in Minneapolis Saturday, advis-If the change order including the ex-
Jiam 0 . Dougla s and J ohn M. Harlan blo\\'outs. defense epened its c.a!e in the f.ly Lai ed her husband to "keep going." tension is approved, Shirley Brother!
did not partici pate and gave no explana-Union Oil Co. has begun drilling new assault trial of SgL Charles E. llulle A hospi!al spokesman said Sun-construction company, builders of the
tion. \\'ells in the channel and the Corp.o; of v.·ith tbe contention that the young soldier day b 0 t h mother and daughter fi rst phase o{ the $4.5 million school.
Last April !hr U.S. Circuit Cnurl in Engineers has decided to issue pla Uorm "did what he had been told to do -\\'ere doihg well. v.·ould be relieved of responsibility for
San Francisco ruled hearinJ!5 ~·ere not -~c~nn~s~t~ru~c~ti~o~n~pe>::r:m:its:::_---------p~u:l~I ~th:e:._::ln~·gg~e~r-~"-----------'===============~__'.'.lh:e'..'.delayed completion 0£ the school.
El Rancho h·as the hottest price in town!
••••••••••••••••••••
County Traffic
Accidents Kill
3 on Weekend
A South Pasadena woman whose family
moved to the Capistrano Beach area
to live only Friday died there Saturday
night, when their car slammed inlo a
truc k stalled on Pacific Coast }lighway.
Orange County Coroner's deputies said
a pair of motorcyclists also died ot
accident inju ries, bringing the weeken:'
fatalities to three.
Dead are:
-Mr!. Marilyn Taylor, 36, of South
Pasadena.
-Linda f.1. Wilson, 20, ()I Stanton.
-Craig B. Hudspeth, 16, of Fullerton.
california Highway Patrol officers said
~trs. Taylor was killed Saturday nigh•
on Pacific Coast Highway south of Beach
Road, near the Capistrano Beach Club.
She was dead on arrival at Sou th
Coast Community Hospital in Soutb
Laguna.
Her husband. John L. Taylor, wbt
spent the ·.night ln the hospital along
with daughter Christie, 9. said he realized
the stalled flatbed truck wasn't moving
too late to swerve and miss it.
The vehicle's emergency lights were
blinking, CHP officers said.
Police said Miss Wilson was injured
last Thursday in a cycling tragedy caused
when she tried to miss a basketball
thal rolled into the slreet at Lola Avenue
and \Vasco Road.
She lost control and was thrown to
the pavement, suffering a skull fracture.
Hudspeth died shortly after hil
motorcycle slammed into a car turnln,g
le.ft onto Ford Drive from Euclid Street
in Fullerton Saturday night.
The accident is stilJ under in-
vestigation.
_,
El Rancho's own • , • lean sliCEI!!, cut a little thicker-12 to 14 slices to the Pound ! If you like bacon •.• the kind t hat doesn't shrivel
a way to a shadow o! i~ Conner self •.. if you like flavor for breakfaat ••• you'll love El Rancho·s bacon ••• at El Ra ncho's price!
;, Beef Liver .. !~.~ .. 69~
Y on11 enjoy the mild fla'f'or ••• the clue to quality I
Sausage .... 1!~~. ~ .... 89~
We make it ourselves ••• finest meats, continental aeuonin1t
So 1'1 14-th varitlll of/erf'd in our deli drpartmrn.t !
Sliced Imported Ham ....... : ............... 59C
' -Dak's .•• lean, ,,.ith a distinct ive goodnl..~ ! 4 ounc.e package.
ARCADIA: PASADENA:
Sunset 1nd Huntincton Dr. (El Rancho Center) 320 w.t Colcndo Blvd.
Grapefruit .. R~r:1!~0 •• 10 i $1
Bright flavor in t he gweet juicy pink m eat! Breakfast delight!
I Prict• in effect M<m., Tues., TI'td.,
Jan. 1J, 1!, JS. No IOUa to d~ale ra.
SOOTH PASADENA: HUHTIMGTOH BEACH:
B• • k 40 OZ. PKG. 4nc 1squ1c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Bake a batch ot biscuita to go with bacon for breakfast!
T . t J • . LIBBY'S 2• oma o u1ce...... 7-
\Vonder!ul way to start the da.yf Pour from the Quart decantert
Dow's Oven Cleaner .................................... 6r
Easy to use •• , cu~ av.·ay those ugly splatters! 8 oi. e1n.
Kai Kan Liver Chunks .......................... 4 "' '1
Give your pct the nourishm ent he needs! 14 oz. cans.
NEWPORT BEACH: 2121 Newport Blvd. and
F~l Md Huntinsto<i Dr • ., W1rner and Alpnquin (Boardw1lk Center) 2555 Wlbluff Dr. (Wlbluff Villa1t Ctnl11)
'4 -IWLV PILOT
•
· Othen·have army coup• ... u.? ... We have
'. PMttWOn butlgeu!' i :
Spies Are
Vowrs Too
·By DICK WEST
~t reptirh; that Army int!llitenee
aaenta had been collecting Wormatlon
about U.S. political figures wtre disturb·
it'lg to many people. Particula.rJy U.S.
political figures .
Everyone felt a tot ~Uer alter the
.Army denied it had ever done such
·• thing and promised not to do it any
more. But the 11peeter of miliW"y med·
dling in the civilian 'political 15ysttm
Isn't that easily dispelled.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. fD-N.C.), who
made public the allegation, plans lo
hold hearings on~ matter next month .
SEEKING AN INDICATION of what
sort ol explanation the Army mi&ht
a:lve. I called up a fellow I know at
the Pentagon.
"What u.se did you p I a n to make
of the information you were gsthering
about U.S. political figures?" I agked.
"We wanted to enlighten our11elve11 110
we would be able lo cast our ballots
more inteiligently. Th06e of us at the
Pentagon are voters too, you know.''
,• I The·'
lLil cmhn'fr.n;;m;:,: , J.lfJ Lf-1· ,,_... ~·
..
.
.Side . ·-
I said, "well. why don't )IOU just lisl~n
b the candidates' speeches on television
Ike the rest of us?"
"Unfortunately. some political figures
~annot afford to buy television time .
We certainly would not want to go lhe
polls without knowing how they stood .
"THERE ALSO IS A QUESTION 11
l.o whether television really prese.nl.!i &
candidate in his true light. So we felt
'hit If we collected ss much additions!
Information as possible we would be
\n 11 better position to make wise choices
~n election day."
1 u ld, "that is a very commendable
1ttitude. But "'hY did you have in·
lelligence agents collecting the in..
lormation covertly?"
•·we feel that naturaln~s plays an
important part ln appraising 8 Political
1igure, MAny politieians tend to put on
1 false front in public. II you observe
:hem unawares you can get a better
line on what they are rea\Jy like."
"THAT MAKES SENSE," 1 s8id. ''But
1ren't military intelligence agents only
iupposf<I to be used -0n 11ssignments
that have some military significance""
"A soldier doesn't divest himself nf
.he duties <Jf good citizenshi p when he
)lits on a uniform." my Pentagon fr iend
replied.
"Then all you were doin g \\'as con-
ducting a voter educalion program like
any other civic-minded group, right?''
"Exactly .ll's the S-Ort -0f thing any
~ivic-minded group with a vast in-
lelli1enoe network would do." -UPI
Coco, Famed
In Fashion
World,Dead ..
PillS (AP) -Fashion leaders on
both sides of the Atlantic paid tribute
today to Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel, the
most influentlal dress designer of the
20th Century, who died Sunday nlght
at her auite In the Ritz. She wu 87. ·
Chanel "changed fashion more then
any other dea\gner." said Norman Norell.
the dean of American designers. "She's
tbe ont who made..~ women comfortable
•.. There may be othtr designers who
made more beautiful clothes, but she
bad the mo11t influence."
"One of the great design!:rl of the
century, who never sacrificed herself
to the tendency of making fashion
ridiculous ," aald Marc Bohan of Dior.
A chambermaid at her hotel found
Chanel ill Sunday night. and she died
shortly aftu. Officials of her fashio n
house said dtath apparently was due
to a heart attack.
Funeral arrangements were incomplete
toda y.
The House of Chanel announced that
showing of her new spring and summer
Ct.'lllection will begin on schedule Jan.
2e. She had been working on it Sunday
and had approved 85 model s.
Chanel's death also will not delay the
tlpe.ning In Cleveland tonight ot ';Coco."
the musical based on her life in which
Katharine Hepburn scored a smash hit
last season. Producer Frederick Brisson,
an old fr iend, said Chanel told him
several wetkll ago "if and when anything
happened to her. the ahow was to go
on as usual. That 's the way Jt will
be:• •
Brisson said the performance tonight
would be dfdicated to Chanel.
Chantl'a rtvolulions in fashion brought
haute couture in reach of the workin g
girl afttr World War I.
"There are too many men in th is
business," she l!illid. "and they don 't
know how to make wearable clothes
for women. When fashion descends to
the street it's a revolution. but when
it come11 up from the atreet it's a
cat.aab'ophe."
FASHION QUEEN DEAD
Ageleu Coutourier Was 17
. i., ,r . '· I J' . •
' ~ t.•
COCO CHANEL IN 1931
Work Spanned 6 Decades
Ireland 'Army' Stages
Terroristic Incidents
BELFAST. Northern Jreland (AP ) -
Vigilante.I of the ouUawed Republ ican
Army toot the law into their own hands
over the weekend and tarred and
feathered four young men tor petty
crimes against Belfast Catholics.
2 Ships Collide
Off England; 10
Crewmen Missing
FOLKESTONE, England (AP) -Ten
sailors were reported missing early tod11y
following the colli.!ion in a thick fog
of two oil lanker!! in the English Chan nel.
One ship, the 13.694-ton Texaco Carib-
bean, was on fire and sinking. the Coast
Guard said.
The other tanker, the 9.481-ton Peru-
vian vessel Paracas, was being towfd
to shore by a sa lvage tug.
The Coast Guard reported 20 crewmen
v.•ere rescued, 19 by a Norwegian ship
and one by an English fishing: trawler.
The latter man was reported critically
injured .
Reports from the rescue ships c'lid
nflt say v.·hich ship the res cuer:! and
missing men were from, but presumably
it was the Texaco Caribbean. She is
registered ln Panama.
"This incident should be taken as a
warning by -0thers." said a .spokesman
for the IRA. "Money lenders, ra cketeers
and extortionists will get the isame treat.
men t. The IRA will not is ta n d !or
gangsterism any m-0re."
The TRA claims that the ProtestAnt
police in Northern lreland are not pro-
tecting the Roman Catholic minority.
A cro\\·d of shoppers looked on Satur-
day night as a gang of me n grabbed
two ~'ouths in the Cath olic Falls Road
area and pou red tar and chicken feathers
-0ver them. The gang hung placards
around their victims' necks which said :
"This man has been found gu ilty and
confessed to breaking and entering and
this senter1:e has heen paised by the
Republican movement.''
A third yo ung man covered v.·ith pitch
:ind feathers was fo und Sunday morning,
ch11ined to an Iron railing outslrie a
church. The fourth man , a former soldier
In the British army, was found tarred
and feathered Sunday night.
Republican sources said the mtn had
been convicted at IRA trials held in
e private house. PoliC"e we1 e checking
the reports of tbe kangaroo court, but
none of the victi ms would tell the police
anvthing .
"They v.·ere obviously afraid of mn re
~erious punishment ," said a po!lce
spokesm an.
Also in Belfast. a bomb exploded Su n-
day night in a club in a Protestant
area, but no one was hurt. Such e1-
plosions occur almost every weekend..
Piercing Co·ld Hits Plains
Rest of Nation Finds Relief from Bitter Col,d Waves
Callfornla
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Bolivia Coup Quasll'~
'
WWII Planes Strafe Right-wing Leader,s
LA PAZ, Botlvia (UPI) -Bolivian
Air F'orce PSI Mustang fi&httrs !lrafed
the big Miraflor'J barrack! ill. La PAi;
with machinegu fire At dawn today
to end a right-wing military revolt and
1end its leader• flee ing for political
asylum to the Peruvian Embassy.
Colofll1a Hu10 Banur and Edmundo
Valene!• were ldt11tified u tht leaders
of the attempted coup. Until last week
Banter was director of lhe military
colle1e but was removed and assigned
tl'.I a remote comms.nd 11.fler 1 gr!duation
speech criticizin1 the "direction" -0f the
Torres 1overnment.
Valencia WI! minister of eeonomy in
I
the government oI ex-presidenl /Jtredo
Ovando Candia, ousled la5t Neveinbe r
in the struggle for power wh!eh breught
Torres to the presidency.
The attempted coup began Sunday
night, and the rebel forces apparently
tried to move out 10 take the El Altn
Air Force base whose officers were
kno'A'n to be loyal to Torres. The rebels were apparently trying to
halt the leftward drift of thi1 landlocked
South American cou ntry under the
presidency of Gen. Juan J011e Torres.
wbo himsell took power in a C(!Up last
November. Okinawa Moh Protests
Had it succeeded, the coup would have
been the 187th Jn tbe 1 4~ years since
Bolivia dtclarf:d its independence from
Spain. War Gas Action; Routed
Presidential Secretarial Minister Mario
Vel11de announced that the rebel officers
In the Miraflores barrack!! had laid down
their arms, and a ahort time later cAme
the wtird that about SO of the rebels
had taken asylum in the embassy of
Peru. The right of asylum is cherished
and observed in all Latin Americar:i coun-
tries.
The inhabitants of this moun tain
tapital were kept awake througb most
of the early morning hours by bursts
of gunfire, and at dawn the World War
JI vintage Mustan11 went into action ,
repeatedl y strafi ng the thJck walls of
Miraflores.
NAHA, Okinawa (APl -About 200
Okinawans pro~1tin1 the movement of
deadly mustard ias across their island
wert drivtn hack ea.rJy today from t'A'O
U.S. bases.
The demonstrators attacked some
hours after Americs.n au thorities an -
nounced A two-day dela y in the start
flf transfe r of the gas from storage
on Okinawa lo Johnston lsland, in the
mid·Paelfic.
More than 100 demonstrators armed
with rocka and bamboo poli s tried to
force their way 'into a compowid tn
Chlblnl where aome of the gaa is stored.
Regular $140 to $430
NOW
'99 10'349
Get your ditmond frorn Sean.
Yoa wi ll alwaysgerqualirr.Sears
dimnond baren are rrue cxperu.
bow diamonds, bne sptat ye.rs
bayia1 onJy qualiry diamonds.
C.Olor, cut and clarity are thrtc
musts that they iasist upon. R.i&ht
now, durin& our a.le you noc on--
ly ,et qualirr but you aJ90 get
1896 tO 29% PTifl&S.
LIFETIME TRADE-IN Sean aJ.
I~ you foll ash pri(e pa.id (e:r-
cla1 iT e oft ues aad f iaance
c.baqte) oa any T~ition d i ..
mond rioe. pin. earri.ass in trade 1
for • hiabet priced dimnond at
szytime.
BUY SEAJ.S DIAMONDS
'WITH CONllDENCE Be-
cmae diameiad weights sre 1eJ..
dom ide-otical, approximate mt
weiP.ts are shown. ~ gi ves
you a Carat Weight Cen ificarc
wh.ich states the c.1act ~ighr.
to ooe-hundredth of a carat, of
rvery Tradicion center diamond
ol 1/20 cant ex more.
Seventy U.S. Marines blocked another
100 protesters trying to break throug h
the main gate at Camp Hague, on the
route over \\'hich a convoy WB! lo
transport an initial shi pment or mustard
gas.
One American was repo rted injured
at Chibana .
Movement of the gas v.·as to ha.1•e
begun today but v.•as delayed because
-0f threats by leftists and some villa1ers
to block the shipment. They claimed
the convoys would endang er the lives
of those livin& along the seven-mile route
to the harbor.
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Replar 1225 Marquiae Solitaire
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2/SCL '179 ............. s I..,. c t 1 '=t c...at Pla.:tu
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BEA ANDE RSON, Edit or
Mond1Y, Jtll\ll tY 11, lt ll " ..... 11
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Greens Golden
For Children
The stakes \\'ill be unusually high \\•hen golfers take to the links Sat·
urday and Sunday, .Jan. 16 and 17, fo r the futur e of many children will be
in the balance.
Sponsoring the \\'eekend of gol f \\'ill be the Tiara de Ninos Auxiliary
of Children's Home Society, and benefiting will be families and children to
be joined through the <idoption agency.
Six courses will "be partici pati n~ in the sixth annual Golf·a·thon, and
auxiliary member s and p rovisional s wdl work one-day shifts from 7:30 a.m.
)o 2:30 p.m.
Cour ses participating \\•ill be the Willowick and San Rancho Joaquin
country clubs, Santa Ana; l\1esa Verde and Costa blesa country clubs. Costa
J\1esa. and ?i-1eadowlark and Huntington Seacliff country clubs, Huntington
Beach.
Pros at each club will dra\v a 15·foot circle around a selected hole.
As each golfer tees off for the circled hole, he will be given the opport unity
to take a chance on one ball for 50 cents or three balls for $1.
If his ball reaches the inside of the circle he \Viii \Vin, and if he has
taken a chance and make~ a hole-in-one. he \viii \Vin $25.
Serving as gen eral co·chair1nen of the e vent are Mrs. Don Elliso n
and Mrs. Pa ul Lower.
All {unds derived from the golr-a·lhon \Viii go to\vard suppor t of Chil·
dren's Home Society. the largesl private adoption agency in the state. Since
1891, Ct·IS has placed more than 34.000 babies in families.
Following the golr-a.thon . 1ncmbers \Viii t urn their attention toward
a cocktail cruise and dinner dance ~1ay 15, a major fund-r aising event for
Tiar a de Ninos.
F'ollo\ving the cocktail cr ui se , 1nembers and guests \viii adjourn to
the Tale of the 'Vh al e. Balboa for dinner and dancing.
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MRS. DON ELLISON
More than 20 percent of the society's annual state\vide operating
budget is fund ed through the efforts of the more than 16.000 auxili ary me1n-
bers throughout Califo rnia.
Mrs. Richard Olson serves as president of Tiara de Ninos. MRS. WALLACE TORKELLS
Patter of Small Feet Drowns Out Sound of Freedom's Ring
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 40. My
wife is 38. We have been married 20
years. Our children are 17. 15 and 13.
I've been a good provider, a good
father and a good husband . . . in
that order. My wife and l have devoted
our lives to our children and we were
looking forward to the day when there
v.·ould be just the two of us. We've
always wanted to travel and have a
little fun.
La.st month \\'hen our youngest boy
tu rned 13 our goal was in sighl. Another
t.wo years and he 'd be off to prep
school and we'd be rree. I fel t" 10 years
younger just thinking about it~
Just as t was making plans to have
a vasectomy, my wife announced that
&.he had seen the doctor and he told
Crowned
ANN LANDERS
her she is pregnant. J asked her to
have an abortion. She refused. We got
jnto an argument and now she isn 't
speal<lng to me. I think she is happy
about t.hi3 pregnancy. In fact. I have
a sneaking suspicion she got this way
on purpose.
The prospect of being tied down unt il
T am nearly 60 depresses me. The way
J see It, either my wife has an abortion
or I get a divorce. \Vhen I told her
to take her choice she didn't believe
Club's Top Honor
J was serious -but 1 a111 . 1 realize
this is an extreme measure but I can't
face raising another child. I'd like your
honest opiaion. -ON THE BR INK
DEAR ON: fl1 y honest opin ion Is th at
yo u are either off your rocker or an
18 Carat Heel. Maybe both . Your ~·lfc
did aot get pregnant by herself. If she
wants to ha ve this baby you ha\'e no
right to ask bt r to hav' an abortion.
She is the one who must carry the
child. deliver It and care for It. The
\Vho shall be named \Voman-of-lhe-year for Foun·
tain Valley Woman's Club? Mrs. Gerald Wessler
(center), chairman of the awards committee, finds
the choice a difficult one. Chosen by nomination
made in writing by the general membership, the
aw.ard la based on the club and co~munity activi·
lies during 1970 and will be presented durin~ a
meeting at 8 tonight in the Fountain Valley Civic
Center.
least you can do lst give her a run
measure of emotloaal support. My advl<'t
Is to stop acting li ke a jackass and
acctpt Ibis fourth cblld with dignity.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several days
ago, I ran into a fellow I dated a few
times when I was in high school. \Ve
now are both 2.1. I am not n1arried .
Bud is. In fact he has two small children.
I v.·as immensely attracted to Bud
when v.·c were in school but he didn't
seem to go for me. When we met
in the supermarket he was knocked
out by my looks. my figure. the whole
bit. lie said he"d love to see me again,
but he n1ade il plain he couldn't take
me out publicly. He'd like to come
to my place and sec me •·quietl y."
It seems he married the ''wrong" girl.
His wife is unresponsive and cold. He
needs soinconc who can give his life
n1eaning.
I ant dating several fellows but no
one seriously. 1My true love was killed
in 1968. Vietnam.) l'1n not promiscuous
but I do have a yen for this old fl ame.
I guess I really feel sorry ror hint.
He is miserable and he wants me. \Vould
it be wrong? -VULNERABLE
DEAR VUL: Wt both know y,•hat you
can do ror Hl!tf , but wh at ca n be do
for you? For ope ners: lie caD lakt
up a Jot of your llm ,. And ht's sure
to lmprovt your cooking and double
your groctry bill beca use you'll b' fi xing
llltle suppers .. , tryin g out ntY." recipes.
Whtie yo u "givt his lift meaning" }hu'll
be passing up opportunities to datt sing)e
fe llows.
And let:s not ove.rlook the possibility
that he might dump his wife and marry
you. Yo u would then· have 'the pr lvUeae
of hclpiDg him with alimony and 11upport
n1oney for the children. And don't forcet
th e guilt tboth yours and his). SoddeWy,
y,·ht n it's legal. you'll discover tb1t it
isn't ne arly Ml exc iling as you thought
it wo uld be.
\low v.•111 you know when the real
thing crimes along ? Ask Ann Land ers.
Send for her booklet ·•Uive or Sex and
How to Tell the Difference." Send 3$
cents in roin and a long. sell-addres&ed.
stamped envelope with your reqoest in
care al the DAILY PILOT.
New Commodore Hoists Club Burgee
dance. Retiring commodore Al Fitzpatrtck'O•~" ::· A new •kipper wlll be at the helm ol the Hun tin g-
ton Harbour Yacht Club after Saturday, Jan, 16,
when club members gather aboard the Princess
Louise for installation ceremonies and a dinner·
saluted by Oeft to rigl')tl Incoming commodore s. !"-
Olson, Mrs. Fitzpatricfi an d Mrs. Olson. . t
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You r Horoscope Tomorrow
Capricorn: Balance Emotions
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! • l LL-FINS WADE IN -Already accomplishing
t .~-..-re than th ef set out to do , members of the ~ ·~men's Division, Newport Harbor Chamber of f Commerce will be recognized for their achievements
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Committee Offers
Hope for Victims
A new committee has been organized at
Hoag Memorial Hospital. Presbyterian , titled
Stroke Rehabilitation and Resocialization,
according to Mrs. Rudolph Baron, coordina-
tor of volunteers.
The first meetin g will take place at 9:30
a.m. tomorrow in the hospital conference
ce nter. under sponsorship of the \Vomen's
Auxiliary to the Orange County ~ledical
Association.
Primary goal of the committee will be
to provide a prag matic method of meeting
the continuing social, emotional and physical
needs of the stroke patient.
Volunteer s \Vil! work directly \vith p a·
tients in t he hospital and in their homes, as
\rell as attend 44 hours of classes to learn
how to assis t the patients.
Any interested community member may
call Mrs. Baron from 10 a.m. to noon at
548-0 651, ex t. 225.
! '•r.. • l .-~terfa ith Foundatio n
I ~ • .-· •. : .,~. ff
I •'$:·,.··c ee ; :::;' 0
I ...... ~. Fills Coffers
./' : .. ::: .. ~ ~s. Daniel G. Aldrich. ti.tark!e. Lawrence D. Fogg
·: :· or the chancellor of UC!, and Miss Alice Gates.
TUESDAY
JANUARY 12
By SYDNEY OMARR
"We and lbe cosmos are
one. Tbe coamo• 11 a vest
Uvlag body, of which we are
1UU parts. 11ae sun 11 a great
btart wboH: tremors run
illtougb our 1malle1 t veins.
The moon 11 a great gl!aming
nerve ceot!r from which \ll'e
quiver forever.''
- D. II. Lawrence
ARfES (t-.1arch 21-Apri) 1!1):
Accent on change. creativity.
possible journey. Emphasize
personality. i,1•illingness Io
communicate and experiment.
Improve relations wit h
children. Maintain positive al·
tilude.
TAURUS (April 20-r-.1ey 20):
Complete projects. Focus on
frame of reference. Utilize
yo• past experience. SpoUight on
No ses in Tune
Pump
d uring the 64th annual installation banuqet Thurs-
d ay, Jan. 14. Leading the way to greater successes
will be {left to right) ~trs. Ll oyd Fle ming, Mrs.
George P. Zebal and Mrs. Florence Mccue.
AT
WIT'S
END
Distaff T earn
Rates Plaudits
By Ell!\1A BOMBECK
\l.'e've never given a party
in our lives that something
(or someone) didn't crawl in·
s ide our wall and die.
Tl's the price. you pay for
rustic, rural living.
In my mind, I visualize a
group or mice meeting in a
cornfield and one of them says
to the other, "Bufford, yoll
don't look too good."
A group or some 135
business v.·omen and civic
leaders has done even more
than it set out to do, so a
big part of the 64th annual
installation banquet o( the
Newport Harbor Chamber of
Commerce will be devoted kl
its distaff side, according lo
manager J ack Barnett.
The banquet will lake place
Thursday. Jan. 14, in the
Balboa Bay Club and will
mark .the first aMiversary of
the Women's Division's new
nam!, The Doll·Fins. and a
year's publication of i t s
Players Match
Bridge Hands
Master poinL5 and pr izes
vd ll be awarded during a duµ.
licate bridge tournament to be
conducted tomorrow night at
7:30 by Nick Mina rdi in the
Montano.'lo Recreation Cen ter,
:fti lssion Viejo.
Entry ree l.s $1 for members
and $1.rx> for guests. Those in·
terested in information on
monthly toumaznent.s may
phone the ce11ter.
monthly bulletin, the Doll·Fin
Tidings.
Purpose or the women's
group has been to promote
lhe spirit of cultural and com·
mercial progress a 1n o n g
v.·omen and to cooperate with
the chamber in working for
the general wel£are and pro--
gress of the Newport Harbor
Area and its citizens.
Annual projects i nc 1 u de
beautification. which this year
will be headed by Mrs. Isabel
Pease. Other sponsored events
are the Sand Castle contest.
Silver Anchor awards for com·
munity service, new teachers'
welcome lOur or the bay and
luncheon, the Trade Fair and
t h e Christmas centerpiece
competition.
New officers who ·will be
installed include the Mmes.
George P. Zebal. president:
''Oh. I'll be all right ," says
Bufford, "It's just a head
cold.''
"Nevertheless." says the
leader, "Why don't you check
in at Bombeck"s wall ."
The night of tlU r last party,
Bufford didn't make it to the
wall . He staggered into our
old pump organ and kicked
off .
[\1y husband came into the
house. sank to his knees and
gasped . "Not again! Whe re
!his time?"
''In the pump organ," l said. "Can't we get rid of the
ndor?"
"Only if you want to paint
Winter
Warming
R. L. Baron and Chris Hopper,
vice presidents; F I ore n c"
ti.1cCUe. treasurer: L I o y d
Fleming. editor nf the Doti·
Fins Tidings, corresponding
secretary; Laura L e g i 0 s . f\'c1v winter skiwear fo r
recor ding secretary. and Nona "'arming up on the slopes or
Hoffman, past pr esident. by the fire comes in z an y
Directors include the J\.fmes. colors, new cuts and new
Veta Behr, Belly Bruce, Roy fashions.
F ox. Lee Rivers. Graham Styline for women show:! a
Edel'blute and Peter Vogel. great approach in knits. like
Mrs. Zebal. assistant direc-the leotard look, and hooded
:: ~~ open her homt for a ~ ::!cCtte Wednesday, Jan . IJ to
:: ::=bGiefit the u niversity 's
'.• : Interfaith Foundation.
Garden Tal k tor of public relalions and sweaters. The glace ski smock
Sponsoring the event is the de v e Io pm en t for J-loag is a favorite also.
\Vomen's Fellowship Service ?\1rs. Roy Raymond will give J\.f em or i al J-1 o s p i ta I . f'or everyone, there a re
-i •. l
of the Community Oiurch an illustrated talk on Slides Presbyterian. was recognized sleeveless vests, r ibbed knits
Congregational. Corona del of Nature's Subjects -Hum· in "Who·s Who in American and reversible piles. There are
Addressing the guests dur· Mar, headed by l\l rs. John mingbirds for members of the \Vomen in 1968!' colors like Political Plum,
lng the 10 a.m. event will be L. Kent. Transportation and South Coast Garden Club at She was selected a s Mighty l\1oss and Think Pink, . ~ ,._frs. Roy Giordano, charter ba b y-s i tting will be 2 p.m. on \Vednesday, Jan. Foremost \\.'oman in Com· allfromWhiteStag .
. member and past pre5ident of available al the church. JJ. -munications in 1970 and other ll";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oi
1 ·~ Women Associates of I.he Women of the a rea are T h 1 '" · h I _, In 1 d Co ta ll lo·u··n'-Uon, who wil l brm· g ea ost or 1.11e meeting onors g ean= cu e s
U.li jnvlted to att.end, and a $1 in the Three Arch Bay Mesa Woman-Of·the-year; the IU.UTlfUL CLOTHES ..•
O"l'f Slightly U1ed I ·1
several UC I students a.s donation will be asked. Clubhouse in South Laguna Henry For d Silver Scroll fQr
gu~. Edward A. Steinhau.s The Interfaith Foundation, will be Mrs. Gilbert Young, Orange County; Costa Mesa
!ltuated near the campus, is assisted by the Mmes. Charles United Fund Angel award and
l y gill who c1n'1 Mir • bl •-twice fn f!le u~ drn1. Th1lr U.. -Y-G1lll
• . -·•ill be ln charge of servlng 11taffed by religious leaden Fran·" R G L" ,__ .. H F d C'"--f th THI SICOND TIMI AIOUND
shm 1 •....i ......,, • • 1nuu 1uan, u1e enry or lu.Kln-O • e-... •· IMI 11 .. Celt• M-refre ent.s, ass s......, by the of every denomination and George SL Jeu and R. L. year for Oranse County in o-11 ,. • -Ml..,. ' l · " .. Mmes. Philip G. MUrray, A. ~·~ided~~b~y~vo~lun~t..~rs~.--==---=---~S~m~lth.~_::::...::.::::...::::::~:...:::_~196ll~._::::.._:::::::::.._:=::::_:~==~~~~==~~==~ Hale Dinsmoor, Roy H .f·
.\ : ' . ': .: : .: . . ..
( :
RJ.chardaon, Jack E. Moore.
Walter M. Roys, Gonion M.
'V ou ' Viewed
for Program • •• • • ' . • • •:. '!You" will be In locus wh!n
: : ttie· Mesa-Harbor Club meets j ~ rot. luncheon Thursd.ly, Jin.
• Club. I H, 1n tile M ... Verde COUntry
Jin. Laurel K I m b o 11.
~ fublon model whose
...&ndlll IDclUdt TV Olld UtU. • ,.....wwt, wm do • porody t •'· 1111 -.n1e o nd
"(ig s 1rale makeup tech-"'=' .... Iheme Tbt Looi< • ... 1111, ollo will emj>bubo J • 4'nUnl<I of Ont Im·
l cwtDAI Md tbt do'I of bow ~ ....... ~ .. : 0reeUDc maiiben I n d
1 ~ will bt .Mn. Duone · 1 Sllplllo, pru-. Olld' Mrt.
1Jon:t1d Rboadlr, p ro I r a m
~ chalrtnan. . .
Legune Group
Amedcan Logion Alllllllry
f ol Lopia Bud> ptbtn the
: ~ and fourth 11alndly ; ...mop ID tbe l4)oo Hall.
' ~
BUFFUMS' FAMED
LAMP CUT
PLU S SHAMPOO,
FERMO DYL TREATM ENT,
5.50 8.50 value
If your hai r only has the slight-
es t tendency to curl, our Buf-
fu ms' experts wil l encourage
every natu ra l wave. En riching
ferm odyl will help strenglhen
you r hair. We'll shampoo and
comb it into an excit ing new
look. Try it ••• discover why
Bullums' lamp Cut hos be -
cOme famous.
S.oury Studio,
Monicurtt • P1 d1curt$ • fa tia h
• fltctroly~it
Newport, •I F•1hion lsl•nd, Newport Ctnl•r e 644-2200 •Mon., Fri., 10:00 fill 9:30; Other d•y• 10 t ill 5:30
home, furnishings, long-range
plans a!f~ting security. What
appears to be formidable op-
position will vanish.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Perceptive abilities increase.
Exctllent for writing, short
journeys, conducting privale
investigation. Find ou t reason.s
for recent events. Maintain
sense of humor - and
distovery.
CA.i'JCER (June 21.July 22):
f'inancial opportunities come
lrom unexpected source. Pay
and collect debts. Tllke in·
ventory. Be a ware of value
o! possessions. Money picture
brightens; position is stronger.
LEO (July 2.'.J...Aug. 22):
Strong desire £or self.ex-
pression is evident. Some may
complain that you push too
hard. Don't permit this lO
alter style. Be yourselr, utiliz·
ing marvelous sense o £
showmanshlp.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S<pt. 221:
Accent quiet, s e I f -d e velop-
menl Keep conlidential af·
fairs that way. Avoid scandal.
Don't make claims you cannot
fulfiU. Cooperate with one wbo
is temporarily handicapped.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22):
Accent on new and old
friend3hips. Make future plans.
Put money lo \~ork. Accept
advice from friends in high
places. Don't sell )'ourself
short. Be ready. available.
SCO RPIO (Oct. 23--Nov. 2!):
Those in positions of authority
react lO your suggestions.
ideas. Gel program i n t o
operation. Make room at top
for yourself. Ambitions can
be fulfilled if alert, versati le.
SAGITTARIUS (~ov. 22-
Dec. 21): Develop new con-
cepts. Outline any travel ifl...
clinations. Study. Gain in-
dicated through written word.
'5 I cent Aroma
Acee.nl philosophy, d e t: p e r
meanings. 0 i s c a r d the
superficial.
CAPRICO RN {Dec. 22.Jan.
19 ): Legal settlements in·
dicated; be perceptive enough
to see various impUcations.
You are stimulated. Romantic
interests arc present. Balance
emotion and logic. Get \\'hat
you·re v.·orth.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fet>.
18 ): Legal, marriage T!la·
tionships are emphasized.
Avoid open quarrels. Being
tactful now can gain more
than any forcing methods.
Diplomacy is a necessity.
PISCES (f'eb. IS.March 20):
Improve methods or serving
and being served. l\1any may
look to you as example. You
can't wish facts a way.
Instead. face music. Gain
knowledge.
lf' TODAY IS YOU R
BIRTHDAY you are flexible
but serious of purpose. You
can stick to a project until
co1np leted. You see ahead;
you perceive v.•hat could OC·
cut. You are interested ,in
people and have unusual circle
of acquaintances. As for
friends, few really know and
understand you. You sett!e
down now to more serious
aspects of living. This follows
lhe living room." ''Is that it?" he said and somewhat of a social merry·
"We mustn't panic," he said · moved on to the kitchen for go--round. Pace was dizzying,
palling his wrists \Vith a a stronger drink. but you learned a lo t.
deodorizer wick. "We're justlp;:,;;;;;:~,;iii;iii;i:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.;;~~~~~~~::1
going to h"e to make '"" SAVE ON KNlmNG YARNS that no one plays the org'an tonight." Y.'e both nodded. STOCKS AR£ LIMITED-HURRY! llrothff' The party was in high gear PAIFAIT $2 KN ITTING MACHIN•
when 1'-1ax l\1arx sat down 1.,.i.r SJ.SO MD<1e1 sn Wllfl L.6<1 Atllchment
to play the organ. 1 grabbed KllMISSI 70-11:10. $14850
a can of deodorizer and follow· · bt•I• S1.00 .. 1u4.se
ed him. \ AND SOME YARNS REDUCED TO so~
"What are you doing?" he The KNIT WIT souJrA~~AST
asked annoyed . PhoM 545-2112 COSTA MESA I turned the deodorizer on1'!:!===================~ myself. "!Cs Skinny Dip," Jlf
said feebly, "to make me ir·
resistible.''
I watched in horror as he
pulled out the stops on tµe
organ and started to pump.
As the bellows wheezed in
and out, spreading misery
throughout the house, three
v.·omen fainted and one man
put out his pipe.
"I say," he said, pausing,
"do you have a dog?"
"\Ve have three of them,
but they're outside."
lie began to play again, then
stopped and sniffed. "ls some--
one in the apartment cook-
ing sauerkraut or making
sulfur wilh a jwiior chemistry
set?"
"\Ve don't Jive in an apart·
mtnt."
"Is someone wea ri ng o!d
gym shoes?" he asked.
His wife came over at the
moment and leaned over his
shoulder.
"!\-1ax, your music stinks."
UP
TO
1/2
OFF!
e BRAS
e GIRDLE S
e SLI PS
e SLEE PWEAR
e AT-HOME-W EAR
e ROBES .,
fa ~~ G: d Graduate Corgrtit>rf'.~
I °'~Ji J""' Specirui,lng in D and DD cu,. ' i !'!/I I I "a. Comfortoblo I" Yo" CUP'"
250 .. E ... 17th Street
All Sales Final
(Olfl M......-HlllJr•n Squ1 r•
-642-54 0 -
lJ6N8M
• Stripes • Checks • Plaids • Solids
a perennial favorite in a
sturdy cotton fabric:.
for sports and playwear.
VALUES TO $1.49 YARD
36" / 45'' wtde
gu•r. w••h•ble
•D
¢
yd.
UITINl!S
BEAUTIFUL SOLID COLORS
yards •nd yuds of top
qu1nty, high f1 shion suitin9s
1n good weight for dresses, pants
VALUES TO $3.91 YARD
ecet1tet, r1yon1, blfts
•cet•h trlcot llnlng 11:
$1,'1 /W I wltlth• yd.
II HOUSE OF FliBRICS
5Mtti C... "-lri1tol •t S111 Di1go Fwv. H ... ,.___17111 1t l •t1lol
c .... M...-14S-1H6 ,_.. A--14J.Jl l1
Or1n11felr M~r1119et+iorp• all4 H1rM r 1 .... P.t C.M•-L• '•11111 1t St111l•11
Mtett11 12 ... n14 ..... ,..._.n .ia2J
Hntl ..... C....-l4i11fff •t k 111i 11...1. H•li•ll• ll•d ff7·HIJ
·1 I
I
I
!
'1 I
Fo1111iain Valley Today's Fl••I
.
N.Y . Steeb
VOL. 64, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 11, 1971 TEN CENTS
' Ribal Calls Ou·ster as Trustee 'Hatchet · Job'
By RUDI NIBDZIEl..SKI
01 Ille OlllY "1161 S"lt
Dr. Joseph Ribal today described his
removal from the Huntington Beach
Union High School District board or
trustees as a "crude political hatchet
job."
_In a letter to lhe DAILY PILOT,
Riba\, a psychology professor now on
sabbatical leave in Scandinavia, called
the act "unlawful " and ·'cunning."
"The prematurity of the board action,
MAY GET LONG COUNT
Teamsters' Jimmy Hoffa
Its odd urgency, the secrecy and surprise.
and the complete Jack of propriety
in following ordinary resignation pro-
cedure and courtesy were only lhe subUe
indicators of the motives behind Oilil
bac~ work," Dr. Riha! said.
Dr. Ribal's seat was declared vacant·
Dec. 8 by his felliw board members
after he had failed to attend board
meetings for more than 90 days. The
state Education Code allows abse nces
of up to 60 days, but the board had
STILL IN THERE PUNCHING
Boxer C1ui'us Cl1y
Supreme Court Will Hear
Cassius Clay Draft Case
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Cassius Clay,
former heavyweight boxing champion,
won a new hearing from the Supreme
Court today on his conviction for refusing
induction into the Anny,
'I1le action means that C 1 a y ' !:'
multimillion dollar title fight with the
present champion, Joe Frazier, can go
ahead as planned in New York on March
8.
The court said In a brief order it
wou ld oonfine arguments in the c ase
to Clay's claim of C'OnscientiQus objection
because of his Muslim relig ion.
Clay -who now uses the name
Muhammad Ali -also contended that
the government had illegally lapped his.
telephone conversations. but th e court
decided not to co nsider that claim.
Arguments will be heard in the case
and a decision handed down later in
the term.
At its first session of the new year,
the court turned down an appeal by
the already imprisoned president of the
Teamsters Union, .lames R. Hoffa, from
his cinvlctlon of defrauding the union·s
pension fund. Hoffa thus faces an ad·
ditional five.year prison sentence in ad~
ditlon to the eight years he now ·is
1erving at Lewiaburg, Pa., federal
R einstate1nent
Hea ring Resu mes
On Beac h Officer
City personnel commiuioners scbedu1·
ed ·a marathon sessJon from 5 p.m. today
w.ith Ole hope of concluding all testimony
In the relrultatement case of fired Hun.-
ti.ngton Beach policeman Gilbert <:oerper.
Among the witneues to be produced
tonight by defense attorney Cecil Ricks
ts Reece Ballard. the Mayor of Garden
Grove and private Investigator who wu
hired to look into lhe clrcumstancts· 1ur•
rounding Coerper's dismi.ual.
Cc:lerP.tt, a motorcycle patrolman, wu
lin!d ~· 21, for allegedly nUlp-·
propi14Ung ""rcbandise given to him
by 1 ifeparlment store for traMrntttal
to 111e Police w1 ... Guild, a charity.
Polk:t Chief Earle Robilaille ~ved
Coerper from dulf for allegedly keeping
some of the rnerchandlll!! and then refUa..
1ng to OC10pt11te with an admlnlslratlve
tnvespaaUon. ·
Lone Quad Survives
SALT LAKE CIT\' (UPI) -Tiny Joe
Anne Springer. lone survivor of quad·
ruplcl.S born ln Idaho, ill in "critical
1nd unstable" condition In an 1rtl0cial
ruplrator bec.all5C she no lonae.r: can
breathe for herself.
penitentiary for jury tampering.
Tbe·court also;
-Refused to hear a challenge to
organized baseball brought under the
antitrust laws by two d i s m i s s e d
American League umpires, Al Salemo
and Bill Valentine. The justices without
comment let stand lower court rulings
that baaeball ls exempt from antitrusl
action under 1922 and 195.l Supreme
Court decisions.
-Rej~ed an appeal by a wh ile
Mississippi parent who challenged a tern.
porary court order revoking federal tax
exempt status for new white academies
whi ch do not have non-di!icriminatory
racial school policies.
-In an about-face, sent back to
a lower court the queslion whelher non-
English speaking voters in 19 states
may be required to use English in
answering questions to register. The
court voted March 30, 1970. to hear
arguments in a case involving a group
of Mexitan--American farm workers in
Yakima County, Wash., but reversed
this apparentty on grounds the justices
unanimously upheld on Dec. 2l the right
of Congress to outlaw all literacy tests.
-Agreed to Mar a case involving
&lie right of L.!: Customs Jns.pectors
to require • ptl'IOll to llrlp .. part
of a teareh for narcotics or other con-
traband It accepted for futurt decision
an appeal by the Ju.slice Department
from a rulln,g of the 9th U.S: Circuit
Court of Appe.als th.It s.uch a aearch
wu le&ally unjustified in the case of
1 young woman found with heroin at
San Yaldro, Calli.
Fountain Valley
Taking Initial
High Rise Look
• FOW>taln Valley P I a n n I n g Com·
missioners were scbtdiz18d to like their
lint loolt al pol<inlal rults for high
rite lplrtn'..enti tn I qieclaJ ttudy ses.skm
·latolbls..ner-. ·
Tht city. aimnu, .does not havt any
"'"'°"'""' -·-··n. ·~ .... anlRrll&' lbe
polnUal ol I~" Ointon SlwoJrod, plannJni
dlrector, uplaiDml. "We're k>okina at
Po&lble deslp ·slandatda, bul no loca·
~-or definite repi.tlons." 'llim &1orits Is Ille lirltt I o r
apartmenll now, thoalb commerdal
buDdlnl!J can g0 higher.
"We'H have more talb on it. and
if the comm.1ulon wants some aort of
hJab rile laws lhore will be public bell'
lngs," Sherrod uld.
-
granted him a 30-day extension.
· ' T h e accompanying back·slabbing
personal attack by the board presid~t
reported in one local newspaper should
make it quite clear that t.be.se trustees
were seeki111g to arrange an ignominious
e.nd to my seven year.i of service by
harming my personal and professional
reputation in tne community with un·
favorable publicity," fulminated Dr.
Riba l.
He added that he had intended to
resign at the board's Dee. 22 meeting,
allowing lhe board to aet a "legal"
election date of April 20 for his vacant
office.
"The County Counsel told us what we
could do and what" we could not do. The
law says he must be removed. We had
no other recourse," school board presi·
dent Matthew Weyuker said today.
Dr. rubal, on the other hand, con-
tends the board has broken the Jaw by
setting the 1pecial election for April 20,
also the date for the regular election.
"Such an election must be held within
l2{l days of a declared vacancy accord·
ing to the law. Assuming the validity
of a Dec_ 8 declaration of vacancy, this.
Jaw requires an electlon to be he.Id by
April 7 ." he argued.
··Not only was this a very shabby poli-
tical stunt , it almost became a $15,000
liability to local taxpayers which would
be the cosl of a special election to ffil
the few remaining: months of my term."
A check at the Orange County Educa·
lion Department did not support Dr. Rl·
bat's contention.
Officials there rJ>Ointed out that the
professor's seat was not technJcally
vacant until the minutes. of the Dec. I
board were received by the county IUJ>'"
erintendent. That date was. Dec. 14. Ad~
ing 120 days to Dec. 14 still" would not
take it to April 2G, but another section
of the education code was cited to ex·
(See RIBAL, Page I)
Industrialist Bombed
Defense Aide's Partne r Victim in Palo Alto
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Two firebombs
were hurled early today al the home
of industrialist William R. Hewlett, whose
parlner is deputy secretary of defense.
Hewlett. 57, multimillionaire president
of Hewlett-Packard Corp., was awakened
by the muffled explosions of the Molotov
Cocktails and put out the fire with
extinguishers recently placed in the home
because of anonymous telephone threats.
Hewlett's partner, and co-founder of
the electronics manufacturing finn, is
Nixon Tax
Easing Seen
On Business
There was speculation today lhat Presi·
dent Nixon might announce that la.I
burdens on business will be eased.
The expected move is aimed at
speeding economic expansion of the flag-
ging national economy.
The on ly news br iefing scheduled by
administration aides today was set for
12 :30 p.m. in Laguna Beach, an unusually
late hour. Jt coincides with the time
of closing of the stock exchange in
New York.
Treasury officials have completed
drarts of new regulations to grant
businesses faster tax writeoffs. on
amounLs they spen(I on new equipment
and plants. This would mean a tu
savings for business :unnlng into billiom
of dollars.
The plan is lO permit businei.ses. to
deduct more for deprecial:lon of equip-
ment in the earlier years of its use.
Presently companies deduct from taxes
the cost of equipment on a yearly in--'
stallment basis taking into consideration
the useful life of the machinery,
A presidential panel devised the new
rules. It was said they would reduce
government receipts by $1.4 billion in
the first year. f.1..7 billkin in the second
and more thereafter.
The idea is to encourage modernization
of equipment and expansion of pro-
duction. In recent months industries. have
spent frugally on new p I a n t s and
machinery.
Nixon is expected to leave San
Clemente sometime this week but a
firm time has not been announced.
lt Is expected he will make an ap-
pearance in Washington late this week
before members of the Republican Na·
tional Committee. ~ cormnittee ii to
name a successor to National Chairman
&gen C. B. Morton. Tt is expected
the choice will be Sen. Robert Dole
of Kansas, a Nixon stalwart. The White
house isn't s.a.ylng.
Since flying here on • iieml·v1cation
last week, the President has taken •
few swims in the heated pool of his
seaside villa, has walked on the beach,
driven in aoutbern Orqe County· and
vlslled Calllina llland.
He walked down to the beach Saiurdlly,
his 58th birthday, taking two dop with
him and occasionally getting bis feet
wet In the surf.
Sl:.L VIA ST ARTS
-
David Packard, the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police a n d Hewlett.Packard
spokesmen believed the firebombing was
due to Packard's Washington post and /or
the company's government contracts. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray said
there were no suspects nor any positive
lea ds .
Neighbors told police they saw two
white men run from Hewlell 's home
at the time of the attack:. The men
climbed into a dark-colored Volkswagen
''Beatlle" which had been parked nearby
with ils motor idling and lights off.
They drove off without turning on their
lights and witnesses could give only
vague descriptions.
One of the firebombs struck the rambl·
lng, two-story home between the first
and second floors and fell hannlessly
to the ground . The second. hit a transom
above the front door and fell to the
po rch , where it started a fire.
Chilean l1nport
Exchan,ge Student in Foster fl ome .·
111 TDBY COVUU: , .. -.,,., ...... ·-
Teresa Hedalgo, 17, is the dark~ed.
dark·hllire'd beauty from Ollie who
wanted a home.in Huntington Beach.
It was touch and go for a few weeks,
but, with the help of Edison High School
Prlnclpal Ernest Patcoe, she found it.
Teresa arrived at her new home
Wednesday -with a great sigh of rellief.
"Yes I was nervous," she explains
in Spanish. Teresa s p e a ks no English
yet. She's. here to spend six months
as an exchange student at Edison.
"I've wanted to come to the U.S.
for many years,'' says the girl from
Concepcion, a city of about 200,000.
She·s been adopted -for six months
-by lo1r. and Mr.'I. Marvin Kleinberg,
21832 Kaneohe Lane. The Kleinbergs have
three. daughters, all of whom arc learning
Spanish rapidly,
"We heard of Teresa's plight and
thought it would be nice to have a
foreign student here ," Mrs. Kleinberg
said .
Teresa is a small package of soft,
dark features. Al first she is shy, but,
with time, begins to talk more of her
home and the distinctions between Chile
and the U.S.
"We don 't eat sweet and sour food s
together," abe said, amazed that her
American family could down a :Jalsd
with vinq:1r and oil and a piece of
chocolate cake at the same meal
"We eat a lot of chopped beef. with
rice. We alao use. a lot of spicea."
With jwt t•o day• In Huntington
Beach, Teresa became booked on onion
rings and root beer, a d.!licacy ahe
never tasted before.
Her trip hcrf: nearly dJdn't come off.
Before Puooe lmted a plea for help,
it looted like there wu DO home for
her.
M It llt'U ahe had to liuaUe. OfOcials
of Intemallonal Fellow1bip told her on
Dec. JO lhe could come and on Jan. s, she ... here.
"Chile hu no city like Ibis," Ille
D.\ILY ,ILOT 11111 "ht!•
NEW GIRL IN TOWN
Exchange Student H.dalgo
remarked, referring to the spread out
size of Huntington Beach.
Most Chilean cities are tightly packed,
she explained, and the highways are
not so large.
Teresa would like to return to the
U.S. for study in one of the unlversiUes.
She'd like to,be a pediatrician.
Her father, German (pronounced her·
man), is a government worker, specialji..
Inf. In Ibo field of Internal ......
'Some fr;enda ol mine came to lhe
U.S. onoe. when they came back lhey
Said It WU unfriendly, No one talked
to them," Teresa said. ''But everyone
ia very good with me."
"We're delighted. wll.b her," Mrs.
Kleinberg said.
Long-haired Student,s
Face Expulsion Threat
.... .. ... ... . -..
Hewlett, whose shares of Hewlett-
Packard stock are worth more than
a quarter of a billion dollan, med an.
extinguisher to quell the blue. The fire
was out when firemen and police arrived.
Damage wu minor.
Hewlett and his wife were fn the
house when lhe gasoline-filled bottles
were hurled about 12 :30 a.m. The home
i.s located in an older, upper middle
class residential area in the OaUands
(See BOMBING, Pa1e 2)
Hand Grenade
Injures 29
At U.S. Base
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Anny Is
investlgating a disturbance outaidl an
enlwted man's club Saturday night durlne
whfcb a fragmenta.Uon grenade injured
29 U.S. aoldJers.
Six of the Gia were hospitalized, one
in a serlow ~ndltion.
Military sources said it had not been
determined whether the grenade wu
thrown or was dropped and e:1ploded
by accident.
The disturbance occurred at TLly Hoa,
a U.S. base on the central coat 2t0
miles northeast of Sal11on. Military police
were called to the club alter trouble
developed between membus or the lit
Battalion , 22nd Infantry, and C Company,
75th Ranger Battalion. 'The sources aald
the cause of the disturbance was not
known, but possibly there were racial
implications.
The sources said Ule MPs trled to
break up the large crowd but finally
had to use tear gas to disperse the
Gls. In the confusion, the fragment.ation
grenade exploded.
On Thursday night, a U.S. Anny major
was killed and another was wounded
in a post-midnight argument with five
enlisted men at the Quang Tri combat
base 16 miles south of the demilitarized
zone. The officers were trying to get
the enli.sted men to lower the volume
of their phonograph.
The Army said three of the enlisted
men Mre held for questioning, and tbe
invesUgaUon wu still under way.
Schools Get Grant
An 11.000 grant WJder lbe Miller-Unruh
Basic .Readinc Act bu been awarded
to lbe Founlain Valley School lltllrlcl.
The state money will provide extra
teaching Ume and matertall. for 1tudeotl
wilh ll)Jtclal nmmg problems.
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jz DAILY PILOT H ~-. Jo"""1 II, 1'71
'Death to Selassie' Rail Firm t-=" ~
Ethiopian Youths
Stage Protest
·BELGRAVE AVE.
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To Request
Aid Funds
• About 40 students describing
, themselve.s as Ethiopia'& "cream of the
, crop" chanted for the death of their
leader near the gates of the Western
White House.
Sbouling "Death to Haile Selusie''
'.and "death to fascist pigs," the student.I
: 'pent about two hours near the pastures
oi the Elmore Ranch next to the Ni.Ion
• Estate.
• (See Photo P11e :I I
. Ostensibly, Ute demonstration, the first
: of the new year at the Presidential
:compound, wu asking for the cutting
;off of fore.i(n aid to the northeast African
·country.
. Spokesman fo r the Ethiopian Students
: Union In North Amenica, Los Angeles
·Chapter, said the aid was being used
to direct weapons again1t fellow citizens,
primarlly in the area of Eritrea.
The spokesman claimed that in the
past few weeks l ,OOQ.. Eritreans have
been "massacred" by se1assie's troups.
The demonstration by the students
bearing large placa rds drew two Secret
Service agents from wjthin the Nixon
enclave and a few San Clemente police
Be's Candidate
Rev. Clennon King, Albany,
Ga., has announced he will be
a presll'iential candidate in
1972. In a newsletter he dis·
tributed, King says he be·
lieves "whoever is elected
president of the U.S. in 1972
will be the reincarnation of
Jesus."
From Pn11e 1
BOMBING ...
of Palo Alto. about 3S miles south of
San Francisco.
A company spokesman said the in·
dustriali:st has received anonymous
telephone threat! in rcctnt months,
U!ually warning of att.acks on his home
or his famil y. They were ct1nsidered
crank calls , but company security of·
flclals placed the lire extinguishers in
his house.
DAILY PILOT
OllANOI COAST f'UIL~ING COMl'AN't
Roli•r1 N, W•1i
Pr•ldtnt •M l'llltlb~.,.
J1ck II:. C111l1y
Vitt Pr.tldtnl 1r.4 0..,Jr•I MltMftr
Tho111•• 1e, • .,.;i
lhtMll A. Murphi"•
M1n1g1nt Edi.Ir
Alt" Dirk!"
Wt1! Otlflllt Cituntv ldltw
Albtrl W. 11111
A•loCK'-tt Edlt.r
Hu1th19t11 IHcll Office
17175 ••• ,h 10111 ..... ,d
M1 il!nt NIOr•tn P.O. lox 790, t?HI
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Ot .. r Offlc ..
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Ian C"""1'tltl )OJ Hori~ ll C.rn.,. •1
·-.
officers.
There were no incident.I.
Besides their placards denouncing
feudalism and imperi1lism wiQtin their
country the· college-age 1tudent.s carried
small red cards containing hint! on a
person's rigbl.I when he ts arrested by
police.
In each segment referring to police
on the cards, the word pigs had been
inserted, instead.
2 Boys Survive
550-foot Plunge
In Silverado
Two teenage boys were seriously in·
jured Sunday night when their small
car plunged 550 feet down a Silve rado
Canyon wall.
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WESTMINSTER
On tlae Market
SALE
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. AVE .
PHJLADELPHlA .(APJ -Trµstcea or
the financially ailing Penn Centrfll
Transportation Co. have decldrd 1.o ask
for almost all of the $125 million in
emergency loan guarantees Congress
au!horized In December.
The court . appointed trustees gaid
they will apply for $110 million 111t
loan guarantees from the U.S. Depart·
men! of Transportation tQ keep the na·
tion "s largest railroad runn ing through
1'-1arch 31.
The Joan guarantees are avallrible un·
der the Emergency Rail Servic~s Act
passed by Congress Dec. 1.
The trustees said the $110 millilln will
be raised through the issue of two cer·
tificates. one for $6 milllon to mature
Jan. JS, 1976. and the other for $5 million
to mature Jan. 15, 19116.
The brokerage firm, r.1t'rri11 Lynch,
Pierct' .. Fenner and Smith Inc . will re-
present the underwriting group. The
Federal Reserve Bank or New York will .
be fiscal gent for the certificates.
The youtrut were removed from the
canyon four hours later after a rescue
effort carried out far into the cold night.
Orange County firemen direcled the
resctie which brought out David Burk,
16, of 28216 Thisa Way, and his passenger
Mike McCormick, lS, of 29181 Sleepy
Hollow , both of Silverado Canyon.
Map pinpoints 46 acres in Westminster being plac·
ed on the block by the state Division of Highways.
State officials say the land, zoned for single family
residential housing, is one of the largest and most
valuable parcels of surplus property ever offered
by the division of highways, which has set $1 .25
miJlion a s the minimum acceptable bid on the land.
Bids are due March 2 at division of highways of-
fices in Los Angeles.
The application must be approved hy
U.S. Dist. Judge P. Fullam , who is ovt.r·
seeing the railroad's affairs since It ap-
plied last June for reorganization unde r
federal bankruptcy laws. It will be pre-
sented to him Monday. .
The Department of Transportation and
the Interstate Commerce Commission
llSO must approve the application.
The accident occurred on a narrow
dirt roadway which leads to Santiago
Peak. about five miles above the
Silverado fire station.
Senior Citizens in Beach Trudeau Pays Visit
MATHURA, India (AP ) -·Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of
Canada. en route to a meeting of British
Commonwealth leaders in Singapore,
stopped over for a vi11it to the birth
place of the Hindu god Lord Krishna.
To Temple of Hindu
Trudeau was welcomed Into the Inner
sanctum of a temple Sunday by priests
who applied sanda[\.\'ood paste to hi~
forehead and put a saffro n scarf around
his neck. He placed a garland of
marigolds at the foot of a 1tatue
Burk is :suffering from a compound
fracture of the left leg and McConnick
incurred chest injuries, officials reported.
Their car went off the road about
4:30 p.m. and was reported by an
unknown person using a citizens band
radio to reach firemen. Fortunately, the
1ccident was witne11.sed by a following
car driven by Raymond Hamm. IS of
µkewood.
Active Social Whirlers
Hamm, his broth er Gary, ts and Wayne
Bentley, 16, of Norwalk climbed down
the steep canyon to the Injured boy.
Burk told them he lost control of
the car when he applied the brakes
at about 30 miles an hour on a curve
which threw the vehicle against the
mountainside and then back across and
off the 10-loot roadway.
Jeeps carrying members of a car club
followed and one of them had the radio
by which the di~tress call was sent .
In all 24 men were involved in the
rescue including membera of the sheriff's
department search and rescue team and
Cleveland National Forest officials.
nie youth11 had to be pulled up the
aide of the cliff by winches. They had
been placed in litter baskets.
New Toastmaster
Slate Installed
New officers of the Westminster
Toaatrna11ter:s Club were inst.ailed at a
dinner ln Huntington Beach over the
weekend.
They are Donald Lewellen. president :
Chuck Hightower, admini.iitratlve vice
president; Al Bentley. educational vi ce
president; Steve 1'1ulllns, secretary.
treasurer, and Bill Longfellow, ser·
geant-at-arms.
The club meets every Wednesday at
g:30 a.m. at the Copper Penny Coffee
Shop, \\'estminster.
Together Again
Life begins at 50 for many folks In
Huntington Beach.
When they reach that age, residents
find it's the passport to heady trips
to Las Vegas , Tijuana and the Santa
Anita races.
Ifs all part of the program of the
Senior Citizens Club of Huntington Beach
v.·hich arranges a social whirl for the
elderly I.hat many younger persons \.\'ould
find hard to take.
The club, which has an age minimum
of 50 as its only membership re·
quirement, has 350 persons on its rolls
and is one of the largest and most
active groups in the community.
Mrs. Irene Edwards, the tour director,
attributes the interest to the outings
the club organizes.
"Some people have liU.le opportunity
to get out, "she said , "They grab the
chance for a day at the races or a
couple of days in Las Vegas."
The club recenlly elected new officers
and reviev.·ed its 1970 activities. A tolal
of 22 tours were arranged, with five
!o Las Vegas and others to San Diego zoo. Solvang, Lake Tahoe and Tijuana .
A minimum bus\oad of 41 person.s went
on each trip.
The members wiU be trying their luck
out early this year with a trip Tuesday
lo Santa Anita Racetrack to help feed
the horses and on Jan. lS.-20 they will
journey to Las Vegas.
"We never have a dull moment," 5aid
Harry Boyer, publicity chairman.
He reported that members unable to
go on the tours attend parties, dance~.
and card-playing sessions the club ar·
ranges.
Anyone wishing to join the busy group
can do so by attending the meetings
Pat Larey and Greg Wike arc cheered on by friends as they work their
way past the old marathon kissing record (20 hours, 14 minutes) to
new standard of 30 hours. Pair set the record during the weekend In
a dormitory at UCLA. They remarked later that lt wu not an alto-
gether unpleasant way to pass the "'·eckend, hut complained of chap·
ptd Ups. -" ' .
held at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
city Parks and Recreation Center at
17th Street and Orange Avenue. The
members play cards after a brief
busineS! meeling.
All the 1970 officers have been
reinstated for 1971 by unanimous vote.
They are: l\1rs. 1-lelene Pound, presi·
dent l\lrs. Esther Rivell i, vice president;
Jenny Siebert, Mrs . Mary Perkins, Mrs.
l\1ae Conant, Mrs. Dorothea Giboney.
Mrs. Evelyn Bartley and Will!am
Bartley.
Mrs. Helen Evana, treasurer; Mrs. Ruth
Sears. secretary. and Mrs. Edwards,
lour director. Other officers include Mrs.
F'rom PUfle J
RIBAL ...
plain how that time limit could be legal·
ly e1tende d.
The section quoted reads, "Whenever
a va cancy occurs within four months of
a regularly schedu led election for the
governing board in whic h the vacancy
occurs, the special election shall be held
at the same time as and shall be con-
solidated with that regularly scheduled
election."
"We could have declared thal vacancy
after 60 day1, but the board felt serious
enou~h to all ov.· him the additional 30
days ," \Yeyuker said .
"We simply wanted tn be fair with
him. I'm very disappointed in him
tirading us."
During hi!I term as school board
member, Dr. Ribal had often engaged
In vigorous debates on educational
philosophy with Weyuker and other board
members.
But throughout the disputes. Weyuker
i;11 id no one ever attacked him personally.
"He seem~ to have some kind of comple1
11.boul thRt. 1 reel no malict toward
him. I disagree with his philosophy ,
but I have nothing against him
persnally.''
Spins New Record
Richard Ford, 30, is something of a di;;c jockey I-le jor.ke.ved a disc
called the Playland Park ferris wheel in San Francisco for 20 days,
16 hours and 30 minutes. setting a new ferris \vheel rncturan ce
record. He completed his one·rnan revolutions S11nri::i v Thr 41l·'""t
wheel revolved during 1nost of his stay, except when he was sleeping.
ON ALL NEW AND USED
ITEMS
&_JEWELRY
~ UPTO 50% Of F
OVERSHIPMENT OF
GUITARS ....
1 t.tl
WILL SELL 10•.-s1 295 ABOVE OUR COST
COMPARE ......... .,. ....... ,_
PEOPlE IN THE KNOW SAVE MONEY EVERYTIME THEY BUY -IT IS NOT EASY TO BUY
FOR CASH, BUT IF YOU HAVE CASH. BANKAMERICARD, OR MASTER CHARGE YOU
CAN SAVE TREMENDOUS AMOUNTS ON EVERYTHING EVERYDA Y.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY ancl LOAN
1138 NEWPORT ILVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA l!•twMn H1rbor & lro1dw1y
~I ' I
•
... ' .... . > '
Newport 'Beaeh '.a'oday's Fl•al
N.Y. St.eeks
VOL. 64, NO. 9, 3 SECTI ONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY II, 1971 TEN CENTS
'
Industrialist Bombed
Defense Aide's Partner Victim in Palo Alto
MAY GET LONG COUNT
Teamsters' J immy Hoff•
Uf'I T...,...,.
STILL IN THERE PUNCHING
Boxer C•11iu1 Clay
Supreme Court Will Hear
Ca ss i11s Clay Draft Case
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Cassiu.s Clay,
former heavyweight boxing champion,
won a new hearing from the Supreme
Court today on his ctinviction for refusing
induction int.o the Army.
The action means that C I a y ' s
multimillion dollar title fight with the
present champion, Joe Frazier, can go
ahead as plaMed in New York on March
•• The court said in a brief order it
would confine arguments in the c a s a
to Clay's claim of conscientious objection
because of his Muslim. religion'.
Man Talked Out
Of Hijacking
By Stewardess
DENVER {AP) -A Trans World
Airlines stewardeM says she talked a
man out of a threat to force a New
York·Denver flight to divert to Las
Vegas.
Linda Barnard, 25, told the pilot of
the conversation Sunday. He radioed
Denver and when the plane landed there,
agents of the FBI and the U.S. marshal's
office arrested Patrick Miranda, 25, of
Bound Brook, N.J., and charged him
with carrying a gun aboard an aircraft.
Miss Barnard. of Atlanta, Ga., said
Miranda told her he had to meet
somebody in Las Vegas and was going
to hijack the aircraft because he only
had S2.
The man began talking with her about
an hour after the plane left New York.
asking about distances from Denver to
Las Vegas and Lake Tahoe. she said.
He asked whether Miss Barnard would
like to go to Lake Tahoe. and when
she answered yes, he said ; "Well you're
going to get to go," pulled oul a small
pistol and la id it in the palm of his
hand. she 1aid.
They talked for about half an hour,
she said. Finally, she related, the man
told her he wasn't going to hijack the
plane and asked her oot to tell anybody •
The other 42 passengers were Wl8Wate
of the situation.
"I think I\ waa just a spur of the
moment thing," Miss Barnard aaid.
Clay -who now uses the name
Muhammad Ali -also contended that
the government had illegally tapped his
telephone conversations, but the court
decided not to consider that claim.
Arguments will be heard in the case
and a decision banded down later in
the term.
At Its first 11ession of the new year,
the court turned down an appeal by
the already imprisoned president of the
Teamsters Union, James R. Hoffa, from
his cinvictioa.., of defrauding the union's
penrion fund. Hoffa thus faces an ad~
d.itional five-year prison !lenience. in ad·
dition tG the eight years he now is
eerving at Lewisburg, Pa., federal
pentt..Uary for jury lamperinr.
The c.ourt a1ao:
-Rerused to hear a challenge to
organized baseball brought under the
antitrust laws by two dis mi as e d
American League umpire.!!, Al Salerno
.and Bill Va1entine. The justices without
comment let stand lower court rulings
that baseball is exempt from antitrust
action under 1922 and 1953 Supreme
c.ourt decisions.
-Rejected an appeal by a white
Mississippi parent who challenged a tem.
porary court order revoking federal tax
exempt slltwi for new white academies
which do not have non-discriminatory
racial school policies.
-In an about.face, sent back to
a lower court the question whether non·
English apeaking voters in 19 states
may be required to use English in
answering questions to register. The
court voted March 30, 1970, to hear
arguments in a case involving a group
of Mexican.American farm workers in
Yakima County, Wash., but reversed
this apparently on grounds the justices
unanimously upheld on Dec. 21 the right
of Congress to outlaw all literacy tests.
-Agreed to hear a case involving
the right of L.S. Customs inspectors
to require a person to strip as part
of a search for narcotics or other con·
traband. It accepted for future decision
an appeal by the Justice Department
from a ruling of the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals that such a search
was legally unjustified in the case of
a young woman found with heroin at
San Ysidro, Calif.
Lone Qua d Survives
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Tiny Joe
Anne Springer, lone survivor of quad-
ruplets born in Idaho, is ln "critical
and umtable" condition In an artificial
respirator because she oo longer can
breathe for hertelf.
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Two firebomb.s
were hurled early today at the home
of industrialist William R. Hewlett, whose
partner is deputy secretary of defense.
Hewlett , 57. multimillionaire president
of Hewlett·Packard Corp., was awakened
by the muffled explosions of the Molotov
Cocktails and put out the fire with
extinguishers recently placed in the home
because of anonymous telephone threats.
Hewl ett's partner, and co-founder of
the electronics manufacturing firm, is
Hand Grenade
Injures 29
At U.S. Base
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Army is
investigating a disturbance outside an
enlisted man's club Saturday night during
which a fragmentation grenade injured
29 U.S. soldiers,
Six of the Gls were hospitalized, one
in a serious condition.
Military sources said it had not been
determined whether the grenade was
thrown or v.·as dropped and exploded
by accident.
The disturbance occurred at Tuy Hoa,
a U.S. base on the central coast 240
miles northeast or Saigon. Military police
w,ere called to the club after trouble
developed between mernben of the l•t
Battalion, 22nd Infantry, and C Company,
75th Ranger Battalion. The source.a aaid
the cause of the disturbance was not
known , but possibly there were racial
implications.
The sources said the MPs tried to
break up the large crowd but finally
had to use tear gas to disperse the
Gls. Jn the confusion, the fragme ntation
grenade exploded.
On Thursday night, a U.S. Army major
was killed and another was wounded
in a post·midnight argument with five
enlisted men at the Quang Tri combat
base 16 miles south of the demilitarized
zone. The officers were trying to get
the enlisted men to lower the volume
or their phonograph.
The Army said thret of the enlisted
men ~re held for questioning. and the
investigation was still under way.
Smoker I gnites
Week end Blaze
At Union Ba nk
A delayed-ignilion fire caused an
estimated $300 damage Sunday in the
basement of the Union Bank building
at Newport Center in Newport Beach.
Investigators said the fire was started
when a cigarette, which had betn
smoldering in building materials of
Uniterslty Plumbenl end lleat Company
since Friday, Ignited the materials.
Smoke from the fire was vented out
of the basement through a pipe which
relea9ed It on the 14th lloor of the
building .
The smoke was spotted by patrolmen
in the Newport police helicopter who
celled f.ire unils to the scene.
The •ts.a million building ts under
constructkln by the C. L. Peck Company.
Completion of the IS.story structure is
slated for October.
David Packard, the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police a n d Hewlett.Packard
spokesmen believed the firebombing wa.s
due to Packard's Washington post and/or
the company's government contracts. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray said
there were no su.spect.s nor any positive
leads.
Neighbors told police they saw two
white men run from Hewlett's home
at the time of the attack. The men
HEADS NEW Hoav Hotplt1l'1 ·Mlhordln
Hoag Hospitnl
Opens Mental
H eal,th Service
A 37·bed mental health unit was of·
ficlally opened at Hoag Memorial
Hospital in ceremonies there Friday eve·
ning.
More than 500 employes and com·
munity members attended the ribbon-cut·
ting ceremony for the unit which is
located in the North Unit of the hospital.
The unit is designed to offer intensive,
short.term inpaLient treatment i n
association with the services ·already
available at the hospital .
Dr. Ronald J. Mihordin ls director
of the unit and will be aided by Susan
L. Sullivan, R.N. who will serve as
nursing supervisor.
Participating in the ceremonies were
Dr. Ernest Klatte, head of the county 's
Mental Health Services; A. Vincent
Jorgensen, president of the hospital's
board of directors: William R. Hudson,
Jr., hospital administrator and Dr.
Mlbordin.
City of Irvine
Iss ue on TV
Opponents of the Incorporation of the
city of Irvine will air their views tonight
at 7 o'clock on Channel 3 Irvine Cable..
visioo.
.Resldeats of the Irvine area wUI be able
to telephone questions to the panel which
· wil l include opponents 'bf incorpora~k>n
and spokesmen for groups favoring delay
in lrx:orporaUon proceedlnp .now btfor1
the Local A1ency Formatioll Commillion,
Jamboree Road
Extension Due
To Open Soon
Jamboree Road extension, the -l.D>·
foot stritch between Palisades Road and
MtcArilwr Boulevard, should be open to
traffic in le11 than three weeks:
Newport to Get Federal
Completion of the projeel, ooe ~ Ulree
involvina; Jamboree Road currenC.11' ia
progJ"e!S. Js awaiting delivery of tr•fflc
alti•l contri>llers, Newport Jkach ~w..
Cills aaid today. Wort !:1 beginnlnlJ on site prep1raUon
for the new central fire besdquarter1 lo
the south of the Intersection of Jsmboree
and Santa &>M where crews are laying
undergroond utilities and construoting a
break 111 the median divider.
Even further to the south, At the tn·
trance of the Newporter Inn, prlv,cite
crews are rultitllng the ·~·· obUgauon to the city by &ddlng .iddJtional traffic
and parking lanes ak>ng with curbs, iut·
ters and sldtwalks.
Jamboree Road has been designed to
evenwally become • aix·laae artery wllh
parking lanes on each aide, clty officials
explained.
B1 L Prl'Ell llUlG
.... Dliltr ,.. ·-Federal IJ'lntl avalllble to local
govemment .are 'beijlmtng to· aerlously
attract IOme of the country'• wulthlest
cltl<S·~ llb·Nnport Beach.
Clly ofndlls· berg may &<I lhelJ-first
real tMte. of fediraJ ~cub in fonn of
• S.1 Grant to ·flmd ab ecolocl<al -
ofU_ll_&v ••
Newport Cllj ~ Harvey l.
Jlurlbort oi/inl ·i.,6 dl)'I '1111 wltt' lb
San Franc:lsco meetin1 wilh offlclall of
the two tap U.S. ageociea.
He met Thursday with · offldall of
th< Dopor1m<nt of lloullnt Ille! Url>ln
Development !HUD) l11d ~ with
o!Hctab of tho DeJ>ar1m<D1 of Health,
Education ll1d Welfare.
Newport Beach may havt an inside
tr•ck •Ith both of them.
It )Ult .. hlppom UM Wellen> realonol
dlreetor of HUD II RDl>trt Coop, who
Jurt 10 hlppens to be I former city
man1ger -of Newport. Buch.
It just so lllo haPIJllll tlllll o&bert
Data, the Western regional di.rector of
HEW, ls a long-time frlend of Hurlburt.
Before tea.vtilg on hll miah>n, Hurlburt
uld the lrip 11 "llrldly. for ·~uory
purpotes."
He 11kl bo will not ttlunl loaded "°'"' with open lf>OC" fUndl l11d redeveloptnent ruou~s.
"I ju!lt want to find oul what moneys
are: avallable to us," Hurlburt said. "l
know the government hu U&erally huD-
dredJ of programs that are aoinl
virtuaUy untapped.
"They are available,'' he aald, "and
wt should try to take tldvantage of
them ."
Hurlburl noted he hid b1ed lo Ill
the City CouncU to add ·• man lo lu.
\
stall last y<1r for )Ult thlJ oort of
work.
"I 11!1 confld"1t lhe $13,000, •1~a
or $15,000 we would have to lay out
for aomeone would be more than repald,"
bo aid.
But the councll nJecl<d hil plea, &nd
thJs ls tba lint chance he'& bid to
do ..,U.lol abOu~ I~ hlmlelf.
And he ii lllo quite -lhe •feder1l
....-.... 11-,h drfwn -•hit llg111tt thin uau11 bec11i!e o1 tpene11n1
cutbacb, •rt not lhll dlfflcull to wedi•
open.
"'The money ls there i( ·• spec.Irle
proaram b propooed lhlt meela UM
de artmenta' crile:rla," he Aid.
llurlburt conceded thlt not too many
y<1n ago the thoucJ>l of lunl!n( to tt~Sam for 1 hlndoat would hlvo
enraged the Clly Council.
"But 11111 council la nol mdln& llltl
)
4
~
climbed into a dark-colored Volkswagen
"~eattle'' which had been parked nearby
with its motor idling and lights off,
~ey drove off without turning on their lights and witnesses could give only
vague descriptions.
One of the Clrebomln struck the rambl·
Ing, two-story home between the first
and second floors and fell harm1usly
to the ground . The second hit a transom
above the front door and fell to the
porch, f"'here it started a fire.
Economy Move
Hewlett, whose shares of Hewlett..
Packard stock are worth more t.b:m..
a quarter of a billion dollars used an
extinguisher to quell the blaze1
• 1be fire
was out when firemen and police UTived. •
Damage was minor .
Hewlett and hl.s wife were: in the
house when the gasoline-filled botUes
were hurled about 12:30 a.m. The home'.
is located In an older, upper mJddle·
claM residential area in the flallandl
(Sc< BOMBING, P1 .. I)
Business Tax
Burden to Ease?
There was speculation today that Pres!·
dent Nixon might announce that tax
burdens on business will be eased.
The expected move is aimed at
speeding economic expansion of the flag·
ging national economy.
The only news briefing 1cheduled by
administration aides today was set for
12:30 p.m. in Laguna Beach, an unusually
late hour, It coincides with the Ume
of closing of the stock exchange in
New York.
Treasury officials have completed
drifts of new regtl!atj<rjs to ""'" buline;,,.,' faster tu Wrlleol!f "'iih
IDlOWlls they spend on ne:w equipment
and plants. Thia would mean • tu
aavlng1 for buslnep runnlnc into bllUons
of dollars. . _ •
TM plan i.s to permit buslneuel to
deduct more for depreclaUon of equip.
ment in the earlier years of Its ase.
PreseoUy companies deduct from t.uea
the cost of equipment on a yearly m.
staJlment basis taking into conslderaUon
the useful life of the machinery,
A presidential panel deviled the new
rules. It was said they would nduce
government recelpta by $1.4 billion in
the first year, $.1. 7 billion in the ICCOnd
and more thereafter.
The idea Is to encourage modernlzaUon
Absent Attorney
Delays Manson
Trial Further
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The ofl-<le-
layed Sharon Tate murder trial hit a new
anag today when the critical illness of
the daughter of a defense attorney
caused hlm to d e I a y bis final argu·
ment.
Maxwell Keith, who replaced the mis-
sing Ronald Hughes as c00nsel for Leslie
Van Houten, said his daughter's 1urgery
during the weekend had so concerned
him that he bad been unable to pre·
pare his Dnal argument.
Miss Van Houten 1.5 one of three fe-
male <odefendantl of llCCURd hippie
leader Charlea Man.son.
'Ibe judge COD11ldeted a defeme: mo-
tion pmsented by attorney Paul Fltz·
gerald to declare a mtstrtal on grounds
that there had not been a public trial,
due to the fact that the majortty of the
courtroom lltltl were reserved for the
DeWS media.
Grant?
way," he Ald. "They have shown lftal
interest in this Sea Grant prosram, for
lmtlnc:e. he aid.
Thia gr1nl la beJnC IOl!iht by the
Upper Newport Bly COOper1Uve Plln-
nlnf Project, I tbrte-mtllJber qency
CG111priled of Newporl Belch, <>ranee
CountT 11111 lbo Irvine Comf)lllY.
It ii teek.ln& DI0,000 ·-in fadm'll"fundl
to study tj>e ecololkll Impact ol.dmlopo
IDlllt 'lit the boy ud lo build I
mathemlUcal model of the blf lo llud1
Udal Dow char•cteriatlcs. ·
lf the appllcatton wlnl approval from
HUD, the three participants: would each
pu t up an even lbart ot the remalnlna
1100.000 -of the lludJ. Hurlburt uld he will have a full report
lo make upon hla ttlum from the norlh
-he • ., 1llo tcheduled to opllld port
of Friday In Sacramento 1t a mMUnc
of the Cllllomla Lelgue of Clllel.
of equipment and expansion of pro.
duction. Jn recent months industries have
spent frugally on new p l a n ts and
machinery.
Nixon is expected to leave Saa
Clemente sometime thi..s week but a
firm time has not been announced.
It is expected he will make an ap-
pearance in Washington late this weeil
before members of the Republican N•
Uonal Comm.ill.et. The committee is te
name a succesaor to National Chairmaa
Ro(en C. B. Morton. It II upecbed
lhe: choice will be Sen. Robert Dole
of Xuiau, a NiJ:on stalwart. The Whit.e
bouN Isn't 11ylng. I
SilK:e flying here on a se.mf.vacaUOll
last week, the President has taken a
few swima: in the. heated pool of hll
seaside villa, has walked on the beacll
driven in southern ·Orange County and
vi.sited Catalina Island.
He walked down to the beach Saturday.
hls 58Lh birthday, taking two dogs witb
him and occasionally getting h1s feel
wet in the surf.
He celebrated the birthday with famll1
cne~bers including brother Doiald of
Newport Beach.
The President lold Pttss Secre1.at7..
Ronald Ziegler that the first real vaca-
tion in his Ille OCC'Jrred two decades
ago when he was 38. Ziegler quoted
the President as saying he is happy
in his job and optimistic about the future.'
The President also quoted President
James Knox Polk as staUng that anyone
with the duties of the Presidency bal
little Lime for leisure.
SYLVI A. ST A RTS
SAVING SERIES
Financial columnist Sylvia Porter
comes to the rescue of the inflaUon·be-
sieged consumer, starting today, in a
se ries of columM especially designed ut -
help you save ftom five to fifty percent.
and !f10l'6 on everything: you buy.
This la not a claim, it's a fact that•
by buying wisely, avoiding the hidden
costs which frequently ambush the
unwary, by . wat.chlng prices, RalODI,
sales and guaran!ee!l closely you can
roll back the strain on your familj
, budget and eave thousands of doll~
a year, Follow Sylvia Porter'• lnfiatk)a..
beating colunw this week.
We•Hler
~y'• -·will be ol
the fiuy vlrlety over lhe OrAlll• c.o..st with llbme driJzle seen: for
inland areas'. Tempenturea: will
nm from 17 to II ~
INSIDE TODAY
A. Mwlr. clccttd eongr.,.
man m priu1'1 clothing ii aU
ut to ·~o ·41. 4 Dtmocra«c Hf>' rcs~nt.aUue trom JifGOdCJiUI("' 1 •
Pag<"18. ,
...""' 1•11 c....... It i ~u, ,,_:
._, " ·-" --u -" ...... , .... " ....,.,,, .. t ... ,___ ... -..
-•
i; I DAILY ,ILOT N """''" -11. 1971 ••
~Beat.It to Selude'
Ethiopian Youths
Stage Protest
:; About 40 students describing f11bemselves 1s Elblopia's "cream ol the
: ~crop" chant.td for the death of their
;1eader riear the gates of tbe western
White House.
. Shouting "Death to Haile Selassie"
11and "death le fascist pig1," the 1tudenls
: 1pent about two hours near the pastures
: <11 the Elmore Ranch next to the Nixon
! Estate.
l (See Photo Page J)
~ Ostensibly, the demonstration, the firs t
:·flf the new year at the Presidential
::compound, was asking for the cutting
1 <1ff of foreign aid to the northeast African
t country.
: Spokesman for the Ethiopian Students
: Union in North America. lm Anseles
··Cbapttr, said the aid was being uaed
to direct weapon1 against rellow citizens,
primarily in the aria of Eritrea.
The spokesman claimed that In the
past few weeks 1,000 Eritreans have
been ;'massacrtd" by Selassie's troups.
The de.monatratlon by the students
bearing larte placards drew two Secret
Service qentl from -wjthln the Nixon
enclave and a few San Clement.e police
officers. ·
There were no incidents.
Besides their placards denouncing
feudalism and imperialism within their
country the college-age students carried
small red cards coatalnlng hinl.!I on a
person's rights when he is arrested by
police.
In each aepnent referring to police
on the cards, the word pigs had been
inserted, instead.
Child Behavior Seminar
Scheduled at Mesa School
Parents with questions about why their
cffspring behave the way they do will
have a chance tc quiz six area experts
in the field of child belllvior at a sym-
posium set for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in
Costa Mesa ffigh School Lyceum.
Sponsored by the Prtsidio and Harbor
Council Parent-Teacher Associations, the
-meeting will feature a panel made up
' of represenlaUves from the Newport-
_ Mesa Unified School DlJtrict, Mardan
. School of Educational Therapy, the
··Institute of Therapeutic Psychology. the
·Youth Problem Center, Child Guidance
Center and the Bureau for Educationally
Handicapped and Mentally Ei:ceptional
Children.
Dr. David W. Keir&ey will represent
the school district. He has been
.behavioral science consultant for the
. diltrict's research and deve1opment
dtpartment since 1968.
From Mardln School, Costa Mesa, will
-~ Mara Schiff, coordinaU>r of servi~
~d educational therapy specialist.
'' ·Dr. Alan Levy, of the Institute of
;f'avilion Queen
~Seeking Permit
From Newport
. With the backing of the Newport
··Barbor Cha mber of Commerce and any
number of lndlv iduals, Daveys Locker ,
.Jnc., is going berore the city council
foe a harbor permit for the controversial
.Pavilion. Queen.
• A public hearing on the request will
,be conducted by the councll U>night at
7:30 o'clock in city hall.
The sightseeing~ntertainment b o a t
came under fire last fall when its owners
aoughl renewal of its temporary licmse.
A 90-day extension was granted.
The mood of the community Ulward
the craft. once weighted against it
~•use of noi3e. seems to ha ve swung
about.
In addition to the endorsement by
the chamber·s Marine Division, Ille coun-
cil has received nea rly a dozen ot.Mr
letters supporting owner Phil Tou r"s
request .
Tozen Is asking for a permit lo allow
the 150-pasaenger excursion crafl to
operate seven days a week from l l
a.m. to midnight, with food and drink
and live entertainment.
DAILY PILOT
O~GI COAIT l'Ul\.llHtNIJ COMl'ANY
lob•li N. w •• e
l'rnklenl Mid 1"1111H1Mr
J1ck II:. C11rl1y
vic. "r•kllfll Ind 0-1! Ml~.,.,
Tlto1t111 k1• .. il
Eclllor
Tlto"'~" A. M 11r,.~i~•
Mll't~I"'° atl,.,.
L P1t1r K•i•t
N""'pon ll••ao c1rv t:cllll!r
New,ctft IMcll Office
2211 W11t l1lbo1 loul•¥••d
M1ili119 Ad"r.111 P.O. loll I •7&, •z66J --
Therapeutic Psychology in Santa Ana ,
specialiles in individual psychotherapy
and counselin g as well as intensive treat·
men t of emotionally disturbed children
and adu113. He counsels parents in the
management of problem children.
Bob Aldrich, director of the Harbor
Youth Problem Center, has done ex-
tensi ve work with drug abuse. While
at Mendocino State Hospital . he co-
direcled a patient-run , staff-assisted drug
program.
Dr. James G. Hall, Newport Beach
private practitioner of child and adu lt
psychiatry, is on the staff of the Orange
County Child Guidance Center and is
a clinical instructor in the department
of psychiatry and human behavior at
UC Irvine.
The sixth panelist, Allan Simmons,
Is a stale department of educati on con·
sultant for the educationally han-
dicapped.
During the symposium whic h is open
to the public, panelisl.!I will answer ques-
tions abou t youth behavior problems and
offer suggestions tc parents about where
they can go for help wtth famUy pro-
blems.
Arraignment Set
Iii Checks' Case
Arraig nment is expected today for a
Mission Viejo man arrested Friday by
Newport Beach police on char ges of
forging two checks wortb more than
17.700.
James Leonard Disch, 41, of 25962
Via Del Norte, was arrested at Applied
Digital Systems, 3848 Campus Dr.,
Newport Beach, where he has been
employed as an account.ant for a year
and a half.
Detectives assert that Disch forged
th e company treasurer's name to 1~·0
checks whi ch he had written to himself.
The case reportedly came to light
~·hen the comtiany's bank called the
firm to verify the signature before
cashing lhe two large checks.
Together Again
. .~, ' ~
DAILY "ILOT PPlel9' .-,. Lii "•JM
Rail Fi.nQ .
I
To Reque.st
Aid Funds
PIDLADELPHIA (AP ) -Trustee1 of
the financially ailing J:>eM Central
Transportation Co. have decided to ask
for almost all of the $125 million ln
emergency Joan J!Uaranlees Congress
authoriud in December.
The court • appointed trustees said
they will apply for SJ 10 million lllJ
loan guarantees from the U.S. Depart-
ment of Transporta tion to keep the na·
lion's largest ra il road running through
March 31.
The loan guarantee! are available un-
der the Emergency Rail Services Act
passed by Congress Dec. I.
The trustees said the $110 mlllion will
be raised through the issue of two cer·
tificates, on e for $6 million to mature
Jan. 15, 1976, and the other for $5 million
to mature Jan. 15, 1986.
Digging for Clanas
The brokerage firm, Piferri!l Lynch,
Pierce. Fenner and Smith Inc. will re-
present the underwriting group. The
Federal Reserve Bank of New York will
be fiacal gent for the certificates.
Clam diggers and the curious gather near Newport
Pier. Serious clam digging took place there Sun-
day during extreme low tide. Local beachcombers
and marine biol ogists note that the clam and clam
diggers are after a small version of the famed
P~smo clam of San Luis Obispo County. Besides
Pismo Beach, the area around the Newport Pier
and a section of Sunset Beach are Lhe only other
places the clam seems to thrive, according to
biologists.
The application must be approved by
U...S-:-· t. Judge P. Fullam, who Is over·
-«e:eing railroad's affair! since it ap-
plied hut e for reorganization under
federal ban ptcy laws, It will be pre·
sented tc m Monday.
Funeral Services Slated From Pqe
BOMBING PROBED . ••
For Mrs. Ethel Merritt of Palo Alto, about 35 miles south of
San Francisco.
A company SJX!kesman said the in-
dustrialist has received anonymous
telephone threats in recen t months,
usually warning of attacks on his home
or his family. They v.·ere considered
crank calls, but . company sec1.1rity of-
ficials placed the fire extinguishers in
his house. Funeral services will be held Wed-
nesday for Laguna Hills resident Ethe.!
Gertrude Merritt who died Sunday at
the age of 73.
Mrs. Merritt, 'ol-·ho ha d lived at 484-0
Via Cadiz for the past year, was a
well kno~·n interior decorator in Los
Angeles and Ora nge Counties who worked
under the name of Ethel G. Peabody.
Pinkley' s Drugs
Burgled 'Again'
In Costa Mesa
Longtime City CouACilman Alvin L.
'"Pi nk" Pinkley arrived to open up his
Costa Mesa pharmacy this mornini and
fou nd H burglarized for the thi rd time in
37 years.
""Every 12 years isn't too bad." he
quipped.
Someone broke in th rough a rooftop
skylight at Pink's Costa Mesa Pha rm acy .
1620 Newport Blvd., resulting in a $600
Joss. No drugs were taken.
The loss included about $300 in silver
coins, a $200 coin collection belonging to
a fr iend, the entire stock of four brands
of cigarettes and small change from the
cash register.
The glove -wearing i n t ruder s also
smashed an ornamental drugstore table,
tore pharmaceutical certi ficates from the
wall and caused other malicious misc hief.
Pinkley was philosophical about the
break-in, mentioning the robbery murder
32 days ago of downtov.·n shopkeeper
Samuel Biales. 68. whose Hawaiian ap-
parel store lies in the next block.
"Money you can replace," he said, "but
not your !He ."
Her da ughter , Trudi, is the wife of
vice Mayor Howard Rogers of Newport
Beach .
A native of Kansas, Mrs. Merritt mov-
ed to California in 1929. From 1938
lo 1946 she was the house ch aperone
for th e Pi Beta Phi sorority at the
University or Southern Ca lifornia ,
In 1946 she opened her interior
decorating offi ces in Los Angeles and
continued to work there until her death .
She was a member of the Ame rican
Institute of Decorators, the South Coast
Alumni Club of Pi Bet.a Phi, the Colorado
Club at Leisure World, the Lagwia Hills
Art Association and the Aliso Club.
A painter who specialized in
landscapes, she recently took second
place at e Laguna Hills art competition.
fn addition to her daughter, she leaves
her husband Wendell C. Merritt , of the
family home ; a son, Dr. Homer D.
Peabody, Jr .. of San Diego; a 1i.sler,
Mrs. A.P. Davidson, of Laguna Hills;
si x grandchild ren . and tv.·o g re a t
grandchildren.
The family has suggested that in lieu
of flowers. contrib utions be sent to the
Rees-Steal y Medical Research f'oun-
dation. in care of the Rees-Stealy Clinic,
2001 4th St.. San Diego.
Services v•ill be held al 1 p.m. at
the Paciifc View Chapel , wi th Pacific
View Mortuary directing.
County Teenager
Killed in Snow
A v.·inter sport outing to the Big Bear
area ended in tragedy Saturday night
for a gr oup of Orange County youths
v.•hen one was crushed to death as his
to~ggan careened under a car.
Roger T. Chadwick, 16, of 61 1 Glen-
rose St.. Orange. was pronounced deed
at a nearby hospital following the ac·
c1denl in Barton Flats.
San Bernardino County sheriff"s depu·
tie~ identified the driver in•'olved as
Irvin Lawery, 42, of Ga rdena and said
he was not cited for any traffic viola·
lion.
Spitas Neiv Reco1·d
Rjchard Ford, 30, is someth ing of a disc jockey. He jockeved a di sc
called the P!ayl and Park ferris wheel in San Francisco fo.r 20 days
16 hours and 30 mi nutes, setting a new fe rr is 'vheel en duran c~
record. He completed his one-man revolutions Sunday. The 40·foot
. v.1heel revolved during most of his stay, except when he was sleeping.
ON ALL t\IEW AND USED
ITEMS
_A.:'EWELRY
~ UPTO 50% Off
OVERliHl~MENT OP
GUITARS .... It.ti
WILL SELL 10'h. s1 2•s o\BOVE OUR COST ,
COMPARE
0--....,.. .. .,,... ,.._
PEOPLE IN THE KNOW SAVE MONEY EVERYTIME THEY BUY -IT IS NOT EASY TO BUY
FOR CASH, BUT IF YOU HAVE CASH, BANKAMERICARD, OR MASTER CHARGE YOU
CAN SAVE TREMENDOUS AMOUNTS ON EVERYTHING EVERYDAY.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
Pat Lacy and Greg \Vlke are cheered on by friends as they work their
way past the old marathon kissing record (20 hours. 14 minutes) to
new standard of 30 hours. Pair set the record during the weekend in
a dormitory at UCLA. They remarked later that it was not an alto-
gether ubpleuant way to pa.ss the "'·ee kend, but compJained of chap-
ped lips.
Ratitis COSTA MESA JEwELRY ancl LOAN
1838 NEWl'ORT ILVD. l'HONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA 8etwHn Harbor & BrMdway
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~men
BEA ANDERSON , Editor
MMN1, J1-ry II, 1t1! H f'1•t 1'
Valentines
Addressed
No\v that January has arrived, February is just
around the corner and members of the boards of direc·
tors of the Girls and Boys clubs of the Harbor Area arc
thinking "\.'alentine."
For the sixth year, the board members will stage a
Valentine dinner party to raise funds for the two clubs,
and invitations soon \Viii be mailed to past supporters
and ne\v friends to remind them of the events.
This year to take place Friday. Feb. 12, in the Bal ·
boa Bay Club, the event is being planned by Mrs. Fred
\V. Johnson of the Girls Club board and Gary Burrill
of the Boys Club, \vith assist.a.nee from Henry Vaughn.
l\1usic for dancing will be pr-0vided by the Society
for the Preservation of Big Bands. and the master of
ceremonies duties will be assumed by Harry Babbitt.
Guest speaker again \Viii be Harborite Dick Lane .
A variety of entertainment will round out the pro-
gram. and an entourage o.f noted surprise guests will
add suspense to the evening.
Tickets are available at either club at $25 per plate,
and tables of 10 may be arranged. ·
-,. . . •• • • ·~ ~·i
. ' ,,
Proceeds 'vill be divided equally between the build-
ing funds of the two clubs for building maintenance
and purchase of new equipment.
FISHIN' FOR FUNDS -lloping th at the "catch" of funds for the
Girls and Boys clu bs of the Harbor Area v.•ill be a big one are llcft
to right) Roberta ?11artinez and Bill Boyer. F'riends of the tv;o clubs
are being invited by the boards of directors to the sixth a~:
Valentine dinner pa'rty Friday, Feb. 12, in the Balboa Bay Clult: ·
l-"'unds \Vil! be used lo augment the building programs. ·.·.::-
Warm Welcome Brewing for New Chairman
Greetings will be extended over coffee to Mrs . Brent
Ogden, ne\v Corona del 1i1ar neighborhood chair-
man for Girl Scouts, tomorrow morning in the Bal·
boa Island home of Mrs. Allred M. WooUey. The
new chairman will assume volunteer leadership of
more than 500 girls and 108 leaders. Preparing for
the welcome are (left to right) 1i-1rs. Woolley, ll-1rs.-
Ogden and Mrs. Wildan Thomas.
·-\." .
New Year Brings New Club Leadership
Leadership dut ies will be exchanged over lunch by
new officer.~ of the Girls Club of the Harbor Area
Tuesday, Jan. 19. \\·hen installation ceremonies take
place in the Airporler Inn. Outstanding board mem-
bers and donors of Li1ne and services also will be
honored. Selecting a menu lo match the, occasi~;
arc (left to rightl ri.1iss Fare! WaJker. James 'M,;·
Dodd s and Mrs. Fred \V. Johnson, incoming pr~
dent.
;: ·.
Patter of Small Feet Drowns Out Sound of Freedbm' s Rin.g:,:.:
DEAR ANN bANDERS: I am 40. My
wife is 38. We have been married 20
years. our children are 17, 15 and 13.
I've been a good provider, a good
rather and a good husband . . . in
that order. My wife and I have devoted
our 'lives to our children and we were
looking forward to the day when there
would be just the two of us. We've
alway~ wanted to travel and have a
Jillie fun. Last month when our youngest boy
turned 13 OllJ' goal was In sighl Another
two years and he'd be off to prep
achool and we 'd be free . I felt 10 years
younger just thinking about it!
Just as I was making plans to have
a vasectomy. my wife announced &bat
she had seen the doctor and he told
her she is pregnant. I asked her to
have an aborUon. She refused. We got
into an argument and now she imft
speaking to me. I think she is happy
about thta pregnancy. I.n fact, I hive
a sneaking suspicion she got lhb: way
on purpo1e.
The prOl!lpect of being tied down until
T am nearly 60 depresses me. The way
l see it. either my wife has an abortion
or I get 111 divorce. When I told her
C.o take her choice she didn't believe
I was acrious -but t am. 1 realize
this is an extreme measure but I can'l
face raising another child. I'd like• your
honest opinion. -ON THE BRINK
DEAR ON: l\1y honest oplak>n Is that
you are eltller off your rocker or aa
11 Carat Heel. Maybe both. Your wile
did not cet pregnaat by herself. If she
want1 to have tbl• baby you bave ne
right lo ask her to have an abortion.
She Is lhe. one who must carry the
child, deliver it and care lor II. The
least you ca n do Is give ber a full
measure of emotional support. ~1y advice
Is to stop aclla1 like a jackass and
accept UUs fourth child wllb dip.lty.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several days
ago, I ren into a fellow t dated a few
times when I was in high school. We
now are both 2.1. I am nol marrled.
Bud is. In fact he has two small children.
I was immensely attracted to Bud
v.·hen we were in school bet he didn't
seem to go for me. When we met
in the supermarket he wes knocked
out by my looks. my figure. the whole
bit. He said he'd love to see me again,
bu t he made it µlain he cooldn·t take
me out publicly . He·d like to come
to my place and see me "quietly."
,
It seems he married the "wrong" girl.
His wife is , unresponsive and cold. He
needs someone whO can give his life
meaning. •
I am dating several fellows but no
one seriously. (My true love was killed
In 1968, Vietnam.) I'm not promlacuous
but I do have a yen for this old name.
I guess t really feel sorry for him .
lie Is miserable and he wanta me. Would
it be wrong? -VULNERABLE
DEAR VUL: We both bow what you
caa ct. for HIM, bid wbat caa lie do
r., you".' For openen: He ca1 take
up a lol of yo111 ttme. And he's awe
to improve your cooltins and cto.able
your gocery bill because you'll be fb::lng
llllle 1upper11 .,. .. lrylns oul oew recipes.
While you "live bis life meaD.lDC" )IJU'll
. .
be passlDc up opportonJtl'5 ,. !~ fellows. :~:•:
And let~1 · ltOt omiOGt tbe
tbat be mlgllt ~ !als. wlf6 aid'~
you. Yoa wtald ·u.ea Uve th prft~
of beJpln1 lllm Wit• allmo1y ··~·· •· money for dlt clllldrea. Aod clon~ ' ... C
lhe gulU (both yours and bl1). ••
"''htn H'1 legal, you'll dlsCOVfr ~ Y<jt~
Isn't nearly "° excltln1 11 you ~
it woald be. ·:;.:•: .... •...
How will you know when ~~~1
thing comes along? Ask Ann ~.
Send for her booklet "Love or Set ~
How to Te.II the Difference." ~:4'
cents in . coin aDd a k>ng, self-a~,
stamped envelope with your reqvt."tlt
care of the DAILY PILOT. .,a,~! . . .
• . " ' . ••• . . · .. "' • ~t
,
I
•
. . ·=
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Capricorn: Balance Emotions
:: ·:
•' :: . . · ..
• " .· . • "
.. .
,·
LL-FINS WADE IN -Already accomplishing
• :loore than they set out to do, members of the
· I;:~omen's Division, Newport Harbor Chamber of
Commerce will be recognized for their achievements
Committee Offers
11ope for Victims
A new coinmiltee has been organized at
oag l\~c n1orial Hospital. Presbyterian, titled
:-,troke Rehabilitation and Resocializ.ation.
according t-0 Mrs. Rudolph Baron, coordina·
tor of volunteers.
The first meeting n•ill take place at 9:30
a.in. tomorrow in the hospital conference
center, under sponsorship of the Women's
Auxiliary to the Orange County Medical
Association.
Primary goal of the com1nittee will be
to provide a pragmatic method of meeting
the continuing social, emotional and physical
needs of the stroke patient.
Volunteers will work directly with pa-
tients in the hospital and in their homes, as
-.-··v.·ell as attend 44 hours of classes to learn
how to assist the patients.
Any interested community member may
calt Mrs. Baron from 10 a.m. to noon al
548-0651, ext. 225.
•
during the 64th aMual installation banuqet Thurs·
day, Jan. 14. Leading the way to greater successes
will be (left to right} Mrs. Lloyd Fleming, Mrs.
George P. Zebal and Mrs. Florence Mccue.
Distaff T earn
Rates Plaudits
A group of some 135
business \Vome n and civic
leaders has done eve n 1nore
than it set out lo do, so a
big part of the 64th annual
installation banquet of the
Newport Jfarbor Chamber of
Commerce \\'ill be devoled to
its distaff side, according to
manager Jack Barnett.
The banquet will take pla~
Thursday. Jan. 14, in the
Balboa Bay Club and will
mark the fir.It anniversary of
the Women'11 Division's new
name, The Doll-Fins, and a
year 's publication al it :s
Players Match
Bridge Hands
monthly bulletin, \.he Doll-Fin
Tidings.
Purpose of the \1•omen·s
group has been to promotc
the spirit of cultural and com-
mercial progress a mo n g
women and to cooperate with
the chamber in working for
!he general welfare and pro.
greSll of the Newport Harbor
Area and its cit izens.
Annual projects i n c I u d e
beautification, which thi! year
will be headed by Mrs. Isabel
Peal5e. Other sponsored events
are the Sand Castle contest,
Silver Anchor awards for com-
munity service, new teachers'
welcome tour ()f the bay and
luncheon, the Trade fair and
t h e Christmas centerpiece
1.•ompetition .
New officers who will be
installed include the Mmes.
TUESDAY
JANUARY 12
By SYDNEY OMARR
"We and lbe coamo1 are
one. The co1mo1 Is a vasl
llvhlg body, of wbkh we are
1tlll parts. Tbe 1u 11 a great
heart whose tremors run
throagb our amallest veins.
The moon It a great gleaming
nerve center from which v.·e
quiver forever."
- D. H. Lawrenet •
ARIES (r-.1arch 21-April 19):
Accent on change, creativity,
possible journey. Empha size
personality. will ingness to
communicate and experiment.
Improve relations w i t h
children. Maintain positive at-
titude.
TAURUS (April ~May 20):
Complete projects. Focus on
frame of reference. Utilite
past experience. Spotlight on
Noses in Tune
Pump
AT
WIT'S
END
By ERMA BOMBECK
We've never given a party
in our lives that something
(or someone) didn't crawl in·.
side our wall and die.
It's the price you pay for
rustic. rural living.
In my mind, I visualize a
group of mice meeting in a
cornfield and one of the m says
to the other, •·eufford, you
don 't look too good."
··oh, I'll be all right.'' says
Bufford, "It's just a head
cold."
"Neverth eless,'' says the
leader, "\\'hy don"l you check
in at Bombeck's wall."
The night (If our last party,
Bufford didn't make it lo the
wall. He staggered into our
old pump organ and kicked
off.
My husband came into the
house, sank to his knees and
gasped, "Not again! Where
this time?"
''In the pump organ,'' I said ,
"Can't we get rid of the
odor ?"
"Only if you want to paint
Mast.er points and prizes George P. Zebal, president:
will be awarded during a dup-R. L. Bacon and Chris Hopper,
licale bridge tournament to be vice presidents ; Ft ore n c e
conducttd tomorrow night at McCue, treasurer: L Jo y d
• .•:"'-:; 7:30 by Nick Minardi in the Fleming, editor of the Doll-
• • • • -Montan0110 Recreation Center,
Winter
Warming r J~~~terfaifh Foundation Mission Viejo. :!~~~intur~e:~r~i~~ New winter ski~·ear for , ·?:··· Entry fee is $1 for members recording secretary, and Nona warming up on the slopes er · 6·! .... · and $1.50 for guesl!I. Tho6e in· Hoffman past pres'1dent by the fire comes in tan y ~~~~~Coffee Fills Coffers ~:~ ~~~hln m~~ vc1i:'a~~~ ~~!r:ee~c:~~~ f;!~~~~s.new cuts and new
!'--_ '. '· . . phone the center. Fox, Lee Rivers, Graha1n Styline for v.·omen shows a
>-. I G Aldr ch ti.1 kl La D F Edelblute and Peter Vogel, great approach in knits, like .-. Mrs. Danie · 1 • ar e, wrence • oU ti.trs. Zebal, asslstant direc· the leotard look. and hooded ~: "1f• o( the chancelloc of UC!, and Mis.! Alice Gates. Ga rd en Ta I k ,.,,._ ~•t ~n her horn• for 8 S tor of public relations and sweate rs. The g.lace ski smock • ..,.u ....-ponsoring the event U the d l t f H · f ., t ·, :-; •.. ~ .. w-•--sday, Jan. \3 to IV . F 11 eve op men or oag rs a avo r1 ea so. • .__... CUI~ omen :s e owship Service M · I H f t t F th .: ,-;.;qioefit the univer s i ty • s Mrs. Roy Raymond will give em a r 1 a o s p a . or everyone, ere are • • '-'•-~ · h F d r of the (;(immunity Oiurch an illustrated talk on Slides Presbyterian. was recognized sleeve less vests. ribbed knits -. • .... -· mc.ena 1t oun a ion. CongregationaJ, Corona del f • s b' If ,·n "Who"s \Vho in· Amer1·can d 'bl ·1 Th o Natures u Ject:s -um· an revers1 e p1 es. ere are : "_; Addressing the guests du r-Mar. headed by Mrs. John mingblrds for members of the Women in 1968." colors like Political Plum,
• • Ing the 10 a.m. event will be L. Kenl Transportation and Sooth Coast Garden Club at She was selected a s Mighty Moss and Think Pink,
Mrs. Roy Giordano, charter b ab Y ·sit t in g will be 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. Foremost Woman in Com· all from White Stag.
member and "'~:.,pre:side1ntthof available at the church. 13. munications in 1970 and olhcr1-.ii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0i=
_,'.the Women ~1ates o e Women of the area are Tea host ror the meeting honors gleaned include Costa II IU.UTIFUL CLOTHIS •••
:.&undation, who will bring invited to attend, and a $1 in the Three Arch Bay Mesa Woman--0!-lhe-year: the o..iv 51101111y u,1111 several UCI students as donation will be asked. • Clubhouse in Sooth Laguna Henry Ford Silver Scroll for ay 0111 wtio <"•n't -· to " ••'" ~-Edward A. Steinhaus The Interfaith Foun:!atlon , will be Mrs. Gllbert Young, Orange County; Costa Mesa •v·k• {~.':;-~= ~~!;,.. ~111 •
..u 11 situated near the campus, i!1 assisted by the Mmes. Charles UnJt.ed Fund Angel award and
:-
. will M in charge of serving :stalled by religious leaders Francl.s, R... G. Linderman, the Henry Ford Cltlzen-<>f.fhe-THI SICOND TIMI AROUND
... •· 11'11 II., CNtt M-. 0... II .. I -60-nll . -~ta. assisted by the of every denomtnaUon and George St. Jeaa and R L. year for Orange County irr
Nmea. Philip G. Murray, A. ~·~id~<d'.!..';b:>:y~v~ol~un~tee~rs~. ___ ____:s;,,m1~th.~---------------1~966~. ___ .::_ _ _:.:_...::~========~II Hale Dlnsmoor. Roy H .f-. ' . . • .. Rlchanbon, Jack E. P.1oore,
Walter M. Roys, Gardon r.1
·. " '
·'ff ou ' Viewed
:,,~.
. T'ar Program
~ou" will be in focus \\·hen ~\Mesa-ti arbor Club mt!els (v. luncheon Thur~ay, Jan. ' tt:ln l:lle Mesa Verde Country
i : C!Ub. ).. :~ Mrt. !Aurel Kimball .
, ; former fashion model whMe
: : credit.I Include TV and little t : _.. -·tbmtet wc:d. wlll do a parody . · ., •e • tbe bousewire a n d : ~ .:._: :.OOnstrate m • k e u p tech-
. •
; . at;;:· btr theme 'Ille Look
fir 1971, she wilt emphasize
1111 dynamkt ol fint Im·
prwions ind the do's of bow
to package younelL
Gru:Ung Jntmbtrs 1 n d
.IUe31a wilt .. Mn. Du11nt
Steputls. p~nt. and ~tr.1.
Donald Rhoades, pro g r a m
chairman.
' ~
\
BUFFUM$' FAMED
LAMP CUT
PLUS SHAM POO,
FERMODYL TREA TMENT,
5.50 8.50 value
II your hair only has the slighl·
est tendency to curl, our Buf ..
fums' experts will encourage
every . natural wave. Enriching
Fermodyl will help streng1hen
you r ha ir. We'll shampoo and
comb ii into an exciting new
look. Try it ... d iscove r why
Buffu ms' lamp Cut has be-
c.ome lan1ous.
8"011ty Srud.o.
Monlcur1i •
• [l•ctro lyfs
Newport, •I F•1hicn l1l•nd, Newport Center e 64'4 -2200 e Men., Fr i., 10 :00 till ~:lO; Other do1y' 10 t ill 5;l0
home, furnishing s, long-range
plans aftectiDg security. What
appears to be form idable op-
po!ition will vanis h.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Perceptive abilities increase.
Excellent for writing , short
jou rneys, conducting private
investigation. Find out reasons
for rccrnt e\'ent.s. Main tain
sense o[ humor -and
discovery.
CA~CER (.lune 21·.luly 22l:
"Finanei;;J opportl1n1t1cs con1e
from unex1>crted sourer. J>ay
and collccl debts. Take in·
ventory. Bl' aware or value
of possessions. t.loney picture
br ightens; position is stronger.
LEO (July 2.1·Aug. 22):
Strong desire for self-eK·
pression is evident. Some 1nay
complain that you push too
hard. Don't permit this to
alter sty le. Be yourself. utiliz-
ing marvelous sense o [
:showmanship.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sepl. 21 J'
Accent quiet, s e I f • d e .velop-
ment. Keep confidential af-
fairs that way. Avoid scandal.
Don't make claims you cannot
fulfill Cooperate with one who
is temporarily handicapped.
LIBRA IS.pt. 23-0ct. 21 ),
Accent an new and old
rriend.shlpcs. Make future plans.
Put money to work. Accept
advice lrom friends in high
places. Don't sell yourself
short. Be ready, available.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
Those in positions of a11thority
react to your suggestions,
ideas. Get program i n l o
operation. Make room at top
for yourself. Ambitions can
be fulfilled if alert, versatile.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Develop new con-
cepts. OuUine any travel in·
clinations. Study. Gain in·
dicated through written y,·ord.
'5 I cent Aroma
Accrnt philosophy, d e e p e. r
meanings. D is c a r d 1h11
superficial.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Legal se ttlements in-
dicated; be percept ive enough
to see various implications.
You are stimulated. Romantic
interests are present Balan ce
emotion and logic. Cet v.·hat
you 're worth .
AQUA.RIUS (.Jan. 20-Fel:i.
18): Legal, marriage rela·
tionships a r e cmphasired.
Avoid open quarrels. Being
tactful now can gain more
than any forcing methods.
Diplomacy is a necessity.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ):
Improve mC!thods of serving
and being ser\'ed. fi.1any may
look t.o you as example. You
can 't wish fa cts a wa y .
Instead, face music. Ga in
knowledge .
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are flexible
but serious of purpose. You
can stick to a project witil
completed, You see ahead;
you perceive what could oc·
cur. You are interested in
people and have unusual circle
of acquaintances. As for
friends. fe\v really know and
understand you. You :setU e
down now to 1nore seriou!'I
aspects of Jiving. This fo\lowi
the living room." ''Is that il?'' he said and somewhat of a social merry·
..\\'e n1ustn't panic ," he said moved on to the kitchen for go-round. Pace was dizzying,
palling his wrisls with a a stronger drink. but you learned a lot.
deodorizer v.-ick . "\\le're justlp;;,;;,;;;;;.i;;;;,;;;iiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOi;.,;;;iiOi;o,;;~;;o;;~~~
going to have to make sure ON KNlnlNG YARNS that no one plays the o.-gan SA YE
lonight." \\le both nodded." STOClS All LIMITED-HURltY! lrolfltr The party was in high gear PARFAIT $2 f(HITT1NG MACHIH•
\\•h~n ti.1ax Marx sai down Rf9•lar S2.SO M"'1•1 58J '''"'''' 70" ,w,•.•. L•'• ".s"1"49~m..,~O lo play the argan. 1 grabbed .,. u
a can of deodorl2er and follow.
1
Ret•lor Sl.01 11,t.H
ed him. AND SOME YARNS REDUCED TO SD•
"What ace you doing'" he The KNIT WIT sou;~A~~AST
asked annoyed. Phone 545-2112 COSTA MESA
I turned the deodo rizer on l':=~===~~~i!!=::l!::l!=========~ mysel f. "It's Skinny Dip,'' 1lr
said feebl y, "to make me ir·
resistible."
J watched in l1orror as he
pulled out the stops on the
organ and started to pump.
As the bello ws wheezed in
and wt, sp read ing misery
throoghout the house, three
"-"Omen fainted and one man
put out l1is pipe.
"I say,'' he said. pau sing,
"do you have a dog?"
''We have three o! them .
but they're outside.''
He began to play again, then
stopped and sniffed, "Is some·
one in the apartment cook-
ing .sauerkraut or making
suUur with a junior chemistry
set?"
"We don 't li ve in an apart·
ment."
"ls someone wearing old
gym shoes?" he asked.
His wife came over at the
mo1nent and leaned over his
shoo Ider.
"Max, your music slinks."
UP
TO
1/2
OFF!
e BRAS
e GIRDLES
e SLIPS
e SLEEPWEAR
e AT-HOME-WEAR
e ROBES • ~tl_fa a.If Graduate Cor~elii>re11 CJ. 'Ji Jri' Specia\i<ing In D and DD Cup•
l4Jl \ "I• Comf"""• '"Yo" Cup"'
All Sales Final
250 .. E ... 17th Street
Coit• M•1-Hlll9r•n Squo1r1
-642-5430 -
lJ6N8M
• Checks • Plaids • Solids
a perennial favorite in o
sturdy cotton fabric.
for sports 11nd playwear.
VALUES TO $1 .49 YARD
. .,
¢
yd.
UITINl!!i
BEAUTIFUL SOLID COLORS
yard• and yards of lop
quality, high feshion suitings
1n good weight for dr1sies, pants
VALUES TO $3.91 YARD
•cetat1s, r1yons, blends
ac1t•t• tricot lining
54" / 60" widths
ft HOUSE OF FllBRICS
S.lrttt C...1 rt-lri•lol ti Sin Dltte fwy. H..., rt-17th 11 l rill•t c.-. .. .._. .. 1.111• ,..,... •-141·1111
Ore••I, M.i1-0r1n9•lhorpt •nd H1rb11r 1 ..... P•rl c..,_I.• P•lme "' St•nlon
P•ll~IZ6°2JJ4 1...,. P9'\-IJ1•6JIJ
H111tl!tff .. C...Mt-Edlnt•r •I l11cli l lwd. Hllltt .. ,_ 1Mc~t7-IOIJ
7
7
---
Costa Mesa Today'• Fl••I
YOL M, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, li PAGES ORANGE COUNT'f, CALIFORNIA MONDA Y, JANUARY I f, 1971' TEN CENTS
Doctor's Death Wish Ignored
' Patient Survives With Fifth Kidney
SA.i'I RAFAEL (AP) -As Dr. Chad
Calland was wheeled into an operating
room to undergo his lift.h kidney trans·
plant, he told the surgeon: "l have suf·
fered too much, Let. me die."
The 35-year-<>ld heart specialist's weight
had dropped from 150 to 86 pounds. He
was hemorrhag ing, depressed, unable to
walk and scarcely able to speak.
But his surgeon disregarded the plea
and went ahead last May with a fift.h
Kidney that had only beea mat ched for
blood lype,
MAY GET LONG COUNT
T11m1t1rs' Jimmy Hoffa
Calland 's body accepted the kidney and
now he is back at work on a limited basl11
-savoring what he calls the little things
in life Lh.11t most people take for granted.
Recallin,11: his death wish before the
fifth operation, Calland said Monday ;
"By all scientific criteria, this filth kid·
ney shoul d have beea another mismatch.
But it wasn't. Maybe it was luck. And
maybe it was God."
He added that his survival was also
due to the "extraordinary faith" of his
surgeon, Dr. Samuel K(JUntz, cochief of
••• Ut'I T .....
STILL IN THERI PUNCHING
Boxer Ca11iu1 Clay
Clny Wins New Hearing
In Army lnductwn Fight
WASHI NGTON (UPI) -Cassius Clay,
former heavyweight boxing champion,
won a new hearing from the Suprtme.
Court today on his conviction for refusing
induction into the Anny.
The aclion means that C 1 a y ' !
multimillion dollar title fight with the
present champion, Joe Frazier, can go
ahead as planned in New York on March
8.
The court said in a brief order it
would confine .arguments in the c ase
to Clay's claim of conscientious objection
because of his Muslim religion.
Clay -who now uses the name
Muhammad Ali -also contended that
the government had illegally tapped his
telephone conversations, but the court
decided not to consider that claim.
Arguments will be heard in the case
and a decision handed down later in
the term .
At itc; first session of the new year,
the court turned down an appeal by
the already imprisoned president of the
'Teamsters Union, James R. }[ofla, from
his cinv iction of defrauding the union's
pension fund. Hoffa thus fa ces an •d·
ditional five-year prison sentence in ad·
dilion to the eight years he now is
serving at Lewisburg. Pa., federal
penitentiary for j\lry tampering.
'!'ht eourt also:
-Refused to hear a challenge to
organized baseball brought under the
antitrust laws by two d ts m Is 1 e d
American League umpires, Al Salemo
and Bill Valentine. The justices without
We•t•er
Tuf:!Kle.y's sunshine will be of
the huy variety over the: Orange
COUt wilh 90me drizzle 1eer1 for
ln.land are1s. Temperatures wW
run rrom 57 to &3 degrees.
INSIDE TODAY
A. newl11 cltcted congre1t-
ma11 m priest's clothing ii all
set to on a.s a Dirmocra:tic 'Ttf>"
Tesentative from Ma.ssachu.s11tt.1.
Page 16.
·'
comment let stand lower court rulings
that baseball Is exempt from antitrust
action under 1922 and 1953 Supreme
Court decisions.
-Rejected an appeal by a white
Mississippi parent who challenged a tern.
porary court order revoking lederal tax
exempt status for new white academies
which do not have non-discriminatory
racial school policies.
-Jn en about-face, sent back to
a lower court the question whether non·
English speaking voters in 19 states
may be required to use English in
answering questions to register. The
rourt voted March 30, 1970, to hear
arguments in a case involving a group
of Mexican-American farm workers in
Yakima County, Wash., but reversed
this apparently on grounds the justices
unanimously upheld on Dec. 21 the right
of Congress to outlaw all literacy tests.
-Agreed to hear a case involving
the right of L.S. Customs inspectors
to require a penon to strip a.1 part
of a search for narcotics or other COll-
lraband. It accepted for future decision
an appeal by the Justice Department
from a ruling of lhe 9th U.S. Circuit
<'..ourt of Appeals lhat such a searctt
wu legally unjusti fied in lhe case of
a young woman found with beroia. at
San Ysidro, Calif.
Mesa Senior
Powd,er Puffers
Win by Yardage
Senion baWed to a sudden-death, three
)'an! victory over U..11' ~ In
a amrtlea a:.ta Mes,a.ver-.EUnd•
Higli SdJool Powder .Puff -I loaibou game Sablrdoy nijh~·
Wll\dl!>I up lour quarters of U.. benefit
doubltliOder •t N"'JIO?I lllrbor High
SCbool'1 Dav-11eld, ..nJor gfrla of
the .two '-i"°"" ...... Utd 0 Jo.O and clolo ln11otal ,.., • .
'Thi f~'4ne ~
a five.. yard pin over the Estancia
Hl&h School ......... tllrte In u.. four
plays allotted tacb Ude.
Junior Estancia Et.ales, however,
lltmll)I nm 1way wllh tho ball. in po111>
ding out • • II lo I v1ct«y am' Coota
Mesa Hl&h School junion.
A total of .., WU railed to benefit
Fail'Ylew 61>1< l!copl!ol prqimna and
the wtnnm and -. of Frid&y'• club
will meet at the 11.me: Ume and aame
place nut Saturday for a decldlng round. . ,
the University of California Medical
School's tra nsplant division, who spent
59 hours at Calland's side after the oper·
atlon.
Kountz recalled: "He was the sickest
man I've ever seen who lived."
Calland, the top UC Medical School
graduate of 1959, will not be able to re-
turn to practice an d expose himself t()
the possible contagious or infectiOU.5 dis·
ease of his patients for some months yet.
But he is back at work reading cardio-
grams and holding two additiona'-part·
time jobs closely allied with medicine.
He said he's also enjoying simple things:
"Like taking a walk and going fisl'ling.
And going out of town to my parents in
Sacramento for Christmu."
Calland's ordeal began in 1968, when he
was felled by kidney disease. By Febru·
ary 1969, he had suffered viral sept.ice·
mia, meningitis, encephaUtis pancreatls,
bilateral pneumonia and peritonitis in
rapid succession.
To keep him alive, surgeons placed him
on a kidney machine, lO take over the
fu~ction of his own ruined organs, while a
.suitable transplant could be found .
In May of 1969, Calland's wife Jlosa.
lind, gave him one of her owR kidneys -
an advance "birthday present," she
called it.. The couple have three children.
"The kidney ma tch was almost per.
feet,'' ,..1rs. Calland &aid. But rejeetion,
the. hum an body's reaction to alie11 tissue
set in. The next month another kidne.Y
was transplanlcd, and it too was rejected.
Last April a third kidney was installed
-also a fa ilu re . In May, a kidney was
made available which a computer de·
clared "perfect." but within Zf boon it
was useless, too, rejected.
CaJland was given the fifth kidey u a
desperation move without any ot the
sophisticated matching .
"There was one kldney in the hospital.
It had just come in. There was no Ume
for eJaborate tissue typing. The blood
matched, and that was all ," Callanct said:
Cailand estimated that the first tran&-
plallt and two years of intermittent hoe-
pitalization cost between $70,000 and '80 ...
000 -paid by the UC Medical Cent.er re-
search budget and other ~.
Industrialist Bombed
I
Defense Aide's Partner Victim in Palo Alto
PALO ALTO (UP!) -Two firebombs
were hurled early today at the home
of industrialist William R. Hewlett, whose
partner is deputy secreLary of defense.
Hewlett, 57, multimillionaire president
of Hewlett-Packard Corp .. was awakened
by the muffled explosions of the Molotov
Coc ktails and put out the fire with
extinguishers recently placed in the home
because of anonymous telephone threats.
Hewlett's partner, and co-founder of
the electronics manufacturing firm, is
David Packard, the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melv in Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police and Hewlett-Packard
spokesmen believed the firebombing was
due to Packard's Washington po.st and/or
the company's government contracts. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray said
there were no suspects nor any positive
leads.
Neighbors told police they saw two
white men run from Hewlett's home
at the time of the attack. The men
climbed Into a dark-colored Volkswagen
"Beattle" which had been parke~Mby
v.·ith its motor idling and Ii ts off.
They drove off without turning on ir
lights and witnesses could give only
vague descriptions.
One of I.he fir ebombs struck the rambl-
ing, two-story home between the first
and seCQnd floors and fell harmlessly
to the ground. The se<:ond hit a transom
above the front door and fell to the
porch, where It started a fire.
Hewlett, whose shares of Hewlett-
Packard stock are worth more than
a quarter of a billion dollars, used aa.
extinguisher to quell the blaze. The fire
was out when f.iremen and pollce arrived.
Damage wa:: minor. ..
Hewlett and his wile were In the
house when the gasoline-filled bottles
were hurled about 12 :JJ a.m. The borne
is located in an older, upper middle
cl85S residential area in the llaUanda
of Palo Alto.
Territory
Annexation
Up for Vote
Chase Fells Woman~ 73
CosW. Mesan Collapses Pursuing Purse-snatcher
Voters in a 78-acre pocket of unin-
corporated territory overlooklng what
may one day be a marina development
go to the polls Tuesday to decide whether
to join Costa lt-1esa.
The 182 eligible may casl ballots at
2267 Canyon Drive, Apt. A, according
to Mrs. William M. Haun, of the pro-an·
nexation committee.
Street improvements are badly needed
in Lhe area, served by Pacilic Avenue
and Canyon Drive, while landowners face
severe fire protection cost increases,
they predict.
General tax increases have skyrocketed
in th e area . the Committee For An·
nexation adds, while they do not believe
them lo be justified based on sur rounding
development.
The Paci fic Fire Rating Bureau, which
advises insurance companies. ha s recom·
mended a JOO percent increase in etiver-
ing structures located in rural or un in·
corporated areas.
Not only that, note annexation pro-
ponents, but current fire protection in
the unincorporated pocket inland off Vic·
toria Street comes from an Orange Coun·
ly Airport station.
Post.-anne~ation plans include forma·
tion of improvement distr icts lo correct
street, drainage and other problems in
the area.
Proponents say lt Is one of the few
remaining areas of county territory lying
on Costa Mesa's western boundary, ad-
jacent to the Santa Ana River.
Lone Quad Survives
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Tiny Joe
Anne Springer, Jone survivor of quad·
ruplets bom in Idaho, ls In "critical
and unstable'' condition in an artificial
respirator becauae she no longer can
breathe for he:rs.eU.
Chasing a long-haired purse-snatcher,
a 73-year-old Costa Mesa housewife CQI·
lapsed in a shopping center Friday but
was revived after being presumed dead
on arrival at a hospital.
Mrs. Marjorie F. Lee, of 327 W. Wilson
St, was Hated as improved today, but
still in serious condition at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital.
She is believed to have suffered a
heart attack.
Her green handbag -emptied of an
undetermined amount ot money -was
found In Fountain V•lley., two hours
after the 1 p.m. incident.
Police said several persons y,·itnesscd
the strongarm theft at the K·Mart Shop.-
ping Center, 2200 Harbor Boulevard, but
had no time to intervene .
Mrs. Alice Duniga n and her ieena1ed
daughter, of 34-0 16th Place, Costa Mesa,
told investigators three h l p p I e -t y p e
youths 18 to 20 years old were involved.
One got out of a red Voliswagen
as Mrs. Lee was pushing a grocery
cart through the lot and grabbed her
purse from il.
lie ran back to the vehicle -with
the elderly woman in pursuit -jumped
in and the car spun one circle around
the dazed and gasping victim before
roaring away.
Miss Dunigan, 16, said she reali zed
a strongarm robbery had occurred at
Former GI Says He Fired
At Civilians on Command
FT. BENNJNG, Ga. IUPI) -Former
Private Paul D. Meadlo. teslifying in
a calm, midwestern farm boy accent,
11aid today tttat at Lt. William L. Calley's
order he firtd with Calley into two
groups of Vietnamese civilians at point
blank range.
Meadlo, 23. of Terre Haute, Ind .. was
the 37lh government wltneas in its at-
tempt to convict Calley, a former
American infantry platoon leader, of the
premeditated murder of 102 civilians
at My Lal 4 hamlet,
Mead.lo, who was granted Immunity
rrom prosecution on the basis of his
testimony by the F"t. Benning com·
mander. aald that Calley told him "I
want 'em dead" in refereace to 35 or
40 men, women and children tn the
village during the March Ie, 1968 sweep.
Earlier story Page 3.
He said he emptied three or four
rifle magazines Into the group In
automatic rlre and Calley emptied four
or five . They fell , covered with blood,
he said .
Later, at a ravine, he said, they stood
at its lip looking al 75 to 100 civilians
in It and Calley said : •'we've got another
job to do, Meadlo."
Meadlo said th at u as far as I'm con·
cerned," all the civilians they shot at
were Viet Cong.
At the ravine, "LL Calley started
shoving them off and shooting,"
He sald be started firing into the
ravine when Calley "ordered me to help
ldll the people."
Meadlo said that Calley changed clips
10 or 15 times while firing hia rifle
Into the ravine and that a clip normally
holds 20 rounds of ammunition.
U.S. Surgeon Sar•
G<neral J..,. L. Stelnleld A.J4 MGodlly It .i.o nwked u.. bqlnlltng , of ~ clalo on low birth w t ID.!!>'·~
that U.. mo~ho,1111<>~ ... ~AlbJacttlii , .......... ofcNatloaal -Week Clet of.camoklng "'°ilwl; '!i<rt;" ·-hV anbenl *w; IW..,.. ·~ ' · dlta on fetal wutqe aDd neana.-,de:ath.
of ~ • -· • ". iil , ; ' .., ~ Ind ffeolill. .-~ llully ahq<ood lhaf thete W017'tn
"Md as 1 result we are ,habits , Dr. Stttnr,ict uid that a new ~~ havt 20 4 percent mare yn.ucctllful
and pooalbly handicapping ' , " I!< now ID Ille 1-ol ~ ~tttd m!Jloncla tllln °'o/ woold b.lvo If
said. to Cmgr1tl vaUdltes: once acaln the they bad not amoked..' . •
Conoldera bly fewer men .m ·omokla• CO!'Cluslonl o! Ibo 11111 report. . Or. St<IDfcld 11ld 'that doi. for 1170
now th.an did JI )'urt ap, Jr. akl, ~evioua ·rtporti, he u.id. dealt wlih abo• that abovt1 2S ~t of ali, men
"but Ille proportlon 'of -·~kera J!lo.lnO..-of-klnton -. 1mokera manoged lo qlllt,.whllo ,Ji per-
in evtry age group etctpt 18-24 li ~ ~ · ''Nmt' ke ii '· •tbatnt•• ~ df ctnt ot women 1ndl:ln ,ere. abla. to
lodly thin II ,... In 11155," be io'Jd evldelloo · 1'llidl , -lr ~ tho give up lhe hll>lh . •
1 meeting of' the National Jntttagency .. u.r view lb.II ~ ~ dar· On anolher lli>Jed. be ulcb "It lo
Council on Smoking Ind Health. Ing ~ 1ionns the Wlboro child hl(h time lo ban smoklnf f0< 111 confined
The meetlnC marked the seventh an-by e1erijng a ret.ardlns lnfluence on publlc place1 BUCh 11 rttt.auranta,
nlversary of the 1ur1eon 1eneral'1 1964 ' retal srowth." be aald. theattrs, 1lrplanes, lra.lnl aJ\d bu.ea."
Ii. ___ ..,
~··
lhst point.
Mrs. Lee began to run, pushing the
cart. toward the K·Mart, presumably
to report the thett.
Witnesses 1ald she suddenly turned
pale.
"A guy on the other side ca ugh~ her
and I caught her glasses," aald Carolyn
S. Wilson, another witnMS.
Fountain Valley police ooutied 1ocal
authorities later in the day &hit Mrs.
Lee's purse, still containing various idezl.
tificaUon cardl and papers, had been
found.
The handbag was turned In by a dtizen
e.l 17110 Santa Lucia St., acrordltlg to
detectives.
Pinkley' s Drugs
Burgled 'Again'
In Costa Mesa
Longtime City Cou11cilman Alvin L.
"Pink" Pinkley arrived to open up his
Costa Mesa phannacy th is morning and
found it burglarized for the third time In
37 years.
"Every 12 years isn't too bad," be
quipped.
Someone broke in through a rooftop
1kyligttt at Pink's COfla Mesa Ph1rmacy,
1820 Newport Blvd,, re!ulUng in a '600
Joss, No drugs were taken.
The l0s.t Included about '300 in ailve:r
coins, a '208 coin collection belonging to
a friend, the entirf: atock of four brands
of cigarettes and am.au change from th•
cash register.
The glove· wearlng I nt r u d t r s also
smashed an orumental dru1store tablt,
tore phannaceuUcal certificates from the
'wall and c1uaed other mallcioul mischief.
Pinkley was phUosophic1l about the
break-in, mentioning the robbery murder
32 da.y1 110 of downtown sbopkeepc'
Samuel Blale1, U, whose Hawaflan a~
pare! store lies Jn the next block.
"Money you can replace." he aak!, "but
not y,our life."
SYLYIA ST ARTS
SA YING SERIES
•
,.
I
.; J DAILY PILOI c Monday, JMllat1 11, 1971 • ¢WI k h a
~Easing of Taxe·s Seen
~Letup on Business Burden by NW>n Hinted
' . 2' There was specullUon todJy lhal Pres.I·
!fient Nixon might announce that tax
~ on business will M eaaed.
~: 11>e apected move ill aimed at
:;.peedbis """""'"' expansion of lhe naa· .. '• ~
'Planners Set
l
!lone Hearings ,
pn 2 Projects
• ~ Public hearings on zonr: exception
~rmits for two uslde ntl1l-type projecla
~ong Newport Boulevard ire scheduled
~~ht before the Co!ta Mesi Planninc
Commission.
One I! to be continued for additional
major study, while the second Is recom·
mended by the staff for denial, based
on wbrit it calls desperate inadequacies.
The project by former football atar
Phil Spiller, at 208ll Newport Blvd., calls
for construction of 27 apartment units
on 31 ,500 square feet or land.
Criticism bas come fr om the planning
department directed al essentially poor
design, inadequate parking and virtually
no open green areas and recreational
space.
Recent surveys of newer 1partment
projects also reveal aiatin& p,mrlting ~
quirements are inadequate, wtmte Spiller
ill asking to drop even further below
them. the staff rt:port charges.
The property is currently in a com·
merc1al zone., but foreseen as multiple
hlgb density.
A public hearing on Lucille Warren's
application to construct 17 motel units
·over Ye Ole Inn, 2376 Newport Blvd ..
.b expected to be held ovr.r ont: month.
·. Mrs. Warren wanta to add the until
In connecUon with htr Sunny Acres
Motel, 115 Santa Isabel Ave ., but plan·
ning department technicians aren't 1ure
'·this ls fea sible.
They say It Is to be more o' a rooming
house than motel, noting the original
structure was not built to support two
• If.cries.
·. ' ConstrucUon of living unit.a: over 1
·bar also involves special fire resistant-
. type buildin g, and discussion with Mrs.
Warren's architect indicates an im-
. pending cbaoce bl plans.
-.
Manson Member
.
'.Surrenders .
-·In Courtroom
•·LOS ANGELES (AP)-A fugiti ve mem-·~r of Oiules Manaon'a hippje-style fam.
Jl)r surrendered ln a courtroom today on ~ charge of conspiracy to commit mur·
der,
. Dennis Rice, bearded and bearlna: the
M:ansoa family symbol "X" carved on
:his forehead -wu immediately booked
_Jn t.he case in connection wlth an 11Je1ed
. attempt to poiaon a witne&s in the Sharon
fate murder trial with an oventote o{
LSD in a hamburger,
R.ict, 31 , walked into the courtroom
wht.re four other members of ;ii.fanson's
hippie-type "family" were awaitin1 ar-
raignment on the same charges.
An atlornty in the case ann ounced that
Rice wished to surrender. The judge read
Rice hla rlghtl and ordered him booked.
J ust before entering the court, Rice
told newsmen in the corridor. "There's
nowhe re else to go ... this is where all
the love !!I. It's all locked up here. The
game is over."
Rice declined to discuss hill relation·
ship with Ma11!0n, saying, ''Charlie l!I ju!lt
a point ln time.''
In court. he asked to be his own attor-
ney, 11 other Manson famlly membe rs
have dOJte, and a hearing on that m1Uer
waa ML for Jan. 18.
DAILY PILOT
OIUHCJI c.oAIT 'Vtl.llHIMe CC!Mli'AMY
R•fftt N, Wfflf
Pf•IMlt ... ,_I ......
J••k ti. C"I.., Ylof ,,_i..o, _, o..rtr ~
Tllt11111 IC•tvll
•dJtw
111"9'!11 A. M~rphln•
M ..... lftlldNf!"
C....M .. OMM
Ill W••I lty Str..t
Ma11'111 AMr.nc P.O. In IUI, t262' --............. , .. , ... , ..... ........,..
LlielfM ._,., Ill .,.,.., A-
Nw!I .......... I t"'1 lffth ..._..,
""ClllllMJll •,.... •• ~ .. ,
.I'
lin& ....... 1 00011010)'.
. '"" only ..... brltllq ........ lit
lldminlltratlco aldoo today ,... Ill ·r.r
12:30 p.m. in t..g!Ull Beach, an unusuaJly
late hour. rt coinc~ with the time
of clooiJll of ihe lloct H<ban(t in
New York.
Tl'U!W'y officials hive completed
drtif\I of new regulaUons to grant
businesses faster I.ax wrlteolfs on
amowit.s they spend on new equipment
and plants. Thia would mean a tu
11vings for bwinesa running in to billions
of dollars.
The plan 11· to permit busineue1 to
deduct mote for depreclaUon of equl~
meot in the earlier yean of Its uae.
PreaenUy companies deduct from tu:e.1
the c~t of equipment on a yearly In-
stallment basis taking into comideration
the useful We of the machinery,
A presidential panel devtaed the new
rules. It wu said they would reduce
government recetpta by •t.4 billion ln
Ute first year, Sll.7 billion in the second
and more tbereatter.
The Idea la to encourage modernliatlon
of equipment and uplllllon of pro-
duction. In recent montha lndustrlet have
apent trua:ally on new p 1 a n t a and
machinery.
N11on 11 expected to leavt: San
Clemente aometime thil week but 1
firm tlqia bu !IOI been announced.
" " ~~~thll .. ..:: C~embers of the Republican Na-
Uona.J Committee. The committee is to
mme a succesior to National Chairman
Roten C. B. Morton. It is expected
the choice will be Sen. Robert Dole
of Kansaa, a Ni.zoo .1talwart. The White
bowe lan't saying.
Since f]ylna here on 1 aemJ-vacaUon
last week. tlie President has taken a
few swims in the heated ~l of h1J
seaside villa , has wal ked on the beach,
driven In southern Oranse County and
vlllted Catalina Island.
He walked down to the beach Saturday,
hil 58tb birthday, taking two dop with
him and occasionally getting hi! feet
wet in the surf.
He celebrated the birthday with family
members including brother Doiald of
Newport Beach.
Tbe President told Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler that the first real v1ca~
tlon in hi1 life OCC'JITed two decades
ago when be was 38. Ziegler quoted
the President u saying he is happy
in hi.a job and optimistic about the future.
The Prealdent abo quoted President
James Knox Polk u ataUng that anyone
with the duties of the Presidency ball
little time for lelaure.
Child Behavior Seminar
Scheduled at Mesa School
Parenti with questions 1bout why their
offsprlnf behave the way they do will
have • chance to quiz 1ht area e1per13
in the field of child behavior at a sym-
posium set for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in
Costa Meaa H11h School Lyceum.
SponJOred by the Presidio and Harbor
CounCl1 Parent-Teacher Aaaociations. the
meeting will feature a panel made up
of representatives from the Newport.
Mesa Unified School Ol!trlct, Mardan
School of Educational Therapy. the
Institute of Therapeutic Psychology, the
Youth Problem Center, Child Guidance
County Teenager
Killed in Snow
A winter sport outing to the Big Bear
area ~ded in lra1edy Saturday DJ&ht
for a ,rroup ot Orange County youths
when one was crushed to death as his
toboapn careened under a car.
Roa:er T. Chadwick, 18, of 611 Glen.-
rose St., Orange, w111 pronounced dead
at a nearby boipltal followln& the ac-
cident ln Barton Flat!!.
San Bernardino County aherlff 'g depu·
ties identified the driver Involved as
Irvin Lawery. 42, of Gardena and said
he wa1 not cited for any lrafflc viola4
tion.
Cycle Accident
Victim Improves
A motorcyclist who su ffered grave head
injuries five days ag o in a collision with
a cir is fina lly improvln1, aides al Costa
fl.fesa Memorial HO!lpital said tOffa y.
Thomas Martin, 18, of 2700 Ptterson
Way, Costa fl.fesa , uoderwenl e:s:tensive
neurosurgery followin2 the Wednesday
accident on the Orange Coast Col!eae
campU!'I,
He was hurled, helmetless, 45 feet
throu1h the air and landed on his head,
bouncin&: twice more, as a result of the
crash with a car drlven by another OCC
1tudent.
Tarzan's Namesake
Finally Gets Word
TARZANA (AP ) -Tarzan ha1 com•
of qe ln the town named after hlm.
Edj:ar Rice Burrou1h1' ton Hulbert
hu offered a set of his lather'• books
about Tartan of the Ape1 to tht: Tanana
branch of the Loa Ancele1 Public
IJbrary.
The branch. which had none of the
books --llbrarlant had COllll<l<re<I
them devoid of literary value, h•• ac-
c:epted.
Center and the Buteau for Educationally
Handicapped and Mentally Ezceptional
Children.
Dr. Dav id W. Keir sey will represent
the sc hool district. He has been
behavioral science consultant for the
district's research and development
department since 1968.
From Mardan School, Costa Mesa, will
be Mara Schiff, coordinator of services
and educational therapy specialist.
Dr. Alan Levy, o! t.he lnstitute of
Therapeutic Psychology in Santa Ana,
specializes in individual psychotb~rapy
and counseling as well as inteMive treat-
ment of emotionally disturbed children
and adults. He counsels parenl!I ln the
mana gement of problem children.
Bob Aldrich, director of the Harbor
Youth Problem Center, hu done ex-
tensive work with drug abuse. While
at Mendocino State Hospital, he ro-
directed a patient-run, staff-a111isted drug
program.
Dr. James G. Hail. Newport Beach
private practitioner of child and adult
psychiatry, ls on the staff of the Orange
County Child Guidance Center and is
1 clinical instructor In the depar tm ent
of psychiatry and human behavior at
UC Irvine.
The s!:s:th panelist, Allan Simmons,
is 1 11tate department of education con-
1ultant for the educationally han -
dicapped.
Ourin1 the symposium which Is open
to the public, panelists wi ll answer ques·
tlons about youth behavior problems and
offer au1gestlons to parents about where
they can 10 for help with family pro-
blems.
Mesa Officer's
Home Burgled;
Loss $3,294
Returning from a br ief visit with
friends, a Costa Mesa police officer
and hts wife discovered the ir home
bur1larized of $3.294 worth of guns. 11.n-
tlque11 and jewelry late Sunda y nigh t.
Officer Ron Veach said someone
Jumped a fence on Kildeer Circle to
reach his GaMet Drive ruldence and
pried a garage door leadin1 to the kit-
chen area.
Ranaacklng dr1wer1 and cablneU, the
intruders stuffed deans of items of
loot Into pWo" cases for easy carrylna:.
Vetch told fellow patrolman Bob Berg
the loot also lnclud~ stereo tapes IDl1
a recorder.
The weaponry taken included a loaded
.380 caliber autom1tic pistol, a couple
of ahotgllnl, a .22 caliber semiautomatic
rifle and an Ml carbine.
JnvesU.aton said the burglars picked
only the mott valuable item1, \eavtna:
olher lhln11 behind.
Ohio Tragedy
Four Runaways Burn in Barn
LANCASTER. Ohio (UPI) -Four
IMHp l'lllllWl!ll from I <oW1ty
-·· ·-. WM diid When UM blm 11111 ...,pt rolup In burned down,
will,,. -In ........ .,. .... ,,,. --"Ibo,..., ,.mhl -Jtfl lmlth ud TOiiy Conny -14, Ind Cobra 8aJdir and Gordla iln!i1rt.
both 11 -,,_ found Satunil1 In lhe
ubo9 of a 11rH1vapd blm.
Olffdllt bolllnd UM two -·II•
cooplao, --ronlly flod -"!hay waro In Ion," ,..... trapptd and
tllled by a flro tlloy hod built lo k"P
warm tho nlpt they i.~ UM Folrflold
COUnt1 Cb!ldno'o Home.
""lblre "" notblns but bonu laytn1
ther.," a daputJ lhlrlft uld.
Brief aerv.lces for the four were
ICbedWed for Wed.oesday 11 a local
hmtr1l homt with burial at Elmwood
Cemeiorl'. eouni, ooroner Dr. Slcpheo
lfodlden ruled the deaths "aecldental.''
The victims had beea livinc at tbt
home for 11bout four yu.ra and planned
to run awty totether, not because lhey
wtrt unhappy, but to be toerther, 10-
cOrdlnc te Mrs. ·Edward Rutherford, wife
of lbf! llom• auptrlntandtnL
"Jt '1 not unusual for kJdl to nm away
from the home, bqt the" kids weren't
unh1ppy," ahe uld. •'Thty ·were In 1ov1."
Mra. Rut.h6rford 11ld one of tht itrl11
told her )'t)Un,tr brother. 1Jso 1 resident
of the home, that thty were 1eln1 tt
lttve the day Utty cli11ppe1red.
HEADS NEW UNIT
Ho•9 Ho1plt1l'1 Mihordin
Hoag Hospital
Opens Mental
Health Service
A 37-bed mental health unit was of-
ficially opened at Hoag ~1emorial
Hospital in ceremonies there Friday eve-
ning.
More than 500 employes and com·
munity members attended the ribbon-cul·
ting cere mony for the unit which is
located in the North Unit of the hospital.
The uni t is designed lo effer intensiv e,
short-term inpat:ient treatment i n
association with the services already
available at the hospital.
Or. Ronald J. Mlhordin is director
nf the unit and will he aided by Susan
L. Sulliva n, R.N. "'ho will serve as
nursing supervisor.
Participating in the ceremonies were
Dr. Ernest Kla tte, head of the county's
Mental Health Services : A. Vincent
Jorgensen, president of the hospita l's
board of directors; William R. Hudson,
J r., hospital administrator ancl n~
Mihordln.
Driver of Truck
Sought After
Injury Accident
A pair of accident.11 on Costa Mesa's
busy Brj!ltnl Street left three persons
injured and a search under way tod ay
for a truck driver who fled the scene
of one coll~ion.
He appeared to be intoxicated, said
the othe r motorist, whose wife wag in-
jurtd in the fel ony hit-and-run inci dent
Mrs. Catherine R. Casper, 52, of 9822
Lincoln Ave .. Anaheim, was taken to
S11.nt B Ana Communi ty Hospital com-
pl aining of neck paln.s, but physicians
said she wasn't badl y hur t.
Her hu!'lband Fran k. 57, told police
1 pickup hit them In the re ar on Bristol
Street at Sunflower Avenue at 2: 12 p.m.,
but the driver lefl wh en he went to
call police.
One motorist and a passenger suffered
facial lacerations Saturday night in a
three-car collision on Bristol Street where
it crosses Newport Boulevard and
becomes Palisades Road .
Valentine J. Stephens, 58, of 312
Princeton Drive. Costa Mesa . and
Deborah J. Oaech, 19. of 9312 Do"'Ding
St.. Westminster, were the injured
parti es.
They were trea ted at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital and released.
Police said Stephen s was turning left
from Palisades Road and coll ided wilh
a car driven by Thomas H. Holt kamp.
22, of 2201 S. Cedar St.. Santa Ana .
Miss Daech was in the second car.
•
Ottfrial l'•ll11
Reagan's Margin:
501,057 Ballots
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Gov. Ron·
aid Reagsn de f e a t e d Democratle
challenger Jess Unruh by an official
margin of 501,057 votes in the November
general elecHon, Secretary of State Ed·
mund Brown J r. said today,
The margin is a friction leis than
reported unofficially immediately after
the el ection.
The final ofrici al relurns als.:l showed
Democrat John V. Tuoney b e s t
Republican George Murphy by 818.941
votes fo r the U.S. Senate. Thi! was
a slight increase for Tunne y .
Reagan received 52.8 percent or
3.439,664 vote!'! to Unruh'g 4$.J percent
or 2,938,607.
The American Indtpendenl Party can-
didate, William K. Shearer, and the
Peace and Freedom Party candida te,
Ricardo Romo, each dtew 1 percent
of the to tal vote. Shean!r tallied 85,8i7
and Romo received 85,954.
The official count showed Tunney drew
53.9 percent or 3,496,558 votes and
Murphy 44.3 percent or 2,877 ,617 votes.
American Independent Party candidate
Charles C. Ripley polled .9 percent or
61,2&1 of the U.S. votes. Peace and
Freedom candidate Robert Scheer also
rec eived .9 percent or 56,731 votes.
American Independent Party candidate
Charles C. }\ipley polled .9 percent or
61.251 of lht U.S. votes. Peace and
Freedom ~date Robe.rt Scheer also
received .9 cent or 56,731 votes.
Controller ouston l FIOW'OOy, 1
Republican, drew the moat votes of any
statewide candidate. He d e r e a t e d
Democratic ctiallenger Ron.aid Brooks
Cameron, 3,79f,024 votes or 60.2 percent
to 2,348,0ll votes or 37.4 percent. The
official figures gave Flournoy a alight
Increase .·
Republican Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke
defeated Democratic State Sen. Alfred
Alq ulst by 802,Hll votes.
Reinecke received 3,521,065 or 54.8 per-
cent of the vote to Alqui11t's 2,718,904
or 42.3 percent. It was Reinecke 's first
elec tion to. the seat. He was appointed
lieutenant governor ln 1969.
The closest statewide race was between
Democra t Charles O'Brien a nd
Republican Evelle Younger for Attorney
General. Youna:er won with 49.3 percent
or 3,140,087 votes to O'Brlen 'a 47.9 per-
cent or 3,05.3,918 votes -1 margin
of only &e,171 votes.
Younger's offlcl1l winning margin was
1li.gbtly Jess than the !Kl,258 edge he.
was given unofficially.
New superintendent 0£ public in-
st.ruction Wilson Rile.~ received S4.l per-
cent of 3.ZM.365 vole5 in the offici al
count to Max Rafferty's 45.9 percent
or 2.757 ,616 votes.
Rile!'!' olficlal winning margin of 496,749
Shotgun Plastic
Blasts Break Vp
Prison Fighting
SOLEDAD (AP) -Soledad prison offi-
cials di!Closed today that ahotaun lire
with plastic projectiles was used to break"
up two fights Sa turday among Inmates.
Billie Harris was hospita lized with a
stab wound after a 9hower room fight in-
volving six inmate! of the maximum se-
curity section. One shot11un charge "''as
fired to break up thi.!I fi1ht.
Two inmates were injured in a later
brawl involv1r1g 16 inmates in 11. chow
li ne . One suffered burns from hot ~oup,
another a hand fracture.
Four shotgun char1e!'i and two tear gas
projecti les were Cired quelllna this dis~
turbanct , 1a id Charles Stilwell, prison
spokesman.
voles is about 2il,OOO votes hl1hcr lhan
the uno fficial returns reported •
Brown, a Democrat, received 3,2!4,788
votes or 50.4 percent in his winning
bid for Secretary of State over
Republican James Flournoy who got
2,926,613 votes or 45.6 percent
Brown's final margin was nearly 20,000
vole! higher than recorded in the early
unofficial count.
Republican Tre asurer Ivy Baker Priest
was re.elected "'ith .l,693.388 votes or
58.3 percent over Democra t Milton
Gordon who polled 2,521 ,699 or 39.8 per·
cent. Mrs. Priest's unofficial edge wa!
reported at alxlut 20.000 less than the
flnal figures showed.
Proposition 18, the controversial ballot
pi'oposal to use some highway funds
for rapid transit projects, had a final
losing tally of 3,182,096 or 54.1 percent
opposed to 2,697,746 or 45.9 percent in
favor.
Major Welfare
Cuts Urged
By State Aide
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Callfomla's
aid to needy families should be increased
and unborn children should be removed
from the welfare rolls, the legi1lature.'s
top fiscal analyst reported today.
Le1islatlv e Analyst A. Alan Post also
recommended that a ceiling of $125 be
placed on work-related e:s:penses paid
for by welfare. He said the two economy
moves involving unborn children and
work expenses would save the 11tate
$J7.1 million a year, with a total !laving
of $50 million for lhe st.ate, federal
and county governments.
He said increasing AFDC aid would
C08t the stale $69.8 million.
The 3-f,pa1e report suggested that the
state eliminate it!I ' ' M a x I m u m
Participating Base" (MPB) which sets
• ceiling on IL! participation in fund ing
welfare.
The report on Aid to Famllie!I vdl h
Dependent Children \AF'OCJ was based
on. a study of 500 Sacramento County
families.
PO!lt said the study founc:i that impo9ing
the MPB "results in an avera ge unmet
need of $33 per case. As a result,
those fam ilies for which a pub lic
assistance grant is the sole sour ce or
income Jack fu nds to support min imum
basic Hviflt.l expenses."
The l'itate has been threatened wlth
the withdrawal of '68• million In federal
funds because Nixon Administrallon of-
ficials charge the MPB, which is set
by the legislature , does not reflect the
official need of welfare recipients based
on living costs.
Eliminating the MPB would mt:et
federal requirements, according to 1
spokesman in the analyst's office.
Post recommended the legislature ask
Conaress to further limit the amount
of outside inco me welfare recipienlll are
al!owed to keep. The report said wtlfare
payments plus outside income should
add up to just one-third more thin
the off icial need standard,
Post said the system does not me£"l
the intended objective of promoting s~lf
supporl among recipients. He also said
some families receive much more tcta l
money than others.
Post said C<ingresslonal limits e-0uld
save Cal\fornia $29.2 million a year.
and would se ve a total of $83,fl million
for all levels of govemmcnt.
ON ALL NEW AND USED
ITEMS
50% OF,
OYW~SHIPMENT 0' • '
GUITARS .... 1,,,,
WILL SILL 10% s121s AIOVI OUR COST
COMPARI · ---........... ~ ...... ..
PEOPLE IN THE KNOW SAVE MONEY EVERYTIME THEY BUY IT IS NOT EASY TO BUY
FOR CASH, BUT IF YOU HAVE CASH, BANICAMERLCARD, OR MASTER CHARGE YOU
CAN SAVE TREMENDOUS AMOUNTS ON EVERYTHING EVERYDAY.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
Ratitis COSTA MISA .IEWILRY and LOAN
18J8 NEWPORT ILYD. !'HONE 646-n41
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA --Harbor & lroadwoy
•
1
7
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--· ~ --·-----· -· .. , ___ ;-
·,
Saddlehaek Today's F l•••
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL M, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY I I, 1971 TEN CENTS
Two-year Ban on Coastline Building Urged
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 lft• DlllY l'llll Stitt
Governor Reagan's blue-ribbon en-
vironment C'OUncil has recommended a
two-year moratorium on construction
along the entire California coastline while
the slate prepares to take over control
vf all shoreline planning, zoning and
building.
The State Environmental Quality Study
Council, chaired by Orange County
Supervisl)r David L. Baker, issued the
recommendation in a report being
drafted for submission to Reagan by
Feb, 1.
The report will also urge creation
of a cabinet-level EnvlronmenLal Protec.
lion Agency to be given far.reaching
powers -includ~ng authority over
coastline construction 'through t h e
establishment of regional commissions.
John Geoghegan, executive secretary
of the council, told the DAILY PILOT
the governor's panel will urge the
legislature Cf"f!ate the mechanism for
implementing the controls.
He said initiaJly this mechanism could
be established through any one or more
of the various shoreline control bills
expected for introduction io bolb the
state senate and assembly.
"While these bills are almost totally
concerned with the coastl ine ,''
Geoghegan said, ''the council's reeom-
mendalion calls for eventual state
takeover o{ building controls and land
uses in many areas of the state where
the environment might be degraded.''
Geoghegan said the council did not
attempt to recommend how far inland
the state controls should extend.
"The J,OOJ.foot limit included in the
bill by Assemblyman (Peter) Wilson of
San Diego last year seemed to draw
the most support," he said, "and this
n ustria ist
Down the
Mission
Trail
District Gra nts
Maternity Leave
EAST IRVINE -The stork h&'! cast
a shadow over the San Joequin Elemen-
tary School District tea chef power.
Trustees voted nine maternity leaves
last w~k but were not very happy
about it.
Gary Shinkle, director of personnel,
admitted that changing teachers in the
middle of the year was not good for
students.
"Didn't the teachers know abou t their
condition when school started," ques·
tioned Trustee Jim Nelson.
"Did they sign their contracts in good
faith? asked Trustee Gratian Bidart.
"Nevertheless, its the law," added
Shinkle.
e Artist Exhibit
LAGUNA NIGUEL -Artists of the
Niguel Art Association will display their
arts and crafts from 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. Jan. 16 and 17 in Richard's Patio
cin Lido Isle, Newport Beach.
Included will be oils, watercolors, pen
and Ink sketches, needlepoint , cJay
sculpture and silk screenings. The show·
ings are open to the public, as is the
the Jan. 21 meeting of the Niguel Art
Association at which seascape artist Julie
Gregory will be featured.
e CofC Activities
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A new
year o( activities. wi!l "be launched by
the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Com·
merce on Jan. 19.
Speakers will include Hugh Walker,
president of the El Toro Water District
and Sharon Taylor. Miss Orange County.
The meeting will take place at noon
In the Mission Viejo Inn.
Diesel Engine
Given to School
A recent gift to San Clemente High
School needed a skiploader for the
delivery.
The gift, accepted with thanks by
trustees of the Capistrano Unified School
District, ill a 2,500-pound CUmminga
Diesel En&ine.
Valued at $7,000, the gift was donated
by the Cummings Diesel Engine Corn·
pany for use ln the industrial arts pro-
gram.
SYLVIA ST A RTS
SA Y I NG SERIES
Financial columnist Sylvia Porter
comes to the rescue of the lnflation·be.o
sieged CC'lnSUmer, starting today, in a
aeries of eotumrui especially dealgned to
help you save from five to fifty percent
and more on everything you buy.
Thi.a ts not a claim. it's a fact that
by buying wi8ely, avoiding the hidden
coab which frequenUy ambush the
unwary, by watching prices, seasons,
1a1cs and guarantees closely you can
roll b!lck the slrain on your family
budget and save thousands of dollars
a year. Fottow Sylvia Porter's lnO!Uon-
beaUng columns this week.
~Death to Selassie'
Ethiopia Youths
Stage Protest
About 40 students describing
themselves as Ethiopia's "cream of the
crop" chanted for the death or their
leader near the aates ot tht: Western
White House.
Shouting "Death to Haile Selassie'"
and "death to fascist pigs," the 1tudents
spent about two hours near the pastures
Nixon Okays
Presidential
Pension Boost
President Richard Nixon has signed
Into law a bill that boosts his retirement
pay, and that of other retired Presidents
from $25,000 to $60,000 per year.
Further, the first revision o[ laws
setting Presidents' and their wido~'s'
pensions since 1958, ties the annual
amount to the level of the. existing
Cabi net members' salaries.
Under the bill passed by Congress,
Presidenl.5' widows will receive $2{),000
annuall y, double the amount they had
been getting.
Press Sec~etary Ron Zeigler said Fri·
day in Laguna Beach the President "did
not actively seek passage of this bill ."
Other portions of the Senate bill
"provide uniform treatment of Federal
employes receiving d i s a b i I i t y com-
pensation."
The estimated annual outlay expected
to result from the survivor liberaliiations
during 1971 is $812,000.
For fiscal 1972 the costs are estimated
at $3,l million risina: to i12.4 million
by fiscal year 1975.
The annual allowances to former
Presidents and widow• of former
Pre,idents will cost $140,000.
Annual payments of '60,000 will be
made to former President Harry S.
Truman and Lyndon Johnson.
Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower will be
the only widow receiving $20,000 tn as
much as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
lltlrrelldered her right to a federal
pens.ton.
of the Elmore Ranch next to the Nixon
Estate.
(See Photo Pase 3)
Ostensibly, the demonstration, the first
et the new year at the Presidential
compound, was asking for the cutting
tiff of foreign aid to the northeast African
country.
Spokesman for the Ethiopian Students
Union in North Amenica, Los Angeles
Chapter, said the aid was being used
to direct weapons against fellow citizens,
primarily in the area or Eritrea,
The spokesman claimed lhat in the
past few weeks 1,000 Eritreans have
been "massacred" by Selassie's troups.
The demonstration by the students
bearing large placards drew two Secret
Service agents from wlthin the Nixon
enclave and a few San Clemente police
officers,
There were no incidents.
'Rush' Ordered
On Extension
Of Victoria Blvd.
A "rush lag'' has been put on the
Victoria Boulevard extension project to
3jlan the Capistrano Valley, and If the
County Board of Supervisors gives atr
proval lo alignments Wednesday, it may
go to bid this year.
Division Engineer Murray Storm, pro-
ject director, gave new 5th District
Supervisor Ronald Caspers and his plan-
ning appointee Arnold Forde a tour of
the site Friday.
Stonn said the 1.5-mile link between
the hill areas of Dana Point and the
Gapistrano Beach village and San Diego
Freeway will be hastened to coincide
with the Doheny Park Road.coast
Highway interchange construction.
"It isn't easy to hurry a million dollar
project," said Storm, ''but if we get
the alignment approval Wednesday, we
can go ahead with the engineering and
may be able to start consfructJon the
first months of 1972."
Families Evicted in Capo
Seek Help From Coun~il
San' Juan CapiJtrano elly counell will
be ukcd at ,tonight''• 1 o'clock meeting
to nnd homes for 11 families facing evic-tion 'from condemned. 11ou,1;,,: ·
Mr11. Lillian Zaenl]ein. Of Pasadena,
owner of the property whlch eo111tains a
dozen occupitd shanties, baa appealed to
the city council to poatpone any action
unUl the city can mall:e arrangements to
relocate the people living there.
The property owner was ordered by the
Orange County Department of Building
8nd Safety (on OOhalf or the city) to va-
cate all buildings wed as dwelling•, de--
molisb all elisting buildings. and pump
and backfill all cf.&'lpools, aeepage plUI
and aepttc lino on the preml,.,..
Compliance with the order wu to be
)
wllhhl Q hours of the re<elpl of'the ordtr
unless an appeal was filed-with the clW
council, •• action which the ~
Olfller ·toolr.· • •
In her i•lltr lo the c"'hell daled Dec,
29 Mrs. Zaengleln stated. "even though
we have received no rental payment for
the occupancy of these buUdlnp, we are
very much concerned as to the welfare
of these people who are housed there."
The property has been leased until Dec.
31 to William Reid, a local rancher who
In turn subleased the ~welliap.
Mrs. Zaengleln added In her Jetter that
she will abide by the decWt1r1 of thl
council aod in the meantime la seeklnc
propasals from contractor• for the r~
moval of the bulldlnp In compliance with
the councll'a terminaUo,,,.
1
would appear to be a logical boundary."
Baker acknowledged there will be op-
position from cities and counties to the
proposal. but he said, ''I think there
is mounting support for such a proposal.
"I think public opinion is on our side,''
he said .
While Reagan and lhe Legislature will
make the final determination of the
powers of the Environtnental Protection
Agency (EPA), the council has recom·
mended giving it authority over a variety
of other areas -including:
-Water and air quality.
-Noise pollution.
-Solid waste disposal.
-Pesticide and radiation controls.
While the ramifications of all the
re commendations are being digested, it
is clear the council is focusing most
of its attention on land uses.
Geoghegan said that, in addition to
the CQastline, a second related problem
"is the critical need to find solution
to various state air basins that are
fast approaching capacity." He did·not
elaborate on that point, however.
He said the new EPA would seek
to establish guidelines "for local ,govern-
ment to operate in" within the other
areas, but said the agency 1hould be
given final authority over all of them.
He said, "The council wants the
regional boards to have the authorltY,
to issue permits and enfo rce standard!.
"It wants to auack the environmental
problem on a comprehensive basis
through a strong structure," he said.
"There would be many ways to fn..
fluence local government but the council
feels the boards should have the legal
clout, too."
The environmental Quality Study Coun-
cil was created by the legislature in
1968 and started its studies in April,
1969, according to Geoghegan.
ome om e
DAILY ,.II.OT Slfff ,.Jlet.
ENGLISH UNFOLDS FOR SAN JUAN MINI-STUDENTS
Cynthia Godinez, Artemlo J aime, Tommy St. Dennis, Mrs. Vllleg•s
Mini Edu~ation
Kids Get B oost in Prograrn
By PAfl.fELA HALLAN
01 th• Diii' '''°' ll•lf
It was just an l:-dinary closet.
But to the small group of impallent
children clustered in front it was a
magic door.
Eaget hands reached inside as the
door opened and their smiling teacher
stood back to Jet them choose from
the books, puzzles and other educational
toys inside.
The children are part of a Mini-group,
a new program organized by concerned
parents for pre-school children in the
Capistrano Unified School District's at-
tendance area.
Some of the children have few, if
any, educational toys and cannot afford
to enroll in a nursery school. '
"Yet these children need nursery
school more than most,'' said Mra.
Evelyn Villegas, a Mini-group lnatructor.
"There are eight in my group at
the San Juan Capistrano Adult C.Om·
munity Center. Two 11peak English, one
is bi-lingual and the reJt speak only
Spanish," she saia.
As the children began to put puzzles
together one UtUe boy began describing
the picture in English.
"Do you aee him/' uld Mrs. Villegas.
"In September he could Only ~
Spap.ish." , ,
TheWonnal cluo la eonducled<almoat
ml~ In EniUlli. 'lllo tadlar ~
a rqlllilr nunery acbool Pl'lllrUil liut.
pars il lo Iha chlldrtn'1 1Ulclaci.t.
One brlihl lilllo,lirl with lw• ponytalia
bobbing al the 1Jilea of her !'!'"> ,aaked, a question tn Spanish which Mn. Vlllqu
answered in Engllah.
She "'Iii.lined ,lhlt the -of tho class ls to prepare the ehlldrtn for
school where English i3 spoken. 1'Most
of the lnstruction" ll ln lanpqe develoi>-
ment ," said the teacher. "We alAO try
to help then> im~e their Ml! '-"
and to adjust aocially." ,
Then! are four Miftl.groop1 operating,
The others are In C.pllttano Beach,
Dana Point Uld San Cl<monto. Allhoqh
the itacherl an: paid there la no flnaoclal
r • '
obligation to the parents. All fund ing
is currently provided through the
Methodist Fund for Reconciliation, but
fr.at source runs out In June.
"We're trying to get United Fund sup-
port in order to continue," said Alan
Schreiber, one of the Mini-group
organizers. "We are pretty sure we
qualify but we have oot yet made a
formal application."
Schreiber said the Mini-groups were
formed to fill a specific need in the
Capistrano Unified School District "We
had Head Start and a state equivalent
but both had welfare and income level
stipulations," he explained. "We fourid
we had about 150 children in the district
whose parenl5 are working to stay off
Welfare who were unable to qualify for
either program. Yet these children
~ibly needed Head Start more ~ause
of language deficiencies.'' The district
no longer has Head Start and the state
equivalent can only accommGdate 3)
ehlldren per semester.
Schreiber said the Mini-groups have
been existing on the two $21500 lfaDl.a
from the Methodist flllld and var!Ous
donations of money and matefial!:' made
by other churches, PI' A groups and '
private donors.
"The Methodist fµnd WU only to help
us get started,'' "llld.:Scf\relber. "W•·
were told from the bqinn~. ~ we:
would . bave to· f1Dd aotber' <mUDS r of\
continuing.'' ·
1Chlldren are ll!lected fOl'\the •prognm~
by the . leochen, Mrs. ~ 'Mli.
Morlha ~-. Mn...lletty Felit aad' Mrs. YolaJlda Stoeffel, and by Iha
coordhlator, Mn. Annld• Bolll. Tlie .
groups are kept very IJ'Qll1 ao thl'
the teachen can provide toolvldual Ao
ttntion.
Although lht p'°""m bu ooly-been •
orerat1n1 since the 1att ttmllter· of ,
Jut year, SchteJblr deecrlbtt It 11 very
111cceMfuJ, Even parenll, whole cultml
heritaga may nol hive prepared them
for the Americln lcbool l)'lltem mt
tUlq Ill. Interest. •• ,,
'
Blast Laid
To Pentagon
Connections
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Two f~ebombs
were hurled early today 1t the . home
of industrialist William R. Hewlett, wbOM
partner i.s deputy aecretary of defense.
Hewle.tt, 570 1llulttmlllionairt pr~dent
of Hewlett·P1ckard Corp., wu awalrened
by the muffled explosions of the Molotov
Cocktall1 and put out the fire with
exlfhguiStiers ..-,Uy plsced In the home .
becaust of anonymous telephone threat,,.
Hewlett's partner, and co-founder of
the electronics manufacturing firm, is
David Packard, the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police and Hewlett·Packard
spokesmen believed the firebom bing Wa.5
due to Packard's Washington past and/ot,
the company's government contracts. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray said
there were no 1uspects nor any potitive
lead!.
Neighbors told pollce they saw two
white men run from Hewlett's home
at the time of the attack. The men
climbed into a dark-colored Volbwagen
.. Beattle" which had been parked nearby;
with its motor idling and llghts off.
They drove off without turning on their
lights and witnesses could give only
va gue descriptions,
One of the firebombs struck the rambl-
ing. twcrstory home between the first
and second floors and fell harmlmly
to the ground. The second hit a transom
above the front door and fell to the
porch, where it started a fire .
11ewlett, whose shares of Hewlet~
Packard stock are worth more than
a quarter or a billion dollars, used an
extinguisher to quell the blaze. The fire
was out wben firemen and police arrived.
Damage was minor.
Hewlett and hla wife were in the
house when the gasoline-filled botUes
were hurled about 12:30 a.m. The home
is located in an older, uwer middle
class residenUal area in the flatlands
of Palo Alto, about 35 miles aoulh of
San Francisco.
A. company spokesman said the in-
dustrialllt bu received anonymout
telephone tbreal.'I in recent mootba.
usuaUy warning.of attacks on h1a liome
or hla family. They -. conal-
cran9 calls, but company JeCUrity of~
flclaiB placed the fire utfnaulabtrs In
his house,
1f'8tlaer
Tueaday's llllllhlne will be of
the huy variety Offl' the Onnp
Coaal with _, --for
tnland ·--Tomperaluru wlll nm fl'Oll>SI lo•A ·mcr-, ' ' • • , -I • . '
INSm S TGD.&'Y
A """Iv •lecwa con-
m<m In •prf<1t11 clolhfng · lo GU
tet to oo 4' a Democratic, up.
resanto&iut from. MClllGCM!ltUJ.
Pao• J6.
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,J DAJL V PILOT SC
.Easing of Taxe·s Seen
' [Let up on Busi~ess Burden by Nixon Hinted
... There was spttulatlon toda"y that Presi-
·~t Nl1on might annou~ that tu
:burdens on business will be eased.
: The ex~led move is aimed at
:tpeeding economic expansion of the flag-
:,ing natlonal eronomy.
: The only news briefing scheduled by
jdminil!tration aides today was set for
·12:30 p.m. in Laguna Beach, ac unusually
late hour. Jt coincides with the time
• of cloaing of the stock ex chance in
-New York.
: Treasury officials have oompleted
.)traft.s Of new re,ulations to grant
1iusinesses faster tu write<iffs on
amounta 1l>ey opeod ao oew eqlllpmaol
and planll. TbiJ woul• mean a tu
aavlnp tor buatneu ruMtng into bllllona
of dollars.
The plan is to perrnil businesses to
deduct more for depreciation of equiir
ment in the earlier years of its use.
Prese.nUy companies deduct from taxes
the cost or equipment on a yearly in-
stallment basil taking lntc consideration
the meful life of the machinery.
A presidential panel deviaed the new
ndea. It was eald they would reduce
government receipts by $1.4 billion in
the first year, $3.7 billion in the second
~stln Trustees Meet
Resolution in Support
Of County Board Eyed
Tustin Union High School District
board of educaUon tonigh t will consider
a resolution supporting the county schools
office which recently came under fire
fro m the Orange County Grand Jury.
Rea cting to the grand jury report
calling {or abolition of the county
superintendent's office, trustees will mull
adopUon d. a resolution "in sUpjXlrt
of the continued existence of the · depart-
ment, the Orange County Superintendent
of Schools, and the county board of
educations."
A similar resolution of support was
County Traffic
Acci.dents Kill
3 on W eeke11d
A South Pasadena woman whose family
moved to the Capistrano Beach area
to live only Friday died there Saturday
night, when their ca r slammed into a
truck stalled on Pacific Coast. Highway.
Orange County Coroner's deputies said
a pair of motorcyclist! al!O died of
accident injuries, bringing the weekend
fat.alilie! to three.
Dead are:
-Mn. Marllyn Taylor, 36, of South
..Pasadena.
-UDda M. Wllson, 20, of Stanton.
· -Craig 8. Hud1petb, 16, of Fullerton.
-California HJghway Patrol officers said
Mrs. Tay lor was k.ilJed Saturday night
.nn Pacific Coast Highway south of Beach
Road, near the Capistrano Beach Club.
She was dead on arrival at South
Coast Community Hospital in South
Laguna.
Her husband. John L. Taylor, who
spent the night in the hospital along
with daughter Christie, 9, said he realized
the stalled flatbed truck wasn't moving
.too late to swerve and miss it.
The vehicle's emergency lights were
blinking, CHP officers said.
· Police said Miss Wilson was injured
1ast Thursday in a cyc ling tragedy caused
when she tried to miss a basketball
that rolled into the sl.reet at Lola Avenue
and Wasco Road.
· She lost control and was thrown to
the pavement, suffering a skull fracture.
Hudspeth died shorUy after his
motorcycle slammed into a car turning
left onto Ford Drive from Euclid Street
in Fullerton Saturday night.
The accident Is still under in·
vestigatlon.
<
Trudeau Pays Visit
MATHURA. India (AP) -Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of
Canada. en route to a meeting of British
Commonwealth leaders in Singapore.
stopped over for a visit to the birth
place of the Hindu god L<lrd Krishna.
DAILY PILOT
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passed by the Tustin board a year aeo,
a district spokesman said.
Renewed support is necessary, accord -
ing to a st.a.ff recomme ndaUon calling
for the resolution. "because of financial
and physical aid to this dlstrict."
Trustees also will consider setling a
trustee election date of April 20, during
their meeting which begins at 7:30 p.m.
In the conference room of Tustin High
School, 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin.
Two boa rd members' terms e:11:pire
this year, those of Howard L. Selleck
and Robert C. Bartholomew. both of
Santa Ana.
A construction change order authoriza-
tion that would result in a $658 credit
to the overall cost of bullding University
High School carries wJIJ\ it a request
for an extension of the contract com-
pletion date by 25 days.
The e:rtension request moves the con-
tracted completion date to Jan. 8.
Originally. the new high school was due
to be finl!hed by Dec. 10.
Three reasona are offered for the
delay, including 21 days extensioo due
to the July and August strike of
sheetmetal workers, three days for a
district-approved change order lo install
electric wiring for an outdoor klln, and
an additional day for delayed pouring
of concrete due to installation of un-
derground utilities in the auto shop.
While iuudenta and faculty moved into
U.nlvenity lDgh on Jan. 4,1 the building
has yet to be finished . "No notice of
completion ht&S been filed for board ap-
proval.'' a ·,district busintsa office
spokesman said. Until the notice of com·
pletion is approved by the board, the
contractor cannot be J)lid, she said.
lf the change order including the ex·
tension is approved, Shirley Brotherg
construction company, build ers of the
first phase of the $4.5 million school,
would be relieved of responsibility for
the delayed complelion of the school.
Among expenses to the di.strict caused
by the delayed opening of University
High School was a $5.000 expense to
bus students to Mission Viejo High School
for double sessions that ended with
Christmas vacation.
1n other actions, I.he board will consider
an opinion from the County Counsel
that the district's Nov. 3, $25.8 million
bond iuue was successful. although the
measure !ailed to receive a t"'O ·thirds
majority,
Laguna to Study
Differing Forms
Of Government
Charter versus general law municipal
government will be the gubject of a
Laguna Beach City Council study
session ~t 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in city
haU council chambers.
The long-delayed study was requegted
by councilman Charlton Boyd, who said
Monday, "There are many pros and
cons and I'm neither very strongly for
nor against charter. but my feeling is
that the charter system, Jn 1eoe.ral.
permits more borne rule.
"There al"f: excepUons, but 1eoerally
it permits 1 municipality to govern Jtaelf
in more areas than •~ permitted to
a general law city, which 11 heavily
dominated by state and federal pre-emp-
tions."
Boyd said hi& prlnolp1l concern Is
the fact that "most of our Jaws are
archaic and need updltl ng -in fact
man y a.re completely unworkable -and
since so many need to be redone, perhaps
it would be 1hr1pfer to have them com ..
pletely replaced by a charter written
in 1'71 and 1972 on the ba11I af here
and now needs."
lf the city has enough 1lgnlflc1nt com·
munJty probl ems to warrant special local
JeplaUon, Boyd llild, he would favor
tht wrlllnc of a charter for Lliguna
Beach by 1 cl'Urens' committee which
alto would ttmain "in more or less
cooat.ant seuion" to keep the ch1rter
up to date.
One prtvilece of a charter city 11
tb1t of HW.nc up a loc1I ta1lna: authority
in some areu, now pre-empted by the
state and federal 1overnmentJ.
Oppooenta of the charter syatem cite
the LU! d rtvitwJ1:11 and updating all
exlSUng ordinances ind the dangtr of
aver1lgbt In replactna them with a new
set of lawa.
Wb.Ue there are more 1ener1l J1w
than tharter c!Ut1 In the tlate as •
wbol' two major Orange. Co1st com-
munltilll, Newport Beach and HuntJD(ton
Beacb, ope.rate 1s charter clUf!ll • •
ond"'°"'lftortlltor.
The Idea ts: to encourage rnodernl:caUon
of equipment and erpanalon of pro-
duction. In recent months industries have
spent (rngally on new p 1 a n l s and
machinery.
Nixon is expecled to leave San
Clemen te sometime this week but a
firm time has not been annowi~d.
It is expected he will . make an ap.
pearance in Washington late I.his week
before members of the Republican Na-
tional Committee. The committee la to
name a su1Xessor to National Chairman
Rogers C. B. fl.forton. It is expected
the choice will be Sen. Robert Dole
of Kansas, a Nixon stalwart. The White
house isn't saying .
Since flying here on a semi·vacation
last week. the President has taken a
few swims in the heated pool of his
seaside villa. has walked on the beach.
driven in southern Orange County and
visited Catalina Island.
He walked down to the beach Saturday,
his 58th birtnday, taking two dogs with
him and occasionally getting his reet
wet in the surf.
He celebrated the birthday with family
members including brother Doiald of
Newport Beach.
The President told Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler that the first real vaca·
lion in his life OCC".lrred two decades
ago when he was 38. Ziegler quoted
the President as saying he is happy
in his job and optimistic about the future.
The President also quoted President
James Knox Polk as stating that anyone
with the duties of the Presidency has
little time for leisure.
Court Rejects
Plea to Halt
Channel Wells
WASJ-IINGTON (AP) -Victims of the
1969 Santa Barbara oil spillage were
turned down t o d a y by the Supreme
Court in a bid to halt further drillings
in the California channel.
The Santa Barbara officials. business-
men. boat owners and conservationists
wanted the court to enjoin drilling of new
wells and construction of a drilling
platfonn until a public hearing has been
held.
The court m•d~ ng comment as it
routinely announced it had decided 7 to
O not to hear the dispute. Justice Wil-
liam 0. Douglas and John M. Harlan
di d not participate and gave no explana·
ti on,
Last April the U.S. Circuit Court in
San Francisco ruled hearings were not
requi red under Interior Department and
Co rps of Engineers regulations. The is·
sue of whether the regulations are un·
constitutional is now b e f o r e a three.-
judge federa l court in California.
The Santa Barbara people, all dam -
age victims in the January 1969 oil
spltlage, said they could show new dril·
lings pose a danger of leakage and con·
taminaUon. The Justice Department, in
()pposing the appeal, cited the findings
of a scientists pane I that continued
drilling and depletion w o u Id reduce
pressure and lessen the likelihocxl of
blowouts.
In 1969 lhe lnterior Department adopt·
cd a regulation authorizing public hear·
ings for a proposed leasing program
but not requi ring them. The leases 1n
the Santa Barbara case wrer e aw arti·
ed in 1968 . Therefore, the Justice De·
\')artment argued, the public hearing
regulation would not apply lo Santa
Barbara even if it "'as mandatory.
Union Oil Co. has begun drilling nev.·
wells in the channel and the Cor ps of
Engineers has dec.ided to issue platform
construction permits.
Lagunan Makes
Citizen Arl'est
On Home Visitor
Lagun a Beach police stopped a vehlele
on Coast tlighway early Sunday morning
after the · driver ran a stop sign and
a red light, but the driver didn't get
a tic ket.
RQbert Denise, of 530 N. O:iast
Highway, explained he was In a hurry
to get to the police station to turn
over a burglar he had just caught In
his ki tchen.
Police said Denise returned home with
his w.ife at 12:45 a.m. Sunday to find
his house lights blazing and the television
blaring. Standing before an o p e n
refrigerator, officers said, D e n \ 1 e
discovered Larry Vernon Kruse, ~. of
La Puente, reachJni for on evening
snack.
Denlse made a citizen's arrest and
look Kruse Into ew1tody. Police sa.ld
Kruse: liter told them he thought he:
was In a frleocfs home· and was as
surprised as ~nlse when the homeowner
arrived. ~ la bein1 held on wsptclon'
of burglary.
Harvard Names Bok
Its 25th President
CAMB RIDGE, Mftr. !AP ) -De,.k
Curtis Bok, dean of H a r v a rd Law
School, today w11 named 2$lh presld~l
of Harvard Unlversity, the nation's old-
eit. unlvusUy, by the university'• Board
o! Ovt:rlflflrs.
Jogs On
Chilly January temperatures did not upset the regimen of this deter·
mined jogger. The youthful exercise buff, silhouetted against the
late afternoon sun, clips off the yards along the sands of Laguna
Beach. The water temperature \•:as a chilly 52 degrees and the air
temperature was less but the jogger kept warm.
Clemente 1-lospital G1·oup
Seel\:s Billhoa1·ds 011 Site
Officials of Chapman General Hospital
vo'ill seek permission Wednesday for two
billboards and a construction head-
quarters building for their new hospital
project in San Clemente.
Planning commissioners will hear the
request by the Chapman f\.1anagement
Corporation in a public hearing \Ved·
2 Boys Survive
550-foot Plunge
In Silverado
Two lccnage boys v.•ere seriously in-
jured Sunday night when their small
car plunged 550 feet do\1'n a Silverado
Canyon wall.
The youth!i were removed from !he
canyon four hours later after a rescue
efforl carried out far into the cold night.
Orange County firemen directed the
rescue which brought out Da vid Burk,
16, of 28216 Thisa Way, and his passenger
,.1ike McCormick , lfl. of 29181 Sleepy
Hollo.,.·, both of Silverado Canyon.
The accident occurred on a narrow
dirt roadway which leads to Santiago
Peak. about five miles above the
SHverado fire station.
Burk is suffering from a eompound
fracture of the left leg and f\1cCormick
incurred chest injuries. officials reported.
Their car wen\ otf the road about
4:30 p.m. and v,oas reported b)' an
unknown person using a citizens band
radio to reach firemen . Fortunately, the
accident was witnessed by a follo1-1'ing
ca r driven by Raymond Hamm. 15 of
l..akewnod .
Hamm, his brother Gary. 15 and \Vayne
Bentley, 16, of Norv.'aik climbed dov.·n
the sleep canyon to the injured boy _
Burk told thrm he losl control of
lhe car v.·hen he applied lhe brakes
at about 30 miles an hour on a curve
which threw the \'ehicle against the
mounta insi de and then back across and
off the !~foot roadway.
Jeeps carrying members of a car club
followed and one of them had the r.1dio b~' which the distress c<ill \\'as sent.
In all 24 men were involved in the
rescu e Including members of the sheriff 's
dcpartrnent search and rescue tl'arn and
Cleveland National Forest officials.
The youths had to be pulled up the
side of the cliff by winches. They had
been placed in litter baskels.
nesday.
If approved the conditional use permit
will gUarantee the launchlng of the
hospital project in corning weeks.
Officials of the hospital plan a con·
valescent and board-and care facility
to be built along side an out-care hospltal
on acreage along Cam ino de los fl.fares
in the extreme northerly area of San
Clemente.
Dr. Ralph Graham , who led a sue·
ccssful effort to wrest ofricial sanction
for a hospital in San Clemente from
a competitor last year, has promised
his San Clemente General Hospital would
open its doors to il s first pC1tients before
the end of this year .
Thi! use pcrrnil. for the construcli on
information orfice and billboards is the
last officia l city action needed to launch
the large building project. except for
routine approval or prec ise plans.
Othe r ac tion planned for the com·
mission's 7:30 p 1n. meeting includes
further consideration of a request by
the South Coast Girl's Club, which is
asking to use a lot at Bonita Canyon
Park for a permC1nent club building.
The land "'ou1d he near the existing
Boy's Club facility. Commiss ioners will
receive detailed information on proposed
financing for the girl's cluhhouse.
In another recreC1tiona l mailer. corn·
missioners \\"ill continue discussion or
the relocation of the two tennis courts
at !he community cluhhnuse lo a new
site at the new water reclamation plant.
County Teenager
Killed in · Snow
A winter sport OUling to the Big Bear
area ended in tragedy Saturday night
for a group of Orange County youths
"'hen one was crushed to death as his
toboggan careened under a car.
Roger T, Chadv.·ick. 16. of 611 Glen.
rose St.. Orange, v.·as pronounced dead
at a nearby hospita l foJIO \\'ing the ac-
cident 1n Barton Flats.
San Bernardino County sheriff's depu-
ties idC11tified the driver involved CIS
Trvln Lawery . 42. or c:ardena and said
he was not cited for any traffic viola·
lion.
The fatal accirlenl apparent ly resuH-
ed fr om Chadwick 's inability l.o control
the sled as il skidded into the street
from an adjacent slope.
ON ALL NEW AND USED
ITEMS
A,:'EWELRY
~ UPTO 50% OFF
Hospital
Due to Open
h1 Sun1mer
A 126-bcd. general hospital adjacent
to Saddleb1ck Community College in
Mission Viejo is due to open by mid-sum·
mer.
Mission Community Hospital b nearing
completion of its base unit that laler
will be expanded to 250 beds. The hospital
will serve the growing Saddleback area.
More than 60 doctors are underwrning
finan cing for the hospilal. its future
expansion and related facilit ies planned
for the \f>..acre medical campus site.
No fundraising campaign will be
necessary, a spokesman for Mission Vie jo
Medical Company, owners and
developers, said.
The hospital site at Crown Valley
Parkway and the San Diego F'reeway
was the original inlerim site for Sad-
dleback C<lllege which has moved onto
its permanent site.
A cooperative nurse trilning program
between the college and hospital has
been establjshed.
Students will begin studies in nursing
at Saddleback in the fall, Dr, Bernard
Turbow, chairman or the education
liaison comrnittee, said.
Planning for the serviles lo be offered
at Mission Community Hospital was bas·
ed on surveys of area needs.
Included in total beds avC1ilable wi ll
be 12 abstetric beds. Other services
incl ude a pediatrics depa rtment, an
oversized, 24-hour emergency a n d
diagnoalic and treatment center. an out·
patient unit. radiological s er v Ices .
laboratory. intensive care unit. cardiac
care unit. surgical centers and a radio
isotope program.
··The South 'Orange O:iunty are1: has
long been in need of full service medical
care . and Mission Community has been
designed and programmed to assure it,'"
a spokesman said.
Along .,.·Hh the hospital, the medical
campus will provide a five-story medical
office bullding. a 138-bed convalescent
hospital and a JOO.bed board and 'care
home for the elderly. ,
A hellcopter pad to handle emergencies
will be included in the first phase of
construction.
H elen Palmberg
Rites Tuesday
Funeral services ·will be held Tuesday
for Helen D. Palmberg. a Laguna Hill~
resident and life-long educator y,•ho died
Thursday at South Coast Community
Hospital. She was 72.
The Rev. John C. Jenkins of the United
~1eth1Jdist Chtirch or Laguna Hills will
oHiciate the 2 p.rn. services a l
McCormi ck Mortuary Chapel in Laguna
Beach. Interment. will follow a t
Fairhaven Memorial Park .
Mrs. Palmberg, who lived at 218-E
Avenida M"ajorca, is survived by her
husband, \l/ll!iam: a stepson. Arnold:
a brother, Edward Davis. of Louisiana ;
a sister, Mrs. Louise McCullough of
La Mesa: two grandchildren and three
R re at -grandch ildrep.
Mrs. Palmberg was a graduate or
the Industrial .Tnstilute in Louisiana and
served on the bnard of trustees of the
institu te for many years. At Leisure
WC1rld, she was active in the Women·s
Club and the California Club.
Nutritioual Speech
Set a t Res taurant
Nutritiona l ctlnsultant Carious P ,
Masori will discuss the effects of
hyog ly rc1n1a -the disorder or low blood
sugar-in a talk Tuesday at. II p.m.
in the Village Inn restaurant in
Capistran o Beach.
The free presentation v.•ill start nt
8 p,m, under sponsorship of Life Center
Health Foods.
OVERSHIPMENT OF
GUITARS ....
If.fl
WILL SELL 10% s121s ABOVE OUR COST
COMPARE o.,.. • -.it•n • .-. ,,_
PEOPLE IN THE KNOW SAVE MONEY EVERYTIME THEY BUY -IT IS NOT EASY TO BUY
FOR CASH, BUT IF YOU HAVE CASH, BANKAMERICARD, OR MASTER CHARGE YOU
CAN SAVE TREMENDOUS AMOUNTS ON EVERYTHING EVERYDAY.
FIND IT HERE FlflST
Racitis COSTA MESA JIWILRY and LOAN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA l•tw.en Harbor & lrOldway
•
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7
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Laguna Beaeh
EDI T ION
Today's Final
'
N.Y. Stoelul
* VOL. 64, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS , 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • MONDAY, JANUARY 'I I', 197 1 TEN CEt-ITS
n ustria ist ome om e
'-'1LY PILOT it•lf l'Mi.
MARCH OF DIMES DRIVE PYRAMIDS IN LAGUNA
Jolie P,e rnstein, Indy Brewer and Alex J imenez
\
Laguna Beach Students
W orkonFundCampaign
Some 25 Laguna Beach High School
lrtudents responding to a cali from La·
guna Beach police offi cer Alex Jimenez,
turned out Saturday to solicit funds for
the 1971 March of Dim es campaign, to
combat birth defects.
The youths stationed themselves at the
large supermarkets in the area along
wit h _other large commercial outlets,
working from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
While no official count has been made
T wo P layhouse
Board Memllers
To Resign Posts
Tv.·o members of the board of directors
of the La guna Mou lton Playhouse,
William Harcum and Robert J. Hastings,
have announ ced that they wi ll not seek
new terms on the board when elections
come up in February.
Hastings will also step down from
his post as general manager of the
beleaguered Playhouse e{fecti ve Friday
due to what he tenned "disagreements
with some playhouse board members."
Harcum, a local real estate broker,
has been president o! the playhouse
board for the past year, but said the
job was "just ta king up too much of
my time away from my business."
Hareum termed his two years on the
board as "very rewarding" and said
he will slill do volunteer wo rk for the
playhouse after he steps down Feb. 14.
Hatcum's departure will coincide with
the an nual meeting of the playhouM!,
ai which. time a new board of directors
will be elected.
yet. estimates reveal that several hun-
dred dollars may have been collected
for the March of Dimes.
"It was a beautiful day and it showed
that kids want to get involved," com·
mented one of the volunteers, Jolie
Bernstein, a high school junior.
Other students working for the March
of Dimes were : Tom Ho 11 t s, Mike
Lac kner , lndy Brewer, Karen Cutkomp,
Andrew Hubble , Roseann Ke 1 I y,
Josephine Pegrum, Nancy Sutton, Paige
Cutkomp, Teri Anderson, Lisa Shipkey
end Claudia Miller.
Others included Dan Tomehak, Evin
Fee, David McKue, Marilyn Cabang,
1...-0rilee Goodall, Leslie Johnson, Vicki
Crawfonl, Maureen Keon, Donna Green-
bough and Phhiil Bablamo.
Later this mon th a door-to-door cam·
paign will be held by the March of
Dimes workers to raise additional funds
Ior their CQffers.
British Roy alty
Kidnap Feared
LONDON (AP) -A telephoned threat
to kidnap the S.year-0ld earl of St.
Andrews, 12th jn line of suceesslon for
the British throne, sent anned police
today to the family home in Buck·
inghamshlre.
The earl of St. Andrews is the eldest
son of the Duke of Kent, cousin of
Queen Elizabeth II and 11th in line
for the throne.
A spolwMan at Copplns. the duke's
home, said: ''Information has been
received by the police or a w ssible
attempt to kidnap one or the Duke
of Kent's children. The necessary precau·
tlons are beine taken."
Hastings said he wanted lo leave the
board because "I am looking at Ult ,
plf yhoose from 8 monetary viewpoint; ~ •
the board is looking 11t it from • 'Financial colUmnlat Sylvia Porter
SYLYIA. STARTS
SA. YI NG SERIES
thtatrical viewpoint. The two didn't work\ comes to tbe rncue of the lnflaUoa·be-
to1ether too well." 1 sieged consumer, 1tartm.s:~ today, in a
The retired telephone company ex· series of columns especially dealgned lo
ecutive joined the board of dirff!tors help you save from nve to fifty perc:ent
in August, 1970 and assumed the role and more on everythlna: you buy.
of acting general manager of the This ls not a claim, it'• a fact that
pU1yhouse Oct. I, 1970. He was given by buying wiaely, avoiding the hidden
the task of trylng to get the PJay hou.se oosll which frequenUy tmbuah the
back on It! flnancial feet. unwary, by watching prk:et, aeuons,
"l feel I've done a lot to pull the sides and guarantees closely you can
playhouse out of its financial straits," roll back the atraln on your family
Hastings said, "I've cut the monthly budget and save tbouaanda of dollars
openttng hudget by $3,000 11.nd have F II S I I P ~-· In"-I eosed m>mt of the tension with our a yeir · O ow Y v a 0• "" • uat on. creditors.,, beaUng columns this week.
'' _I
•
Ecolog y
Group
Organized
A new ecology· group initiated by con-
cerned Lagun a Beach women, was offj.
cially brought into being Friday as "Pro--
environment People (PEP)."
PEP will hold an organizational and
plann ing session, open to all inte rested
citizens, at 11 a.m. Friday in the House
of Hyun Restaurant.
Members will make their first pu blic
appe arance as a "pressure group" at the
J an. 27 City Council study session on re·
cycling of trash.
Early in February il will sponsor a
public program in the Festival Forum,
at which a panel of noted authorities on
ecological subjec ts will speak.
'·~
ll::
MAY GET LONG COUNT
Teamster•' Jimmy Hoffa
STILL IN THERE PUNCHING
Boxer Cas sius Clay
Formation of the group, which will con -
cern itself wilh environm ental legislation
at all levels, and with practical appro ach -
es to combating pollution at the lower
level, grew out of an informal meeliflg
at the Laguna Beach home of Mrs. Luisa
liyun last month.
Mrs. Hyun is serving as pro tern board
chairman for PEP, with Mrs. S11.ndra
Tomehak as secretary and Mrs. Emma
Stuchlik, treasurer.
~upreme Com·t Will Hear
Cassius Clay Draft Case
It was decided to ask annual dues (){
S3 for individual me mber'!> or SS for fRm·
ily membership! to cover the cost of
mailing and establishing an ecology li·
brary or information center.
As its first official action, PEP will
present the City Council with a peti tion
encouraging all efforts to trash recycling.
City Councilman Ed ward Lorr has re·
qutseted the council st udy session on re·
cycling and council man Roy Holm, who
concer11 s himself with conservation mat-
ters in behalf of the council, also has ex·
pressed interest in the new civic group:
Absent Attorney
Dela ys Manson
Trial Further
LOS ANGE LES (UPI ) -The oft-de-
layed Sharon Tate murder trial hit a new
snag today v.·hen the critical illness of
the daughter of a defense attorney
caused him to de I a y his final argu-
ment.
Maxwell Keilh , who replaced the mTs-
sing Ronald Hughes as counsel for U slie
Van Houten, said his daughter's surgery
during the weekend had so concerned
him that he had been una ble to pre.
pare his fin al argument.
Mis.c; Van Houten is one of three fe·
male codefendants of accused hippie
leader Charles Manson.
The judge considered a defense mo-
tion presented by attorney Paul Fitz-
gerald to dec lare a mistrial on grounds
that there had not been a public trial,
due to the fact that the majority of the
courtroom seats were reserved for the
news media .
LagunagrlM
' .
WASRINGTON (UPI) -Cassius C111.y,
fonner .heavyweight boxing champion,
wtin a new hearing from the Supreme
Court today on his conviction fur refusing
Induction into the Army.
The action means that C l a y ' s
multimillion dollar title fight with the
present champion. Joe Frazier, can go
ahead as planned in New York on March
8.
The cou rt said in a brief orde r it
would confine arguments in the c a s e
to Clay's claim of conscientious objection
because of his Muslim religion.
Clay -who now mes the name
Muham mad Ali - also contended that
the government had illegally tapped his
telephone conve rsations, but the court
decided not to consider that clain1.
Arguments wi ll be heard In the case
and a decision handed down later in
the term.
At its first session of the new year,
the court turned down an appeal by
the already imprisoned president of the
Teamsters Union, James R. Hoffa , from
his cinvicti011 of defrauding the union's
pension fund. Hoffa thus faces an ad·
dilional five-year prison sentence in ad·
ditio n to the eight years he now is
serving at Lewisburg, Pa., federal
penitentiary for jury tampering .
The court also:
-Refused to hear a chaJJenge to
organized baseball brought under th e
antitrust Jaws by two d i s m i s s e d
American League umpires, Al Salerno
and Bill Valentine. The justices without
comment let stand lower court rulings
that baseball Is exempt from antitrust
action under 1922 and 1953 Supreme
Court decisions.
-Rejected an appeal by 8 white
Mississippi parent who challenged a tem-
porary court order revoking federal tax
exempt status for new white aca demies
By Phll lntorlondl
"I SwHr,Mortha, If You Say Ofto Word I'm Throwlnt
You Out of the Car."
•' '. ••
' wh ich do not have non-diacrimlnatory
raciaJ school policies.
-In an about.face, aent 1-ck to
a lower court the que.tlon whethif non.
English speaking voters in 19 ·st.ates
may be required to use Engllah in
answering questions to register. nie
court voted March 30, 1970, to hear
arguments in a case involving a group
of Mexican-Am erican farm workers in
Yakima County, Wash., but rtversed
this apparently on grounds the justices
unanimously upheld on D,ec. 21 the right
of Congress to outlaw all literacy tests.
-Agreed to hear a case involving
lhe right of L.S. customs inspectors
to require a person to strip as part
of a search for narcotics or other con-
traband. It accepted for future decision
an appeal by the Justice Department
from a ruling of the 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals that such a search
was legally un justi fied in the case of
a young woman found with h'eroi n at
San Ysidro. Cali f.
Ethiopian Y ouths
Stage Protest
At San, Cl em ente
About 40 students d es c r i bing
themselves as Ethiopia's "cream of the
crop" chanted for the death of the ir
leader near the gates of the Western
White House.
Shouting "Death to Haile Se.lassie"
and "death to fascist pigs," the students
spent abouL two hours near the pastu(es
oi the Elmore Ranch next to tho Nixon
Estate. '
(See Photo Page 3)
Ostensibly, the demonstration, the first
of the new year at the Presidential
compound,. was asking for the cuttblg
off of foreign aid to the northeast African
country.
Spokesman for the Ethiopian Students
Union Jn ~ortb Arnenica, Los Angeles
Chapter, said the aid was being used
to direct weapons against fellow citizens,
primarily in the area of Eritrea.
The spokesman claimed that ,fn tbe
past few, weeks J,O(lO. Eritrew have
been "massacred". by 5elassie,'11 troups.
'Ille demonstfa tlon by the, ltUdents
bearing large pl,acards di:ew two ' Secret ·
~rvlce agents from w.it?Urr. tb8 . Nb:on
epcliVe .and a .few .San Clemerite police
officers. · , ·
There wCre)itl 1ncldeiiis~ ' , '
Beoldes their , 'pla~al]ls: clooounclng
fetidallsm and ·lmperlaUsm. withla tbei r
cOuntry the college-dge studentl carried
small red cards d:lntalnlp& bhrtl· tln a
person'• rights •hen he li amst.c!• f>Y'
P!>lice. ' In each segment referr1n1 to pcUce
on the cards, the word pip bad beta
Inserted, instead.
Lone Qua d Survives
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Tiny J ..
Anne Sprlnger, lone turvivor of quad-
ruplets born in Idaho, Is ln "crlUcal
and taU1tl ble '1 condition in an artll:lcial
respirator because the no longer can
breath< for benelf.
•
Blast Laid
To Pentagon
Connections
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Two firebombs
were hurled early today at the home
of industrialist William R. Hewlett, whose
partner Is deputy secretary of defense.
Hewlett, 57, multimillionaire president
of Hewlett.Packard Corp., was awakened
by the muffled explosions of the Molotof
Cocktails and put ·out the fire with
extinguishers recently placed in the home
because of anonymous telephone threats.
Hew lett's partner, and co.founder of
the electronics manufacturing firm, ts
David Packard , the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police a n d Hewlett-Packard
spoke smen believed the firebombing was
due to Packard's Washington po5t and/or
the company's government contracts. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray said'
there were no suspects nor any positive
leads.
Neighbors told poiice they saw two
whi te men rwi from Hewlett's home
at the time of the attack. The men
climbed into a dark~lored Volkswagen
"Beattle" which had been parked nearby
with its motor idling and lights off.
They drove ()ff without tumlng on their
lights and witnesseJ could give only
vague descrlpUons.
Ol:le of the firebombs struck the rambJ ..
lne, two-story home between the first
and aecond floors and fell harmlessly
to the ground. The second hit a transom
above the front door and fell to the
porch, where it started a fire.
Hewlett, whose share! of Hewlett..
Packard stock are worth more than
a quarter of a billion dollars, used an
extinguisher to quell the blaze. The fire
was ou t when firemen and fXllice arrived.
Damage was minor.
Hewlett and his wife were In the
house when the gasoline-filled bottles
were hurled about 12:30 a.m. The home
is located in an older, upper middle
class residenti al area in the flatlands
of Palo Alto, about 35 miles south of
San Francisco.
A company spokesman said the In.
dustrialist has received anonymous
telephone threats in recent months.
usually warning of attacks on his home
or his fa mily. They were considered
crank calls. but company security of·
ficials placed the fire extinguishers in
his house.
Police Sgt. Robert Monasmith said
the firm ha s been harassed in the past
by radicals because of its work on
government contracts.
Happening Costs
Clemente $1,200
1'he after effects of Laguna Beach's
Christmas Happening have reac hed San
Clement~ with the payment of $1 ,200
in overtime to the city's 25 police of·
ficers who assisted in clearing the fes·
tival site.
City Manager Ken Carr sa id the pay•
ment is routine in mutual aJd situa·
Uons.
"When we need help from elsewhere,
they pay the hill," Carr told the cit~
council, ''and 1f they need us, we pay~
It rt ally balances out in the end."
Oruge
lfe•iller
Tuesday's sunshine will be of
the buy variety over the Orange
Coast ·.with 101Dt driule seen for
Inland • areu. Temperatures wW
run !tom D7 to SI dqrees,
INSmE TODAY
A ·M"tO!V tltcUd C(lnQTtlfO
mon in pries£'1 elothfno ii oU
r6tt to go a.s a DtmocTOtic rep-
resnta«w from .lla.ttoeh1'ft'tts.
Page 16.
I •
2 DAIL V PllOT SC Mmda,_,.U,1'11
Easing of Taxe·s Seen
:Letup on Business Bur~n by Nixon Hinood
· Tbue wu speculation today that Presi·
Cteot Naon might announct lhat tu
burdens on business will be eased .
The e.rpected move is aimed at
speeding economic expansion of the flag·
sing national economy.
· The only news briefing scheduled by
•drninlslration aides today was set for
12:30 p.m. in Laguna Beach, an unusually
late hour. Jt coincides with the time
of closing of the stock exchange in
New York.
Treasury officials have completed
drafts of new re,WaUons to grant
busine.sses faster tu writeoffs oo
-la tlloy il!ODd Oii DIW equi-nt
llld' plonta. 11111 -td ..... • tu
u vtnp lor boll1-nmnlftl lnlo bUUona
of dollars. .
The plan ls to permit businesses to
deduct mon: for depreciat.lon of equip.
ment in the earlier years of its use.
PresenUy companies deduct from taxes
the cost of equipment on a yearly in·
st.aliment basis taking into conaideralion
the uaeful Jife of the machlntry.
A presidential pane.I devised the new
rules. It was said they would reduce
11ovemment receipts by $l.4 billion in
the first year, $3.7 billion in the second
:Tustin Trustees Meet
Resolution in Support
Of County Board Eyed
Tustin Union High School DI.strict
board of education tonight will consider
a resolution supporting the county schools
office which recenUy came under fire
from the Orange County Grand Jury.
Reacting to the grand jury report
calling for aboJiUon of the county
superintendent's office. trustees will mull
adoption oC a resolution "in support
of the continued existence of the de.part·
ment, the Orange County Superintendent
of Schools. and the county board of
educations."
A similar resolution · of support was
County Traffic
Accidents Kill
3 on Weekend
· A South Pasadena woman whose family
moved to the Capistrano Beach area
to live only Friday died there Saturday
night, when their car slammed into a
truck stalled on Pacific Coast Highway.
Orange County Coroner's deputies said
a pair of motorcyclists also dled of
accident injuries, bringing the weekend
fatalities to thte:e.
De.ad are:
. -Mn. Marilyn Tl}'lor, 36, of South
Pa&adena.
-Liada M. Wilson, 20, of Stanton.
-Craig B. Hud1pelh, 16, of Fullerton.
Calilamia Hlghway Patrol officers Yid
Mrs. T1ylor was killed Saturday night
on Pacific Coast Hjghway south of Beach
Road, near the Capistrano Beach Club.
She was dead on arrivaJ at South
Coast Community Hospital in South
t.guna.
Her hll!band , John L. Taylor, who
1pent I.he night In the hospital 1Jong
with daLJghter Christie, 9, said he realized
the stalled Clatbed truck wasn't moving
too late to swerve and miss il
• The vehicle's emergency lights were
blinking, CHP officen; said.
Police said Miss Wilson was lnjurtd
la.st Thursday in a cycling tragedy caused
•hen she tried to miss a basketball
that rolled Into the street at Lola Avenue
and Wasco Road.
She lost control and was thrown to
the pavement, suffering a skull fracture.
Hudspeth died shorUy after his
motorcycle slammed into a car turning
left onto Ford Drive from Euclid SITeet
in Fullerton Saturday night .
The accident is still under in-
vestigation.
Trudeau Pays Visit
MATH URA. India iAP) -Prime
t.fini.5ter Pierre Elliott Trudeau of
Canada, en route to a meeting of British
Commonwealth leaders in Singapore,
stopped over for a visit to the birth
place of the Hindu god Lord Krishna.
DAILY PILOT . "..,.,, .... " ......... .... ....... '-di ........ w...,
COits M.-. S. Cl-•
OltAHGa COA.$T PUBLISHIHG COMrAJl't
Jtob1rt N. W1.I
Prn loar.t er.ti '°"'llli-
J1r.k JI. Cinl.y Vic• ,,.l<Nrll ., ... a-.1 Mlllll'tl'
n oll'll l K11Yil
l!'lfler
71iom11 A. Mur,hi._•
M-lllnll Efltor
tUch1t4 '· Half llvlh °'""' CO.,.Uy .... .,_
C11t,I M11t1 m W.I 111 l lrat fil...,....1 ... ,~ Jrl1 'll'9't ..... &olol~ • LatUM ltitc:tt1 m .._, ,.._
Hvnll .... I MCflt '"'' a.di lo.lware .$Iii (*NIIMI at Nlrlll El ~mini 11:•1
'
paS!ed by the Tu.sUn board a year 1go,
a diltrict spokesman said.
Renewed support is necessary, accord-
.ing to a staff recommendation calling
for the resoluUon. "because of financial
and physical aid to this district."
Trustees also will consider setting a
trustee election date of April 20, during
their meeting which begins at 7:30 p.m.
in the conference room of Tustin High
&hool, 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin.
Two board members' terms erpire
this year, those of Howard L. Selleck
and Robert C. Bartholomew, both of
Santa Ana.
A construction change order authoriza-
tion that would re!Ult In a $658 credit
to the overall cost of building University
High School carries with ft a request
for an ei:tension of the contract com·
pletlon date by 25 days.
The extension request moves the con·
tracted completion date to Jan. 8.
Or iginally, the new high school was due
to be finished by Dec. IO.
Three reasons are offered for the
delay, including 21 days extension due
to the July and August strike of
sheetmetal workers, three days for a
district-approved change order tc Install
electric wiring for an outdoor kiln, and
an additional day for delayed pouring
of concrete due to inst.sllation of un-
derground utilitits in the auto shop.
While suud~ts and faculty moved into
Unive~ity High on Jan. 4. the building
has yet to be finished . "No notice of
completion bas been filed for board a~
proval." a dJ.slrict business office
IP9~ .agt. Un"l!: "e not~e ol COO)"
plkhn' 15 8pptoved bf the board,' the
contractor cannot be paid. she said.
If the change order including the ex-
~nsion is approved, Shirley Brothers
construction company, builders of the
first phase of the $4.5 million school,
would be relieved of responsibility for
the delayed completion of the school.
Amoog expenses to the district caused
by the delayed opening of University
High School was a $5.000 expense to
bus students to Mission Viejo High School
for double sessions that ended with
Christmas vacation.
In other act.ions , the board will consider
an opinion from the County Counsel
that the district 's Nov. 3, $25.8 million
bond issue was succei.sful. although the
measure failed to receive a two-thirds
majority.
Lag una to Study
Differing Forms
Of Government
Charter versus general law municipal
government will be lhe su bject of a
Laguna Beach City Council study
session at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in city
ball council chambers.
The long-delayed study was requested
by councilman Charlton Boyd, who gaid
Monday, "There are many pros and
cons and I'm neither very strongly for
nor against charter, but my feeling is
that the charter system, in general,
permits more home rule .
"There are e::r:ctptions, but generally
It permits a municipality to govern Itself
in more areas than are permitted to
a general law city. which i! heavily
dominated by state and federal prHmp-
tions."
Boyd said bis principal concern is
the fact that "most of our Jaws are
archaic and need updating -In fact
many are completely unworkable -and
since so many need to be redone. perh1 ps
it would be simpler to hive them com·
pletdy replaced by a charter wrJtten
in trn and 1'72 an the basis or here
and now needs.''
[f the city bu enouab 1lgDtncant cam-
munJty problema to warrant special local
leg1Jl1 Uon, Boyd uld, be would favor
the wrlUna of • charter for Laguna
~ by a citlJeol' cornmlttte which
alao would remain 1'ln more or less
constant leUloo" to keep the charter
up to date. one prlvlleae of 1 ch1rter tlty Is
that of .etUnc up a Ioctl taxing 1uthorlty
ln 90me mu. now pre-empted by the
Nie and fedtraJ pemmenl$.
Opponent& of the tharter system ~Ile
the cost of reWewlnc ind updating all
e1tstJng ordinances and the danger of
overslcht in replacing them with a new
set of la••· While there are more general 11w
than ch1rter cities In the atate 1s 1
whole. two major Orange Coast com·
munltlts, Newport Beach and HunUn1ton
Buch, operate 11 cbarter cities.
&llllmso tlliruftar.' ,,,. I4oa la Io .......... modenlllltlon
of equipment ind erp1mton of pro-
duction. In recent months Industries have
spent frugally on new p I a n t s and
machinery.
Nixon is expected to lea ve San
Clemente sometime this week but a
firm time has not been announced.
Il is expected he will make an ap-
pearance in Washington late this week
be.fef"e members of the Republican Na·
tional Committee. The committee ill to
name a successor to National Chairman
Rogers C. B. Morton. It is expected
the choice will be Sen. Robert Dole
of Kansas, a Nixon stalwart. The \l.'hite
house isn't saying.
Since flying here on a semi-vacation
last week, the President has taken a
few swims in the heated pool of his
seaside villa. has walked on the beach.
drivf!n in southern Orange County and
visited Catalina lsland.
He walked down to the beach Saturday,
h~s S8th birthday. taking two dogs with
him and occasionally getting his feet
wet in the surf.
He celebrated the birthday with family
members including brother Dolald of
Newport Beach.
Tht President told Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler that the first rea l vaca·
lion in his life occ'.llTed two decades
ago when he was 38. Ziegler quoted
the President as saying he "is happy
in hi• job and optimistic about the future.
The President also quoted President
James Knox Polk as stating that anyone
with the duties of tbe Presidency has
little time for leisure.
Court Rejects
Pl,ea to Halt
Channel Wells
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Victims of the
1969 Santa Barbara oil spillage were
turned down t o d a y by the Supreme
Court in a bid to ha lt further drillings
in the Cllifornia channel.
The Santa Barbara officials , business·
men, boat owners and conservationists
wanted the court to enjoin drilling of new
wells and construction of a drilling
plaUonn until a public hearing has been
held.
The court made no comment as it
routinely announced it had decided 7 to
o not to hear the dispute. Justice Wil-
liam O. Douglas and John M. }larla n 1 di~ not perticipate and ,a.ve no e~Jana·
lion. 1-· '
Last April the U.S. Circuit Court in
San Francisco ruled hearings were not
required under Interior Department and
Corps of Engineers regulations. The is-
sue of whether the regulations are un-
constitutional is now before a three·
judge federal court in California.
The Santa Barbara people, all dam-
age victims in the January 1969 oil
spillage, said they could show new dril·
lings pose a danger of leakage and con·
taminalion. The Justice Department, in
opposinC the appeal, cited the find ings
of a scientists p a n e l that continued
drilling and depletion w o u Id reduce
pressure and lessen the likelihood of
blowouts.
In 1969 the Interior Department adopt-
ed a regulation authorizing public hear·
ings for a proposed leasing program
but not requiring them. The leases in
the Santa Barbara case wrere award·
ed In 1968. Therefore, the Justice De·
\partment argued, the public hearing
regulation would not apply to Santa
Barbara even if it was mandatory.
Union Oil Co. has begun drilling new
wells in the channel and the Corps of
Engineers has decided to issue platform
construction permits.
Lagunan Makes
Citizen Arrest
On Home Visitor
Laguna Beach police slopped a vehicle
on Coast Highway early Sund1y morning
after the driver ran a stop sign and
a red light, but the driver didn 't get
a ticket.
Robert Denise. nf 530 N. Coast
Highway, explained be was ln a hurry
to get to the police station to turn
over a burglar he had just caught in
his kitcben.
Police said Denise returned home with
his w.ife at 12:45 a.m. Sunday to find
his house lights b!azing and the lelevision
blaring. St.anding before an o p e n
refrigerator, officers said, Denis t
discovered Larry Vernon Kn1se, 25, of
La Puente. reaching for on evening
snack.
Denise made 1 citizen's arrest and
took Kruse Jn to CUllady. Police I.lid
Kruse later told them he thought he
was in a friend 's home i nd was u
surprlstd a1 Denise wben lhe homeciwner
1nived. ~fWJt is being held on sus plcloo
of burl l8;Y.
Harvard Names Bok
Its 25th President
CAMBR!DGE. Mass. (AP) -Dertk
Curtis Bok, dean of Ha r v • rd Law
School. today was named 2$lh president
of llarvard UnJversity, the n1Uon'11 old-
est university, by the univer1lty'1 Board
of Overseers.
DAILY l'ILOT ~r.11 l'lllflo
Jogs Ota
Chil ly January temperatures did not upset the regimen of th!s deter·
mined jogger. The youthful exercise buff, silhouetted against the
late afternoon sun. clips off the yards along the sands of Lagu~a
Beach. The water temperature v.1as a chilly 52 degrees and the a.ir
temperature \Vas le~s but the jogger kept warm.
Clemente 1-lospital G1·oup
Seel{s Billboa1·ds on Site
Officials of Chapman General Hospital
will seek permission Wednesday for two
billboards and a construction head·
quarters building for their new hospital
project in San Cle mente.
Planning commissioners will hear the
request by the Chapman Management
Corporation in a public hearing Wed·
2 Boys Survive
550-foot Plunge
111 Silverado
Two teenage boys were seriously in·
jured Sunday night "·hen their small
car plunged 550 feet down a Silverado
Canyon wall.
The youths were removed from the
canyon four hours later after a rescue
effort carried out far into the cold night.
Orange County firemen directed the
rescue which brought out David Burk ,
16. of 28216 Thisa Way, and his passenger
Mike ~fcCormick, 15, of 29181 Sleepy
Holl ow, both of Silverado Canyon.
The accident occurred on a narrow
dirt roadv.·ay which leads to Santiago
Peak. about five miles above the
Silve rado fire station.
Burk is suffering from a compound
fracture of the left leg and McCormick
incurred chest injuries , officia ls re ported.
Their car went off the road about
4:30 p.m. and was reported by an
unknown person using a citizens band
radio to reach firemen . Fortunately~ the
accident was witnessed by a fo\lo w1ng
car driven by Raymond Hamm, 15 of
Lakewood.
Hamrn , his brother Gary, 15 and Wayne
8C'ntley, 16, of Norwalk climbed down
the steep canyon to the injured boy .
Burk told them he lost control of
!hC' c;i.r when he applied the brakes
al abou t 30 miles an hour on a curve
which threw the. \'ehicle against the
mountainside and then back across and
or! the JG-foot roadwa)'·
Jeeps carrying members of a car club
fo\lo"'ed and one of them had the radio
by "·hich the distress call was sent.
In all 24 men were involved in the
rescue includ ing members of the sheriff's
department search and rescue team and
Cleveland National Fo rest officials.
The youlhs had to be pulled up the
side of the cliff by winches. They had
been placed in litter baskets.
nesda y.
If approved tbe conditional use permit
will guarantee the launcbing of the
hospital pf1lject in coming weeks.
Officials of the hospital plan a con..
vale.scent and board-and care facil ity
to be built along side an out-care hospital
on acreage along Camina de los Mares
in the extreme northerly area of San
Clemente.
Dr. Ralph Graham, who led a suc-
cessful effort to wrest official sanction
for a hospital in San Clemente from
a competitor last year. ha s promised
his San Clemente General Hospital would
open its doors to Its first patients before
the end of thls year .
The use permit for the construction
information office and billboards is the
last official city act.ion needed to launch
the large building project. except for
rou!ine approval of precise plans.
Other action planned for the com-
mission's 7:30 p.m. meeting includes
further consideration of a request by
the South Coast Girl's Club, wh icb is
asking to use a lot at Bonita Canyon
Park for a permanent club building.
The land would lie near the existing
Boy·s Club fa cility. Commissioners will
receive detailed info rmation on proposed
financing for the girl's clubhouse.
In another recreational matter, com-
missioners will continue discussion of
the relocation of the two tenn is courts
at the community clubhouse to a new
site at the ne"' water reclamation plant.
County Tee nager
KilJed in Snow
A v.·inter sport outing to the Big Bear
area ended in tragedy Saturday night
for a group of Orange County you ths
.,.,.hen one was crushed to death as his
toboggan ca reened under a car.
Roger T. Chadwick , 18. of 611 Glen·
rose St., Orange , was pronounced dead
at a nearby ho~ital following the ac·
e:idcnt in Barton Flats.
San Bernardino County eheriH's depu-
lic~ identified the driver involved as
Irvin Lawery. <12. of Gardena and said
he was not cited for any traffic viola-
tion.
The f:ital :iccidenl apparently re~u/\.
ed from Chadwick's lnabilily to control
the sled as it skidded into the street
from an adjacent slope.
ON ALL NEW AND USED
ITEMS
,A:'EWELRY
~ UPTO 50% OFF
Ho spital
Due to Open ..
111 Summer
A 12&-bed. general hospital adjactnt
to Saddleback Community College In
Mission Viejo is due to open by mid·sum-
mer.
Mission Community Hospital is ne1ring
completion of its base unit that later
will be expanded to 250 beds. The· hospital
will serve the growing Saddleba:ck area.
More than 60 doctors are underwriting
financing for the hospital, its future
expansion and related facilities planned
for the J:>-acre medical cami)us site.
No !undraising campaign will be
necessary, a spokesman for f\.fission Viejo
f\.1edical Company , owne rs and
developers, said .
The hospital site at Crown Valley
Parkway and the San Diego Freeway
was the original interlm site for Sad-
dleback College which has moved onto
its permanent site.
A cooperative nur!ie training progra m
between the college and hospital bas
been established.
Students will begin studies in nursing
at Saddleback in the fall, Dr. Bernard
Turbow, chairman of the education
liaison committee, said.
Planning for the serviles to be offertc!
at Mission Community Hospital was bas-
eti on surveys of area needs .
Included in total beds availabl~ will
be 12 obstetric beds. Other services
include a pediatrics department, an
oversized, 24-hour emergency a n cl
diagnostic and treatment center. an out-
patient unit. radiological s e r v i c t s ,
laboratory, intensive care unit. cardiac
care unit, surgical centers and a radio
isotope program.
"The South Orange County area has
long been in need of full service medical
care. and Mission Community has been
designed and programmed to assure It,"
a spokesman said.
Along with the hospital, the medical
campus will provide a five-story medi cal
office building, a 138-bed convalescent
hospital and a JOO-bed board and care
)lome for the elderly.
A helicopter pad to handle emergencies
will be included in the fir st phase of
construction.
Helen· Palmberg
Rites Tues day
Funeral services will be held Tuesday
for Helen D. Palmbe rg , a Laguna Hills
residenr and life-long educator who died
Thursday at South Coast Community
Hospital. She was 72.
'I'he Rev. John C. Jenkins of the United
1\1cthodisl Church of Laguna Hltls will
officiate the 'Z p.m. services a t
fl·lcCormick fl.1ortuary Chapel in Laguna
Beach. Interment v.·i ll follow a t
Fa irhaven Memorial Park .
Mrs. Palmberg. \\'ho lived at 218-E
Aven ida Majorca. is survived by her
husband, Wil!iam ; a stepson, Arnold ;
a brother. Edward Davis, or Louisiana .
a sister. Mrs. Louise fl1cCu llough of
La fl1esa: two grandchil dren and th ree
great .grand children.
f\.f rs. Palmberg was a graduate or
the Industrial Institute in Louisiana and
served on the board of trustee! of the
institute for many years. Al Leisure
\\'orld. she was active in the Women·s
Club and the California Club.
Nu tritio na l Speech
Set a l He~la ur a nL
Nutriti onal !'Onsullant Carious P
Mason will discuss the C'[fect~ of
hy oglycC'rrua -the disordl'r or low blood
sugar-in a talk Tuesday at 8 p.m.
in the Village Inn restaurant Jn
Capistrano Beach.
the free presentation will slart al
8 p.m. under sponsorshlp of Life Center
Health Foods.
OVERSHIPMENT OF
GUITARS ....
It.ti
WILL SELL 10"/. s1 295 ABOVE OUR COST
COMPAR~ o ...... ...,.... .. <'-,,_
PEOPLE IN TH E KNOW SA VE MONEY EVERYTIME THEY BUY -IT IS NOT EASY TO BUY
FOR CASH , BUT IF YOU HAVE CASH, BANKAMERLCARD, OR MASTER CHARGE YOU
CAN. SAVE TREMENDOUS AMOUNTS ON EVERYTHING EVERYOA Y.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-n41
DOWNTOWN COST A. MESA letw"" H•rbor & 8ro.dw1y
•
•
7
7
I
San Clemente
Capistrano EDI TIO N N.Y. Stoeks
YO~. 64 , NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY II, 197 1 TEN CENTS
Two-year Ban on Co~tline Building Urged
By L. PETER KRIEG
Governor Reagan's blue-ribbon en-
vironmaol couneil ha s recommended a
two.year moratorium on construction
along the entire California coastline while
the state prepares lo take over control
of all shoreline planning , zoning and
building.
The State Environmental Quality Study
Council, chaired by Orange County
Supervisor David L. Baker. issued the
recommendation in a report being
drafted for submissio n to Reagan by
Feb. l. '
The report will also urge creation
of a cabinet-level Environmental Protec.
tion Agency to be given far-reaching
powers -including authority over
coastline construction Lhrougb t h e
Clltablishment of regional co~issions.
John Geoghegan, e:xecutive secretary
of the council, told the DAILY PILOT
the governor's panel will urge lhe
legislature create the mechanism for
implementing the controls.
He said initially this me<:hanism could
be established tbrough any one or more
of the va rious shoreline control bills
expected for introduction in both tbe
state !erulle and assembly.
"While these bills are almost totally
concerned with the coastline,''
0GC<>ghegan said, "the council's ret'<lm·
mendation calls for eventual !late
takeover of building controls and land
uses in many areas of the state where
the env iro nment might be degraded."
Geoghegan said the council did not
attempt to recummend how fac inland
the state controls should extend.
"The 1,0QO.foot limit included in the
bill by Assemblyman (Peter) Wilson of
San Diego last year seemed to draw
the most support," he said, "and this
n ustria ist
Down the
Mission
Trail
District Grants '
Maternity Leave
EAST IRVINE -The stork has cast
a shadow over the San Joaquin Elemen·
tary School District teacher power.
Trustees voted nine maternity leaves
last week:· but were not very happy
about it. ·
Gary Shinkle, director of personnel,
admitted that changing teachers in the
middle of the year was not gOod for
students.
"Didn't the teachers know about their
condition when school started," ques·
lioned Trustee Jim Nelson.
"Did they sign their contracts in good
faith? asked Trustee Gratian Bidart.
"Nevertheless, its the law," added
Shinkle.
e Ar tist. Exh ibit
LAGUNA NIGUEL -Arlists of the
Niguel Art Association will display the ir
arts and craft.s from 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. Jan. 16 atid 17 in Richard's Patio
on Lido Isle, Newport Beach.
Included will be oils, watercolors, p('n
and in k sket ches, needlepoint, clay
sculpture and si lk screenings. The show-
ings are open to the public, as is the
the Jan. 2l meeting of the Niguel Art
Association at which seascape artist Julie
Gregory will be featured.
e ColC Jlcllvit ies
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A new
year of ;ictivities will be launched by
the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Com·
merce on Jan. 19.
Speakers will include Hugh Walker,
president of the El Toro Water District
and Sharon Taylor. Miss Orange C:OOnty.
The ~eting will take place at noon
ln lhe Mission Viejo Inn.
Diesel Eng ine
Gi ve n to School
A recent gift to San Clemente High
School needed a skiploader for the
delivery.
The gift. accepted with thanks by
trustees of the Capistrano Unified School
OistriCt, is a 2,500-pound Cummings
Diesel Engine.
Valued at $7,000, the gift was donated
by the Qunmings Diesel Engine Com·
pany for use in the industrial arts p~
gram.
SYLVI A. STARTS
:SA YING SE RIES
Financial columnilt Sylvia Porter
C9flle5 to the rucue of the inflation*
Pesed consumer, sllrting today, In a
series of columns especially designed t(I
help you save from five to fifty perc.ent
and more on everything you buy.
• Thia la not a claim, It's a f1rt that
by buying wisely, avoiding the hidden
costs whk:h frequently ambush die
unwary. by witching pr1ces, aeuon!I.
1alts and guarantees closely you c.an
roll back lht strain on yoor family
budget and save thousands of dollars
a year. Follow Sylvia Porter'• inOatJoo-
beiting columns Ibis week.
~Death to Selassie'
Ethiopia Youths
Stage Protest
About 40 students des crib Ing
themse lves as Ethiopia's "cream of the
crop" chanted for the death of their
leader near the gates of tbe Western
Wh.ite House.
Shouting "Death to Haile Selassie"
and "deaLh to fascist pigs," the students
1pent about tw· Uas Dear b puturt1
Nixon. Okays
Pres idential
Pension Boost
President Richard Nixon has signed
Jnto Jaw a bill that boom his reUrement
pay, and that of othes: retired Presidents
from $25,000 to $60,000 per year,
Further, the first revision of laws
setting Presidents' and their widows' ·
pensions since 1958. ties the annual
amount to the level of the exisling
Cabinet members' salaries.
Under the bill passed by Congress,
?residents' widows will receive $20.000
ann ually, double the amount they had
been getting.
Press Secretary Ron Zeigler !'laid Fri-
clay in Laguna Beach the President "did
not actively seek passage of this bill."
Other portions of the Senate bill
•'provide unifonn treatment of Federal
employes reef:i ving d i s ab i Ii l y com4
pensation."
The estimated annual outlay expected
to result from the survivor liberalizaUons
during 1971 is $112,000.
For fiscal 1972 the costs are e!timated
at $3.l million rising to Jl2.4 rni!Uon
by fiscal year 197&.
1be &Mua1 allowances to fonner
President.a and widows of fonner
Presidents will cost Jl.0,000.
AMual payments of $60,000 wilf be
made to fonner President Harry s.
Truman and Lyndon Johnson.
Mrs. Dwight 0. Ei.senhower will be
the only widow receiving '20.000 in as
much as Jacqueline Kennedy Onass.ls
surrendered her right to a federal
pension.
of the Elmore Ranch next to the Nixon
Estate.
(See Photo Page 3)
Ostensibly, the demonslration, the first
of the new year at the Presidential
compound, was asking for the cutting
off of foreign aid to the northeut African
country,
Spokesman for lhe Ethiopian Students
Union in North America, Los Angeles
Chapter, 1aid the aid was belng used
to direct weapons against fellow cltiuns,
primarily in the area o( Eritrea.
The spokesman claimed tha t In the
past few weeks 1,000 Eritreans have
been "massacred'' by Selassie 's troups.
The demonstration by the student,
bearing large placards drew two Secret
Service agents from wjthin the Nixon
enclave and a few San Clemente police
officers.
There were no incidents.
'Rush ' Ordered
On Extension
Of Victoria Blvd.
A "rush tag'' has been put on the
Victoria Boulevard eict.ension project to
~an the Capistrano Valley, and if the
County Board of Supervisors gives ap-
proval to alignments Wednesday, it may
go to bid this year.
Division Engineer Murray Storm, pro-
ject director. gave new 5th District
Superviso r Ronald Ca.spers and his plan·
ning appointee Arnold Forde a tour of
the site Friday.
Stenn 11aid the 1.5-mlle link between
the hill areas of Dana Point and the
Capistrano Beach village and San Diego
Freeway will be hastened to coincide
with the Doheny Park Road-O>ast
Highway interchange construction.
"It isn't easy to hurry a million dollar
projeet," 11ald Storm , ''but if we get
the alignment approval Wednesday, we
can go ahead with the engineering and
may be able to start constructlon the
first months of 1972.''
Families Evicte.d in Capo
Seek Help From Council
San Juan Capistrano city council wlll
be aaked at tciplght's 7 o'clock meet1n1
to find homu for 12 ramiUu facing evic-
tion from condemned hOf.lling.
Mn. l.Jlllu Zlena;ltln, of Paaadtna,
owner or the property whlch t'Olllaina a
dozen Oci::Upled abanUe1, hes appealed to the::J~~Y council to po1tpone any act.Ion
unUJ'Ule city can make arran~tJ to
relocate the people Uvlng there.
property:.Woef 'Wll onlft'ecl'by tho
Or i County Depor.....,t ol Bull<llng
and fety (on behalf of the. city) to va-
cate all buildings used as d,*elltnp, de-
molish all uisting bulld.lnp, and pump
and bickflD' all cwp>e>ls, seepa1e plt.s
and Rptlc tanb on I.he premises.
Compliance with the order WIS to be
• •
within 48 boun of the receipt. of the order
unless an appeal "'• flied with the city
council, .an 11ctlon whlch the property
OWN!r took.
In her letter to lhe council dated Dt<:,
29 Mr•. Zaengleln stated "even though
we have received no rent.II· piymenL for
the occupancy Of these buildlnp. we are
very much concerned as to the Weltare
of the1e people who are houNd there.''
Tiie property ha.. been leutd Oalll Dec. sr .. William Rtld, I loCl11-andier who
in turn 1t1ble8.Hd the dwelU.,..
Mtf. Zlena:Jiein added in her letter that
•he will abld& by the decWon of tile
cooncll and Jn the meantime la IMln&
propoull from contractor1 for the re-
mov1l of the buildings In compliance with
the councll'1 tennlnaUo•.
would appear to be a logical boundary.''
Baker acknowledged there will be op-
position rrom cities and counties to the
proposal, but he said, "I think there
is n .... onting support for such a proposal.
"I think public opinion is on our side,"
he said.
While Reagan and the Legislature will
make Lhe final determination of the
powe!'s of the Environmental Protection
Agency {EPA ). the council has recom-
mended giving it authority over a variety
of other areas -including :
-Water and air quality.
-:"loise pollution.
-Solid waste disposal.
-Pesticide and rad iation controls.
While the ramifications of all the
recommendat ions are being digested, it
is clear the council is focusing mosl
of its attention on land uses.
Geughcgan sai d that, in addition to
the coastline, a second related problem
"is the crillcal nred to find solution
to various state air basins that are
fast approaching capacity." He did not
elaborate on that point. however.
He said the new EPA would seek
to establish guidelines "for local govern-
ment to operate in" within the other
areas, but said the agency should b·~
given final authority over all of them.
He said, "The. council want.I th;:i
regional boards to have the authority
to issue permit.s and enforce standards.
"It wants to atr.ack the enviromnental
problem on a comprehensive basi.S
through a strong structure," he said.
"There would be many ways to In.
fluence local government but the council
reels the boards should have the lecal
clout, too."
The environmental Quality Study Coun-
~il was created by the legislature in
1968 and started it.s studiea in April,
1969, according to Geoghegan.
ome om e
DAILY ll'ILOT 11 .. 1 l'ht!•
ENGLISH UNFO CDS FOR SAN JUAN MIN I-STUDENTS
Cynthia Gcdinaz, Ar tamio Jal ma, Tomm y St. Dannis, Mrs. Vill egas
Mini Edu~ation
Kids Get Boost in Prograrn
By PA~I ELA HALLAN
01 If>• 0111¥ 11'1111 S111f
Il was just an 1 rdinary closet.
But to the small group of impatient
children cluslered in front it was a
magic door.
Eager hands reached inside as the
door opened and the.Ir sm!ling teacher
stood back to let them choose from
lhe books, puules and other educational
toys inside.
The children are part of a Mini-group,
a new program organized by concerned
parenlj for pre·school children in the
Capistrano Unifled School District's at-
tendance area.
Some of the children have few, If
any, educational toys and cannot afford
to enroll in a nursery school.
"Yet these children need nursery
school more thaR most," said Mrs.
Evelyn Villegas, a Mini-group instructor.
"There are eight in my group at
the San Juan Capistrano Adult Com-
munity Center. Two speak English, one
is bl·llngual and the rest speak only
Spaniah," ahe said.
Aa the children began to put puule11
together one little boy began describing
the picture in Engllah.
"Do you aee him," aaJd Mn. Villegu.
"In September he could only 1pdk
Spanish."
The lnfonnal clua Is conducted almost
entirely in English. The tt.acher proVldes
a regular nursery school program but
gears It to the chlldren'1 efflclencLu.
One brll!>t UW. girl wllh two ponytail&
bobbing at the sides ol her ·face, asked
a question ln Spaniah which Mn. Villegas
answered In Engliab.
-nplaload•Uiat lhe )lllrpOOe of the
dlSI 11 to prepare the children for
1Chool•1fbore EniJllh ls lpOteoo "Most
of the lmtrucUon la ln language develop.
ment," aald ~ teacher. uwe.also ,try
to Mlp· them lmf)rOVf: their self images
and to aclJuot llOC!ally."
There .are lour Mlnl·lfOUJ>I operatln(.
The others are In CaplstraM Btac~
Dana Potnt an'd San Clemente. Althouaf'J
the. teachers are paid lbere ll no flnancr:ii
J -· ,
obligalion to the parents. All funding
is currently provided through !he
f.1ethod ist Fund for Reconciliation, but
t~.at source runs out in June .
"We're trying to get Unit~d Fund sup-
port in order to continue," said Alan
Schreiber. one. of the Mini· group
organizers. "We arc pretty sure we
qualify but we have not yet made. a
formal application .''
Schreiber said the f.1ini·groups were
formed to fill a specific need in the
Capistrano Unified School District. "We
had Head Start and a state equivalent
but both had weUare and income level
stipulations," he explained. "We found
we had about 150 children in the district
whose parents are work ing to stay off
welfare who were unable to qualify (or
either program. Yet these children
possibly needed Head.Start more because
of language deficienc.ies." The dis(r\ct
no longer has Head· Start and the state
equivalent can onl y accommodate 30
children per semester.
Schrtlber said the Mini-groups havt1
been existing on the two $2,500 grants
from the Methodist fund and varioos
donallons of money anfJ materials made
by olher churches, PTA groups and
private donors.
"The Methodist fund was only to help
ua get started.'' said Schreiber. "We
were told from the beginning that we
would have to find anolher me1n1 of
continuing."
Children are selected for the program
by the teachers, Mrs. Villegas, Mrs.
Martha Samano, Mrs. ~tty Yellx ond
Mrs. Yolanda StoeUel, · and' by the
·coordinator, . Mrs. ~rmlda BallL :!J"I
groups are kept very !ltl'lall. ao ttiat
the teac:hcn: can provide lndivk:lull •
tenilon.
Although the program has olily beSJ
oreraling since the laat. semeJter of
Jut year, Schreiber dcscrl~s It IS very
succiesaful. Even parenll, whost:1C1.1ltural
heritage may not have prepared them
for the American school rystem are
taking 111 Interest.
Blast Laid
To Pentagon
Connections
PALO ALTO (UPI) -Two firebombs
were hurled early today at the home
of industrialist William R. Hewlett, whose
partner is depu ty secretary o{ defense .
HewleU, 57, multimillionaire president
of Hewlett-Packard Corp., was awakened
by the mufned explosions of the Molotov
Cocktails and put out the fire witli
extinguishers recently placed in the home
because of anonymous telephone threats.
Hewlett's partner, and co-founder of
the electronics manufacturing firm , Is
David Packard, the chief aide of Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird at the Pentagon.
Both police and HeWlett-Packard
1pokesmen believed the firebombing was
due to Packard's Washington poSt and/or,
th e company's government contracts. But
Palo Alto police Lt. P. L. Ray said
there were no suspects nor any positive
leads.
Neighbors told poliet; they saw two
white men run from Hewlett's homl!
at the time of the attack. The men
climbed into a dark-colored Volkswagen
"Beatlle" which had been parked nearby;
with its motor idling and lights off.
They dr ove off without turning on thelt
lights and witnesses could give onlY.
vague descriptions.
One of the firebombs struck the rambl·
Ing, twe>-story home between the first
and second floors and fell harmlessly
to the ground. The second hit a transom
above the front door and fell to the
p<1rch, where it star!.ed a fire.
}fewlett, whose shares of Hewlett--
Pac.kard stock are worth more than
a quarter of a billion dollars, used an
extinguisher to quell the blaze. The fire
was out when firemen and police arrived,
Damage was minor.
Hewlett and his wife were in the
house when the gasoline-filled bottles
were hurled about 12:30 a.m. The home
is located in an older, upper middle
class residential area in the flatlands
of Palo Alto, about 3S mlles south of
San Francisco.
A company spokesman aaid the In-
dustrialist ha.s · received anonymous
telephone threats in recent month.s,
usually warning of attacks on his home
or his family. They were considered
crank calls, but company security of·
ficlal.s placed the fire extlnguisbers in
his house.
I
Weather
Tuesday's aunshlne will be of
the hazy variety over the Orange
Coast with aome drtnle seen for
inland areas. Temperatures wUI
MUI from 57 to 63 dear-a.
INSIDE TeDA 'l'
A. uwly ekcUd conqre•
man tn priest'• clothing b oU
set eo go as a Democratic np-
rtstnkltive from · M4"~h1UttU. 1
PoQt JB. ·
-
.. ;.
. -
.z DAILY PILOT SC Mondll, JanulfY 11, 1971
Easing of Taxe·s Seen
i Letup on Business Burden by Nixon Hinted
< "" 'Ibere was Speculation today lhal Presi-
!<1en t Nixon might announce that tax
~rdens on business will br eased. r The expected move is aimed al
;zpeedins economi c ex·pa nsion pf lhe nag~
~ing national economy.
; The only news briefing scheduled by
Jldministratlon aides today was set for
,12:30 p.m. In Laguna Beach. an unusuaUy
late hour. ll coincides with lhe Lime
of closing of Ute stock exchange in
New York.
: Treasury officials have completed
;drafts of new regulations to grant
·businesses fast.er tax writeoffs on
amount& Ule7 lpeod on oew "\llilnlllll
and planta. 1'ill would mun • tax oavlnp k>r bualneaa running lnlO bllllons
of dollars.
The plan ii to permit businesses Lt>
deduct more for depreciation of equip..
ment in the earlier years of its use.
Presently companies deduct frorn taxes
the cost of equipment on a year ly in·
stallmenl buts taking into conside raUon
Lhe useful life of the machinery.
A presidenUal panel deviied the new
rules. It was said they would reduce
government receipts by $1.4 bill!on in
tbe first year, $3.7 billion in the second
:Tustin Trustees Meet
.-
Resolution in Support
Of County Board Eyed
Tustin Union High School Dislrict passed by the Tustin board a year ago,
board of educaUon Wnight will co nsider ./a ..district spokesman said.
a r.esoluti~n supporting the county scha<;>!s Renewed support is necessary, accord-
off1ce which reeently came under fire ing to a staff recommend atio n calling
from~ Orange County Gra~d J ury. for the resolution , "because of financial
Rea cting to th~ gran d Jury report and physica l aid to th.is district."
cal lln' for ~boht!on of the . cou nty Trustees also will consider setting a su~tendent s office. trus~s will mull trustee election date of April 20, during
adoption of a resolution tn supp:Jrt their meeting which begins at 7:30 p.m.
of the co ntinued existence of lh~ depart-in the ronlerenee room of Tu stin 1-ligh
ment, the Orange County Superintendent School, 1171 Laguna Road, Tustin.
of Sc~ls;, and the county board of Two board members' terms eX"pire
cducat_1o~s. . this year, those of Howard L. Selleck
A similar resolution of support v.·as and Robe rt C. Bartholomew, both of
Santa Ana.
County Traffic
Accidents Kill
3 on Weekend
A South Pasadena woman whose family
moved t.o the Capistrano Beach area
to live only Friday died there Saturday
night, when their car slammed into a
truck sl.alled on Pacific Coast High way.
Orange County Coroner's deputies said
a pair of motorcyclists also died of
accident injuries, bringing the weekend
fatalities to three.
Dead are :
-Mn. MarUyn Taylor, 36, of South
Pasadena.
-Lloda M. WUsou, 20, of Stanton.
-Cral1 B. Hudspctb, 16. of Fullerton.
California Highway Patrol officers said
Mrs. Taylor was killed Saturday night
on Pacific Coast ffigh way south of Beach
lWad, ne ar the Capistrano Beach Club.
She was dead on arrival at South
Coast Community llospital in South
Laguna.
Her husband. J ohn L. Taylor, who
spent the night in th e hospital along
with daughter Christle. 9, said he reallied
the stalled Oatbed truck wasn't moving
too late to swerve and miss it.
-The vehic le's emergency lights were
blinking, CHP officers said.
Police said Miss Wilson was injured
Last Thursday In a cyc ling tragedy caused
when she tried to miss a basketball
that rolled Into the street at Lola Avenue
and Wasco Road.
· She Jost control and was throv.·n to
the pavement. suffering a skull fracture.
Hudspeth died shortly after his
motorcycle slammed into a car turning
left ooto Ford Dr ive from Euclid Street
in Fullerton Saturday night.
The accident is still under in·
vesligation.
Trudeau Pays Visit
MATHU RA., India (A Pl -Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of
canada, en route to a meeting of British
Commonwealth leaders in Singapore,
stopped over for a visit lo the birth
place of the Hindu god Lord Krishna.
DAILY PILOT
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'
A construction change order authoriza-
tion that would result in a $6511 credit
to the overall cost of buildin g University
High School carries with it a request
for an extension of the contract com·
ple tion date by 2S days.
The extension request moves the con·
tracted completion date to Jan. 8.
Originally, the new high school was due
to be finished by Dec. 10.
Three reasons are offered for the
delay, including 21 days extension due
to the July and August strike of
sheetmela1 workers. three days for a
dlstrict·approved change order to ln.!lall
electric wirlng for an ou t.door kil n, and
an additional da y for delayed po\Jfing
of concrete due to installation of un·
derground utilities in the auto shop.
While suudenl.! and faculty moved into
University High on J an. 4, the building
ha.! yet to be finished. "No notice of
completion has been filed for board ap-
proval, ·• a dis trict business office
spokesman said. UnUJ the notlce of com-
pletion is approved by the board, the
contractor cannot be paid, she said.
If the change order including the ex-
tension is approved , Shirley Brothers
construction company, builders of the
first phase of the $4.5 mi llion school,
would be relieved of responsibility for
the delayed completion of the school.
Amoog expenses to the dietrlct caused
by the delayed opening of University
HJgh School was a $5 ,000 expense to
bus students to Mission Viejo High School
for double seulons that ended with
Christmas vacation.
ln other actions, the board will consider
an opinion from the County Counsel
that the district's Nov. 3, S25.8 million
bond issue was successful, although the
measure failed to receive a t1.1,·o -thirds
majority.
Lag1ma to Study
Differing Forms
Of Government
Charte r versus general law municipal
government will be the subject of a
Laguna Beacb City Council study
session at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in city
ball council chambers.
The long-delayed study was requested
by councilman Charlton Boyd, who said
Monday, "There are many pros and
cons an d T'm neither ve ry strongly for
nor again!t charter. but my feeling is
thal the charter system, in general.
permit!! more home rule.
"There are exceptions. but generally
Jt permits· a municipality lo 11ovem Itself
in more areas lhen are permitted to
a general law city. which is heavily
dominated by state and federal pre-emp-
tlons."
Boyd said bis principal concern is
the fa ct that "most of our laws are
archaic and need updating -In fac t
many are complete ly unworkable -end
since so many need to be redon e, perhaps
It would be slmpler to have them com·
pletely replaced by a charter written
in 1971 and 1972 on the buls Gf here
and now needs."
If tbe city has enough significant com-
munity problems to warrant 1peelal local
le&islation, Boyd aaid, he would favor
the wriUnc of a charter for Laguna
Belcb by a cfU.zens' committee which
11Jo would remain "In mol'f!I or less
constant sctislon" to keep the charter
up IO date. [
One prlvile1e or a cbarter city is
that of aetllnc llP a local taxing' authority .
In !Omt areas, now prHmpted by the
state and rederal 1ovemmtnts.
Opponents of lhe dlarter system cite
the cost of reviewing and updaUna all
existing ordinances and the danaer of
over1labt in replaclnj: tbem wl lh 1 new
aet of laws
While t~tre are more 1entral J1w
then ch11rter cities lo the state as a
whole. two major Orange Coast com·
munllie!i, Newport Beech end HunUn gton
Beach, operate as cbart.er cities.
lod ... ""'"""'· -'lile tdea ll to encourqt modernltaUon
ot equJ.pment and ex-pansion of pro-
duclion. In recent months industries have
spent frugally on new p 1 ant s and
machinery.
Nixon is expected to leave San
Clemente somelime this wet!k but a
firm time has not been announced.
Il is expecled he will make an ap-
pearance in Washington late this wee k
before member1 of the Republican Na-
tional Commilltt. The committee ii to
n1:1 me a successor to National Chairman
Rogers C. B. ~1orton. It is expected
the choice will be Sen. Robert Dole
of Kansas, a Nixon stalv.'arl. The While
house isn't saying.
Since flying here on a semi-vacalion
last week, the President has taken a
few swims in the heated pool of his
seaside villa , has walked on the beach,
driven in southern Orange County and
visited C11 lalina Island.
He walked down to the beach Saturday,
his 58th birthday, taking two dogs with
him and occasionally getting hi.! feel
wet in the .!urf.
He celebrated the birthday with famil y
members including brother Doiald of
Newport Beach.
The President told Press Secretary
llonald Ziegler that the first real vaca-
lion in his life ocC'Jrred two decades
ago when he wa s 38. Ziegler quoted
the President as saying he is ha ppy
in his job and optimistic about the future.
The President also quoted President
James Knox Polk as staling that anyone
wilh the duties of the Presidency bas
little time for leisure.
Court Rejects
Plea to Halt
Channel Wells
WASHINGTON (AP) -Victims of the
1969 Santa Ba rbara oil spillage were
turned down t o d a y by the Supreme
Court in a bid to halt further drillings
in the California channel.
The Santa Barbara offici als, business-
men, boat owners and conservationists
wanted the court to enjoin drilling: of new
wells and construction of a drilling
platform until a publi c hearing ha.! been
held ..
The court made no comment as it
routinely announced it had decided 1 to
(I not to hear the dis pute. Justice Wil -
liam O. Douglas an d John M. Harla n
did not participate and gave no explana-
tion.
Last April the U.S. Circuit Court in
San Francisco ruled hearings were no1
required under lnterlor Department and
C.Orps of Engineers regulations. The is-
sue of whether the regulations are un-
constitutional is now b e f o r e a threc-
judge federal court in Ca\ifomla.
The Santa Barbara people, all dam-
age victims in the January 1969 oil
spillage, sa id they could show new dril-
llngs pose a danger of leakage and con-
tamination. The Justice De partment, in
opposing the appeal , cited the findings
of a scientists pan c I that continued
drilling and deplet ion w o u Id reduce
pressure and lessen the likelihood or
blowout.s.
In 1969 the Interior Department adop1 ·
rd a regulation au1ho rizing public hear·
1ngs for a proposed leasing progrinn
but not requiring them The leases in
the Santa Barbara case wrere award·
ed in 1968. Therefore, the Justice De·
\)artmenl argued, the public hearing
regulation woul d nol apply to Santa
Barbara e\'en if it was mandatorv.
Uniun Oil Co. has begun drilhn~ nr1\
v.•el ls 1n the channel and the Corp~ of
Engineers has decided to issue platform
ronst ru clion permits.
Laguna11 Makes
Citizen Arrest
On Home Visitor
Laguna Beach police stopped a vehicle
on Coast Highway early Sunday mornlng
aft.er the driver ran a stop si1n and
a red light, but the driver didn't get
a ticket.
RoberL Denise, cf 530 N. Coest
Highway, explained he was in a hurry
to get to the poUce station to turn
over a burglar he had just caught in
his kit.che n.
Police said Denise returned home with
his wife at 12:45 a,m. Sunday to fi nd
his house lights blazing and the television
bl aring. Standing before an ope n
refrigerator, oUlcers said, Den i a e
dlscovercd Larry Vernon Kruse, 25. of
La Pue.nt.e, reaching for on evening
snack.
Denise made a citizen's arreet and
took Kruse into custody. Police gaid
Kruse later told them he I.bought he
was in a friend's home and was as
surprised 11 Denise -when the homeowner
arrived. Kruse ls beln& held on suspicion
of burglary. .
Harvard Names Bok
Its 25th President
CAMBRI DGE, Mass. (AP ) -Derek
C\Jrtls Bok, dean of H ar v a r d Law
School, today was na med 2Sth presldt.nl
of llarvard Universlly, the nation's old~
tlSt unive rsity, by thl' university '• Board
or Overseers.
Ii
I
. .Jogs On
Chilly January temperatures did not upset the regimen of this deter-
mined jogger. The youthful exercise buff, silhouetted against the
late alternoon sun. clips off the yards along the sands of Lagu na
Beach. The water temperature v.·as a chilly 52 degrees and the air
temperature v.•as less but the Jogger kept \varm._ --------
Clemente 1-lospital G1·oi1p
Seel{s Billboa1·ds 011 Site
Offici als of Chapman General Hospital
will se ek permission \Vednesday for 1wo
billboards and a construction hea d·
quarlers building for their ne1,o,· hosp1!al
project in San Cle me nte.
Planning commissioners v.·ill hear the
request by the Chapman fl1anagement
Corporation in a public hearing Y.'ed·
2 Boys Survive
550-f oot Plimgc
In Silverado
Two teenage boys were seriowly in-
jured Sunda y night when their small
car pl unged 550 fe et duwn a Silverado
Canyon wall.
The youths v.·ere rcmo\'ed from the
canyon four hours 111 \cr after a rescue
effor! carried out far mto the cold nighl
Orange County firemen directed Lhe
rescue v.·hich brought out David Burk .
16. of 28216 Thisa Way, and his passenger
Mike McCorm ick. 15. of 29181 Sleepy
Hollow. both of Silverado Canyoo.
The accident occurred on a narrnw
dirt roadway which leads to Santiagn
Peak, about five miles above the
Si!verado fire station.
Burk ls suffe ring from a compoun1!
fracture of the left leg and McCormick
incurred chest injuries, officials reported.
Their car went off the road about
~:30 p.m. and was reported by an
unknown person using a citizens band
radio to reach firemen . Fortuna tely , the
accident was witnessed by a fotlow1nJ?
ca r driven by Rciymond Ham m. 15 of
Lakewood.
Hamm . his brother Gary. 15 :ind \Vayn1•
Rcntley. 16. of Norwalk climbed dnv.·n
the sleep canyon to the injured boy.
Burk told thP.m hi' lost control nf
the car v.·hen he applied the brakes
at about ?O miles an hour on a curve
which threw th!' vehicle agains1 lhe
mnunta1n s1de and then back across anrt
off the IO-foot ~oadway
Jeeps carrying members of a car club
fn11 QY.'Cd and nne of them had the rad1n
by 1,tricb the distress call was sent
In atl 2~ men were involved 1n 1hf'
rescue includmg members of the sheriff s
department search and re scue lf'am and
Cleve.land National f ores! oifiC'1als.
The yo uths h!!rt In he pulled up the
sidr. of the cliff by winches, They harl
been placed in tilter baskelS.
nesday.
If approved the conditKlna\ use permit
will guarantee the launching of the
hospital pro1rc1 in comi ng weeks.
Officials of 1he hosp ital plan a con·
valescent and board-and care facility
to be built along side an out-care hosp ital
nn acreage along Cami no de los Mares
in the extreme northerly area of San
Clemente.
Dr. Ralph Graham. who led a sue·
ce~sful elfort t.n \\-Test official sanction
for ii hospital in San Clemente from
a competitor last year, ha s prom1sC'd
his San Clen1ente General Hospital woold
QpC'n its doors to its first p<iticnts before
the end of this year.
The use rcrrnit. for t.he construction
information office and bil!Doards i~ the
last offici i'll city act.ion needed tn launch
the large building projecl. except for
rou tine approv al of precise plans.
Other action planned fnr the com -
m1ssi11n's 7 30 p.m. rnccling includes
further consideration of a request by
lhe South Coast Girl's Club. which ic;
asking to use a lot at Bonita Canyon
Park for a permanenl club bul\d ing .
The land v.·nuld lie near the existing
Boy's Club fac ili ty Comm issioners v.·ill
receive detailed information on proposed
financing for the girl's clubhouse.
In another recreational matter, com-
mi ss ioners wi lt contin ue discussion of
the relocation of the two tennis cour1s
;it the community clubhouse to a new
site a! the new 11·ater reclamation plant.
Co unty Teenager
J{ilJed in Snow
A v.·1nter sport outing to the Big Bear
11rea ended in tragedy Saturday night
fnr a group of OrRnge County youths
.,.,.hen one was crushed to death as his
tobogg.1n careened under R car.
Rngr r T ChRdwick. 18. of 611 Glen-
rosr SI . Orange. was pronounced de11d
-'ll R nearby ho!lpltal following the ac·
cident In Barlon Flats.
San Bernardino Coun ty sheriff's depu·
t1rs idcn11 f1f'rl the dri\•er invol\'ed a:;
l rv1n Lav.·cr~· 42.. nf Garrl('n~ ;1nd sairl
hr was no! cited for anv traffic viola·
l!On .
The f11tal acc1denl apparl'nt ly resull-
ed from Chadwi ck's inability to control
thr <;\!!d ;is it skirlded into the street
from an adJaceol slope.
ON ALL NEW AND USED
ITEMS
... EWELRY
~ UPTO 50o/o OFF
Hospital
Due to Open
Lt Sun1n1e1·
A 126-bed, general hospital adjacent
lo Saddlcback Community College in
Mission Viejo is due to open by mid·sum-
mer,
t\-1ission Comntunil y Hospital is nearini;:
completion of its base unit that liter
will be expanded to 250 beds. The hospital
will serve the growing Saddle.back area.
More than 60 doctors are underwriting
financi ng for lh t: hospihi l, ils future
expansion and related fal'1tities planned
for the ta-acre rnedical campus site.
No fundraising campaign 1.1,•ill be
necessary , a spokesman for Mission VieJo
~1cdical Company, o v.· n e r s and
developers . said.
The ha;pital sill' at Crown Valley
Parkway and the San Diego F'reeway
was· the original interim site for Sad·
dleback College which has moved onto
its pcrrnanenl site
A cooperative nurse I.faining program
between the col!cge aud hospital has
been established .
Students will begin studies in nursing
at Saddlebaok in the fall. Dr . Bernard
Turbow , chai rman of the education
liaison cnn11nittec, said.
Planning £or the serviles lo be offered
at Mission Community Hospita l was bas-
ed on survevs of area nr.eds.
lncludod ·in total beds available will
be 12 obs!etric. beds. Othc( services
include a pediatrics rlepartment, an
9vcrsized , 24-hour emergency an d
diagnostic and treatment center. an out·
patient unit. radiological s er vice s .
laboratory. intensive care unit. cardiac
care uni t. surgical cen ters an d a radio
isotope program.
"The South Orange Counly area has
long been in need of full service medical
care. an rl ~1ission Community has been
designed and programmed lo aS.!ure it,"
a spokesman said.
Along with the hospltal. the medical
carnpus will provide a fi ve-s tory medical
office building. a !38·bed convalescent
hospital and a 100-bcd board and care
home for the elderly.
A helicopter par\ 10 handle emergencies
\\•ill be included ln lhe lirsl phase of
construction.
Helen Palmberg
Rites Tuesday
funeral services will be held Tuesda v
for Helen D Palmberg. a Laguna Hill~
resident and life..-long Pducator who died
Thursday ;it Snulh Coast Communit y
Hospit al. She v.·as 72..
The Rev John C .Jenk ins of the United
~1ethndis! Church of Lagunfl Hills will
officiate the 2 p.m. services a t
McCormick. Mortua ry Chapel in Laguna
Beach. lntcrment will follow 1 l
f ilirha\'cn ~femorial Park
!\.1rs. Palmberg, \1·hn lived at 2111·E
Avcnida Majorca, Is su rvive d hy her
husband. \Villlam: a stepson. Arnold ;
a brother, Ed\vnrd Davis. of L<iuisian11 ;
;i sister. Mrs. L-Oulse McCullough of
La Mesa: (11·0 grandchil dren and lhree
g re« t-grri ndch i !dren.
,\lrs. Paln1bcrg WiJS a graduate or
thr Industrial Institute in Louisiana 11nd
served on the board of tr ust ees of the
institute ror many year~ At Leisure
World. she was Active in !he Women's
Club and the Califo rnia Club.
1\ntritional Speech
Se t at Res taura nt
Natritional consultant Carious r .
~f:'lS(lfl v.·ill discuss !he crfecl!i of
hyo~lyccm1;i -the disorder l)r lov.· blood
<:11g;1r-1n a !;:i lk Tuesda_v at ~ p.m
in the V11lagr Inn restaurant in
Capistrano Beach
The fr ee presentation will &tart 11t
8 p.n1 . under sponsorship nf Lile Center
llealth Food.~.
OVERSHIPMENT OF
!IYis~g~· 3001 ~ UP TO • /OOFF
GUITARS ....
1 t.tl
WILL SELL 10% s1295 ABOVE OUR COST
COMPARE
6-Mt o.ll•n .. ,,._ ,,_
PEOPLE IN THE KNOW SAVE MONEY EVERYTIME THEY BUY -IT IS NOT EASY TO BUY
FOR CASH, BUT IF YOU HAVE CASH, BANKAMERICARD, OR MASTER CHARGE YOU
CAN SAVE TREMENDOU S AMOUNTS ON EVERYTHING EVERYDAY.
FIND IT HERE FIRST
Ratitis COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
1138 NEWPORT ILVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN COST A MESA Batwaon Herbor & Broedway
' l
)
)
TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan
• ASK HER IFN IT'S
AWRIGHT IF1'l 1
,_-__,
·..,., .... _ -· .... __ _
MUTI AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
PICK HER UP FETllHE
WINCE 1'NITT. AT
ATh A' CLOC K!
+lE HAS ONl.Y--
ONLYONE SUIT
TO tllS NAME!
50
W+lY
OOESJll'T
+lE WEAR
i+lAT?
H A.VlN G &EBI
O'RlVEN HOME !Y
Mil. T's CHAUl='r:EUR:,
SAM Pli:IVER' IS
A&OUT TO ENTf~
Hl5 AP.&.RTMENT
WHEN HE HEAfS
DON'T n:Y .l.JIYTHOJG
FUNNV, DlllVEll! WA.LK
IM QUIET-Lll(E :
I TMOIJ6HT TME
VOICE WAS F#..MIUAR',
ELMO .. !UT WMA.T's
THE 64.IN roll?
A. VOICE
6E+ll!Jt1 MIM ~
PllAIN JANE
!DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R A. POWER j
ACROSS 45 Popular
rt sort
1 --Godunov ~1ta
II Chief ~a Bird
11) Taj Mahal 51 British
site rompos rr
14 Ho llywood's 52 Chan9ts
~ rss Head \ht ti tie
15 Laod 54 Dtsttnd ants
mrasllft of Levi
16 Vth ic lt, 58 Ancl othtrs :
of 1 sorl Latin
17 Com r to 5'1 lrl sh
a po int fairies
18 Rtstln9 bl l'la rd off
pl ate &2 Sttd
l' Window covering
on it &J Cosmtl1t 1 [~oriomic: )8 Dotie al
20 Count y bas t
t~tcut ivt 64 roolish Cooperat1011 procl 11ct
Adm inis· 39 Acc tpls, 1s
12 lilake proplt traliori : coriditlons :
!nsant 65 Carud il n Abbr. 2 words
2.f Carr oll politician; 8 Barrtn ~2 Undtr
characltf Informal ~ Aband oned no1mal
26 Pantry &6 Forgtt to
27 O~t rbt<11inq mention
woma n; &7 ~111's nam t
St ang DOWN JO Chill
ship ci rcumsllncts
10 Attire 43 Reduc t
11 ''Excel!tnt 1" greatly
12 Ala ls or ~6 Genrration
Urals ~7 Barbaraus
Jl l11strumtnt 13 Tut kish ~8 1'Ttrrlllc!"
32 Bla nd I Puts chief ~9 Kind of
37 M1lh monty on 21 "Fct 51'\l tnt l" 1ocktl
sub itcl; a horse
Abbr. 2 Harem
38 Ex clusive ,,,,. 23 Ethn ic 50 Walkin9 ---·
911111ps 2 words
25 --acc11unt 53 Fakt
rights 3 M a!urt
to ust 4 Say Z7 Wild an ima l 55 Ra in rr11!y
28 ·--bodltd har d
40 Otm ur e rtptl11'd ly
'l Rising 5 Migb-
1.J Tr lb t of ~itched
lndo-Ch in1 6 urasian,
~4 T ltlt--t .g.
29 Ort ssts up 56 Stat.
J3 E9ght1d Gatlic
34 RtPtal 57 A9tnt:
35 Fly high Suff ix.
J& "Auld ling --"60 H i9h pr It st
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
'/OUtrE HELPING IRA
PLAN HIS C/\REEJ< 7
JrEVE ll4S JI/ST
SIJ66ESTED
A SUSPECT
FOl/7111!
BOMBl>.G
WHEN A
')tJIJ1I{ WAL KJ'.
INTO 7H£
•MONITOR~
OFFICE-
""
_,---·--
1llATlL llE
JUST i'1'i()j~ DEAR!
YOU MAY LAU.
FOR USAT
EIGHT! /v.t!--'
(,
By Al Smith
ltlE
+lOl.IDAYS
ARE OVER 1
By Harold Le Doux
TI-I/I.TS WHERE VOU'l?
LIKE ME TO ee. ISN'T
IT, DRIVE R!WHAT Kl~D
oi:: ... STOl?Y OID YOU
61YE Ml/:. T ... wur ME .
=\
By Frank Ba9inski
YES,
MIS~ PEAC",
!!UT
HE'S SO
'1"1SR'R10L. Y
L-AZY.'
--------
'
Ll'L ABNER
FOR A MlllOil Ii' A WHK?-
"'-'T-PIEY'RE. ~ A4UP£1t!5!!
SALLY BANANAS
H ~, 1 ·,,.,, """' <>& ~ ""'""
t-w%~S~ H~ \j<>Wv' nM.& ~I
GORDO
ANIMAL CRACKERS
~MO 1"0LD llOU
n1A1" YoU COULD
ll6E MY SllAMPOO ?
OR?
By John Miles
•SOF'T, cusµv uos..
!>IG PAY,
60 DAYS ANNUAL
VACATIO N ,
NO JlE5PONS16/LtTY.
EXECUTIVE STATUS.,
MANY f3EN EFIT5;
HOURS, IO .. lf,
't·DAY L.\IEEK.•
""· n. a..1-... ! ........ !"'4lu ..
. J (T),b.oJ NI
By Mell
SEE?
THERE'S
t'l-WAYS
"' C ATG-1 .
By Charles M. Schull
...-~~~~-,-~~
NN Wl.1URE CAU6HT
SITTING ON Ml/
Sl«lll¥WI 6ETS
Monday, J11n111ry ll, 1971 DAIL V PILOT :fl
••
0
= c"'M"""L't:==::::!~.J..:::::_--.::::!
HUl>l>Y, l<Avo, OR
'iOUILL Bf' L..ATo
FO~ SCHOOL-!
By Charles Barsotti
By Gus Arriola
... ".._.,... __ _., ........ .-
By Ro9er Bollen
• SHf CO!Jl,D HAVE /!ii"
LEAS"!" l ef Ml> ~IJ5!0 !
""C'"''"""--....
1. /: -.
' 1: ' '
:,'.:
-~
. 7
1 • ""
" ill/11
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
I
II DAILY PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE
L£GAL NOTICE
(.I.Se. HO ,. ,.,,.
Cl:•Trl'ICATE 01' IUllNEIJ
l'ICTITIOUS •lllM N .. ME
IAlt )t1S Tne ~,..,,,,,.,...., aou 11..,tot c•rll,.,.
•11.i lit ii condu~l"9 • bl/01~~· u
•JI S•nlll•<> Slreel, S•n•• .l.n• Countv
d Or•nae C•l•lorn•• ~Ade• Ille !lctltlo""'
lirtn n•m• ol II UPTHEGROVE ELEC
lRIC COMPANY INC •na Tn•I utot
l lrm I• comPo\M! of rh• lo!lowlf\9 ""''""" wf'lou ntm1 Jn full and pl•C• ol ttslden<e
h •• lo!low'I to-wll IUU..•<I Uplllfo!l•DY• Ot? Al1>1on
Orlv• Hunr.1111ton 8etcll C•lllornl•
011ted 0(-r I 1910
RIC.lltrd Uprhen~•<>•t
~T.l.TE OF CALIFORNIA
COUNTY OF" OA ... NGE u On Octot>.r 1, 1t10 t>eto•• me, •
Nori,., Pub/le •n •nd lot ••lot Countv •nd ~Ith! pe<'""1111v IDPffted Rldidtd
Uo1nt11rovt ~nown kl """ lo bf I~
oorson ,.....,.. n1mt I• 1ut>K•IW<I lo
"'• wllhln ln1lrumanl •"" ec~-ledslld
to .... 11111 111 •KeCUled 1111 .......
Wl!nen mY ht nd 1Ad •••I
Seref\ff H GtHft
Holl•'f OUlll!C In •"It
IOI' ukl Counf'f ind Si.re
Ml' c""'mlulon IKP1rtt ti 11-11
1tO•&RT W ••11101 SH I! Clla•mlft °"'""' C•lll ""6 Tt .......... ..U.JIH ""-' flubllsllt!<I Ortnge (0111 O•llY P ilot
.J1n;,.ry t 11 II 2S rf11 1'44 10
LEGAL NOTICE ----------lllOTIClf 01' TllUITl!l"'S SALi
TS N1 "HU
On ll>uri.d•• F1Dtu1r'/ ,, 1'11 II
11 OCI A.M TITLE INSUR .... NCE AND
TllU5T COM"ANY I S aulv 1ppo0onlecl
'''"'" under •Ml 1u•1u1"! to Oef>d m Trutl att*ll Novernbe' 10 lf6f E.Jt
~!Id Sv MA.Tl LUJ.lN I. El:LfND-'
LUJ ... N, hutblnd tn<I Witt t nd r..cordf>d
Novtmt>ft" it. 196t •• l•1>tr No 1on1, In boolt tr•r 11g1 130 m Offldar
RPCll'<I• In The o!tlct of ll>t Ca<mtv
R.-:;l>'dtr of Or1not Countv C~lllornl1 WILL SELL Al PUl!LIC AUCTION TO
HIGHEST B!DOElt l'OR CASH (PtVibl•
et !Im• of stl• •n l•wlul ff\on•• ol
Int Unit*!! S111Hl ., '"• '""'"" lrOf\I 1ntr1na lo lht Orl"lll Co u n ! Y
Cou""°"tt , locUW t i 1tlCI Civic Ctn1~r
O..lwt West. ~-m.,.ly WHI 11n Stree1),
51nl1 -.~1, (lllf0tnl1 oil roahl, Tolle
•no:! lnTt re•I CO<lVtVod !<t •"" """' Mid b'I ot u!Wlt• ttl<I Deed ol lru1I In
lh• pr-rty 1llu•IN1 In mo cnv ol
C0<I• -· In ulcr COilnlY '"" SIHt olotcrll)tod 1s
T~t E1Jf rK11n~u1t1r t J f..et •'
""' Wu! 1S'2 letl 01 Lot JOt ol
P<1we>0rl M"I l••cl tJ ptr l"llP
•K1l-In llooll 5 P•v• I ol MIK.llneou~ M ..... In ""' olfk l •' !he county •..:ardor of u l<I c()l,lnty
l~• •lfeet 1ddr1u and ot~er common
deol11nt1lon 11 1ny, ot '"• re1! Property
dflcrlbtcl tbowe II Purport"" 10 be
Ill Wesl 111n St , Cost• Mtt1
C•llfornl•
TM Uft(it'111~ 1ru~•H 11.SC!l lm•
•mi ll1bOltv lo• '"' ll'<o""<'"""' <tf rne 1•rttt 1<1ctff"ll oner oljlff common
d11l1n11lon 11 1nv, 1hown ntrt In
Stld 11t. w!ll l>e m1cr1, bit! w1tnaut
cov1n1nr 0t w1rrtntv """'•JI "'lmpl/!!'d •t111r<11,,., 11111 Don enlon er en
cumbrtrw:IP' lo ••• ltl• un11l11 D•l<>e•Dll
I Ym "' llM 1111!1 IKUrt<I by •1111 C•t<I
•>I Tn"I !O-W!I 'M U7 ?J wlln lnler11I
1•111" Juty 1 1t111 11 111 11ld f\Ole
Jirowlctt<I 1crv1ncecs 11 1ny, un111r lt\e
•• ....., "' 11ld Deed cl f ruit IHI
c.n1r11e1 ond "•~H• cl !hi Tru•!ff 1....i of ttie 1r11sh crt111<1 by Hid OHd
ot Trutl
The bene11cr1,.., una1r <••d Ott<! o!
Tru11 by ••~'°"' ol 1 ~r11cn or dtl1u11
In tnt otoll1•flon• sec11rld lh•rel>v ll@,1lof0ro PKUllcS •n<I oeUvtrod lo t~e unde'111nl'd 1 ... rlll!!'n Otcl•••tl<>n m o.i1u11 •"" O.m1na lor S•I•, •n<I ,..,11~n no1lce ol broecti 1n<I ot e ll!Cllon
lo CIUll tne <1M<lt'<Sl,nld 10 ,,11 111•0
1>r<>1>trt• to Hlll!V ••Id ubllGlll""~ • ...., 1~er11l!tr on Sl!1>I ll 1910 !he on
.,,,.,lgnecl c1uoecl u!d no!lc1 ot 1>re1cn
•n<I of ele<:Tlon ~ Ile rKOrlecl I" -
''"· PIGt 41 of t.1!0 Olllcl1I ltl'Cor1n, 0 1•e De<:~• ;f ltlO
TITLE rNSUll•NCE •f"O
lltUST COM"""'y •> 1110 l rUt1••
II• •nn scnwel'~
T•il••tt S11r Cfflct '
•utl>orlie<I 5•0N1ture
6MSl
l'u1>1,snod Or1no1 Coif! O•U• P ilot
J""u1r• • 11 11 1n1 10JO.lO
f EGAL NOTICE
ttOTICE Off TJIUSTEE' '"LI!
Ne F /C 7'J1 o~ J1nu1•v 111n 1t11 11 •~ oo 1 m
., 1n1 ....... Sl•IM She<il •""'""' lo
•~e 01<! Orang~ Coui"' Co11r! HQ11•-
c,1y ot S1nl1 ""' County o+ 01~"9•
$1~•• ol C1l1lar~·• BAN KE!!!. LANO IN VE~ll,IENT COM
"•NY. I con>OfAhOh !IOrm•tlV 8•n~er·
l nvo<t"''"' Com1>1n• 1 <0"''"'1 ""' "' TtuOT•• unde• IM 0...0 O! I" '1 ••PCY!eN tv ll!CH •RO ow1c;Hl 11 .. RlON • ...,
l("lHL'OiN C 8>\llTON MU\Of,'°" on~
'""" 1n<1 rec...-<lod Jul• JI I••• '" !IO<llo ~l1, fl1oe 916 o! OHie••• l!KO•~· OI
Or•~a• Countv C1l•lor.,I• Qowon •o '~
curt •n onGet:itod<><'I• In t1vor ft! 11111~
t tl MOrt9'1g• c.,,,,o•nv ot (•l•!orn•• 1 .:or-•tlon ,_ own.., •n<I h•ld b~ e,1n~lf1 l/0QrlQ1g1 c""'"'"' DI (•llf<I<
flit, 1 co"'°rf tlon b¥ rouon o! lhf
brN ch ot cl'l••n ol>ll~1tlo•" ·~u<od
1~1•e0¥ nn1i,,1 of .. 111cn ... , •Ko•O!'a
S.pt•mtr 1'11>, 1t111 •n ll(l(IO; U(l\ o•v•
llJ o! N ld O!fiCltl llf<DtGJ B&n>I'<>
Ltr>d lnYlll'l'llf'I '""'PlnY, I (orpa•a
flon wllt Hll 11 oubllc .. .oenon to thf
hlD"'st bl001r IOr ct lh o•••D•• Jn l•w
lui man•v Pl 1h• UMttd s 111e1 •' 1111
11m1 al .al~ wl!kci111 wur•n!Y 1• ro
1111e .OIHHlon or 1ncU"'l>0<1nc15 in.
lnl••"' '"""''""' lo 1...r now ""!d b• ••Id Tru<IH u....in ••Id aoccr cl !•1111
'" '"" Ip !he f<;llowln• de><""lbetl PIOD .,iy, llllul led In !l>t CITY ol (O<!I Mou
Coo.mlV OI O••nV<, St1t• o! t1hl~•nl1
... w!I
"•oa••tv l'aare••: ?111 P u en 1 ~
A\'lfllll CO.II MffJ, Ctlll0tn!1 Loi
ll of Traci ?JU, •• snown "" 1
MIO rKOra..d In 8oo!< 711 D~• ll
ol M/S<fllaMOUI MNI~ re<orO• "' or"'" Countv c1u1o .... 11 Ut:Cl!:"T tll c:r11<11 ofl ot!tc~u,., ••s. bt••· 11•h•ltvm an<! t ll 11.lnO•fd
1ubiltnct1 Incl o!htr m lr>et•I• ""°" •ncl In Mhl l•nd e•ce1>t m• rlqM
lo u11 Inf t>r>r1i..... DI Ille $Urt1c1
of 11!1 l1nd for llrllll!'t o!>fr~Tlon1
mini,,. or 1uar,..,ln1 ot 111 11.lnclt,
lnc!WI"" IN! llOI 1•clu1lvo ot oll -n •rUflftll, or1 -lol>m11<>t, 1n1nlllt
-rtlloM. IO'l"lltr Wllh 11>1 ""' of 1•kl ""'Kl tor ofl .... ui. ll'lkl 1unnt11. mllllr11 1•Ct ¥1llon1 ., "1>1111 pro¥1o:IH,
llOWWM'. ti!.-..... ""•11 no/ ~ (-"rlltd lcr """'11111 1l1nt cl•llllnoa or
w(f'I otr..r CINf•llon1 wl!IC~ In NI
WIY UM -lrl I AY Wlf •NKI !tie
wrf•C*' ri.tih Qf Mic! Ill"' 11'111 wtlido
crcr nor M,., uld i..n11 .i • po1,.1 i.o tNt> • fief IO Mid •url1e9
fltr ..... ---et' l>IY I... Otlllpl\oftl MOll'MI "" .,Id o..d lncll11Ht11 .....
(fllrwa, ltllll -DI "" lnJtlH, 941W~ K •nY, IJM•t "'-,.,,.,, ef Mid dloed, ....... ,._,_ •nd W2'6Jt,
.. .....w ,,_... ., "" "'"' ""''"" 1W MW ...... ..._ lfthrel ,,,,r_
"""'" ,....If t. "" • Ill uld lllt9 flfo,d IW llW' ,,..,..,...., D9"'1 0.CI n•r J1, 191' ...,._.. LAnrl ...... ,1111111 ,_,,. ·--(fol'IM,.,., ..,...,, lnvfftl'l'ltflt -· ._. .. ,_
•r e1ey111 \... AWl'klt
Altltt.,,t ._,....."' .......
1'"9111Mo1 °'""" ~ 0•11• "llOI ,_.,w .., 11. 11. 1m t~it-10
•The' DAILY PtLOT-
T ops ift lout Sporll
SC Monlby, J•nuo11r~ 11 l'l11
Fi1·st Model
Of Trailer
Introduced
T~ f 1 r s t production·hne
model of a new. motor home,
lhe Revcon 240, was com~
plettd recently at Revcon
Inc "' new manufacturing
planl m Fountain Valley, John
Hall, president of the ftrm,
announced
Fifty add1t1onal models of
lhe n1otor borne are now under
C<111SlNcl10n at the facility.
' We have the capability of
producmg: up lo eight Revcons
per day," liall said "1n 1971,
"e plan to have more Ulan
500 Rev cons on the road,"
Revcon Inc. was founded
three years ago by Hall who
has had more than 20 years
experience with A1rstream,
lhe world's leading travel
trailer manufacturer Revcon
ts a subs1d1ary of Duntt
Properties Corp , Santa Ana,
wh.ich 1s 1n turn a subs1d1ary
or the Los Angeles-based
Pacific L1ght1ng Corp .
(NYSE J
The Revcon 241.1 has been
designed as a top-<>f the line
1notor home priced 1n the
$17.t'.100·$19 000 range
The new motor home is 24 5
feet long, 7 S feel wide and
6 5 feet high
Ust11g lightweight alummum
monocoque construction, the
Revron 240 is powered by a
front-wheel drive Oldsmob1le
Toronado 375 horsepo.,,;er (45!'1
cu 1n ) engine. The unit comes
equipped with au I om a I 1 c
transmission, po"er steering
and p(l\\er front disc brakes
''The use of aircraft t\•pe
construction combined \vtth
the Oldsmobile po"er plant
gives the Revcon 240 po"er
roadab1hty stability a n d
strength unavailable 1n any
other production m o t o r
home ," Hall said
1'he Revcon will sleep six
adults and 1s completely equip-
ped with kitchen fac1hlles a
d1n1ng area and a bathroom
with an extra.large sculpture
fiberglass tub and shower
cumb1nat1on
'!'he new motor home is
manufactured fn a new
milhon-dollar plant 1n the
Orange Count v community Qr
F'ounlain Valley. Cu st o m
fiberglass, v.ood and meli:ll
shops along \v1th the main
assembly bwlding are loca ted
at the facility
The new motor home "'111
be sold and se rviced through
authorized Revcon dealers
The company forecast s
estabhshmenl of a second
pl ant 1n Dallas 1n 1972 Plans
call for Re\COn to produce
quahty m1n1-motor homes.
campers tent trailers and
houseboats
Bank Buys
FV Bonds
The Bank of America 1~
p1ck1ng up S720 000 10 school
bonds from 1he Fount ain
Valley School D1 sl r1c1 at an
interest rate of 4 8212 percent
Charles \\lood(rn associate
district superintendent said
t"o fac tors brought !he in·
tcresl rate under five percent
Jor the fir st time 1n t"o years
' One "e sold the bonds
on a 10 \ear pa~· ba ck basis
and the other 1s the general
lowering of the bonrl market "
The bond sale makes 'he
d1str1ct ehg1b!e for more stale
f1nanc1ng on sch o o l con
struction. The d1str1cL ha s
three schools planned for con·
struction with stale help thi s
)ear ~1ore apphcabons can
now be submitted
The past two years bond
lnlerest rates soared near the
!ft.veil percent mark.. Recent
drops 1n the market have
brought the rates down, but
now below five percent
By offering to pay back the
bQnds U'l 10 years, the school
district made its bonds more
allractive to the bank.
Sully-Miller
Names New VP
Paul D. MacMahon, Orange
County con,,truction manager,
has been elected vice pres1-
c1tnt of the SUlly·M1ller Con·
tracting Company
MacMahon heads S u 11 y •
MJller's site development and
subdivision operations. I n
Orange County which Includes
exravaUon, pl~ work, storm
dtatn gystems, b r 1 d g f! s ,
asphalt paving, 11nd concrete
\\'Ork.
1,IWS OP Oil PAINnN•I
WHOLISALI WAllHOUU
OHJf YO THI PUlllC
30°/o off
!flt •• IOI ...... I AlllT& A .. . .,.. .........
Ou.L•U WAJOI•
In High Gear Complete-New York Stock LlSt
Ford Dealer Wins Award
WIUt CJrl C1nkn1~n
"My firs\ new car salrs
Quota was ()ne new Ford ill
1nonth "
{)(course times have chang·
ed end the man speaking
Theodore Roblf'lS, Sr , had JUSt
DEALER FETED
Theodore Robin•
been named one of il winner3
of the national Time ~1agaz1ne
Quahty Dealer Award
Robins. who 1s president or
1 heodore Robins Ford 1n
<..:osta t.lesa, will be presented
his a\\'ard al the 54th Na!Jonal
Automobile Dealers assoc1a·
lion convention Jn San Frati·
CISCO thi s "eek
The Time A1vard s, now rn
their second year honor
America's out s tanding
autom-0b1le dealers and are
presented in co-operation w1!h
NADA, the nttional assocla.
tlOll Robina: was nominated
by the Motor Car Dealers
A:iltoelation of Orange County
and the 71 national winners
narrow the field considerably
from the 31,000 dealers across
the coonlry.
1971 marks Robin's 50lh an·
n1versary in the auto business
and he's seen many changes
in the bus1neS! smce opening
his one-man 1arage 1n Balboa
"The only thing I knew about
autos was that they had to
have good working engines,''
he said
He became a Ford d::!aler
by accident. "Two men came
to the garage one day offering
me pretty good money for
the business They said lhey
could be the new Ford dealers
but needed a bu1ld1ng ~fore
they could get the franchise "
Robins told them 1t ~asn'l
for sale and 1mmed1ately
headed for Los Angele s.
Before the day was out \he
garage was re-named Rob1f1S
Ford The quota was one car-
a month and his 1nventorv
consisted of one new Ford
He easily remembers his f1r:.t
sale as the bill of sale ror
$007 15 hangs framed on his
office wall "We didn't wor ry
much about financing in those
<lays either,'' he said
He's moved the bus1nes~
lour times 1n the last 50 years
going to his present location
1n 1965 Jle now stocks over
:WO new cars and trucks and
has 110 employees,
During his Anny Fl u1ng
Service da ys, he was the first
man to fly over J4,+40 foot
~1ount Shasta, tn a open
cockpit plane without oxygen,
Yo11r Money's Wortli
a feat lhal gamt'd him world· "*u• Fd wkie coverage He set a world Abtllt-• 1 11 "CF 11'11 JM ~ record of 156 mil~ per A.cn>tCl•w •
I A.cm• Ml.I lb hour In a: 1920 f y1ng meet 11<1m1e~ !6g •• Long Bea .. Ad M1111, 20 ... en. A<l<I•~ 151!
Robins Is a director ol U\e $~1. , •
Motor Car Dealers A.uoc.1ahon A~ul•~ £:. 2
of Southern Cal1forn1a and a :1~,..:.nc-'Xll>
past dlrecto. o! the Orange ::~~~"s
C<xlnty Dealers AssoetaLion AJ 1ndu11ri.1 A~r.
Actlve rn CIVIC affaU'S, he A.!1 G11 t Ill Al1tl11 lnt1r1 "'·as named 1968 ''Man <If the A1~toe :n
Y ,, N H AIO..rhn1 l6 ear by the ewport arbor "k •nAlu 1 M
Chamber of Commerce, and :J~~.';" :xr~
1n 1962 he was named "Cihzen !l/::L~ l':
of the Year" by Orange Coast :H::1"U: f':J
College !::~~.~~ 1;:
He 1s a director ol the !JJ1:11~,l~
Harbor Area Boys Club, :111=sr~11~.:i
Newport T<1morrow, Costa !11:,.,~uio~
Mesa Tomorrow. 0 ran~ e !i~:!Pfao'"°"
Coast tommorow and Boy ~:rAE, {n20 Scouts Explorer Group ~,,.,Es 11l'l &er ""' He1> JOr For lhe past 30 years he AmtH pU..JQ AA lrFlltr 10 has ~n a d1reetor of the •m A l•lln '° •a•~•r oSQ Newport llarbor Chaml>er of A erna1 2 1~
Commerce and has been ::::eri.~211020
A Ctn o!I IS president or that organ1zalton Am Cem•n! A Cto1ln I 60 twice, 1n 1937 and 1962 He "~·vsuo 1 ~
d I I Ar.•Spf4S0 1s a past presi en o the " 11n10 1 l!
Lions Club !01~,~~~111~
Robi ns "'as t>lecled to the !~eff:'!1~e:~
hrst Newpo rt High School !:!ie~~o ~"t,
Board of Trustees 1n 1929 ! 2~r~':;'115tr
He 1s a charter 1nember ~mH~:1 1 :g or the American Legion Post !,,,H~~DPl2~
291, 1s a past president of :"'M!dU~1 ~1 Newport Exchange Club and A Mt1c1. 1 10 ' A M!ICt~~ ~
1s a past director of Amigos !~.,~:~~·2110
VreJOS Clb !We~B~'0 2l~• He 1s a nati ve or Seattle, Am ~aunQ 1
""' ~hip llltb Washington A s~11 1 \IO
Robins 1~ married to the !:::~~~·, 70
A. St<IDU7! former Mae Becker They !'T"a./'...-1' "
have two ch 1 Id re n -"'" r&"ff ? 110 Am WWk ~ Theodore. Jr , a partner and Aw 1>••1r11
of AW~IPll ~J vice president I h e Am zinc:
I Ameron 60 dea ership, and Mary, a high Amiek 60•
school teacher ln Balboa, ~1ac1~ w
Calif :~:C .. 1~056
AmPCaPI wl Ampf~ Cor1> AmSt•r I 10 Am•tar pt 'II Am•lfd 2 41) Amltl J? ANcon I 90 -.ncn Hock 1 Ancor1> 5wc 1
Bargaii1 Cale11dar Outli11ecl
Ana Cl1v I :111 A1>1chfCp 2! ApccO l 191 !~t ~,a't1 06
.lRA Svc I 0. Arc~I~ ,!O• Arcn O•n 1 At••"~•lOI
By S\'LVIA PORTER
Desplle the fact that yon
race an cvrr·r1s1ng cost of
11\ 1ng for as many years
ahead as you can foresee you
<an sha~e 5 lo 50 percent
or even morJ' ofl !he prices
of most good~ and service~
}OU buy simply by follo"tnR
the guidelines 1n my hve col-
umns beg1nn1ng today
I guarantee lh1s -and I
do so even though 11 s pro-
bably that prices across-the·
consumer bqard will rise 3 lo
~ percent ' year throughwt
lh1s decade At an annual ratl'
of nse of 4 percent, your
cost or li ving "ould double
cverv 18 years or so
YoLI can for instance . .sa1 e
h11n<lrcds or dollars on your
overall costs 1ust by planning
you r ~pending lo take ad-
1•antage of the seasonal sav.
1ngs v.h1ch arc and Y.111 con·
t1nue to bt' a v a 1 I ab 1 e
throughout this era of in·
rta11on Or you can by the
same loken, waste hundred:>
nf dollars by ignoring lh1•
"BARGAIN CALENDAR" I
.subrn1t below
To be even more .specific,
1f you know you Wiil need
a specific item this year, 1t '~
silly to wail until the demand
for the 1tem is at its seasonal
peak and you are lea .st hkely
to get a discount
February 1s an excelle nt
month 111 which to buv air
conditioners and used cars
rugs and lamps. Do ::;o, and
\Ou can shave 10 to 30 percent
or more off the original prices
Fina11cial Officer's
Duties Brocide11ing
l\'E\\I YORK !AP!
No1\1here else 1n the executive
~u1te a r e respons1b1ht1es
hroadcn1ng as they are for
lhe chief financial officer No
longer Just a scorekeeper, the
CFO is no"' a COR 1n advance
planning and policy formula·
!Ion
The ~hange ha~n t been
abrupt although the alarming
drought 1n hr1l11d1tv that oc
1 urred dunnK the past 'ie11 r
highlighted by the 1nab1hty of
the Penn Central to raise
enough money lo remain sol·
vent. accelerated the change
Companies that once .... ur
ricd primarily about pro-
duction or me1 chand1s1 ng sud
den\y realized durln g the pasl
summer that th(<y could not
roulinely depend upon their
usual sources o[ financing and
so the CFO's duties assumed
greater importance
But {tnancmg 13 only one
of the factors 1n the lrans11lon
Qf lhe corporate money man
Complex laxes, n ~ w ac
cOWltmg procedures. mergers,
oomputer1zat1on. insurance.
pensions plans and profit shar·
1ng abo are forcing the CFO
to be more broadly mvolvcd
Reflectin g his growing im·
portance, salaries for CFOs
now generally range between
$50.000 and $7S.OOO. according
to • survey by lAe IT\anage-
ment con!Julllng hrms ot
Heidrick & Struggles, schedul-
ed to bt rtleased Feb, l.
The Unn rectived a S9 per·
cent response to a quell·
twnna1re ~nt to the chief
f1nanclil executives Uf the SOO
largt$l !ndw!J'lal companies
and 247 other companleir;, In·
cludln& utthlies and 1n:iurers.
From the rcphts, 11 drew
this profile of Uie CFO
He ts 51 compared w~th
SJ yearS of age hve )ear~
ago .Most likely his un-
dergraduate deJfrec Is from
Wl.5consln, JJllno~. Ne~ York,
Nor th"estern or Penn s}hania
un1vcrs1t1es There is a 40 per-
cent chance he has an ad·
''anced degree, most hkelv
from Jfarvard or NYU, and
a 33 percent chance he 1s
a certified pub!1c acC<>untanl
He 1s relallvely stationary
1n "hat es becoming an In-
< reas1ngly mohde business
\\Orld having worked for only
one or tY.O other employers
In fact 1f he works for an
insurance or utility concern
there 1s a 50 percent chance
that he had only one other
employer or none at all.
For some reason not tX·
plained 1n lhe study, he 1s
an officer but not a director
ol his company, although
He1dr1ck and Struggles ven·
lures the foreeast that he will
be found 1ncreas1ngly on cor-
porate boards 1n the future.
While his compensation IS
hkely to ~ between $50.000
and $75,000, he may in some
$100,000 1n 53.lary, bonus and
deferred pay. Jnc:reasmgly he
1s the beneflc18ry of stock
options and other benefits..
The survey demonstrated, 1n
fact, thllt salary today t.'1
really the bNe for com·
pensatlon rather than the total
amount Some 69 percent
reported they receive cash
bonuses, mort than SO percent
receive club membfrahip.1, ti
percent are given stotk op-
tions and 74 percent receive
maurance.
In his own mind. the survey
contt:nds, the CFO v1ew1
himself iis having "evolved
from a posture characterized
by rtslstanc~ to change to
that of one 1ggrtSSlvely seek·
Ing ll ' "
His emphasis, the repart
concludeti, "hAs moved from
financial reportin£ to financial
phuvung, from the. tedtni-
clan's role of historian to the
managt1lal role of
formulallng ct1rporate
strategy "
Arlan1 O S!t
August 1s a fine month Ill !~~~0~,/1 ~00 ~h!Ch lO buy rurs and garden· Arrnr Pl• I~ /\rm" Ck ID '"g equipment furniture and Arn.Ck o•J 1~ Arm Ru I <IO men's coats Do so, and you Aro Co•P 90
can shave another 10 to 30 ~1\d Jrf 1
1
10
percent or more of( the :r.J0 a~~ ... 16
AoldOG1 xr or1g1nal costs ~~~"s'\,~m
Buy re r r 1 g e r a 1 Q rs in ~;r~~11 '1"'1
.lanu:iry, m1 lhnery 111 July.. ~lic~ifi1s11''• Buy t"ys and clothes during Au 11 1cM1.;r 1 AtlRt~ oil 15 the post.Christmas clearances Au 111cn 011 AllRcn .,,, to and bathing su1ls and summer All•• Cllffn 1
J I Alll• Coro shorts <luring the post· u y 4 ATO inc: c.. markdown~ :~;~ ;~~ /\ulomln Ind Enough Here 1 ~ you r ~~~: c~cr~1 "Ba rna1n Calendar'' Clip it ""'ca ou10 l'I ' Awtr¥ PO 10 ~ave 1t. use it for maximum ~~r ~~c, 10 savings I pledge you 'll come A11ec 011 1:11
out spectacularly ahead
11< YCIU
WANT TCI I OY
A•r co....i11'°"-" Aoo1<1nc•• 1•m11H Dtc~ to Scnm! C'Ol/'lc'>•
Sc-I S"o•lle>
etd<lln• .....
fl~lldlno m111""" lu!Y'~"'
c ... """' Ctr~ u"d ~•I cov""' Cl>Otlr11n I clcll\•~•
Cnon~ ol1UWtre
Clolhf'S Cl•Y•'' Ji n
c .... , WV""" • ""' O•tl"~
Cu•!1•n•
Fur'
CO•!~ m•n •
G•rdfnln~ fQUlom•n!
h1•CIW .. f
'•b Now oee
Jui. ~c
J•n r oo Soo>I
Fl!'b Mtf Anrll
•ut No• DIK
J•n. "'"'. June Fon -.ua
J•n, Auo
Jon Aug
F ~rnMul!, ~w••w•r••
11mp\ J&n f ob
f\Jf:I 011
Holl m•n,
'"''"' ~ wet • L+n1ns bl~nk eT•
Pl.CO Qoor:IO
l!•dlo• '"'fO •• , •••
"'"""' Ruo• ,_,
511·-.. •
S<>et!, ... t•'
Sulll l"'1n'1 b<l1•'
llrt•
'•'•"''"" .. i. loYI
'City' Post
To Bryan
Don L.. Bryan has been ap.
pointed director of office leas-C•t>ot co ;oe
1ng for "The Cuy" 1n Orange. l:f~~~;"' Ctll1hn Mnor 11M? announcement w a s c..mo•t• •s C•m~ Sp 1 10 made by J ti-1. Moore, pres1-C•n Sov 1tw
dent of The City Management #~ 11::" l ~
Co fl I I •ntllt 1 D rporatiOn, an a 1 ta e com-'" c Met•
pany ol Kiaser Aluminum & :~ ~.JO Cbt~al Corporation : ... m l!w
"Mr. Bryan will direct the :~~ U
office leasing slaf( In all :f!2'', st!
phases or leasing our 18-story t;i::!~ ·~
BanJt of Americs Tower and '-'rl;.,. 1
all future highrbe office ~i0ct •11·\t,
buildings at The City ." Moore ~m• 3'
said. "He will report lo Jerry rn1 .fJ1 ••
Hay vice president Office i'n illli '•1
' ', nl!IL! Pf' M Development D1vulfln ' ..,ups fii rftlltE• 1
Prior lo accepting his posi· inr~: 11:
llon with The City 1'1anage-""' 5o¥• ' , (tofllt!U tGb
rnent Q>rporalion, Bryan wa91:;1t..1doao ast0elated with Fuller & Com· t•t 1.ir pf to 1u~1.-.1r 60 p3ny In Denver, a commercial ~.Ol>l'n inc
industrial real t'slalc firm He ... ~1111 ~ ..
has owntd and o~rated a l:!:!t • .:'~,. l
property M JI n II g e m e D l ~st':r' M'!~
business Jn Phoenix. 8:;.:Jr0:.1 1
10 + Vi ~Jl, S1 .+ 1 lfl'• -,, ···~ ' '· I'> t '•
I
lltodq, -11, 1971 SC DAILY PILOT J:J
Monday's Closing Prices f.omplete New York Stock Exchange List
A workman oil ]adder is so intent on his Work in
:;tale Capitol that he fa ils to n otice the bOss, Gov.
}l.onald Reagan, as the chief executive takes s troll
through building to visit legislators. ·
1970 Very Good Y ecir
Says FBI Director
WASH INGTON (AP) -To
F BI Director J. Edgar
Hoove r, 1970 was a very good
year.
More fu gi tives were located,
more organized-crime figures
con v ic t ed and more
fingerprinls checked than in
any previous year in the agen·
cy's history, the FBI chief
said today.
Arid, according to the FBI's
arilhmetic, iL all was done
at a profit:
"Fines, savi n gs and
re co v e ri es in FBI in·
vesligations during the period
~-reached the record figure of
over $422 million, a return
of $1.60 for every dollar ap-
propr iated for FBI opera-
tions," Hoover said in his an·
nual report. to Atty. Gen. John
N. Mitchell.
However, Hoo\'er reported , r: UP;::::.-,.....:::.·~
·1· Me11 in t~
" Service + ••
" ,, ..
· Na\'y Seaman Erne5t H.
"\'alencla , son of ~Ir. and Mrs.
Ernest H. Valencia of 8591
· Washington. Midway City, was
graduated from Fire Control
'School at the Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, Ill.
Airman William W. Striegel,
wn of Mr. and ~1rs. Rex
J. Striegel, 126 t-.1onte Vista.
Costa t-.Iesa, has completed
basic training at Lackland
AFB, 'Tex. He is remaining
at Lackland for training in
communications electronics
systems. Airman Striegel. a
1969 graduate of Costa Mesa
H igh School, attended Orange
Coast College.
Anny private Timothy R.
Green. son of Mr. and Mr s.
Kenneth F. Green, 8872 Aber-
deen. Garden Grove, recently
completed a basic Army ad·
ministra tion course at Ft. Ord.
His :wife, Luanne, lives at 1224
Bellasl Ave., Costa Mesa.
U. s. Alr Force Sergeant
Keneth J. Jenkl•s, son of
Mr. and ·Mrs, James Edwards
of 15911 Dundalk Lant, Hun-
tjngtoo Beach. ls Qn duty al
Udof-n. Royal . Thai AFB,
Thailand. ,
· : Seraeant J enklns is an in-
·ien~ence apeciali5t with a
Wiit .of u.e: Pacl(Jc Air Forres.
He ~vl>usly served at Ram·
ateln AB, Gmnany.,
I
a rise in new-left vlolen~.
aircraft hijackings and killings
of police by black militants,
and added:
"As long as crime continues
to increase and dissident
elements contin ue to strive
violently to destroy our cur·
rent way or life, law en-
forcement cannot a fford to
look back for long on past
accomplishments, but must
look ahead aild seek new ways
to meet old chal!enges."
In the calendar year 1970,
Hoover said, 463 persons in·
volved in organiied crime
were convicted as a result
of FBI investi gations. Con-
victions in 1969 totaled 319,
the r~BI said.
The FBI tracked down a
record total o! 32,000 fugitives
tvanled for violations of
federal or state laws, in·
eluding Angela Davis, who
declared her innocence Tues·
day to murder and kidnap
charges in Californla.
Miss Davis was among
reveral of the J<~Brs ten most·
wanted fugitives to be cap-
tured in 1970. That list its
grew to a record number.
totaling 16 before Miss Davis's
apprehension in New York .
In 1970, the FBI received
more than 6.5 m i I J i o n
rmgerprint cards, processing
them at the rate ol 26,000
a day. At the end of the year,
1-loover said, some 199 million
sets were on record.
Although what Hoover term·
ed "new-left te1Toris m" In·
creased during the year,
racial troubles in the schools
took a tum for the better.
While 160 racial incidents were
reported in secondary schools
since classes cipened this fall .
the rigure is belo w the 299
recorded in the same period
in 1969, Hoo\'er sairl .
Urban racial disturbances.
totaling 140 for the year. were
down from the peak or the
mid 1960s, Hoover said, ad·
ding:
"The number of incidents
of racial disorder that did
·occur in our cities and in
.secondary schools.' along with
the many unwarranted attacks
on police, strongly indicate
that 'M-'e are far from the
realization of racial harmony
in the nation."
Hoover said six policemen
died ·and 22 ·were wounded
duriJlg 1970 as a· result or
"acts by persons ~ho Iden·
Ufied themselves . as Black
Panthen.''. He Calle<tthe num-
bers a marked Increase over
the -preYiOUS· two Years when
the totals ~ere five killed and
4.2 Wounded.
, Ohio Man Acquitted
For Aiding Bird
.WARREN, Ohio (7111) -A common pleas rourt Jury
ha found Bernard Nemcosky innocent of a charge of be-
lrlendlng'. bird.
TM 'l'nlmbull Coanly Court Jul'J dellberated !or 30
mlnut.es before acqWtUng the Courtland, Ohio, man, who
foilid a ....U brvwl> thratber lojund on a .-1 and
I nuroec1 11 back to bealth. ~ Game •arden• arrested Nemco:sty on a charge of
• -"1olatlog the llate law Whldl prohlblta the poosesalon o1
.blrdl other than1 game fowl
Nemcoeky told lbe Jury ht tr1ed to release lhe brown
'thruller OOt JI would not fiy away. Only then did ht adopt
h N a pet he Aid.
A game warden testlned the bird's motMr might have
loand H li N,,,_ky lu\d not Interfered.
• •""' 'I • . •" . -.. ...
\ I
W o·rkers Agree to 10 Percent Pay Cut
LANCASTER, P•. (AP) -
Production workers al the
Harnillon Walch Co. have
agreed lo take a 10 percent
pay cut that they hope will
keep America's oldest watch-
making business anoat.
"It was a very tough
decision to make," said Ralph
Frey, president of the union
that represents about half of
the 2,000 employes in the plant
here.
"But I'n1 convinced H's the
right thing. This firm can b~
turned around. and when we
, look back a year from now
we will be able to say we
helped save the place, and
our jobs," Frey added.
Management agreed the JO
percent cul in wages between
Jan . 11 and ~1ay 29 was
courageous and ·would make
a substantial conLilbution to
Hamilton's cash position.
"They didn't have to do it,"
.said J ames Pollock, general
coonsel for th~ 79-year-old
firm. "There was ~no way we
could make them do~·
The Hamilton local Is in
the middle « a three-year
contract. Thi!!! provides for a
6 pe~nt wage increase in
June, which Pollock said will
be paid as promj!ed.
The wage cut averages
about 35 cents an hour for
each employe, or, roughly, $14
a w.eck and $280 for the full
2Q..weck period. Jlcwly and
piece workers now e a r n
between $2.70 and $4.50, and
Jhc median is close to $3.50.
Frey said about 300 or the
450 \Yorkers attending 1he
union meeting approved the
wage cuts.
Besides wages the ~ayroll
also is being cut sharply. Frry
said about 500 nonunion"office
and supervisor)' eO"iployes and
about 300 union members will
be laid off by the end of
"this month.
"'This is expected to save
about '$6 million by J une,"
Frey said. "The pay cut, in
round terms, will save around
$1 million.''
The compa11y declined to
estimate the savings.
The pay cul decision came
as a huge deficit, blamed on
cuts Jn defense spending,
swept past $15 million for the
fiscal year that ends Jan. 31.
This compares with a profit
of m arly $2 million in 1969
when sales reached a record
$fill million. For 1970 sales
arc around $60 n1illion, down
a third.
Hamilton last reported a
loss in 1933. of $150,000, which
was in the middle of the na-
tion 's worst depression.
"1"he ·winding down of the
Vietnam "'ar has affected us
severely since "'e make time
fuses for artillery shells and
an ('\ectronic field radio for
the Army," Pollock said. ''And
the general decline i n
economic cond itions has af-
fected our watch s a le s ,
espceially since "'e went on
a fair trade program lasf
hfay, pulllng out of the dis· Frey said a new executive "We fell if ·they~ were -firing
count n1ark.ct." learn Look over in lhe firm management people, w e
Hanlilton still assembles last November and has been should make a ' cootrilxltion
trying hard to cut expenses to keep this ship' aloat," Frey
watches ia L ancaster, .1nd overhead. sa'd
althouKh all n1ovements now,-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'.;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ are made in ita two Swiss11
plants. Wh I p K The Bplo'8 Watch Co., y t ays to now
originally a Swiss. firm, Cl3ims
it is the last !inn to make BOB PALEY fine watch parts in the United '
States.
l'l~mil!on has several pro·
fit able subsidi ari es, none af.
fect:!d by the wage cuts. They
are Wallace Silversmiths in
\Vallingford. Conn., and Semca
Corp.. 1nakers ct clocks, in
Lo ng Island City, N.Y.
Young Buy ing
LOS ANGELES (UPI)· -
Nc<1 rly half of the motorcycles
sold in 1969 were to persons
between 25 and 35 years of
age, according to industry
figures. ·
~ ~-SAFECO
INSURANCE
lob raley1 Ii he 11 w o-forl"' 1111111,
pethop11 lllge! Sea•feorln' ll probably
_,. lik• It. Ht rtil"kl th• bo1111dlnt
"IOI• Is 1111 eorthquokt Irr la11gor. He
would11"t k•ow o rllrMolt llrr• fro111 '"'
Mogl1ot Li11e. Still, JI you're r1111•l11t
l11to pretty heawy w:cu with your ptl"•
"' J~11r-c•, why 1101 ho•• o talk
wltll lob:> lt'1 a cinch, rrrllff, that Its
co11 011d will write tht perfect co•-
•1'119' ro 1uir your nffd, He"ll ia•• you
• wad of green 1ruff h1 so doh19.
So,. whore.,... your need . , . fire,
theft, auto, liability ... tallr It .,.,.
with lob ralay. You"ll find frlirrr hi dry•
doclr: cit 414 E. 17th St., Costa MeMlo
!'hOM 642·6500.
HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!
i
1.
i
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...
-
-.· ,,
• . .._
Sears
Prices Effeclil'C Tod3y
rhru Tuesday 1/12/7 l
•
' .
'
.'iectrs Regular
Lo11: Prices
Depending on the Size of Tire You Neccl!
•Nylon Guardsm an• A ~H{ • Supcri 1·<'cl • ~·i :~i <'r C uarcl
Discontinued 1~r e ad D e~ig n ~
WHITEWALLS • BLACKWALLS
ALL FULL 4-PLY
SOMENYLON •••
SOME FIBERGLASS
Use Sean Revolving Charge
Scars •vrH• •••• , .... -. .u .... c11•0•• •••• ,.. ..... , a •own .. S-.l tl I
.... N • .loU"QI 1·1-, (t 4...U11
C-... •·1111, .. M fll ll&UTW ... 110 ••lt<ll
•I ll>.~<-. .. 11 tt~.'7111~~ CO••• t ..... 11 lllOUWOOI Oii l •:Utl
"'-'H1tht1Mllll.tlw• S.t.t :30A.M. t• t 1JOP..M..a.Nay 12 ..... tll .I P.M.
' '
10 ... ll#oCll ........ .
Ol"l'•PIC • IOl"O M l ·lln
Ol l!HH l lf•llN
r .1o1.aotllA •11-.l 111, lll...,11 -·•-Ml
SIZES TO J:.'IT
MOSTCARS •••
BUT QUANTITIES
ARE DEF'INITELY
I LIMITED
-0 .. ...., ••
••"'• ..... in r.n11
••"'• n .............. , ·-· -· ..... , .. ... llOAff ........... J.e(l.JJJ)
,._.., .. O•IU ..r41 .. 10••-· •••. , ••• -·-"'''''' VMUf PO -11, 'M44U9 .... _ ...... ,,"
I t
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Is She, or Isn't She"!
~ricia Nixon is \\:earing a ring on her left hand. ls it an engagen1ent
ring? Maybe so, m~ybe no. Tricia isn't. sayi ng, bu t columnist Betty
Beale of the Washington Star reported Sunday that Tricia, 24, will
n1a rry Edward F'. Cox, a f"larvard Ja1v student, June 14. So far, there
has been no official anno uncement that the couple is engaged.
T1·i1 stees at Saddleback
To Get Wortl 011 Nu1·sing
A registered nurse training program
for Saddleback College will be presented
to trustees tonight al their 7:45 p.m.
meeting at the college. 28000 Marguerite
Parkway. l\1ission Viejo.
r.1rs. Gertrude C Baker, registered
nur~e v.•ho rorn1erly headed Los Angele:-;
Trade Tcchni('al College's nursing pro-
grarn, "'ill detail the tv.·0-year program
due 1o begin next faH .
~1rs. Baker was appoin!ed to the Sarl-
dleback staff this year. Education law
r equires hirin_g a nurse education pro-
~ram head 011e year in advance of !he
slrirt of c:la~ses, a college spokesman
said
An1ong nthrr mall!'rs before the board
lnnight i~ approval of the April 20 trustee
elertion dal!'.
Three members· terms expire this y!'ar
including tho~e of Alyn ~I. Brannon.
trustee from Santa Ana : John B. Lund,
board clerk from Laguna Beach, and
~flchael T. Collins, trustee from Laguna
Hills.
While candidates seekin~ el ection lo
I.heir seat.~ must reside in the trustee
area they seek to repreSt'nl. voters from
throughout the district decide on each
race.
\\'hile the S11ddleback board L~ awaiting
a cou rt decision on its controversial
dress code hair -provisions. it is Ml
<!xpected the matter will come before
the board tonight, a spokesman said.
Other items on the board agenda in-
t.'lude a recommended Civil Defense Plan
for the present school year. adoption
of an offic ial emblem for the college,
and p~sentation of the Winter quarter
enrollment report.
4 on Coa st
On Board
For Ope1·a
Four Orange Coasl residents have
been named to the 26-member board
of the Lyric Oper·a Association of Or·
ange County in its lUth year of offering
musical entertainment.
Newly elected directors are 1-fcrring
F ranklin, Costa Mesa: Herman Griffin,
358 Avenida Castilla. Laguna Oills: Mrs.
Adrien Pelletier. 112 En1erald Bay. La-
guni! Beach , and Mrs. Stanley Eich·
staedl, 14 Lagunita Drive, Laguna Beach.
ReplaC'i ng retiring presidt-nt H. Jean
Bede!/ is Dr. Lester Ludlow of Santa
Ana. Bedt>ll, of 100 Emerald Bay, La·
guna Beach, continues as chairman or
the budget and finance rommittee of
the board.
Named to the Lyric Opcra·s execu-
tive commiltee are \\'infield Shiras,
32871 Monarch Bay. Sou I h Laguna:
Airs. C. Sidney Johnston, JOO! I Bello
Place. South Laguna: r-.torgan Cuthbert-
son, 348 Pinecrest Drive, LagWla Beach.
~nd Mrs. William llinwood, 32394 Ston-
1nglon Road. South La guna .
lleading the association's two auxiliary
uni ts are Mrs. Eichstacdt -the Oper'a
League of Lagtina Beach -and Mrs.
Edith Smith -the Opera ''100" of Lei·
sure World , Laguna 11ills .
One other new dirct!or is Dr. Arthur
Jiowa rd of 2501 E. Chapman Ave., Or-
ange.
Besides productions of mu~~cals and
operas, the association has launched a
repertory company pro:igram designed to
tr~in young artists and provide thcrn
\Ylth performing opportunities before area
schools and clubs.
Hospital Plans
New Garage
For Expansion
The. first stage of the $7.5 n1ill ion
expansion program at South Coast C.On1-
munity Hospital is a 368-car, multi-!evrl
parking garage due for complelion in
J\1ay.
Victor C. Andrews, president or 1 hr
South Laguna hospital's board ctiscusse1I
the expansion progra1n before a mectin ,::
last \\'eek of life members of the hospital.
Afl er completion of the garage,
"construction \\'ill b<!gin on lhl' shl'llcd-in
second. third , and four1h rioors, brinR1n~
our total bed count to approiomatcly
300 beds." And~ws said.
Also to be enlarged are U1e X-ray
department. emergency rooin,
laboratory. kitchen and dining areas,
a new boile r room and an administration
"'ing .
Five new board membf'rs wrrr clcclrrl.
They are: \Vil!iam Wh ite Ill. Renee
Pelletier Shepard, George Gade, \\'inf1cJr/
Shiras and Robert Coulter.
Officers electerl at the annual meel in~
were; Victor C. Andrev.·s. presiden1 ;
Adolp h Kroch, chairman emerilus; John
\\'eld, first vice president : Edward l ..
Olsen, second vice pr('sident; Jt1me.<>
J\foniz, third vice president : Harold
Ekman, fourth vice president : llaro!d
Osborn, treasurer; Da vid Phillip.~. assis-
t.ant treasurer, Bernard I ngra m .
secretary and Robert D'lsidoro, assistant
secretary.
•
Molldar, Jil'lllll)' 11, l 'iil s DAILY PILOT
White Hotise West Protest
About 40 students in school throughout Southern
California a re sho\vn at gates of \Vestern \Vhile
!·louse in San ('lcmente during Sunday n1orning
demon stra tion. They urged U.S. to \Vilhhold forcig-n
q.id to Ethopla. funds they maintain are used for
weapons directed against leftist students. Slogan!
such as "Death to Ha ile Selassie (Ethiopian em•
peror)" were chanted.
Greenhelters Pressing On
Lag una Group Unclaunted by Stalemate
App.1rently undaunted by what presi-
dent .James Dilley dcscrib!'s as a "!cm·
porary stale1nate'' in the allempt lo
arquire the ~acre Sycamore Hills pro-
perty for lhe Laguna G r eenbe l t,
~reenbelt supportl'rs are proce<?ding with
a v<iric1y of plans lo promote I he i r
goal.
Annual meeting of the corporation with
be helrl at 8 p.m. next Monday in
the Riviera Roo111 of the Hotel Laguna.
at which titne a traveling exhibit \vill
be unveiled an<I pla n.~ for 1971 outlined.
An a1tempt to secure a federal grant
In help purchase the $4 million Sycamore.
ll i ll.~ properly \1•a.s stymied .,.,·hen it \\'as
revealed thal the enhre amount y,·ou1d
ha ve to be put up by the ci!y initially
in ordrr to obtain 50 percent reim·
bursement.
It had been planned to raise the
mA!ching amount over an ex.tended
period after securing a guarantee of
the federal grant.
Dilley last week persuaded the City
Council to continue the matter of the
grant application until the Jan. 20 council
session in order to give the Greenbelt
group a chance lo make recom-
mendations on a "holding" program of
1.onings and other policies geared to
ult imate purchase of the land.
"Ourin;:: the past year." he told the
council, ··we have become increasingly
W 0111e11 Voters Exami11 e
Capo Area Welfare Issue
Arc welfare ('Osls loo high'.' \\'hy are
lhf'y in.-reas1ng., Are there resident of
!he Capistrano Bay area who should
recei\'C assistancC". but do not'.' I-low
can the la:ic burden on the homeowner
br rcrluced'.'
These and similar questions will be
posed in a public meeting of the League.
of \Vomcn \'otcr~ Tuesday in the
Mon:i reh Bay Club at 9:30 a.m .
Capistrano fki y Arca League. prn-
\·i~io11nl, \l'ill hear a representative (J f
the Orange County \\'elfare Department
and po.~c qurstion.~ to begin a s!udy
of \\'Clfare problems in the bay com-
muni!ies.
1'he \Ye!fare s!udy is a segment of
a broader Know Our Arca Survey which
"'ill be conducted in cornlni;: months.
l\1rs. O. V. Carnpb('ll, league presiclen1,
sAid !he group i!I' seeking women in
the bay area who arc interes!ed in
community !Mttcrmcnl and voter in-
formation service.
"\Vr must expand our memb<!rship
i11 order to accomplish the service for
,1·hich our organization is intended, ~aid
Mrs. Campbell in welcoming prospective
member! lo attend the Tu<!sday meeting.
"\Ve \\'OUld like especially to meet
\\'Omen new to thi! area, and v;e will
provide childcare for the morning," said
hfrs. Campbel!.
oppressed w i t h the deepening en·
vironmental crisis and this has prompted
us to accenl the necessity of open space
preservation in it.s natural slate.
''There is a grave and growing threat
lo I.he very air we breathe, not anly
because of the increasing pollution of
the air, but also because of tbe pro-
gressive reduction of I.he oxygen supply
. . . open spaces (are) v i t a I oxygen
replenishment areas that must be
preserved in their natural slat.e if the
human race is to survive ."
Students Rap
Session Slated
Anyone interested in rapping with a
panel or five high school students and
Don Miller. assistant principal of Laguna
Beach High School may attend aa in.
formal discussion meeting 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the district office, 55(t
Blumont ~t.
Th(' session is in response lo ex4
pressions of interest by I,agunans in
"\('arning rnore about student attitude!'J,
accomplish1nents, activities and reaction
to studies. directly fr om student.!
1hemsclves,'' a spokesman said.
The session is sponsored by the Schools
Communicat ions Group which is at4
tempting to have representatives of an
Lal:una Beach organizations represented
at meetings to ex-pand public and school
communications.
At each meeting a subject of special
interest to the group is selected for:
the ne:<I. meeting.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
Beef Liver .. ~~~~'.~: .69~
You'll enjoy the miid'flavor 4 •• the clue to quality!
'
Sausage ... ~~~~".~ .... a~~
\Ve ma.kc il our!elves .•. finest meats, continental seasoninl!
,';0 mult varietv offrrtd in our deli department.'
Sliced Imported Ham ...................... 59C
DaJ.;'s .,. lean, with a distinct ive goodness! 4 ou.nte package.
ARCADIA: PASADENA:
Sunset 1nd Huntin&lon Dr. (El Rancho Cer.tci ) 320 Wat Colondo Btvd.
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••••••••••••••••••••
El Rancho's O\\'Tl ••. lean slice~. cut a little lhickcr-12 t.o 1·i alice~ to lhe pound! If you like bacon ... the kind that doesn't shrivel
away to a shado"' of it~ former self .,. if you like flavor for breakfast .•. you'll \o\'e El Rancho'r. bacon .•• at El Ra ncho's price!
(i f •t TEXAS rape ru1 .. R~e: .R~D.
Bright flavor in the sweet juicy pink meat! Breakfast delight!
I P rice3 in e/ftcl Mon.., Tu.es., lrrrl.,
Ja11.. 11, 12, 13. No 8alea to dcnle1·~.
SOUTH PASADEHA: HUHTIHGTOH BEACH:
Bisquick ... ~~ ~~·.~~~ ... -49'
Bake.a batch of biscui ts to go with bacon f or b reakfast!
Tomato Juice.L!~B!:s.·29'
\Vonderful way to start the day! P our from the quart decanter!
Dow's Oven Cleaner.......... . ............. 6r
Elllliy to use .. , cufs away those ugly splatters! 8 oi.. can.
Kai Kan Liver Chunks ........................... 4 .. '1
Give your pet the nourish ment he need s! 14 oz. cans.
HEWPORT BEACH: 27'll Newport Blvd. and
Fremont ind Huntinlfon Dr. Warner and Algonquin (l!oardw1lk Center) 2555 Elstblulf Dr. (Elstbluff Yillap Center)
I
I
•
Otlans have amu' COUP'
••• Ua? .;. We haw
P,1ttf,IJ6on bat/gm/'
Spies Are
V ot,e1·s Too
By DICK WEST
ltecel'lt report& that Army inttlha;enct
1,.nta hid been collecting inform1tlon
about U.S. political figures y,·ere dist.urb·
lng to many people. Parr.icularly U.S.
political flgure1.
Everyone felt a lot better after the
Army denied it had ever done 1uch
1 thing and promised not to do it any
more. But the specter of military med-
dling in the civilian political system
isn't thlt euily dilpelled.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. ro.N.C.). who
made public the alle11alion. pl ans to
hold bearin11 on the matter next month.
SEEKING AN INDICATION of what
tort of e1J1lanation the Army micht
&Ive, I called up a fellow I know at
the Penta1on.
"What uae did you p I a n to make
of the informaUon you wl!re gathering
about U.S. political fi(Urea".'" I aaked.
"We wanted to enlighten ounelve1 ao
we would ~ able to caat our ballots
more intelligently. Tho.se of U! at the
Pent.lgon are votm too1 you know."
J u.Jd, "well. v.·hy don't you just lillen
kl th• candid1tes' 1peechu on televl1lon
I.Ice Ute reat of ui'."'
"Unfortunately, some political fiiUJ'l!lll
:annot afford to buy television time.
We certainly would not want to 10 I.he
polls without knowing how they stood .
'1TBEltE ALSO IS /t.. QUESTION 11
~ whether televillon really presents a
tantidtte in his true light. So we felt
'hat If we ct1Ilected as much additional
;nlormatlon as possible we would be
1.n 1 better po!iUon t.c make wise choices
Dn tledlon da y:'
I uld, "that is 1 very commendable
1tUtude. But why did you have in·
Lelllleftee agents eo\lectin& the in·
lormalion covertly'?''
"We feel thlt naturalneas playa an
tmportant riart in appralaing a political
'l rure . Many politici ans tend to pu t on
1 fal!:e front In public. lf you observe
.hem unawares you can get a better ·
1.ine on v.·hat they are really lik e."
"THAT MAKES SENSE.'' J said. "But
tren 't military intelligence agents nnly
;upposed to be used nn assignm tnt.s
lhat have some milita r.v significan ce'?"
"A soldier doe:sn·l divest himself o!
.he duties CJ( good citiitnship when he
)Uts on a uniform .·• my Pentagon friend
replied.
"Then all you were doing ·was con-
~ucting a voler educ1Uon proiram Ille
eny other civtc·rninlled group, right':"
"Exactly .Jt'a the 1ort of thing an y
~ivic-minded IJ"OUP with a vast ln-
lelligence network would do." -UPI
Coco,F amed
In Fashion
W 01·ld,Dead ...
PARIS (AP~ -Fuhlon le1de.r1 on
both 1Jde1 of the .AUanUc plJd tribute
tod•Y to Gabrielle "C.ooo" Chanel,' the
moa:t influential dresa dulgner of lh•
20th Century, who died Swiday nltht
1t h!t 1uJte in the Rlt:. She waa f1,
Chanel "chanal!:d fuhioll more than
any ot.hu de1Jgner. '' 1aid Norm1n Norell,
the dean of American deaigner1. "She's
the one who m1de women comfortable
..• There may bf: other de1lgnera who
made more beautiful clothea, but ahe
had the moat lnf1uence.''
"One of the great du:Jgnera of the
ctntury, who never 1acriflced heraelf
to the tendency of maklng fash ion
rldlculoua," pid Marc Bohan of Dior.
A chambermaid at her hotel found
Chanel UI Sunda y nlgbt. and ahe died
shortly 1fter. Offici.tla of her f1shk1n
hftust said death apparently "'as due
lo a hearl altack.
Funeral arran&ement.s were iacomplete
today.
The House of Chanel ann ounced tt\at
ahowing of her new spring and 1ummer
collection will begin on schedule Jan.
26. She had been working on it Sunday
and had approved 85 models.
Chane l's death also will not del ay the
opening in Cleveland tonight of "Coco."
the mUJlcal b.tsed on her life in v.•hich
Katharine Hepburn score~ a ~m11sh hlt
las t sf!ason. Producer Frederick Brisson,
an old friend. said Chanel told him
several weeks ago "if and when an ything
h1ppened to her. the show was to ~o
on A! U3ual. That's the ~·ay it will
b•."
Brisson aaid the -performance tonight
lt'ouid be dedicated to Chanel.
Chanel's revolutions in fashion brought
haute couture in ruch of the work ing
girl after World War I.
''There are too many men ln this
business.'' she said. "and they don't
know how to make wearable clolhl':s
for women. When f11hion descends 00
the street it'1 a revolution. but when
it comes up from the 1treet it's a
catutropbe."
FASHION QUEEN DEAD
Agel••• Coutourler W11 17
COCO CHANEL JN 1931
Work Sp1nn1d 6 Dec1d11
Ireland 'Army' Stages
Terroristic Incidents
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP J -
V1Jilante1 of the outlawed Republican
Army took Ule /Aw Into their own hsnd11
over the wet!!kend and tarred and
fe athered four youna men for petty
crimes 11tlnst Belfast Catholica.
2 Ships Collide
Off England; 10
Crewmen ~i~si_ng
F'OLKESTONE, Engl1nd fAP l -Ten
1allor1 were reported missing l':arly todey
following the ~l!isil'ln In a thick fog
or two oil tankers in the Ena!lsh Channel.
One ship. lhe 13,694-ton Texaco Carib.-
bean . \1·as on fire and sinltini . the Coast
Gua rd said.
The nlher lanker. th e 11,481-lon Peru·
vian vessel Paraca ~. w.111 being towed
In :;hore by a salvage tua.
The Coast Gu;ird reported 20 crewmen
"'ere rescued, 19 by ;i ~or11·egian ~hip
and one hy an En~lish fishing tra11 lcr.
ll)e latler man y,·as reported cr1llcally
iniured.
Reports from the rescue ships rl1rl
nni. say v.·hich ship the rrscutd ;i nrl
missing men were from. bu! presum;i;bl.v
It wa s the Te.xaro Caribbean . She is
re1illered in Panama.
''Thia incident should be t.aktn as a
"'Uning hy others," s1id a 1pakesman
for the IRA. "Money !enderll", racketeers
and extortionists will get the same treat·
men!. The IRA "'ill not ! ta n d tor
gangsterism any more."
The IRA claims that lhe Protestant
pohce in Northern Ireland are not pro-
tecting !he Roman Catholic minority.
A crowd of shoppers looked on Satur-
day niJ::ht as a gang of ml!:n grabbed
tv.·o yout hs in the C3tholic f'aJJg Road
area and poured tar and chicken feathers
over them . The gang hung placards
around thei r. victims· ncckit which said:
"This man has been found gullly and
confe.!'ised U, breaking and l':Olerlng and
this sentert:e has bel':n passed by the
Republic an movement.''
A lhirrl young n1an covered with pitch
and feathers was found Sunday mornlng,
chained lo ,;in iron railing out.!'iide a
church . The fourth man, a former soldier
in the Brifi~h a:rmv, \.\'.1S found tarred
and fealhered Sund8 y night.
Republican sources said the mtn had
been convicted at IRA trials held in
a private house. Police ~·ere checking
the reporls o! thl': kanga:roo court , hut
none of the \"JC!ims would tell the police
an vth1ng .
"They \1rre obviously ;if1a1d of mnre
~rri<.us punishment:' sa1<l a police
."p<!kc5man.
Also in Be lfast, :i bomb ex ploded ~\Jn·
<lay night in a club in .s Prorestant
area, but no one waa hurt. S11:h e1-
plo.sloru occur 11most every weekend.
Piercing Cold Hits Plains
Rest of Nation Finds Relief front Bitter Cold Waves
CallfoM&la Tempet'ature•
,
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f~I )'·llOUr ~trl1<1 t n<lln1 11 i I "'•
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Bolivia Coup .Q.uashed
WWII Planes Strafe Right-wi":g Leaders
LA PAZ. Bolivia !UPI ) -Bolivian
Air Force PSl 1'1uslan& fi&hters strafed
the bl1 Mlrafioru b1rraclu in La Paz
with m1chlnecun flre 11. dawn today
to end a rt1ht-wtn1 mUitary revolt and
11end lt.s leadera flee ln& for political
asylum to the Peruvien Embauy.
Celonela Huso lanur and Edmwuio
Valepell were ldentlfled u the lelllu•
o! the attempted ceup. Ut1lU Iaat week
Banur wag dlrectftr of lhe military
colle1e but w111 removed and autaned
lo a remote command alter a 1r1duatlon
1peech critlcizinl; the "dlrectlea" of lhe
Torres 1overrunent.
Valencia waa mlnlst.er or economy in
UM 1nvemm111t of ez -pruldllt Alfredo
Ovando CaNla. ouatecl 1ut Ntvmber
ln the atruple fer pe"'er whlch breu.1ht
Torrea to tM prnldeney.
The •ttempted coup beaan Sunday
nl&ht , a1td the rebel forcu apparently
trlM to move out to take the El Alto
Air Force b.tat whl!tll! offleera were
knewn t.o IM loyal te Torru. The rebet1 were app1rently tryin1 to
hilt the leftward drift of Util landlocked
&uth American country under the
pre aldency of Gen. Juan J ose Torres.
who himself look power in 1 coup \1st
Novtrnbl!:r. Okinawa Moh Protests
Had lt 1ucceeded, the cou p would have
been the 187th ln the 145 ye1rs 1lnce
Bolivia declared Ila Independence from
Spa in. War Gas Action; Routed
President ial Secrelariat Minister Mario
Velarde announced that the rebel officers
In the Mlranores barrack! bad laid down
thei r arms. and a ~hort lime later caml':
tht word thet 8boUl 50 of the rebels
bed taken asylum .in the embassy of
'Prru. Thl!i right of asylum i!'I cherished
.find observed in all Latin Amulcan coun-
tries.
The inhabitants of this mftuntain
capital were kept awake throu1h most
of the early morning hours by bursts
of gunflrl':, and 1t da wn the Worl d War
II vintage Mustanas wen t into actio n.
repeatedly 1trallng the thick walla of
Miranores.
•• " ..,.Jr ...-
NAHA, Okinawa fAP ) -About 200
Okinawans prole11t1n1 the movemtnt of
deadly mustard 1a1 a~oa' their Island
were driven back early today from two
U.S. bases .
The demonstrator1 atlacked 1ome
houra after American authorities an·
nouoctd a two-day delay ln the start
of transfer of the 1a11 from 1t.cra1e
on Okinawa to Johnaton bland, in the
mid-Pacific.
More than 100 demonstrators armed
with rock! and bamboo poles tried 00
force their way int.c a compound In
Chibana where &&me of the 1u ii 1tored.
Sears
Rerular$140 to $430
NOW
'99 10 •349
~c JOW' ditmond from s~
Yon will always &rt qualiq. ~
dian"JOnd boyers are ~ experm.
bow diamonds. have spent fears
bayin1 only qu.Liiry diamonds.
Color, cut and clarity att rhree
nmsu that they insist upon. lligbt
now, clnrin1 oar tt.le you noc: on-
ly IP qusliry but you :t.l'° ~t
1891> "' 29% .... _
un:nME nADE-IN Sean aJ.
I~ you fall cub price pa.id (a.
cla1i•e of ta:res and fina•c~
c}wgr) on any TNdition di ..
mood ring, pin. Clfriosa in trade
for a hi&ber priced diamond a:
""'time.
BUY SEA!lS DIAMONDS
WITH CONFIDENCE Be·
came diamoed wei,hts a:re 11t:J.. '1
dom idetttica.L ~e cam
we ighrs a.re .shown. 5"r.s ~vM
you a Carat Weight Cemfic.ire
which states t~ c1.act -..·ei,ghr.
to ooe-handttdth of a. cant, of
~ Tradition center diamood
tt 1.f1t> anc: or' more.
Seventy U . .S. Marine1 blocked anttl.her
10() protesters tryin& to break throuth
the main gate 1t Camp Ha1ue, on the
route over which a convoy waa In
transport an initial 1hlpment of mustard
gas.
One American w11 reported Injured
at Chibana .
Movement of the 11s was to have
begun today but was deJayed bec1u.se
of tbreat.s by leftl1ta and some v\lla1ers
to block the 1hlpmenl. They claimed
the convoys would enda.naer tbe llves
of thoae livln1 alon1 the 1even·mlll': route
to the harbor.
2JS Cl.
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I
I ----·--
Monday, January 11, lq]l DAILY PILOT 'Ji
Aborting Disease QUEENIE School Finance
Apollo Crewmen Isolated Record Tab Seen
llu11dli11g fJ p
l'hyllis George. 1971
~liss Amer ica, pulls a
hood over her head to
\Vard off cold Chicago
\vinds. She \Vas en
route to DeKalb, Ill .,
for a one-day appear·
ance -her first of
1971.
Democrats
111 Heated
House Duel
WASHINGTON (AP ) -'fhe
crucial post of House majority
leader will be filled in little
more th;u1 a \Yeck, and still
the Dc111ocrat most likely to
;i.ccede is unknown .
Supporters of the two men
considered front·runners -
J{eps. Hale Boggs of Louisiana
and l\1orris K. Udall of
Arizona -increasingly are
seeking pledges of second-
r o u n d su pport fr om
Dernocrats pledged to other
candidates.
Despite continued claims of
a firsl·Vote victory at the J an.
19 Democratic caucus
C'spccially from the Boggs
camp -the current strategy
is a plain recognition that no
<:andidate has the m a g i c
number -128 votes -locked
up.
Boggs. the cu rrent
Democratic \Vhip. jtunped off
to ;in early learl in pledges,
one reason being Uie vote
:issocialed "'ilh !he liberal
Demix:ratic S!udy Group \\•as
divided helween Udall and
,James G. O'lhira of l\1ichigan.
'fhe n sr. .<illpporl is ex-
pected to coalesce behind one
of these -presun1ably Udall
-:it some point in the
balloting. •
Boggs strategists now claim
116 voles pledged. \1•ilh a bet·
ter than even chance of pick-
inJ:! up the addilional 12 needed
from among 48 uncommitted
OC'mocra!s
But they ;:ire also angling
for second·choice votes among
supporters nr fl F. Stsk ·or
ra!ifornia, \\':iyne L. Ila~~ of
Ohio and Ech11ard P. Bola nd
of t.1assachusc!!s.
CAPE KENNEDY, F I a .
(AP) The Apollo 14
astronaut.s loday began a 21 •
day period of preflight
medical isolation lo minimize
ezposure lo disease or illness
such as the measles contact
which forced a late substitu-
tion in the Apollo 13 crew
last year.
Astronauts Alan B. Shepard
Jr.. Stuart A. Roosa and
Edgar D. Mitchell and their
backup crew generally will be
restricted to three areas of
the Kennedy Space Center.
These are the crew living
quarters, the training building
and the launch pad.
They also will 1nake one
or two trips to nearby Patrick
Air Force Base for practice
flying in jet airplanes.
Movements from one point to
another will be wa I ch e d
carefully so the astronauts do
not c o n 1 a c t unauthorized
personnel.
The Apollo 14 launching is
scheduled Jan. 31 w i I h
Shepard and Mitchell to at·
!empt a landing in the moon's
f'ra ~lauro 11ighlands to
search for ancient lunar soil.
Last April all three Apollo
13 astronauts were exposed
to German measles a rew days
New Neigl1bors
Huge Galaxies Pinpointed
BERKELEY. {APl -
Aslronomers say they have
found two huge g a 1 ax i es
previously undetected in
earth's neighborhood of space
b<.'cause its own galaxy -the
Milky Way -obscured them
with dust.
The find means there are
seven galaxies in what is
known as the "local group"
of galaxies closest to earth's
solar system: The ~1i!ky Way,
the Andromeda Galaxy, three
smaller satellite galaxies and
now Maffei I and Maffei 2,
as the "new comers'' are call·
ed.
The report on the 11ewly
identi[ied systen1s was made
Sunday in the Astrophysical
Journal by nine astronomers
from the University of
California at Berkeley. the
California I n s Li tut e of
Technology and the Carnegie
Institute of Washington.
f\'laffei I and 2 are named
for a young Italian
astronomer. Paoli P..laffei, who
wroLe in an obscure scientific
journal in 1968 that he had
found strange objects in in-
frared photographs made at
Italy's Laborato r y of
Astrophysics at Frascati.
Robert Landau. a graduate
student at Berkeley. was in-
trigued by the s igh ti n g s
because they can1e from a
JXlrtion of space where in·
terstcl!ar dust is thickest.
Landau said he felt the ob·
jeets n1ight be a lot larger
than they appe ared because
th ey were vlsible on the in·
frared photographs through
the dust.
As it turned out. the
astronomers wrote, the dust
in thnt part of space is so
!hick it blocks out 99 percent
of visible light and 6 percent
of infrared light.
Increase i11 Soviet
Harassing Proniised
NEW YORK {AP) -The
head of the militant Jewish
Defense Wgue says his group
will step up its anti-Soviet
campaign by forming teams
to "trail and harass" Soviet
diplomats working here.
"We don 't want to build
cultural bridge~ on the bodies
of three million Jews." said
Rabbi Meir Kahane v.·hen ask·
ed if his organization's ac-
tivilies might not aggravate
Soviel·American relations.
Speaking outside the Soviet
mission to the United Nations
on East 67th Street. Kahane
said Sunday that "the life of
each RUS&ian 1vi!J be made
mi~rable'' 1mder the harass-
ment campaign.
The league has spearht·aded
11 number of ant i ·So v i et
demonstrations in r ec e n t
Weeks to protest the condition
of Je\\•s living in the Soviet
Union and the trial and con-
viction of 12 persons, most
of thcn1 Jews, for an .at·
tempted hijacking.
Jn response the Sov iet Union
has official!y protested the
ca mpaign. lu t.loscow over the
\l'Cekcnd the cars or three
A m e r i c a n correspondents
\vere v:indalized in apparent
retaliation.
Kahane. who founded the
JDL in 1968. said he called
for harassment of Soviet
diplomats after he a r i n g
reports of Lhe r.1oscow in·
cidents.
A few league members
followed cars emerging from
the mission here Sunday.
JloJice escorted the cars and
blocked off lhe street.
Ark:idi V. Gouk. f i r s I
sccrclary at the missions, said
Sunday night : ··sonic of our
people were. followed by some
unknown peoplt.' wilh pro-
\'ocntivc purposes: \\lho they
arr. \\'e don't kno11.,·•
U,I T1....,. .Pot Bunter at Work
"Fritz" .a German shepherd trained to ~n l ff out mirijuana hidden in military
lugr.3ge.. Wllows hi~ no~e 3.5 he and ~is trainer Sgt. Robert Trail search 'ear
of incoming and 6Ul goitig bis in Vietnam. Frjtz is one or five dogs trained
for this type or "''Ork at !~est and Recuperation centers In Vietnam.
I
beCore leuo<:h. Jfmes A.
Lovell Jr. and Fred'W. Halse
Jr. were found to be immune,
but Thomas K. Mattingly was
not and he was replaced hours
before the launch by 'backup
command module pilot John
L. Swigert.
The isolation Utat went Into
eHC<'t todar was the result.
During tile 21 day.s, only 112
persons will be authorized to
work directly wilh the
astronauts, compared with
about 800' on earlier Apollo
fllghts.
Most of ttfe 112 will have
only minimal association wilh
the crew. some none at aU
unless necessary.
These prime contacl.S all
have provided d e t a 11 e d
n1edical histories. submitted •-:::::---:.;__::;-::---::-:---------..J to extensive physical exams
and have been immunized "Sincerely yours, Benson & Company ... P.S. Run!
against 10 common diseases, My wife just came in.''
as have the astronauts. ---------~-------------
School officials and physi-
cians in the Cape Kennedy
area have been given a list
of the 112 persons and their
families to help detect· any
potential disease carrier.
The wives of the astronauts
\\'ill be allowed to visit, if
not i!i, but their children will
be prohibited from direct ac-
cess because of the prevalence
of childhood diseases i n
schools.
Teachers' Strike Ends
PIT'l'S BURGH (AP ) -The
city's schoolteacher strike is
settled but weeklong stoppages
that have blacked out the
city's two daily newspapers
,and . crippled mun i ci pa I
government rontinue.
Members of lhe Pittsburgh
'Federation of Teachers, which
represent~ a ma;ority of the
city's 3,200 in s l r u c l o rs .
ratified a 23 month con1r<ic1
Sunday night by a vote ur
l ,o31 to 224 .
The pact, e.~tim:i1ed to cosl
$4 million the first year. g1vcs
the teachers a base pay hike
of $900·a·year
our car • I
ore
\\'ASHINGTON (AP) -The.
National Education Associa-
tion reported t o d a y It will
cO.!t a record '42.4 billion in
1970-71 lo l'Wl the nation's
public schools but the feder-
al government's s hare will
shrink to its lowest percen·
tage level in six years.
The NEA 's 29th annual re·
port of "estimates o f school
statistics" added that the
failure of the federal govern-
n1e11t to pay a greater share
of the rost of educating th e
nation's 45 million elemen·
tary and secondary pupils
will fall on flnancially-press-
cd slate and I o ca I govern-
men ts.
"This downhill t r e n d is
alarming." said NEA presi·
dent Helen Bain In a press
release. "The federal govern-
ment is providing a plttaftce
~h~uid w~ strsoun~jyi'~lie;~~~
one-third the school funds
with the state and local gov4
ernmenls providing similar
proportions."
The fed er a I co ntribution
reached an atl·time high of 8
per cent of the school dollar
in 1967..()8, but has dropped
the last lwo years. The NEA
estimated federal rnoney will
be only 6.9 per cent or the
total this school yea r.
Denture Invention
For People with "Uppers" and 11Lowers 11 -
The nearesl UtillJ lo having your be!pt prolect gum1 Crom bruisin" own ti.~lh is possible now with•-'\'ou eat more naturally-cnjo)'
plaslic crean1 discovery that ac· apples. com-0n·the<0b.
tuatly holds both ··uppers .. and F1xooENT may help you speak
"loll'Crs .. a.1 ""'tr brfurt />IJSJib/1. more clearly. be n1ore at ease.
It's a revolutionary discovery The special pencil·point dis-
cn!led F 1xooENT. for daily home penscr lets you apot FIXODENT
ui;c, (U.S. Pat. 13.003.988) With with precision ... wltn1 rutdtd!
FlXOOENT nuany denture wearer• One application may last round·;.
now eaL, speak. laugh, with little the clock. Dentures that flt arf!" f y,·orry of dentures coming loose. es11ential to health. See your ·
FIXOOENT forms an elastic dentist regularly. Get easy·to-. _
membrane· that helps absorb the use FIXOOENT Denture Adhe!in ·
lhock of biting and chewina:-Cream at all drug count.era.
a car.
These days, every car deale r is offering
you a deal . Including us.
The difference is, our deal includes more
than a car.
. On cars delivered now through
Febru~ 28, during our "What-Would-
You-Do' SJ>OCial, American Motors will
give you a General Elec tric 12-Inch
Portable TV with any new car you buy
from us.
But that doesn't mean we won 't give
you a good deal, t.oo.
Because we've got the best cars we
ever had this year, and we're going all-out
to give you a better deal than you can get'
anywhere else.
Plus the tv set.
Maybe you don't expect this much from
a car dealer, but, if you had to rompete ··
with GM, Ford and Chrysler dealers, .
what would yo u do?.
If you had to eotlipele with GM, Ford and Chrv&ier dealers,
what VJO&dd you do?
'11 American Motors Dealers
HARBOR AMERICAN
1969 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa~ California
1.
'
DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Enter
J\le'"'comers lo public office usually hold their
t.ongues and their fire at leasl until they have acquainted
themselves "·ith the ramifications, the ins and outs o!
problems and the acts or their predecessors.
Not so lbe ne\Yly-constlluted Orange Co unty Board
or SuperYisors. Ne \\'ly-e!ected Ronald W. Caspers and
Ralph Clark, in allia nce with freshman supervisor Rob-
ert \V. Battin. can1e on like gangbusters last \Veek.
Even those observers of county government "'ho
had expeeted a change in styl e and tone were surprised
-and a good 01<1.ny u'ere shocked -by the newcomers'
performance thei r first day in of{ice.
\Vhen they had finished their first plunge, what
came through \1•;.1s a heavy accent on po\\,.er politics -
and not very subtle use of pO\\•er either.
First lhe Battin-C aspers-Clark majority named Bal·
tin to the board l'hairmanship. This wasn't to tally un·
ex pected. Bui their next n1ove put all county depart-
ment heads on notice by refusing lo reappoint them for
1971 -hardly likely to preserve executive morale.
The triu n1 \•irate refused ev~n to consider C'Ourtesy
reappolntn1e nts, despite the' fact t he board has the pO\\'·
er to remove department heads at any time.
The group al sn look what amounted to a gratuitous
slap at a large nuinber of selfless. dedicated citizens \vho
serve \Vithout ron1pensation on various committees,
comn1is~1ons and task forces. They were directed
to Justify their existence \Vilhin 90 days or have their
groups abolished. Obviously, volunteer groups no longe r
serving a useful purpose should be disbanded -but not
\Vi th such a display of ingratitude.
Dis regarding the experience of veteran (14 years)
board member \\lilliam Phill ips on the Local .o\gency
Formation Commission (l..o\FCJ. the alliance replaced
him and former Supervisor Alton .-'\lien v.1ith two of
their O\\·n -Casper.s and Battin.
Educatio11
Sliould Be For
The Mature
(
"'
The great virtue of !ht; Jal.est r~port
of the Carnegie Comm1ss1on on H~gher
l~duca!ion, "'Less Time, M~re Opllons.~
Education Beyond the lllgh School
1""'r.1cGraw·Hill Bool< Co, 19il /. is thal
it sho.,.,·s a cJcf'p understanding of \.\'here
1he problems of 1 our colleges and
un iversities lit>.
Thev /1e not Qnly in 1rrespons1ble
l':tudents and proressors, weak ad-
ministratinns and reacUonary boards of
regents although these often bring the problen~s to pubhc: attention. They lie
in certain assu mp-
tions alx:iut higher
education \.\'hich 100
many of us take ror
«ranted-and 1vhic ti
;l'lapc the structure
;ind [unctions of
nighe r edu cation.
The conlmission·s
report cha llenges
the assumption thal
highC'r education is
bas1tally for young
pcoplt>. J\tany young peoplf'. !he report
i;uggests, simplv are nol mature enough
J<1r cotlrgc. It r'econ1n1ends that "-l udrn1.~
be oflcrcd lhe Q!)tion <11 the end Qf h11;h
s<:hOo! o! taking lime oUt for !11 n or lhn·P
)-'ear<:: !n 1vork. lo becon1e. acquainted w1lh
the 11orltl ou tsifle of sehool and tc. gro w
up n1enU1 l1y and en101ion;illy.
A:\O BEt:Al.i'SE educauon should be
;i uncd at grow11-ups. "'Opportun1l1 (''> fur
higher educal1un . .;huuld be <11 <1dablc
to j)r'fsf111s thro11gho111 tht·Jr Jitc!HTit· ::inll
not JllSt 11nm1·d)a1tly ;1f!er high school
... '.\lore edlu;at 1onal, <Hlfl !hus career
upportun1!1cs should be a\';11lahlc 10 all
"'ho \.,.ish to study parL-lln1 c or re turn
to study later in life."
It 1.~ necessary lo make higher ed11CR·
lion "more ava ilable lo n1ore people,
1nolud 1ng y,·omen. cmp\o~cd persons.
nlder people. and people from the lo.,.,·er
income levels." Thcrt.' should be "more
.~horl -term progra1ns leading t Q
cerlLflcales and gene rally 1norc slress
on lifelong learning ··
'"Higher education."' say~ lhc report ,
''is now pre j u J 1 c e d aga1nsl older
t'tudents. Thc.v .~hO\lld !)(! \\clco1ned in·
stead. Too often they are looked on
as inferior."'
TlllS PREJUDICE ii; built 1nto the
system in California. as in many other
mtes. Teache rs in adult and eiclensi<1n
programs are paid al a shockingly lower
rate than those In the regular degrtt.
program. Extension _ courses aff: u~ually
given limited C'redlt or no credit al
31J toward! a degree The professorial
~talus system Is so arranged lhal neither
promotion nor tenure can be earned
by leaching ettension CQurses. The even-
ing Cl&¥ or attm:iorri teacher, ofWI
moonlJghtinc {tom a titcady J o b
·Quotes
Vki« B. McAUm, S@noma. l)ft decllnt
ta U.S. mlllta"y pctwer -"1£ we continue
to day dream we're going to be In one
whale or a me$S (IO) let's get all our gov·
emlng bodiea together and qulckly .build
a strona:er United St.ates before it is too
J1te."
Re•. Duald Ga~ll'.· •lrotcr.tant
.,w.t, SF -"My code()( tlhics ii loving
your neighbor a.s you lovt yourtelf. One
haa to have a cer1ain stlf-wortb to apon-
taneoualy hive compassion for tn:i
neighbor .• ,
I
\
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
That "obscmily" allegedly yelled
by· John Wayne al those Viet Cong
flag-wavers just might have been
"Traitors!'' If Duke \Yayne didn'l
holler that. he should have.
-L. J.
T~it ... ,.,.. •"IK'hl ,. .. tn' ~ ... ,. Mt Mt;HMlrllY l'MM •I fllo __ ,,r, Stlltl .,..,,r "' _,, .. •r.."'' •""' a.11, ,11e1.
elsewhere, is the stepchild or the
academic profession.
"Yet," contlnues the report, "older
student. will help end the in loco parentb
atmosphere of many campu~ add
maturity to discussions, and make a
more balanced community out of the
CQJlege."' To thi s I can only say,
"Amen!"
STARTING AT JU.lNOJS Institute of
Technology in Chicago and later at the
University of Chicago and San Francisco
State, I have always sought adult and
evening classes as part of my teaching
a.~s1gnment. Looking back over 30 years
{ll tea ching, 1 find that l remember
niany more of my adult studen~, from
25 !o 55 years old, than of my younger,
"college age" student!. who are often
loo unformed In character and mind
to stand out as individuals.
1 rernen1ber in my classes firemen,
p0l1ce officers. executives, o u rs e ii: ,
1eaehers, society women. retired military
·-many of whom bring t() the classroom
surprising amount!! of experience and
barkground. like the student who politely
l'Ontradicted a stalemenl of mine in
class by saying, "I happen lo know
differently, sir. r \\-'I S a member of
(:cncral i\lacArthur's stall during the
Ol'Ctlpa lion "
~IE;,\ A.HOUND 3fl and 40 often fa ce
a p<'rsonal crisis as they ask themselves
1f 1he:v \\-'ant to spend the rest of their
hves in the occupations in \.\'hich they
hnd them~/ve!\. At th is point many
f'nroll in evening classes -perhaps
fur purposes o{ se lf.<fist:overy.
I recall \'lvidly the end of one semester
·when one of my students sold his
busi ness to study for the ministry and
another left the ministry to go into
bu~iness. Some, of course. stick with
their jobs but often arrive at higher
aspirations as a result of U1eir studies.
r.1any women, their intellectual lives
int.e.rrupted by marriage .and babies,
begin to think of going back to sdiool
as their children grow older. I recall
many such wnmen from 1'J to 45 who
re-entered collece to become in due
time teachers, professors. art colleetors,
novelists, journalis~. community leaders.
OLDER STUDENTS, a! Wt learned
from World War 11 , Korean War and
Peace Corps veterans, are well·mottvated
and eager. Like lhe majority of our
students at San Francisco State, whose
average age is 25, they enrich the level
of discourse with their maturity Bnd
eicperienct. Still ml>!l insUtutions put
f'very roadbl ()Ck In lhe way of older
students,
As the rtport says, "Society would
gain 1F v.·ork and ~ludy were mixed
throughou t a lifetime, thus reducing the
~nse ... of ii!IOlated studenta vs. worktn
and of )'outh vs. Isolated <:1ge. 'M'ie sense
of isolBtion would be reduced if more
students were also workers and If more
worker~ could also be studenl!I; if the.
age!I n1i.xed on the job and in thr.
classroom. • .Society· would bt more
intearated across the lint.a lb.It now
separatt: !!lludent.I ind worker1, youth
and age."
The Carnegie Commission rtport ('(ln-
la1ns many nmre intcrullng Ideas that
I shall dlscUls In future eolumns.
By S. I. H•)'akawa
Preaideol
San fr1Dtl1eo St.alt COUe1e
' ,_
Politics
Supervisor Phillips at ooe point admonished the
new majority:
"There seems to be an unseemly haste to do away
\vith everything that has been accomplished in the past.
I urge you to be cautious. Don't just undo everything.
I feel a spirit of destruction, not construction here.
"Don't destroy just lo start everything anew. Time
is needed for reflective study. experience is needed. I
get the reeling you are here to destroy with only one
day's experience on the board."
Phillips' displeasure will be shared by others who
sense that the new majority is creating a confidence gap
between the board and the pei?Ple within and outside
of county government. Political wheeling and dealing
obviously preceded the precipitate actions. County citi·
zens have a right to wonder what other deals have been
made.
The first \Veek's performance of the Battin-Caspers-
c:lark combine -is not one calculated to inspire confi-
dence. The new coalition's initial image does not trans-
late in to good government. It looks like simple, old-style
power politics.
Helping Fatherless Boys
Big Brothers of Orange County has for 12 year5
carried out lhe one man-one boy concepl of therapeutic
friendship. At present, more than 300 boys between
eight and 17 years old are matched with Big Brother
volunteers in the county.
Countless boys in fatherless homes have been saved
from bitterness and desLructiveness by Big Brothers
working to restore balance to their lives. And in the
process. the Big Brothers' own Jives have been enriched.
The organization needs more volunteers. For inf or·
mation, call the agency at 544-7773.
·you MEAN I'/'\ NOT INVITED TO TAKE CARE OF -THOSE
RUSSIAN HIJACKERS? WH.A.T'S CIVILIZATION
COM ING TO?•
A Sticl,le1· for Conventional Morals
J. Edgar Hoover's Private Life-II
(Second of two columa1)
WASHINGTON-Our FBI-style fie ld
investigation or J. Edgar Hoover bas
uncovered a bath of personal letters,
signed "Arfectionately" and ''\V i t I\
Love,'' lo an attractive \Vashing!on. D.C.,
"1'idow.
This is one of our starlling discoverie!!I
about Uie FBl's bachelor boS.'5 who on
New Years Day ceJebrated his 76th birth-
day and, in May. will mark hi.I 47th
anniversary at the FBI.
He has become such an awesome figure
t h a t Presidenl'l,
members or Con.
1resa and newsmen
alike have hu:ltated
to criticize h i m.
With octasional ex·
ceptions, the press
ha s been filled with
outpourings of
praise for him. \Ve
thought it was time
therefore. that someone pried into his
private life in the FBI manner.
HOOVER IS SUCH a stickler for con-
ventional morals that he ordered an
e.xhaustive investig ation o( an FBI clerk
\\-"ho was accuged by an informant of
spending a night with his girl lriend.
The girl was subjected to an FBI grilling,
and the clerk was fired for unbecoming
conduct.
Hoover hims.elf treats the lad ies with
19th century courtliness. The only hint
of a romantic interest is found in hi.5
personal letters lo the late Muriel Geier
who. according to local legen d, was the
iruipirat.ion for Muriel cigars . In her
youth, she \vas a stunning beauty who
reeernbled the gll'I on the Muriel cigar
Jabel.
The cigar people have. heard the st.ory
that Muriel's rather ran the cigar con·
cession at the old \Villard Hotel and
that a cigar maker on a visit was
so captivated by r.furicl he named his
favorite slogie for her. But the favored
legend is that the ~1uriel cigar got
its name from the daughter of a Little
Rock , Ark., colonel.
THERE IS NO reason lo believe that
Hoover's relationship wit h Muriel Geier
\l'as anything but platonic. His letters
were personal but proper with af-
fectionale endings. When she was prepar-
ing for a European tour. he offer ed
to arrange special treatment tor her
with the U.S. Embassy in Paris.
Later. he wrote that he would send
two FBJ agents to escort her from
New York City"s Kennedy airport to
the Waldorf. He hoped to .set her in
New York. he added. Jn another letter,
he 11Tote that he \.\'as "'sorry to hear"'
about her son·s difficulties and offered
to be or assistance.
The son, Paul Geier, said Hoover had
been a close friend and patient of his
foster father, the late Dr. Fred Cieier.
Young Geier acknowledged that Hoover
had written leUers to his mothtr signed
"Affectiooalely" and ''With love" but
insisted this v,·as a routine com-
plimentary close for genLiemen of
Hoover's gene ration. Asked why letters
\.\'ere \1-Tillen only to Muriel tven before
Dr. Gl'ier's dee.th. Paul Geier explained
thal his mother had handled all the soclal
correspondence.
HOOVER WA S born in \Yashington,
youngest of three childr en, into the home: or a career civil servant and christened
John Edgar. His parent!. Dickei:son ;:1nd
Annie·Hoaver, v.·ert God-fearing folk who
laughl him tht fwidarne:ntaHsm that sti!J
dominates his philosophy.
Arter his fa ther died, Hoover broughl
his invalid mother into hls home: and
for years provided her with devoted
care. Yet curioll.5ly, he contributed
."!carcely a cent lo the care of his sister,
Lillian Robinette, \\'ho also spent her
last years as an invalid. He left all
the cost and l'i'Orry to her son Fred,
tl'Len a IO\lo'ly agent on the FBI payroll.
\Vhen Fred's \.\'ife became pregnant,
Fred went into deb! lo hire a nurse
ror his mother. An attorney. 'vho loaned
him $2,500, told us Robinette had tried
to borrow the money from Hoover but
had been turned down. The neighbor!
in Lanham, ~1d .. y,•here the Robinette~
lived, also wondered 14·hy Lillian's famous
brother didn't help out.
BUT FRED, WllO qu it the FBI in
1951 after slaying long enough to l\'in
his 10-year pin , had no complaints, He
told us that he neither sought nor ex·
pected financin l help fr om his Uncl~
Edgar. For J1oover had carried the: full
financial burden of h.is own mother's
care.
It can11<1l be CQncluded that Hoover
is tightfisted. On occasions, he has reach·
td into his o.,.,·n pocket to help QUt
FBI agenL5 in need.
Our Bankers Put Love Into Loot
This great nation's historic love afla1r
with loot has approached some form
of cllmax in the mounting production
of what can only be called sexy bank
checks.
The check, as we know, 1.~ one of
the great in\•entions of our peculia r socu:.
ly. It cheapens money, and so enables
us to part with it
with greater alacri·
ty.
Ma:t; Beerbohm
put it well when ht
said, "Every ane.
even ~ Tiches;t and
most munificient or
men, pays much by
check more light·
heartedly Ulan he-
pays I it t 1 e in
specie."
Yet even though the check lubricates
our grPed , and va~tly, there is always
room for improvement. So our friendly
bankers. in an effort to make things
better all around, have decided to ~ut
lovt into loot. Bankers will use anything
for their purpose, which ill the 1tora11e
of your gelt, including love. And tht
most bankerish of bankers are tho.i;e
\\'ho live right here in California. They
have started the whole thing.
IF YOU ARE A cuslomer of lhe
~--B11 6eor9e
Dear Georae:
Do yoo think smoking marijuan1
Is any w<ne than a couple of
martlnls before dinner1
STUDENT
Dear Shu -Sthudenl:
Penhonally, I don'l think ish
near ash coon as c o u fl I a
martinlsh afore dinny.<fin! WHEE!
Dear GC<lrge:
Are you one of those long-haired
hippies!
SUSPICIOUS
De8r Susplcloua:
No. rm just one of th~ Ion~·
harrit.d f11mily 1nen -I c::11,n'l
AF'F'ORD a haircut .
(Send your problems to George.
No fractions or lone division.J
Charle& '\·lcCabe
-·
Bank or An1crica . thr largest Ln the
world, }'011 can ha vr your checks
overprinted ""'Ith a vie1.,. of the Golden
Gat e, or the San Dil'go or New York
City skyhnes, or the rocky Pacific
coastline.
For those who don't care to go big,
there are checks ""'ilh pastoral sctoes
like oul of Turner or Constable. or
just restful clouds floating in a pate
blue sky. These numbers !ht Hudson
()ty Savings Bank of Jersey City calls
"serenity checks."
Even lhe hippies in affluent society
have rnoncy and they are not overlooked
by outfits Hke Manhattan's Irving Trust
or Detroit's .Bank of lhe Commonwealth,
\\'ho offer checks decorated w 11 h
psychedelic patterns. intertwined hearts,
and even the peace symbol.
W0!\1EN, THOSE great spenders. are
nat urally the biggrst customers for sexy
checks, For patriotic lad ies. there are
checks with An1erican t:agles. So (ar
nobody has ye t put the American flag
on a check; but the law may be changed
to make that possible.
You can even get a check with your
awn picture on it -and in full color
too if desired. ·
All of this is the best possible news
for old Mammon, the one God for Whom
there are not atheists. And if he v.·ere
still around, it would come u good
news to Dr. Samuel JohnMn, who was
a great advocate of apending.
"A man cannot make a bad use o(
his money, s;o far as regard!! 10tiety.
if he do not hoard it; for if be either
.s pends it or ltnds it out, society has
the benefi t. ll is in 1ener1l better to
Generalist vs. Specialist
1[ you go tn a general practitioner.
the chances are prelty good that he'll
treot what you've got. or refer you
to treatment; ir you go to a specialist,
the chances are higher that he'll find
)'ou've got what he tre.11ts.
• •
Tlmes have hardly
ch a n g e d in tht
more than 200 years
sinre Vauvenargues
observed that "tile
young suffer le!ls
from thei r own mis-
takes than from 1he
wisdom of U1e old ."'
•
All U1e world may
•
love a lover, but not when he's munchlni
o" hill 'irl friend "• ear directly in fronl
or )'OU 1n II movie housr.
• • •
'·Au1hor1ty" that has to use torcc h:ls
alre11dy lost it_, iiuthorlty.
• • •
ll took the: Weiilcrn world a long time
lo catch up with Dean lntt'• tuay 1;1n
"P11r1ousm," wrllten in 1111, where he
wrote: "In impertlll.rm. oolhlnc !alla llke
success. If the conqueror oppreues hlJ
subJecu. they will become fanaUcal
patriob and tooner or later have their
reven1e ; tf he treats them wtll, and
'governs them for their 1;1wn cood.' they
wlll multiply fastt:r than their rulers, Ull
they claim their Independence."
• • •
~hind every questian we ask a lover,
there Ue11 anoth<'r question we dart not
Bllk. •
Tiie maxim or Prot11aora1. lhal "'Man
ls the mea sure of all lh lng1," 13 tht
noblesl ~ying If applied to tht a:pe<:les;
the most wicked, if applied lo the
individual.
-
spend money than to givt: it away~
£or industry is more promoted by spen·
ding money than giving ii 3\.l'&y."
A ~IAN H'HO HOLDS onto his money
is rightly despised by our society, By
so doing. to use a piclure<;quc phrase.
he keeps the \1·hcels of the economy
fron1 turning. Thal is a properly awful
thing. Anything ""'hich loosens the dum-
mies from their dough is to be applauded.
The national motto should rightly be,
"Anything for a buck.''
While :iexy check!! are clearly a boon
to the AmeMC'an "'ay of Lire. ""'hy should
we stop there? Why not go to work"
on the cash itself?
WHV NOT A SAWBUCK with picturt!ll
of Aphrodite, or one of her later images,
llke Brigette Bardot or Jane Fonda!
Or long ones with a reproduction of
the Rape of the Sabine 1'-faldtns? Or
just simple dollar bills with your own
discreet phlz thereon ? Lincoln isn't 'doing
all that much for the economy.
lt i!: sald that almost anyone koows
how to make a mWion but only one
in a million know.9 how to 1pend il
This is .a condiUon which can be
remedied, as .all condJUona can be '
remedied, by a little more Ytnkte know·
how. Just let Batten, Barton, Duratina
~ Osborne take over tht mint Any,
further questions?
----
Monday, January II, 1971
Tht tdltonol pogt of lht Dcllp
Pilot ntlu '° Inform and adm.-
ulalt' r1ader1 br prt11nting thiJ
newspaper'• oirinlan.a and com-
mcniarv on topfu of "1t.cre1t
and sfgnlfi<>nic<. by pn!tli<llng •
foruJn for t"IL!: t:rprcuion of
our rtodlr1' OJ)infona, and br
presenting the divtrte vino-
pofnll of ~11/orm•d ob8tn>tr1
and .spokt-imtn on toplct of th• dau.
Robert N. \Veed, Publis!1er
Highway
Deaths
Lower
WASillNGTON ! UPI)
'fhe nalion's highway dealh
toll for 1970 dropped sharply,
Indicating the government's
11utfl safety standa rds are
beginning to pay dividends in
hun1an lives, traffic experts
said today.
A prelin1inary survey by lhe
national llir.:ln.vay Safe t Y
Bureau indicates 5 a , 3 O O
persons died in traffi_c ac-
cidents in 1970, a dechne of
1,100 fron1 1969.
1'he decline \Vas the firsl
!'ince 191i7. the year the
govern rncnt's initial safety
standards took effect. Between
1967 and 1969 the death toll
increased at an average of
2 percent a year -but this
comp01red v.·ith ;:i n ave rage of
almost 7 percent for the five
years previous to 1967, a
Spok e s m;in for the
·r r ansportation dcpartrnent
sai d.
'/'he expc:r ts sUB . a _re
cautious a b o u t pred1ct1n~
\\'hcthcr 1he 1970 do\vnturn will
conlinuc. but th ey say it ap·
pea rs 1hc s;ifr ty innovations
llre h<'lvinµ a direct effect on
the death toll.
1'hc use of scat belts is
rited for krcping the death
tn!t do\\'n. along with the col-
lapsible stccrin~ \~~eel _and
increased padding 1 n s 1 de
pas!'enf:!r r comparl!nents, all
of whi<'"h were required under
the safety standards for ne\\'
cars.
But the f'Xpcrls said there
:ire other factors. too. 'fhey
rile the he::ivy use of in-
terstate high\\·ay s y s le m .~
\\·hich are "tw ice as safe
ns secondary rnads: b£'lter
designed secondary hhi;hways:
<1nd increased use of safety
dn\"iccs tilong roadsides.
for exan1ple, the experts
pointed to a federal highway
ad rninist.ration report I as t
n1nnth \\'hich claimed one of
its ne\\·esl safety innovations
-the breakaway sign posts
-is so effective the govern-
ment can't find the evidence
it needs to document its suc-
cc o;;s.
Jl.1andatory on new hi11:h
"fll'"d highways built '''ith
federal aid. !he sign posts
nrc desiE:ncd to slip from their
hasc and move upv;ard and
for,,•a rrl out of a car's .,.,·ay
in1 mediately on impact .
Lnst year 6,500 persons _lost
1hrir li ves "'hen cars collided
\11l h fixed flbiects such as
sign PQSts. hridgc stanchions
and guard rails.
Bui 1hl' FHA :-;<1id it is now
\n1pnss1hlc ln 1cll exactly ho\\'
nianv lives \\'ere s a v c. d
hec;l11sr "drivers ,vho used to
perish nr suffer seriou_s injury
in slam n1ing inlo a s 1wi pole
t1re now 1~·alking away" and
the nccidenl is not reported.
liandica p Swim
Lessons Slated
Swimming leSS()ns for emo-
tionally and mentally han-
dicapped youngsters will be
offered at the Huntington
Beach city pool st.arting Jan.
12
Classes will meet for four
\.I/eeks each Tuesday and
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. and
7; 15 p.m. Registration fee is
$4 and youngsters mey be
registered now at the city
gym. 16th Street and Palm
Avenue.
Male a Sharp
Trade; Use
Dime·A-Line1
Mond1y, January 11, lfl71 OAlLY PILOT 7
Sale! Look how we've
underpriced our underthings.
Save 15% to 25%.
2 for '4
Reg. $6
S-M-L-XL
~a
Reg. $10
S-M-L-XL
Av .. tall
Our fantastic sheet sale.
Natlonwld•® whit•
Cotton mualln. 133 count•
63x108". 72x108"
or twin fitted bottom.
Reg. 1.99 ................................ -...................... NOW
Full 81x108" flat or
143
full fitted bottom. Reg. 2.29., ............................... 1.-•••.• NOW 1.U
Piiiow cases '42x36''. Reg. 2 for 1.09 ................... NOW 2 fot lk
•e1e1ched and llniahed.
Pencil•" white parcel•
Combed cotton. 188 count*
Twin 72"x108" flat or
::~. f~tt;:. .. b.°.~~.~ .. ----··-·-····· .. --..... -NOW 183
Full 81x1 08" f lat or
lull fi tted bottom. Reg. 2.69 .......... -·--·-.. NOW 2.1S
Pillow cases -4 2xJ8" reg. 2 for 1.39 ..................... NOW 2 lor 1.ot
·e1e1cl'Led and Finished
Penn·Preat" white mualln
50% cotton/50% polyester ·
Twi n 72x104" flat or
~~~. f~t~e9d .. b.°.tl~.~.' .......................................... NOW 177
Full 81 x104" flat or
lull titted bottom. Reg. 2,99 ...................... _ ... _ ............ NOW 2.37
Piltow cases 42x36"'. Reg. 2 tor 1.69 ................... NOW 2 for 1.S7
Penn-Preat• white percale
50% cotton/50% poly11tar
Twin 72x104" flat or
~:;. 1~~~9~.~.~~~~-~.' ..... _._, .......... ---·-··NOW 237
Full 81x104" t11t or
full fitted bottom. Reg. 3.91 ....... _.,_, ... _ .. _ .. _,, ... HOW 1.11
Twin fitted top. Reg. 3.!59 ..•.•••••.. , .• _ .............................. NOW 2.t7
Full fitted top Atg. '4.!59 ....................... _,,___ ........ NOW S.17
Piiiow cuu, '42x36"; Reg. 2 for 2.09 .................. NOW 2 for 1.17
OuHn pillow c"91. "42x40". Atg. 2 for 3.09 ...... NOW 2 for 2.14
King pillow c ..... 42x44". Reg. 2 for 3.39 ......... NOW 2tor1.71
Queen flat or queen
lifted bottom. Reg. 8.99..... ·--NOW l.M
King flat or Wntern king
titted bottom. Reg. 8.19 ... ---·--· .. ---·-NOW 7.14
P1nn-Pr11t® perc1l1 faahlon color
50% cotton/50% polye1t1r
72x104''
~~~~~~:!.~~.~:'.~.~·i·t·~~~·~·~·t·~~~-· .................... HOW 357
81x1().4" !Jal sheet or twin tilled bottom.
Reg. 4.99 ......................................................................... NOW 4.11
Queen Ila! or Queen filled bottom. Reg. 7.99 ............ NOW 1.71
King Ila! or Western King fitted
bottom. Reg. 9.99 .......................................................... NOW 1.48
Pillow cases. 42x36". Reg. 2 !or 3.09 ................ JrtOW 2 for 2.T7
Queen pillow cases. 42x40". Reg. 2 for 3.59 .... NOW 2 for 2.IO
King pillow cases. 42x46". Reg. 2 for 3.89 ....... .NOW 2 for 3.0I
Penn-Preat® perc•le mufti-floret or 1trlpe1
50% cotton/50% polyester
Twin 72x104" !lat or
~~~-'!~~e9~ .. ~.~~'.~~: ....... -. ................................ NOW 418
Full 81x104" flat or
full fitted bottom. Reg. 5.99 ............................ -.-....... NOW 5.11
Pillow cases. 42x36". Reg. 2 for J 59 ................ .NOW 2 for 3.11
Penn-Prest• Percale Comp•nlonette
50% cotton/50% poly111ar
Twin 72x1CM" flat or
::~. f~'.~:. .. ~.~'.'.~.~: ........ -·····-···"•"······ .. -·NOW 418
Full 81x104" flat or
lull lllled bottom. Reg. 5.99 ................................... -•• ..NOW 1.11
Queen fl1f.or Queen fitted bottom. Reg. 8.49.-... -NOW 7.22
Ki:,g flat or Western King
fitted bonom. Reg. 10.99.-...... --.. -.. NOW 1.3'
Piiiow casts. 42x36". Reg. 2 for 3.59 ......... -. .NOW 2 for 3.11
King pillow cues. 42x'6", Reg. 2 for 3.99-.. .HOW 2 for 1..11
' I
P1nn-Pre1t• mualln In Flor•I prlnta
50% cotton/SO% polyeater
Twin 72x104" flat or
:~ 1~1~9d,b.°.'.1~.~.'. ................................. 2 for $5
Full 81x104'' flit or
lull filled bottom. Reg. 3.99 ............... _ ....... -... NOW 2 for $7
Pitlow cue1. '42x36", Reg. 2 lor 2.49 ........... -..... NOW 2 for l2
Penn-Pr11t• mualln faahlon
colora or 1trlp11
50% cotton/50% polyester
Twin 72x104" flat or
~i~-'~~~e9~ .. ~.~~~::_,_ .................. _ ..... 2 for s5
Full 8tx104'' fl at or
full fitted bottom. Reg. 3.99 .. -.............................. NOW 2 for 17
Pillow cues. 42x36", Reg . 2 for 2.49 .................... NOW 2 lor 12
CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE I
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..., .,..JlV Pil -0"1 r ... ud"1, January 11, 1971
Etl1nund Brown Jr.. on Mowe
SACRAMENTO (UPI l -
Edmund G. Brown Jr. darted
about his new office yanking
out empty desk draftn and
ritlina half-barren shelve!.
"There was a book here
by Robert Welch. That's one
that won't stay if J can find
it.'' he said.
All John Birch Society
litC"rature bad been removed.
But the son of the forn1er
go.,.ernor spotted a n o l h e r
publication of personal in·
leresl -the final results of
the Nov. 3 election.
Burying his head in the as
. ~et unreleased f j g u re .i ,
California's new secre:ary or
slat<:> learned he actually h<id
been elected by Inore than
300.000 voles -a larger
ma-rgin than at rirst reported.
Like a tenant in a new
.:4partmcnt, Bro1vn has devoted
most of his first days on the
job to just getting acquainted
\l'ilh !he place
I le also hos been shaking
hands with a s eemingl y
endless .s!rea1n of well-l\'ishers
11ho say they knew !tis father .
To the inevitable question
-does he plan sornc day
to run for the office his father
held for lv•o terms -yo ung
Rro"·n cautiously replies /hat
first he'd ''like to spend a
ht11e lime up here and ge t
a feel for what it's like."
But he adds, "I'll look lt.
01·pr very carerully."
There seems little doubt
•
•
,
•
SETTLI NG IN
Edmund G. Brown
fhat Brown cioes have his
sights on highe r oHice.
At onl y 32, he is one or
the younges t statewide elected
off icials in Californ ia history.
He also is the only De mocrat
now holding state w i de
partisan office.
Jerry -as friends call him
-is intelligent. articulate,
energetic and enough of a
political realist to know why
he's where he is.
"I 11·;i nt to thank my mother
for having the good sense to
name-me after my father,"
he quipped after being sworn
in by retired Chief Justice
Earl Warren. "I never liked
that name, but l got to like
it during the campaigo.. ''
Brown bears sev e r al
resemblances 10 his father -
inqu isitive, piercing eyes; the
habit of cutUng bil sentences
off suddenly, then pawing to
see what others near him have
to offer; an air of determina-
tion.
Like his father, Brown is
an attorney by profession.
Unlike bis father, he studied
for th e priesthood in a
seminary near Los Gatos. He
left in 1960 .
"Alter tour yea rs of ex-
posure to the life in a
monastery," he says, "I decid-
ed I'd ralher be in the world
than under the .obedience and
authority of a religious order."
A serious minded bachelor,
Brown believes "the most
urgent problem" fa c in g
California state government is
to raise enough. revenue ''lo
do what needs to be done."
For one thing, he believes
the possibility of establishing
off lrack betting should be
"looked at very carefully."
"There are beaches that
ought to be bought, schools
that ought to be adequately
financed . There are a high
number of children not getting
adequate reading, or noL ijving
at a decent' place .•. "
Brown says he w ..
"puzzled'' by Gov. Ronald
•
Anniversary SALE
The best seat
in the house
for only ..... .
$139
In your choice of wood finish . -•
in your choice of foblrlcsl
PASADENA
POMONA
-• YOU'LL IE SITTING il'REnY i" • il'•t lty
11Hil'l!I with 11••• ilftto•t ler ,h.iri frt'" Hib•ittn ••• new your1 ti Al'll'li>'t rstry
lt¥i nftl l•1iilf1 th1 1•1• pric•, w• 1111
9iv1 yov two b1"1u•i: I) Cllooi• fr•'"
thi1t1111 pti,llh "'""d fini1ii•1 t• t iv1 it
th1t cv1t•,. lo ~. '"' 2) we let yov t1~1
yo11t pf~~ of · 11i9n1• qvtlity l•bric1. l'ut
i i •II 'fo91fh•• •r1d you'll' pl1i1 it "Wliti-t It'•
1v•• lo be !ht bti! 111! i11 y1v1 h11111I
Colorodo-at ft•Melit10-7'2·6136
Hol t, fo1f of Gorey--629-l026
SANTA ANA Moin ot fl•v•ntn-.547.·1 621
s..te 4M ltoN o,_ M--, l\1'11111"1'
•
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Flt.-e Bulldozers
T ee riagers Save
Reptiles' Lives
If there is a better value than
the Penncrest~refrigerator, it's
the Penncrest"refrigerator
On Sale Sale prices effective
• through Saturday o~ly
Save 41.95
Sale $388
Re g. 429.95. Penncrest • Imperial
18.5 cu. ft. side-by-side refrigerator.
EquippPd lo receive ice
make r, has 213 pound freezer capacity,
completely lrost lree. Wtl1te, copper-
lone. avocado or harvest gold ••• color
costs no more at Penneys.
Same relrigeralor with aulomaUc
Ice maker. Save 41 .95. Reg. 469.95,
Sale $428
Save s21
Sale 278 95
Reg. 299.95. Penncrest "' 16.6 cu. ft
refrigerator. Fealures 139
pound freezer capacity. twin porce!air\
enamel finish crispers. Rolls out for
easy cleaning. While, coppertone,
avocado or tiarv esl gold ••• color costs
no more at Penneys.
Penncrest1'' 16.6 cu. ft. refrigerator
with auto matic Ice maker. Save 40.95.
P.eg. 339.95, Sale $299
~.;;t'.' .. , .. __ ,
CA.LL ••. (714) 523·8401
Save 31.95
Sale $328
Reg. 359.95. Penncrest c •mp1rlal
19.6 cu. ft. refrigerator ..
, . Equipped to receive ice mal(er. Has
139 pound freeze r capacity, split
can!1lever shelves. In white, copper·
tone. avocado or harvest gold •••
tolor costs no 'more at Penney&.
S•m• refrigerator with
automatic Ice-maker. S•ve 31.95.
Rog. 399.95, Siie $351
Value. It still means something at Penneys.
t\nnelf•
HUNTINGTON
FASH I ON
CENTER,
ISLAND,
Huntington
Newport
Beach
-.
Cente r
&~~ ii o~ P1""•Y•
Tom• P•Y"'tnt Pl•l'I
•
UPI Teltl'~Ote
IT'S CAPITOL -NOT LONOON BRIDG E
Engineers Say It Won't Be Falling Soon
Eco·tltctics Clltss
Sclieduled by UCI
Eco-l;Jt'1tcs. polt11cal lcfl1•11·
ques thal rna ;v help rn;u1i...111rl
a1oid ecocat<1stro11hes. 1s lbc
substance offered 111 a t:l
Irvine Ex!cnsion !cc1ure s('r\c<;
th at melds politics o n d
ecology.
Dr. George Hcn 1•ghan ,
twg lns his cours1• ··1-:e11lnc\·
and 1 'o!ilics The Slcndl·r
'l'hread"' fro1n 7 to 9:~5 p 111
Thursday in Hoom :!!iii ut
Humanities H<1ll. Ul'I
··11u1nan survival n1ay d1·-
pcnd on the knnw lertge 11nd
/Jur1ng U1C' series 11'hrch runs
tl1r!lugh fllr1rch 18, case
stuct1cs of four ewlogical
~ri~~·s 111!1 Ix· presented · the
j•ff.,hore oil crises, death of
!akr :ind ri1'ers. politica l ba!t!e
01·t·r h(>rbit·idcs and pesticides
and probll·1ns of San Fran·
t·1sr·11 t:::iy and Salton Sea.
Thr t:oursc is open to the
pul1!1c ;ind n1ay be taken for
t!lrl'I' units of credit in
puh1ica l sc1ent() or for no
credit. In t•1ther case the
course fee is SIS.
use of the political proec~~.-· ,-----------,1
Dr. Hencgh;in said. lie· ts
chairman of !he pnlillc:al
science depart1ncnt. Cal Slate
Dominguez Hills.
The DAI LY PILOT-
The One That Ca res
Come in now ...
Valentine's Day
is February 14th
Give him you r love
in a Valentine Portrait
••• taken just with him in mind!
3FOR ONLY 4 95
Hurry In now and you'll receive one big,
beautiful 8x10 for him .•• plus two 5x7's for
Dad and Grandadl Don't miss it! And ,...
member, you can charge It at Penney's.
'11\.l.f;llTOl'I llUNTltlGtON •Ea c 11
O--..-•lr c...... l-1~MIN/IOrl (°"tu ,... ·-· .,, .... '.J.IJ/ 7'><I • .,.,., lf?./111 O<"•• ·'lh• (11'¥~ ""10'1
' -
NEWl'OllT a.a&Cll
F .. hlO!I Jtl11nd
1'>d t_., U4-1lU
Mond•y, Jan111ry 11, 1':171 DAILY PtLOf
Capitol Wall.s May Sag, hut ·won't Fall
WASH~GTON tAl1 ) -The restauranl.8 and to at w
venerable walls or tht U.S. bathrooms.
CapjtoJ'a weg front are in Far from collapsing. the
no danger of lum bling down, report said, the C a p l l o I
Congress has !;>eftl. told, and "survives in relatfvely &obd
can be restoffil to Jlth Cen-oonditlon, att~sling to ·the e1-
tury perfectlon by 20th Cen-cellence of its builders·. 111d
tury techno logy at relatively to the concern of those
modest cost. . responsible for maintaining
1l>e r esport or an Jn-th.is, the national monument
dependent New York arcllitec· t.o our republic."
tural firm may permanently The report, by the rinn of
lay lo rest plans to encase Praeger, Kavanagh a nd
l h't 150-year-<>ld sandstone Waterbury, said old columns
walls in a marble extension should not be replaced merely
-inc I u d in g Io u r i s l because they are frayed and
eroded by Ume, and ooncloded
restontlon can be carried out
under congressio n al
guidelines.
"The Capitol is 15ll years
old." the report said, "and
$hollld give an impresmn
of venerable age, not a crisp
newDe!s that denies i t s
historical background."
Required by Congress last
year, the report goes to a
Q>ngi-essional body w h ose
name has been entirely con-
sistent with its king-sought
g.a.ls: "The Commission for
the Exten.k?'l ~ the CapltoL"
That comntltsion led and
directed tbe successful drive
to extend the Capitol's east
front more than a detade ago.
It has alnce waged a cam.
paign to do the-!&rM far the
west front, contending that
part of the building has so
deteriorated it could easily
give way, possibly lead \ng to
collapse of the building's cen·
tral set'lion and its towering -·· The commission recently
lost two of the major forte s
behind extension: J . Goorse fears are groundles.-:.
Ste...-art who was Lhe Capitol One of the first copies of
architect when he died last the comprebensive report -.
it weighs tour poondit -wall
Ye a r ; and John W. delivered to Sen. Wllllarn
McCormack, speaker or the Proxmire (D-Wi1.). who witti
House until his retirement a1 Sen. f.:dward M. Kennedy cl)..
the end af the lllSl Congress. Mass.), has been a lead~ng
It was Stewart, an engint.>er and. vocal foe of the extens1011
. ... th proJect. by trai ning rau"'r an an __ ~
architect, who argued the west r;;;=-''--===-=-----;
front was in danger of col-FAIR
lapse. He eipressed fears that
a sonic boom could even do
the slructure in .
The new report said such
F11I, f.:., f1clu1I, Ti.01•
th••• wo•d• 111m up f1clor' ill
opet•!io11 011 the DA ILY PllOl
edaori1I p191 •••ry dey.
Penneys values . . . even greater
now -at clearance time.
Assorted styles in boys'
sweaters priced for
savings. Cardigans and
pullovers in assorted
colors. Sizes 8-1 8.
399
Infants' cotton
cord crawlabouts
in assorted
prints, 1/2-3.
Orig. 3.29 •nd 3.50
NOW 199
Boys' link
stitch acrylic
sinatenkl
gr..., blue or
gold. 8-18.
399
Girls' Orton" acry1ic/stretch nyfo11 cable knee
socks Jn white, red or navy. Sizes 7 1/2-8 112,
9-1 a. Stock up now at this low price.
'
Special Buy!
Misses' two--pieee skirt and pant suits in various styles
end colors. These •re •terrific value, so be sure to be
early for but selection. Assorted misses' sizes.
19ss
Women's sheer
stretch panty
hose with nude
h&el styling in
fashion colora.
Petite/medium,
medium/la/I.
129
Girls' sk1 r!s i11
assorted colors
and broken sizes.
Orig. $4-55
Now 288
Girls· ankle p ants
in assorted colors,
Broken sizes.
Orig. $4·$5
NOW 2
88
CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE !
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J 0 DAil V PILOT Mond~y. J1n11lt)' 11, 197J
l 'A.fflL l' ClllCllS An gela's Davis Co-defendant
Charges Bribery Overture
Pris on Break
First, He Cracks Safe
SAN QUENTIN (UPI ) -security area outside prison
A convicted murderer v.·ho walls and Dav.is slid to a
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Bjorklund, Maaet said he complete lack • f com· was a:in.sidered 8 m 0 d e I San Francisco Bay mudflat
Ruchell Maaet. tbe ruued 31· rcfl15ed the offtr •nd "run mllnicatlon that l bavt ubd ! and th en waded around two
Y .. r-old co-defendant of black prisoner cracked .a sa e Sun-Bjorklund out of the room." lhe court to wltbdr1w u bis h b militant Angela Davis, says day, took isoo and then fe nces to reac a near Y
in an affidavit that ht was Bjorklund sakl he was attorney." escaped in a heavy rog from roadway where pri s o n
offered immunity if he would shocked at Magee's charges Bjorklund'• requut to San Quentin Prison. authori,_Jes think he may have
perjure himself to help convict and called tbtm "absolutely withdraw waa made lul TUea· Joe E. Davis Jr., 31, v.tio been given a ride by an ac-
Mlss Davis. false." · · · day at the conUnulng ar-was convicted of both mur-con1plice.
The two are charged with "Mr. Magee has at ablolute-ralgnment of M11ee and Miu der and burgl!ry in 1963 in By n1eans of a stolen
conspiracy, kidnap!ng and ly no time communicated with Davis. Superior Court Judie;:;::=========:::; Santa Clara County, vanished stethoscope he was able to
murder in the shootout at the me concerning these charges, Joaeph G. Wllson hu taken RNd Gr•ffiti from an employes' restaurant cpen the canteen safe by
Marin County courthouse last and I have been absolutely the request under advl1emtnl and snack bar where he li stening to tumblers fall as
Aug. 7 which took the life unable to crimmuniCate with Maa:ee conalst.ently bu refus-By Bin Leery worked as ca.shier. he twirled the combinati on
of Judge Harold Haley, ty,·o· __ hi_m_ . ....::.ll....::.i•:._:bec=::'"::':::'....::.•f:._:l::hl::•_.d::__:•l::to:m_::::•Yc:•:.· -------=====::::=====!__Th:.::•:.:'::':n:lee'.:n'.'...'.'.is:_in:_:•:...:m:•d:i_:Um:.__d:i:al::.. _______ _
San Quentin convicts and an.-
acromplice who brought guns
into the courtroom. Magee,
"Listen? Hear that quiet I
i t's s.nowin'l "
Sounds like
serving a life senten ce at San
Quentin, was in court as a
witness and is charged with
murder.ing Judge Haley. Miss
Da vis, a former UCLA phi l-
osophy teacher, is accused of
ha ving purchaaed the gwui:. -
Job Layof f s Hi nted
111 R eug·ci1 1 Me ssage
r..iagee aald the man who
made the offer was A.
Leonard Bjorklund, a Sausa-
lito attorn ey later named as
his defense attomey by ~1arin
County judges.
Jn a self prepared motion
S aturday to di s mis s
SACR A!\lENTO (UPI) -
Sorne stale workers could Ix>
laid nff as part of Gov . H.onald
Hca gan·s stringenl new drive
10 further "cut, squeeze and
\nm" the cost of government ,
arrord ing to a top ad-
minist ration official.
''There are some situations
"here layoffs may be
necessary." Edwin ~lcese Ill,
Reagan's executive secretary,
Sui ts Pend
In Cutback
On Medi-Cal
LOS ANQELES (UPJ) -
A [}(>n1ocrattc assemblyman
and the California ~1 edica l
Assoc1a11on have decided in
separate arlions lo go lo court
against the state of Cal ifornia
Administration to f or re
rcinstatcrnent of the re cent
cuts 1n t.:ledi-Cal benefits.
Bill Greene. who represents
much of south central Los
Angelcii. said Saturday that
he hopes lo file suit in
Sacramenlo or Los Angeles
th is week lo "brin g immediate
rcllef to the needy people or
this stalr "
In San Di ego, Dr. Ralph
,V. Burnell sa id the Califor nia
Medica l Association voted Fri-
<l ay tn sue the state to rescind
the cu\backa. lie said the
Rcagfln arlmi nisiration v.·as
"playing 11•i1h the lives of the
poor."
Gree ne charged that the
governor acted callously and
C.'lpric 1ously in ordering the
cutbacks. ··This rcsutcd in Rn
overwhelmi ng number of doc-
l{ltS. pharmacists t1nd other
1nrdical s e r \' ice pcrsoMel
refusing to treat persons
rri:ei\"1ng metli-cal bcncrits, ·•
hr said.
Yellow Lines
Ba e" in \'o1!11 <'
l,OS ANGELES IAP1 -
\'!'\low rcnterhne slrlpc!; \1·1!1
t>f!on replace the v•hi!e stripe!'
nn rnany of Cali fornia's tw o·
l;ine slrccts an d highways.
sa1·.~ the state dircclor or P~blic Y.1orks
Jan1es A. ~toe sa id today
the repainting will l:legin 1n1·
mcdia1el y and should be co111-
pleted with in t1i.·o ye11rs. fl1ult 1·
lane roa ds and streets have
had yellow centerlines fo r
several years, Moe said.
sa id Sunday. But fl'leese adde d
he did not anticipate "mass·•
layoffs.
The State's fiscal si!.uation
is one of the major prbblems
fac ing the Legislatur' today
as it begins the secol)d week
of the 1971 sessioil. Reagan
has said his anpual "State
of the State" message to be
delivered Tuesday will "make
public the full extent of our
money problems."
l\.1eese said any employes
laid off \Vould probably be
•·technical" workers not easily
transferred to other jobs.
"I'm not saying there will
be (layoffs), but these are
the areas where it might be
nec.essary," the official ex-
plai~d.
When a .vacancy occurs, he
s3id. the state tries lo transfer
nnother emplOye from a
dcparlment where the payroll
Is being reduced into the spot
rather than hire a new person .
But he added some specialists
'"don"L have that capability of
transferring" to another p<>si-
tio n when thetr dtparlments
cul back pn;~
In such sltUations, "there
\\'ill have to be ·Jayoll!," he
said. ,
Reagan last November 30
annou nced a strict econom y
program in' ah etfort to hold
down the Cost of government.
He revealed his adrninistralion
was spending money at an
annual rate. of $150 million
more than it was laking in.
A freeze on the hiring f)f
state employes was part of
that program,
Big Red wood
'Fool Proof'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The coast red wood is "a near-
ly foolproof tree," s ay
landscape architects or the
state Divisio n Of Highways
"'ho ha ve been planting all
"nrls ot trees in the freewa v
beautification· program thiit
bC'ga n 25 yea rs ago.
Reporling this with evident
satisfaction. lhe California
lledwood Association add s
that the cdast redwood (se-
riuoi'a sempervirens) grows
from two lo eight reet a year
and y.'ill tolerate tempera-
tures down lo zero.
Even mOtt hnportant. lt is
among the few smog-resistant
trees. which also include sugar
pines and the Big Trees of
the Sierra foothills (sequoia
gigantea ).
Mills E yin g
Le g islature
Assig nmen ts
SACRAME NTO I AP)
Sen. James Mills faces the
first major test of his state
Senate leadership this week
as he begins making the
touchy decisions on y,•hich
senators should get prized
committee assignments for
the 1971 legislative session.
'The San Diego Democrat
is acutely aware that bit·
terness among prestige con-
scious senators over com-
mittee assignments hastened
the downrau of Republican
Ho\vard Way, one of his
predecessors as Senate presi-
dent pro tern.
But Mills plans to profit
rrom Way·s mi.stakes, not
repeat them.
So while most key com·
mittees will go to Democrats,
reflecting the party's 20-19
supremacy, some Republican!
and not a few anU-Mills
Democrats are Jn fine fat 1ood
assignments ls Mills proves
he wants lo bury the hatchet.
Mills plans to give an old
arch-foe, Sen. R ando Ip h
Col l ier (D -Yreka),
chaiarmanship of the Finance
Committee.
And he i11 virtually com-
pelled out of courtesy to at
least offer a chairmanship to
the fellow San Diego senator
he depoatd as Senate leader
last Monday, Republican Jack
Schrade.
Miils will be u s in g
diplomacy. and conciliation as
well as rewarding loyalists in
making the assignmenll, a
task he must share with the
othe r four membeni or the
Senate Rules Committee. Two
members are conservative
Democrats and the others are
m o d e r ate -to-conservative
Republicans.
Alien Signup
Deadline Set
SAN FRA NCISCO I AP)
1'he U.S. Immigration and
Natura I i z at i on Service
ren1inded aliens again today
the! they must report their
add resses to tbe government
this month wlthout fail.
Forms for address reports
are on hand at a\1 post offices
and immigration servi ce of-
fices.
Mar ch to Prove Peaceful
Protest Erupts in Me le e
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
A Chicano rally and 1na rch
which its sponsor said was
lo prove "we can proelSt
peacefull y and that we will
not be intimidated by police"
erupted into a club swinging .
rock throwing melee during
the weekend.
Thirty·two persons were ar-
rested Saturday when the
violence spread through a si x.-
block downtown are11 and win·
dows or mort• than 2 O
businesses were'£ m a sh ed.
Dozen11 of Policemen and
demonstrators suffered minor
injuries.
CMrges 11ga1nst thOM: ar·
rcmed inclJ.rded RS"laull on a
pollceman. fallurt to disperse
and one of lootlng..
Tbe trouble began at Parker
l
Center. police headquarters.
whert some 1,000 persom had
ga thered to protest alleged
police harassment of Mulcan--
AmeriC&!\5· Many tiad walked one mile
from Hollenbeck Park where
lhcy had attended a rally
sponso red by the National
Chicano Moratorium Com-
mlltee.
Rosal.lo MllDOl, co-chairman
of the group, tpld the rally,
"over 50 Chicanos involved in
the moratoriuni committee
have been beaten or arrested
by police in the last month.
"We are marching to prove
th11t ~'e ca n protest peacefully.
and that wt wtU not be l•-
Umidated by polioe."
Ocmonstrators .spilled Into
the st reets 1111 Parker Center
and into a construction slle:
at the nearby city ?1111 annex.
Police attempted to clear the
site and prote1ten hurled
rocks aAd 1tlcks. An American
flag flying at the annex was
pulled down and ripped apart.
The ga thering was declared
an illegal assembly and some
350 offiren swept the area.
As the demonstration broke
up, groups of 30 to 40 youths
ran down Broadway break.Ing
store wllldow11.
Muno; said police were to
blame for the vMtlence. He
l'iaid lhlt the lf'OUP WU wOlinc
to dlspene but that officers
tried to speed them up.
The moratorium ccmmittee
!l"pomored an anti-war parade
and rally list Aug. 29 which
resulted Jn thret deaths and
millions of dollars of damage
In East Loo Ang<les.
•
• WI
Nowt Yaa cm carpet roams JOU
never thought JOU could-with • famous Marvess olefin tiles.
This fabulous fiber by Phillips 66
is sturdy enough for loughest
traftlc 811111 .... just wtpe up
-H's a clncll ID tceep neat. And
JOU can do ltyour.oaHwtth no
~ IDOis, no mMSY adhesi"9S.
Carpet a room this afternoon walk
on It lonlghtl......,. popular
colo<S. c-a II' x 12' floor
for just Ml.
MAR.VES! OlfflN ·•
Value ~ It still means something at Penneys
~nne111
Aw•l!iD I• •I th•it F S H I 0 N I S l ''""" ""'"' A A .N D , N e w p o r t C e n t e r
H u· N T I N G T 0 N C E N T E R , H u n t i n g t o n B e a c h. c, .. ,. 11.
\
This a Boat~
ON HER WAY-l'rctty J)ebl>ic James \\'as selected
by publitists ur the Southern Califo rnia Boat Sho\v
to entice visitors to lhc Pan Pacific Auditorium Jan.
22-3 1. She probably \VOJl'l be there -even in a
Chrysler boat.
From 4 CoflJltrles
7 Chalknging for America's Cup
Detractors who decry th.al the requt!l of George O'Brien.
there is dwindllnc interat in owner of the lZ·meUr Endless
the America'! CUp eom-Summer (e:r-Dlllne PattM>l:
peUUon would do well to The Royal Perth Yacht Club
review the acUon since the of Australia for the Spirit ol
end of the 19'11> campaign. the West Syndicate, headed
Seven challenges represcn-by Australian bU8intsaman
ling four countries have been Alan Bond ; Yacht CI u b
submitted to the New York D'Hyeres of France over the
Yacht Club for the 1973 signature of V. Bellaguet :
America's Cup. This i! the Cercle de la Voile de Paris,
largest numb«!r of challenges by Baron Marcel Blch who
the 1970 t vent when it in an elimination trialJ wilh
stipulaled that tht clallenger ont or more ol the other
<If record v.·ou.Jd plrticip.ate c:ballena,ers.
3 Boati1ig Centers
Hostin g Power Races
ever to be filed for 1 Cup lost tilt 1970 challenge trlal!1 Races originating from tht Pacific Offshore Power
race i.n l:Z..meter yachts. lo Australia ; The Roy a I lhree major boating centers Boat Racm, As!Ociation he•d-
Announcement or the receipt Sydney Yacht Club of -heeded by the 7th annual ed by President Russ Kill Jr.
of the challenges came e•rlier Australia, 1represented by Sir Long Beach Hennessy CUp POPBRA, with last Dec.
this week from NYYC. current Frank Packer 'A'ho headed world championship classic Slh 's Rum Run VI already
holder of the CUp, following unsuccessful challenges in 1962 Aue. i 1 -are on the 1971 under its belt, will also con-
conclusion of the 9 O-day and 1970 ; I~ Royal Thames Pacific-Far West of Is ho re duct the aMUal Catalina Race-
waiUng period for challenger.:s. Yacht Club" of England, ils power boat racing schedule Cruise Feb. 13-14 for aMOCia-
The club had announced it third challenge since 18'10 announced by ofricials of three tion points only: the third an-
would consider all challenges when it submitted the flrsl boating organizations. nual Long: Beach Ensenada
received up to 9'.I days from challenge lo America : the The Hennessy Cup raer-, International Aprll 17 for AP-
the last race of the 1970 serie5 Socicte de Nautique d e with points toward both the BA points ; another 96-mile
as having been re ce ive. d Jl.farseille, f'rance, believed lo l'.'Orld and American Power Rum Run event June I~; the.
simultaneously , represent a syndicate headed Boat As 1 o c i at io n cham-Hennessy CUp Aug. 21, and
by Alain Gliksman. editor of pion.ships at stake. is one of the annual Catalina Challenge
Challenges have bee 11 Neptune Nautiamc. the French lour races l.o originate in Long 1'rophy race ou\ 0£ Marina
received from yacht clubs or yacht.Ing magazine. Beach under the auspices of Del Rey on Aug. 2!.
organizations in F r a n c e . '1';;;;;;;;-.;-;;,;-;,;-;.,;-.;-.;-;;.;-.-~.;;,;---------;;;;;11 England , Australia 1 n d The Cup Committee, headed11
Canada. The An1erica·11 Cup hy Henry S. f\.'lorgan.-with DR. JOSEPH MURPHY
Co mmittee or NYYC no1v Donald B. Kipp, secretary, SPIAllNG ON
must consider the challenges and Percy Chubb I I, is ex-'"PRAY and PROSPER in 1911 '' and designate the challenge pected lo mee t next month.
of reeord . No 1U\00Uncemen\ as to the Wednesday, January 13, 1971
Challenges have been riled challenger of record is ex-7:)0 to t :lO p.m.
by the following clubs and pee~ before several months.
organizations: R 0 ya t Van-A club spokesman indicate CHURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCllNCE
CO""' ''acht Club 0 f the committee might follow , •• •OLllN CllCU DI .. SANTA ANA
' nm 4fll SI. ·~-fl_,.,, ,_., ..... l••I• ........ ,......,, ~.~p:~~ ~ j _c'.:a~"~''.'.'.d".:'-:=":'''.'.'~'""'m'.'.a".'.b~IY!.._'.f~ili'.'""~''.'.'~'::h'::__:'::'"":::::__:P::_':::°"'=dw-:_:•_•::"':::::_d_:l:::•r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I
~ ¥;· .~· : f ~ . I
\,
' 1'
NICE RHUMB LINES -Diane Barnett supposedly
steers a course (or the San Francisco Boat & Sports
Sho\v al the Co\v Palace Jan. 8·18 but will probably
mi ss it with a!I that porl helm. Anyhow, she v.'ished
boat show visitors a 11appy Ne'v Year.
••
IT'S COLD IN CHICAGO -
lf\1iss USr'\) doesn't seen1 lo n1ind as she attemplo; to
lure boating buffs to the Chicago Boal Show .. .o\ny-
one remen1bcr th e dates?
At·t~ Gals Boats?
Publicity Men T1ti11k So
Onto of thr odd lh1ngs about
visitors to 11 boat show is
that U1ev seldnr11 if ever g11
10 sec ·beautiful models 1n
skimpy costu111es.
And ii they did. it is highly
unlikely that they would get
a glimpse of a bikini clad
dolly.
Be that as it may , virtually
every tub-thumper for a
regional or national boat show
goes to great lengths lo find
the most lusciot1s m«fels or
remln.ity ' garb lhrm in the
most scanty costumes and
pose them 11) on the bow
12J on lhe deck 13) in the
cockpil of anythi ng from an
8-foot prow to a plush power
cruiser or sailing yacht 10
herald the upcomi ng show .
exhibit or another.
Furthermore, moet boating
buffs art so busy thumping
hulls. prowling through in·
I terior11 or coUecting llteraturt
that they wouldn 't notice Ra-
quel Welsh In tht altoctther.
Nevertheless, boa t s h ow
publicists continue to send out
advance copy decorated with
"lovely actresses, mo d e I 1 ,
etc ., ele.
And boatin1 editors conUnut
to u1e them.
Why? Mostly because the
landlubber readers -not to
mention the inll:-staintd
wretches on the c o p y
desks-like to ogle t h e
pulchrilude. Jt brigh~na up
the page. say tht latter.
Wowee! 1ay lht former.
Penncrest® sewing
machine sale.
Sale pk:•• eftlidlwe awc•uh S 1llwdey only!
Save 40 95
Sa1es109
Reg. 149.95. Petw111r .. 1e •42 D9elgn" lltlllwalglll lig ng ....... 1118Clll11e
features 14 b4ilt-in cams, plus a decorative design .... ctorl Push button tor
instant reverM .Miwing and simple dial for preoiee stitetl length con1ro11·
Includes. 3-poSllian Medi., automatic bobbin willdef.
Value. It still means something at Penneys.
For
families
who
never
seem
to
have
enough
hot
water
or
enough·
money.
Have
we
got a
sale
for
you!
Eqoolt 1ftlldollen avlillltle
DAILY rtLDT f f
wllllln 24 llfL II Peoneya ..... ...-
OnllN pl ..... by 2 p.lft, wll be lnlJllled
ttle l•M• d•y Mond1y lttrough l1turdtly.
Sale5288
11e9.11.11. ,..,.,,on-
42flL 1l1Cllrlc_.,._..,~
Delivers 82 gaUona of hot water
tlietirst hour at 100• rise.
Sale5998
Rog. 11.H. Penncr11lSllnd11<d
~2 ---lorhNllr.
Delivers 72 gallons of hot water
the fir1t hour at 100° rise.
"••· 77.95. Penncraft St1nd1rd
30pl.gHWltef'heater.
Delivers 74 gallons of hot water
the first hour at 100 .. rise.
Sale7488
"9g. 17.15. Penncr1ft Cwlorn
41111. gH w1lerhffter.
Delivers M g1nons of hot wat•r
the tir1t hour 1t 100° rise,
Sale8288
Aee-17 A l'wlft Ct11t1 M ....... --. Olli-. 114 ~ OI ho1 Wiier the"'"' hollf 11100• rls1.
.... ,......., o••••••stsU,.
v1lue. ~l.t11 l'l!Mf1s
aomethlng at Penn-rs.
Jn most cases. the models
accept 1heir pay for posing
and could care less about ap-
pearing at any boat show .
In any event. today's
boating page should be pl enty
bright w it h thret-count-
em-aamplea of the publicity
l\nnett1
u •• '911t11ey1 f!1J11 '''"'•"' •'•~:
Thrrc is the possible ex·
c~ption or the ··snow queen ..
-Jr any -who might po~
for opening night pix on one
11ent out by boat show PR Aveili \il i '1 1~•1• 111""'" •1••••:
m~:, doo't """'' t• ,.., ony H U N T I N G T 0 N
"f them at the boat sbtiws.
FASHION ISLAND, Ne w port Cent e r
CEN T E R,Hun t ingto n B • a c h. l uy ii •n '•"fl•Y• J;,.,. "'''"'"' "'·"
..
j
FASHION ISLAND, Ntw,.ort Center
HUNTINGTON CENTER , Hunlin9to n Booe~
Sh•p Su1"'•w. *••· 11 t• • '·Mi.
•
)
,I DAILY PILOT
Vets Given Seagoing Care
Repose Ship No·w Part of Naval Hospital
The hoSpilal ship Repose beaan 1 new phase this year
ill 1 Jong career or serving
and caring for mih1ary n1en
around the world when she
became a satell ite extension
of lhe Long Beach Naval
Hospital. •
General hospita l care for
acltve duty and retired male
military personnel will be pro-
vided as she helps lo serve
a military population totaling
10,IXMJ sailors and 3 0 , 0 O O
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys: ·
Our Sue Cory 'Select'
permanent wave,
usually 12.50, now 8.88.
Our Sue Cory 'Fashion'
permanent wave,
usually 17.50, now 11.88.
Price includes
shampoo, cut and set.
retired military. Dependents
will be cared for at eilher
the hospital or the Naval Sta-
tion Oispen.sary when il 1s
opened in April.
ll.epose has served n1ankind
around the world and will con-
linue to ma intain its lifelong
rnission as a hos pital ship.
From the verybeginning she
was meant for hea ling. Re1)ose
was built from the keel up
as a ho~-pilal ship. She is
equipped with a 2 0 0 -b e d
hospital. elevators. w id e
passageways. wide stairways.
ramps an d handrails .
Most of lhe facilities will
remain the same although a
few changes have been made.
Her rtritting at the Long
Beach Naval Shipyard cost
about $600.000. A n e w
emergency room complex and
large outpalient clinic ha\·e
been constructed in the two
ward spaces of the ship. Once
a man boa rds the shi p he
will be only 10 feet from a
n1odern, up lo dale ope rating
room suite if an emergency
arises.
A new ''check-in" a n d
distribution center of the
Repose will house medical
records for active duty and
retired military personnel. Pa·
tients will be seen quickly
by doctors in nearby ex-
amining rooms_
Clinlcs will incl u d c
orthoped ic, medical, surgery,
dermatology, ear, eye, nose
and throat. urology a n d
sepa ration p h ys i ca I cx-
an1ination. It will boast corn-
p I et e labotatory ft1cilities,
pharmacy and x-ray room .
The hospital has three corn-
p!ete operating roon1s for
surgery, two elevators. a
chapel, barber shop and ex-
change faci lities. II o s p i t a I
meals will be prepared or
board and served in the mess
decks which have been com-
pletely reworked and wood
paneled.
In addition , Repose will
have a blood donor center
and a blood bank for use
in surgery. !led Cro ss
representatives will be on
board with all then· se rvices.
Skyboat Takes Off
Tbe world's first skyboat, called the Boata1oon.
hovers over the San Francisco Boat Sho\v in the
Cow Palace where it made its inaugural flight Fri-
day as a feature of the show opening. The con-
traption is piloted by balloo nist \Vil ma 1'~ckmier
and carried U.S. mail \Vith commemorative en·
velopes whic h \viii be avail able to stamp collectors.
The ascent was made in the center arena at the
Cow Palace.
NOW! LONG BEACH IS SHORTER
TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA,
Rettig Wins~
,
Manning
Sabot Cup
Mike Rettig -Of King Hl1""'
bor Yacht Club won the 39;
year old E. E. Manning Per-
petual Trophy Sunday wtw!P
he topped a rie\d o( 24 entries
in the Winard Sabol class in
the annual competitioo at
\Vindjarnmcr Yacht Club.
The ~1anning Trophy goes
to the winner in the largest
class of dinghies. For many
years the award was exclu-
sively for undccked dinghies
up to 14 feel. Recently the
competition was expanded kl
include all dinghies up to and
including 16 feet.
.This year's ~tanning series
was sailed under the spon-
sorship of King Harbor Yacht
Club. Only U1e S a b o t class
y:as sailed at \Vindjarruner
Yacht Club.
FAIR OUTSTANDING CONTRIBUTOR -Bill Ficker continues to receive honors
fo r hi s successful defense of the America's Cup last September. The N~I YC
0laff con d h d . ! th J Fd1!, fd ir, f•cludl. Tho•• " 1 1no ore ere 1sp ayes e a mes Webster Perpetual for outstandin,.,. b thre• wordi 1um up f•c:loro i"
contr ibution to yachting which he received Saturday night fron1 the Southern ooe•d''o" o~ t~d DAILY PILOT
California Yachting Assoc i a tio ll , al the l;:l"O up's a nn u. ~a~I .'."'.'.'c'.:c:'.l'.'.i n'.\g~i r~1 .;:S'.:a'.'.n_D~i c~g::'.o:.. d0:·='="=0 '=' '=' ='=' '='='="'=',,' ,.',.",.· """"';
Bill Ficker Awarded
Top Y achts11ian Title
Bill Ficker of Newport Har~ cr's suc~ssful defense of thel
bor Yachl Club Saturday America ·s Cup last Scptem-
night was awarded the James ber when he skippered the
f\1. \Vebster Perpetual Award 12-meter Intrepid to a 4-1 vie.
for the most outsLanding con-tory O\'er the Australian'
triOOtion to yachting by a challenger Gretel IL Ficker is the only Southern Southern Califoraia yachts-California yachtsman to ever
man. skipJer an An1erica 's Cup de-
Fickc r received the award fender.
at the annua l meeting of the The award c11 n1e onlv ;1 fc v•
Southern California Yachting days alter liC' wr1s edgi.:d out for the national vnc·ln.snuu1 Association wh ich annually of the year by Ted. Turner uf
1nakcs the presentation. Atlanta. Ga . Turner bl'al Vick-
'The award was for Fick-er by only four points in the
national poll by the top yacht-
ing \Vriters in the U S. for
\ ...
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e Grt tieal!hy ·whilr. you
1H1rk'. Position open at a
ltll"."ll llf'allh l',·'Od StoN.
Ck llELP \\'ANTED .
e Thl' key \1-ort.ls "ClllL-
DRE:-l OKAY!"0 lf you're
u1 the n1;1rkC't for a nir.c,
l:i r:::f' apartinent . Ck
HENTALS.
e ll's 1ln1(' ror you 10 '"BOO·
GJI:;" in your II('\\' "BUG"
Ck otir atJlo~ for sale class
NO\V? Before it's too late!
F I O(l(l 1' S w ''' '' ll ,...:':::h:c _:':::.''::".::":::'':.:·":::':::":''~a1:::":::":::":· __ ..'.'::========================================·
Ci ty Office'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -1\
broken fire main poured 72.000
gallons of cold water into the
basement or the San Diego
Co unty Administration Center .
officials said.
Two persons were tern·
porarily trapped in a fl ooded
elevator and four boilers were
submerged Satu rday before
the water could be pumped
out of the building \Vhich
houses county boards and the
health and tax of[jce, firemen
said.
Call Collect
(714) 523-6511
for our shop-at·home service, free.
-~ ~ < ; )
"-· . . "· ,.
Call now!
Save up to 1/3
on cu .stom
draperies.
Give your house a wh ole new outlook with bea utifu l draperies
now. Choose from casual open weaves, sheers, slub
weaves and m~ny more labrics at savings up to }), Regular
low Penney prices for expert fabricatiori. Cir•-OiUlttf'I .--·--------, LOI Angeles (Orange County, Palos
l ong Beach to Verdes. Wilmi ngton, Torrance, etc.}, San Francisco $1l! Including tax. Long Beach is like having your own private
1 eave Long Beach airport Yo u don't have to fig ht the free-
Now you can tty PSA from Long Beach 7:40 am way traffic to L.A. International. There's
Airport to San Francisco. Four times a day. 10:•5 am easy parking. And the crowds haven't
Mo re on wee kends. Mo re flights than 1 :30 pm found it yet. Next time you head north
any other airline. Connections to Sacra· 4:30 pm (o r south), head for Long Beach Airport
mento. Qr, avoid the freeway and fly to Mon thru Thurs&. Sat. by way of your travel egenl and PSA.
San Diego. It you live a ny place s out h of .__"'_0_'_'_11_'g_h_"_'_'1_&_s_u_n_. _, PSA &fVes J'OU a Ifft. 01corat1 nowl U1e Ptnneys timt payment pl.a• •
•
.,
I
'
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ARB UCKLE & SON
"'e!1-l<'lifr /'lfnrh111ry
42i E. 17th St .. Co5ta ~1cs a
6~6--438!1 • RALTZ l\10RTUARI F.S
Corona dr: !\Tar ...
Costa l\1rsa •
OR :1.Jltlll
mi 6-2424
BELi. BROADWAY
/'l!ORTUARY
110 Broarl~·ay. Costa i\trsa
LI 8-~433 • !\lcCOR!\llCK T.i\f~U\'A
REACH i\IORTUARY
1195 l.agun R Ca nyon nod.
494-9415 • PA CIFIC VIEW
i\IEi\fORlAL PARK
Ce metery i\tortuary
Ch11pel
3MIO P1clflc View I>rl ve
Newport Reach, California
644-%700 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
110!\fE
7Ml1 f'o\sa A•e.
Westminster 913-3515 • Si\llTHS' !\IORTUAHY
6Z1 !\fain St.
Huntington Rtach
536-8'31
GETS UCI POST
Finance Advisor Pieper
l lCI Stu<l e11t
Ai d e N ame<l
IR\'l:'\E: Charles R.
P1rper has been appointed ad-
m1n1str;i11ve services officer
fnr !'tudent affa irs at UC
lrl'1nC'
Pi ercr, serving under Vice
rtv1nrrll0r f(lr Student Affairs
Jnhn Hoy . is responsible for
pl<1nn1ng ;ind directing finan-
ri~I ;-ict1vi1ics v.:ilhin the scope
of the v1t·e chancellor.
A grarlu;ite of t:SC v.•here
br 111<1jnred In fin.;ince, Piepe r
rcee1ved a mas!er's degree
in busi ne s s adm inislration
lrnn1 l "CLA in 1966. F'nr the
pasl fou r ye ars he served as
fin;inc1a l projf'<'I officer And
procurement offi cer in the
t: S Air Force He left tht
service v.'tlh the rank of cap-
tain .
Grand Jury
lndictrnents
Vp
SA\1TA
County 's
• Ul
ANA
1970
1970
Oran,ee
Grand .Jury
racked up a ne11• record io
lf'rms of ;irtinn on criminal
<'harlles hroui;iht to it by the
d i~tr1ct ;ittorney's riffl<'f'.
The panel. d1.o;charRrrl lrnm
its .vear.lnn11: .~pell of du ty l::i.o;t
week h~' Suprrior Court Judge
.J:imrs r. ,fu dge. is.~urd 111·
chctment.o; in 129 criminal
ra.~es 1nvnlvine: 21>1 person.o; .
'.\!arcnt1<'s offenses took ur
the major por1inn nf th e
Grand Jury·.~ \\·ork \\'!th 105
ind1 c1 menls jr;.sued . i\tt ;i j ri r
fraurl and theft were th e
theme of n1nr Indictment.~.
murder c·har/,!cs 1vere listed
in six m0rc ;ind rrime5
Rg;i inst person." !assault. kid·
nap and rnhbr r.1'l were listed
ii, fi\•c ind1ctmC'nts .
V1<'r 1hnn km;iking ;ind pro-
:i;titu11on) prndurerl 1wn in·
dif'tments lasi' yrar. \\'hile .".r~
nffen:r;es ;ind ::ir:r;nn 11·ere lhP
mn1 1ve.o; for twn more. F:lrven
indl<'lmenl<; 11•rrr ;in1rndPd frir
variou s re::i.o;nn.~ du ring the
year.
or the 2fi1 rrr"nns inrlic1rd
b~· rh" r.r;ind .Jury. 14~ rirr
1111;i1t1ng fin;il <'Our! ;irt1nn. ~.1
h;i1·r scrn chspo~1!1on of 1hr
i·h:iricr-. brnuchl ;i_g;i1 n~1 them
::inrl 2.1 1nrlif'trd pPr<;oo" 11·rrr
nr1rr :11 ra1gnrd nn th!' rlt".l flr\
alt ornrv <; rompl;i int.
A s<'rut 1nv nf 1;r;;inrf .!111"\'
ret•nrrk 01·rr !hr I""! drr;idr
rPvral~ !hat lhe 1970 panf'I
h;i" f;ir nu1"1rirrrrf i 1 ~
prrrirl"r~<;nr~ 1n trrm~ of !hf'
nun1hrr nf rndu·t menl.o; isr;.11ed
;ind thr numhrr of prr~on~
n11rned hy the c;rand .Jur~'·
Thr p<inrl i<;".UPd 2.1 inl r rirn
rrpor(s on c1v1 I m::i tlers d ur1n ~
1!170 :-ind t•lnsed its .vear "'ilh
thr filing of a J.'ill-r>:igr fin;i l
rrport ;in rf ;i 1.'lO-page 1·olump
cont;:iin1ne repnr1." of !hr rnn ·
lr::ir·t audi!rirs fnr the Grand
Jury.
Counselor
Asks to Be
Reinstated
SA1\.TA A~A -A Cnun1 y
(lf Oran/,!e employe 11·hn claims
hn V.'AS urijtistly fired from his
job as a ho.vs ran<'h counselor
at lhe Los Pinos Forestry
c·a mp has asked a Superior
Court judge to ordrr his im-
mediate reinstatement.
Arthur Thomassen ar~ues in
a writ that '>''ill be ruled on
by J udge Robert A. Banyard
lhal he v.·as dcpri\•ed 0£ hts
constitutional r iiht.1 under the
•terms of counly personnel
codts applied in him after
consideralion of complaints by
his supcrvl!Or.
Thomassen left his job "on
probationary release·· I as t
Sert. I 1.
Senior boys ranch coun se lor
VauR.h n H. Roley i.o; namrd
along "'ilh cou nty supervisors
as defendants in the ac1ion.
Thom::issen is representerl in
the action bv the Orange.
County Emplo)ies Association.
Capo Man
New GOP
Chair in an
SANTA ANA -Thnmas C.
Rogers of San Ju&n Capistrt1nn
has been sv.·orn in ti s
chairman of the Orani.:c Coun-
ty Republican Central Corn-
m!llee folJo..., ing an election
that has produced new off1t'crs
in scvl'ra! of the GOP gruup "s
key posts.
!'crv in~ a~ mrn's vice
t·h;:i1nna n under the Ne11·por\
Rraeh bus1nes!'1nan v.111 be
l·:dward r . · O'Caltahan of La
Habra \\·ho replaces \\'1l!1s J.
Clemons of Santa Ana in the
post.
Dorothy i\L Cla rk. 12111
ChaUCl'r noad, Los A lam1tfl~.
takes over 1he Jnb of 11 omen 's
vice <'hairman, replacing Alice
Bartlett. 1718 Pine St . Jlun-
t1 np:1nn Rea <'h. Mrs. Bartlett
rf'lains her post as a men1ber
of the Second Superv1sorial
District.
George Brokate of New[Xlr\
BPACh v.·as elected lrea surrr
and v.•ill ref)IAcc David L.
Jamrs of Oran.R,e in lhe handl-
ing nf fisc al responsibilities.
Election nf a secretRry has
been held over to the
or 11: R n t l 11 I i on' s Jan. 18
ffi('e\IOR .
Rnger.~. 29~61 Spot1ed Aul!
Wa y, San .Ju;in Capistrano.
1vas the un11n1111ous choice or
the GOP grnup. He and the
elected off icers will serve t\\'O·
year terms.
Other elected offiters in-
cluded Marcia Bents, 8HI \V .
Ba y A1'e ., RAlhn;i .:ind John
A. Hop\\·ood, 1049 West Chff
Dri ve. Nev.·porl Beach. 11ho
1rill serve wi!h Rogrn; anrl
BrokAte 11 s rPprrscnt atives nf
th e Fifth Supervisor i a I
D1.~tricl .
Srcond n 1~!r1ct rrprrsen-
1a11vps are i\·lr.o;. C-l;i1·k. ~·lrs.
R<1rl le11. Thnrn;:is Hl<ir km;.in .
42! Re1·.v\ tn\'r \\',1.1·. Sc;:il
Ar.:ich ;ind Sc<JI t 1\lorri!'on.
!ll!l<l J..:1 r k s pur nril'C,
\V es l m i n .o; t e r . i\·lnrr1~nn
replacr.~ S1 e11·;irt Cnsc in 1hC'
Se<'nnd Dis trir1 rn~trr .
C11rlo:i; Galindo of La Hahra
is the nev.• exct·u!il'l" se1Trlary
of thr Repuhlican Centr;il
c·11mm1t1ef'. replacing J ack
Kell~· 1n 1hat po~t.
G;ilindn s;iid the
5tand1ng c·nmn1i1trrs
r!('Clerl ./;.in. UI. The nrg;.iniZil·
Linn's v1e1\'i'i nn rrrl1 strict1nJt
:ind possihle r.op c;inrl1da1i>s
fn r sea ts madr available hv
nPW hnundHTiC'S v.·111 he
de!erminrd at the commillec
level. he said.
Wome11's
Comn1ittcc
Set at UCI
JR\llr\E -Selrctinn nf nine
members fnr th e Chancrllor·s
1\dv1sory tnmrn111ee on 1hc
Sta!u" or \\'nn1en <it 1 ·c Irvine
11 Ill hcgin rh1.". rruarlcr. ac-
cording In Eloi~e Kloke. ex·
f'1 u111 e as.~1i.lanl lo C'hanc('llur I
D<1n1e! Aldrich Jr.
Thr ne11ly f''\1;ihlishl'd 1·0111
ll11l!C'C ll!IJ l'Xilnl 10e thr Sl.1 t11"
of 11·nn1en in their re\a11n11-.h1p 1
tri l Cl a.<; a<'adcn11c ;ind ... 1;:if f prr~nnnrl and ;.i~ i.t11denl " I
<"nrnn11!1t·c n1C'mber" 11 111 ;1rl
1 i~r. thr ch11n1·e!101· of rrnhlo·n1 I
,1rr:-i s and rr!"omn1r11r! '1olu-
1 1on~ ;i s wel! ;is reromn1rrirl1ng I
r an1pus progr;irns and ~r11·1n~1
;i s ;i CO<Jrd1nrit1ni;i hnr!v for
grn11p~ or inrl1v1du;d~ · cnn-
f'Prncd Wll h lhe Sl(llUS Of
11 nrnen ;:i! CCI.
The member~hip will 1·11n~i~t
nf rC'pre~('O!i111ve~ nf the
f;i<·ult,\•. s1all <ind 1·nmmulrr
;.ind resu1rn1 ~tudrn1 ~. :O.·lrs
K!nke 11 11! be an ex olf1c10
niember.
Servicen1<111,
Says Guilty
In Burglary
SANTA ANA -An r:l Toro
~1arine who pleaded ,i::uilty in
OrAnJ!e Coun!y Superior €ourl
to rrdu<'ed charge~ afler being
accused of sexually 1nolesting
an 11-year·old Sanla Ana girl
c;in nol be classifie d as a
mentally disordered sex of·
fender, Judge James F. Judge
has ruled.
Judge Judge ordered Paul
H. Henson, 21, of 8741 ~
~1 idw,11y Drive. El T or o
1\-farinc Corps Air Station, to
return to court JAn. 28 for
scnltncing on a m c n d e. d
charges of second degree
burgr..ry.
Henson w,11s ,11rrcsted last
~Rn. 15 artcr allegedl y forcing
his way lnlo a Sa nta Ana
home Rnd Sl'XUl'lll y a~~Au ltinJ(
his young victim v.·ho "'RS
11.lone. ;at the lime. He wa~
arrested 11 short time late!'
al his E! Toro quarl4:!rs.
Sears
SAVE
820 to s30J
Me1i's Custo11i
Tailored
Suits
' '
Mondi)', January ll, 1971 OAILV PILOT J ~
Custom Tailored Suits Give
You Flallcr in f! Fit, Cho ice Of
Fahric and 1' .. r,011aliz cd S1yli11 µ
N11v.1 \I JU l .l!I h.n t' d1t' (t llll!ll.!ihhn;.-: l"ok n f <I \111 t l U~!nn·1.ca1l"rC'd t').,!u\11cly l••r l ••U , IH ,ub11.1r11 1.i l
~a11n,i.:~ dur1n,i.: du' l11n1rc d •.1IC' (:fHitllC' tn 1tn nian}
1.1hr1~~ 1n <:a~1 t .Hc ')1 11l1~·11c hlcnd', all.~nnl v.nr
\Cc,l~ 1n a \\1,Jc r.111,i.:l' pt 11(·,11('\ .illrl p:i ttrrri\, An 1l
kC'q nt al l, 111u t h1u 11c tht· ~1 1 l r. the sh~J'l'. ihr ta il-
,1 r111 ~ bt'\t fnr )OU ;111d )llU .1l,111e ... 1;<,i!h rreCI\('
m~a\Uft'n1C nt1 an.t prrot!'.'~111Jn~I tadorin.~ rn a.15ll t('
rou rhe best lit y11u 1e e1er ha d.
Regular S99 Regul•r s12:,
88 88
R e~u lar Sl4:i Ke~ula r S 110
88 88.
.4;Jc Abou.c Seari ,
Contfenient Credit #PlaN
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[Sears[ ~TAILORING
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1uou. •••ii:
C4N00l Pt•IC
COM,.,OM
CO'l'IN•
U MONff
OUNIAU
NO UTWOCID
llllGUWOOD
lOHO lf4(11
O\VMPI( t. IOlO
Ol•HOf ,., .. , ....
I
l.IOlll," IHll'fOI
I.INTI, •OHIC•
l-OU"4 CO.litl 'l-'I•
l>10Ul•"9 04111
lOl•tOICI
'l'•Ull
'l'llMOHf
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_J tl DAIL'r' PILOT Mondi.)', JMUMY ll, 1971
I
· .. y -·
UPI Tt11Plllt19
Daddy's Picttare
Kevin Aske\\'. 7. did the artist concept of \vhat is
daddy looked like on inauguration d ay (left). Actual
photo (right) sho,ved how F'lorida governor really
looked . Kevin ,,·as a little off on sleeve length but
his drawing sho\ved the governor lo be a lot hap-
pier that he actually appeared to be.
CHECKING
•UP•
Just 1 i11 5 l(now
Lice11se N umhe1·
By L. M. BOYD
HERE'S A SCHOLAR \\'ho
claims the third most popular
\ve(]ding present v.·orldwide is
11 machette .... HO\Y MANY
\\'A YS can you spell yogurt?
Our Language man counts 23
A ltlOTEL !\1ANAGER
of long experience says four
oul nf five men ca n 'I
remember their car license
numbers.
CO UJ\'Tl!Y'S F'IHST color
romic stnp was ft F'. Out-
caul!"s "'fhe Yellow Ki1l."
Cam<' out shortly before the
turn or the ceritllry in. the
old New York \VOf"ld. But Out.
caul! soon took his cartoon
::icross town to the New York
J ournal for a considerable pay
rai se. And lhe \Vorld in ire
hired another artist to turn
ciu1 11s own Yellow Kid comic.
This SC'! o1f a ci rculation \\•a r
nf sorts bcty,·cen the 1v.·o
new.~papcrs. and as their con1-
petition he::itcd ur. thC' stuff
nf thl'ir stories J?Ot hvelier.
Thr <'ll1ze nry labeled them
''Th11--<· \'t_-l!fl"' l\td papers ·•
\l<ikf' mention of lhe fore~o1ng
1n rf'~[)Onsc to :i customcr·s
inquiry :is II) 1hl' ong1n or
the tcrr11 ··yellow inurn;ihsn1"
1"hl'll ·s is.
No. sir. neve r made it to
the town of Ding Dong in
Texas' Bell County, either. l n-
lend to gel there someday.
ro.1aybe on the same trip that
takes in \\'hy. Ariz.. and
\\'hynfJL. t-.1iss .... Q. "Did
you say a sheep eats as much
as a co y,•;" A. Not me. A
CO\Y puts a"·ay about seven
times mo re than a sheep.
STILL TRYING to clear up
that Will R og e r s qt1olA-
tion. Some claim he said. "I
never met a man I di1ln 't
lilie. ·· Olhers contend he said.
"I never met a man I couldn't
li ke.'' Now corrics a subscriber
\vho insists what he really
said '"'as, ''I never kidded a
man I didn't like·· Who's
right? "Kidded'' sound s more
sensible and old \V iii 1vas
nolhing if nol sensible. thai:s
sure
AN INSUHA1''CE STATlSTI·
CIAN says the ave rage
house,\•ife runs as much risk
of accident as a fireman. Is
that [)OS.Sible? JIOW
CO:'\IE NO BOD'' :-1round here
<.'alls a son Famine or \Var~
Ar.th art> tommon first names
ar11u11p: lhe Rausto tribesmen
ol South Alric<t
1"i) l'HO\'E th•· fl'lllnlt> \\"llAT A FELl,0\'t rt'gar1!s
(1111\ook 1111 rnn1nni"' nrl'rr ;i s 1h(' f)rin1t' of hfe :ippnrenllv 1•hnns,!('~ (ltir 1,,,11, and \\';,r 4trp..·nds on how olli he i.s
man quoirs O\ id '.~ anc:it•nt ;it the rnr1111enl Tflkl' coll!·gr
t rilnJ::I' ... 1·11c Art of !Al\'t•." nien Pollst ers chC'cke<t them
whf'rf'in it's \\Tll . "\Vhcllll'r 11u1 flf th(' Uni ver!iily nf
thry yil'ld 11r rcfi1se , it ilclighl .~ Chicago Generally. 1 hr
\\'Oin1·n Hi hai {' hei'n :islietl .. lrcshmcn specified age 2fi as
... IF SHE TELLS )OU she :,.....h<~~:~·:s agl~~~-~h:·,uni~~~
\\":l.~ hlonrtc as a bah~·-youni;: · 1• fellow . bcli'..'i·c her. About 55 :igr. 36 and the seniors agr
()Ul of JOO infant girls 1n 1h1~ 42
C'ountry :ir1' fair-haired. But
only ahoul 13 out of 100 stay
that way.
CliST0:\1ER SER\'ICJ-:: -Q.
":'\1istcr, h;1 l'C you ever been
tn the 10\\'n of Java in
Alaba111a·s Coffee County~" A.
Yoti r questtuns and com-
ments ore welcomed and
will be used 1n CHECKING
l1P wherever possible.
T'leose address uour letters
t.o L. i\1. Boud. P.O. Bn:r.
1875, Newport Beach, Calif.
Discovery '71
Boys Club Sponsors
Reading Adventure
"Discovery "71" a Boys
Oub program designed to give
ltlilul tO reading as an ac-
tJvity bits been launched by
Harbor Area 8o)•s' Club.
"To get more boys to extend
their r ead i n g habits.
Dllcov«Y '71 encourages boys
tn respond to what they read
and to abare their reading
eqMriences with others.·· Miss
Cathy Lewis, Central Branch
llbrarl•n said .
The.Harbor Arca Boys' Club
is one of 118 clubs in the U.S.
which last year participated
In the national program
During O{SCQvery 71 , the
club wJH conduct a reading
contest ror particlpaling mcm·
hers in which boys will pick
• boek to read and dlscuss
1
il with the reading coordinator
who records each boy's pro-
gress.
B<>ys will also be encouraged
IQ submit some of their own
original writing and 10 com·
pete for an Epstein J\temorial
Foundation Scholarship. The
foundation regularly a i d s
Boys' Clu b members with
artistic talents.
Knit sportshirt" ~·ill be
aJarded to the three boy11
who were ou tstanding in
reading, "'ritin11 and in giving
8ervice . a n d "Discovery"
booke-0vers will be given to
conte.'ltants in their second
yeat of pArlicipation. All boys
are also given "Discovery '7 1"
bookmarks. buttons a n d
aboulder patcbe"
storewide sav ings for the New Year in every department at al l stores
Save 27 % to 55 % on Puritan,
McGregor and Fiore Sweaters
5.99 Io 8.99
were 11.00 to 18.00
An outstJnding d ~sortn1ent at outstanding savings. Ta ke
your pick .... cardigans, V-neck pu ll overs, crew-neck
pullovers, ~\Veat er shirls. M any are machine washable.
Many are full-fashioned. Cho<Jse fron1 dozens of color~.
You'll find Jll ~izes <:.mall to exlr.:1 -lorgc.
n1Pn's ~pol! turn1~hu"lg':> 84
m•y co south coast plaza, san diego fwy •I bristol, costa """"' 546-9321
shop monday thru saturda~· 10 am to 9:30 pm, sunday noon 'Iii S pm
"
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save on our exc lu sive labe l
Maybrooke new styl e suits
1\ more shJped silhouell<'. Wider l,q)rf s. CC'n1ervcnl<>. Pic k
from ~election o f Lci lor.,, pal1 C'rn.., .incl variecl fabric.;;. Short,
regulrir, lonB si1.e<;.
reg. 85.00 onP-pant
reg. 9 5.00 l\VCl pe1n t ~uil ..,
other men's clothing January values
reg. 11 0.00-140.00 better suils
reg. 50.00-60.00 Maybrooke sport coat;
reg 18.00 pure wool dress s lacks
n1cn's clothinJO: 21 .inrl 4'i
69.00
79.00
89.00
39.00
10.99
MAVCO
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D e 11ver Population Li1nits Sought
DENVER IAP) The
Colorado Environmental Com-
mission, an advisory ;:igency
for the state government,
wants to keep the wide open
spaces around !he four-count_v
Denver melropolitan 3 r c a
~'id~ op,en. <.
l l proposel to do 3() h~
Jin1lting the popula tion to I ~
n1illion persons, 250.000 more
than now reside hi..·re,
The comn1ission
proved a plan to
h11s
Shu(
Dtf'IVer and sUburban growth
by setting up a green belt
of park.~ and agri1..'\1lturat proj.
eels 3S n1iles wide to fen ce
out encroachinj population
fro1n .satelliie communities .
·•tt'.'i nn Jd~ll!J.'i!h: cunceoL
Yl'S." ssiid Dr. M<iX Petef.s.
ro1nn1ission t'hainnan a n d
rl("Hl 11£ the college of
t•r1glnl·•·rlr1g <ll the Univcrslly
of l)1l11rado, "but lt \viii get
penp l1• talking. It's a good
bill.''
MET AL SHO E RACK
77c
Chrnmild -fini~h"cl 111f'!al.
Hnlds 9 p;i1r nf sh•u·~.
MOTHERS COOKIES
RecJ. 41c
2 Baqs For 99'
f\ fl 11 1· In u .~ <1l'sort111,..nt nf
1\Jnt]H'rs; (nnkir~. four,.nm<",
f11r flavnnlr~ /trld fit: hars.
~I nt..
rnn~t riirt !on.
P LAST I C·BASE
DA NISH DESIGN
TABLE LAMP
Reg . 2 .86-2 Days
96
Charge it!
At tract111tiv s1ylrd to go
"ith rhr mtidcro or cnntem·
p nrary l00k. Sm11.rr plasuc:
shade and "''POdf!r11n-look
ba Jie. Wh i te . pumpkin ,
avocado, Save a! K m'rtf
.• \ ~ \ \~ }.Jo~··1 1 ~~l 1~===!!
REI NFORCED SEWN
CORN BROOM
Reg. 1.63 I 07
2 Days •
Sturdy broom fur inJoor and
ourdo0r u.'ie. Ruy 2! Savr,
l-lt<il --~lily -llO• otlot II ....
Mffol l41 J~O •• ·-··· -----·-,··
4-.SLICE CHROME TOASTER
J2.88 Our Reg .
2 Da ys Only
15.47
Toa~ts 2 or 4 ~!ires 1,·it h separate color coorrol (ex each sidC".
Gleaming chrornc fin1~h with black plasiic conrrols. h•ndlcs,
fcr:t. Site. 11 1hX I J 1.'.x8 ~i". A great gift 10 g1w. C.ll"argc IL
16-PC. OVENPROOF
DINNERWARE SET
97 Our Reg .
2 Days Only
7.78
·rhe latest in informal dinnerware is now at a
savings price! Drip glaze set includes 10"
plates, 6" fruits, 7" plates and mugs. Serves
four. Brown. A grt:at starter sct.Shop and .save.
I I
11\1,\. \l! ll
'EXTRA CONTROL'GIRDLES
C'ar Rog. 2.78
2 Days Only 200
Pa1uy and long·lc-g styi~. Nylon, Ly.:n® ~pa ndcx
w ilh. fr ont, sid~ f)ancls; Soru,.e bcc.c grip~r\_
S·"-t·!... XL. .-O•,_Aot.T.11..
JR. BOYS' POLO,
FLANNEL OR KNIT
SHIRTS, 3·7
Your Choice -Rog . 1.17
84.~
Lo ng-sleeve, !a•hion, crew
o r T·nc ck co1 to n kn its:
button·down·collar cotton
fl1nncli; i n plaids; short·
iltt\'C, crew neck polos in
ttripn :and solids, Char1c it.
. QUALITY BLUE DOT•
FLASHCUIE PACK
ll•v· 1.2a 8 7C
2 Dar•
J cubes in ·c1ch packagt. A
total of 12 Ouhn. Saw 41c.
llmllf ..,.:;;,.-............
ALUMINUM 6·FT.
STEPLADDER
7.97
Re9. 13.74 -2 Days
Double rivets, front and hlck.
Quality constructed. Sir.l'c!
Monday, January 11, lt;71
LEGAL NOTICE
>
DAIL V PILOT 15
CEGAL NOTICE
COSTA Ml!SA SANltAllT DUTlt!C:T
OllANGE COUNTV. (A,Lll'OllNIA
NOTICl INVITINQ 1105
N'lll(f': 15 H!'OEl!IV GIVIHI lh•!
"'""" D•OPO••I• ... 111 h• rec.iv..i ~~ the (th C••r~. °"' !>t1>1t1 ol ll!f Co••• M••~ s .. Mt••V 01,fTlrl, •• "'' olfl<P
In In~ (II> H•ll. 11 ""'' Or!vt , Co•!•
M•••· C•lltornl•. until In• hour ol t!;O<I "m, on !he ltth 0•1 or Janu .. r.i,
1'71. o! which !l"'I thtv will be r«>e~.,l
~ubll<IY •nd •••O 1loun In '"" counr<I
Who Cares ?
No etli1r n1 w1p1p1r ;,.. tli•
world c:1r11 •bovt ytvr c:o,,.1'1v·
nltv llk1 yow' c:oml'lunily J1ily
111w1p•p1r dt••· 1!'1 lh• DAILY
PILOT,
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JI DAILV PILOT Monda.y, January 11, 1971
•
SOLON IN PRIEST'S CLOTHING
Rep ... lect Robert F. Drinan (0-M.•a.)
Priest 'Set to Go'
111 Congress Debut
WASHINGTON (AP)
"lt's always open season , I
guess, on lawyers, churches
and the Congress,'' muses
Robert F, Drinan -past Jaw
school dean, present Jesuit
priest and f uture con-
gressman.
' 'That's understandable.
After all, '¥1-"e are public
servants and we deserve
criticism if we don't live up
to it," says the Roman
Catholic priest who takes of-
fiC'e later lhis month as a
Democrat representing a
Massachusetts district rooted
in Boston suburbs.
"At the same time ," he
says. remarking on President
Nixon's recent criticism of the
just.expired J e g i s I a l i v e
session, "many good things
did happen in the 9 I st
Congress and r hope I.hat
many more import.ant ones
would in the 92nd . ''
Drinan is ready for action.
He has all the enthusiasm
-as well as thC Jack of
seniority or a House
freshman.
He"d like a scat on the
Judi cia ry Committee.
especia lly since he. v.·as dean
of Boston College Law School
from 1956 until his recent
resignation from collegiate
duties.
He comes to the House as
its first Roman Catholic priest
member since the Rev •
Gabriel Richard v.·on a lone
tern1 as a delegate from
Michigan territory in 1822.
\Vhal docs Father Drina n
think he can do <JS a
clergyman in Congress?
At 49, Drinan, who describes
himself as "a superdove" on
the Vietnam war, emerged the
upset winner in a bitter three--
sided struggle with 28-year
veteran Rep. Philip J. Philbin,
a conservative Democrat who
lost a party primary then
sought re~lecUon as an in-
dependent, and Republican
John McGlennon.
Drinan views as a prime
goal solution of ' ' t h e
enormously compl ex'' problem
of economic conversion of
defense-related induslries to
civilian purposes."
Jn a hunt for an .enswer,
he intends t.o call a sort or
town meeting -a New
England tradition -in hi s
district "where all I h c
wicmployed will be given the
opportunity to tell us what
lhcy think the government
should do."
Drinan said he will press
for so1ne form of sharing
federal rl'.'venue with local
c om munities ; new job
retraining programs a n d
revival of expired GI benefits
for veterans.
Politically, Drinan takes the
viC'w President Nixon can be
defeated in 1972 "because the
l'.'conomy is in very bad shape,
thC're's a crisis of confidence
in the country, the '\•:ar is
not really terminating at \:II,
the foreign policy of the coun-
try has not been altered, and
18-year-0lds wi ll be voling."
Drinan strcsecs he is no
longC'r on leave from his CQI·
lcge activities: "I have resign-
ed everything al B os l o n
College." He will reside with
the Jesuit community in
\Y ashington's Georgetown sec·
tlon. He will continue wearing
hls _ blac.}t priestly clothes:
"They're the only ones J
have."
•·rm not So pretentious as
to say that I'm going to save
the nation. But I think lhat
v.•hat v.·e nttd in this CQUntry
is some type of moral con·
sensus -v.·e arc divided over c-'--=========.I
priorities ...
''I think that the last, the
lnwc.~I and 1he least in society
should be remembered -the
aging, the sick. the retarded
and the chronic alcoholic. v.·e
should give more attention to
them and Lhe poor and the
CHRDREN
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
blaeks. '------------'I
Cro,¥ning Glory
beauty salons
O~IN I VENINQ1 •IMI SUNOo\'1'1
Curls
Are
--Our
~Business!
~
Y2 P
1
RICE
IJI 116AL CUIL
PERM SALE!
$17.50
121 GLAMOR CUIL $12.50
$10.
IUDSET "EIM.
ALWAYS SI.fl tN,rm1I H•lr l
SPECIAL SAVINGS!
SHAMPdO·SET
STYLE-CUT
l tvllll ,..-le• •1111111\' II,....,
SOUTH COAST l'lilA
l•w•r l...••l--N•rl lo S1•r• ....... ~"''
w .... T-.•WM
2.95
1.50
i-w ...
3.45
2.00
267 r. 17B ST .. COSTA WUA ""'" .... "'' Op•l'I E••nil'lt• I Sw1u1l1.,
o,." ~";,''' W.u••.._._...,
Campaign Tally
$26 Million State Tab
SACRA<dENTO (AP)
Calilomia politicians spent
nearly $2& million in seeking
ol1ice ln the Nov. 3 eleetion,
a capital publlcatbt reported
Wednnday.
Tbe top amoont, for both
prhn11ry and general electioru;,
was $3,56 million by Cov.
'Reagan to win re-election, or
$1.05 a vote, reported
California Journal, a m<*:ithly
publlcaUon dealing with state
government and p o I i I i c s .
R e a g a n ' s Democratic op.
ponent. Jess Unruh, reported
spending $1 21 million or 42
cents a vote,
Here is the breakdown loc
various types of offices:
-Statewide offices includin g
governor, lieutenant governor
and so on : $9.38 million.
-U.S. Senate: $7.27 million.
-U.S. House of Represm-
latives, 38 seats: J,J.21 million.
-State Senate, 20 seats at
slake : $1.77 rnillion.
-State Assembly, 80 seats
at stake: $3.96 million .
-Board of Equalization,
four seats: $296,247.
The Journal said the total,
expected lo grow with late
liUngs with the secretary of
state's office, was believed to
be a record.
'nlis was ·the first time ln
some'Ye&r'! lhat~a U.S. Senate
contest coincided with elec-
tions for state office3.
Atty. Gen. Evelle Youn~r
reported the most apendlng
for a state constitutional of.flee
other than governor, $910,304,
or 30 cents per vote.
The top spending for 1 state
Senate post was in the raue
between incumbent Sen. James
Mills (D-San Diego), and
Henry Boney, a Republican,
$244,108 with Mills spending
$108,928 to win re-eleclion·han-
dily and Boney $135,180 in the
losing effort.
Former Sen. Lewis
Sherman, CR -Berkele y)
reported spendirig the most
for any one Senat.e candidate,
$139,634, but Sherman was
defeated by Democrat Jctin
Hohndahl. who -reported &pen-
ding only $3CJ,!M2.
Sen. John V. Tunney (D-
Calif.), and former Sen .
George Murphy, R_epublican,
reported spe.nding $4.7 million
total.
You Work Less •
•
Keeps things cleaner without
effort, eliminates bath tub rings
You Save Money Soap and clothing last longer
Smoother,
EadcrStlavc1
l.&•Mryb
Deamer
Dishes
Sparkle Oiapcv-5
Arc Ckaner
Feel Fresh
and Dean
Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans
Com pie le lnslallalion Available! J usl Ask!
I Sears I So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St.
Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave.
Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St.
P h. 540·3333
Ph. 8284400
P h. 547-3371
Why ·thousands of.Americans will spend $9,000
for a Mercedes~Benz tthatS 1
two feet shorter than American luxury -cars•
At Mercedes· Benz, we define luxury.~
-bit differently than most automobile
makers.
To our way of thinking, size for theJ
sake or size is not luxury, It is waste.
If adding an inch 10 a Mercedes-Benzj
won't contribute to some function, Mer-
cedcs·Benz engineers won't add it.
The Mercedes·Benz 280SEL is more·
'than two feet shorter than the three lead·)
ing domes! ic luxury cars.
Yet it is a curious fact that the SEL
provides more room than any of them. ,
Eric Dahlquist. in a recent issue of
Motor Trend, commented on the size of
the American luxury car. "Stunned by
such mass. the passenger enters to find
that size docs not equate with room, that
the SEL actually wins in the space race."i'
-.. ·Mt,cadts·Bent
enrinaerJ beli'"'
bollr hands baloni on tht wheel. So ·
1/r1ybui/1 four
t:rilica / con/rob i'110 o single stalk and
positioned it a
Jingtr's length a1414y.:
The engineer is Icing In its recommended position, the ~ A Mercedes·Benz is as different from seat seems too far from the wheel. And '
'a -domestic luxury car as automobiles, it's much too unyiel3ing to be called
each with four wheels and an engine in , ''luxurious."
front, can be. But that strange seat position lets
' Mercedes.Benz is one of the few aulo-you drive with the wheel at arm's length
'mobile makers left in the world when: the and your back firmly against the seat's •.
engineer is still king. And that gives you better control.
Design decisions arc made by an en-,... The "unyielding" seat, it turns out."
f gineer, not a styling whiz or a marketing 'was designed by orthopedic surgeons to
"Tire 'L'i11SEL1111a11s that Iha car has•
fou,..ittch lo11itr whet/base rhan lht tWnrta.I
Z8'JSE. but ii should s1a11d /or 'limo,' the bal:k
, Jtal area is that large." -Mo1or Trend
'wizard. At Me rcedes-Benz, the engineer·
Ing department still tells the sales de-
partment when a lflCW model is ready.
The result is an automobile that has
been built lo an engineering ideal.
· And an automobile that is fundamen-
tally different than any built in the States. I
From oddity to necetsity ·
To the uninitiated, this approach may·
[appear to have disadvantages.
Your first time behind 1 the wheel of a Mercedes-'
Benz is likely to pro-
duce a vague sense of'
disorientation.,
give £irm support. You'll appreciate it
more after seven hundred miles than you
~do after seven. ·
If you press the noor switch to get
I your high beams, you'll get a squirt in the
1windshield instead.
That's because a curious·looking'
·stalk, positioned precisely a finger's
length from the wheel. embodies four dif-,
fercnt controls.
High and low beams. tum signals.'
'windshield wipers, and· their rwo.speed
control all can be operated without tak·
ing your hands from the wheel. Or your
eyes from the road.
Such oddities, admittedly, take some
getting used to.
But there's a reason for every one.
And, before you know it, the oddities
have lzecome necessities.
No domestic 1edan •••
It is at the wheel a man discovers the
performance characteristics that make
•
· Mercedes-Benz unique among
-qi..;··· the world's motor cars.
Mercedes·Benzen-
ginecrs believe that a '
. car's abilities should be '
· limitedonJy by road
and conditions-not by ·
its own design.'
. Every Merccdes-
Benz has £ully indepc&!
dent suspension front
. and rear.A design''
'. 'concept used, without
exception, on 20().mph
grand prixcars. lt pro-
vides the maximum
possible cornering power
over a variety of road ~urfaces.
No domestic .sedan has it.
Every Mercedes-Benz is equipped
rwilh four massive disc brakes. S1andard.
n ot optional. Because, to our way of
'thinking, h's unthinkable to relegate the
best brakes you can build to the option list.
No domestic sedan has them on all
four wheels.
And every Mercedes· Benz has a steer·
ing system so precisely balanced that the
car seeks a straight path on its own.
No domestic sedan can m211ch it.
Even the Grand Mercedes 600. a three.
ton limousine, notes Motor Trend, " ...
wi ll outrun and outmaneuver many
sports cars."
Join the club
But the final word on the distinctiori
bc1ween Merccdes·Bcnz and domest ic
luxury cars belongs to a group of Me r·
. cedes.Benz owners.
Owners so enthusi astic that they've
formed thirty·two chapters of the Mer·
cedes· Benz Club of America.
Each year they hold more than 60 lo-
cal compe1itions and 3 national rall ies.
It 's their opportunily, in perform·
· ance events, to extend their cars to the
limit.so( which a Merced.es· Benz is capable.
Not everyone joins the club.
Mercedes-Benz owners who rally·
their cars are a relatively small share of
our owners.
But, then, no domestic luxwy car
even has a club. -· -
'$9,000? . -
Our pursuit of engineering ideals has
placed Mercedes-Beo2 automobiles
among the world's most costly.
The suggested retail price of the Mer-
cedes-Benz 280SEL. without options, Is
$8.2591•
With such amenities as the optional
electric sun roof, and air conditioning,
you can spend over $9,000.
However, all Mercedes-Benz automo-
biles do not cost $9,000.
Nine models cost less,beginningv.>i1h
our 220 Sedan at $5,350' and including
our 280SL two-sealers.
And six cost more, including the
300SEL 06.3-dubbed by Road &: Track
"merely the world's greatest sedan . ,,"-at
115.~581•
'Any 19,000 car ca'! look ,c:ood i11 tl1t country
club dri1'tway. Aflrcedes.Ben:. looks 1:ood
in pl acts like Lime Roe~. Road An1trica and'
Lagu,ia Seca.
But if your tastes do not run to the
'conventional luxury car, \Ve think you'll
find Me rccdes·Benz automobiles \veil
worth the price you pay. '
' And if you'll till out the coupon below,
we'll send you our least expensive pro-
duction. A fulJ.-color Mercedes-Benz bre>
c:hurc, absolutely free.
!Well Coo•• port"' ~n•ry .uduoiO'tol tnn•-urion.optloru.
>!at~ an<I k><•I ruo•. ti •ny
Copyrip.t 1'10. M<rudu lknr ol Nortll Ameriu. Inc.
i--------------------------,
I 0 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS, INC. 1
I 120 W. W•rner Avenue
I Santna Ana, Callfornla 92707 I Pltase send me your full-color brochure or lhe
I Merccdl.'l-Bcnz motor cars. J I 0 Please include the Mercedes.Benz Guide to Eure>-
'
' :: D<li><~.
Address ___________ _
.; City State . l
I Zip Tclcphl?n .. 1
·-----------+--------------·
· Erle Dah /qubt o(Molor Trend drove the 28DSEl..
11lle11 wrote, "/1111.111pretenlio1.1s Mtr«du still r1.1/U
lhc G<r'"a" lu:mry c.r ma,.tar,., -11 cu much of
\Ille rut of 1111 t:ivili~ world."
Jim' Slemons Imports~; Inc.· 120 w. warner Avmu.,sant• Ana. C.Jifornia 92101rhone: 1H-s46·4IH
j •
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I
'
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I
I I I
I I
I I I
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I
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•' •• r
Memorial Trophy Honors Ida Trott er
/..
Members of the Laguna Beach Women's Golt Club
have a sparkling new trophy on display in t:he pro sbop
in men1ory of one or their m<W>t active and beloved me1n-
bers. ·
During annual installation or officers in the Laguna
Beach Country Club, the first annual Ida Trotter Mein·
orial A\vard for most improved golfer or the year wa."f
given to ?i.1iss Gracia Johnson, outgoing pl'fSsident.
Recipient of the putter of the year 3\Vard was ~trs.
John Poor.
1'hc memorial plaque, engraved \Vi lh 'vinner's
nan1es, \viii be on -permanen t display at the country cl ub
along \Vith other trophies. The individual trophy, an en-
graved tray bearing 1.1.iss Johnson's name, \Vas presented
to the \\'inner during installation ceremonies.
T\·letal scuJptures created and don ated by T\1rs. Kar-
la /\lien also \Ve re given to winners in special golfing
d ivisions.
'fhe ne\v board consists of the lilmes. Cornelius
Toomey, president; Poor, tournament chairman; Glenn
l\lcflitu ll en, handicap chairman; Cha rles l\1orrison. secre·
tary. and Evangeli11.e Christiansen, treasurer.
\V omen residing in the l,aguna Beach area a rc in·
vited to join the group for the 197 1 golfing year.
'fee off time is 9:30 a.m. every 'fhursday.
6men
BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466
MOIHl•Y· J•nwl'Y n, nn s ~·•• 11
DOUBLE VI SION -Saddleback Mothers of Twins Club members
(left to right) Mrs. Ken Killian and hfrs. George Hudson show off
1'1rs. Killian's 4-month-old sons Steve and _Kim and Mrs. Hudson's
ON DI SPLAY -~1rs .. James Trotter !left), daughter of the late ~1rs. Ida Trotter, display<> a 1nemorial plaque for the most improv.ed
golfer. Receiving the annual tray presented to the yearly win·
I -,, . I
• . I.
8-year-old daughters Christena and J,ezlie. The women are among
a group of Saddleback Valley residentc; \\'ho share in the joy of
raising twins and triplets.
. •
ncr is Miss Gracia Johnson <right) \Vho accepts the Ida 1'rotlcr
trophy from Mrs. Co rnelius Toomey. ne\'vly installed president of
the Laguna Beach Wo111en's Golf Club.
Two-year Study
Moms Share
Dua l Secrets
It n1ay be double the trouble,, but the
re,1·ards are twice as satisfying.
Ask any n1other \11ho belongs to the Sad·
dlcbatk l\lothers of 1\i,.·111s Club and she'll
tell you it 's a fact.
·ro make bringing up r hil dren (in n1ul·
tiples) a bit ea~ier, Saddleback Valley moth-
e rs decJded lo s hare their experience, know·
led ge and understanding.
Saddlebar k l\!O'l'C \vas founded in ri.lart·h
of 1970. J>urpose is lo discuss and research
problen1s in the care of t.\\·ins and other
n1ultiples.
The club aid!-> mothers in buying. selling.
loaning or trading t\\·in s equipment and cloth·
ing. In addi1 io 11. it gives rnembcrs an oppor·
tuni1y to n1ecl 11e\v friends \Vith similar in·
terests and probletns and provides a needed
social outlet.
Philanthropic projects are scheduled
during the year wit h a 1971 sum1ncr baby
contes t and com bined picnic in Laguna Ni·
gucl giving a social break to .daily routine.
ri.Iec t ings are scheduled the third \Ved·
nesday of earh 1nonth. All e li gi ble persons
interested in joining are asked to phone ~1rs.
Robert F'igeira at 830-3531 or· Mrs. Ken \Vich·
crs at 493·1572.
Persons \Vho n1a y join the organizati ons
include mothers with children of 1n ultiple
births. adopted multiples or children not
1nore than six months difference in ages.
Patter of Small Feet Drowns Out Sound of Freedom's Ring
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 40. My ''"' you can do Is live her • lull II_ seem• h• morriod lh• "wroog" gid. ht p•ulng up OPP'"'"""'" lo""'' sloglc
wife is 38. we have been married 20 measure or emotional sQfport My advice His wife IS unresponsive and cold. He fellows . .
years Our children are 17, 15 and 13. It to &top actts1 like • Jacka11 and needs someone who can give his life And lei's .not overlook the posslblUly
J've. been a good provider, a good accept tbJt fom1ll child with dignity. meaning. lbat be ritlgbt dump bl1 wife and marry
father and a good husband •.• in ~ J am dating several fellows but no you. You would I.be.a have the prtvlle1e
that order. My wife and I have devoted , DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several days one seriously. (My t,rue love was kiUed of helpia.g him wllh alimony and support
our ltves to our children and we were ago, I ran Jn'to a fellow I dated a few In 1968, Vietnam.) Im not promiscuous money for the chlldrt:n. And don't forari
looking forward to the day when there her she is pregnant. I asked her to I was ~rious -·bul .1 am. I realir.r: ttmee When I was in ,high school. We but I do have a yen for thi s old Dame. the gallt tbelb yours and blsJ . Sudl:kaly.
would be just the two of us. We 've have an abortion. She refu.ed. We got thit b ID ertreme. me~e but I can't .now .are both 23. I am not married. I gueu I really feel sorry for him. wbe1 if• legal. you'll discover that It
always wanted to travel and have a into an argument and now she isn't face i'alalng another child: I'd like your· Bud is. Jn fact he has two small children. He is miserabJe and he wants me. wourd Isn't newly sn uetUD1 111 you UMM:aP&
UtUe fun. speaking to me. I think she is happy honest opinion. -ON THE BRINK 1 was immensely attracted 10 Bud Jl be wrong? -VULNERABLE It would be. t
Last monUl when our youngest boy about lhis pregnancy. In fact, 1 have DEAR ON : My lioOfft oplnioa Is tbal when we were Jn school but he didn't DEAR VUL: We boUi lmow what ,..
turned 13 our goal was in aight. Another a sneaking surplckm she gol this way )'09 are either off yov rocker or 11a seem to go for me. When we met ca• do fot HIM, b9t W-.i cu lte d9
two years and he'd be off to prep on pul'p(lrM!. JI Carat HetL Maybe bolh. Yoar wife in the supermarket he was knocked fot )'Oii? Fer opeMn: He ua ta•e
school and we'd be free. I fell 10 years The prospect of being lied down until dld aol (el pregnaat by lter1elf. IF 1he out by my looks, my figtD'e, the whole crp a lot ol yow time. AH be's ,.,,
younger just thinking about It! T am nearly 60 depresses me. The WBY wt1nt1 ii Uve lhts baby you have no bit He said he'd love to see me again. to lmPl'••e your e,okln& and doable
Just as I was makin g plans to have I see it. either my wire has an abortion right lo ask her to have au •horUon. but he made ll platn he couldn't take your lf'OCttY bUI because you'll be fixing
a vasectomy, my wife announced that or I get a divorce. When I told her She ls the one who must carry the me out publicly. He'd like to rome ll!tle 1upper1 ••• tiylng out new reclpts.
she had seen the doctor and he lold lo take her choice she didn·t believe child, deliver it and care Ior It. The lo my place and see me "quietly."' While you "live bis Ide meanln&" )'Ju'll
" I
How will you know when the ff.al
thing comes along? 'Ask Ann Landtn.
Send ror her booklet "Love or Su _,,d
How to Tell the Dlrfen!nce." Send Ji
cents in coin and a long , self-addrtsSieO,
stamped envelope with your request~
care of the DAILY PILOT. •"'" ..
•
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/,, • .. -~ •
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Your Horoscope T amorrow
Capricorn: Balance Emotions
. • •
DOLL·FINS WADE IN -Already aca>mpliJhing
more than they set out to do, members of the
\\'omen's Division. Newport Harbor Chamber or
Commerce v.ill be recognized for their achievements
Committee Offers
Hope for Victims
,.\ ne,~· c·o1nm1ttee has been organized at
lloa;:: lilemorial liospital, Presbyterian, titled
Stroke Rehabilitation and Resocializ.ation.
accord ing to 1'1rs. Rudolph Baron. coordina-
tor of ,·oluntcers.
The r1r st n1eeting v.·ill take place at 9:30
am. tomorro"· in the hospital conference
center, under sponsorship of the \Vomen"s
Auxiliary to the Orange County fl1edical
.\s.sociation.
l'rimary goal or the committee v.·ill be
to provide a pragmatic method of meeting
t he continuing social. emotional and physical
needs or the stroke patient.
\·oluntecrs "·ill v.·ork directly ,,·ith pa·
t1ents Jn the hos pital and in their homes, as
\rell as attend 44 hours ol classes to learn
hov.· to assist the patients.
.J\ny interested community member may
call t.lrs. Baron from 10 a .01. to noon at
546-06.11, ext . 225.
Interfaith Foundation
Coffee Fills Coffers
during the 64th annual installation banuqet Thurs-
day, Jan. 14. Leading the way to greater successes
will be (left to right) Mrs. Uoyd Fleming, Mn.
George P. ZebaJ and l;Irs. Florence ?ilcCUe.
Distaff T earn
Rates Plaudits
A group of some JJj
business v.·omen and civlc
leaders has done even more
than it set out to do. so a
big part of tht 64th annual
installation banquet or thl'
r\e'A·port Harbor Chamber of
Oimmerce \\"ill be de\·oted to
its di staff side. aC<.'Ordiag to
manager Jack Barnell.
The banquet v.ill take. place
Thursday. Jan. 14, in the
Balboa Bay Club and 'Aili
mark the first aMiversary of
!he u·omen·s Division'.s oew
name. The Doll-Fins. and a
)ear's pubhcalion of i Is
Players Match
Bridge Hands
monthly bulletin, lhe Doll -fin
Tidings.
Purpose of the y,·omen·s
group has been to promote
the .spirit ol cultu\;il aod com·
mercial progres a mo n g
\l"omen and to coopera~ "'·ith
!he chamber in y,·Ofking for
1he general y,·eUar e and pro-
gress of the f\ey,-port Harbor
Area and its cilizen.s.
Annual project! inc I u de
beautifK'ation. V.'hich thill year
will ~ headed by Mrs. Isabel
Pease. Other sponsored events
are the Sand Castle conltsl,
Silver Anchor awards for com-
munity service. new teachers'
welcome tour of the bay and
luncheon. the Trade Fair and
I h e Chrilltmas centerpiece
competition.
l\ew officers \\'ho y,·111 be
in5talled include the lt1mes.
George P. Zebal. president:
R. L. Bacon and Chrill Hopper.
\•ice presidents: f 1 ore n c e
McCue, treasurer: LI o yd
fleming, editor of the DoU-
Fins Tidings, corresponding
TUESDAY
JANUARY 12
By SYDNEY OMAllJI
"'We _. die ~ att
--~~••Tut u.,...,,., ..-....
1t111 ,.u. ne -• a are-t lleart ...... tnlllWI ,...
......,. --fttm. ne -•• pqS Jlnmht( ~·e ttater from wMdl we
~ farevn-... .. -D. H. 1Atm-11tt
ARIES !Matti> ll·April 1'):
Accent on change, creativity.
possible journey. Empha.site
personality. •illingness I o
communicate and o:periment .
Improve relatiom w i t h
children. Maintain pl:Siti,·e at-
titude.
TAURUS (April :.O.~tay 20):
Complete projects. Focus on
frame of reference. Utilize
paJt uperieoce. SpoWgbt on
Nase s in Tune
Pump
AT
WIT'S
END
By ER.\tA 80'.\IBECK
\\'e've never given a party
In our lives that something
/or someone) didn·t c.rawl in-
side our w11JI and die,
It's the price you pay for
rwtic. rural living.
In m_v mind, J visualize a
group of mice meeting in a
cornfield and ooe of them sa~·s
to the other, "Bufford, you
don ·1 look too good."
"Oh. I'll be all right." says
Bufford, •·u·s just a head
cold "
··\"evertheless," says the
leader. •·Why don't you check:
in at Bombeck's wall."
The night of our last party,
Bufford didn't make it to the
y,·all. He staggered into rur
old pump organ and kicked
off.
)ly husband came into the
house. sank to his knees and
gasped. '"Not again! Where
this lime~··
"In tht pump organ," I said.
''Can·t \\"e get rid of the
odor ?"
°'Only iJ you want to paint
Wil"lter
Warmin_g
:\laster poinl.3 and prizes
well De awarded during a dup-
hcale bridge tournament to be
eonducted tomorrow night at
7 30 bv \"1ck P.1inardi in tht
:\lontaiioso Recreation Center,
~fission VieJo.
Enlrv fee is 11 for members
and $1..:.0 for guesl!I. 1l105e in-
terested in inform11tion on
monlhly tournaments may
phooe the center.
stcrelary; Laura L eg i o s . !\cw \\"inter skiwear for
recording secretary. and Sona .,,,.arming up on the slopes or
Hoffman, past president. by the fire comes In tan y
Directors include the !llme.s. colon. new cuts and new
Veta Behr, Betty Brul't'. Ro\· fashions.
Fox. Lee Rivers, Grahaffi StyLi.ne for women shows a
Pl1rs . Daniel c. Aldrich. P.l<irkJe , l..a\..-rence D. Fogg Edelblute and Peter \·ogel. grt.at approach in knita, like
"'ife of the chanceUor of UCI. and MW Alice Gates. d I l.trs. Zebal, assistant direc· the leotard look. and hooded
._1-11 0~. ·-, hom· ,,, , s -"' 1 . th Gar en Ta k tor or public re1atk>rui: and sweaters. The glace ski smoct " ,,..... '"' ••-.:. ponsor1ng t t'ven is !! d I t f I' . f -I COfr-"'ed-sda)·. Jan. 13 to 11. F 1 h" e'" e o Pm en or 1oag l.!5 a avont.e a so. ~--" '"' omen·s e lows 1p Ser\'ice ·~ · J H · t 1 F th benef;1 the univ er 5 i t y • s P.l n:. Roy Raymond l'>ill give 1• em or 1 a o s p 1 a . or ~veryont:, ~re are of the Community Oiurch II ed lk s1·d ~ b .. _ · . __ .. 1 J 'bbed •-• Interfaith f'oundation. a11 i ustrat ta on 1 es .. ,es )"..:nan. ';\"aJ: recogn1~ s etve ess vests, n a.nils
Congregational. Corona del of l\a!ure·s Subjttls -Hum· in "\Vh<fs Who in American and reversible piles. There are
Addressing the guest!I dur-~lar. headed b\· )!rs. John mingblrds for members of ~ \\"omen in 1963." colors like Political Plum,
ing the JO am. event will be L. Kent. TransPorta!ion and South Coast Garden Club at She y,·as selected a s liilghty M<m and Think Pink,
P.lrs. Hoy Giordaroo. ~arte~ ha b Y ·sit Ii n g y,•ill be 2 p.m. on \Vednesday, Jan. f oremost \\·oman in Com-all from wttitt Stag.
member and past pres1 ent,,o available at the church. 13. munic.ations in 1970 and other11",_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_=
the Women A.ssoc1ates of uie "'omen of the area are Tea host for Ule meeting honor5 gleaned include Costall
foundation. who y,•il l bring invited to aUend, and a $1 in the Three Arch Bay t.lesa Woman-of.lhf..year: the 11.A&ITIPUL CLOTHD • • •
several t:Cl students a!f donation will be asked. Clubhouse in South Laguna Henry Ford Silver Scroll for-,., "" ;:_tt .!~~~':' w -
guests. The Interfaith f oundation, y,·ill be P.1r.;. Gilbert Young, Orange County; Costa P.1esa rwar"-'~t::°.!~~ G-9M
Mrs. Edy,·ard A. Steinhaus situated near the campus. is assistttl by the P.1me:s. Charles United Fund Angel award and
\4'ill be in charge of serving staffed by religious leade:s Francis, R. G, l..ioderrnan, the Henry ford Citiun-of.UJe.
refreshments. ~lsted by the of every denomination and George SI. Jeu and R L. year for Orange County in
P.imes. Philip G. Murray, A. _''~id~ed"!_b~y'_'."vo~lun~lee~":· ____ _:;s'.'.m~;th~_:_· ________ _:1966~· ___ ...:. __ _:_~=========~'ll
TMI SICOND nwr AROUND
-•• ll'llt .... c.t• ....
"-11 "' • -M>ofl9
1-lale Dinsmoor. Roy H -!-
Richardson, Jack E. ~loore.
WaJter M. Roys, Gordon ~I
'You' Viewed
For Program
"'You" v.·ill be in rocus when
the )lesa·Harbor Club meeLs
for luncheon Tbursdaiy, J an
14, Ill the Mesa Verde Country
CJ ob.
µftt1 ' BUFFUMS' FAMED
LAMP CUT
PLUS SHAMPOO,
FERMODY L TREATMEN T,
5.50 8.50 val ue
Mn. Laurel Kimball .
-former fashion model v.·hose
;: credit.s include TV and little
: theater work. will do 1 p1rody
~ on the housewife a n d
Ii you r hair on ly has 1he sl ighl -
e5;t tendency to curl, our Buf.
fums' experts wil l encourage
every natural wave. Enriching
Fermod~I will help slrenglhen
your h~~. We'll shampoo and
comb it into on exc111ng new
look. Try it • • • discover why
Buffums' lamp Cut hos be-
come famous.
demonltralt: m a k e u p tecb.
niqu<o.
; With her theme The Look
.. for lt7l, sht will empbultt
the dynamics of first lm-
prtSSlons and the do's of how
to packaee yOW'lf:U.
Gl"flelinc members a n d
guest.I will be Pi.in. tiua.M
Steputis. pre:skterlt. and Mrs.
Donald Rholda, p r • 1 r • m dWnlw1.
Laguna Group
American Leeton AU1.lliary
ol 1..quna Beach gathtrt the
. .......i and fOUflh Thursd>y
evenings in lbe Legion llall.
I
\
hovty Srudio,
Mc nicure1 • Pedicures • loc iols
• Electroly.;,
Newport, •I Fashion Island, Newport Center e l>-44-2200 e Mon., Fri., 10:00 till 9:]0; Other tJ•ys JO till 5:30
• I
home, furnishings, loog-ran&e
plans affecting security. Wbat
appe3J"S to be fornlldable op-
position will ¥ ani.sh.
GEMINI. (May 21.June 20):
Perctptive a bilities increase.
Excel.lent for \\Tiling, short
journeys, conducting private
investigation. Find out reasons
for recent events. P.laiatai.n
sense ol humor and
disco\•ery.
CA.:'OCER (June ?!..July ?%1:
Financial opportuniti~ come
from unei:pected source. Pay
and coUect debts. Take in·
,·entory. Be a"·are of \'a]ue
of possessions. ~1oney picture
brightens: position is .stronger.
LEO lJuly 2.1-Aug. 21 1:
Strong desire for se\f~JC·
pression is e\·idenl. Some may
complain that ~·ou push 100
hard.. Don't permit this to
alter style. Be yourse.lf. utihz-
ing man·elous sense o f
sbowrnansbip.
Y1RGO (Aug. n&pt. 121 :
Aectn1 qu.irL s t I f • d e velop-
menL Keep confidential af.
fain that way. Avoid scandal.
Don't make claims you cannot
fulfill. Cooperate with one who
iJ temporarily handicapped.
LIBRA (S.pt. 23-0ct. 22 ):
Accent on new and old
friead.!hips. Make Mure plans.
Put money to work. Accept
advice from friends in high
places. Don 't sell yourself
&hon:. Be ready, available.
SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. ~l ):
Thase in positions of authority
react to )"OUr suggestions,
ideas. Get program i n t o
operation. Make room at top
for yourself. Ambitions can
bt' fu.Jrilled if alert, ve.rsatUe.
SAGIITARIL'S (\"ov. 21-
Dec . %1): De\'elop new con-
ctpts_ Outline any travel io-
clinatioos. Study. Gain in·
dic.aled through Y.'ritten ,,.,·ord.
'Scent' Aroma
Accent phJIOMphy, dee per
meanings. D i s l' a r d the
&Uperficial
CAPRICORN fl)(>c 22-Jan.
19): Legal seUJ<-ments in·
dicated; be perceptive enough
to see v:iriou., impl1calions.
You are l!ti111ulatcd. Romantic
intert~,u arc present. Balance
emotion and logic. Get ~'hat
you're worth .
AQUARIUS I Jan. 20-feb.
18/: Legal. marriage re!a.
tionships a re emphaslz.ed.
Avoid opc:n quarrels. Being
tactful 11ow e<tn g:.iin more
than an y forl·ing methods.
Diplomacy is a nCC'ess1ty_
PlSCF..S 1 Feb. 19-lilarch 20):
Improve rncthvds of &:rving
and being served. hlany may
look to yuu as cJCan1plc. Voll
can"l wish f:icL'i a y,• a y .
lnstead, face rnusu.:, Gain
knowledge
IF TODAY JS V 0 U It
BIRTHDA y \'OU art• rle JC \ble
bul serious Ur puqlO!.f'. You
can stitk to a prr1Jctt until
completed. You :~c ahead;
you perceive wtlfl1 could ~-
cur. 'i"ou <H'l' 1ntcrcs1cd in
people anU have unu~ual circle
of acqua1ntanef's. As for
friends, few rc~dly kno >v and
underst;.ind vou. You sellle
doy,·n now io more serious
aspects of li ving . '!"his follows
the li\'ing room." '·Is that it~" he said and somewhat of a social merry·
.. "·e mustn't panic," he 5aid mo\·ed on to the k.i\chen for go-round . Pace y,·as dizzying,
palling his vtrLSts y,·ilh a a stronger drink. but you learned a lot.
deodoriler wick. ··\\·e·re 1ust11;;;;;;;;;~;;;~:;;,,_,_,_,_,_,_,..~=~-=-=~~7:~
go;og to ha"e IO make '""· SAVE ON KNITIING y ARNS that oo ooe plays the organ
tonight." We both nodded. I STOClJ A.IE LIMITED-HURRY! 11ro1ho< The party v.·as in high gear l PAlfAIT $2 KNITTING MAClllNE
y, hen )Jax ~fan: sat do"11 a...i• S:l.50 wnh ~~·~1~~""'""
to play the organ. I grabbed lElMESSI 70¢ REG. $14950
a can of deodorizer and fo!Joy,·.
1
"""'• Sl.OO •194.so
ed him. AND SOMI TAllNS REDUCED TO 50~ ' •~at "' you domg'" he The KNIT WIT sou~~A~~AST
asked annoyed. ! Phone 54J-2112 COSTA MESA
I turned the deodorizer on 1~~~~~~~:i::i~~~~~~~~~-l::~=::~~~~~ myself. '"It's Skinny Dip."' I f
said feebly, ··10 make me ir.
1
resistible,"
I "4'atched in horror as he
pulled out the s\ops on the ,
organ and started to pump.I
As the hello" s y,·heezed 1n
and wt, spreading misery.
throughout the house, three
y,·omen fainted and one man
put out his pipe. I
"l say.'' he said. pausing.1
··oo you ha\"e a dog·:··
'
0\\'e ha,·e three of I.hem .
but they're outside.'' I
He began to play agair1, then
stopped and sniffed. "ls somt'-1
one in the apartment cook-I
ing sauerkraut or making
sulfur with a junior chemistry
set?"
··v.•e don't live in an apart-
ment."
.. Is someone 1o1·earing old
gym shoes?" he asked. I
His \lo-ife came o\·er al thl.o
moment and leaned over hisl
shoulder.
··~ax, your music stinks."
UP
TO
1/2
OFF!
e BRAS
e GIRDLES
e SLIPS
• SLEEPWEAR
e AT.HOME.WEAR
e ROBES
·~ Jjif' y· Jf Graduatf' t ·.,r •• llcff'~ 111 Speclallzini; 1n D and IJD Cu;..s
I i 14JI '1--.-.-.-,~.-m-:-f•-,-.,~.~,,-:-;,-=y--;u-, -Cups .. -
All S&ll..'9 F'ina.1
250 .. E .. _17tti Street
C01t11 M..-Hlll9r•n Squ11re
-642·!1430 -
ID6/N8M
Stripes • Checks • Plaids • Solids
a perennial favorite in a
sturdy cotton fabric.
for sports and playwear.
VALUES TO $1.49 YARD
36''/45" wid• sru•r. w•1h1bl•
. .,
¢
yd.
UITING$
BEAUTIFUL SOLID COLORS
yards and ya rds of fop
quality, high fashion suitings
1n good weight for dresses, pants
VALUES TO $3.91 YARD
•c•f•tes. r•yon1, blends
•cetata tricat lining 99'
• 54" I lill" width, yd.
II HOUSE OF FllBRICS
,..... C-Pl-l ri1t•I •t 5•R Dl•t• fwy.
c:.... ............... ,"'
Or•11 ... MlllJ..-O,.R,•lt1o•p• •""' Htrl>.r ,..i.tt.. 12~1JJ4
H-.. "-17 ... •+ l1idel s.t. A-'4J·llSI
..... ,.erlr c..t.-.l• ,.1,... •t Stt 11loft
._ ,..,._.2MlJJ
•
'
M011do11, Jo1"111ir:; 11, lq7l DAtLV PILOT J9
Trea sure
'S a ils' Se t
By Alums
Ha waii Home fo r Newlyweds Harborites
To Marry
Dign itarv Pays Visit,:.1' ( .-z
Ceremony Links Pair
Weddinc pledges will be ex-
Bridesmaids were the ,.1isR.S chanaed by Nancy AM Daigh
Terri Regan, Patti Jlartson, and W 11 I I am Filtpaltick
Opening her Newport Beach lhe arts and crafLI sc.iliill ·Jn
home on Thur$day, Jan. 14, Tennessee 1 up port &•·n ..
for • meeting °'· I.he SOu~ tionaUy by aU Pl Betilo"l1lt Coast Alumnae C.:lub or P1 ~
1'he answer to '·\\hat ll'lll
I do with 11"!"' wi ll be provided
1vhcn the Orange Coa~t Alum-
nae of Kappa Alpha Theta
sponsor a wh ile elcph<in l sale
at JO a.ni. l\'ct!r1c.:.J;1y, ,Jan.
13, in the Lido 1 ~1c honie
of ~trs. Don<1ld T1pf>et t.
All area Thetas arc> invited
In allend the st.1 lc ~u1d gel
rid of thl·1r u n 11· a n t e d
treasures; a ti cl 1 1 ion a I in·
formation n1ay be olll t.1 111ctl MRS. P. J, R EGAN
by calling 1\lrs. Donald \VartL Recites Vows
Wedding rings and vows
"·ere exchanged by Christie
J..ynn Denner and Patrick
Joseph Regan during an even-
ing ceremony in St. Joachim's
Ca tholic Church, ~ta Mesa .
The daughter a! "'1r. and
Mrs. Elton Duane Denner or
Balboa Island and the son of
Mrs. \Villiam Regan of Costa
f\.1esa recited their pl~ges be·
fore the Rev . Thon1as Nevin
and the Re v. N. L. Brown.
Given in marriage by her
rather, the bride asked her
sisLer , Mrs. Vernon Edler Ill
lo serve as matron of honor.
-~~~ ~~-~~------~.
FOR YOUR VALENTINE
Costa Mesa Store
Harbor Shopping Center
'l300 Harbor Blvd.
. '
,
l
5 x 7 PORTRAIT, or a set l 49
OF4 WALLET SIZE PHOTOS ..•.•.. ,. e
2 CHILDREN PHOTOGRAPHED TOGETHER. , •. 2. 98
""•ch •OO•h•f>fl s ~ '~·. W•lltl Sn• Gt ... p SI .• , II pur<llfnd "' ......
"-OOoloOntl cll••9• lor roorO•"·
Great color portra its. as only the ''P1xy'' photographers cap.
lure them. All portrai ts are delivered to you at our store. You
ti ave your choice of several poses. No mailing, handling.
or other charges. Age lim it, l 2 years.
l uC!'Sdoy. Joftuorv 12 thru Sourdav, Jon. 16.
HOURS: 9:10 '111 !. p.m. Doilv
1 l !
Lester June H in St. Andrew's Alary Lou Croake, Cece Prtsbyterian Churth, Newport
Amaranthus and Janet Davis. Beach.
Flower girls were he!' nieces, Their betrothal hall been an-
Gwen and Cindy Edler. nounced by Mr. and Mrs.
John Probst \Yas best man. Jonathan P. Daigh of Newport
and seating guests were Den· Beach, parents of the bride-to-be.
..
• Bet..l Phi wlU be ~1rs. Gary chapteri and alumnae~
Myers • Assisting rt the mut~n
Honored guest will be ~\rs. tx.· the Mmes. Al~ V.
Maxine Goldback, province Conley, Roy E. June .. ~ley
president who will give a slide 1'1iller. Glen s1mmon<-<and
prei.enlaliun or -~\rrowmont , Phyllis StrDUd.
,· ..
nis Regan, Larry Denner, Mi!!S Daigh and her fiance,
Doug Kollus, Doug She1:1rer, .11on of Mr. and Mrs. William
~lark Regan and Kei th Regan, A. Lester of Newport Beach.
\\'ho arrived home from Viel· both are graduates of Newport
nam jusl in time for lhe wed· 1-larbor High School. She at· NANCY ANN DAIGH
ding. lends San Dlego Slate College June Date sHAG ~t :!!j
The new 11rs. Regan is a and he is a student at Orangejjiiiiiiiiiiiilliiioimmiiiiiii
graduate of Corona del A1ar
0
_eoas __ ,_eo_11_eg:.e_. ____ _ Al'o al l .99·6.99-9 .99·1 2.99·16.99·2~.99
14 38 South Main Street, Santa Ana
•,
Jfigh School and attended
California Slate College at THE BEST
Fullerton. Re1de11hip pol11 p•ove "P••·
The bcned1 cl, a Vietnam r11rh " i1 one of th1 world'1 moil
\"eh:ran, was graduated from popul1r comic 1trip1. R11oi it ~1'ltt'r Dei High School and,";idii;.,ii;,,iiii,,;;,h. OAILY PILOT.
auended Orange Co as tllr iiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiii~
Colle~e. Now stationed 1n
Hawaii, he serves in lh el
Army.
The ne\\'lyweds will make
their home in Hawaii.
Boot Look
For Legs
The latest concept of the
decorative leg ta k e s in·
spiration from prototypes or
grandn1other's day buL with
dramatic difference .
Legging s, the innova-
tion in leg covering by
Burlington, fit snugly under
the instep and lead the eye
Up\vard lo just belo1v the kne e
1vith a l'ariety of lil'ely pat-
t.r:rns and styles.
It's the decorative bool loo k
for both day and evening.
Opera League
Plans Auction
A gcnenil meeting and
1vhitc elephant auction for
n1cmbers and guests of the
Opera League of 1.a.guna
Beach \1•ill begin at 10 a.m.
lomorrow in the home of Mrs.
Ross ~1cC\ure of South La-
guna.
~fembcrs arc asked to bring
a "A-'hitc elephant gifl. Relrcsh-
1nen\~ "'-'ill be served.
Secretaries
At 6:30 p.m. every second
Tbursday \\'omen of Bahia
Cha pter of National
Secretaries' Ass oci a Ii on
International assemble i n
different locations to attend
m eel i n g s . ~frs. Lloyd
Vlen1ing at 673-636() may be
telephoned for a d d it ion a I
informa tion .
Read
Roy Alverado'$ (~•~tr o! EOon90•
'HAIR BEAT' Pho..c lo• F .. t l 1tl111otu •'
Every Thursday
Da ily 9 to 5 :30
Fri. 9 't il 9 574-3993
This is the ~es event that smart buyers have bee n waiting
for. Now, for a limited time. you can get all the quality and
engineering excellence Sylvonia home entertainment product:.
:ire famous for ••• and with up to $100 in savings. But don't
delay, if you miss this opportunity you may have to w ait a
whole year for another chance at bargains like U1esc.
. .
. :·
Semi Annual
Shoe Sale ~.·
1:
I . r·
SAVE$1QO
MEN 'S
VALUES TO $38.95
PRICED
FROM
TO
CHOOSE
FROM
e FLORSHEIM
e WINTHROP
•VALLEY
e JOHANSEN
• LADY FLORSHEIM
e VITALITY
• PENAlJO
e ADORES
e ENNA JETTICKS
e MUSKETEER
WOMEN'S
VALUES TO $29.00
PRICED
FROM
TO
----CHILDREN'S---~
STRIDE R!TE & LAZY BONES OPEN
MON. t. FRI.
NITE
Till
9:30 PlM.
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4223 •
I .. :..-· -
Sylvania Air Suspension speakers (model
AS-41) for pure natunll base sounds!
4'" Cull range spa.ken are eq uivalen~ lo
speaker11 2 sizes larger. Ideal a extra
speakm ror your stereo comol~
SAVES10
C1m;:sie styled stereo model SC388, wiLh 400 watts peak music powt>r and
scaled Air Suspension speakers. Superb break front credenza cabinel. Includes
FMJAf.f plus FM lilereo radio and Garrard SL95 aulomal1c slerco lurnl.ablc.
Now Only $3995 Now Only $775
SAVE SBQ on either of these superb Sylvania Stereos. YO UR Both models feature 240 watts peak music power. FM/AM plus FM stereo radio, Garrard auto~
metic aeteo twtltable and sea.led Air Suspension speakers..
CHOICE ·
Now
Only
$595
Contempon:ry credenza stereo model sc37t. .Early America n styled stereo model $C374.
HURRY! OUANTITIEs LIMITED AT THESE LOW SALE PRICES I
COSTA MESA
411 E, SevenlHnth St .
6 1614 dolly 9.9 Sot. 9·6
,,.
)
EL TORO
Laguna Hills Plaz•
(ntxt to S1v·On)
837·3830 d•ily 10.6 M/ F 10.9
' I
....
If DAILY PILOT Mond.ty, Januaty 11, 2971
Exchangettes Heart-oriented
l,,ookllJI lnlo bw1a will be
lhe Newpon Harbor Ex·
cbanplttt whea they meet
to make decorations for the lr
upcomln& ValenUne D-r o.noe.
open her Costa :tttesa home
at 10 a.m. Wed.oeid&y, Jan.
IS, when members aalhe:r to
mab red net hearts for tbq
event. Lunch will be served.
The dinner dance will Lake
Mn. Dooa1d Ziemer will place Feb. ~.
WE ARE CONTINUING OUR srECIAL INTRODUCTORY
OffERI FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY YOU MAY STIL L
1lECEIVE 1
....
YOUR INDJVIOUAL l'ER SONALIZEO HOROSCOPE
YOUR IN-DEPTH 1971 FORECAST
COMPLETE WITH CHARTS AND A CASSETIE
TAPE
OR A l'ERSONAL APPOINTMENT FOR
YOUR ANALYSIS
OR I OTH 1f YOU WISH
ALL DONE IY A NATIONALLY fAMOUS
ASTROLOGER
• PLUS •
A COMPLETE HOME STUDY COUR..SE IN
ASTROLCGY
MEMBER SHIP IN THE AST RO SCIENCE CENTER
l m••lin91, t.ctu1•1, 9u•ll •P••~•n, etc. I
TWELVE MONTH SU I SCR1PTION TO THE
"ASTRO SCIENCE NEWS."
All li.i1 at our inlroduclo<y offer of only $•9.SO, (Yo u
would ••pact lo pay llli1 much and mo'• fc>t • 9ood
Ho101cope •lo~•!)
T1rrn1 ••• •~•il1bl1,.,. P•Y ••you la11n.
ASTRO SCIENCE CENTE R
(71 41 543-8100
. .....
.
A Fa vorite Gown
1100 N. llOADWAT #J11
SANTA ANA 92706 One or Pat Nixon's favorite evening gowns is this
pink panne velvet creation by countess Alesandra.
She likes it for its coverup look.
Up <!nd down the state, the 27 offices of the 5.25 3 en9Ml:f~
subsidiaries of Imperial Corporation of America, ............... ~U'llilws-the nat ion's third largest pub licly-owned savings mt•ut ltalrlJlllt. _,..,
and loan holding company, have taken the name --of Imperial Savini;s. l·lere you'll find the same 5.75 % OI $!CUI..,... tJt frfend1y staff backed by experienced manage-_....,_.r..
ment dedicated to community growth. Here you'll ~-.... --find the highest interest rates permitted by law,
.. _ -·----insured safety wit h your funds protected by an
agency of the federal government, and a great 6.00 % -PDl...-its• ......... :. range of financial services. -·-IJIS.._.._
Whether you open a passbook, or guaranteed .. -growth account, your funds will start earning --......... ,....
Instantly. Come in and start your savings growing 7.50 % et1$IG\ODD...,_
at Imperial Savings, a subsidiary of Imperial Cor· •-MM~ ---poration of America.
,,,,._
.. ..... t --~-,.... •
--. •
Philanthropies Viewed ~~
.~~-~m ~~;~~:i Fighting Pollution
Ecology Accented
Alumnae of Alpha PbJ will lbe group in malting decora·
bt bolted by Mrs. Lloyd Uana for a bridge-brunch tak-• "' Hamilton in her Santa Ana ing place Tunday, Feb. 9, ,
Resolution Fi~ht Pollution is lhe theme
bf an Ecology Fair spansored by the llunt-
ington Beach Junior Woman's Club.
· home at 10:30 a.m. Wed· in the Balboa Bay Club. More than 20 groups are expected lo at-
tend the fair beginning Wednesda y, Jan. 13.
and con tinuing through Saturday, Jan. 23 , in
Huntington Center.
nesday, Jin. lS. Following the workshop, Jun-~
Members will make chem will be seC'\led with Mrs. ~I
prepanUons for their Heart Hamilton being assisted by
LoUIPoP Sales scheduled to Mrs. Robert Haechel, Bruce I
begin during the third wtek Corzine and Lawrence LitLrell.
ol thlt moolb.
Among them will be elc1nentary and high
schools and colleges as \\'ell as· other organ-
izations interested in combating pollu~iun.
Uoder the direcUon of Mrs. Accepting reservations for
Jamu Flon:nce, 1 a 1 e 5 the workshop and lun cheon
coordinator, membert will are Mrs. Douglas Gorrie ,
Additional information n1ay be obtained
by caUing Mrs. Emde or Mrs. Larry John.son.
J uniors conservation chairman.
diJtrlbute the Io 11 i pop '1 p;;i;;p<iiesii1ii.diieniit~, iianiidiiiiMiirsii.iiHiiaiimiiiiiltoiiiin.,_·,;i-""iii;'i;i""~~··;;,· ·.··:,·--.,....,;-~.,:.. __ ....,~· ... -.:,;,,;,'~· .·:..,",,;' .;.. .. • .. -.·.~-"";.·,..·'. throuibwl Orange County andll
all proceeds will be donated
to the COUDly Heart A.s.socia.
lion.
Silver Sends
ne flnt Tuesday of each
month at 8 p.m. memben ol
Silver Sands 286, N at i v e.
Daughters oi the Golden We.st
gather . foe meetinp. Lake
Park Clubhouse in Huntington
Beach is the meeting place.
1,Ml'I OP OIL PAINJINM
WHOl.llAU WAllHOUU
OPIN TO THI PUIU C
30°/o off
1•1t •· IDt•••• U WTA ........ -·-DUJ.••• WAMTae
•
•
•
•
•
•
0
on MAYTAG
YEARS
LABOR
WARRANTY
YEARS
PARTS
WARRANTY
You won't pay one cent extra for parts or labor
FOR AT LEAST 5 YEARS !
Fo1110111 Moftat S year worroltty: frff repair or •1chon9e of defKliYe pctrh or cobintt
If II r11•t1. frff ln•t0Uotlo11 of ptrrb Is tlw deole"' respon$1bllity of wllln9 fTa11chi1ed
Moyto9 Oeoler with in first yeor. Stro119nt Orrl1·lrow11 Senk• 09r"111e11t 111 hi•tory!
Oo•IP.l row11 will pro•lde orl9lnol p•rehm•r a ll lobar 011d ports need•d to 111oh1tai11 the
washer In -•llltlll o p••crtl"'I candltle11 for 5 Y"'f"I crftwr co11troct date. Thi• ''"ice 09ttt·
111 ... 1 i1 n.ol in 111bult11t• for Mcryt09'1 WOl'ranty b11t is In odcUrlan th•rtto for parts cmd
lobar not co•etitd !hereby.
MAYTAG AUTOMATIC
BIG FAMILY CAPACITY!
Big F1mily Size Tub
Automatic: Water leve l Control
Power-fin Agilatri"r
Choice of Water Temps
Curable Press Care
Self Cle1nin9 Wish Basket
ALL
FOR
ONLY
Includes S Year Parts
and La bor W1rr1ntyl
HOW CAN DAVIS.BROWN
MA KE SUCH AN OFFE R?
W• eno e""'lllKI 11111 hlftl1"'11 ,,_i.llt11 ,_.,..
II~ ... IJ' mljw lpptl•,..11 11141 ltlttl•lot!. Wt ...,CllM11 l<t Inly I I ..... l llty .,.,,,., 11111 ""'
..... ll!rwt lrtrn ..... IK!el'J' 11 llw 11r1<1•. Wt
nit ,.........,,,.~ Cltlll.
Wt M•1 IUr ,_.., llttt .t 119"'9 """l<I tr11<-I
dlfl.,. wll!I tec11.., lr•lllt<ll ttnlct •Pt<l•lli1i
.. 11111 .... •1111 ...-.k:. "" """'"'"'' .... 11.
W1 .......,. •• c111 t l'ff J'H btlltr Prl<luch wllll
...,,..,. Mnk• lor 1111 ...ntyl Clmt In '9111yl
MH•! Alotll'
I 1mPERIAL SAUlnG·s MATCHING MAYTAG DRYERS
AVAILABLE IN GAS OR ELECTRIC
l •teiJ.-lt11 ••II Dep.,....ablllty 11...,e 1947
I
1 Milllld•ry ot lmfl'/\81 eorpon11on 01 Amerb and loan Association of NMpGJl-Pasadlnl
Newport Balboa Savings' new name
E1ecutive Olflce: 3366 Via Udo, Newport Beech, 673-31 30
M&in Office: 61 South Like Avenut , P.s8den1. 795·8441
r J de1 Mer Olhce: SSO Newport Cen ter Drive, Newport Be&e:h, 6"·1461
3870 (a~t Foothill Boult'lard, P1saden1, 795.0447
::: 1 North Glendora Avenue, GlendOrl, 335·4043
• , 1;:r. (.. ::,,,; 19900 V1 nlw11 loule .. ••cl, Woodl1~d Hilh, 346·)920
I '/
,
' COSTA MESA l
411 E. S•v•ntH nth StrHt
646-1684
DAILY 9,9, SAT. f·I
EL TORO
La9uno Hills Pla10
(.,,.,lo s.v.Q")
937.3930
DAILT 11t-6-MON.·fll. 1D•t
MOllCllY, January 11 , 1971 DAILY PILOT %1
ly Al Capp DICK TRACY U'L ABNER
ll-IE'i ALL
RE.FUSED
THE
-'1'1uliOER!-_,.RaiieL E.! -
voe,!!
.,. ....... _ ...... _ ..
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
ASK HER IFN IT'S
AWRIGHflF'N I
PICK HER UP FER 11\E
VANCE 1'NITE AT
ATE NCWCK!
HE HAS ONLY--
ON LY ONE SUIT
;o HIS NAME!
so
WHY
DOESN'T
HE WEAR
,.HA,.?
/.//
,_---.
~ v
r ·II
By Tom K. Ryan
T\Ml'L~ flE
JUST PEACH~ VEAR! YOU MAY LA~
FOR US AT
E16HT!
By Al Smith
,.HE
HOLIDAYS
ARE OVER'
By Harold Le Doux
SALLY BANANAS
H.;.' I'"" o-n. ~ ~ ""'"' ~ ~ Su./>.Alt
H--... ~ ,,.,,..& a.e-.t I
O~?
.......
GORDO
HAVI NG BEEN
Df?lVEN HOME BY
MR. T'S CHAUFr:E"UR,
SAM DRIVER IS
"&>UT TO ENTEi?
HI S APARTMENT
WHEl>l HE HEAE:S
DON'T Tl?V ANYTHING
FUNNY, 17RIVEI?'. WA.LK
IN OlllET·LIKE !
I Tl<IOUGHT nlE
VOICE WAS FAMILIA.~,
ELMO .. BUT WHAT'>
TrlE 6UN ~~?'
I THOUGHT fl.IAT'S Wl-IERE VOll'D
't'Oll WERE IN LIKE ME TO &E. ISN'T
MEXICO CITY' IT, 17R!VER?WHAT KIWD
OF A. STO~ D1D 't'Otl
61VE Mlt T Al!-OUT ME .
A VOl(E
BEHIND' HIM:
PLAIN JANE
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I
ACRO SS ~5 P opul~r Saturday's Puzz lt Sol~rd·
resort ' l -·--Godunov ~1e a
b Chief 48 Bird
10 Tai Mahal S l 6r11'Sfl
Silf composer
) 4 Hollywood'~ 52 Chang e~
'A1ss Head the ti tl!"
JS l ~nrJ 54 Descendan!~
me~s"r'" ol Le vi
11. Vel1itl!", 58 And othe•s:
nf ,1 sari La !in
17 Comr !O sq lr1$1l
~ po111I fa1rie ~
18 Re~!•ng h I \'/arr! oil
pl ~Cl' Ol Se!'d
19 l'ii11tlow cover1tHI
lH'\t t b3 COSr.lCt1( 1 Econom ic JS Qp\1cal
20 Co11r.1v b~se
1'11'C tl!1~ e I;~ F oolisl•
Cool)tralion product
Adminis-3'1 A cc epts ,~"
22 l.l ~kr peopl e trat1011 . rondihons
In S311'° b5 C.1n~d1~11 Abbr 2 word~
24 Carroll pol11 ic1~11 B Barr~n 42 lluder
character Inform al 9 Abandonr !! normal
71, Pantry bb Forget to sl,ip t 1rc11ms\a11(r~
27 Ov~rbe arlng me11t1011
woman: 67 Man's nAme
10 Attire 43 R,tduce
11 "E~ctl!tnt i'" 91eatly
Slang DOWN 30 Chi II
12' Alals or 4b Ge11e1a!1on
U1a ls 47 Barbaro11s
31 lns trumenl J3 Turkish 4B "Terrilic'"
J2 Bla nd I Puts chit l 49 Kind of
J7 Math mon ty or1 21 "For stiampl" rocket
s11b jt t L ' 11orst
Abbr. ZH ar'em
23 Elhnfc 50 Wa lking •.••.
groups 2' word~
3B E~clus!vt room 25 ··-ate Dunt 53 Fake
r i;hts 3 Mat11rt
to ust 4 Si y
~O Demur• reped!fdly
11 Risi ng S H igt1-
,3 T1 ibe of ~itchtd
loc!CJ-C.binl II ur1s ian ,
27 Wild animal 55 R~ln rfallv
2B ---boditd hard
29 Or,sses up S6 Scot.
JJ Egghead Gafllc
)4 Repeat 57 Agtnl :
35 Fly high Suff il
44 Tillt f .g. 3b "Auld lang -·"60 High prie~l
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
"'IOUIZE HELPING IRA
Pl.AN HIS CJ'.REEf< 7
-' I
l I •
By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS
\'1110 .,.Ol.D 'IOU
TMl.T li'OU COULD
U6E MY S!WolPOO?
"SOFr, cusµy uoe,.
~IG PAY,
60 DAYS AN>J/.iAL
VACATION,
/-JI
NO RESPONS16'U'TY; j:;X6GLJTl\IE STATUS,
MANY 8ENEFIT!>;
HOURS} IO·*~
't·DAY WCEK.•
By John Miies
!I'll.""~ ... 1 ............
J.11),h.ol"fl
By MeH
STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Overgard
.-.,-Dl_,.D.,-1 .,-HEA=R:-5:'.0M::-'.'.E"· r.:-==-:-:-:-:-=-:::'.:::'VOH::'.:!:'.rP::-:NN:=;:l:;SE~lllU::::::T0::-7'Pl.EASI!, DIRK/ IM CORRECTIOll
Jrfvt! HAS J/JST
Sl/G6ESTED
A SliSPECT
FOil THE
BOM81>16
WHCNA
YO<f1H IVAl~
INTO 'THE
•1ttOlll TOll•
OFRC£-,.,,
PEANUTS
----
ONE MENTION MY PAYMOREATTEMTJOMTO SURE MJl.Ff4;lf'ER DOLLY/-I
FATHElrS lHE 1.ftlL LAWS THAN v.ol'T-STIR UP INTENO TO
NAME"~ MR. REVERE DOE'S, SIR/ TROUBLE/ CALL TME.M AS
;•
" I•
!l
-------
I Sil THEM/
JUSTLllCE
YOUR
FATHEll/
• •
By Charles Barsotti
• Sile COO~D HWe: i;r ~EAST Lei' Me: ilf!>6S !
ly Gus Arriola
By Roger BoU.n
~-C> ,.,, .. ~ .... -.....
.,,.,_
-~ .'b.:·· .. .J
~a ··· ... • .-• .
DENNIS THE MENACE
< >• I
,,
' ¥
I
•
'>! DAJLV PILOT
LEGA i ... NOTICE
-HI
CllllTl•KATI 0,. I USIHISI
•tCTITIOUI NAMI'
Tl>e .......,._ -t¥1H' ~· '1 • •-I"" • llonl-•I 1000 Hew-I ~, ... ,, Ct1i. Mn•, C•llt?N•, ..-Ille
llcfllOll• II"" ,..,,,. o4 WIMOWAltO
(IJJTOM $AILt •nd fNI w kl firm h '"""°""' el , ... IQll;owl"9 W•Wlll, """°'" ,,_, rn 1\111 ..o pi.,~ OI rulcltn<;• h 11
folkPw>o
Jol>n ( CO"P•· tel N 0••"9• ~',
0••"9•· C•!il0tf'll
0•1ecl 09<:""""'' II, 100
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Nol••• Puollc In •nO •or ""'o ~'•'•· ""'"""'"' -••t'<I '""" {. c ....... l.nown lo -To bo tnt """"" '""°'' "Am• ,~ ~UbKlibN IO l~p ,.,,~,,.
1,.,,,u..,,~nl tnd otlno .. l...:JQ~ ~• ••P<ule<I "" .. ,..,.. !OFFICIAL SEAL!
MtrY K. 1<~1'1'
NOIO•Y Pubhc {•l11(1rn ••
P••nc!1>1! Onlco !rl
O•ltK>r (OUM•
M• Commln lon E•Pi•~•
Noy H. 1•n r "bl1\~ Cron• .. LO.II D••lv Pllol
(>.,<mtlu ll. ll. 1910 '"" ,.,.~ • .-. •, !l, l•ll 1)63-1'11
!.£GAL NOTICE
C•l E HO '·lfllt
CEltllflC•Tl OF lllUSIN[S!
,t(flTIOU' FlllM NAME
I AI! 1'1!
1"< ut><lcn•ol\H o~' ""'"'" ,,r1,1v
'"•I ~· '' t-..C.!•"" " ~·n•" •I • I ~onll•oo !!•••'· S•nld Ano. c..,.,nl•
r.• O<•~W•• Coi.to•n••· "'"'"' HI• l•{lol•l><I~ 1 m ll•m< "I II UPl,..,£01101/E Elf(
1111( CONPANV, IN( •nd lh•I ·~·d
• •m '' (<>ml>O>'"' "I tne tollowong ,,.,!CJ>,
"'""" "~"'' '" lull 0na pl"t~ "' '"""'"<• I '" !ollOot~, 11\·W,1
f.totl\MO Uo111<9•0•• .m •1b•OI\
O"•o. liun!·n~ll>'I ll<lt~. {..oh•o•1>•• D•I~ O<lotlTt I, li/O
ll ocnorcl UPlll<noro,.
~lAlE OF CAllFOllNIA
fOUNTV OF OllANGE " 0.. O<l<>Off I 1010, ll!'!Ot• m• •
""'""' Public '" •M '"' •••d '"""'• ~•o Soai. """"n•ll• •PP<•"O lloCh~rd IJo•~•o•• ~"°'"" 10 m• •o bf' '"• ""'-"'"°'" """"' " •ut>""""" lo Ill< ""''"'" •n>l•umrn1 ~nd ~c~no,.l<dgtd
10 mr !Ila! llt ••<tu!~O •~• ..,mt
wit"'" m• n1nd ~~ •••1. !oreno• ti. G•ttn
NoTA<Y PUt>llc In •n<I '°' >11<1 (ountv 1no $'"•
I.I• UW'l'lll'tl .. •Oft t~o.rU
II }~/I
1!08fllT W. llll'llili5
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T1 l..,l•lll>t< W ·119t
Allo.,,cv
P<10I<>~•<! O••Me {n••I O•>IY 01101,
Jo,.,u•rv j , 11. 18. i). !Oii l .. ,,70
LEGAL NOTICE
NOl tC f_ 0,.-111 USTEE'1 S.ILE
f~ Ne. Ill.Ill
0" lnu•.a•v. ""~"'•"' 11, 1'11, •I 11 00 AM TITLE IN!Ullll.N(E .. ,.0
TRUST COMPANY, •• auly •"""'"'"" l •., ••• ""d"' •n<I ......... "' 10 ~
M T<1"I <101ta Nov••nll"• I~. 1tb9, E •
•(u•e<l llv MATT LUJ.llN & EllLINOA
I UJll.N. ""'~""~ ""<! wilt "'>d '"corned No••mb•r 19, 1969. u '"'''· No, l ~jJI.
'" boo~ •l<I. 009• 110, ot O!T!cl•I
"'"o•<I• Jn '"" oltlt• ot It·• Covn!v R~o•<I•• O! O">ftQ• C1><111N. (olilornlo.
Will SELL AT PUOL!C AUCTION TO
'"GliEST 8100£11 FOii CAS,.., (1>&•oblf
•• 1;..,, ot '°''' ln 1•"'1ul ...,,.,,., ot
'"" u,.,.,.., !•~·~• •' In• No•tn ''°"' '""""'~ 10 '"" O•~"'" Co u n 1 • fov•ll\Ov•e lll<••to •• 10tl (,y;c C•nt ..
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t/ewOO'I MM• lr1ct ., '''" .... ~ ..
••(01,,rd •II II-!. P•q" 1 ol
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In• ~ou"I• "'"'""'at >•In count>.
Tno •''•<I •dor.,, •nd o•no• <<1mmon d.,19n•hOn, II •nv. ol th• •••I oraoort•
n•'tt<h..a •bn•• I< ""'"""<!d 10 t>r ~ll WtSI \1tll ~! (o,,o Mr'•·
l•hto,,,I•
H•t u•IO~•~•C"'d ltv"•• <11,,11,,,..1
•nv ll•D"ll• '"' 1nv 1nto1ttctnt« al
In• SI<..,! l <IOrtu •t><I O•ll•t (_.,._
o•.,9n1Hon, of •n•, >ho..,.n ll0to '"
~•·<I -,~I• w .I! br m•O•. !)Ut "''"'°"' •o~~"""' '" w••r111!• .,,.,~,or lmof~,
'"9~'"'"° >•II•, ""1•••1•"" or ,,.. 'U"l'lbt~ut_ ... •o o•Y if>O uno•o<I P"nf"t•\
•U"I "' "'" no•• ••CU•"" D• 14•d ~.d
r t r,~,, '"·"'•' 1'.151 n. with on•t<"MI t•nm July I 1970, ~• ;n ..,1n notr
'"O''""" .a.~nt•'· I! ~··· Un<lt' lhf I~'"" 01 'ooo Ol"'d o• ''""· !OM, '"~'o~· •nd ••~~ • ., of "'" T•u-.ttt
~"~ 01 the l•u•" c•o•lt<I ov •1•0 O...o
ol l•.,o!
111<' ll<'nol.c.o•v ""°'' w l<I O•.., o+
1 •u•t. hv ''"""'of • ouac" or oo•a~t!
In '"" obloQot'°"' >l!'C<1f..a !hotea..
~u.,olot0 ••KulO<I •nd "•l••••t<I 10 '"f una~••lgl>fl! I w•ll!rn 0 t<"l••ot,on
n! O•f•uH •t><I Oom~nd !or 5•1<, ~nd
"'"""" no!ltt o• D•••<" ~nd of •••d•o~ I<> ca"'' •n• """"'"~n•d In ••11 •••n
P•c11or1v to '~'"'' ••ld o111;Q"h"'"· •n<t 1'><•••""· "" Seo>! It. 1910, lhe Un· d"'••on•o C•W>td ,,;., ..,,,1,, of t>•uc~
on~ ol .. Kt<lln ID r,.. tKOtOfd in -
Oo1o. ~o• OI, ol U•d Ollicoal ll KO,,ll.
Oa1• Doetmi.r• ll 1'1n
lllLE INSull•NCE l'NO
Tlll)Sl COMPANY
•• \lid Ttus1.-. ~'I Ann Scnw«'I~
l ""I•• Sa'° Olhc••
<iu!ho,,1rd S1°r~1~"
I Ult
l>u•1+ ~·d O••n~t Col\! 01"• P iie!,
J~"""" •. It. 01, 1911 14J0.10
I Et;AL NOTICE
NOT!([ CF TllUSICC'! SAl(
No F1C lt~I
Cl" )~"'"••v 1'1~. 1911 at IQ 00 am ,
•I ·~• ~ •>! ~"'" ~,,.., •n'<all(f 10
"• 01~ O• ""'" Cl><i"'• Cov•• 110""·
1 t> o• ~'" '" A"·l· co""'' "' Oro1>9e. !o'"' ~· l.11''"'"'~ BANO:[ll~ ! Ai.JO HiVF~ll.'ff'<f COM
Pl\'I" ~ :n""H~11nn 1'<>'"'~"• (\~"'"'
'""" lm~1'1 C:>mu•n• o (Ofl>trll•Qll1, •I
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t, Ol('io><>:) l:IVICHI 6A~1 0N on~
•~Jl"L-'+'< t llA~1 0"1 ~v•Don(I .,.1
"''• 0'<~ '""1'0•0 Jul• 11 '"'~ 111 fl(I<.>.
"l'-,, ..... •16 "' o .. , •• ~1 De(O•O• OI
fl••"~" CO""'' t•"'"'""· ~·v•n 10 \l-•u" ~" '""~~IM,....\\ In tov~' o• B•n•
'" Mu01 o~•• r:"rno1n• ol C•l•IOln•O, •
"""'o••llo~ "Qw 01•"'"" •o'll t1•l<1 OV
11 .. ,.. .• ,. ,,\"'' '""' (o.,1oanv cl Co!iltlf
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"'t•tn oi '"""'" oell~•hon1 '"""'"' lll~'""t• nnl"t nt "'"'(" w•1 •oeofO<'O <;oot~"'~' H! ... \010 1n B-~•GS. DOff
7•', ot <..o•d O•hto•• """"'d" B•n~-1
l1t1d lnvt\tmtnl (OtnHn~ o tD'l>D••
l•i>o> w•!I •tll •T PubUC •udl!WI to Tn•
ttiQll"'' to<l<l•'f '"' ea>ll, Pt~•ble In lnw
tul m"n•• o! In• UnOf!O ~1•1•l •t !!IP
''"'" cl \OI• ""'"'""' "'""""'" •• to
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•~ ~no •n '"" 1~110.,.;n~ <lt•<"i~ o•OCI•
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f.ountv ot 0•011;..r, SI~!• ol Ca!lrorn+•
lo·"'' p,,_,,. Arid"". 7'/U Put ft I I
"""""•· CO"• IV'•••· C••••o,n1.-; lol •• or 1••<1 7Jtl, a~ 11low11 on •
MIO '"(''"""' !n 11<11111 .Ill, Pia• n
ol Ml•<•ll~n•au' Mops, '"'"'"" ol O'""'e Cou,.h . Collfo•n11,
EXCE PT ~II c•vdt oil, 1>.i•oltum.
<to•. ~t••· ••u~•l!u"1 on<I Ill •!ndr!<I 'ub\t•~ttl ~"° o•lle• mlt1et•l1 un<lflr
~"" on ••jd •~"" ••ctol !ho' rlqnl
10 u1e '"' 1>0•t1on at the 1u•l•t • ol Ille l"r.d fOf Ofllll"'I .....,,.11.,...,,
m!nlnt I>' ..... ,.vl1>9 O! •It •Incl•.
lnclUOlno bu• ""' ••tlu•lv• ot alt ~e•! O••!I""'· oil """'IOl>mtnt, mlnl"'f -'"!I""" toort~t• wJ111 tr.. us.t ot ..,oo •u•t•<• ••• t>ll wtll1, l•n••· 1unntJ1, m.n.ng e••f•fl•O~I or ll'\1/!1, ~•O•I""",
no""""", '~' umt 1h.11! no! n. ton. 1true<:1 lo o•Ohl~lt 1!enl .,,1111"" or
IU(ll Olht• OPttA1Kwi~ .... 1(1\ In "9
.... Ult o• In MIV "''Y ft!<'(! ""
surll<• •lthl• ol ""'d l.ond -Wltlcll "° not """' ••I" ••!Id •' , 110ln1 1t11 1~1n soo '"' to ulo wrte<•. fof' ""' PU•POM' ol •tYI,.. ollll .. !lon1
loK ..... ld tty ... kl a • .., lntlllCllM IHI,
.. ,.,,..,, 11\d t>Pf<IMI 111 !fie T•u1ree.
IMIYll'l(tl. II •nv, \lftde• I~ ""'" ol
w ld dtH. '""""'' llW'f.on •ncl 113,710 n, ht -If ltl11e1NI ol ,,,. nole IKUted
bit ,.~ -· ... 1111 lnt••nl ~'"""'
fr<lffl APt'll l, '"' •• In .. 10 ""'• .,.., "" 1 ..... "'°"I-. Oelld O.Ce<nttt• 11. 1no
••l!ltt •I L.-no !nYQl'Mf!I c-.~
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''°""tth lenlt<"I lnOH!'l'ft11 C-•"•· • <O<-•lkiifl l•u!I ... ll W' f lf YN \., .llO<o<~
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1•10.N
The PAIL Y PILOT-
T op> 1n local Sport>
)
'
s MDnda1, Ja1t11ary 11, 1971
First Model
Of Trailer
Introduced
•riw f i r s I producdon..!lnt'
model or a new motor home,
tht• Revcon 240, \\'SS com
.Pleted recently at Revcoo
Inc. 's n e w rnanufacturing
plant 1n Fountain Valley, John
Hall. presldcnt of 1ht> firrn,
;in noun{'ed.
F1f1y add ilional rnodt:Js of
the 1notor horne are now under
const ruetton at the facility.
''\Ile have the capability of
proc:h.icing. up 10 eight Hevcons
per diiy:• Hall said. "In 197 1,
\\'l' plan lo havt'.' n1ore. than
~I Heveons on the road."
B1·vcun Inc. was founded
I hrce ~cars ago by Hall, wh<>
has had more th:in 20 yea rs
1•xper1ent·e 1•111h Airstrea m.
lhc world 's leading travel
trailer n1a nufacl urer. Rt<vcon
1s a subsidiary or Dunn
Pl'oµcrt1es Corp , Santa Ana,
\.\'hich is 111 turn a subs1dlary
or the Los Angelcs·bas.ed
Pacif ic-L1ghl111g Co rp .
!NYSl'.:1.
Tht· Revcon 21~ has been
designed as a \1Jp-of-1hc-tine
in otor home priced in the
$17.000.$19.000 rangl'.
1'he ll('W motor home is 24.5
feet long. 7.5 feet wide al'ld
6.5 feet high.
Us ing lightweight aluminum
mooocoque construction, the
Reveon 240 is powered by a
front -\1•heel drive Old smobile
·roronado 375 horsepower ( 455
C'U. in ) eng ine. The unit comes
equipped with au tom a t i c
transmission. po"·er .steering
and power fron t disc bra kes.
"The use of aircraft type
co11structio11 combined \1'ith
the Oldsmobile f)OWe r plant
gi\'l'S the Revcon 24{1 JX>"'er.
roadab11ity, stability and
slre.ngth unava ilable in any
other procluctlon mo t o r
home." Hall said.
The Rev con will sleep slx
adults and is completely equip-
ped with kitchen facilities. a
dining area and a bathroom
\.\'ith an extra-large sculpture
fiberglass tub and shoy,·er
combin,1tion.
The new motor horne 1s
ln(lnuiaclured in a n e \V
1ntllion-dollar plant in the
Orange County co mmunity of
Foun!a1n V:i lley. C u s t o m
fiberglass. y,•OO<I and metal
shops along wit h the ma in
aSS(>mbly building are localed
at the facility.
The new motor homt" will
be sold and serviced through
authorized Revcon dealers.
Tke rompany f o r~ca s t s
establishment of a second
plant in Dallas in 19'72. Plans
call for Revron lo produce
quali ty mini.motor homes.
ca mper.;. tent trailers and
houseboat.s.
Bank Buys
FV Bo11d s
"rhe Bank of America 1:;;
picking up $i2\l.OOO 1n school
bonds from tht' Fountain
Valley School District al an
interest rate of 4.8212 percent.
C.:harles \\'oodfln. associale
district super111tendenl. said
two fa rtors brough1 1hc: 111·
lc.resl r11t(· under live pc rccnl
for 1he fir~\ timP in 1\\o years.
"Onr. \IC sold lh<' bund'i
on a JO-year pri) hack lla s1s
:-ind the other 1-; 111e general
lowering of the bond markc1 "
The bond sale rn.1kes 1hr
dislrict eligible for rnorc sta le
linancing on srhuol ton·
slruction. The d1strlct ha~
three schools planned for cun·
siruction \.\'ith state help this
year. r..1ore applica tions can
now be submitted.
'l'he pa sl l\.\'O ~·f·rtr~ bond
interest rates soared nea r the
seven percent mark. Rece nt
drops in the market have
brought the rates dO\.\'n, but
now bel()W live percent.
By offering to pay back the
bonds in 10 years. the school
district made its bonds more
attractive to lhc bank.
Sully-J\1illcr
N a111 es l\ew VP
J>aul D. Mactllnhon. Orange
County construction 1nanager,
has been elected vice presi-
dent of the Sully-~Ullcr Con-
tracting Con1pany .
MacMahon hetids S u 11 y •
Miiler's site devclopmerit and
subd ivision operations i n
Orange County which includes
e:ii:cavation., pipe work. storm
drain systems. b r I d g es ,
asphalt paving, arid roncrele
work.
1,otr. OP OIL PAINTINOS
WMOLUALI WAllHOUSI
OPlll TO THI PUILIC
30°/o off
"" •. 101"•1, M Jlll & AJll.I ........ -OIALlll WAN'l •D ~"'l'I:
J
... . . . . ~ ,. .. "' ..
•
••• High Gear
Ford Dealer Wins Award
a re.al that gaine<l h1nl world·~
wide coverage. He sel 8 world
speed record of 1S6 miles per
hour in a 1920 flying mee t
In Long Beach.
\Vllb Cul Carlltt'nsC'11
'·My firsl new car sales
quot;i was one new Ford a
month."
OI course limes ha1o·e chang-
f'd and the man speaking
Theodore ltobms, Sr., had JUSl
DEALER FETED
Theodore Robins
bt::en naml:'d one of 71 \\'inners
of the nat ional Time Magazine
Quali ty Dealer Awa rd.
Robins, who is president of
Theodore Hoblns Ford in
Costa Mesa. will be presented
his a\.\·ard at the 54th Natlonal
Automobile Dea lers associa-
tion co nvention in San Fran·
cisco lhis \.\'eek.
The Time Aw artls. no1v in
thC'ir St'Cond year, honor
America·.~ 11 u ts I andin g
automobile dea lers and arc
presented in co-operation with
NADA. the national associa-
tion. Robins was nom inated
by the Molor Car Dealers
A&sociation or Orange County
and r.he 11 national winners
narrow the field considerably
from the ~1 ,000 dealers across
the country.
1971 marks Robin's 50th an-
niversary in the auto busine1i11
and he's seen tnany changes
in the business since opening
his one-man garage in Balboa.
"'11le onJy· thing I knew about
autos was that they had to
have good 1o~1orking engines,"
he said.
Me became a Ford dialer
by accident "Two men came
to the garage one day offering
n1e pretty good money for
the business. They said they
could be the new Ford dealers
but needed a building before
I hey could get the franchise."
Robins told them it wasn't
for sale and immediately
headed fo r Los Ange le s,
Before the day was out th e
garage V.'as re-named Robin'I
Ford. The quota was one car-
a n1onth and his inventor\/
t:Onsisted of one new Ford .
lie easily remembers his first
sale as the bill of sale for
56.17.15 hangs framed on his
office \\'all. "We didn't worry
much about financing in those
days either," he said.
He's moved the business
four times in the last 50 year.~
going lo his present location
in 1965. He now sttJCks over
:WO new cars and trucks and
has 110 employees.
During his Anny F!uing
Service days, he was the fi rst
1nan lo rly over 14.440 fool
1\lount Shasta. in a open
cockpit plane without OX)'gen,
Your !Honey's 11'ortli
Robin& is a director of the
Motor Ca r ~alers Association
of Southem California and a
past director ol the Orange
County Dealers Association.
Active in civic affairs, he
was named 1966 "Man of the
Year" by the Newport Harbo r
Chamber of Commerce. and
in 1962 he was named "Cit izen
of the Year" by Orange Coas t
College .
He i:t a director of the
Harbor Area Boys Club,
Newport Tomorrow, Costa
t.1t:sa Tomorrow. 0 r a n g e
Coast tomm<:xow and Boy
Scouts Explorer Group .
For the past 30 years he
has been a director of th e
Newf)Ort Harbor Chamht'r of
Cornmerce and has been
president of that organization
twice, in 1937 and 1962 He
IS a past presid!!nl or the
Lions Club.
Robins \1'as elected to the
lirst Newf)Orl High School
Board of Trustees in 1929_
He is a charter n1ernber
of the American Legion Post
291 , is a past presid«"nl of
Ne wport Exchange t:lub, and
is a past director of Amigos
Viejos Clb.
He is a naliv~ of Seattle,
\Vashingl(ln.
Robins is married to the
former 111ae Becker. They
have tv.·o children
Theodore, Jr .. a partner and
vice president of I h e
dealership : and Mary, a hig h
school teacher 111 Ba lboa,
Calif.
Finance
Briefs
NE\V YORK (UPI) -Stan-I
dard Poor's Corp. has con-:
flrnu:d whai many inveslorsl
suspected the past lZ month,,, I
1970 wa11 a lousy year for
dividends. The number of
favorable dividend actions, Jn.I
creases and ex:lraa, b yl
American t'flrporatlons fell
1,945 from 2.399 in 1969, The
nun1ber of unfavorable divi-
dend actions. cuts a n d
on1issions, jumped to 505 from
225 a year earlier.
TAMPA (U PI ) -Ground
will be broken Jan. 7 for a
35 story building with 1'"'irst
National Bank of Tampa and
GTE Data Services, Inc .• as
major tenants. "II will be the
tallesl office building i n
Florida and v.•itl occupy a.
sciuare block," said Prl'sident
E. P. Taliarerro, Jr., of Fir.st
National Bank .
NEW \'ORK (U PI )
Chesebrough-Pond's, Inc., has
contracted y,•ith llikon Corp.
of l\.1arlboro, ~lass., to n1ake
plastic jars under a new
design. The initial or d er
amounts to $1.5 million. l likon
is al present engaged in
developing a type of plastic
jar that ca n be destroyed
Y.'.ithout causing any air polio·
ti on.
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
- General Fireproofing Co.
announced ii has cut executive
salaries 10 percent and has
reduced while collar personnel
10 percent and cut the pro-
duction work week to 32 hours.
Some production workers have
been laid orr.
Bargain· Cale11dru· Outli.J.1ed
\\'AYNE , N. J. (UPI) -
American Cyanamid Co. has
111erged its plastics and in-
dustrial chemicals divisions
for greater efficiency and
econoiny . The rompany said
the Wallingford, Conn., plant
will continue as a major unit
of the merged division,
By SYLV IA PORTER
Despite the fa ct tha1 you
lace an l'ver·rising cost of
li ving !or as many y1•ars
ahead as you can foresee. you
can :.ha1·r Yi to 5{I pl'rcen1
or even more off the price~
r::J most goods and services
you buy simply by lollowing
the guidelines in my live col·
umns beginning today.
I guarant :;e this -11n<l 1
do so ('Vt'n though it's pro-
bably lhal prices across-i he-
l'Onsumer·boa rd \\'ill rise 3 lo
4 percent a year throughout
this decade. At an annual rate
nf rise of 4 percent. your
cost of li ving would double
f'1'cry 18 years or £0.
You can . for inst;incr. sa1'r
hundred.<; of dollars vn yo ur
ov£ral! costs just by pl anning
you r spending lo lake ad·
vantage or the season<1l sav~
ings which are and will c:on-
l!nu e to be av a i l ah 1 e
throughout this era of in·
flation. Or you can. by th e
same token, waste hundreds
l\F dollars by ignoring ll1e
"BARGAI N CALENDAR'" I
submit below.
To be even more specific.
if you know you will need
a specific item this year, it's
~ally lo wail until the demand
for the item is at its seasonal
pea k and you are least likely
to get a discount
February i~ an excellent
mon!h in \l'hi ch to buy air
l'Onditioners and used cars.
rugs and lamps. Do so. and
you can shave 10 lo 30 percent
or more off the original prices.
Financial Officer's
Duties Brocideni11g
l\'F.\\' 'YORK (A l-'l
r\n11·here rise in the exerut11·,
.suite ., r <' responsib1l it1cs
broadening as they are for
1he chief l'lnancia l office:. No
longer JUSI a scorc keeper. the
CFO is 11011• a cog in advance
pl;1nn 1ng and f)Ohcy forr1111l:1 -
11on.
Tht• ch<Jngc h;j$n'l ll<'cn
:lbrupt. although the aln rm1ni::
rlrought in liquidity that 01>
1·urred during the pas! ye ar.
h1gh!ightcd by th(' inabili1y of
the Penn Central to raise
enough money !o remain sol·
1•ent. accelerated the change.
Companies that once \\'Or-
ried prin1arily about pr().
duction or merchandising sud -
denly realized during the pas1
summer that they could 1101
!'OUtinely depend upon 1hl'ir
usual sources of finaocing. and
so the CFO's dut ies assumed
greater importance,
But fina ncing is only one
of the factors in the transit ion
nl the rorporate money man.
Complex: laxes, n e w ac·
<·ounting procedures. mergers,
romputerization, insurance.
pensions plans and prorlt shar-
jng also are forcing the CFO
lo be more broadly invol ved .
Rcf\ecUng ·his growing im·
portance. salaries for CFOs
now generally range between
$50.000 and $75,000, according
to 1 survey by the manage-
ment eonsulting firms of
Heidrick & Struggles. schedul·
ed to be released F'eb. J,
The firm received a ~9 per-
cent response to a ques·
lionilaire sent to the chief
financial executives of the 5Ckl
largest lndu.~trial companies
and 247 Olher companle11. in-
<.'IUdinR utilit ies and insurers.
F'rom the replies. it drC\.\'
thl~ profile of lht' CPO·
He h1 51. compared with
53 >·,ars of age five years
sgo. JI.lost likely his un-
dergretlu111e de"ret' 1s from
\V!sconsln. Illinois. Ne w York.
l\orth\.\·estern or Pennsylvan ia
universities. There. is a 40 per-
ce11\ cha nce he has an ad-
vanced degree, most like!v
from Harvard or NYU, an(J
a 33 percent chanc(' he is
a certified public accountant.
lie 1~ relatively sta tionary
111 1~hat 1s bC't'Orning an in-
t'reasingly rnobile business
world . having \.\'Orkcd for only
one or two other employers.
ln fact. if he \.\'Orks for an
insurance or utility concern,
lhrre is a 50 percent chance
lhat he had only one other
employer or none at all.
F'or so me reason not ~x
plained 111 the study, he ii;
an officer but not a director
of his company, although
lleidl'itk and Struggles ven·
lures I hf' forecast that he will
be found increasingly on cor·
pora le boards in the future.
\Vhile his COOtpensalion is
likely to be bel\.\'een $50.000
and $75,000, he may in some
SI00,000 in salary. bonus and
deferred pay. Increasingly he
is the beoeficiary of stock
options and other benefits.
The survey demonstrated, in
Jact. that salary today is
rea lly the base for rom·
pensation rather than the total
amount. Some 69 percent
reported they receive cash
bonuses, more than 50 percent
receive club memberships, t l
perctnt are given stock op-
tions and 74 percent rtceive
insurance.
In his own mind, the survey
c0n tends, the CFO views
himself as having "evolved
from a posture characterized
by resistanct to change to
lh31 or one aggre.ssl\'tl)I ieek·
ing il . , ,"
His emphn~is, the report
concludes, "has moved from
financial reporting to financial
planning. from lhe techni·
cian's role of hh1torlan to tht
1na na ge r l a l role of
f o rmulating corporate
$trategy."
August is a line month in
which to buy furs and garden-
ing equipmenl , furniture and
men's coats. Do so, and you
can sha ve another JO to 30
percent or more off the
original cos ts.
Buy r efrig era to r s in
.l anuary, millinery in July,,.
Buy toys and clothes during
!he post.Christmas clearances
and bathing suits and summ~r
shorts during the post-July 4
markdowns • , •
Enough, Here is y u u r
"Bargain Calendar." Clip it ,
save ii, use it for maximum
savings. I pledge you'll rome
out spectacularly ahead.
I" TO\J
WANl ro I UV
GOOO MONTtlS
TO &UY
Au c"'1dllionu' F •D .. l\uQ.
ApDll•n<:!< U m1lll JAii, f!l;t.
B•<-to Scllool Cltt!nt'·
Sch<IOI Supoli•• ,.uo., 0<;1.
ll!<l<lln; Feb .. Au•,
ll<>t•u J~n.
llu!l<lln<t tr.ien•IJ, ivmtr•• Jun~
Cir$, n•W S•o1.
Cet,, V)f<!:
... 1 <O•t<"• r·~, r-<ov,. O•t.
r~ll'lron'• coo1ninq Ju1v, O•c.
(hon•. plAS<,.lro J1~, F<b,. S<n1
(IO!ht> """" J~n , F•b., MM., Aotll '°""' won>en·· All• .• Au<t .. ~"'"OK, o~,.,., J•n,. Ap• , June
Cu•Hln~ Feb . Aue.
Fur< J~n, A<i9.
CO<lll "'""' • Jen., AUQ. G••<l•n•nQ •Oo•om•M,
~atdW••• AUQ., !•o'.
futn!lur•. "°"'""'"'"' 11mo• Jan , Feb . Auv_, Seo1
Fufl Col Jul~
li1i,. ,,.,,.,,., Jen .. JulY
tnf1nt'1 "'tar J en .. Mt•., "n"
l ln e"'• t>11n~•"· 1;n<nrl• J•n .. M1v
Plec. 900CIS Jan, F•tl., j.,I•
010,,.., 1ereo. '"'"Q, J o~. F•b., Julv ........ ~. 0 ""'"" OuQJ ,_, Jin., f eD , J•llY, AuQ
l•n, Ju•• 5,, •• , ... ,,,.
Soo•Hw•••
Sul!s. men'• ""'''' Tire•
lolt •lslon "'' TO••
'"" '•" ''•ll .. J<Jly Aot .. Au9.o Ott_
Mo1. Au~
M•~. Jun~
J•n .• Feb.
\\lhilP spacP lin11tat1ons pro-
J11bit further detail. lhis c•len-
dar ~·ill automatially guide
you to the bargain seasons
for ('\'erything el se. Ask que s-
tions; watch lhe ads: you·ll
lrarn fa st.
TOMORROW
Food Costs
Slash ins
'City ' Post
To Brya11
Don L. Bryan has been ap-
poi nted director of oHice leas-
ing for "The City" in Orange.
The announcement w a s
made by J. ~1. Moore . presi·
dent of The City Managen1ent
Corporation, an aUiUate com-
pany of Kaiser Alum inum &
Chemical Corporation.
"Mr. Bryan will direct the
ofnce leasing staff in all
phases of leasing our 18-story
Bank of America Tower :ind an ruture hlghrlse office
buildings at The City," Moore
said. ''He will report to Jerry
llay, vice president, Office
Development Division."
Prior to accepting hia posi·
!Ion wllh The Clly ~1anage·
ment Corporil,lon, Bryan wa s
associated wi&i Fuller & Com·
pany in Denver, a commerch1 l
industrial rtal ~ale firm. He
has owned and operated a
property management
busines.s In Phoenix .
•
WILr..1lNGTON. Del. IUPI )
-Dupont Co.. has signed a
ID-year rontract to buy
titaniurn di oxide ores for
pigments from Ame rJ can
Smelting & Refining Co.'s
Lakehurst. N.J .. property at
a ra te of 125,000 to 150,000
tons yearly.
BOISE, Idaho (UPI) -Mor-
rison-Knudsen Co, and a
German affiliate have ob-
tained a $20 million sub-
rontract from Eb a s co
Engineering Corp, of New
York to pave reservoir em·
bankments at a n e 1v
hydroelectric proj ec t in
Ludington. r..lich., for Dclroit
t:dison and Cons umers Power.
The German partner i s
Strabag Bau Co. of Cologne.
LIVINGSTON, N.J.-Foster
\Vheeler Corp. has obtained
a contract from Public Service
Co. of Indiana to de!'lign. build
and install l\.\'O 650-mei;ia \vatt
<:oal fired pressure boilers
l\'Or1 h about $35 million.
\\'ASHINGTON The
\\lorld Bank ~'iii offer $200
million five-year notes. not
redeemable until maturity, in
\V:iU Street through a group
led by First Boston Corp.,
t.lorgan Stanley & Co. a11d\
Salomon Bros. The la st \Vorl<I
Ba nk borrowing 111 th e Uni!ed l
States \.\'as a $300 million 25-
year issue sold last July.
DALLAS l\1angurian's.
Jnr., the furnit ure retailing
ch<11n, ;1nnounced it \\'ill bu ild
a $3 million sho w case
\.\'are.house on the I.BJ
freeway \.\'est of Dall as. It
will have about 20\l individual
roo1n settings as f I o o r
displays.
CLEVELAND Building
Systc1ns. Inc., has arranged
SW million in construction
financing from Ziegler Finan-
cing Corp. of West Bend. \Vis ..
to hel~ in building "turnkey"
housing P rojects. The com-
pany has such projects un-
derway al Cleveland, Detroit,
A.no Arbor. Allentown, Pa.,
Toledo and Yowigstown, Ohio,
and Rocheste r and Cortland,
N.Y.
PHILADELPHIA Lire
Insurance Co,, of N Qr th
America said the securities
and e:ii:change has approved
the public sale o£ it variable
annuities which are lo be sold
in connection with t1l r e. e
mutual funds. Oppenheimer
Fund, Decatur Income Fund
and National lnvestors Fund.
WASHINGTON -Sout hern
Railway employea will be able
to buy shares In I.heir rom·
pany through a payroll reduc·
tlon plan !tarting Feb. 1. The
company wlll add 20 perctnt
lo the deductions wo rker9
authorize lo buy shares and
will pay the brokerage fees
and other expenses. The max-
ln1um deduction pennitted wi ll
be t tOO a month or 6 percent
of .~alary, v.·hichevcr · Is
i;:maller .
'
Who Listens
To Landers?
' I
'
'
SINCE
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
Does
That's Who
You Can 'listen' to Ann Landers
.
Daily DAILY PILOT • '" The
WHAT'S YOUR HANGUP?
If mountain climbing is your thing, we can't help you much. But if
your real "hangup" is looking for a broad view of the news that in-
cludes a good, hard look at what's happening at home, the DAILY
PILOT has the line you should grab. We give you a broader view of the
world than you can get even 12,000 feet above Chamonix in the Alps.
Mont Blanc, over there in the background, is the highest peak in
Europe, which reminds us ••••
Our local coverage is hard to top. When it comes to piling up infor-
mation about local schools, sports, social events, entertainment or
crime and calamity, we're king of the mountai n. We're your home-
town newspaper. We make keeping up with the world, the nation,
the state, and the county, your town and your school a lot easier than
climbing a mountain. Just grab our line. No more hangup. The DAILY
PILOT will take you where you can see the view from the top.
DAILY PILOT
. . ~ ~ '~· . ·-~---
\
•
24 DAILi PILOT
•• U,I f ..... i.
Shhhh, ltleii at Work
\ A "-'Orkman on ladder is so intent on his work in
State Capitol that he fails to notice the boss, Gov.
Ronald Reagan, as the chief executive takes stroll
through building to visit legislators.
1970 Very Good Yecir
Says FBI Director
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -To
FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover, 1970 was a very good
year.
More fugitives were located,
more organized~rime figures
convicted and more
fingerprints checked lhan in
any previous year In the agen-
cy's hi story, the FBI chief
said today.
And, according to the FBrs
arithmetic, it all was done
at a profit:
"Fines, sa v ings and
r ecove rie s in FBI in-
vesligalions during the ptrlod
reached the record figure of
over $422 million, a return
of $1.60 for every dollar ap-
propriated ror FBI opera-
tions," Hoover said in his an-
nual report to Ally. Gen. J ohn
N. J\1 itchell.
l·lo\Yever, Hoov er reported
Men in
Service
Navy Seaman Ernesl II.
Ve/eocia , son or Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest II. Valencia of 8591
\Vashington. Midway City, was
gradunled from Fire Control
School al the Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, Ill.
Airman WlUlam W. Striegel,
son of Mr. and J\1rs. Re:ii:
J . Striegel. 126 Monte Vista,
Co<:ta h1esa, has completed
basic training at Lackland
1\fB, Tex. Ile is remaining
;it Lackland for training in
communications clectronlcs
systems. Airman Striegel. a
1969 graduate of Cos ta Mesa
l~ii;i:h School. attended Orange
Coast College.
Army private Timothy It.
Green. so n of J\1r. and J\1rs.
Kenneth F. Green. 8372 Aber·
deen, Garden Gro\'e. recently
completed a basic Army ad·
ministration course at ft. Orel.
l~is wife. Luanne. lives al 1224
Belfast Ave., Costa 1\-fesa.
U. S. Air Poree Sergeant
Kenneth J . J enkins. son of
l\.1r. and l\.1rs . James Edwards
of 15911 Dundalk Lane. llun.
ting ton Beach. Is on duty at
Udom Itoyal Thai AFB,
Thailand.
Sergeant Jenkins is an in·
lelligence specialist with a
unit of the Paciric Air F'orces.
He previous ly served at Ram.-
stein AB, Germany.
a rise in ne\v·lefl violence,
aircraft hijackings and killings
of police by black militants,
and added:
"As long as crime continues
to increase and dissident
elements continue to strive
violently to destroy our cur-
rent way of life, law en-
forcement cannot afford to
look ·back for long on past
accomplishments, but must
look a head and seek new ways
to meet old challenges."
In the calendar year 1970,
Hoover saidJ 468 persons in·
volved in organized crime
were convicted ·as a result
of FBI investigations. Con-
victions in 1969 totaled 319,
the Fm said.
The FBI tracked down a
record total of 32,0IXI fugitives
wanted for violations of
federal or state laws, in-
cluding Angela Davis, who
declared her fnnoce nce Tues·
day to murder and kidnap
charges In California.
Miss Davis was among
several of the F'Bl's ten mosl·
wanted fugHives to be cap-
tured in 1970. That !isl its
grew to a record number.
totaling 16 before Miss Davis's
apprehension in New York .
In 1970, the FBI r eceived
more than 6.5 m i 1 I i o n
fingerprint cards, processing
them at the rate of 26,000
a day. Al the end of the year,
J1oover said, some 199 m lllion
sets were on record.
Although what Hoover term-
ed "new·lefl terrorism" in·
creased during the year,
racial troubles in the schools
took a turn for the better.
\Vhile 160 racial incidents were
reported in secondary schools
since classes opened this fall.
the figure is below the 29!:1
recorded in the same period
in 1959. Hoo\'e r said.
Urban racial disturbance..~.
totaling 140 for the year, y,·l'rc
clown from the peak of thl'
mid 1960s, Hoover said, ad-
ding :
"The number of incident~
of racial disorder that did
occur in our cities and 111
Sl'condary school s, along y,•ith
the many unwarranted attacks
Ofl pblice. strongly indicate
that we are far from the
realization of racial harmony
in the nation."
Hoover said siit policemen
died and 22 were wouuded
during 197G as a Tesult of
"acts by persons v.·ho iden-
tified themselves as Black
Panthers." He called the num·
bers a marked increase O\'Cr
the previous two years when
the totals were five killed and
42 wounded.
Ohio Man Acquitted
For Aiding Bird
--WARREN, Ohio (7<M) -A common pleas court jury
has 'found Bernard Nemcotky tnnocent of a charge of be.
friending a bird.
The Trumbull County Coort jury deliberated for 30
1 minutes before acquitting the CourUand, Ohio, man, who
found a small brown thrasher injured on a street and
nursed it back to health.
Game wardens a~sted Nemcosky on a charge of
violating the stale law which prohJblta the p:>SSe.SSion of
birds other than game fowl.
Nemcosky told the jW')' he tried to release the brown
thrasher but it would not ny away. Only then did he adopt
! it u a pet he said.
A game warden testified the bird's mother might have
found It if NemCOl!lky had not interfered.
I
-
.
Workers Agree to 10 Percent Pay Cut
LANCASTER, Pa . (AP) -
Production workers at the
Hamilton \V atch Co. have
agreed to lake a 10 percent
pay cut that they hop( y,•ill
keep America's oldest y,·atch-
rnaklng business afloat.
"It was a very tough
decision to makl'," said Ralph
Frey, president of the union
that represents aOOut half of
the 2,000 employcs in the plant
here.
"But I'm convinced it's the
right thing. This firm can b:.:.
turned around. and \\'hen \Ye
look back a year fron1 nC7w'
we will be able Lo say we
helped save the place, and
our jobs," Frey added.
Management agreed the IO
percent cut in wages between
Jan. 11 and May 29 \Yas
courageous and \voul d make
a substantial contribution lo
Hamilton's cash position.
"They didn't have lo do it,"
said James Pollock. general
counsel for th!' 79-ycar-old
firm. ''There was no way v;·e
r
could make them do it."
The Hamilton local ls in
the middle ol a three-year
coolract. This provides ror a
6 percent waae increase In
June. which Pollock said will
be paid as prom.I~.
The wage cut averages
aOOul 35 cents an hour for
l'ach employe, or, roughly, $14
a \veek and $280 ror the full
2G-week period. Hourly <ind
piece workers now e a r n
between $2.70 and $4 .50, and
the n1edian is close to S3.ft0.
Frey said about 300 of the
450 \\o'Orkers attending t h~
union meeting approved the
wage cuts.
Besides 1vages the payroll
also is being cut sharply. Frey
said about 500 nonunion office
and supervisory employes and
about 300 union members will
be laid off by the end of
this month.
"This is expected to save
about $6 million by June."
Frey said, ''The pay cut, in
round terms, will ·save around
I :--,
$1 milhon.''
1'hc company del'l1neU lo
es.timate the savings.
The pay c:ut dec1s1on t·a1nc
as a huge dcricit, blan1cd till
cuts In defense sr;cndln;;.
swept past $15 mllliun f'1' the
fiscal yea r that ends J an. 31.
1'his compares \\•ith a profit
of nearly $2 n1illlon 111 J91i'l
\Vhcn sales rcac·hed a record
$89 1nillion. Fi..r 1:170 s~1 h's
arc a round $60 1nillion, do\1 n
a third.
J larn1Jto11 last reported a
loss in 1933, r.f siso.ooo. 1".hJ• h
was in tlic rniddlc ol th e na·
Lion 's worst depression.
''The winding do .... 'n or the
Vietnam y,•ar 11.<ls ;iffcctf.'cl us
severely :;incc we n1<1ke time
fuses ror artillerv sht'lls and
an electronic fie-Id r<idio for
the Arn1y," Pollock s::iitl. .. And
the general dee!ine 1 n
cconon1ic conditions h.i~ ;1f-
fcctcd our wa tch s ii l c :-. ,
especially since ...,.:? y,·enl 011
a fair trade proi;ra1n Jasl
~luy, pulling oot of the tli.s-Frey said a new executive "Yi'e felt if they were firing
l:Ounl n1;u·ket." ll'am took over in the firm management people, we
I I N be d h ..... ,, s"""ld •noke a contribuUon H;un1l1011 snll <1 S.'>l'!nlJ tes ill<t ovtm1 r an as Ul;'.'t: ,,.., ... tr)ing h.1 rd to cut expenses lo keep this ship aloat," Frey \101\rhc.:; .-1 Lancaster , 5.,1·d. oind O\ crhead.. ..
:i l1hough <Jll n?l)\'Cmcnts no\v ,-______ ;;,;;;;;.;;;;;;,...;.;;;;;;._.;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;_;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;; :.ire 1nade in its L1vo S\visslf ----
p!ants. j
The Bulo\'<t \\'<.itch Co ..
orighi;1!ty fl Swts~ fim1. clain1~
it is the !t'l.st firm to m:ikc
finl' 11·::itch par!~ in the Vnilcd
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l l:n1111t on has ~f'vrrnl prn·
l il ~1hlc subsidi ;1ries. ncint 01f-
l el!~U h.•· the \\Uge cuts. ')'hey
;ire \\'1dlacc Silve rs1n1lhs in
\\':dl 1ngford. Conn., anti Sen1c:1
Corp.. ntakers li clocks, in
Long Island City , N.Y.
Young Buyjng
LOS A'.\'GELES IUPl l -
r-;ra 1 !y h;i H er the n101urcycles
sold in l!lti9 \1·cre lD persons
bcl\1·ecn ~:; and 35 )'Cars or
<1gc, utcurding lo i{ld.uslr;I
rigurcs.
. Why It Pays to Know
SAFECO
INSUR~NC6
BOB PALEY
Bob roley? h Ii• ci 1eci-lcirl11' 1r1•n,
,.,bop)? lil9e! Sea.~arl11' b probably
rn o•e till• it. H• think' the bau11dlnt
11111.in ii a11 earth~olle 111 longor. H•
would11't know a Plirmoll lh•e from tht.
Moql11ot Line. Still, If you're runnfltOIJ
flrto pretty llcilvy SHS with your ptet.•
int l11u1ra11c.e, "Why not hflle a ta1k
w!tti lob~ It'' a c.ift.Ch, 111at9, that lie
i:a11 ond will •rite the petlec.t co••
erote to wit your netd. He'll 1a"t you
a wad of gr"'n "i.tff In 10 dall19.
So, whate•et your -d .•. fire,
thefr, auto, lla.bUity ... talll It orer
witti llob Paley. Yo1'l1 fh1d kl111 In dry·
doc.k at 4 74 (. 17tti Sr., Caito Mn•
P'hone 642-6500.
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Came ra Click Rattles
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bob Lunn
-and possibly • cameraman -beat
Billy Casper in a suddtn death playoff
for the $21,000 first fWlz.e in the Los
Angeles Open golf tournament, lM first
stop on the 63-event pro tour thb year.
Casper said the click or 1 camera
on the finaJ regulation hole Sunday "ruin-
ed my temper on my driving. I didn't
hit the ball solid once. after th1t.
"I necked it on the 15th (the fint
playoff hole ), hooked it on the 16th,
sliced it on the 17th and pushed it
on the 18th."
He saved par on all o( them, OOwevtr,
but Lunn won It with a bird.le on the
18th, h.ltting a wedge lo within II inches
ol the nq:.
Casper, uauaUy one of tbe most mUd-
mannerd players on the lour, leveled
a baleful glire at the cameraman 1fter
he wu disturbed ''right in the middle
of my ,.sw±na:." He mlaaed the fairway ,
but mana11ed to save par on the hole
and force the playoff.
ll was the fifth victory for the burly,
soft-spoken 2$-year-0ld from Sacramento.
He hu been on the tour only a little
mott than three years and bas won
over $300,000.
"I'm JU$l so happy 1 could cry -
and 1 might," the balding, 220-pounder
said. ''To play against a man like Billy
Casper, and in a field this &ood, well,
J'm JUSl very, very pleued and
honored."
Each had a final round 67 for %74,
10 under par on the Rancho Park g'olf
club rourse. AM Wall , a 47-year-0ld
fonner Masters champion who hasn't
won since 1966, had a share of lhe
lead until he three-putted the final bole,
mWing the second from lhree feet.
He had a 28 for 275 and was alone.
in third.
T ractor Driver Zips Away
With Riverside 500 Title
RIVERSIDE (AP} -It's back lo the
20 mile an hour tractor today for farmer-
driver Ray Elder even though he's con-
siderably richer from winning the ninth
Motor Trend Riverside SOO.mUe race for
grand national stock cars.
Elder, 28, hails from Caruthers, Calif.,
a tiny farming community lost in
California's massive San Joaquin Valley,
where he and other family membera
grow alfalfa, cotton and black-eyed peas
-and build fast race car.i.
Hearing ''black-eyed peas," one may
wonder whether Elder has a Southern
background. The answer iJ "no" but
Santa Anan Out
his victory waa the first ia this classic
by a West Cout driver. The previous
high finish by a Westerner came in
1!164 when Bill Amick was fourth.
In turning the trick Sunday, Elder
beat a host of Southern challengers,
five ol whom fmished &eeond througll
sixth.
Nothing grew beneath farmer Eider's
feet Sunday when he .sped through 191
laps at an average speed of 100.89 miles
a n hour to take his first victory in
such a major race. His winnings were
$19,165, all of which "goes back to the
bank", he quipped.
Second in Sunday's grueling live-hour
contesl on the twisting 2.62-mile asphalt
track was Bob Allison of Hueytown,
Ala ., who, like Elder, was driving a
1970 Dodge_ Allison, who ga ve Elder
8trong competition all the way to lhe
end, earned $9,225 for the effort.
Third was Benny Parsons of Ellerbe,
N.C., in a 1969 Ford, who earned $6,34tl
for his work. He was followed by David
Pearson of Spartanburg, S.C., who WM
driving a 1971 Dodge entered by Bobby
Isaac of Catawba, N.C. Pearson took
over driving chores in Isaac's car after
more lhan half the race had been run.
Pearson's 1970 Ford had blown it8
engine on the 25th lap. His doleful com·
menl: "Reckon I sucked a valve."
Lo ss of NCAA Crown
One of the big diappoinlments of
the race came when pole-sitter Richard
Petty or Randleman, N.C., dropped out
of the race on lhe l07th lap, his engine
suffering similar to Pearson's. Petty had
held the lead most of the time after
Pearson was sidelined.
Shocks Cal Track Coach The most exciting part of Sunday's
contest came in the final laps when
it became a contest of pit stop efficiency.
E lder held the lead most of the time,
changing position!! with Allison briefly,
but won when Allison had to make
a pit stop for fuel.
From Combined Wlre Senicet
BERKELEY -First-year coach Dave
J\.1aggard of the -University of California
said Sunday night he was shocked to
learn the Bears must forfeit the 1970
NCAA track and field championship.
The NCAA lifted the crown fro m the
Bears on grounds that Isaac CUrlis,
one of California's a ce sprinters, was
ineligible to compete.
Curtis was a former Santa Ana High
School football and track star.
"Obviously, I'm shocked lo bear about
It," said Mauard. "It's very dillicult
for me to comment further on the. matter
unLil I have a chance to talk with
(California ath1elic director) Pa u I
Brechler and find out esactly what the
situation is."
Brechler is attending NCAA meetings
In Houston.
Maggard said he still doubted Curtis
was ineligible. "But if he was Ineligible,
we would not want the title," said Mag-
gard.
"In no way was l aware that Curtis
might be ineligible. Obviously, he never
would have been out for track and
would not have competed had we the
1lightesl a"A·areness we were v>olating
NCAA rules.
"But if our school happened lo violate
the NCAA rode, you've got to 11 tick
by the rules."
Maggard said it would be a "big blow"
to the Bears' 1971 track fortunes if,
as punishment, Curtis is not allow~
to co mpete in track this sea.!lon.
Sunday's action klwered California's
winning point total in the track cham-
pionships from 4-0 to 18 and gave lhe
title to Brigham Young. Kansas and
Oregon, which had lied for second with
35 points.
Curtis finished second in the 100-yard
dash, fourth in the 220 and ran on
Bi g Ten Aces
Rip South, 39-2
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -It was Big
Ten day in the American Bowl, far
from the midwest'a mowy terrain.
-Ohio Slate's Leo Hayden ran for
two touchdowns, gained 75 yarda rush.inc
flld was named most valuable player.
-Michigan's Paul St.aroba caught 1lx
puses, two for toucbdown1, to &•in 15
7ards.
-Michigan quarterback Don
Moorehead hit eight of 1% paues for
• yards and one score.
}JI that Big Ten CoRference mu1ele
lwtd1y led the North to a 39-% triumph
Over the out-classed South in the colle1e
ill-stai: production_
Although the live crowd was only 12,flOO
1n fog-shrouded Ta m a SUidlu~, the
IJIOOSOring Lions In maUonal pro--
dalmed the venture a ial auccea
Ind aid n will be bod< It'll.
RUICll1 for the ..... • '50,000
ltt from IQ indepeudenl l<lovllian
network.
The South, favorite of the tiny crowd.
never got rolling and when the favored
Yanks 8Cilred 20 points in a three-minute
span midway throuJh the first hall l\
became a lopsided aHalr.
Moorehead broke up a borlnc ftnt
quarter by driving the North ii yardl
for a ICOl'e. Hayden ban«itd acroa from
the three and it was 7-0 with 23 lfCXlflds
le-rt In the period.
South mlrtakea IOOO toot their toll
and at 11:20 of the M!COnd period tht
Yanks we.re on top »-0.
ISAAC CURTIS
the winning 44G-yard relay team -a
total of Z2 points. But the school
discovered afterward that it had failed
to submit a predicted game average
to the NCAA when Curtis enrolled as a
f~shrnan.
Under NCAA RegulaUons. a student
must predict at least a I .I grade average
on a 4.00 scale -approximately a C
minus -to be eligible to compete in
athletics.
Dr. Robley William.s, California's
faculty athletic representative to the
NCAA , 11aid a veteran clerk in the
school 's admissions office who had check-
ed eligiblity records for a number of
years had just left her job and the
new clerk overlooked the lact that CUrtis
had no predicted average.
''It is regrettable that an oversight
ha.!! deprived a.n outstanding athlete and
a very gallant athletic team of a
very richly de!!erved national cham·
pionship," Paul Brechler, California's
director of athletics, said Sunday.
''It is important that no stigma be
attached to Isaac Curtis. He performed
to a near B average in the classroom
in hill firlt year. 1be trrar was that
he was not aware of the teat necessary
to pffllict 1.1 and not that he failed
in the test. The mistake was institutional
only." \
Dr. Williams 1 aid Curtis' "strong
academic performance tbis p1st year
and the tact that the mistake was an
honeat one makes me believe that no
further punJUve action wi ll be taken.
"The University of California and thl!
NCAA share the belief that an athlete
shou1d alto be a bona fide student and,
aa the record shows, Qirtis ta one ot
the bett on both counts."
However, the precedent tn such CUff
has been that an athlete wbo competes
Allison was only a few seconds ahead
of Elder -a lead he had taken wh ile
Elder •ISO stopped for gas -when
he ducked into the pits for a quick
refill. Elder then took the lead and
kept it, finishing only teeonds ahead
of Allison.
"f figured if he wa!! ever going to
pit , we'd be in good shape," Elder rom-
mented afler the race. "I figured before
the race we. could probably outrun them.
But our only hope was to go out and
follow, then afte r halfway through we
were going to go all out."
Elder is known as one or the West
Coast's most talented drivers. having
earned the Western Grand National driv-
ing title in 1969 and 1970.
His racing is a family affair, with
his father being owner of the car, his
brolher acting as pit crew chief and
neighbors and other relatives atanding
Jn as crewmen.
Much of the action during the race
came from cars breaking down. since
only lZ of the 40 cars that started
were still running at the end.
11>e race was run be.fore a spectator
crowd of 3',:ul on a hazy, cold day.
Proctor Loses
Cool, 200 Race
RIVERS IDE (AP) Defending
cha~ion Clem Proctor lost his cool
and his engine blew. allowing Cana-
dian Gary Kershaw to sllp by and win
his first big stock car race, the $20,000
Permatex 200 at Riverside Internation-
al Raceway.
Kershaw, a lumber truck driver from
Vic toria, B.C., grabbed the lead wtth 17
laps to go in Saturday's !'!ASCAR late
model sportsman race when Proctor
stopped for "insurance'' fu el.
When Proctor, of Paramount. learned
that he needed only nine gallons, he
angrily gunned his car back onto the
track and the engine quit.
Kershaw, who pocketed $4,750 for the
two-hour, nine-minute race, averaged
93.518 miles per hour in his 19&5 Chev·
rolet. Johnny l..nderson ef Lancaster.
Calif., was a di!tant second In his '64
Chevy.
Alston Receives
Comiskey Award
while ineligible loaea hil next sublequent CHICAGO -Walter Allton, manager
year of elillbillty. of the Loi Angeles Dodgers, waa honored
CUrtis was one of the nation's most Sunday night at the annual Diamond
hl&flly touted ~ runnif1c: batil Dtnner of the Chicago BatebaU Writers.
this past aeaton, wtlch CaWonia'a foot-A crowd of .ome IOO pel'IOfll pi1ying
ball tum flnilhed with a t-5 rtCOtd. $20 a plate-qw Allt.on rtceive the J.
Tbe NCAA <OUllCIJ,lhenatlonallfOllP'1 \Louis ComJWy aword ror long and
polJcy-<natblc ud -cenient body, merttor-..me. to -II.
mmt now rule.on Ortb' fubre ellglb\JJ.. Among others receiving awards were
ty. There wu no word when such actkln Earl Weaver, manager of the lJ'orld
l'VOUld be forthcoming. ch a m p I o n Baltimore Orioles and
1be NCAA uld a ft y decision on his star third baseman, Br'O'Jka Robinson.
Ca.llfomla'1 hiving to forfeit football Weaver recel~ the Will Harridge
pmu must come from Ill conference:, achievement award •IHI RoblnlOl"I was
the. Paclfl~. Commluioner Thomas J. aelected the World Serlel hero for 1970.
Hamllton aa.ld the conference W'OUld con-Llody McDaniel, ace relief pitcher for
skB" tbt matter if and when ·Curtis the New York Yankees, ·received
is declared Ineligible. the Ken HtJbbs mtmorlal award for
Califomla defeated Pacir« rlY1ls conduct on and off the Oeld.
WuhlnCt<m, Washtngton State, Southern Billy Wllll1ma of the Cubs was named
Callfomla and Stanford and won norK:Otl-Chltago'J player of the year and team-
ferenoe 1ame1 from Indian. and San mate Jim Hickman won the He.adUne
Jost SUite. award.
Monday, J.a11L1ary 11. 1971 DAILY PJLOf U
Lunn
"I lhink t re&lli' lost It on lhe second
round," said Casper, the 1970 PGA player
of the year and a playoff winner in
this tournament a year ago,
"I hlt 18 greens and had 37 pulls
on that round," said Casper.
Lunn said a string of five holes .starting
at the 11th was the key to his triumph.
"I played those just about a& well
as l could," he said.
He saved par from 10 and 4 feet
after missing the greens on the lllh
and 12th1 ran In a IO foot birdie pull
on the next. knocked in a 35 footer
on the next and pitched to eight inches
for his third ronsecutlve bird on the
next.
FIREMEN SPRAY FOAM ON RAC E CAR AFTER CRASH KILLED IGNAZ IO GIUNTI.
Italian Was Leading 600-mil• Arg•ntina Race Sunday When He Crashed Into Another Car on Bl ind Curve.
Sports In Brief
Laver Aimsfor $170,000
A fter Marathon V ictory
ROCHESTER, N.Y. -Corona dcl
Mar's Rod Laver tries for his thi rd
$10,000 victory Y.'ednesday night whe n
he meets Australia's Tony Roche in
Boston in the third round O{ the $210,000
Tenn is Champions Classlc.
Laver has won the year's first two
winner·lake--all rounds and can win
$170,000 if he goes undefeated through
lhe tournament.
He beat Ken Rosewall of Australia
Jan. 2 !n the Classir's ~fadison Square
Garden opener, ancl dumpe:d Aussie J ohn
Newcombe, 6·4, fi..2, 4-6. 5·7, 6-4, Saturday
night here in a 31'i·hour marathon.
•
BUFFALO -Watching a goalie fa!l
flat on his face dQCsn·l rank among
the exciling plays in hockey. But when
Los Angeles Kings goalie Denis DeJordy
did it three times Jn a row, it was
exciting. even though it indi rectly led
to a score by the opposition.
Jt seems De.Jordy did evc.rything
humanly possible ti) stop a series o[
three !!hots &'nl goal ward by the Buf(alo
Sabres in a Sunday game that wound
up in a 2·2 tie.
•
SAN FRANCISCO -"The women have
been geUlng a raw deal," r;aid Ann
Jones, smiling over a check for $1 ,400
that represent.ed the new deal in women's
tennis,
The left .handed blonde from England
won the $1,400 for a third·place finish
Saturday night in the singles of the
$15,000 British motors tournament, the
first stop on an all-women's tour .
To~seeded Billie Jean King heal
Rosemary Casals, 6-3, 6-41 in the finals
and won $-4,300. '
•
CLEVELAND -Baseball Ha.II or
Farner Elmer Flick will be burled In
suburban Bedford Tuesday. F'lick, 94,
died at Bedford Municipal Hospital Satur·
day following a long illness.
Flick, an outfielder \\.'ilh a lifetime
/'balling average of ,315, was a life.Jong
resident of Bedford, wher~ he was born
Jan. II, 1876.
He was inducted Into the ~la11 of Fame
al Cooperstown. N.Y., in 1963.
Flick's batting average from 1892 to
1902 for Philadelphia of the National
League was .345. He hit an a verage
of .2911 while with Cleveland of the
American League from 1002 to 1910.
•
SF.ATTLE Bob Rule. Seattle
SuperSonic basketball player, underwent
successful surgery Su nday for a torn
Achilles tendon. doctors said.
The tear was less than an inch above
a similar tear in his left ankle suffe red
during a game early in the season.
Doctors said the second tea r should
not delay his planned return lo the
team next season.
•
TORRANCE -Inside lefl Franz-Jose(
Hoenig scored three goals and halfback
Klaus Zaczyk added a pair Sunday as
Ha mburger S. V. of Hamburg. Germany,
trounced the Holl ywood Stars 9-0.
•
WI NN IP EG -Charles Gi lmore of
Anaheim fin ished fifth in the Canada-U.S.
speedskatlng championship over the
weekend as the American skaters easily
defeated their northern neighbors.
The Americans totaled 294 1,-!i points
to Canada'11 6SY.i.
Jn the men's division the top skater
was Dan Carrol, 21·year-old member
of the U.S. Army from SI. Lou is, whose
183,033 paints in four eveols led the 12-
man field,
West Continues
To Be Amazing;
Lak ers Falter
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -In his decade
ol pro basketball, Los Angeles Laker
guard .Jerry West has connected on just
a shad e less than 50 percent o{ his
shots from the floor.
So with West missing three games with
a broken nose and the flu . coach Joe
Mullaney didn 't expect much from his
6-foo t·J star Sunday on nat i on a 1
television. But West's statistics in face
of the adversities, are amazing.
He connected on nine of 12 shot!
from the floor, played 39 of ·the 48
minutes, missed only one of eight free
throws, grabbed seven rebounds and
passed off for six assists. Bu t the Lakers
couldn't overcome their own ball-handling
errors and dropped a 118-109 decision
to Oelro1l.
Th<" Piston!\'. winner~ of 30 g a m es
before the AH.Star Game break, have
no\\· won one less game than they d id
in the entire season B year ago.
Detroit was led by Jimmy WaJker
with 29, Dave Bin g with 23 and Terry
Dischinger with 19.
West had 25 as did Wilt Chamberlain
-on 12 of 18 floor shots -but it
was big Bob Lanier, the Pistons· sensa.
tional rook ie. who made the key ba~kels,
a long with Bing, as Detroit overcame
a Laker rally that knotted the score
with two minutes gone in the last period.
Los Angeles hit 51 percent of its field
goal attempts but the Piatons did even
better, Cring on 53 percent.
Despite. the losa, the Lakers continue
lo lead the Pacific Division of the Na-
tional Basketball Association with a 24-19
record. San Franc isco is second at lhe ·
halfway point with 25-23 and San Diego
next al 2.'\.24 .
LOS A"OILll OITltOIT • ' ' • ' • Ctl•rnbl><l•ln 11 • ••• " ""' " ~ " Erlc:k>On ' ,.. " 01oct1"'9e1' ' " .. 0-rlc" ' " " 0.IKOll ' .. • !'Mir•""" ' •• " t1..-111 ' .. , " MCC•rl ... ' .. ' ll:;oonlv• ' ,.,
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LOI •<1ttln " " u n -11tt o.ltOll " n " l2 -Ill To1tl '9111' -Loi Al!Ofl• JO, o.tnili f.I.
M • •
18011 Strikes Super Gold
1
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -That moon over
Miami, famed in 10ng and ode, may
never have attracted as many starry
eyes as pro footba ll's Super Bowl.
Some 80,000 grid fans will pay $15
a head ntxt Sunday to watch.
Some call It the greal.etlt on«:lay show
in all of sports.
Snowbirds flock. to Florida just ror
the weather, plying $36.a-day and up
for hotel rooms, '8 for prime steaks
ancl $1! for tut rldell rrom Mi-.mi Airport
to the beat h.
1'tle attraction of Lhc Super Bowl turn~
a mad scene: of flesh, 11utomobUes and
'
French poodl~ into an ever wilder scene
of guys in Texas hats wearing "Big
D" buttons and folks from BalUmore
aeying Johnny Un1tas is atUI the best.
"The real No. 1 reason for wanting
the Super Bowl Is the put;llclty value,''
qys Lew Price, who promotes sun 'n
fun for the local government.
"We're happy to have the. 50,000 'live'
Suptr Bowl visitors, but we're also
delighted to have 60 milUon proape<:tlve
tour\ii ls watching on TV." ·
It wlll be !he thir~ Suptr Bowl In
rive yea r:. for Miami's 1lnnt Orange
Bowl. It began In Loa Angeles, came
_,
to M.iaml for two Januarys and ls bade
after a year in New Orleans.
Lest.er Freeman, executive dirtctor of
the Miami Cham~ of Commerce, places
the vaJue or the fialional Football League
iihowdown at '4mOr'f: than $40 million••
for Soulh·F1orld1.
"This kJnd of publicity Ii priceltls:,''
ht said. "If I wu snowed in up North,
It would make me pack my bits·''
'Td j\ISI as -Ibey hold Ibis Supel'
Bowl thin& someploce e1 ..... Slid Hl21
Omstoclc, 1 waltn:u. "I can't 1ct to
work In the morning. t UVt. 15 mi~
from tht: reetaurant and It takes mii
45 rrl!nutes. ''
. " -
I
. I
I . '
'"" -..
•
DAIL Y ,.ILOT Sti ff ......
BARON CAGE HEROES -Dave Lynch pulls down
a rebound '''hile Fountain Valley teammate Ken
Shibata (left ) is ready to off~r assistance in recent
game against Edison . The Lynch-Shibata combo has
led Barons to a 9.5 record. ,,,_
Plunkett, Ham Stand Out
In Hula Bowl Grid Tilt
HONOLULU (AP) -"There were a
lot of great pla yers out there." 5aid PeM
State"i; Jack Ham of his fe!IO\\' collegiate
stars in Saturday's Hula Bowl game.
One was Hcisman Trophy winner ,Jim
Plunkett of Stanford, who com pleted
11 of 12 passes for 133 yards and SCOT"ed
the last touchdown to lead the North
to a 42-32 victory over the South.
Plunkett was namtd the game's
outstanding back and Ha m was named
the out.!landing defensive player.
Backing Plunkett werr Notre Dame·s
Joe Theismann and Ohio State's Rex
Kern. who doubled on offense and
defense.
Theismann gained ~9 ya rds in four
carries to tie for game honors and
set up a. touchdown on a 37-yard punt
return Kern passt-d for one to uchdown
and intt-rcepted a pass "'hile on defenst-.
~-lississippi's Archie ~fanning led the
South's second half comeback after a
35-7 halftime dc fiC1l. He completed 30
of 3J passes for 294 yards and gained
an o!her 27 ~ards on eight carries.
\\'inning coach John Ralston of Stan-
ford said, ''any of my three could have
rlominat.cd this game. and r-.1ann.ing re.eUy
made a believer out of us ail ."
A Hula Bo"·l rule which nas the leading
learn kick off regardless of which team
scores !he last touchdown kept the North
rlefensive team on the field most of
the third quarter.
"Our offense was out of there ID
long we losl momen tum," sald Ohio
State's J ohn Brockington, who carried
14 times for 55 yards.
South coach J1ayden Fr.v of Southern
Methodist said. "\Ve didn't deserve lo
win because we played a bad first hall.
But they stuck tog ether ... and I was
proud of the way they came back."
Hi11 Paces Win
MOBI LE. Ala. (AP) -Ar i z on a
State's J . D. Hill. who score d tv.·o
touchdo.,..·os for the North, says that
playing in !he Senior Bow! game gave
him something of an idea abou t what
it will be like pla ying for the pros.
"I've got to do a lot more than J've
been doing as a college player.'' said
Hill. t.l·ho "'as \'Oled the game·s ol!!-
slandirlg playe r after the North rle fea1-
cd the Sol.Ith 31 · 13 in the !'iaturda \'
match. -
"f'm g\Rd 1 gol the opportunity to
'Play In this game with a quarterback
like Dan Pastorini and aga inst defen-
sive. backs like the South had.·· added
Hill, who srored one of h1!' tourhdl•\\·ns
on a 73-yard punt re turn
Pastnrini, the strong.armed passer
from Santa Clara who en11:inecred the
North victory, hit 13 passes for fi9 va rds,
.averaging 35 yards on s e v f' n ·punts.
b.andling kickoff duties and adding to the
SC()rlng with a 27-yard field goal.
Top Two British Playe r s
Dropp ed By Soccer Club s
LO~'DON f AP) -Geo rge Best and
Bobby Moore, lhe two biggest names
·in Brit ish soccer, were dropped from
their club teams o\·er the weekend Jn
sensational feuds over discipline.
~foore. 30, wa s left ou! of !he West
Ham United side for Saturday '' match
with Arsenal amid I rumpu' over dri n.ks
in a night alub.
Belt. Jl.yur-old Manche ster Unit~
winier ~th ' a bf'ard and shag~ hair.
l'.'81 origfna!ly named for SatUrday's
match with Chelsea but then was deleted
/ram tbr tum after failing to show
'for Friday morning practi~.
Manapr Sir Malt Butby said Best
had bnn dllclpllned and lhe Issue would
come before the club's board of directors
riext week .
Both mtn ltt household name!'!
throughaut the IOCCer world. Moore as
England'.• World Cup captain and Best
os one al. ~.jim<'• 'out.landing rtars.
But thert :re.;n. are both struggling
to ketp In the Engl\sh First Division.
Only 24 bouts pmlously West Jlara
had fl~d Moore and three other players,
including former England star Jimmy
Greaves. for drinking and dan<'ing In
a Blackpool nigh! club until 2:30 a.m.
recently.
. The party was followed by a 4--0 k>Ss
to Blackpool in the English CUp later
in the day.
An even worse blow lo Moore's pride
came when West Harn manage-r Ron
Greenwood explair.ed his action. He. said
tt was lfOthing to do with the afiatr
in tbt night club -he wu, simply
'leaving Moore out of the team.
Greenwood told newsmen he planned
hit aew team formation , without r.1oore,
befare be had heard anything about
the night club incident.
Moore, long regarded as one of soccer's
gentlemen, hu been the target of
criUclsm tbla ·aeason.
As captain or the England team that
won the World Cup in 1966 he. was
a naUonal hera and was awarded the
Ordtt tif l1'le Brttish Empire (OBEJ
by Que<n Elizabeth 11.
As captain of 11truggling West Ham,
50me observers reel Moore 11 not a
dynamic enough leader.
Shibata, Lynch
Spark Barons
To Top Record
Ry PHIL ROSS
01 "" 0•111 ~ll•H Siii!
One particular Fountai n Valley Baron
basketball player usually turn3 in a slerl·
ing defen sive performance while manag.
ing to pull down a king's share of
the rebounds.
Yet. still another Baron !earls the squad
In scoring and is the only Fountain
Valley cager averaging in !win figures.
Together. 6-2 Ken Shibata {the v.·icked
drfender of Baron r-.lanor) and 6-21·1
Dave Lynch (Fountain VRlley's primary
offensive weapon ) have aided in bringing
!he Barons to !heir best-ever record
this season (although the Irvine League
cam paign has hardly gollen under way).
Shibata is only scoring at a 9.9 clip,
~onrl on the squad behind Lynch's
13.3. However, the besp<>ct.ac1ed ~en1or
has d(]ne yeo man 's duty on the boards,
"''hcrf' hr h11.s yanked down 12 caroms
j)(lr i.:onlcst.
The Baroni;' youthful coach·, Dave
Brown says of Shibata , "he's the wiry
type \\'ho can really jump well.
''He·s definitely our besl all· around
player rven though he 's not a great
shooter from the outside."
The 175--poundcr has only connecled
on about 35 percent of his altempts
from the floor and Brown candidly ad·
mil-;, "he·i; a poor foul fihootcr but
is work ing hard lo improve on il.
"\\1hal makes Ken so good is that
he is a trernendous leader and hustler.
I-le loves tn fight for lhe ball and is
all over lhe cou rt all or the time.··
Sh ibata is also described by Brown
as the person who makes the Barons'
zone press go.
No doubt, he and Rick Power -
another Baron Cajiter -acquired a
healthy portion of their leadership
tendencies when they shared t h e
quarterback job last fall on f ountain
Valley's 5-4 football team.
Lynch, on the other hand. Is al so
a two-sport gem witb baseball being
his olhc.r strong suit.
Brown oHers. ''Shibata is lhe beller
all·round athlete but Lynch is !he better
natural basketball pliiyer of the two."
A half inch taller than Shibata but
five pounds lighter. Lynch was the second
lead ing point produce r on Fountain
Valley's 7-16 unit last season with a
12 points per game norm.
Brown feels that Lynch may have
more of a cage future. as a g u 11 rd
because of his adept baU handling
capabilities.
"He 's more of a guard-type forward
anyway,'' claims the Cal State (Long
Beach) alumnus. "!I 'll be a tough lransi·
lion for Dave to make but he's an
adequate ball handler, e1cellent outside
i;hooter and has good penetration with
lhe ball.
With the Shibat11-Lynch duo plus a
be\'y of other experienced players on
hMd. it seems Brown'a hopes for an
Irvine LeaRue \Hie for Fountain Valley
could well be ju:.t around lhe comer.
' )
Br_uin, Trojan
Cage Teams
Stay Unbea te n
By the Altoelafed Prn1
UCLA and Southern Caifomia live in
fwo different worlds but un-
fortunately the sa.me town.
Unfortunately. that is, for Southern
Cal coach Bob Boyd.
"It's hard keeping our identification
In the same city with the best team
In the country," says Boyd. "We. have
to try harder, and concentrate on staying
alive. One way of staying alive i!'I beating
UCLA. which we have.,.
The TfQjans, No. 4 in the country
with a 12-0 mark thal included Saturday
night's 79--72 beating of Washington, have
risen up on occasion to strike a blow
at their crosstown foes.
Top.ranked UCLA has losl but four
games in five years. two of them to
use.
"I've lived with UCLA for so me time
now and 1 know what it takes to beat
them," says Boyd, "but it isn't easy ."
How hard is it living in the shadow
of a team th at has won four straight
national championships and six out of
the lasl seven years?
"ft has tended to submetge a very
successful basketball program a l
Southern Cal," says Boyd. "it has taken
longer for us lO gel the recognition
we deserve. H's a wonder we've been
able to survive lhe national champion.
We've been growing though .. ,
While Southern Cal continued its move
toward the lop with another victory
Saturday, rnck-steady UCLA stayed on
course with a 94-71 success over
Washington Slate -the Bruins' 127th
in thei r last 131 games.
Except for secund-ranked Sou t h
Carolina . the rest of the Top Ten did
okay. loo. ~laryland stalled South
Carolina , 31 -30, for· the only upset, but
third-rated Marque.Ile beat Xavier , Ohio
91-60 : No 5 Penn slammed Dartmouth
92-77 : sixth-ranked Western Kentucky
defeated Eastern Kentucky 85-74.: t-;o .
7 Jacksonville clouted Miami. Fla., 124-82
and 10th-ranked St. Bonaventure smashed
Kenl State &S-68 in Saturday's games.
, Nin&h-ranked Notre Dame ambushed
Air Force 75--71 in a Sunday game.
Face VCSD Tuesday
Anteaters Seek
To Snap Streak
By HOW ARO 1-HANDY
ot IN Dellf l'lllM lt11t
Doctors often prescribe a change ln
scenery for ailing clienl!I and coach Tim
Tift will subscribe lo that theory thi!
week as he takes the UC Irvtne basket.
ball team to UC San Diego Tuesday
for the first of two out of town games.
The Anteaters dropped their third
straight verdict ln the supposedly friend·
ly confines of Crawford Hall Saturday
ni ght and second to CaJ Slate (Fullerton),
Uri!'! time by an 84-82 margin.
The gsme was a rough-and-tumble af·
fair from beginning to end. One lrvine
pl.ayer was sent to the showtrs with
five personal fouls with 4: 19 remaining
in the first half.
Another was ejected from the game
for deliberately pushing a Fullerton
playe r. And a third joined the ear!y
shower brigade with five personals late
in the game.
Asked his opinion of the officiating
following the game. Tift said, "I have
no comment."
Visibly disturbed by the. turn or events
that has seen a 7-t record suddenly
change lo 7-4. with two of the defeats
coming at the hands of Alex Omalev's
Titans in the last three outings, Tift
praised the Fullerton squad.
"They 11re a sound team. But when
we make more field goals than they
do in the first half and still only lead
by one point, something is wrong.
"Every coach has a tainted view of
the officials. In my mind. a foul should
have been called when Fullerton took
the ball just before the tjeclion of Bi!!
(Moore ). I thought he was fouled.
"We. didn't play a good game, though,
and this had as much to do with our
losing as anything. And don't forget
Fullerton is a sound team."
The Titans posted their eighth straight
victory after starting the season with
a 1-5 record. When they open CCAA
play Friday night at home with Cal
Poly /Pomona), they will be going for
a school record for consecutive wins.
Another thing that hurt the Anteaters
was the fact that Moore was their leading
scorer fo r the night. Prior to his leaving
the game with 3:16 remaining, he had
scored 27 point.s and the score was
tied at 74-74.
The Titans made a steady path to
the free throw line for the balance.
vf the game hitting their final JO points
on charity tosses.
They rnoved in front 81-74 with seven
gift tosses before Richard Clark could
score on a tip.in and the late hr.roiC!'I
of Clark, 1'roy Rolph and Gary Fox
left the Anteaters two shy of a tie
and tl1ree of victory.
Tift felt UCI got in trouble often
trying lo get inside during the second
hall and "when 1o1•e did, 1o1·e couldn't
score."
The Anteaters hit at a 50 percent
clip from the floor. scorin g on 33 of
66 attem pts to 41.2 percent for the Titans.
The outside shooting of starter Arthur
Jones and reserves Mark Ramsey and
Steve Gerjets was again responsible. for
a large portion of the Fullerton scoring
attack. Jones played an outstanding
game and was high point man for the
Titans with 21.
Coach Jerry Hulbert's freshman
quintet won its seventh straight without
defeat, handing the Fullerton yearlings
an B7-n defeat in preliminary action.
Four Irvine players were in double
figures with Charles Lumpkins bitting
19 and Gary Denton 18.
UC lrwf<I• !11J l'u1 .. rt.., Cl4) '• " • " " " • " ll hyne • ' ' " Cl>ell'"'1h•m • ' ' " Moar• .. ' ' " Am!M!try • • ' • Clark ' ' ' " Rodrlirutz ' • ' • '" • ' ' .. A, Jone• , , ' " ll••t"' ' • , ' Clllldtti• ' ' ' • 8 urlin9h•m ' ' • , R•m•ey , , • " llolph • ' • ' Gt•lll• , ' " M•!,,..,..1 • • ' • Geo1'9t • • ' • T<t!•l1 ll " " " To!ih • • " .. lialttfme, "' l•vin1 "· Fult1rton 42,
UCI l'nnh Ill) CSF Fnrll'I 1n1 '• " " ,, ,, " • " "'•"""'"• • ' ' Fie.I< ' ' ' , ,.,_ , • • " Alc1r11 • • ' ,. ... ' • ' • Mohr ' ' ' .. He n•..,, ' ' • Krvtcnt • • ' • Mo11er ' • ' " S•llt• ' • , " lluncn ' ' .. Conltv ' ' • • lumpl<ini ' ' " Jon-. ' , ' • li lQ9in1 • ' ' • To!al1 » " " M To111, " • " " li8lltlm1. "" F•O•n » Fullerton FrOI~ ~.
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YOUA SAFm II 01111 a ustMUI ----------
MD Gears for League Play
MoH ,archs Dow11 Fledgling Uni Five, 81-52
By PflIL ROSS
Ot ,,_ D•ll~ l'llol Sl•ll
1'he r-.1atcr Dei Monarclt~ :incl li11l 11er.~i
ly Trojans will go their separate ways
this week after the host r.lona rchs wreak-
ed havoc upon their fledglin~ "isitors,
81-~. Saturday in a non-league basketball
Jnatchup.
Coach John DriscoJl's first year Tro-
J.
' -
f
/.
" '
. .
. ·-••
•
• ' -
jans v.·111 be busy c a g er s this week
with lhree contests on lap.
University 15-101 plays host to Neil
Tuesday at Mission Viejo before locking
horns wilh Lawndale (Wednesday) and
Bosco Tech (Friday\.
l'he Monarchs ( 11-4) of coach Jerry
Tardie, meanwhile, ge t an opportunity
to think about archrival Servite (13-1)
until Friday night when the bitter county
•
THREE HANDED TROJAN? -University's Bruce 1t1ico (22) appears
lo have three hands as he fi nhts with an unidentified Mater Dei
player for rebound. !t1onarrhs 0Sleve Ken1per (left) and Rick Kniffin
(33) watch in 81·52 Mater Dei victory.
FJC Given Scare
Pirates Meet Santa Ana
After 57-52 Setback
l\y CRAIG SHEFF
01 m• D11!¥ PilG! Slit!
Oran ge Coast Cn!lcg1.'s baslir!b<JJI
tram. stil l l r~·ing In find :i Y.'1nn1ng
formul a, travels In Sa111.1 Ana Cnllcgr
\l"cdnrsdr1y night 111 South Co:.isl Ctlll·
fcrcnr.e play.
Cn:1ch Herb Livscy 's OCC Pirates
abandoned their fasl break tactics for
a ball control gan1e against Fullerton
Saturday night and the Bucs almost
came away with the upse t of the season.
A pair of cosily turnovers by the
Pirates in the waning minutes helped
Fullerton to a S7·S2 decision oo the
lose rs' court.
The loss was Orange Coast's eighth
straight and 14th in 16 games.
Livsey and his freshmen-dominated
club almost pulled it off, jumping to
a 2.8-26 halftime lead and mainlain1n~
control of the lemPo throughout the
serond half or play.
The slow down taclics frustralrd 1he
llorne\s into numerous fouls in the sc-
c:ond half. ~·ith OCC hitting 18 rrce
throv.·s.
pla}u1g an outs tanding game on !he
bna rrl s, the Bucs made !heir mo"e and
passed thr Hornets 127-261 v.•ith two
minutes left in !hP half.
Thf' P1rat~s finished \\'l!h only a 30.4
field goal percentage for t.he game, hit-
ting 14 of 46 shots. Even more
rcn1;irkable was the fact that OCC could
only caR three of 14 shots in the sec.
ond half (21.4 (K'rcenl). '
Bul some fine free lhrow shooting (24
of 29 1 kcPt the Bues in the game,
Fullerton shot a nifty 47.9 percent from
lhe field, canning 23 of 48. And coach Moe
Haclovich's club h.it on lt of 15 fro m
!he charity stripe.
Ot•ntt (NH Ull "Miit""" U 7) •• " • .. ~ " • .. L.acti•r ' • ' • A1>erei1<1 ' ' • " Holmes • ' ' , C~icl~y ' ' ' " Mtl~G~ • ,, • " Cerllle ' ' ' " Gotwlll•• ' , ' • lltrg ' ' ' • Oltlie ' • ' ' .... • • • (MrOY ' , • DeSo1e • • • Wall••• • • • M1cll;..,1l1 • ' ' To1a1s .. " .. " loTal• " " " p H$lllirnt; 0rH19t Coal! •• F\llltr!Oll '"
JC Wrestling
parochial rivalry is resumed at Cal Poly
(Pomona) at 6:30 in an Angelus League
opener.
Both Mater Dei graduate!, Driscoll
and Tardie had been looking forward
to Saturday's clash with much an-
ticipation.
The winners grabbed the lead for good
with 2:27 left in the first ball and
began a steady surge which carried
them to as much as a 3l·polnt bulge
(79-46) with 5: 10 remaining in the game.
University had led most of the ftrSt
half.
What put the game, but undermanned
Trojans away for good were a pair
of quick spurts (9--0 and &-0 ) in the
third period, both direct resuft.!!I of a
ferocious Monarch fullcourt press.
Rick Kniffin and Steve Kemper (both
6-3) controled the boards (Mater Dei
had a 49-29 rebounding edge ) and did
a good job of releasing to speedy males
Steve Fritz, Dave Kiley and Pete Roberts
on the vaunted Monarch fast break.
The Monarch quintet tallied 14, 12,
11, 13 and 14 points in that order.
Tom Mullinix (16), Dan Stuart (1 3)
and Tom Walker ( 10) hit in double
figures for the seniorless Trojans.
Mater Dei connected on 39 or 83 al·
tempts from the fie ld for 47 per~nl
while University receipted for 40.4 per·
cent (21 of 52).
Dri.9.,"'0ll rommented afterwards, ''our
kids looked good most of the first half
and they did what I askeJ of then1.
·'But they just started getting a little
Impatient after that and Mater Oe i
finally broke it open." the first year
varsity mentor concluded,
Unlvtnlry UU Mllff D.i Clll
" • ~ .. " " • .. W•l~er ' • ' .. Fri!• • ' ' " M ica ' ' ' • l(n!flin ' • ' .. .!.imon ' • ' • Ktmper • • ' " Slu••t ' ' ' " H1upett ' • • ' Mull If"~ • • " O. Kil•¥ • ' ' " O'Ntit • • ' 11.Dt>erli ' • ' .. ··-' ' ' ' N1nr¥ ' • ' • P•tn4arg111 o • ' • Poetlll•n ' • • ' Toti I• " JO " " Totals " ' " " St11 .. t)" CW.rt.-n Unlve .. ny . " " " ' -ll M•lor ... " " " 11 -II
Southwestern
Next Opponent
For Gauchos
After lwo losses by a total of four
points, Saddleback College's basketball
team is hungry, to say the least.
The Gauchos hope to snap that two-
game Mission Conference losing streak
Y>'hen Southwestern College invades
J\1ission Viejo H i g h Wednesday night
at 8.
The latest heart-breaker came Satur-
day night when the Gauchos cf coach
Roy Stevens fell to highly.rated
Riverside, 'JS-72 on the winners' court.
Saddleback had previously dropped a
59-58 decision in the last six seconds
lo Grossmont in the Mission circuit
opener.
The Gauchos trailed for most cf the
same against Riverside, narrowing the
margin to ju.st one. point (73-72) with
a little over a minute remaining.
But Riverside '! 6-3 center Lennie
Cooper popped in two fr ee throws on
a one-and-0ne situation in the wan ing
seconds to insure the Tigers cf their
fir::t circu it triumph in two outings.
Cooper, a U.year-0ld sophomore, led
all srorel"! with 22 points while Sad-
cileback's leading st'Orer Eric Ch ristensen
paced his team with 16.
Three oll~ players hit in double
figures for the Gaucbo9. Guard Steve
Minton canned 14, 6-4 center Pete
Henderson tossed in IJ and Tom Gardner
hit 12.
Follow ing the Southwestern game, lhe
Gauchos will hort Chaffey Sa turday night
at J\1ission Viejo.
Cha ffey figured as an also.ran in the
conrerenee, but the Panthers have won
their firsl two games, including an ll0-66
victory over Southwestern Saturday
night.
Chaffey currently shares the COft·
ference lead with Citrus, bul that will
cease to exist Wednesday night when
the two teams clash on the Chaffey
court.
s-1t1M1ck 1ni •w.,.i.. 17SI .. • • " .. • . ~ Chrl"..,..., • • • " ""'-' ' , • Ed"'•'"' ' ' ' ' 11t1cn1,d1 ' • • • He<ldt!'MPl'I • • ' " , ..... • • • n """""'• • • ' " H1Nt1 • • • • .... iftloft • ' ' " 1''1rit' • • ' " t.l!l•y ' ' ' • Stta'le ' ' ' • ...,_, I • ' ' ..... ' • ' ' .... ' • • , .._ • ' • " Ta!lll • " " n ,_. ~ " a n Hl!lll!Tlt': lll'ft'l'llOe lS, SHifllbKtl .n.
The lead was tither tied or exchanged
hands 14 times in the second half with
the Bucs getting only three field &oals
jn the entire 20 minutes. Bucs, GWC Fare Well
OCC attempted only seven shots in
the first 10 minutes 0£ the SCCQnd half
and did not get its first fi eld goal
until 5:42 remained ~·hen center Steve
McLendon grabbed a rebound and banked
it in.
Mcl.endon's shot put the Sues one
1back (45-f.4J, but Larry ~willer's
baseline drive 45 seconds Jeter gave
OCC the lead.
f But the 1-lornets came right back on
11 14-foot jumper by guard Rick Abcregg
-and that was the last time the Bucs
were in it.
Two straight OCC turnovers resulted
1tn a pair or FJC buckets and a 51-46 ~ead with 3:40 IC'fl ;i nd for all intent
and purpose !he lforneL'I had their second
straight conference win.
Colden West College's wrestling team,
after a seventh place finish in the Cal
Poly (San Luis Obispo) tournament
Saturday, will launch the Southern
California Conference season 'l'ueldlly
night at Cypress.
The meet begins al 7:30.
Orange Coast will wait two weeks
before starting South Coast Conferentt
action. The Pirates of coach Jack Fair
placed 10th in Lhe 22.-team Fresno State
tournament Sa turday. •
Orange Coast will compete in the an...
nual Cypress College lnvllational Friday
and Saturday. The Bucs begin conference
play Friday, Jan. 22 at Cerritos.
El Camino won the tourney closely
followed by Fresno, Bakersfield and
Fullerton.
Meanwhile, Pat Bealey, Dave Worn.
mack and John Noble pa«d the Rusll<n
<ii coa<:b Dale Del'-to their ,....lh
place pooltlon In the 3'-tum Cal Poly tourney.
e...Jey, competing In the Ill-pound
event, placed sil"th wbUe Wommack ( 128)
earned a third place position. Noble
was fifth In the 1'71JO'INf category.
Chobot .......... the ....,..,. dwJl.
pionship wit& t>lablo Valley and Pierce
lying for 1ta1nd place. Cypraa was
fourth, followed by Riverside, San Jose
and Golden West. •
MO!lday, J.in111ry 11, 11)71 DAILY PILOT 11
He.wy[Nly
SllockA~
Ufe1tmeGuru1~
H Heawy Duty Sboek Alt-
!Oriler l1il1 due to f1ulty
1n111eriab ind wortJnaR..
ahlp or wearout while ori·
Ji~I rn:llllser OW111 car,
1l wl be ttpbced llporl
~um, flft of chaT1t. or
lhP purdla~ prk-t will be
~furdtd. If tM delectift
shack •bsof"brr ••• in--stllltd by Sun, 11t will
l!llUill new shack absor·
tier with "° ci..rce for
labor.
Lifetime Guaranteed
Heavy Dut y
Shock
Absorbers
Regular $7 .99
• Lon1er wea r,
smoother ride
• Rugged sintered iron
piston and chrome
plated rod
• Replace wom-out
shocks now and save~
20o/o~:.~ .............. . .......
Heavy Duty Mufflers
Guaruteed for a1 lolt1 u yoa own your car
• End caps crimped over two. sleel
layers
• Zinc plated to resist rust
• Up to 1/J thicker gauge steel
than most standard equipment
mufflers
Expert Installation Available
Prices effective today tbru Thursday 1/1%/71
._.... .. .
IOW-30 AH Weather
'49.99 l'ortabl e
Steel Ramp
Work under car 111 safety.
Removable inclines, whet!
!lops. llolds up to 2-'B tons.
Motor Oil
SAVE48¢!
11eau1ar u. Qt.
3 Qt.
Cans
. 99
Carburetor Air Filter
Carburetor 1ir filter traps llam'l-
ful dirt before It reaches tbe csr-
buretor. ·
Standard
Tune-Up Kits
Includes: eoDclemer, Rotor
and Points.
199
• " Sears
•
.
l
Heavy
Duty
Oil Filter
67
each
Filters out dirt I ft d
sludge.
12-Inch
3-Height
Sturdy
Jack Stand
99
Adjustable tor car or
trailer. 12-inches hith. ...,,
12-Volt
Battery
•Fits many l2·volt ars
• Replace ,oar WOnMlt
blttery with a S.n
Allstatt Battery
Allstate
Spark
Plugs
¢
~uy them now at Sein!
Use Sears Revolvlq Charge
-11111 -••&&11: c ..... ,,... --·--------....... -···· ................................ , ......... , ............. . ------·--.... N-------.....
----·--Oran ge Coast, missing its first. nine
shotir of the game. fell behi.nd, Jl--4.
tn the early going. Then with McLendon
Top performarres for OCC came from
Guy Morrison and Bob Curry. Morrison,
wre.stling in lhe 142-pound category,
finished third while curry (158) 1150
grabbed oU a third place medal.
FoUowing the Cypress meet Tuelday,
the Ruatlen will por11dpete In the Sonia
Ana Invitational Friday and Soturday
11 san .. Ana eonece. 1-----------------------------------...,,....
• •
' ' (
I
"
•
28 one·:
Sonora Five Tabbed ~~ A~,.e,~ For Orange Coast Area
Prep Wrestling· Results
To Win Orange Loop DON 'T GAMBlE ON THE EARlY HOLES Vtn ilY
C_... Ml Mar IHI UJf SA V•lltY
_, • .,, 111 t!.c l•ktr !(j t-)
10.-AOull•ro ($) pl""'" 9IH:llno•
IC I J:U .
IEOl 1 <I Ul-Duf!ft (EOJ ,1,,,... W1ltt;t
l4-D1llly (E1!t dK Mll YIOC:O 1E01 IEo!l .
.. , ltl-JolU'ltofl •Ea) ,.1...,.., Woo !Et!J.
IJ'-l l lll1n tEdl dee D. Sft¥O•< 171-C•..V (l'•I .. n111d H•rt (loU.
"~"'°"" !Eon -11¥ •-·•· CEorl 1-0. H¥,-Moull'Dn tE1t) WOfl 111 lvl•Tt
The 111:-leam Oranp Cin..'Uit
be1ins loop action Tuesday
night and if DAJLY PILOT
predictierui are c o r r e c t •
Sonora and El Dorado will bat-
tle for the chttmpionship ~·1th
pressure from dark.horse: con-
tenders Valencia and Laguna
Beach.
Here's 00"' the league
shapes up:
I. Sonora-l)esplt(' the racl
that the Raiders hi\'f a
lackluster '4..fl p r c I e a g u e
record. coach Paul ffush 's out-
fit draYlS the nod as favorite
to the title.
The Raiders ha\'t lost a
pair of decisions each to La
Ila bra and Serv1te 1 one ii onl'-
po in\ Joss to the lallt•rl and
Lutheran and El Rancho h:H"l'
;:iJsn posted one-poin! margins
over Sonora.
The Ra iders ha\'(' 1 h,.
players to win it :111 \1'1th
their fast break offense and
pressing defense keyed by a
pair of 6-6 ~eniors.
Dave Myers i!nd ~like
Taylor are the 1·cbound1ng
1/l reats "''hile 'fin1 Horton
114.6) and Mike Brown i ll.O~
add further ruel to the scoring
punch.
And the Raiders have Brad
l-lillman, a 6-1 senior guard
in the fold after missing the
first part of the season while
quarterbacking the football
learn in the CIF' AA playoffs.
t El Dorado-The Golden
Ha\\'ks have a solid shot al
the title behind lhe all -round
play of senior Ro be r I
DeWeese. a 6-2 1h forward.
DeWecse js averaging 25
points per game and is a
c!lnsislent performer from in-
side and outside. He'.~ h11d
a pair of 30-plus efforts
Deweese. 1hc only re1 urnini.!
:darter. is bolstered by post
man Bill Willis j6-fi sr ) and
Paul Uo11orff, a S-2 ~" senior
guard who is expe<"ted to be
ready for league play arter
sustauung a hroken knuckle
against Pacifica in <1 practice
game.
Included 1n El Dorado's 6-6
mark are victories over San-
tiago and Mater Dei.
··001torff should 111ake a dif-
ference in the ball handling
d•'part111ent for 1..1s, becaus!'
ol his experience and ability."
savs c·oach Nash River a. ':i. Volencia-The Tigers
havr a starling live 111<11
averages 5-!0 h and the scur·
tng sta ts echo the balance
of the quintet with Sergio
Eche\arria ! 12.71 and Jim
Cordrry 1 LI IH !cadiug the
J><ll'k
Junior cenlt'r Ross ~1 cCrar
16-1 1 ~1 is the only start er over
si x fnut F.chevarria. Cordcry
;ind guard Ril'.k Garci;i 15-Gl
are seniors while junior .Jerry
:\1arn1o!eJO 1 fl-I I I round.~ out
the starting live.
Coach Bob Han1blin en1plov.s
;i pla1oon systern and the
nll~rnatc fi ve Is con1[J<ir:-1hlf•
Jn size
Despife lhe di sadvantage ln
size, Valencia has "·on four
of its last rive gan1cs. in-
cluding an ll·point \\'in over
El Dorado.
4, Laguna Beach-Coach
Jerry Fair's Artists have al-
ready outdone last year·s total
\~In output t3-21 ) by a conside-
rable ma rgin wilh :in 8·11 pre-
Jc;igur seaslln
F'a1r's crt\>' runs a nnc-ftJur
offense '''tth l\\'O high po~l
men flanked by a pair of
\\'Jng~.
"The wav \\'e've com,. on
the last fc1~· 1vecks I frrl we
can stay \\'ith anyo11(' in thC'
league. Dedic;il inn is enc nf
!he thing~ 11'e h<i l'e to
nvericon1c. \Ve h:.iv e thre<' or
four kids th at really wunt lo
Pro Cag·e, Hockey ...
l •Olt•ft COft!O!•n<•
•Ul•ntl( D1¥lloon w9,. loll l'cl. Gii
J? ,,
'~ ,. " ~ 11 l~
Ctnt••I D1vi.,..,
...
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l!•l••moro I• 11 6(01
[1llC1t\t101! )9 Jl "1
Arion•• I • J7 .JO• U [l~vOl•nd I U .110 1•
w.,,,,,. con1"''"''
MJclw••' Dlvl•lo•
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PDl'lland I! 11 "'
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Mllw•ul<to" lSl. ll•Ulm"'t "
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won lO•t "cl
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10 •• •'' " ,.,
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Wf'Ot Diw,.lon
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Ul•h
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0•"•"' 1••••
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16 ,. II t,
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U! ... ll"I. 1<'°'1~1tn• ,,.
°"I• ~m•• W:htdulea
Utth 11 lr>el•ln.o
l{•n•uc~• vi. M•m~~., •' No•nv•I,., 1•nn
On>y U•mo> >(hf'dul<'<l
JC Hoop
Standi ng:-;
'0Uf1'4 CDASl CON•tlll"CE
W L Pl' PA
C .. rlloo ? 0 IJS 116
l'wl,.,to<> 1 o !•S 110
S•n 1>1-.o Mt>A I I.. 1111
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f'Ml~Delp~ ••
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f'~.1.~e·D~•O '· ,~,.~Trr~I 1
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flu"•lo 1 l Q• A n~~'"" 1, '"
l"">ftlD l Ofl1011 I
Mon••Y'I G•n><•
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t<tw Vo•• ~t V•<1<.ouv•t
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0..1• O•m•• IChe<lu••d
UCt.A !It \ 1111 UC lnil ...
·~n m..,,,. ·~I•• -UCI fr.Hlton.
Cooorr, Ca•n1~an O'ld H•~f~J. !\o tlmt;
UC.LA won our n"ouo1,1lt<1
l,OOll ''"~"¥" 1 Gfn!O• IU(LAI,
1' II l ""O" lUClAI, 10 11 , J !..ol•
IU(I I 17 l•
100 lr•eUvi• -I O'M•ll•• tUC:lAl,
! II,/, 7. Slrnsou IUClAI. 1 ... 1: ~.
M••••n 1uc11, 1 •l.J
'\O •re!'•T~l.o -I ln9fl'i.on !UCLA).
?11. 1. Ill~~ !U(LAI. n .1. J. Dk~·
m1•1n llJ(I), 2J,S
100 •n<t, mN! -I G~!f• IU(lAI,
l QI l . ] DOYlt IUClAj, 1 Ol •1 J
["'D" fUCIJ, 7 10!,
100 Dl.ll!e•fl• I Slon..on IUCt.Al
1 "1 0. 1. (l•t~ (l.J(lAI, 1 jO 0. J
l•<n&ti1n iUCll, 7 OI
1[1() "'""''"'~ I O'M•ll•• llJ(LA ·~ 1 7 """"'""' !U(LO,o :)()., 1 XIO b~l~'''""" I. Ge"'" IUCL/\
F•>On 1UCl1, 111•.
7 OJ \. ) ~P•C -o~ llJft.A!, ? ~J' ~
tl•!\O>\ IUCI •.] 100
I(~ he••h•i• l f.~"'"' l\j{I "'
•Ill ~ M•''"' \llC• '\9 • 1 in""'"'" IU11 •1, \~70
)QO D<O•"""""• I 81~!<>" ll)t LI! 7.IS.•, 1 (Ion IUt lA I. 1 )l •. J
(OCM>H IU(I /, 7 710
G,l f t !•> -I. /UCLAl,J I<
S•ht•.,._ I 111 11111-C==== Or-• Co.>I 0 17 11
Son DIP9o o 1 M 11
Ml. S•n Anlon1~ ~ l 11• 1 ..
S•!Yr~n·• l<or"'
f'Vll<•to« ~I. Or•~•e Co•\l 9
C ... rl!o• IO. Ml S•n Anlonlo •I
s.,,. DMtlo Ml'>• 1oi. \••'• A ~A 'll
W-.Mty" Ci•m••
Or-eo..t •' S1Mt An• .,..,......., '' s.n oi...
1#1 l)IMo M•• •' C•rrlfol
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Ml. Sift ~ID fl l'"!lt•l-
S ... Olt>M 8f 1•11111\M ..... Die-.,...'°"'
MKi ... (ONl'lltl'NCI'
W L "' °''""' ' • '"' CnrW 7 I l~I
G,_.,,.. 1 11•
Pt lom... 1 1•1 111r-""' , ....
S.,01 ....... ,,..,,, 1 , 1'1
kddMOKti e ' 1>0 kt> ... flfrOlnf 0 1 Ill ........,..,sm,..
111:1"nl6t 1J. 146dlebK.I n
Chlflw •• s.MllWHllMI ..
Cl11V1 U. a... a.r1111rdlM u ,. • ...,,... •'-o.-.-• ,,
W ... flOJ''llOICftfl
\ • I
J
win, II s a niatler cf gelling
this attitude contageous," ~a)·S
Jo~air, in hia second year al
the Artist helm.
The Ar!i11ts arr. currc:n11y
on a three-game ~·inning
streak
Included ~n the. :;lart1ng
lineup are four juniors with
<'hu("k Corwin 11 1.4 ). f'-;ick
1:1lk·!>pie (9 OJ and Vince \Vhil·
nah t8 51 cornb1n1ng scoring
!alents with .scn10I' Bari Tal>or
\JO 5~.
~. BreM-Tiic Wildcats have
lost nine of 11 decision s and
n1ost of the trouble has been
the lack of height for coach
Jerry Nicn1eyer 's qu1n te:t.
"\Ve 're very small, v:e hilve
to hustle and scramblt· for
f'v(•ryth1ng "'e gc1:· :.a\s
Ne1n1cyer io evaluating his
lcam·s ch<inces lor the league
championship.
I chose the first hole at Augusta National (see
illustration) to describe my method of playin& the.
early holes in a round.
On this hole I v111l nor malty play well away from
the sand on the right on my dri11e. On my approach
shot I will play away from the sand on the left.
front of the green, unless tlie flagstick is well
beyond this haza rd. . .
Nothing ;, worse than starl1n& a .round with a
bia fat double-bogey. I suggest playing for a pars
on°'the first few holes. You may get a "bon u~"
birdie along the way, but par should be your rna1n
objective. Later, after a backlog of good holes-~nd
your swing feels loose end grooved, you mt a;ht
want to go tor a few birdies.
~. tj "70 l<U'l. ........ 1,-. -
(~ollegiate Basketball
11'-0utlt (S) Cl'tC OMf!~ (Cl J·I.
nl-WloH !CJ ...... ed 5o1o !SI 1:01
130-1111,.,..l9d !Cl plnn.O Atull1•1
!~l 1:)1 .
IJ6-C,.mo.t /Cl ~·nned llt•tn.o lSl .,.
l•l-Clt•k /() ~lnftt<I V•ten1u111 tSI
t :OO.
1 .. -Stetit>On• rc1 orrw •'"u•O••I ISi
1·1. ' 157-Ca'"'f (Cl oirin9d Smith !SI J:JJ.
l611-C11lno !C ! clK lltn~•bldn fl\
ll-ll.
llt----ll•n<I•! !Cl ~ihnod Ve&ll ISi 1·u . .
"4---K•l~renn (~) won b¥ IO•lt•!
Hv•-llrcwn !Sl plnfl.Od Gter••• IC I
' "
11111 Ctut! !f'd! "'"""" S s..,,,,.., Vt<tl!V
l!tll 1·to .. ..,,111111 V•111Y UO (I I L• Al1111llo
P l-Hun! tE1rf ''""" G11v11 IEdl K-"••dm•n (FV! won 11'1' lor1elr.
!11, 10l-ltlne rl"Vl pinned $1~11 (lAI IM-kl~ fE11) •Inned Timm•"'""" 1,0,.
(E~,'.~.",·,.,, IEtO w&ll br ftrl1h. llJ-Son~ IFVl tie< l1k11 !LAI )1~.
n 1)l-L1l !•nc !LA) Ole Ou•ld (,YI J.,nl&• V1nhY 1-1.
lll•ncll Uil 1111 lf/1... lll).-L. Ilk"' (LA) Ilic W1rdlow IPVI
lf-8K~tr IE•ll cite Htnn IECI 11·7. 4·0. k IL I •-Miiier {Elli cite lon1c~um t EdJ 136-l!'ncn !FV~ dK Hornt A
~·l. l0-0. 1•1 -MO!lul•~+ (FVl pin-G1llt th1r l1 S-Sch1•l!er (l •H C1<>11 lleftcln.neo \LAI ,u, I
rec! )·). l•l-Humphr\11 ll"V) G<IW Julll n tlA Ul-Olwson (l •ll won 111 1on1n. , ,
l»-'•kl t !Ell) 1!e< K1Pl1n !Ed) ;si -11:uil !FV) t!K lltbb<t (LA ) •·O.
!-0 111-Lewlo CFV) won b~ lor1<11. ill--G••nlCge 1EGI pl,.,,... Colli>on 17t-Fl1lcher {LAJ clK Mlllltr IFVl Jv1111r V•r•lff' tEio. ~-J
Cirtna cit Mi r U•l !Ul jA Vl llt' Ul-"t rtlnu tE1!1 'iftllld C•••• lt4---8et chtt !FY) plnr>ld Llnl>IN tLAI
•t-.Ar,,.,ID IS) dK Saw• tCI 11-t tll~!:-llovo IEttl won b• !a<ltil, H~!'..:_W•lktr Cl"Vl W1)ll 1>¥ lor1elt.
10....C:hl •ll (SJ Pl,....d MotrloOft tC), ,,,..;;~~~~~;iiiii.iiioiiiiii;i;;;m~~:O:~iii=~~~:::--1 • ll.
iiS-Allyn rc1 WOii bY !ori•lt. VW •• AKE ll)-V1le111ut l• !Sl OK Jonto !Cl -4·1. ~
1»-81nd1I \() plnnH l'ro..01 (!!
' ~••h•m (C l won bv lor!tl!. 5 P E C I A L
"t-H•lli•rc !Cl ,1nn.ci 5toddt rd II! Rell"e 4 WhMll t·!l.
111-Jofte• IC! pl .. nN McG•eto• (5) Machi"• 4 Drum•
l.~!1-J•I!•.., IC! won 1>v !ortelt. ~r:::lu!.::=:. ~~1::::• 111-Du~'"" !SI cite Ga•• f(I 1•! !HDT l'ltO-ltAT•Dl \/.._....~lt>' (51 olMed HltlY (() 1:54.
n•-W~•'""'' {SJ won la •orlt!!. $39.95
Yl<llW
llis guards. 5-l 1 ~c111or L.\'le
Junes <1nd !"1·10 Junior !l arry
Dowell. oire his lcarn "s l.H~gcsl
asset while the lack of dC'plh
<111d size arc his nir~JO!' ..:on-
trrns.
WEST
ll'>C n. Wa•h1nQton n
1:.1.11<11 nu n•> ""'.., vw SHOCKS ··········--·-$7.tS ln1Nded '"<ll•n• 101 . N0<1i.w.,1orn !<I H-MeO•n!•I• (Eill plnnid J i ccbt 100,000 mile guaranteed (no t pro-rated). OeP1u1 IS, SI. Jouph find.I 11 IE<l l l·•t M1 •<1~ttt• fl. x 1v1., lOhlcl IOl IG6-W1J~tw1• (Er!! cec G•ldnt i \VE 00 ALL F'OREJGN CARS.
Bret1 '.s biggest pJ<1ycr 1" G-2
sophomore Greg Tr 1 p Jl,
recently promoted r r o in lhe
sophomore lean1.
"
115t'. Fro•n ,1 , soulh.v~•t ! h ll'l
'"LI> F•osn 111, Antr1ope Vellr• \\
UCLA 9J, l'l•1hong1on SI II
(JI" S~n•~ 6•rbM" ~I F'">no 51 !\
(ol P~I• ISLO! ea. /'M Pol• IPnmon•I
Wh'"'"' ll, Qc(<Ufnlil 71
C•I S• !LA) 90. s~n Jlj';~ S• 18
5•n D•~o St, 100. Sr••ll~ ll
"u•Duc 11. Mlnn11010 16 (Eel s-11. 1 I I e DISC IUll SPICIALIST e ~ We5•..,.n M ltMc1n 19. Mtr1h•ll 11 llS-Jone' IEcl) Plnntd lier ck EH
O••IOn Ill, Lo•ol1 !Nt w O•lein>i " '":ll-Ho>I tlEttl <It< Bl"'' fEOI 1-4. COSTA M£$A STORE ONLY =--.==.
'"1'" 16. O••~• ~ tJO-M""" IE<I! plnn1d Gu1vor Jiii H"91 IM,4. lt&ntf~ SI IQ, Ntbr&•~· IY
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'"Gingerbread' Dranaa
Simon's Still Funny
By JACK GA \.'l:R
NEW YORK (UPI) -1,
Neil Simon's decade of sensa-
UonaJ success as a playwright
-almost certainly more suc-
cessful financially than any
dramatist ln such a span -
there has been the nag from
certain quarters that all he
does i11 "write funny " and
make a lot of money.
So, that's a knock? Would
there were more playwrights
deserving of such comment!
The irnplied criticism is that
Simon is a frivolous v.•r1ter
and nothing else, regardless
of the extent of his appeal
to theater·goers with such hits
as "Barefoot in the Park."
''The Odd Couple," ''Last of
!he Red Hot Lovers," "Plaz.a
Suite,'' his first effort, ''Cozne
Blow Your !lorn"; not to rnen-
lion librettos for such long-run
musicals as ··sweet Charity"
and "Promises, Promises."
the latter still running.
It is possible that .such
criticilm lnfluenefti Simon te
write "The GI n ge r bread
Lady," his new one "lt the
Plymouth Tbealer, w b 1 c b..
while loaded wlth Simon "fun-
ny," has a more •bviOWJ
serious content than usual.
Before getting Into that. it
should be pointed out Lhat,
however bilarlous his previous
work! may bave been, there
was in them, ii yu had a
second thought beyond the
humor, some keen comment
on various aspects of the
human condition.
~1ost perllnenl in I h i s
respect is "Visitor f r o m
Mamaroneck," first, of the
lrio of plays making up "Plaz.a
Suite." And, funny a.s it is.
there is something more than
cheep hilarity in "Last of the
Red Hot LQver.;," now in its
second year at the Brook.5
Atkinson Theater.
As for "The Gingerbread
Lady," it is highly recom-
mended despite the fact that
Gets Into A~t
Countian on Al"len Show
Ed Arnold of Fountain
Valley, community services
d irector of Newport Beach's
Fr.if radio station. KOCP.1 , can
claim his mental Purple Hearl
anytime arter \Yed ne s day
night .
He's a veteran or the ad
llb wars of the Steve Allen
show.
Arnold, a part-time
newsman at KTLA (Channel
5) was on the premi3es when
the Allen show to be telecast
Wednesday at 6 p.m. was
being videotaped.
First thing he knew, he
reporlS, he was conscripted
to serve as a contestant in
a game with Lucille Ball and
.some other famous guest stars
who were helping Allen fill
the 90 minute allotted to him .
"I \}'as on with them for
most of the last 10 minutes
ol the show,'' Arnold said
later. ''It was hairy -no
rehearsal at all -but fun ."
Simon, alUiou.ib turning out
the laugh !Ines with h11 usuaJ
facility. has made a too eb-
vlous try at blending them
wilh a meaningful serious
theme.
He didn 't ha~t to be that
obvious. IF, for example, you
should hark back to "The Odd
Couple," there was a certain
basic poignancy, but it didn't
intrude on the fun .
For those who Lhink of a
Sifon play •nly in terms ef
easy laughter, be assured that
hP provides plenty of such
humor in "Tbe Gingerbread
Lady." That this does not
always blend well with his
more serious intent, resulting
in such critical quibbling as
you read here, really doesn't
matter too much,
rn any case. ' ' The
Gingerbread Lady" is worth
seeing simply to w a t c h
dynamic Maureen Stapleton in
action as a night club singer
of some distinction fresh orr
a sanltorium sojourn to cure
her of a lcoholism. Mi s s
Stapleton is wonderful.
It isn't long before her
determination to "go straight"
gets fouled up with the pro-
blems of a beauty.vain womfln
friend, a failure-prone male
homosexual actor and a
Former lover, not to mention
her 17-year'<!ld pr act i ca I
daughter, who, hopefully, may
guide her mother to a br.ighter
future. But don·t bet on it.
There are fine performances
by Michael Lombard, BelSy
von Furstenber g, Ayn
Ruymen, Charles Siebert and
Alex Colon.
Despite some critical nil·
picking, Simon rides again 1
PROUDLY PRESENTS. • •
Bizarre and di1conctrllng.
Touchy, Ironic and
tender. Odd. Fiercely
a nli·conventional. Rebel.
Elll
11111
He wrote his scores in red ink without bar
tines. Then he named !hem "Chapters Turned
Eve ry Which Way." "Mysterious Kiss in the Eye."
"Truly limp Preludes for a Dog." "Pieces in the
Shape of a Pear." little wonder that Paris called Erik
Salie odd!
Yet beyond his eccentricity, his music lives In crystalline
beauty. Its biting spirit and economy marked the llrst real
break with Romanticism. Nor was his influence limlted lo ·
music. He became a key figure in the avant garde of Cocteau,
Picasso. Olagh!lev, Debussy, Milhaud, and Revel -a group that
reshaped all !he arts.
In his musical conlributions, Satie diffuses en extraordinary charm and a
surprising melancholy. His music seems 10 come from very tar and from very
t11gh. Once heard , it is never forgolten. ll's an exhi18:rating plung~ inlo musical
advenl!-lre and fantasy.
On four albums Aldo C iccolini plays 130 razor·sharp
piano minlalures. Each exhibl11 the tell Ing rt1 pport
between pianlsl and composer thet hll earned Cle·
colini the reputation of being !he world's Sa!ie spe-
ci!list.
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SALii
PlllCI
SHOWDOWN -Clara Grich defends her h usband under the withering attack
of prosecutor Paul Teschke in a climactic scene fro m "Witness for the Prose·
cution" at the Long Beach Commun ity Playhouse."
fo1• P1·os ec11ti011'
Court D1~ama Absorbit1g
By TOi\1 BARLEl'
Cl! !ht 0 •111 l'llot Sit!!
Courtrooms and the drarnas
enacted within I he n1 have
proved to be a rich souree of
inspiration to many
playwrights with just a few
of them rising above the ranks
to give us memorable pl<1ys
that unfailingly pull us back
to the theater at revival time
And it is not remarkable.
to this critic at least. that
a central feature of tl1at select
number of coourtroom drnn1as
has been their authenticity.
the ability of the \Oo'rilcr lo
v.·eave his or her !ale into
a selling thal would satisfy
the most purist of lawyers
"'hilc dclighl ing: we n0t-so·in ·
sistent laymen.
of the Christie collection and ingly gullible in the role of
our very spe{'lal tribute today the murdered y,·oman's co111-
to \\\'O artists who d id panlon.
particu lar justice to their Faults there may have been
den1anding roles Paul but this highly entertaining
Teschkc in the key role of '"Wi tness" is a strong cast
Robards and Clara Grich as efforl., admirably delivered
llon1aine, the outwardly al· under the guiding hand of
tractive yet utterly callous director James Brittain and
111ifc of Vole. 01•1ing a great deal to the
Teschke 11· <t s <.'O tnpletely stage management of Fran·
eonvincing as the bulldog-li ke cisro Gutierrez. ~·ho also
British barrister who puts into takes on the supporting role
his courtroon1 battle the of Carter, the chief clerk.
fervor that can only con1r to \Vhat 11·e i){>lieve lo be
the ad1·oc;1te v.·ho thnroughly Agatha Clirislie's finc!il play
believes in his ctienl's In· has lost none of its magic with
noccnce. And l\1iss l;rich in-lhe passing years. Takr a look
jects a most plausible venom at this Long Beach pr1r
into her role of Ho1naine and duc tion and rerresh you r
th:it of "Ilic other y,·on1an " niemory of just whnl ha s l.o
•Nho br inr;s ,1 Cockney accent be Lhc cleverest courtroo1n
and a craft y plol t1\'lst into drama on record.
thr play at exactly tht• right ---
psychologit:al 1nomcnL
DAILY PILOT ff
Mondays on NBC
World Premiere
Movies Increase
By VERNON SC01T
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
There aren't enough movies
being made to satisfy the maw
ot television, and many recent
films are a blt raunchy for
the home set, so NBC Is shif·
ling a:ears again.
As of tonight and Monday
nights thereafter, ~ network
will beam only "NBC World
Premiere'' movies.
That Is to say, the movies
will not be reruns but brand
new two -hour flicks filmed at
Uni\'ersal. 20th Century-F'ox,
\Varner Bros. and Screen
Gems. Future deals are being
rnade with Paramount and
MG~f .
Stanley Hobertson, director
of motion pictures f o r
television at the network, ex-
plains: "We can't buy many
pictures being made for
theatrical release today
because of sex and vio lence.
"What good would it do for
us to buy something like 'Mid·
night Cowboy' or 'The Wlld
Bunch• and then cut out all
!he scenes which might be
offensive to home viewers'.'
"Much of the sex and violen-
ce in movies are based on
story points. If you remove
them , you emasculate the
purpose of the picture."
\Vhen the networks first
began paying out huge sums
for old movies, bidding was
fierce and prices high. When
ii appeared there wouldn 't be
sufficient oldies to go around,
NBC began farming out two--
hour movie projects to the
studios -mostly Universal.
The network beamed eight
U1e first season. The following
year the total was dropped
to four. Ratings proved that
the innovation was catching
on so NBC aired 14 in the
th ird season, and 15 this year.
''Sometimes the s I u d I o .t
came to us ~'ilh a properly
they belie\'e wO\/ld make a
good World Premiere,''
Robertson said.
"But in most cases we 'll
go to a studio with a property
we want them to develop. In
either case, we show the pie~
lure the first two times on
television. Thereafter it
reverts to the studio."
According to Ro be r ts on
these two.hour te I e vis ion
movies cost from $700,000 to
more than $1 million.
"Ecooomically it took
courage l.O put up mooey lo
get into this movie concept
for television. And we use
adult themes without being
explicit," Robertson said.
"Now we are beginning to
attract top performers
because of the quality of our
stories. Carrte Snodgress and
Rock Hudson are just a couple
of examples of the sort 0(
talent making movies fo r us.
"These two-hour movies are
part of the long form o( en·
tertainment in television.
"It wouldn't surprise me to
see more and more two-hour
films being made to replace
the dwindling supply o f
lheatrical features on all lhret
networks." There you have the for1nat
for Aga!ha Chris!ie's "\Vltness
for the Prosecution." cur·
rently being: revived b.v a
brillianl Long Beach Com·
munity Players cast and still
as absorbing and fa scinating
as it was when it firsl en-
tranced Broadway and London
audiences.
Noble Shropshire y,•orked
very hard as Vole and he
dirl. 10 a certain extent. c<1 p-
ture the guilelessness and in-
n;1le innocence so vital in the
early scenes. But he did not
devClop the incredulity of
Vole when he is confronted
"''ilh an apparently faithless
\vife during courtroom ques--
lioning and he most certainly
f:iiled to give us the true
Vole in the pla y's dynamic
final scene -111l' c<ilculating
and thoroughly evil killer "''ho
is ;idd ing a r a rt l cu la r J y
lAsteless touch of infidelity to
his already n1onstrous crimes.
PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
For there is no doubt th:il
Miss Christie gave us y,•hat
your critic /regards as lhe
most brilliant creation of her
long career when she took
this slory of the perfect /wel l.
almost) murder a nd decided
to use the courlroon1 as the
cenlral setting for !he t1n\vin·
ding of her craflily conceived
pl ot.
Many readers will recall the
fa11ltles.<1 deµiction by Charles
Laughton of Sir W I I fr c d
Rob ards, lhe brilliant h:i r-
rister who is so unfairly
deceived and yet triumphs
through one of th~ cleverest
and most astonishing Inst
scenes in the history of the
theater.
And there v.•rrr no less
superb perform11 nces in that
same movir from TyrQne
Power as U>onard Vole , thP
apparently hap!c~s you n ,::
defendant y,·ho ~·on Robards'
heart and oratory <1nd Marlene
Dietrich as Vole·s wife :ind
-thanks to that marvefously
developed Jsist scene -ex-
ecutioner.
But more about the U1 ni;
Beach players v.·ho do suc!i
superb justice lo this jc1\l'I
J ack Lackman was con·
vincin~ as i\1r. Myl'rs. the
prust't:U1!1r \\'h•1se v.·ntcrtight
case is destroyed b.v that las1
minute w11vc. of the Christie
wand. without ever developing
I.he fnrcc and eloquence \vrit-
len into the p;irt. \Vhat m<1kcs
the on1ission more ref{rel-
table is this crllic-·s conviction
!hal Lflckn1an 1s n1ore than
cnpable or redressing the
balance.
Glenn Sterling gives u~ a
f1r sl class cameo of 1'1r.
1\fayhew. Iloba rds' bluff and
very reassuring colleague.
Arthur Perkins survived a
sha ky opening scent' lo vt'ry
capably create Ins p ec to t
Hearne of Scotland Yard and
flitn Donahue \Vas n1 o s t
s111tah!y Scottish and ch1.1rn1.
Deep Six Dive
Divers fro1n the crew of ckpt. Jacques Cousteau
examine the wreckage o( a World War D air·aea
battle on the ABC News special "Llgoon of Lost
Ships" tonight 1t 7:30 on Channel 7.
\
-JR D RECORD WEEK -
ACADIMY MIMBIRS,
YOUR CARO ADMITS YOU AND A
GUEST TO ANY PERfQR:MANC(
M N°"Y THI! THUl!SDA1
PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
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IR) LITI'Lf FAUSS AnD llG HALSY
AlMI. l!mbrtl S11ei50nd .
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PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
IN liARBOll SHOPPING C(Nlflt
E DWARDS
HARBOR,r::1:~2
H IM DllGQ fW'I.
IN MIS ION Vll!JO
EDWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
IAflll DllOO NV. AT LA ,Al. 'T\lllNOfJ'
ISO·IHO
3rd GREAT WEEK
ELLIOTT GOULD
•~ i 0.0.YID L WO!.l'l~ ,, .. .,.,, ••
"I LOVE MY ••• WIFE"
o __ _,.,_, ..... ,UOI llCM'oCQ.00' ~
Rtdfo,d '" "TILL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE" "'
A MIKE NICHOLS FILM
·c1re1:22·
A 3 UNIT All WALT DISNEY SHOW! .,. --
A PURR-FECTLV
WONDERFUL NEW
CARTOON FEArURE
"NIOK" Tho O"'h°" Ele hont "o
''IULLIT''
l
•
Sky Girl
Haquel \Velch stars as an American sky diver v,iho
Oetomes the central figure in an espionage caper
in "Fathom." tonight at 9 o'clock on the ABC Mon ·
day Night ritovie over Channel 7.
..
~~~~~~~~~~~
, MONDA Y
'
----~·· -·------
Oriflhaal Revue at SCH
'Mother Earth' First Ra.te Musical
By TOM TmJS
Of .. Defir p""" .....
11 11 .. ti'Jly poA!ble ·that
the I. com pan) members ... of
· South-Clout l\et>eft«y who · "°°°""ed. ·•1111 et«Uted the .
all-ar.l&lnaL musical re Y u t ............. ...,,.,,
A ,...,.. miul<•I s•-· boot •M 1vrla
bY llon Tl'lfOlllCM, i'Mtk 6,. Toni 1"'-'f• •r, dlrtdotd 6v JltOfl J'bfoMOll; "chor_:. ·
09<......., tiV M1111' L11C011;-u'1"t'l'llO• bY
G..,,-11 11"0'' wltullt by JCen...th
Shllrtr, 11.tlllM by S.r>dr1 l'1rk1r.
CHlllmH' llY #Mry FIM'llM, ll'l<lllCll )"
dlrK'llOn In' T,P '""'''• P•IU'f!lld I, 11. $oo.11t1 c,..1 1t_o,..,, 1m "-
""'' Blvd., Colli .,,,,_IMI. ,... Tt!I CAST
EWIN •anlUIOll. "Sk>nllr1 M1t""'1.1· ,~.
DelUM'I. Mldltlt Doo.i1l1u, em Kif!, ~" S....a~ Mlrlno, Jttt MIKl'ltll, Jtmtt •.t'· ·jr•
o dlPtlttl, TOlll Sl'l11r..-. Mimi Smlltl. ~.ll. · .;)l< •
C1m<1ron v.....,.. lnilr11m..,l1!11l1 Steve ._
H-!1y, l lfl Kett, 1!1111 """ ltw•"" (\ ·JI/ !
bw-. Ton.I ~'"• Jtn'lff d1Prl1.r, ,,j,,.."f .fl:· ;l· ' ·,
KM .st111r.... ~>t' .. <t .., . .. . ., .,., . i.:.f. "Mother Earth" never fully . · i · -·· .
realized just how brilliant ~,& · · .
their show reaUy was. 4 · .. •
They received a good indi-· ' '
calioil Friday when a wildly . ~
enthusiastic opening n l g h t ~
audience rose almost as a unit
to its feet and refused to be
still until the cast returned ror
what is virtually unprecedent-
ed af SCR. a second curtain
SANITARY SMOOCH -James dePriest and Mimi
Smith show how lovers of the future would react
to air pollulion in South Coast Repertory's "Mother
Ear th."
call.
The exlended applause and
chetirs were .iri well-deserved
appreciallon fOr what musl
rank among lhe finest hours
of .a company which has pro-
vided Orange County's thea-
trical leadership for nearly
Hix years. The. difference in
this· case was 01e fact that
this ttme they did it all them-
selves; ·
"MoUt~r Earth'' is more
than a first rate rock musi-
cal, expertly stru ctured and
professionally executed, a
treat for the· eye as well as
the ,ear. It also is the perfect
an!W~r to those '."ho \\'OU.id
cons1gn lhe presenting of mes-
sages to Western Union.
The subject is ecolog.y-air
and water pollution, overpopu-
lation. the advances of modern
teclmology on the stepping
stones of environmental beauty
and the apathy of the Ameri-
can public which only recent-
ly has become significantly
aroused. Wilh each haunting
ballad, farcical skit or smoot h-
ly staged p i e c e of choreo-
graphy comes the prickly re-
minder that all is not well on
the face of our earth.
Ron Thronson, who con-
ceived, wrote and directed
the show, deserves U1e 1nost
resounding of kudos for his
highly professional treatment
of what cou ld have been an
uncomfortably preachy even-
ing. Thronson's script. v.·hilc
occasionally offbeat, is near-
ly always on ta r get; his
blackout gag scenes are per-
formed with polished comic
thrust; his direction is fluid .
and his cast superb ly discip-
lined.
Musically, the show is noth·
ing less than exciting. and !he
credit for establishing and
maintaining a top-notch tern-
po goes to Toni Shearer who
penned the music and also
takes a featured role hl the
proclucUon wbere her sing-
ing and acling lalenL!i burst
into full bloom. As If thal
weren't enough, she al.so oc-
casionally doubles on piano,
sharing the keyboard duties
with James dePriest.
A third, and very loud, hur-
rah is in order for Kenneth
Shearer whose diverse talents
of photography and jau
drumming are given (ree rein
in "Mother Earth." Shearer
shot hundreds of slides to
form the cinematic back-
ground for the show, and he
augments his own effec ts
v.·ith some tenacioU! lapping
on the skins; his drum solo
in a sec ond act number,
"Taking the Easy Way Out,"
drew the longest and loud-
est applause of the night, al-
most delaying the start of the
next scene.
The choreography, by f\1atti
Lascoe. is equally well done,
with the aforementioned num-
ber and the pulsaling ensem-
hle seq uence "Look Out or
Your Window" among the
most visually memorable. A
popi.:lar piece of soft shoe
work, electrically paced, is
"Humanity is My Name," a
slraw hat and cane routine
which crops up lour limes
during the evening.
It ..-.·ould almost be enough
if the mus i c and dancing
carried the show, but Thron-
son's script is strong and
pungent, ferreting out envir-
orunental plunderers and off-
ering some effective, if out-
landish. solutions to the ecolo-
gical ills. The brevity of the
sketches allows a continua l
barrage on an assortme nt of
related topics.
ln one scene, the president
of General Motors roughs to
death while delivering a re-
port to his stockholders ;
Superman comes to grips
wllh LoU1ar 1:111d Is zonked
by a dose of. Los Angeles
smog; Flash Gordon returns
to earth after many )'ears
and sees the brown haie over
the cily as the coup de grace
of Ming the Merciless: . a
television ''killathon'' solicits
volunteers to help stamp out
overpoulation: a p I as i. i c,
talking redwood lree eulo-
gizes her departed brethren.
and a fa shion show trots oul
the latest look in gas masks.
Amoog the individual musi-
cal '1.ighli ghts of the show are
Miss Shearer's rendition of
her own "How lo Save the
World": Saundra Mathews·
Deacon's throating appeal ,
"God Will Take Care of Us
All '': Sandy Marino and
Elaine Bankston teaming up
on "Wbo Cares ir the Earth
is Round," and Miss Bank-
slon's poignant solo, "Save
the World for the Children."
More memorable comic seg-
ments include Michael Doug-
lass as a consumptive astro-
naut coughing his way through
the well know gasoline con1-
mecial; James dePriest as a
population policeman offer-
ing a sure fire way to keep
procreation down, and f\1iss
Bankston as a victim or ra-
dioactivity who makes the
best of her situation.
Unlike the ordina ry origi-
nal revue, "Mother Earth''
is almost totally devoid of
the unevenness that general-
ly marks such an untried
effort. It is crisp and sharp
on all counts, complemented
by a fine, futuristic looking
set and attractive mood
lighting.
This is a production that I
deserves widespread atten-
tion, for in attacking the
Cleniente
Casi Set
For 'Girl'
A new play and a new direc-
lor will make the i r
simultaneous debuts at the
San CI cm c n t c Com munity
Theater this month when the
CabrHlo Playhouse presenLs
"'Everybody 's Girl."
The comedy by J o h n
Patrick, author of "Teahouse
or the Augusl Moon" and
"Everybody Loves Opal." lells
of a good hearted but un-
conventional woman who i3
pressured into competing for
the •·n1other of the ye ar ..
award.
Joanne Applegett , a
longtime backstage worker
\\'ilh the San Clemente group.
lakes her first directorial
assignment. Doris Oonka will
play I.he central role of
Beatrice Bundy, with Jan
Wentz and Gene Applegfl1 t
cast in featured assignments.
The B u n fl y children -
Washington. Lincoln. Grant,
Jefferson and Jackson -will
be pla ye d by John Rell. Sam
Besse. Mark Manning. Ron
Polazek and Eric Suitter.
while Dave Cox and Paul
Steele round out the cast.
"Everybody's Girl" will be.
staged Thursdays t h r o u g h
Saturdays, opening Fch. 21 for
three weekends, at th e
Cabrillo Playhouse. 2 O 2
Aveniri1:1 Cabrillo , San
Clemente. Advance ti ck e t
sales are being handled al
492-0465.
J oanna Role
HOLLY\VOOD (UPI)
Joanna Shimkus. having com-
pleted "The Virgin and the
Gypsy," will star 1in ''A Room
in Paris'' which Mel Ferrer
will produce.
r.fl1irties Linked to Today evils of a ravaged environ-OPEN
ment "Mother Earth" em-':4S
NET to Study Turbulent Dec ade Ut New Series "' r. ••'"-erges as a superb piece of hlltM ~rniniul•
enlertainment, worthy of pro-j,'---------===
duction in the professional
theaters of Los Angeles or
New York. It cont i 11 u e s
through Feb. 13 -but merits
a far longer run -at the
Third Step Theater. 1827 New-
port Blvd., Costa f\.1esa.
eNOW-Ends Tuesday•
WE ARE PROUD TO USHER IN
THE NEW YEAl WITH THIS
GlEJ.T FlLM-
By ,JERRY BUCK
NEW YORK IAP) -With
the 1900s a generation behind,
that· ·turbulent decade is com·
ing under scrutiny by the prn-
ducers of books. records.
movies and television.
What begao as camp and
nostalgia and campus venera-
tion of 1uch anlihef'oes a.1
Humphrey Bogart is turning
into a search by many young
people ror a contemporary
relevan~.to the period.
"I think the underlying in-
terest Jn the '30s now is a
fear that· we are going into
another depression. A fear
that we fre1 .• going to drop
off into · SP*'·" said Jae . '
Venza, exeCulive producer of
"The Thirties." a six-part ex-
amination by National Educa-
tional Television of the
dramatic literatu re a n d
movies of the time.
''A lot or people have lost
the ir jobs and a lot of in·
tellectually prepared young
people are for the first time
facing the apple-stand-on-the·
street thing. It is 11 fear, not
reality, bul people are wor-
ried."
Venza said, ''The key to
il is not a bunch of old people
turned on by no!talgia . What
interests me is that irs the
young people who are buying
the books and the records and
going to the old films.
"For our segments on the
Hollywood [ilm I sent the two
youngest people on ou r staff
to Hollywood. I thought this
was the way to go about ii.
lo make sure it wasn't a
memory Jane piece .. ,
The series, which is a part
of "NET Playhouse" and will
be seen on public televisloo
stations. opens Thursday, Jan.
28, v.-ith Arthur Miller's stark
portrait or blue collar life in
the '30s, "A f\1eruory of Two
Mondays.·· The cast is headed
by Jack Warden and Estelle
Parsons, who won a n
Academy Award for "Bonnie
and Clyde:·
The next segn1ent is ''Movie
Crazy" and is a blend of In·
terv.iews with excerpts from
such films as "Little Caesar,"
"Confessions of a Nazi Spy,"
..Public Enemy," "I Am aJriiii~~~~~~~~~ll Fugitive From a Chain Gang,"1 1
"Captain Blood." "Charge of
the Light Brigade," "Jezebel,"
.. Cabin in the Cotton" and
"Gold Diggers of 1933."
Interviewed on the show will
be Edward G. Robinson , Pat
O'Brien, Olivia deHavilland,
.Joan Blondell. d i re cto r s
William Wellman an4 fo..1ervyn
LeRoy. producer llal Wallis
and screenwriters D a 1 ton
Trumbo and John Brighl.
Frost Sets Tribute
The following Thursday it
\1•ill be "Hard Travelin'" by
f\1illard Lampell , a series of
acid-toned vignettes about the
exploiters and the exploi ted
or the depression. Ralph
The final segments will be
a two-part dramatizatkln of
Clifford Odet s ' "Paradise
Lost." on Feb. 25 and March
~-Eli Wallach and Jo Van
Fleet star in this drama of
the deterioration of family and
urban life.
.
i\leeker stars. To Rodg ers Tonight
Next. on Feb. !I, will be
ments that Hart \\'as a "fun-a 1930s movie that has yet
loving, regular fella' " and to be selected , but probably
Hammerstein "a more will be one of the socially
Richard Rodger s, the com-
poser of such all-time musical.
comedy successes as "Pal
Joey," ''Oklahoma ,''
"Carousel." "The King and 1, ..
"South Pacific.'' and "The
Sound of fo..lusic" will be
saluted on the David Frost
Show lonight 11, on Channel
JI at8:30p.m.
Poll Leaders
serious. sentimental man." oriented films from Warner HOLLY\VOOO (UPI)
He adds that his scores with Bros . ~1arlo Thomas and John
each are very di I f ere n I , Venza said . "I think whal \V ayne have been voted the
because \1•hile working with young people are finding Favorite Stars of 1969-70 in
Hart. he wrote the music firs! surprising is that Hollywood a poll of reader~ by Photoplay
"'A SALUTE TO A REIEL!"
2o.. e.~ ............. -
t• A't"l'() N
SHOWN 1:40 ONLY
AlSO-IOHUS FEATURI
She-7:00 Onl.,
Performing R fl d g e r s '
mclodles for this full sho w
tribute will be opera star Ned-
da Cassei and singers Felicia
Sanders, John Raitt 11 n d
\Valier Willison. who i ~
featured in Rodgers' current
Broadway show , "Two By
Two."
and \'lith Hammerstein the attempted socia l Ulms. They "i':m:e~g:•':':"':·_.ioii ______ ~::::::..:;~iiii creative process v.·as reversed. may have failed. but they II
Highlighting the show are lried They're finding i l NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES performance'S of R o d g er'~ surprising . loo. lhal radicals
music by Prosl 's other guests, had an audience in the '30s.
accompanied by Billy Taylor Young people think it's their
and the Frost Show Orchestra. own thing and didn 't exist
Noting in his conversation
with frost that he had the
good fortune lo learn \•dth
two of the theater's finest
lyricists. Lorenz (Larry) Hart
and 09car Hammer!lein II .
Rodgers comparea their work·
ing habit& and sty!~. He com-
2/Jdo
...._·IMCW-et .... _
.. ~ ll~· l•lo -O.. M J5•
before." Among the numbers, Ra itt -,------,~==-c-==-:~ll does a medley f r o m
"Oklahomh" and "If 1 Loved
You .. ("Carousel"): Miss San-
ders sings "This Nearly Was
Mine" ("South Pacific") and
''Bewitched. Bothered a nd
Bewildered" t"Pal J oey"):
~tiss Cassei sings .. You'll
·Never Walk Al one''
l"Carousel''l and "Something
Wonderful" ("'The King and
r·); and •Willison does "t Do
Not Knaor A Day I Did Not
Love You" ("Two by Two'').
In add.iUon, Rodgers' wife
Dorothy, seated in the tw·
dience, talks with David GD
the subject of loYe.
"M-A-5-H" 11 the
best American
war comedy
sine• sound
lnl"
An
logo Preminger
Production
....JD1 ·-IJ OELuxt'
_ ~ a. P1!'13\'fsforl•
-ALSO PLAYING--
The story of 11 beautif°' g1d 's Wetime
between the ages ol 19 •nd 22.
PWlONAL "CfNCIM. l'!CrutU ,._...
Mi98u.aa.,,,_..
~·G Ate.
/, -
·AIRPORT.
. -), ' • BURT ' DEAll i WICASTtR • IAITll
~WSEBERG
, .W:QUEUllE llSSET · . ' an m11mY ··
IELEll llYES
II llM'f[""" l'ICTUllC
'o:HfnCOl..Olt•
,.,_..."' lOOO .o•
~-===C»
ALSO
"Anne
of the
! Thousand
Days"
1forri11'
RIC HARD IU llTON
GENEIEl l IUJOLD
lllENE PAPAS
Set. & S1111. o,.,. 12:45
Frft P•r•l11t
"Artnt" ~1 l1 ... 6;to.ll141
.. AlrpOrt" •' ~, ... I :•
I
I
l
M"'6q, ...... ,, II, 1971
Everyone Ha•
Something lhot
Someone Else Wonts
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
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You Can Sell It,
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With a Want Ad
,
,~[ _ .... _ .. _ .. _ .. _. ~I ~ I ...... , .... l~I ............ 1~1--I~ _,,,_ I~ I ,.,..,__
:l629 Harbor, C.f\L
546-8640
SELLING?
Wr arr so busy 11·e nrf'd
n1orc hC>uSf'S. \VC' 11·ill
pay you lull mark(·t val-
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-no i;::immi1·ks -no
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GET
Me•a Verde
Excellence
r:edecorn!<' lhfs 2800 sq.
ft. 2 1>tory nrcstii;r ho111r
11nd sav<•! l t has R llcau-
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ishly landsrar11.•d. All 5
bt't'lrooms are ov('rsizc
plus it fl'aturcs a formal
dining room -luxuri-
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a sidf! by sid(' refrii;.-
frcczcr -3 queen size
baths -Lorated in thf>
most exclusive ar<'a of
Costa ~1C'Sa ~ MC'sa Verde
carriage Estates ~ on
sale for $54.9~. See it!
ACTION
Here It Is!
4 Bedrms. Sl75 per
mo. PAYS ALL
Located in onC' of Cn~ta
il1csa·s bes t a rf'as, !his
hon1e has it all, 2 i;;ood
sized baths. huilt-in
kltrl)l'n, double i::aragc,
forcrd ah· heal, massive
brick firrplace & sub-
jrct lo f':-C isllni; 6 <;;, an-
nual rale VA loan Pay.
ments \\jJI b1' ~175.00
mo. tolal! -1-Jurry on
this one:
FASTER
$150.00 DOWN
4 Bedrm, 2 Bath
General
*
lttook us5year5
to undo an i~our
industry had worked on for
300years.
Down through !he years, !he sharpies in the rand investmenl industry were actually few in
number. Bur. oh my, how people remember them.
We're in land Investment, 100. tn a big way. Our company is the fastest g rowing land inves-
tor in the west; a rnu1t1-m1!lion dollar. 11ve year old publicly held corporation, In that short time
Gen•raJ
* * * * TAYLOR CO.
BUY OF THE CENTURY!
we've done our best to live down the repulation
ot thal tiny· band of forbears.
One way of doing it was with the men we hired
10 represent us. They had 10 understand the
responsihility that comes with being a land
invezlment counselor. They learned that they
were counted on to advise prospecls on what to
buy. And what not to buy. ·rhe men who were
just out to sell some acreage didn't last very long.
Right now we're looking for more men of the
same caliber of those we kept. Land invesiment
Is truty blossoming and we need bright, willing
people lo work with us.
How about you? Would you be interested Jn
launching a new career? II doesn't mallet what
you now do. If we think you're good, we'll !rain
you. And if you are good you can live the kind of
li1e that you might be dreaming about Give us a
calt, then drop in for a visll. You'll get an idea
what image is all about
*
~l~'--
Loa Anoeln ArM: 213/986·1770 end 872-3620.
S•lll.I An•: 714/635-3233. SKr•flMfllo: 916/481-3890. S•n Dl•90: 71 4/279-8550. S•n JOM: 408/241-4745.
General General
THE CIRCULAR
DRIVE
Custom-built 5 bdrm. 41h. bath, l ge fa111rly
home w/VIE\V from Santa Ana lo lhe ocean!
A ll huge rooms, elegant master ste, big
closets-even a clothes chute. Top locati1;1n
Leri.ds to the dramatic entry
or ihis Baycrest Estate. !\.las.
11ive fieldstone fireplace.
\l'ann use of v.'OOds, custom
carpets. Vl'ry functional
floo111lan, featuring lorm11.I
dining roon1, l bedroom.!!
and 2 baths. pwnrr 1rans-
fe1TPd . Vacant. S;)7,;,oo. May
v.·e show you today? w/beach privilege. A steal at ....... S99,m
ofinJa J,,/e AS$UMAILE 11
LOAN
Cull to lhls S23.500 • 61,1%
nlA Mn wtll put )'Oil Into
thil tOvely ho~ for a total
monthly payment cl only
$119. 3 bt!droom1, 2 bathJ,
laJ'le 21x21 beautifully fin.
I.shed bonus room, Many at·
tractive f'atures for pat
family li1dng. Call for In-
spection 546-2313.
MUST SELL 3 br, 1 ba.
I: 1 br, l 'bs. du~x. 45'
lot. Pvt pty. 6~724 or
67>-0972.
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 2 BR, view, neu Uttle
Corona . Must .1eU. Owner.
61>3428. 52 Linda Isl• Dr.
2' Lind• Isle Driv• Costa Mes• Decorator furnished. 5 Br. 5 bath home lac·
ing Harbor I sland. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready
!or inuned. occupancy. W/dock $200,000 FIXER UPPER
For complete lnformetion on
all hom•• & lots, please call: 0 T HE REAL
\'."\.. E:STATERS
S1art the ~ar rlgh1 with •
bargain, llU'ieat modrl In
Colll'le Parle area, Co~r
lo!, room for boat and carnp-
Pr. 3 Big, big bedrootm,
famUy room, dble lireplace,
ahake root. Nttda 1oving
care, hurry, brU.-)'Our off,
'n! Call 50-1151 .
BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR
833 Dov•r Dr., Suite 3, N.B. '42-U20 -DOWN,
4 BIG BEDROOMS
Start the New Year oU In
your own 4 bedroom beauty
with large family room, elec
bltns, and &.II the yard your
kids can use. Walk to i;chool
or Soultt Coast Plaza. for
shopping-. ksume 61~% an-
oual percentage n.le loan
and hav, total pa.yment or
only $183! ! $26,950 Take1 it!
co: Ts
WALLACE
REALTORS
_ _,.54,., .. 4141-
( 01>9:n Evenint•J
•OAT LOVERS
WATERFRONT
BARGAIN
Live at one of the fioe11t m11.-
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room unit whh deluxe built.
ins. Dining room, Firt'plaet:.
Privale lanai ov,rlooking
your 01\·n boat dock. Living
is good at Huntington Ma.
rina. Priced to sell now!
$48,500. Dial 962.5585
FOREST E. OLSON
NO GIMMICKS
will move ~u into )'OUt own
4 bed channer and pay-
ments like ttnL Take ad-
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~r~;, ~~I~:;~:;;;; Walk~~,.~ Lee 1 ~:::;;:;;;'';';";';";~!
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peting, Close to 1hopplng ._ with a yard big enough for ~ U •"n "ard schools, rnA ·VA terms. your own garden, Room for I'
Great 1tarter hoow. Just ,xpanaion too! Freshly paint-llALTY
reduct"d for quick sale to l'd eKl,rior I ltwner Mil lhtc• 1MI
$21,100. Bett'r aee to ap. paint inside. Almost new DMwritewn Cwa r.t..
preciate. Cali (TI4l 962-SS85 ahag carpeting &: kitchen H!!','....642_2991 FOREST E. OLSON """"· Vaoanl k <M .. , -v~
Inc. Realtors
19131 Brookttunt Ave.
Huntington Beactt
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
HOSPITALITY
Rooms galo~ in this home
with a sp.arkllng pool, 5
bedrooms, family r00m wllh
lireplaee and barbeque, De.
Jux kitchen with built.In
tn?rzer, refrigerator and
blender, Lanai with wet-bar.
See tl'lj9 interesttri:g home.
AU for $39.!ICJO... PhOn'
646-TITI
quick poueuiori. $23,950. List with C.Q. Bl.I.)' from C.Q.
ASK FOR ANN . COATS. GOOD 5 BR Me on Lon-
.Arent 675-4930. donbeny In No. C . M .
$24,750 ""'"m' <Xiottng FHA loao
of approx ~.150 w/lnterest
4 BEDROOMS ,, only 8%. 12500 down
POOi slttd deep yard • neatly paymnt. Chu. c. Martin
manicured. Built-in fe~ RJtr. s.tS.ll95
lnclut'llng dishwasher. Plush I =========='I
c11.rpetlng + drapes. Owntt Dov•r Sh,,res
desperate. will Ae!l with
1,ase option to buy • $500
down. ~1720
TARBELL 2955 H1rbor
REDUCED $1500
Priced at VA apprais&.l of
$33.000. Terrific, bl,g 4 bed-
room, 2 bath home, 2 patios,
\l.'alk-in closets, beautiful
carpets and drapes. Stt TQ.
DAY • VA or rHA is 0.K.!
SELL OR TRADE
BAYCREST -$73,500
You'U love this one. so bring your check
book. J~agine ! 5 ,Bdrms, formal DR & en·
closed pool. Like new thruout !
NO MONEY DOWN
No rmal cln~ing cosrs of ap.
PI O.~. $150. 11·il! n)OVe you
in 1his spacious corner Jot
location. Neat • well kept
1"'0 bedrooin home w i f h
large living room. artractive
k1rch('n v.ith dining CQuntl'r
and coey concrete enclosed
pauo. Detached Dbl. garage
. plenly of room for boat or
traller storag!', or build !WO
,·ADDJTIONAL UNITS. An
Excellent buy at only $2:l ,000
11'ith low !-'"HA PAYMENTS.
I nc. Realtors
19131 Brookhurst A\'e.
Colesworthy H:~::;" v7::
'O THI: REAi, 1'."\,, f.STATERS
$26,500
Walker & Lee
Realtors
BY OWNER
DOVER SHOR~ t-UNOB.
STRUCTED VIEW * Spac-
ious 8 rooms + aervice
porch + pantry. (4 BR-3%
BA). 2 ltlJlcs, wet ba., all
fonnica (ca.rpeted) kitchen.
WiU trade down l BR &: den
In $70,000 range. or aubmit
for inoome property_ cau 642-9915 for mowtna.
Located on Polaris Drlv.
HOMES & Co. 5 BEDROOMS
_ 2(M.3 Westditf Drive
M&-m.t Open 'ti! 9:00 PM
Priced to sell $98,000
fiealtor Be the first to see 1his tie·
Ne"'J>Ort Bl"arh Office g1tnt, split Jrvel home dl'-
''Our 25th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO,, Rtoltors $27,500
l ---'°";-•Ba=y•''~'~·~D_,_. __ 1 signed for luxurious family
5 HOUSES ll ~og. """ f•m. ,m., w/
P Ju s 11nr mal closing
costs -Hurry ,,n this 2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road
ont', it "'nn't last -It NEWPORT CENTER .644-4910
2 On Tht Lot. 2 Bedroom
}louse k 1 Berlroom Garage
Apt. on large F..1tdl' lot. Try
lit% clowo.
3 BO.+ DEN
Prime area. 3 twin sized PLAYHOUSE A: play yard
be<!rooms, convertible den, tor children, lge lot, 2 blks
huat flreplac~, doublf! pa. to new llC'hool In fall, 3
tio with brick BBQ, rear br, tam, rm, custom decor
livlna: room. No down terms. A: la.nd&eap il:W'. Open house
54G-17'l0 Sat &. sun, 1 to s. U'780
TARBELL 2955 H•rbor ~St., F.V. 962-5101 .
hns double J.?llraJ;!" -* * * * * * brick firrplacP, nr"·ly 11,============-====="='===='-painl<'d inside--carpet
REDUCED $1300
NOW $21,700
throuµhnut. This is a Gen•r•I
must see, call nQ\v 11----------• What a great bargain. Add
YOUR DOLLARS very Ji!Ue rlown for a double
bargain. Spotless 3 Bed-SAFS' HERE roon1s, !iparkling koppe.r
\l'hilc you efljoy every rom-ketllc k itchen_ Large living FROM
3 Bedrm, 2 Bath
Sl63 Mo. Total Pmt.
Take over subjf'C! In t''.'IC·
islini:: 6* 7t. annual r;
ralf" loan -l.ncatrd in
brst Costa ~·l r-sa arC'a.
o~·n!"r an.xinus. Can e n
no do1\·n VA or f'HA.
call about this one.
FARROW
A lot of House
For $23,000
You ~1·1 ~\ spa<•1t1us brod -
rooms, 2 lmt\1.~. buill-in
kitchen. for(•f'd air hrnl-
in(::. beautiful patio,
\l.'a\k-in f.l{lnlry, total
pmt. ,,,111 be ~138.IXI rrr
mo. s \1hjec;t tn r11istin~
FHA IMn of 5\1. '1-0 an-
nual ralc.
REALTORS
Big Play Room
$2 .. 600
This J tx-droom 2 t>ath
home fratulT's a hui.:e
20x20 ru1npus room rra-
dy for pool tab1r or
\l.'hR.t ('V('r-J:O no dnv.:n
VA or !? Owner anxious.
.loin the now rompany.
\V" arr busy and \VE
N r. ED SALF:SJ\.1f.N.
Wf're on the. mnvr wi th ~tler idt:81' lo help you
make morr. mon('y In
1971. Ti·nining -mgmt.
oprortunity -counl y v.·lde orgllilizt1.tlon hi~h 11.dvcrt. budget For
lntenilcw NOW!
2626 Harbor Blvd.
540-8640
OPEN EYES.
11U 8:30
2629 lJ11.rbor, C.M.
'
BAYCREST
JUST REDUCED
$8000
An ideal home only two yr11r:s
nrw ""i!h 4 lx>drooms. for•
n1al dining room, fa n11 ly
room, a kitchen to delight
1he gourmet cook. an incon1·
parable master suile and 11.
Sl'Cluded study for the ('X·
ecutive or profesi;ional man
who needs e. private offil.'e
at home PLUS a pool and
low maintenance yard com-
h1nr rn n1akr this the pe.r-
fcct plac(' for thr fa mily
the.1 lo1·cs rr. C'nrcrta1n.
AND
Thr o~·ner "ill mn~idrr an
rxch11 11,t:r for Eastblulf or
lhc Bluff.~.
Now Only $!!~.:.no
1424 LINCOLN L"l,
OPF:N HOUSF:
.SUN DAY 2-~1
CALL li73-l!.°t.'i0 ,
IO THE Rt::AL
\'."\,, ESTATERS
room with while brick fire. fnrt anrl a:inveniPnCC', Cus.
tom :t hedroom plu.~ family placl". Quiet nei ghborhood.
rooni. 2•., baths, e.'it ra large Latge tree lined grounds. All
w vererl patio overlooks types flnanci ng available.
heated fiWrrl"d secluilcrl pool Excellent starter home. Bel·
trr hurry. a~a. F:}lfras 1n(·lurle 1<1vrly
sl onr fu1'plaCf', "·alk in rln~. 645-0303
rts, ~pr1nklt'r!I, ou1<1oor l1ghL FOREST E. OLSON
ing, ('Onl"l'C'IC' d 1 l\'f'l1ay, rlrl'-
tric ,l..'a ragr orwnrr. r 'ipan. REALTORS
s!on fc1r urr anrl 1hr Nc1v. 2299 HARBOR
por1 Bl'Rt'h 11r1chho rhooct Is
so a rr1·i i·11vr llnrl slab)(' [,('! COSTA MESA
11~ shti1\· this nnr to you. I --~-------
14.I,""°, Coll &1&7171 HERE"S A DANDY
A rharm111g 2 Brdrnom and
rl cn danrly only 12 monlh11
11r>w with hC'tiutlful cusrom
-o'=c'0'"'='7'0'="'===''='='= I dr;tpc11_ !usurious carp!'ting
3 BEDRM BEACH .!Ind al] sorts of top grade
impro,.meol,, ENJOY Tl<E
$19,950 BF.:NEFITS of a. new hln1e
FANTASTIC ~·ithou~r1~ d~"';.~t.ages.
\Ve 11.lmru;t didn't believe it 2000 PORT PROVENCE
ourselves: Only Ii yrani /'.'EWPORT BEAOI
youn,i: allCI loadl'd wlrh S42,9Jt) INCLUDING
cha.Mn. 3 large ~dronms, 2 11iE LAND
EASTS I DE BAR.GAIN baths. All latcm dt'luxe built, Phone 673-8a50
'OTHE REAL
'."\,, ESTATERS ' .
t'rcshly pain!ed, re:iwoort sld· ins. Beautiful patio. Pro-
ing, rambling ihake roof (essk>nally Jand3c11.pcd , $166
home, )OCAt~ nr8r M:hool& mn. pey11 all. fantastic year
and shopping. l).rec bednn, end bargllin. Don't delay!
f\1.•o bath oornt' with BIN Ca.ll now !'.162-558..1 l -=;c"o"L°'D~H"A~N"o"s°'?o==
,;,, o;,;, ..... ""' 1'"'' FOREST E. OLSON WARM HOME I
ttar family rfll, wilh used And walling for )'OQI' family
brick fireplac*,. Fully car. Jnc. RealtDa lo cheer it up, 4 1paclou1
peled &nd dr~ ·com plete-19131 Brookhtll'11t Ave bedroom"'. FIREPLACE and
ly fenced, 'lell Jandscaf)Cd Hllntington Beach • room 10 run. M low as $800
yards. VAcJ.NT · IMMEDf· 1::;::::::::::1 to!aJ down, $24,000 TOTAL.
ATE 'POSSESSION. Priced I w lk & l *E~s.a: J2S,CKX> FHA-VA lt1fflf11f\tfftJlilll 8 er ee
mLW
Eveninp CaU ~9
REPOSSESSIONS
Spuidina Cll!an. bOmts. .ome
......,. pOjnl<d • '*"""'· " 3; 4 6 5 bdrms. Sotne with
poolt, FJIA-VA conv. terms,
from $17.000 to $40,000,
Colli1111 • Watta lnc.
88C3 Adama Avf!. 962-M23
l!Ol\fE v.·Uh lfl<'.OO')f. Xlnt
£a1t1id' loc. Walk to shops.
F'ortln Co. 64.2-SOOO
Realty ~pany Reatton
NEW 7682 F.dinger
IN CAMEO SHORES '1141 84.....,; "' 54<J.5140
Warm 11unMilnl': ponll'lde and
e Ol,taHna 'View will be yolll'I
tn lhl1 charming 4 bedroom
ho~ In an excellent loca·
Uon, $82,600.
1NCOMEI
2 Fu het'I bachelor __:;.nit1
ck)se beach I: 1bOl'Pin1.
111.oool Geor • Williamson
eeltor
67J...4 '45-1564 Eves.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
2 Homf!1 On A Comt'.r Lot
A Good Investment At
$29,750
Roy McC•rdlti Re•ltor
l8Ul Newpon Blvd .• C.M • -7729
BEACH SPECIAL
4 B<lnns. 2 baths. Xlnt cond,
Stl'Pti to oc:l'!an, Only S3a,1l5o
• Te.rm~.
CAYWOOD REAL TY
6306 W. COUt Hwy., NB
-12'0
On liil'<30-1 101. Ealil5ide CM
a rea, Good money.n1aker11.
Income of $820 mo. Asking
$69.900.
11 UNITS
2nd {rplc, Bi t-ins, 3 ba.,
beaut. \\'ailed garden. $57,500 --N•wport
Coldwell.Bmiklr"
~
644-2430
et
Fairview
646-llll
(anytime) Near Bl'ach. Escellcn! yl'!llJ' IJJ..0700
around income of $1.J70 mo.
Nn vacancies. 14 pragl's. l'"""'!!!!!B!"!L!'U~F:'!F!'!S!'"'""'" I •!!!!!..,~!'"'!!!!~~...., SJ35.ooo. -GI or FHA
CALL G> ...... ,. BAY VIEW TERM>-Aa.,... If you · want Jiving l enrer· \\'ith some tixln' up • this 71: EAL TY Ul.ining space rather than could be the best buy
f'/t•r Nt•p•rl P••t Offlrt sleeping spacl', check in!o d 4 hed 2 ba
BAYCREST 4 BR
Great t'amily Home w/huge
~eparatt'd fan1 ily room &
frplc. Large pool sized y81'd.
Xln'I linanc:ing & owner v.'ill
tradt'.
675-3000
' m11.u · A 111:.\fll
llEU:I'\' IXI'. I
£~T 1t1'1 ~1~ Joro 1
'h'. roomy 2 n-•room l•m 11.roun . rm11 . ths, I D<:U ' •
'
·ly room fwith w<t •-·I coiy brk. firepler" . double '"'' car gaJ·agt' • fenced hllck homf'. In addition 2,,, l'aths. yard • slab pallo • owner
beAutifuJ f"asy care kitchen leaving area • $2.4,000. anx.
and a terTific bay .11nd green-ious. Phone 646-7171 bf-It view. Son'U'lhing spec.
ial fnr only $51,500. Phone
613..S:iSO.
O THE REAL
··'.' ESTATERS
GOLFERS' SPECIAL
1-oTHEREAL ','."\.. ESTATERS
' ' ' '
Exciting large cLJstom Tri. ---------·I Level (3..100 1q, ft.) along
6 UNITS
$75,000 good spondeble
Ellclu1dve with us · Eastslde! !
2 BR, 1 BA each. Bltns,
~frig., crptg, df'l)I, fenced
w/complete privacy, separ.
ate patios. 2 Blocks to 17th
St. shopping. Pre&ellt. incomr
$850 per mo. but should be
railed. Good term•.
POOL HOME
PAJtADISE
17th fairway&. about 1 block
from pool, tennis k club·
house of T\!eu Verde COUn.
Yt'llr around tropical living try Club. Call for details.
can be youn at nil per mo. Rent1ls
In this adult occupied 3 Br 2 Bit F'urn
hideaway. Gas bbq for ~n-4 BR Mesa .Verd,
tertaining on the covered Pfl.· 4 -t· pool Eastslde
Ho, family room w/firepl8ce,
lonnal dining room &. hard·
wood noon. This ii tor real!
•
C~TS
WALL.AC!
REALTOU
• '62-4454 •
Open Evenings
MAKE YOUR
NEW YEAR'S
RESOLUTION
Lochenmyer
Cl n ii• .' r
ASSUMABLE l !
'""""""""""""""""""~lean for •" appolntrnerit kl tie ·this 1 bedroom Doll
Cash to' thlJ $23,500 • 6~%
rnA Joan will put you into
thla Jowly home ror a total
monthly p!lyment of Olli)'
, Ut9. l bedrooms; 1 be.thl,
larse 21x21 btaulltully fin-
t&lwd bMus room. Many at· MESA VERDE
POOL
' 'Hou11e plu:s rue•t apartment
on a' beaUtiful Jt.2 Lot In
Here•s a beauty . 3 bed1oom•,
2 batht ud family room
hmne wtth a •rldlnr Mat-
ed al:ld tutered' pool for tan
Corona del Mat. Only $32, 1~ ·
wlth axceUcnt terms. 673-8560 .. ' ¥ •
q 'l'l!'t' 'or.·' ' I . ' ~ • ' , .: , I',~~ I t. l ;
atu.rt!s for IJ"l!at
' . Call for In·
'313.
'"""•· Qu i.t .,,..,.......,.. ' ~ • 11~· t I STORY within wt.lldnr diaiance to • .. ..
,,_;.,._ M"'h mo,. to ,.. CU$TOM l'OUlll'L IX .' 4' Tl!AL
tor only $31.950. Cali naw aiok:re Niwport &ft'e, 3 BR Jtooln ·to MIO In this 1600 '14·
S46-2ll3 • 2 BR units. Ideal OWDtt .fl~ .c.&pe Old Cottage Mm
oocupled l tu shelM prop-Jow,.·low .$144 pmymenl• or
ert;y. $9,120 Income. $12,000 'ntA ...S VA Tuma avall-
Down, 175.000. • .... l'S,0001 ..=====i~"!.iiiiiR.-RON++-,r,;;""';;;;;m"".:-•.
2
-.-1!,..', Walker & Lee
You don't ·neid a gnn to Ebtllde1)oc:. Wallf kl 1hopl.
Draw Fut when )'O'.I pl&c9 Nr . ..achools. Fortin. Co.
an ad '1t ~ DAILY PJl.01! fG.50DO.
I
Jt.altorm
2790 Hattlor Blvd. at Adalu
~ ()ptn 1lil 9 PM
BRAND NEW
Pool, patio, view. 4 Bednns, Huntington Beadt
3 ha, wet ba.r, Jg din rm. lg F.H.A. ''12% LOAN kit w/ brklsl nook. paM!led
tarn rm in this 6cluslve S20,SOO PRICE
Dover Shores home. Roy J, TOTAL payment for this
Ward. Rltr. lCIJ3 Marine.rs !harp 3 bedrom home 11
Dr. 64&1 550, open daily. $116. Subject to FHA Loan
with 61~ annual percentage
SALESMEN rate. AU appliance• such as
We. "'have the tools, clO!!Pd cir. washer, dryer, refi'~rator
cul t TV, color d ide1, relirf • all a150 included. w H y
map. etc. RENT it you are! Submit
THE HOME SHOW your down payment • SELL.
"'Armchair Househunting'' ER ANXIOUS. ANYONE
35J5 E. Coasr Hwy., Cdfo.l QUALIFIES.
"s.1225 W I k & l """S""el.-1 .-, L.-.-.,.-./-,•p"°'tlon-I a er ee
4 BR., 2~ ba., frplc. 2 Dir Realtors
gar. 3 Yrs. old. 2200 Sq, f'I. 2790 Harbor Blvd . at Ailllml
A·l Cone!. Vacant quick pos-545-0465 Open 'tll 9 PM
se.,1. Call tode.y! 1-----------1
Call Parrick wood 54!>-2300 $ 4 Bedroom e Biii Hoven, Rltr.
2
2lll E. Co"< CdM 673-3211 Stratford
EASTSIDE TRl-PLEX
2 Br e11., lg patio, enc pr'11 fpl't. 15% yrly return in fn. yeal'I old. ha11
vestment. eV'ef)'thlnr! ! Only $5650
BROKER 646-1226 down to JllG. total G.1. pay·
GARAG~ for ttnt S20 mo. ntent. , MARINER REALTY
eq.5541
WALK TO BIACH
FOR Sale by owiwr. th I 1 AMUme 5"% Leen, 3 BR,
Wffk only ftduced $2000, 2 ea. hrwd an. trpk, eJtt
N'w p.lnt. Lovely prden, kit., II comer lot. Immedl·
Good cpts. 3 BR, 2 N.. ate pouessJon. ftu1ble
J'.R .. , Dbl frplc, Service term,.
pol'<h. Own<r wUi "n'Y 2nd BRASHIAR lll!AL TY
TD. Im med o cc u Pan I! Y . 1414581
m.ooo. 230< Falrnill Dr.1 --~v~A~C;.;AN'"=r~--1 -· . . A11umeS~%GIL-
C...... dol M<lr oo ' bedrm, 2 batto. ....,. \ story M&r Doualu Aero.
JUST RiDUCED "'"'" p1ani Excellent "'"'
Lovely 3 A. den' w/3 beth-dllk>n. Prnmt~..,. rooma. Only 1% b!ka. 10 the ments·only $191 Pl .. r.
OCH.II, Hdwd. flra., lath A L•rwln RHlty, I
p!uu,-w.U., lledu«d to ..,,_ o
$08,:tOtl. I 'P"RES'°""m=GE"""i.,.-v."",.'°'iao=-,.,....,.-,ll 2:_L•Enc,!_~HHI Is~~ o...... PDol I ,.11o, 4 U.
-• ........ t "'1-. """""' J•!IJA, famib', dlnl• imml!d. mmo occ. Ht wam.r A GftiUD. ·
' it'. dt ORCHID * "By -.·iMJOD PB4 ~" ·
I.Mil( 2 Bit. him1<, '"'°' "' -· loon. loll.fnl Dll'I/ •vtl'>'Wna. R-2 Let. Carp. _.. · ,,
" drli-s. FTplc. Nide pedo.
Qood JIT\'estnlient tit.. lotl
ol -' Uvliw. Onlr $31.!00.
r,IO~GAN RIAL TY
6n:6'42 . '7U4Jl
DIAL dlnd -a..p
""' Id. .... "' -..., lilltn to tbe pbc)M Ml!
I
ONLY ftS,ftll
01/l'HA TllMSI
Le ktt " t.m rm. ~·i JMt!
HAl'l'DAL RIAL TY
~
I
'I
'
DAil V P!LDT llOlldq, J...., 11, 1971
Classified INDEX' -Advertising . .
.____[ __ ,_ors.I•~!~ [ SIN~ •nd Repon 1[5J
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Ttlr/L.a ... Rt N lr
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Trff St ,..lct
TUltrfMI
U1i'le111trr
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l.___Em-ploymen___,t I [Il]
Jtb W111l1d, Mt le ............ ,70f
J .. Wt nltll, ll'trl'ltla ......... ,.711
Jobi Wtnttd, M & .. ,,.,,,,,.,,7M
.-1111 ... nted, M & " ........... 71'
'~--Fin•n-cial ~]~ .____I _M•rcha-ndlse__;ll§J
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•ulllltH OIMtlVnltv • ... .. 101
illlllnn1 W•ll!MI ........ ,,,, llt
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Ct"'""'l"lum• vnrur11 .......... ne
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t>u•~•H fl.lrn. , .•. Ml
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Apartmenl1 for Rent I• I
... ,._ lu•11. •• • ..... ,. JIO
A•t. VlllVrR. .. ........ lU A•"·• !urn.•..,..,,,._ .......... 11•
I'---_R•n_tals ~I~
11oomi 40f """" .. 90••• ................. '" H•l•li. Motob ................ , , •It
•-' ......,, ................ •1s s--.... , ... -····--······· 411 v.c1t1tn 11!111ltll ................ •u
Jltlllt lt .. ltwrr.. . ' .• ' "' .... ' .. •Jt $1rtttt for 111111 ............. 4H
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•1nr11t ........................ '11
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Huntington Beach
4 BEDROOMS
$22.500. $2,2:SO do"''TI to new
Joan, JMIYm~nts of $209 per
mo. pays au. Very clean
hOUAe W/nt:W erpb 6 drpa:.
Welk b> arade school, ~
blocks, Coverrd p.11tio, well
landscaped. Ideal home for
lOw payment.
I' Hz.4471 I ::l:_) 546-llOJ
EXEC Pool home lln l /.'I
a.t:1"\', by own('r, ti BR. rlin .
rm , rec rm. $45.900. 8-16-7~0.
L•guna Beach
HARD TO FIND
N•wport B•ach lndustrlal Proptrty 168 Bu1in•ss HouMs Furnished 300 HoUMt Unfurn.
Opportunity 200 1--'------.C..:.~ ·
305
BA_LBOA COVES l ~~------7J:C=•=•l=•~M=•=H=-----Costa Mesa WA WIU. build to 8ult • 8,00J
TERFRONT ~ fl , M-1. Protlu('lion AA.A 1 1----------1
Prime Joe. 3 BR. 2 ha. gingl~ Place, N.81 Owner 673-3315 Candy & Snack Supply 2 BR, 1~ BA. xtrfl storagf' CUTI!! «ollage, 2 bt'. frplc,
atory_ Ntwly decor. Fenced eve•. W E bl ' h Al garage W 1Bth CM $1~ fam rm l215 $250 Iw-n
Yd, Sltp for 30 ft. boat, Only '-==========I • sta 11 I Rout•t &ti-3161 . . Avail 1/..,;.._ 640:3645 . $79500 1" (NO SELi.ING JNVOLVEDl l-:m:o:. ======= '" · Biii G Lota for Sal• 170 CASH REQUIRED 1~ LA.RG E clean 2 BR . Crpts,
rundy, R••ltor Plan one ............ S!l75.00 l~una B•ach drps, g<1ragf'. $t35. Bab}'
833 Dover Dr., N.B, 642-462() OK. Refi;, 1945 Pomon11.
B OCEAN front to Coast Hwy Plan two ............ Slli25.00 est Buy Beach Area R-3 property, ... ,. •. 12,00J Pion threo .......... IJ>SO.OO RENTALS 3 "'· ' ha bltn """" •
gq_ 1t. Xlnt buslne111 or hon1e Excellent income for a few 1. Cha.rm. old rt'dwd. house oven, fi repla{.:e, cpts &
3 Bedrn1 , newly decorated.
5300 River
Open llouse Sat & Sun 1.s.
JEAN SMITH, RL TR
400 E. 171h S t., C,\I &lG-3255'
.FOR SALE BY O~VNER
possibility. So. 1..a&:una. hours-,,·cekly \.\'Ork. (Oay1 at Victoria Beach. Ocean vu drps. $26.5. 54&-!i793.
$UO,OOO. (213) 244-1197, & Evenings). Relillin1 and & path lead 10 beaeh, Com-3 br house-Newly earprted,
t.-ollect1ng rnoney from C'Oin pletely furnished. l''irpp!ll.re. Stove. $175, 2 children ok.
operated dispenseri within Pegged floor. Lease $275 r>lo. 6-12-0857. PR.NATE P arty w\shes to
11ell large Emerald Bay
view lot. 494-9968. a qualified atta, \Handles 2. 2 bdrm. hirnished apt, at =-:-'-'-"~------
name br<ind candy and Woods Cove. 150 yds. lo $l!fi · 2 RR. 1 BA. F'f'n<'N!
snacks}. ,f or penonaJ in· beach, Lge_ 1ri:e shaded pa. )':trd. 2171 Rural PlaCf', C:\f.
tervlew send name, address tlo. Lear.e $165 ~In, 67."r"I092 11.ft 5 pm . 5 bedroon1s 01· ? 3 baths
functional ix'ach home. Pvt.
con1munity, $57,000 By appt.
Jn one of Laguna's be tter only 64Z-7781; 675-8680.
attas • th!a fanuly 11omc. in I ==00:=~~=~~:'::::=, I
mint condition has 3 large Newport Heights
bf'drooma, 2 baths, large
25 ACRES
Mobile Home Park;
anti phone nun1ber to Multi-3. Lge. older 2 bdrm., un. 3 Br, fncd yd, i::ar, nr schls,
S!ate Distributing, Inc., 1681 turn. unit, close to do1vn. oo 1)£'15. 1!188 Pomona.
West Broodv.•ay, Anaheim, town. Firepl11cc>, w/w 1·ar-!:>-llJ-!lOOL
Ca. 92802, 4714) 718-5060. pl'tS, Juts of IVOOd paneJ 111g, .\ fc,,-.-, -,X'-,-,,-,-... -,.,-... -•. --.. ,-.-.1
ATTENTION Lease $250 Mo. p:.i1nl, i;ardener. $210 mo .
dining and famlly roon1, OCEAN vieW -4 br ·I hii
mas!Jve corner stone fire-l~e rump11s rm wlbar, Jg~
place in living rOOn1 , 11!-l1v rm. frpl ('. ·3,000 sq ri
teched 2-car garage, corn-unl in l~hrd . $tl,500, 5-18-5766
pletely landscaped \Vith fenc.1 =oo'='='='-=50307:,:'-====== ed yard. Ready for immedi-I·
ate occupancy, Anxious own. 1 _S_•_cn_ta:..;A_:.;;n~•c_ ____ _
3-S Acres : R-3 Apts
L.A., Orange &
San Diego Cnty.
\V.R. DuBois Inc.
(R.E. Brokers) Oi45-TI66
4 BR house, in good repair,
located n ear San Diego
freeway. \VIII pay c:ash.
Write Box ?-.1-24 Daily Pilot,
330 w. Bay, c.r-1.
Distributors Needed t 3 bdrm. unfurn. houS<' 2 1988 Pon1on11, 5-W-9001.
HUNTS new multi-million $ baths, fireplace, L.t<r. pa iio.
adver1!sed snllCk pac pro-Walk to beach & shopping.
ducts NEED NO\.V! re11able Yearly Lea.st S.100 ~lo.
n1en or \.\'omen in So. Calli. r.tISSION HEAL l'Y
to sl'rv1ce last moving coin 985 So. C.oast H\.\'Y .• Laguna
nf)C rated producis ui co . .i;e. Phone 49-1-0731
East Bluff
O\.\•ner's homp ap1, 3 Br, 3
Ba. den. fr-pl , encl dbl gar
:!"iOO s(i. fL l-1.:.0l mo. 675-5033
cured locations Commercial er ask.in& ... 000 BY O\VN.ER: 3 BR, 2 BA, ~. I f Riviera Rl'alTy 499.28()() g. an1. rn1 v.·/llrt>pl, New Apl, Units Jn good location
wan!ed by pvt buyer. Cond I
no1 important. 675-3511.
fa ctory, Part ~ tul! time. N•wport Beach Huntington Beech
COMMERCIAL
BUILDING
Located in the center of La-
guna Beach, with 50 ft.
frontage, $45.000. Call .
AO Ian
REAL ESTATE
ll90 Glenneyre St,
494-9473 549-D316
EMERALD BAY
Just Uated! Altt. traditional
3 BR. 3 Ba., sep. liv. r m.,
din. rm. & fam. rm,
ns Emerald Bay $75,000
Shown by app't.
Bill Grundy1 Realtor
833 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620
BY OWNER • 4 br, 2 ba,
playroom, fenced ya r rl ,
bltns, crpts, drps, decks,
ocean view, $54,000. 494-34.12
aft 4
Lido Isle
ON STRATA CENTRO
4 Bedrooms, 3%. Baths
35 Ft. + Lot
Street to Strata
$12,500
LIDO REALTY INC .
3377 Via Lido 673-7300
REDUCED S 4500, 21S
Ravenna, v.·cU furn. small
hou&e, Jge sunny lot, $51,950,
10% dov.·n. Owner 675-2&13,
* * 40' lot-Clean 3 br, 2
ba. Newly decorated, Large
patio. $71,500. KI 5-2512
af1 cr 6 pm.
** 40' lot . Clean 3 br, 2
ba. l'\ewly recleccrrated.
Large patio. $71,500.
KI 5-2512 after 6 pm
Newport B•ach
11'/W shag. $25,500. 5'1&--0802
Sa nta Ana Heights
0\VNER 'rRANSFEn.RED
$1000 a.~sume!I 7~~! GI
n1ort~agt' 5 BR. famlly rm.
2700 sq. 11. 54:r2992.
Tustin
Tu:,~rJN .MEADO\VS • By
0\Vnf'r. Lt·g 3 BR, 3 Bath.
!urrnal din, scp. Jani &
laundry rm. $36.500. 14561
E111rrywood Rd, 838--0807
University Park "
PARADISE FOUND
\\'ill be your comment when
you sec thig one. It has 2
Br's, 2 ba, bltn wet bar,
rlen s._ J1v. rm. Beautiful pa·
rio & 11icr landscaping. All
this & a 6'1.i"'/o assumable
loon. See it today. Price re-
duct>d to $31,000.
(ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, lrvine
Call Anytime 833-0820
BY TRANSFERRED owner
-Open 12 !o 5, 17871 Acacia
Tl't"i' Ln, 3 br, 2~J ba. Stan·
for(1 IO\vnhse. 2 Jrplcs,
<'rpTs. drps. Xlnt scl1ools.
!'1·15,000
Reill fstilfe. !JJJ Gener i i '-----'-"---'
Ac reag• for sal• ISO
2'·~ ACRES ln J oshua T!'f'f',
watrr, ('lee avail $24,:IOO.
Aft 6; 5-1\)..9~00 '
Minium 4 BR 2 BA, din rm.
Lido. Call 675-8766 aflr 4 PM
10-12 hrs per week. No sell-i L\1.\1AC. EX. lrg 3 Br, 2
ing-. CASH REQU!Rl::D. SHARP 2 BIT/, rmpltly Ba, Juple.x. Crpt, drps, blt-
$1900-$3900, Write for p(>rson. remodeled. Steps to ocean. ins, lrg lovf'ly flriv. ya rd .
al interview, giving name,l~:n"'3/C5C98"·c4~9'C9C.-,--.,..--7. Gar + huge prk'g. $195.
acldres!I & phone no. to DJs-4 Br. 2 ba, lge house nrr Respon. married a d J t',
1ribuiorshlp Div, 51, P.O. beach. 71Dl &-ashore. Avail 842-3276 I~ I
:~n~o~x~3~1>5~,~T~orr~•:";"~·=Cal~U~.1!t~h;ru~J~o~n~•~25~'~· ~$~2S~5~. :":"~-~76~7~1~ 1-•,...,B"nc.0,~BcA-pool~-ho-m-,-,,.-1-Y I Flnanclal • 90:':i0$. 2 yrs ne'""'· Crpts, 'drps, ~------~ HoUHI Unfurn. 305 bltns. 3 car gar. Call Mr.
•---------· Busin•11 W•nt.d 210 l!oei;:r" South cOast Rltrs.
Busin•ss
Opportunity
WELCOME
TO THE
10 HOUR
WORK WEEK!
2DD
If you v.•oul d likf' to \\'Ork 10
hour:; a 11·cek a! your O'lrt
pace, in you r O\\"n car 11111:!
build your own hugines~ ..
If you \.\'OUid l1k1> to invest a s
litUe as $600 to $1500 iu spare
eash lo gtar! a business that
can give ynu a nice l'l'turn
p('r year 1he11 \\'e'd better
have a Jftue talk!
\Ve'll show you ho\.\' 10 m3ke
your spare time pay hand·
sOme dividend~ wllh Ull
Snack Shop Vending Ma-
chines. A proven business
opportunity in a growing s;,
billion market \\'her(' 1!0% of
the business ls done by lhe
small independent Opt'ralor.
I
G•n•r•I :Y.15-8424.
\VANTED: Small bu1ine1s in * $135 *
the Newport-Costa Mesa
area. Prefer mail order Lge 2 BR fixer upper 1\'/fcnr-
t>lectrle: fixture business et ed yard & garage, Ch ildren
manufacturing level or akin welC'Ome. Available now:
lines or open for other pro-BLUE BEACON
duel.JI. Mail full deacriptlon * 645-0111 *
To: Rite 0 ' Lite, Box 400, "'-====-=== Glendale, Ca. 91202. M 0V1NG-TRANSFERRE0:
lnvestm.nt
Opportunity
Tired o( fighli ng with
tenants'! Call the problen1
220 SC1ivers -South Coast Real
E1tate, Property Manage-
ment Div.
JDEAL;--fcoc,c,oh-,-,-m-•"ll"•-,"t"o-m"i··I
ly -3 br + den condo
vi/bltns, \Valk to shop'g &
s c hools. $210 mo .
Reff'rences. 962-3831
Laguna Niguel
3 BR} 2 BA, vie1v, cptd,
drpd. Extra paved parking
for trailer & boat. 3 yrs
olrl. XI n t cond, $280.
495-424<\.
I Shopping C•nter Sit• 54.')...~·11·1 La guna Beach
S ACRES * Prin1e loc1Hion w / service $160 * station corner. Partners 4 BR nice older famlly home,
spli!ing, Subordination to gd. Lge yard. Hurry on tl11s!
$18:l. 2 BR remodeled .
Mature 11dulrs. 190 Canyon
Acres Dr. 213: .'l99-250t.
huyer . SACRlrlCE! 714/ BLUE BEACON * 1 _L_i_d_o_l_•l_•------I
240 3 BDR.l\f. + tan1ily rm., full 3 Br, l'rp!s. drps, bhns, trplc.
dining rm .• built-ins., hrk, Adults. $.100. 673-l768 142
:i.IS-J266 Days or Eves, * 645 .. Ql 11
Money to Loan
_l_s_t __ T_D __ L_o_a_n_, ~~rt, m~~~720~0 FEE, I =v=''="="'='"='=· ="='=-'='=1'=· =·=
3 M•sa Verde BDfil.f., Fl!l.Illily rm., park
7\lr'il· INTEREST like yard. Costa Me!a. l<i rls REAUT!1''UL Lndscpf'd
2nd TD Loan l'=O~K=, =b,=k=.,=1=200=•=m=o"=th=.=N=O~ I home in Mesa Verde., 3 Br, FEE. 540-1720. 2 ba, fncd, dhl gar, frple.
~ b · 1st ,t, last. $269, mo + •m·" 'rrm~ ased on equity. Balboa Cov•s ...... 642·217 1 54S.0611 l~:;.::;:.:c..;:;:;_;::_ ___ I occw-'',,",,11 i0"'7'';;"°;:,'::_·°'642~-33=9:::'.:_· ~I
Servin,c Ilarbor area 21 yrs. BALBOA Coves water lronl. SHARP 3 BR. 2 BA, quiet
Sattler Mortge9• Co. Dttorated 3 BR. 2 Baths. s1reer. Now vacant, $240 per 33~ f: J7th Stref't Month to month. $350. nio. Call "LARRY, Heritage
· Bill Grundy Rltr. 6424620 Real Es!ate :)10-11$1.
Money Want.d 25D Corona del Mar
COf\.li\1E!ClAL STABLES 2 BR. '-''/frplc, stv, relng,
Constn1ctloo & pe.C'manenf 1ar. 702 Avocado Open Sal
Jinanci ng !1eeded. $35,000. 10-3. 673-7949, 675-7299
01vncr 673-'l2fl9.
i jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj 1* .C BR. 2 BA. New crpts & drps, 1 blk to b('h, Adults.
Newport Beach
SHARP :! BR home The
Blufrs. Yrly lease, $3~ mo.
6-t-l-0062'
Sen Juan Capistrano MUST SELL BY OWNER
Brand new, fee simple. 1 C1metery
blk beach, 3 br, 2 ha, 2 1 __ L_o_t--'•/_c_,__,Y_,_P_h ___ l_c5_6
No <'Xperienee necessary~ No
personal sale~ calls nr«"S·
s11ry! \Ve will 1rai11 you.
counsel you, 11ecur" youi· ro-
catious. All you need !~ y•1ur
car, a small investment, and
be wilting 10 work .hard to
become a succrss. Your con-
scien1ious e-flort -....•ill deter·
mine your income. '--"_'~_ .. _._,,~·~·-'·-~II 11! I ;:::.
6:~:· 3 BR, 21).i BA Spanish town.
house, bllins, cpts, drps,
pool, clrc sarngr, many
nth<'f ~·xlrll.~. $~5 lf'ase.
li-1·1-226() day, 673-1028 ev".
!rp!c, beam eeilings, ,v/w
c:arpet, huie dbl g a r .
642-7523.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
GRAV!-: SITES Cl!, fW,qul,
J11Jllo11 PArllic f\.1en1o'r1al
f'ark. 67~-177.\.
Condominiums
Are you ready tn start lm-
proving your income? Th"n
writr.
for sale 160 E-2 I--'~"'-.:..~~~-.;.;;_
LAZY LIVING
NATTONALLY
ADVERTISED BRANDS
Houses Furn•h•d 300
G•n1ral
* $90 * 2 ll.rrlrn1. 2 balh, si ngle siory, rli\'1sion of UH
11rofessionally r1,. cti r 11 r. 1275 PROFIT DRIVF On 1he Water~ I BR C'(lltlll!:~.
ec;_ Lo1v down payrnenl , take 11ALLAS. TEXAS 7S2~7 Ulll paid! Ava11 ytar round.
3 BR. HOUSE
2 Baths -Fireplacf'
(;nrdeninJi: prn~·idrd
Children & pet O.K. t
C]o.<;e to f !!Cl1nol.~ & shopping ,
J ust olf Irvine Al'e.
Avail mirl-January
$200 Month
Sa nta Ana
Nr11· 2 BR hOUSI'. Adulta:
only , No flE'JS . $160 mo.
• &16·?:'>42 •
University Park over gov't loari '""'i lh no qua!-I em interested in mor.;: in· Singles welcomf.
i!yh1K. Nf'ar -new. Ownf'r Jnrmat1on about ni:1kin~ 1 BLUE BEACON ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!
transfrrrPd. rn0ney 111 the vendini: hu~·· 1 * 645 .. 0111 '> R Larwin Realty, Inc. ness. I hav~ a ('er and \0 ~ It 1 1111111 .......... $233
962 6988 · hnurs ""r 11'f'f'k SP'" 01me. I :l Bft 2 baths " .... ~s.;;ie • anyt ime '" B Ibo I I d :I fl!< ·11 • h ===========ID I can invest $GOO in 11 I e a s an · 1 • ~ aths ........ $.100 ro1Jte. Rf'allors :I HH. 11111 r111, 2 h11 .... $.125
Income P roperty 166 0 r can \nuest 3:l500 in a I 1.r·i·r Ral ls al1 r !lirn hsr 673-41400 3 HI:. plus bui;e honus room,
Investment Opportunity rou!r. I 11r 11a!1'r, palio C'Ov"d !encd ! 2 l•atlis ··· ··········· .$.l:xl
4 Unit!!". 2 duplexes, shake Name , ...................... 3 hr. 2 bA frpl. 673-6267 I.EASE OR OPTION. ~parkl-1; ~~··!am . rm, 2l1 ba, SJ!;;
roof, bhns Incl rebig's. 1•~ Ad!lrt:'s.~ ..................... 4 BR. furn, Avail Feb 1~1. ing 3 Br, 2 story, lrl-!evel I \\:E ~l~~,'~s QTI''''" S4JO
ba, 2 Jg l:>eflrm11 sundeek City ·" •· .. " ... "' · ·· ...... · $·100/mo yearly. Ga~ & \V!.r '-'llOnnal dining, hug f' !ERS
over prlv garages'. concre1e Stale ........... Zip, ....... pd. 646-2130 lin11!y & all tlb11.~. $300 :\10.
drives, mahogany p&neiling Phone { ) ......... "....... or assu1ne low lritr rest l!liln
& n1uch more . Shows .xlnl Dept, 2!.l69B Balboa Peninsula w/ n1inimum down. Call 'llnli'l1Plld •
- --'l lr11llor
'"SINCE 1946"
yield on $6;i,cH)I) price. Top I !'!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!!111!!1!!!!111! : -----------! ~-.4.S.~~24. South C (I o s I
location, a I w a Y s tt111ed. Thank you for reading our .J."1' B/\YFRONT Ra Ibo 11.li;n~·~"o'"~"=·c..=~~~-~
Bkr/Q\vnr says .'lf.'U FHA .r.. chr.sslfied ad!!", hope we have P~nin, ~ BR, 4 Ba, pier, FOR Lease 839 Sentlagtt Rd,
pay points. Phone; 536-SS!H helped you or can do 50 in flnar . \\'inter or yearly. C~t 4 BR, 1:\ BA ·
flt 64:!-2436. the future. 673-20.,9 F1repltce, c:arpets, drapes, ======================.l.-========== l===========l large fe~ yard. Clean
Busin•ss Businesa Corona del Mar & live-able, Close to schools .
1st 'Vestem Bank Bldg.
U11lv('rsi tv Park
Days 833-0101 Night1 Busin•ss
Opportunity 2DD Opportunity 200 Opportunity 200 Nttd rel~rences. 5'15-7l::i9
'----'=--==~:::::..<....--= VIEW VIEW VIEW VERY SHARP 3 bedr1n, 2
S@\l~lA.-~"E~s·
The Puzzle with the Bui/t./n Chuckle
• • bath homt with dble garage 01 the Ol.:t>an trom this beaut. & fenced yard, Avail month
~ B_R. 2 Ba, furn. home . ro nionth for S200, families A\'11.ll. now lhn1 June 15th. only. Agt ~141
Call: 673-3663 ~75-8886 Eve~. 3 Br, crpls, !rp!c, fenced
0 R.orrang• leneri of lh•
four tcrombl.d wordt be-
low lo forl'l'I four ~mpl• words.
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
l02S W 811tbo<1 671-lt>t.J
yard. :Kids &. pets ok. Baek Con dominiums
Bay area nr school. $250. Unfurn. 320 ~8-4945 eves. --------...::;=!
ATTRAC. 4 Bil. + bonui; Costa M1sa l 0i6i 1 1~1 l·~
RYKEJ I' 1-.-1 ~I _;,.,I 1,.:..,.l-1 t
DIPEB I '·' l--l~*"""l~.;;1~,;:...1-1 Hove you heord about th•
• " . _ Sultan'a &evenly-two wives ;:~======--who were surprised on• night
R E L H A W I and ltr out o terrified -? t--rl S,::.,;I :...;~I .:.:.~I :_~1-J 0 CcimDltl• th1 ch11ck 1.1qJ:,1ed • • by l1Uing In th• ml•lng WOl"d
yov dev•lop from step No.. 3 b.low .
• PIONT NUM8£UD umu IN I' r I' I' I' I THESE SQUARES • • • • •
I ===o=:--o:======I room, near 1ehools & A.II
11hop'g netds. $235/mo. :136 NEWPORT RIVIERA
Cabrillo CM . (2131 243-8949 Adult Condominillm Coste Mesa
FURN. Bungalow w/ J lrg I I DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba 3 BR, 21,, BA. Fireplat'f'.
Bdrm. Bltns. Garb. dl!pl., Twnhte. All bltns, pool, Bltns. Di-luxe interior. Dbl
Pf!lio, rncd yard. Wtr dp. clbhte. $225. 5.C S-5270, J:Rr. Avail now. $285/mo.
Adults only, No pets. S1501-;C833-""'3SIO:;:.=:,,-..,--.,,.....,.-,.--h'asr.
per mo. $50 sec dep. Mature VER\' Pvt. l hr hon1c, STEPHENS $, KA\'E
roupll' pref'd. ~8-1281 \\'/s!ove, dbl rar, lrg yd. &15-0122 ~-URN hsc, t BR, sm yard, $165. mo. bl & last l===========d
on stteel, Qulel. nr 1hop'f·l-"~'"-tl=="~-~------Irvine
no dog~, 54S-2720. 3 BR/2 full ba, f/yrd • A~all l/15, 3 BR, 2 $215. LEAST~ Ry 01\'llC'r. ;i BR. ~ '' I"""' Call: 646-5386 or 61>0708 J BA, lam rm. dhl '"'t ""'• IUIC, ''<t t;'l(t. I '" 645-1622 * 3 BDRM J10USE: UTL PD. .ge low mnintrnance. vd a-
-----------1 1mtio. Crp1~. clrps, (rplc,
I CHAl1,\11NG I Br. bJuse. No No pets! $2IS/mo. hit -Ins. Pools, te11ni~ ctbl,
children. Sl50/n10. **54g..,1S.tl•• 1>J1 rk~. l'te. University P IU'k
•Call 642-823• 2 Br. New crp1. No pet.~. 2 R:J:\-1145". ·
Bu! n-Sell It-Trade tt Chlldl'f'n OK s1:i0 + dcPt'J•. .,. RESULTS 646-5637 ~1"'J -'"0• )'OU can l)eo. -tl'ek !I -Jt'11 -'" available · · ·• · I pend on Call 1h Su
thn1 Daily Pilot 011.ssitied LOVEL V 4 Hr, h1 n\ rm. .'5 1\ I e 1 ,,; 1 n. Dall~ ~;
ads. Phi.Ci! ,our ad fncd, crpts, drp~. bltn~ Gd Classlfled 642-5678 ~ place
now .. ~11.U dlred SOWS Joe. l23S. 546--9042. J )'OUr •rl • f'harp Ill
• . ..
Moncl.,, JIMlllry 11, lm
[ ----lltl [ ---lltll ---•w•~ J[t]I[ -bfor~ l ltl ~l -•-utw-Jlt1 I -----l lt11---1~1 --btor-Jlt] I I
i -.-... -1 .
1 ............. 1 ............ _1, ............. 1 ........................................ 1 ............................ _
Townhouse Unh.l m . 135 l-A-'-p_ts_._F_ur_n_. ___ __;..360'-' l'-AC::p--t._;:Uc.nc.fu.:.'c.n..:· ___ 36:c.;5l_A..;p_t_. _u_n_fu_r_n_. ____ 365_ Apt. Unfurn. MS Apt. Unfurn. )65 Apt Unfurn. 3'5Apt. Unfum. 365 Apts.,
Huntington S.i1ch Cost• Mes• Back Bay Coit• Mesi Costa Mesa Ea1t Bluff
ATTRACT. Twn hli£' ·I br \1/
frpl c, all eltt bltll\ t~•v
1-rpr. drp~. pvr pat. poof
6.· rt'(' arra. 1...,. onlJ No
pr1~. 2 t."hllrl ren $ I 9 O
:iti2-2034.
--------
OPEN HOU SE SA-r & SUN * l BR. Furn. $155. \'l l'.:\V Of TH E BJ\Y-2 br. 10.2, BRAt'D NE\\/ EaM1ld~ 'I'WflhouM!. 2 BR. 2n BA.
POOL 8Jt11,,, \_'fllts, <ll'P.~. no l'l"pls. drps, b!tn•, ponl & FROM $135 2 & ') b Bltn1, !.n>lc. t:ncl dbl aar.
chlldrt>n. 111.1 1"-'ls. 32.i-J E, i:1u1rleck, Adlllts J 17 0 . ~paoish Garden Apts ~\: to ~~9;;. 1 Crpl~. ~~: 15:.! Am!sus \\lay. 81'5.50l3.
17th Pl. Cill. ;,.ig..:n31o: 6i:;~3690. ('unven1ently Localed rl~h"'•hr, M'll cli:o un gas oven, SPACIOUS 2 Br. erptl, drp~.
CLEAN. I BR. 2 Bn. 1') B Ibo l •land I&.: 2 Bffirooms 1\.11 \l'lr & ~as pd. llld pool. d'ol'hr, patio & pool. $'240.
Bi\, Ctpts, drps, lrg ciO~PI!. a .. Built·il'l!'I S2~ F:. 20!h SL 646-9148 *' 644-5298
Oupl•x•s Unfurn. 350 Pool. Adlrs, 00 pets. Uli.11----------1 Carpeia & drar>es COZY 1 br. beamed celllna;, LOVELY t Br. Lra-entry • :..-'---------1 pd, a.l~.136. CUZY I Br. ap1, yrly. No Enclosed Garages • 1 · , d •· P 1 & R R i;tove re Mi:", crp s, rps. Crpts. drp!'I, d'ol'hr, pooL ;165
Co1ta Mesa ACAPULCO Apt! a1~11ct1ve, pt·~> Squ<t~·cs . ~nl~, Rel's. 00 ~re11.!lon m. Pvt ~·ard. Gardener. $130 * 644-S298
I Pool, Util paid, Garrlen ~6·' -1-uhl ~-hi.\.)503. See: l60 \V. \VUson mo. 696 \V. l!lh St., 64.2-4.960 I ===='='=====o I
l·,-,-,.-.. -.,--1-,-3-5-R--I---living. Adults. no pets. 2 AR LS~; 2 BR. 2 Ba uni. Stov e, , -'-"-:.154._0_•_64_2._98_2_1._=-· I Founta in Vall•y
·•··"' " • 1 UJl pvi I $1-· l BR $1~· 1800 t / l II t '' !nrd )·ard, rlf'!' hllll~: dlil \\"1.l•I • A C ,1 "· 1;1•1·1~· 1 '"s1.~.,'.1'I'.~~ "l...:.ra · LRG. niodern 2 Br. Bl!n1.1-----------I ~arai::r J36·1947, ~l:\ ' ii ace \'!'., .i • ,.( Is nn y. :.....J. h1 .>-11 ""· c:rpts. rlrps. Near K-:i.t art AU. NE\Y
741-8647 F URN Bachelor & I Br. VIE\V -3 Br .• <'pis, drps, & Harbor Shop·a. Closed , VALLEY PARK
Exceptionally n ice f enl'I. 'gara11:t. Yrly $325 i?A.r. + p11 rk"g. Adul1s only.
Apli. Furn. 340 21 10 Newport Blvd., CM \\"ln!'ln Hrally 61:'l-l33 1 R('a]tors 2210 Rutgf'rs Dr. 64&-69\9 APARTMENTS
!-'~-------'-. U V E L y l 01{. Balboa P -i·nsul• 673-4400
1
1 LRG 1 Br. apt. All ~w , .. opens new doors for General ... [·rn1s . d-•. tile &. ""int. YOUNG FAMILIES ~urn /11 /pa ho Nr i<l(•l"('S,
1
81';115 $[45/mo. ~51. ' • '
RENTINw FURNITURE
COSTS LESS
Con1 plrtc I Un ~-11111 ,
as lo"' as $22 per nin.
100 1. PURCHASE
O PTION
Ind . 11e1n ~clrct1011
2.\ hi'. clelv. J.lnn1 h to ~lo.
CUSTOM
~,.,liet'-l~d~.1-,1~_', 1%5 Pon1ona, A1'rRACT ,_,, dpl'. 1 br e CORSICAN 998 El Camino, Ct-.1, 2 BR. Apt1 $160 ,,. ......., 2 BR. Gard•n Apts $175
r UllN ! 1 Rn F + <lrn. ht>arh & sl1or r 1ng Nr11· large, deluxr \.2.J BR's. NE\\' Unfurn I Br ap1. 2 BR To h $llS i;:r apt, ~ iO A•lll~. no pt>ls. S190 + util's. f'ri\';ite patio [J \'ing , only 3 v:/bltns. rrplli, drps , ' wn ous•s
nlo, Athilll' :i1~9SJS, 24SO h7;'>-117i arr 6 & \\'k111ls neighbors in :)-'Our blr1g. dsl111hr, all u1il I ncl .
Eld<>n A\r, C ~I fJ~'.l.t.:Xl:':3IH~:!~b11-:-Yea rly. Bltns, rtwhr, forced a ir heat, Sl.'l0/n10. lnq. 307 Avoc:ado, ~ 11 BACl lELOR 1\l'T, \\'airr virw. Avail f"rli J. shag crp ts. drps, {rplc in 3 Apt 9. 64;>-098-l.
Sl:lj/nii'I Call 616-:1.:Ji!l or S"'ll(lnio 6i: ... ~1:..'fi a1!7pn1 B r.~ar.1 \3m1. E.otSouth LRG 2 BR .. l '.~ Ba. Studio flT. ... ;j7ij7 " ., co-~-~~-~--1:;-13n-2-1:1a1-~111 ~')shwsr Cuas1 P!11za: tu rn oU Sun-apt. l\"o pet!. Chfldrt'n ok.
1 , BR. i'/!'•I'_ Beaut. IUt'll. & il ;Sl~'Slli ,' 11r lll'ach, $280 flo"·er 111 Ro!;S.I Pvt paho. 125 Joann SL
Nfl nl\"l to 1n1). ~dulls only. rrio yearly. 61:,..2823. FR0/'11 $1~ $150.
~·!ehool c.enr,r , J\fiu.lt pool.
Olildr,n's pool. Priv p;itios.
Elec kitch,m. Wall to wall
closers & carpt"ts. .2 play-
~rounds. Carports & stor.
age.
2?20 Elden. fi.16-!l:l7! l'VCS. 5.\l}.1973 or a.1:>-2::21 $~16~,~L-G~E~.~,~,,-.~,~.-,.~,~ .. -I
furniture Rcnt~I QU I ET~~1Ud~Js :Sl l~BR 's Ca pist rano Beach ba. Quiet; adlts. G.E. Kit.
j17 \V, 19th, c.~l. :..Ji\.3411! I s12:1. No chlr!rn nr ll<"L~. DELUXE ~1 or11i;r. 2·10 E. 161h Pl
17256 S. Euclid St.
(Just south ol \Varner In
Fountain Valley) Anahf'!m ~i~.2~! :!1~:, Elden Avr. C~I. See1·*--T-H_E_P_A_L-IS_A_D_E_S_*_, TOWNHOUSES !}·18-&132.
Llt Habra 69~·3 •0h :\lgr Apl 6. ON N~\\'PORT BACK BAY --o'o"'°~~----1 • Ne11• oeean vir11 $!~:> • LRG 2 Br, crpts. Phone 1714) 54~785
NICE .2 BR, pool, bltns, cpls,
drps. sundeck. Adi~. no
pet.5, $150. 642-8001,
64'-'006.
PALM MESA APTS.
1 BR F URN. $149.:11
Bachelors l''urnished
from S140.
2 BR ap11 S17~ mo.
1110 ./1110. OK e POOL e SAUNA e JACUZZ I
l;;!il Jl;lesa Dr. Co~la i\!esa
Phone 54~9860
, l Bil rurn tra1lrl' * 1.iixi;,.1011~ 1 br· .a PL~ drps, bltnll, patio, no pet!.
No tl11,l.t!1,'t'~1~,,1no pel! * l.gp rlriuhlr ii ardroh('s 3 & 4 RR .J Ba. Frplr. fa m \\'krlayl alt 5:30. 54S..1867
• J\ll• * roo1n , double i;arai;::t>. Beaut. ,_,... • Pri\'all' paTins 2 BR de!ux, Clean, Quiel,
SJ J.'1. l Bl-t rucr ly rurn S&...,. * CJran all clertnr loun~. Pool. Billiard~. Crt!/drrs. bltns, beam reiJ. Adult & Childrcns area 2 BR trailrr 132 \V. \\'1lson • Ran"c.~. rcfri.-=, cublr ·rv ini:. Ar!lt~. no JM'l5. S\50
C \1 ""9"17 "" $250/nio. 6~2-0300, 54{1.5147 .. · · ,,..o-, J · * Ht•avy :-;hag carpeting mo. 1914 \Vallee, :>16-5386. Huntington Beach
$100 lnl·I util, Sm ~fi1h for • ~.:xtra carport ... , boa~ sp. Qui•t Adult Living
adull n111r1 nf'ar & "~~:;.d~!t~. no Cfll'I,, Sl70J A 1 l & 2 BR. Shag cpts, bltn!.
NR new 2 Rr, 11i Ba,1----------
cp!/drp" •IV/d•hwlu-, (M. 2 Bdnns. • 2 Bath Avl now. 766 \V. \Vilson. Nrll'por1. 642-safl3. ·'·"'~"'-amino .a p1s1ran~•: P beaut lndscpd. Sl50 & $170
1~i1;_1 ~-anager. ·l96·24·'),) or incl all utiJ, Adults only no S150 l\lONTH • POOL :D:a~n:•:_P~o~i~nt:_ _____ l,·~l.=~'·~··=======1 J>P ll'. t.lTRAC. 2 Br, 11i Ba !'tudio cptsl drps/blf.ins, patio
642-79~
2·H Avocado SI. ~5-0979 apt. Crpll'. drps, blt.n1, Kids & f)f't~ OK. lrg rooms
s. IN'GLE ·rv, pool. -•
0
"'·\;c;o;•;o;n;•;;d•;l;;M;•;·;; ••• 1;~~c:.~~~~~~~ I . p I N • , .. ~ VILLAMESAAPTS. rerig, oo. ·o pets . 2620Dela\\"ar,,H.B. St5 & ur wkl)'. 0 1\NA _&1_.,. __ 1_0 _______ 642-22'11; 1tter 3 p.m. 536-1816 t.larina J11n 34 1JI Coast 2 BR, Priv pat io. l-lrd pool.
I' 2 c11r encl'd gar. Children * NE\V LUXURY l & 2 Br. 2 BR, $155 Up. -3 BR
r -~~ v wrl<:o n1(', nn pl'!~ rlraSt'! \\' r, s 11g crp , garage5. SlSO UP, atio, po o I, P'o~rty Managomont I ~ ~ -d h h 1 p ·
Special izing in hornes Huntington B•ach fJ.. Ort• S16:l n10. 119 \V, \\'ilson. Pool & Rec. Quiet adult childr'n ok. t-10RA KAI
& •m•lle• u nits. , 1 _6-1_~_1_2_.51_______ living &12-447fl. Apts. 13!81 t-.1ora Kai La~.
• u SJO k t l k 135 17 blk E. or Stach ort
Huntl!lfton Beach Huntt,,.ton Beach
J!a Quinla fiermo~a
Casuat estate living. Enter La Quinta Her·
niosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree-
lined walk wa ys to yo ur apt.
ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED
1 BR. Uni. $150 -Furn. $180
2 BR. Uni. $175 -Fu•n. $210
3 Spac. flr. plans, decor. furnishings: li ve
within romantic setting w/fun or privacy.
'f erraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ 'l!l w/
.seculded .seating comp!. w/Ramada & f'oun·
lain. * Color co-orcl. kit w/ indir•ct lighting. * D•lux• r•ng• & ov•n• * Plush 1he9 crpf9. * Bonui stor•g• •p•c• * Cov. c•rport * Sculptur•ci m•rble pullman & tile beths * Ele9ent recreetio n room.
FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY
Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego
Frwy .. Goldenwe st CoUel?e.
San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd .. So. on
Beach 3 blks. to Holt; \V. on Holt to ...
LaQuinta He.mos• 714 : 847-5+11
Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn.
~-------36S
Irvine Santa Ana
NOW LEASING !
N"w. fam!.Jy a.nd adults units
with total recreation club
and pre.school. 1, 2, & 3
bdrms from $150. Nr, 1bop.
ping, go!f, schools. Ju111
&0uth or San Dlea:o Fwy. on
Culver Dr., Irvine, S33-3733.
PARK WEST
APARTMENTS
Owned and hfanai'd by
The JrviM O::ompany
Lagun• B•ach
VILLA MARSEILLES
BRANO NEW
SPACIOUS
1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1.
Adult Living
Furn. & Unfurn.
Dl11hwasher . color coordinat.
ed. appllan~s -plush shag
carpel • choice of 2 color
schem~1 • 2 baths . sta!.1
shuwer! • MilTo"ed ward-
robe: doors _ indirect light·
Ina in kitchen . breakfast
bar • buge prlvste fenced
patio • plush landscaping •
brick Bar·B·Q"s -larre heat.
er! pools & lanai.
3101 So. Bristol St.
(%Ml. N. of So. Coa~· Plaza)
Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Co1ta Mesa
~ttA coRDdVl
NEW NEW NEW
Luxury 40 Unit Adult
Apartment Complex
1 & 2 BEDROOMS
FURNISHED OR
UN FURN .
• Spa cious Apartn1enra
• 5Pt'Clal cabinet space
• Lock garages w/ Ix .1.lor e Sm ce1I e Lndry e PitllQS
• D"'·hr/d!Sp\ • Gas stove
• Spf'("la] soundproollng e Shag carpets, drape!\
GAS & WATER PAID
2323 E ld•n Avt, ~
CM
646-0032 or 642-1121
DELUXE l & 2 Br. furn
& unlurn. S13~$165. Pool.
177 E. 22nd St. C:\1. 642-:l&IJ
Huntington B•ach
ON BEACH!
• Bachelor APts. From $21.i
• 2 BR un r. Froin $2'1.J
• 2 BR F11rn . Fron1 $28.:i
Carpets.drapes.dishwasher
heated pooJ.saunas·lenni1
rec room-ocean views
patios.ample parkin&
Security guards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AVE., H.B.
CTI4J 536-14S7
Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Daily ·
\\IILLJAJ\1 \VALTERS CO.
OCEAN VIE\V -Lr&: 1 &
:! BR unlurn apt1. Crpls,
drps, bit-ins. patio!. Walk·
Ing dlstlll\ce to town . 100
Cliff Dr, Laa;una Beach
494-5498 Santi An• l ~~~~~~~~~,.I
PHONE: S57-8200 WE'RE FRIENDLY •t
STEPHF: ·"' ~ . A , I l 7 BR F' • Uni··-I d I F" I I J\laid ~rr, linrn~. T V k. l'le. ...,,,...,"'" No K \"L I DEL • LAKE Jli!ANOR l.g. I ON TEN ACRES NE\\/ a11rac1ive 2 br. sound \\' -per, \I' ll . . G•rl•'•ld. _, ~·
61:1-0 12~ AR. $1•10, Pool, patio, adults. , ur11 """ r roo up ex. rp c, crp s. N•wport B•ach :,3tj.6717 F'i.replnc~s ; priv. p11.llcs I rlrps,, beamed c e i I j n g 5 , !V'aLark :\Intel 2301 Npl 1 BR. near t>ea c.h, newly --~---------=
CAN'T BE BEAT
STONEHENGE
Exclusive 2 Br, 2 Ba, fu rn
S185, un1. $155. Ca.I! now
536-3107. -----~~---1 Pool ... T,nnls .C.Ontn !'l Bkfst. l1l!ns, pa1lo. Adults. only. Blvd. 646-74·15 rlecora!ed w/pool .$140 ptr PARK NE\\'PORT • care
CHATEAU LAPOINTE
1 $11:'!. Ver.v n•c\'. 2 BR.rnobile 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644.:?fill 110 re!s. r,rfs. $1:)9.50. 23:).l * DELUXE l k. .2 BR. mo. Also. 2 )!Ir ., bltns le ~e llva: ovf'r lk& lh' waler.
, l~)_me~ _Cal!: 518-9.i77 or (MacArthur n~ O».rt Hwyl Santa Ana Avr, 673-039:). I Garden Apts. Bl t-ins, pr iv. rerrlg, crpts I: clrps. $l~ 7 pools, 7 ten nis ct1 5750.000
DELUXF. lul'n 2 Br. apt . bt1-0 1l' patio, healed pool, trplc.. incl uti1 '1, Spa. From $l7:i to $450-
Pool. Close io shors. $150. l BEDROOt-t. nelr brh. S130 * COROLIDO APTS * NEARLY NEW Arlul1s. $145 n10. ~6-5163. Tra.d,wind5 Realty, 847-851 1 Bach . 1 or 2 Br. Al so 2
i\du lts.,110 fl('!~. I PE'r nl'I. Tradewinds Rr ally, ~ BR s111tlio. Un/urn. All 1 BR .. 1 ba. Crp!g, .rlrps. ~elf I•. BI GGER than II. home. WALK TO OCEAN sty Townhouse!'.. Etec, kt.
SINGLE STORY
South Sea Atmosphere
2 BR .• 2 BATH
Carpets & drps
Air Condilioned
Private Patios
lfEATED POOL
Plenty of Ja11rn
l &: 2 BR01. FRO~l S\33
Overlooking beaut garden
patio & htd pool .• \dull s.
1035 12th St, across in;Jm
l.ake Park. 536-2692 19.Jl I oniona A\r, C.:\!. 841-fijJ \ Pk·t , rlsh11·hr, dil l caJT!l)rt &. clean~n~. &~8 ;;:"3_7e~~I ::t Br 2'2 ha stud ; 0 . l BR. Crp111. drp11, some ·w/ prl. pal or bal Subtr n pa.rkg,
HOLIDAY _PLAZA $12.l-Sl :!:i. LGF:. n1orlern 1 hr lri.: nool. $190 &. up, 67J.33 78 ~~-~· a )Os. · "· ' · $195/~o. No pets. ~.>-5270, 1rplc &: patioA . SJ.30..$150 per l'.lpt maid s'r cptR, drps J u,..t * 1lr NE\V l BR. Sll5.Sl50.
l'um/Unlurn. l Block In
BEACll Priv. pa.Lio. 202-A
141h, HB. ~367
DELUXF: ~1~ar1ot1s I Bf: nr bch : crpl!<, drp~. "'"·:? Bil, ~'rplr. S!ovrlftcfrig. 1 son. &.l~JMI) mo. Adults. N. ol Fashion Isl al Jam·
furn apt SL.J. H~alerl pool 409 Cali !. 536-4261. 847-~1169 /'\""' shi:-o.:rr i, ,.11,., l?!U'. GOLD MEDALLION =sl~l7A=R=P~L,-.~1 7h-.. -cr-p=l7/d~l"J>-,-. LINDBORG CO. 5JG-2579 bort"e & San Joaquin lhlls
Ample parklns;:" ~o ehildr"n DELUXF. B11.chelor u-;tt~ $1'.fi/m'l N!> Jlf'!~. 61.-;-1!(19. i\lodi.'rn 2 Br. l !~ Ba. crpts, bH\ns. Quiet bl~'J. lnlanl BIACHBLUFF Apt1 Rd. 644-1900 for l'aaing lnlo.
• 110 pets. l!:lfi.> Poniou.a.1 \\'1tlk lo QcPan. Urd pd. Nf-,lll y--:::--, h I b rlrP~. GF: kit, Encl. gar. OK. $130. 50-9772 or New 2 BR, 7 B•, dishw&Jih· SEACUFF f'.1anor Arts. I C:\l _, • "riv . r. a. i\l I ! N
· · ..
1
LINDBORG CO. s:;G-1.Y09 shil/:: i·rpl, bllns ,i;,, itrps 1 any .. uxury ex ras: r. :>i1·26ll2. er:., pool, paUo. 8231 Ellis. & .2 Br, 11,; Ba. Sl45-S160.
Carix>rt & Storage
HIDDEN VILLA GE
GARDEN APTS.
2500 South Salta Lagun1 Beach
2 BR f URN s1 ... 1 PC)()!.. LUX 2 Br 2 Ba. 1 BR.-!<ep w/frplc. S200 mo. 61~~n4 . bus. $1.1.1. Adul t.s.120 E-20th l ·A-v=A~I L-F=-,-b-.-1--L<-g~l~B~r. Mi.8477 or 847.3957. $30 niove in a.Jlowance: + Bltn~. ("f!IS. dfl'.~. adlts. l"o i:ho\\·er al0 1?.03 \\'alnul. St:-e 3 BR 2 ha nci111y de:ror NEW DUPLEXES Crpts, drps, bl!ns, enr l g11.r, "W_A_L_K_T~O~B~E~A~C~H~l~l-I re2'. discounl. Crpl!, drp!f. ~s!sU~T~~~k~l.'.15. &t:Z...9:i20 I _!!gr, 219 15th SI, HB. s:ioo ' mn. fiog Poinsett ia: 1-2·3 BR. Y.'afoher~dryer book· adul ts, no peta. S 14 0, LOVELY·NE\V l & 2 Bil"•, ~!:;n~1·5"4~:~ ok. 1525
Santa Ana Q 54fi..1525 sruo1os _ 1 BR. util Incl.
Quiel, pleasant. C11.ll collect
Dwyer (213) 437~204 1;;;;========1 Furn bachelor unit Crt:O.r li 73..fiJj1 up. enc.I g11.r, paho. frc:d air.1 _•_t&-_11_6_2._______ Crpts. drps, dlsh\\'ll!hera.
I I d 1100 *' • • "·I" ""07 L" · b ,, , b fl.lrsa Verde arf'a. ~l034 PARTLY !urn. 1 Br. duplex 109 Palm. 847.3957 * BAYFRONT * W•sfcllff Balboa s an vo-~uo "11111r;ut ratiu nr11 " r.l"°=-o-o=~cc--;;-;---..,,I \ t '~ h;i, bni cei1, lrrl. all LRG 2 BR. 11" BA . 2 apl. Ar1ult~ (}fl!y. No ptots. CHEZ ORO AM'S San Clement•
1---------. -.-1 I Laguna Beach 1>11n~. hr~! .1 rea. 67:i-6:YJ.I t:hi!d ren ok. fKl pe I 5 . $105/mo. 974·8 \V. 17th St. 82.'4 AUanta, 1·2 BR, pool,
I BR l11rn apt yrly, ut 1t 5 inc · --;----Sl:.O/mo. !).l;}-2~86 ~1~-69;'1-I private ,.,.,,e. \\lash,n, Call all 7 pm 67~7·123 & Sa.! • 2 RR ap! "/garai;;e. P~·11,::""=-'-'-'---~-I-'--'-===~~--~
& s · [ $30 WK LUXURY rntranC"r $20ll 111(). 70 0 2 BR. upstairs, crpt.~. drps, -A.· • UNUSUALLY: &pac 2 dryers. 536-8038; 536-2727
un. Narr!ssu~. 67:l-1814 bl!ns, rlo & N.'rr1g. No pe1s. hr l ha Ja ni size studio. ATIRAC. 2 Br. from S139.
, I ,t· ur. Barhelors. single~ l 3 BR 2 BA r 1 S140. 968-145:'1 or 548-7729 Nn pets. $150. ~;...5210, fill extras. Pool. Kid! le
B•lbo• Pen1n1u a II Bdrm, ~1ep1> to hrh, all u'iil. 2 d ·, bit upprr, .. _rp,o, DELUX ,1,11.11 2 Br 111 ha 833-3.YIO ""'ll ok, 17441 K'eison-D.
, ----------cc: s, 1n~. nr 11<:ac . , · 1• • 1 --~~----~~ "' ,. . h!d PoOI, Jinens .. rec rm. Lea~r 962-2270 s1ud 10, Cpl.~. drrs, pool, * 2 RR. e!PC tiltna, lock. 847-8335, 958-1510
BAYFRONT • \\'1nt~r ren1.aJ., reslaul'anl, cocktails, danc-, · · , 111111~. t rhilrl Ilk. ~96 gar, .'>le~a Verde 11~a. Big l 'U~N~F'U=RN='--:2~B~,-.~,~.,=,~1=0-,=,o-1.
Jrg z Br Jowrr. V•P\\·, (,ar ing 2 Blk' l1"1il11 n(Ceari, l BR.I=~-~~~~--=-close!~. $135/mo. No pets.
!.· u!il. Arlull~. no pels. Vi1 1age Inn Hotel Apl! 2 1:,1. f1·plr~ h_ltr1~. rpl~. drps, S13_j • LRG 2 . Br, crpt11. 5..,7_8400 f'ncl gar. Arlults on I Y. s2~l/mo fii:l-2iliil 49~.'.).136 S2,>0 '.,llt-19~.: rl1 p.~. bltn~. pa tio. nn ~ts. $1 50/mo. 842--4549
... _ ' . . , . .. · · · , ,1 . \\'kdays all a:30 5-IR-1867 LRG 2 BR. Crpts, drp!. l NEW ;i BR C ta d • $2J \\'1,-0CEANrRO:--r $9:J. Furn ~n1a ll t:'fll.Y plar.c. BR,\:"\lJ ncii -& .! Br apt!. -r•hild ok . Sil.'> + dp. 221 4 · rp ' rps.
Ulvr ly Bnchelor.;, I _ BR. near bcAcll. 1 responsible .~of hwy. :122 i'olariuel'lte. R~DECORATED lge 2 br. Colleg' A\"t No. 2, 646--0621 ~tov,, patio, garaa:e .
i\iaid st'rYICI'. Pool. Util. '>oun~ man. 494--4200. f>.14-1342 or 6i:~2222. New drps, crpts,_ blt.ns $150. $165/mo. Ph. &36-QlZ7
• 67~7,10 • · Chilrl ok. 642-731., SI70. 2 BR, 1 1~ ha ~tudio, l 't'""°"B~R,_-,>7l<rl""'•"llio=n~Co=nt1o=,--:Ac;ll
rrrlec, cpl/drpR, 11.clj shop'(. bltirur, reCri1. encl/patio,
548-8301, 211/:>92-5221 pool, Qui't. S130, 67::.-5034 Barh!'lf'r, furn t.:!tl's Newport Beach Costa Mela LRG J Br. 2 B11. 1"e1v ~111111:
pd for I man Sl:J mo. 1 __________ 1----------1 cni1s. llt'wly dee. l'\r. OCC
6i}6i:Kl A N•w Way To Live FAIRWAY Ca rport. $1i5/mo. 5.17-6151 2 Br. Crpts. drp,;, 161.l Sa n·
fa /Ina A\'c, C'l\t. Sl!'Jl/mo.
S.12-72i9, '\'t'S 543-8312.
* NE\V delu).e 2 br &. den. -B~R-.-,-,.,-, -Ullhi-,.-, -,,.-«7 ' in Newport Beach For an ad lo sell around F irelacf', rarap.
Mach. Call 968-4!°)4•.
N ' ar
Sl ~,/mn. M""' 310 l , OAKWOOO GARDEN VILLA APTS. lh '1°"'· dl•I 6'>-S67'. BaJbol\ Blvrl. Balbn~ APARTMENTS !=========~=========.'.-==========
Apt. Unfurn. 365Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 On 16th Stree! bl\l'n '2 & 3 BR's.
lrvinr 11 ml Dover Dr. rrl\alP pa11n. f!MI • uullv General Gen•ral Gen•ral ----------1 (714 ) 641-8170 !;iuodi·y fa r. l"-'-'--------------------'----------
Corona del Mar
r\"t h;u·h. rtn S· ha. \\"TR. 28R. U11J pa irl . ;\"r. :"'r.ar On1n~,. l o A1rf10rt t.
1'\1rrly [urn d. ;-..,, bo'h /..: ~1nrrs . SJ~,'1. ;\(Ml 311h LCI Arf111!~ 01111
1·ook111g. 603·6901 I s• :,; B <:.Pe Bl'rt ;\IPrr1n1an 2012'.! S<irlla i\n~ ,\II', 1 ,,~s=n-. -s0'""0!-!11\y. No ni trl. t67;:...1027J (5:l~33461 ;\!/:;r. :\lrs,. Joarl1im. Apr l·A
children nr rw,1~ $18:>. 1 llf! 6, cxo.:e pl on \Ved & :~1fi.fitl :1
Sq11ares only, Fi\2-i89S Sun e MARTINl.c(j)=U~E~.~1
OCEA;-.iF P.07\"T J Br, 2 Ba ,
l~E\1A ~!\:.\!~I. Y
UNBELll':VARLY
EXTRAOROINARILY
BEAUTl r~L
Val D 'i1•r• Gard•n Apts
Adll!ts. no pc1.<,
Pulling 11'.rcen. wa terfnll &.
sft'eam llowtn;; rverywhrrt",
4~' pooJ, l'l'l'. room. billiards_
BBQ's, S11.una. furn .. unfurn.
Singles, 1 BR, I BR -l-drn.
2 BR. From S\33, See ii!
200(] Parson.~ Rd ., 642-8670
Be tween llRrbor & Newport,
2 Blk N, 19th.
CASA d e ORO
l'rp1~ rlrps, (ti:-;. \\'inter. Park·Lik• Surrounding• ~JOO ' Adul!s 0111}. :->o prt11. Dt:LUXF: 1·2 &. 3 RP. APTS.
673-SO~S. A!sn FURN. OACllF.LOR
OCEAN fROl\~r 1 Br Ideal Prv patios * lihl Pools l~all~n -P~intl'd, ca.rpetrd. Nr ghop 'g • /\du.Its only
SJ':O nio util pd Yt>arly 1171 Sanla Ana A~·e, Ct-.1
or' ~aM>n'a.i 12lll 698-3627. t11 gr . /\pt l IJ • fi4fi.55t2
2 BR I BA , crpli, drps, ./ ATTRAC.'TI VE 2 BR, l~
f1repiacf' on CIJU Dri11e. BA . split JPve.I. lmm11.c.
$19j 67:,.:.19:16. t\Pw r,-i!!t/rln1~. hltns. Nr.
· 1 br ii;hnp'~ Ii· ~chl'. SJ:iO. lnr;: *' * 5150 l'olONTH • 2868 Lii.Saii,, Apl t. 54~3524 11pt, ulllities pair!. or ;i.J0-6338. * 30-I 33rd St. *
f "t J 1• h TH~ Gf\BLES -I BR ap! urn h urit ;,t TIIF SEVILI E
$140 n10. ..i;,o Channel 11 • • Plaet'. 67:)..1071_ 2 Br, l i Bo. ,,., gar Ad\111,
..:.C::.:C"-'-'-.---~--1 crpll, drp1, ran&e, fncd yd,
3 BR, 2 ba. upstain . Dshw1r. patio. 636-4120
Sunde('k, Ga' paid, Quirt 2439-G Orana:e: Ave $15..\
CASUAL Calif. Living in 1 srea. ~4-334.'i. 2l:i\!}.E: Sa/lta Ana Ave: f155 w11rm Y..fr.dilen·anean a1r1109.
'""'" ,,,o;o,,, "''" ro -Apt. Unfu•n. 365 HARBOR GREENS
ordlniited 11..pts • rlestgnerl & -'---------1 GARDEN • SI'UOIO AP'I'S
furnished ror 1;tyle k rom-~G_on_•_•a_l _______
1
Ba.ch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. rrom $110.
tort e Ht11ted pool e Kirr.b. ~ 7700 PetttSOn Way, C.M.
en w/ Indirect lighting • st&-0370
Dtluxe RIO. Ad ults only. No .....
1 BR.·$175 turn.
lJTlLJTJE.S JNCLUDEO
365 W. Wil8on 642-1!111 •••••••••• $6 n1le up $21.51) 1.1•k up
STUDIO l 1 BR Apls e Cok>r TV, phone: K"f\'. pool
• Linens, m11.id serv av11!.
Social clulxoom·bill iards. etc
Uve where the lun is~
2376 Newport Blvd. 5C8-9Th'i •••••••••• • * * • •
BEAi.IT. SAeh le 1 Br. apt•.
~ '1.·kly ~ up. ''um t11CI
ulll. Monthly lrrm!l 11vail.
998 El Camino. S-u; . ..01jJ
RENTAL FINDERS
Fl'•• To Landlords
64S.0111
4JJW.19tti,c ... M ...
Jurt for Single Adults
SOUTH BAY CLUB
APARTMENTS
N•wport Beach
880 Irvine Ave.
ttrvlne and 161h)
1714) ~550
\VIL.SON GARDENS l\PTS
2 BR Unfurn. Newly dee.
Nt'w cpts & drp~. Spac
groundl. Adult1, no pels.
$140 1no. 2283 fountain \V1y
'E. tHarbor, turn w. on
\\'ilson).
5175 BRAND NEW
2 br, crpt.c, drp1, giu'a\:e
3:":1.1-C Y.'oodland Pince
67::>5712 or &1:z.~-:1.'"JO
BRAND NEW :1-PLEX
2 BR. C1raa:e. Extl'll11.
J left . Ilia. 64;,.~4 LGE., comfort11 ble 2 BR, ,.,.,,.:..::=='7.-'::...:;::c::.:.:._,..I '
•le<'I kitr h, fil't'pl, p,11t lo. Nr $14.i • 2 BR. New drps, crpts,
O«'lln A: bay. Sl!t:'i )ti y. ~1nvr. Adults, no pets, Call
f;ll-762. . 6-12.-5A48
•
• ~ ·• ... ....
·• ~
........ ·• ~
hook
llIXDJ1Z llvlDfJ •••
HUlmHGTOH BEACH-Adults
OPEJlllll:SP!aAL-1-FIOll$14~
CASAdalSOL
Nur all betcha~ Prtntl Tmaai •Rec Buildina: •Saunas
2 Poob • Blllllrdi • GJ111 • l'vttin1 ""°" onl V~loyltll
B11itt·i11 Kitchtns• Obhwuhln • Ols,osals • ~rJIU/Dr11MS
Clost to oll sltoppltt1 • PriYltl l'lllin1 "d Stonp
Al.SO: 2 Btl.-w/Aroollu FIVl11 $205
211il •llllossto .......----(714) 112.asJ
HUlmNGTOH BEACH -Adult and F1mll)' Sections
1-rr.sl35-2..._2_F_SIH
HUNTINGTON GRANADA
Prlnte Tenace • 3 Poob: w/C.bann • Built~11 Wins·
Dislnralters • C.rptts/Dlapos • W1lk-l1 Clouls • Dtmln1 Rooms
ao. te Sbapp"" All -1JJJI loill111 Anos 1n11-""'11.."....,.._ (714)MM055
Oust South Of W•->
·MuuPBy:
W•MANAlmEITR, .. l BR, $1X"1. Pool. Spaclou1.
Adults. ld,11 ror Bach•Jors
1!193 Ch11rrh. :11~-Xi\.1
S175 New apt. 2 BR. hltna, 2 B~R"'°1r=;.=,~1.=,-. =rn=·=,.~,=,=,=m1=e=nl
,1ia11: crpu, drp~. patio~. l l lU'a&:e. S12."> mo. ~Cl:CCl:C::l:D::l:C*D*C*Dl:I: i;::ir :1.~l> F. 2(lth, C~t 612 191\"1 i:i42-!;R~I •
•
Hii;:h-rise 2 BR's from $295.
3 5lde tie slips available.
64 2.22.02
ATTR 2 BR ap!, 11n/urn,
l blk Jrom oce!lfl, very lg
L. R. w/frplc, $2'J l mo.
fi7:\-22.i7
$16S -2 BR. Ne1v 5hag. Bl1n~. 1----------·I
H1rl Pool. Quiet adults no 2 BR .. 2 BA .. b!Un raniie.
pets. 642-2j14 ' rls hwshr, laundry fac. Rec. "==========I rm, Ta!tlelully decorated,
3 BR 's, 2 BA, unf. Crp!.!1,
drp~. blk to ~ach. Y1·d.
Y'arly $260, No pet 1 .
""'°" 3 Br. 2 ba on BluH w/vie w
of b11y &: ocean. $330. 74j
Drimingo Dr. Pool priv!.1.
Call 645-1260.
Apts,,
Furn. or Unfurn, 370
Balbo1 P•nin1ula
BAYFRONT -YEARLY
2 BR, 2 BA. /urn or unfurn.
P11t beach & patio. No pets.
S?,00 per mo. 673-0774.
Costa M•sa
NE\V 2 BR, 2 ba , Frplc.
1h1g cptr. drp1, Bltns, BAY MEADOWS Al'TS.
garsge. nr bch, S 1 7 S.
646--0841 or 646-3528.
.2 BR, carpeted, draped, near
be1ch Suncl~ck, a;&raie,
washing lacil . Ye a r l y .
&12-.1\1711 'vi's £. "''knds.
2 BR garden "P', carpl'tini;;.
,;ra~s. i Brlf'· Ne.1vpor!
Hfts. $160. 548-9695
LARGE 2 br, 1\2 b11, crp!l<,
rlrps, bHnB, nr. Hoag Ho1,p,
SI~ mo. ~2-4381. &12-\ii l
BRAND NE\V UNITS all 1\llh
beam ce1l1ngs, panehng, r vl
p11l!os, f!lllC, all rec !acil.
1 tir.~. Adul ts, no Pfls. e Bath_ from SIOO e
e I BR lrom S135 e
• 2 BR froin $165 •
387 \\'. Bay 51 f bt\\·n Harbor
t; Nt'11·port Bl\'d, It mi N.
ol 19th S11 .
C1\LL 646.0073
Adults Only • SlBO
214 Calle Patr lcla
CAsa Con tenta, 492·2259
'--"-'"_'"_' _ _J)\...s)
Rooms 400
HUNT INGTON Beach -shl·
dent preferred kitchen k
hath privilegP11. $55 • $65.
F urn, ut!.1 paid. 642-8520.
BIG room & priv bath In
C .~!. pri ~ntrancl'. Nirely
!urn. $65 mo. Responsible
nlalP only~ 54S.:,sJO.
SLPING Room, 560/m o .
P riv. enlr. •. h11th . Adul1 l<
no pets. 213:i Elden, C~1.
See i\lgr Apt 6.
SLEEP'G rm tor emp!y.
man, pvt home k. entrance,
hy mo only, $3.5. 1.;.i:1 Santa Ana 8'-11.utilul I & 2 BR furn Orange, C,:\·1.
FREE TV nr unrurnapts.OFFER!NG: * $15 PER \\'l'l'k -up
~If clean. ovens. 0 /\\1 l in w/kitchens. S~7.50 per week
MOYE IN BONUS 2 Br). diapls, 11hag crpts, -up Apt1. MOTEL. ~8-9753
dll>l!. Jacuzzi&. Sa.una hath. NEWLY furn roon1, $18 per
$115 to $135 Jfuge Pool, FOR ADULTS \\'1ek & up, Pvt entr avail.
lmmac. Frt'shly p1ln1ed. only. Pbone 546-0451
MERRIMAC WOODS Ctpt1, drps, blln11, fenced in N.B. pvt lower level w/vlew,
pool. 1 or .2 chilliren nk. 425 r.rerrimac Way patio, refria:. may rook.
N I.I E ~.· s Costa tllesa o pe1.11. 0 . ,.,,.11 I., ~~~---~-~=I i\lature g'nt SlOO. 645-0930.
S.A. {off Grand Ave., al cor. 2 BR. furn or untum. S150 YNG cnlle11:e or workln&: Kiri.
ner of Jteason Buick) .•
1
unf. SHiO furn. 2568 Oranee Balboa 1111. Kil & TV rm,
~2818 Ave. 5-1~1657 tele. $65/mo & up. 675-3613
Apt. Unfurn. 365Apf. Unfurn. 365
fount1ln V•ll.!Yc_ ___ F_o_u_n_t_o_ln_V_o_ll_•~Y __ _
:J.ounlairu·
111..iir•rr.,,._ S.,.i. WUl'f
lASW.--lllalbo
Adalt LIY!n1
ranlollod&Vtilondlbod ..... ·--... • 8Nr c-,... :-,.,.._
• ~""3:..
ROOM I bath w/pr1v, entry.
Ocean Blvd COf'Ona del l\lar
STS/mo. 675-&;95.
ROOM & kitchen priV\leet1
tor mature "''orking lady.
Pet ok. S25 \\'k. 841-2163.
FURN rm cook'&: prlv Pvt
entrance,' 77~ Broadway,
C.1\1.
Rentals to Share 430
MID age emp. wom1n, 1hare
·my beau t. If"' . .2 Br. &pt.
No drink or 11mokt .
548-6432.
GfRL 'lb ahare Victoria
Beach house, .l frpl1, OCl'I
vw, beam cla. ~L
F E ~I A L E Roommate tft
al'la.re new 2 BR apt w/frplc
with n,pie.-, ~-
GarlP" for R..,t as
S TORA GE Garase .
SIO/mo. h t I: Jut. 19th
I: Pomona, CM, * 897-4815.
e GARAGES f2l. Sbn~
only, Nr Fairpound .. $20
mo.&4&-3226
5r0RAGE' Gan.pa.
S25 per month.
PhoM 642-fi39 \ until 6 pm •
I
I
t
J
•
O'An. Y PILOT Monda,y, Janu11ry ll 1971
I..____"-__,!~!..___ ---~~!~.__I --·~· 1~11.._ .:...._ ... _-___,1[5J j-· -*-*-*-*---.*.11.__I _ ..... _,.....___,Jfill 11
_[ _ ..... _, .. -·~lfill .__I _ ..... _, .... ·~l[Il]
·1 Trader's Paradise
Build•" Office Rental 440 Announcements-506 Announcements 500 1.,----------11 I"
Help W•nlod, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted., M & F 710
'~=:.;:~;;;;'."";;;;:;-;;;;I ~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim l "'RICK, block, '. n ... ". Ines ISuPER·DELUXE QUALITY carpentry, hOuse Jevellng,
l-2-3 room. up to 3,000 sq. WANTED llll ty~5 re1nodeling. Nu t" ft. oUlce suites. lmn1ed. oc-job too small. Lie .. Conrr. I mes
cupancy. Orange-county. !162-6945. =·· ltv~~ ~':~', OVERWEIGHT /LADIES c .. ,,."'"' dollars llotel & RPS:tauNlnl, banks,
San Diej,'O & N'pt F"''Ys. CARPENTRY UNCROWDED PAHKING F or weight reducing program to est ablish MINOR REPAIRS. No Job __________________ ,,II
LO\VEST RATES s tatis tic.s for rapid permanent weight loss, Too Small. CabinP.t in gar-0.,..,1ier wll! lradl· Z5M ~iulty ~r/mgr. 211'1 DuPont Or. c onducted by qualified physical c ulturists. ages & o t be r cabinets. in Wl'lr E:1.l'l'Uli\'e :; BR, 2
Fully equipped fluff & fold
l&undry est 12 yrs \•alue
$12.00CI,' suit L'Ouple. Ex.
change mobile or motor
ho1ne or sn1 hOUSe, 54&..5640
HAVE: J20A. on trout
s!ream near L. Isabella.
TRADE $3.'l,000 equity for
Sou!hern Calif. income.
3roker Englund 673-4144
Rm. 8, Ne\\'}Xll'l &ai:h ~1ust be a minin1um of 20 pounds over· 545-8175 U no answer leave BA hon1p 1n A1"(•11dia for
8l.'hi223 Coort~Y to Brokers weight have transportatjon and not current· msg at 646-2372. ll O. beach or Orange Co. uniti;. * DELUXE * Jy under doctor's care. NJ inquiries complete--Anderson 21'.f.355-7372 eulll'<'1 .
Office space available. Two Jy confidential. REMODELING & Repair c,v~1ST1tANO C-ZON ED
exK"tllivt-suites (no sq 11 Specialist. Comm'I, residen-4 I Acre~. lr"t.<c ,r,, 1:le:_1r.
and 708 sq fl ) each Will i J ASK FOR MISS POWELL -S37-5410 tiaJ. Paneling, cabinet s $1 30000 Tlt,\UE FOlt Jn-
offlces Large reception inarlite, forrnica. 644-75911. ' evlr~c 0~ .. ,.,.!
roonis: Goon stru·age, Adi'-~ Additions * RernOf!ellng llf-:ALTOH ~~.'i-771 1
qualc parking, Lovited ~I ~ Ge1v..·ick & Son, Lie. T\\'!N l.1ox sprln);' & 1n:11.
across from W Orange I~ I J[g] 673-60-ll * ~19--2170 li'<'SS n1ediun1.fu•111. t1 ~crl
County Airport, 4540 Campus [ Aonountement5 -d l ost ;111d Found l\l'iCt:. 'J'nil\c ror cxl ra-r1r1n
Dr, Ne"'POrt lk h .. Conlaci C--------'· •. c. -------~· _c_a_c0p_e_1_s_._,_v_k_• _____ 1niallrl'ss 51.1, plug.1n heal·
• * * 2 Lag.una Beach vlrw
Tt'ade f(lr ?!
C;Jl 1'11r. lioei;cr
1'1Zr8·124
• luts.
Pacesc ucr Homes for furth-Diamond Carn1>l Cleaning ·r.~ nr ??7 4~2-0770 rr info: ~"146-8801. ..-
OFFICE SPACE
tor rent, WestcliH Drive,
Carpels, {!rapes, utllifies,
Air renditioning included:
from 2'\c sq. 'tt. Furnishings
available, &16-0228
DESK SPACE
222 Forest Avenue
Loguno Beoch
4M-9466
DESK SPACE
305 No. El C•mino Real
Sun Clement11
492-4420
WCt sq. ft ground floor,
Announcements 500 Found (free ads) 5SO
WHAT IS YOGA?
Demonstr-<llion ,I'; talk \\'('(].
11ile <ii 8 pn1. Classes slarl
Thurs. al 7 pm. \"oga Ccn1.
<'r, 4~j E. 171h St. Ci\f,
646-$21\1
A'r l'ENTION /\l1T!STS, \\'e
have the _gallt'J)'. 1r you
havc any arl \\"Ol'k or any
art objee!s lo sc!l, please
cull 67;,...:1767, 646-3589.
I ~
LONG Haired lite tan cat
"'/flea collar found v1c
Atlantic & Bushard, l·l.B.
96$--3182.
YOUNG Afgh11r1 found vie
Es!anL'ln High SC' ho o I.
Plc&se-identify. ~I0-5:i97
YOUNG female Siamese cat,
found Vic, Dover Sliol"es.
646-8135
Female Sian1esc kitten found
YI(' Of l81h ,r,, Ne1\1port, Call
to identify. 6-12-ITIL
Lost SSS
prestige Westcliff Dr. Pvt ;100 R.E\VARD for return or
entrallC'e. Util paid, Park-info lead ing to r eturn of
ing, $85 mo, 1741 \Vcstcl iff Auto transportation 525 \Vhite/Apricot Toy Poodle,
Dr, 645-3033. 1-----------fem!, lost Christmas eve Vic
AIR Cn d ,, 1 · \V/\NTED: Very matuf'I' and 16th & .orange, CM .. Owner n , crp..,,, acing Beach Blvd, Reas. Call responsible 2l year old or very grieved. 646-9516,
g 4 2-2 5 2 5 0 r 0 v.' n r r ?ldrr female to_ shar~ driv· R E \V A r. D . Silky Terrier,
2131394-0015. ini; <in<l. ~as ln V\!. htis., smal\ black & gray, enswers
CORONA DEL MAR Good dr1v1ng record! Am to Pepe_ Vic. Tustin Ave
going as lar north as Colier Boy's Club 548-1732 2 Rm suite, pvt ba, pvt en1r. D'Alene, Idaho. Am h.'a\'1ng · ·
Prkg, crpl/drp, util pd. approx ,Jan. \5t h. OJnract Fl-1AL8 Yorkshire Terrier vie
$145/mo. Owner. 673-6757 Jack at 557-49.~2 or :H:;..::~!tl Cdl\1 llii::h School 3 lhs.
l'a1nil.v & n1aid grcaving , 7?10 SQ 1-l suitable for
t>nglneering design offici>. Persona ls 530 t !l-14-0·12'.i
Equipped ,l'ith desks, drar.1 ----F-R--E-E ____ \\1Hl'I'~ Persian & Angora
ling boards, etc: tJci,vntovon fP1n cat. Name "Star."
C.M. $150. 642-4230 Ph·a~L' call: 968-3•133 or
350 Sq. fl. $160 mo. Dlx
prof bldg .. air con<l., good
prkg. 3.)() E. )71'1, C:-.1. Bar·
retl Rlty 642-4353.
OFF1CE Or showrm spaC'P,
across Balboa Bay Club.
Beaut decor., $150 n10.
645-0930.
913~Ji~..J.
Gl':Ri\lAN Shepherd, fC'n1alc,
'.'.cii;;;~, .. s vi~~· H~~s~lJs..~~i-i
RE\\'.\H.D FOR RETUR.i\f or
Sha1•p Portable Color TV,
51·r No. 03178. 673-7142
RE\\'ARD. Calil..'O cat, vie
Thrre Arch Bay, flea collar
& JD, 499-3863, 4~-8989.
New Yt>ar Special! 1'rad1• $9.0011 t:'qu11y in ~ hr
F1•ec J\11nor Repairing W00<ll;Hld llills hon1e \\'J
\\lith Cieani~ 400' $20. fl')O] ,\: :i11· <'ond, on \'ie\v
t'r<"l' est. 64:>-1317 lot, appr:.Ust•d at $-13.000,
===========I for h<)mc 01· ., ~ 9 5-16-3877
_c_e_;i_;_n~g_• _______ ,12 R-1 Jol s, ~an Cll·nientt'.
PAINT Accoust1<:al Ceilingl', Cor1101e1-r1ul lo!, Dana Poinl.
$10 ea. or trade. 53J-69::i7, \Vant inco111e, TD's, or "!
or 636-3110 Thl• Doyle Con1pany
Cement, Concrete
Block Walls -Sitle1valks-
Palios -Planlcrs.
5'19--3173 2''lor11 or Eve.
*
Eves: 838.6311
* *
CE~1.ENT \'.'ORK, r.o job too
!!'!nail, rcawnable, Fr e e
Estim. J·L Stuflick, 548-8615.
Service~ and Rep;;rirs 1(5)
ee CONCRETE, 1''Joors,
patios. Any size job. Reas. Housecleaning
Call Don 642-8514.
Child Care HOUSEC LF.A.N l.NG
-----------1 A.j\J. -~.::!Q P\{ $1J.7:i.
('J IOICE: lal'~e in1provccl
l\.it. Snlton City. \\'aot late
T1·rivel Trailer flick-up
tru.:k or H"ade on Molti.Je
hon1c. ~12·8~>!16
\Vhut do you have to !rad<'?
Ltsl it here -in Orarn:c
Coun1y's largest r ead trad-
ing post.642-56i8
* *
[ Services and Repairs J ~
Tile
* Verne. The Tile il1an *
Cust. work. Install & ri>pain;.
No job 100 srnl. J)la.slt;"r
TENDER Lov111g CarC' lor JX'f!Cn<·ct!; 01vn !ransporla· pa\ehlug. Leaking shower
your 3 yr old & up. Reas. !'ion 6'12-02.18 r.:>pa i:r. 847-1957/846-0206.
Nr Pon1ona Sehl . 642-1327. lcD~A=Y\oVcOclc{cKc. cpo,-.,c.,-. =1-"1"1-=,=,,-.-,. l ·CoE~R-.\-MolcC-T'i-le_w_o_c=k-. =,c.,-,-,11
DAYCARE: 7 Day \\'eek. }lot $2.50 l1 r. E.'<p. 01vn transp, est. No jub too sn1all.
meals and play area. In &12-407(} 11fl G. 53fi-2·126
C.M. &16-6417 1--iiII~O~U~S~E~Cl.EAll·:A>NiiINNCC--11 ~=~=======i i
Trt1e Service Child Care My Home By Day. Own Transportation
Day/nite ;1'1&-2·1~)1 J:j3!)-(16.18 1----------
="===========1=========== I TREES, llf'dges, Top. Trim,
Contractor Ironing cut, removed, hauled. Ins. G-12~1030 Big Joh n
\VA.LKING Df.:CK I roning: $1.50 per hr, Tutoring
COATINGS Bring Own H11 ngers
01 all lypes. Lee Roofing Call fi.\;j..3092 TEENAGE: tut or l n g &
Co., Ci\1. 642·7222 for Jrerl=========== i:o unscling, E,xper1encetl,
('st. M aintenance r• r I'd r. n I i a Jed lf'at'.:her.
to.fY \Vay, quali1y br1111e , ;,.1~-~:111. Call bctwn 6:30
repair. Walls, ccillng, floor.<; HUSBAND Busy~ Ca 11 ,",; 7::ill
'''· N• ,-,,h too '">all. l\loosr il<'J'k'li1·-B u1!d-;'o.frun1 I ------~~-~-·II " " "" · ~ I· • 1~ """" TEACI! hr1u1d paintlng, Free "'1'94, 2.1 he a "'. ··-·. i>'lost Any1 ung ;~''"''°~"eves ,,.,,,,.. ., '"' ""'"' • kit. Laura 531-9978. Alice
ROOM Add1!ions. L. ·r Masonry 11'1'1'-1"'1'1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill Con:;tn.1ct1on Stng!e story ori----'-------
temporary
per1annel
proud to be an
• amer1can
glad you're a
• 111 g1r ...
registt1r with
• amer1can
girl
invest
your
time
&
talent
wisely
&
be your
own boss!
at NEWPORT offices, c pt s ,
drps, ocean view, from $6.'i
pl'r mo. Onr Aft 6 pn1:
6i5-4&;4
Basic Boatini< Cour.~f' off.
el\'d 10 lh(" Jlll hlic t1y t!IL'
Balboa Pu11'o·r Squu<lron
Silll <IS Wl'l/ .JS JIOll!'I"
hoa1i11g taughr. Star11r1g
7 pn1 r.•Jon. J;in, 1S. E1·rry
!\londay nitc for 13 11·t·cks.
Al Nc11•por1 Jlurbor Yacht
Club 720 \V. Bay Ave ,
N1.:wpor1 Brach. Bl'lni;
JJntcbook & ~nc:il firs t
t\llC'. ,\ny que.s11ons cnll
67:::. JS.i~ * XLNT OFFICE SpaC'e 1 ---~===---
BLACK Labrador Re tr.,
female, Please citll
962-2800
2. Esti m., plans & layout. Bl11CK & BLOC!\ \\'ORK ,"'='=-','-11c.~--~-~--1 i\1AsoN1tY or, /\LL TYPi:::s J 1r· 1] •
LIC"D Contr. Remodf~!ini;. For ('Slim;rtP , :l,1!-2fl.'i2 . Employment IT amer1can
add-ons, roofing, painting & '-------~
repalrs, 54Q.78s,g, !H0-7664. Painting & Now Avail. LIDO BLDG, FR EE
3355 Via Lido, NB. 673-4;,Ql
.'l700 NE\\'PORT BLVD, NB l-luntinttton Reach Powrr
ON TilE BAY Squadron's basic boating
RE\\',\llD Uist }'en\ Golden
Retriever. Vic: Bristol &
Baker. 546-0010
57;..2i1&1 or 5'11-50.12 course for sail or po11"Cr,
1670 SANTA ANA AVE, C~1 I 1[14')
ne~ri~ :E~~~~ns Paperhanging Job Wanted, M a le 700 g•1rl
Licensed-Bonded 5'1S--l5"37 PROFESSIONAL Painling. l Exlrr. 1 s1ory, low as $200 /\PT-:\lOTEL r.1cns, ·wcJ
GEN'L CONTRACTOR \v/gd pu rnl. Avg rni. SIS. 11 u:1ll. No child/pels. Bon-
Rrm0<ic ling.Roon1 A<ldiliuns Accnu.~. ceilings iqira:,'ed 2-dab(f', J\1a lure, Avail. now.
Lic'd/ins &15-09!!1, 673-6809 cool~ $15. Roy, 817-l:i;il! Pl'~'[•'r hral'h awa. Pl>:>ase 35c sq. foot Clas~rs slart: l\1onday, Join. , __ '_"'_'_"_'_"_'"--~
675-24&1 or 541·5032 uary 11th -oEox=E=c=ucn=v=E~=,-",c"--,=,-,=,.· I Tin1c: 7: 00 P.i'.i.
call \\1/i\f 71 ,1: 273-1313. you will find exciting
Nu \Vas1irii::: ~'=='==~-=---II
fices, 334.i Nr.ii·?Jrl Bll"d, At: l luntini;to 11 Beach l ligh
H.B. &l:>-454:1• Si:hool, Room 121 Schools &
instructions
Fencing *WALLPAPER * J~OOl\EEPER • 20 Y"ars temporary ex..,...r1cnt·r. Retail slorr or positions
schedule !----~~~-~~~ 1For inforinatiun telephone; * NEWPORT BEAOI Civic 536·4138.
SIS When you call "!\lac" '" 548-1444 &l&.lTIJ oilier. PC'rinanenl. Ph : to f it your
Pu1ios-Dccking 6·M-:~J2~.
REDWOOD FENCES
Center, ~ JI lo JOOO It, 1 --~======--
Anws & Secretarial. 675-lfiQI ADVENTURE
Discover a Great New
Career With Th•
64.'i--0991 or 673-~()9 INT/Exl er palnling. Fro:el-----------·11& needs.
===========I est. Ln..:al ref'~. Lie'{! & ins. (;EN. 2'1ain1. Ship, Receive,
SAILING CRUISE 1865 Park A,·c C~!. 1.000
ft. 4 Rms. /\ir.'.cond, Phone J5o fr. 3 mast Squflrc Rigger. 833--3~21 eve. Ctsy to Blmi. Leaving 3/15/71 for 3
Gar dening Acroustical ('i•illngs. Cali i\1111! Clerk. J l yr 11·/sllme
Chuck. 61j.OS09. firm. Ex. Refs &12-2066. AIRLINES AL'S GARDENING PRO-PAINTING. /\ccooslic
mooths. i\1en & women wan~-
30Q.60Q..l200 s11. ft . C'd \\'/desire fnr adventure
OFFICES, $60-$00-$180, & u·avol & ability to share
A natural for young people
"'hO \l'ant excitement plus!
Tickel AgC'nt? Air Freight?
Sla!ion a ge n I? Reserva.
t!ons? Ramp or travel
ai;:ent? \Ve'Jl train you for
these and 111orc, d:Jy or nite .
\\'e include placement as·
for Gardening & smaU land-CL'1lini.:s S10 rnn1p1Plt'. Also,
scaping servii:es call 540.519S inter nr e"lrrs $90 + painl.
Serving Newport, CdJ\f, Cos. 5J1-69~7 or li:l&-:ll \0
Job Wanted, F emale 702
STF:PHENS ~rad seeking
i.;o\·erness posi!lnn -bi>at•h
arl'a. \Vil\ hve-111 . Exp,
]"{pf~. &12-f>!l~~
Costa Mesa. 646--2130 1,xricn.~f's. For i~fomial lon ~ r-.1?st· Dover Shorr.s, YOU SUPPLY T!lf0:-r -A"I_N_T
l·B_u_•_;n_•_•_•_R_e_n_l_•_l ___ 44_5 1 -~'_:;_.~'._260_P_~~-·"_'_1_'°_Y_"_"_'d0'0'_12_1_31_1
'r' AC.HT Broker s <'ck s .FULLY LICENS~I? *.
es!chr . SlO per rni, paitJIL'd Yi s * A·I CLEANUPS (•:-.p.~ F.·rl't ('sL ~Jl-8ti:i.~.
Storm r C'pa1r, n1inor !ndscr. 5~11-oO·l.~hc. ~~-~~-~
lawn l"f'novaling, 7 Yrs 1n PAlNTIJ'\C; Coinm"l & resid,
AIDES-For convalescell('t•,
elderly c·a re or lan1il~, can·.
l Jo1nen1akers, ft47-6fi.~l. Ncw·port Bch I 0 c <I 1 1011 Rrno_wnc{l Hindu Sp1r.1tualtsl
\v/dock ni:<."l"SS, 2'13 ; Ad1•icc on al~ 111a1ters'. arra. 962..1[9 14, Af)IS •11.ir ~1"'Cl1111y, :l •lay
37g...s71;; eves. Lovr, i\larr1agc, Busine~s
!ll'arlings given 7 d11ys ;1
\1·rrk, 10 an1 · 10 pn1 .
sistance. . . . scr,·11·P. Fro'f' "~1. R1•1's. Help Wanted, M & F 710 1
AL S Landsr:ar>1 ng . 1 rec !lti~l ~,10 or 6-15-lS.1:1 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:11
cor..1YJEB.CIAL Blrl"g l o«ld~:
OfliC'C's, v.·arel1Dll~,.. &
fc-necd/yr d, 1n C.M. /\va1I
1/15, Call: <195-'."i'ill!.
EAST 17th St. frontai;e. C.:.'1.
S1ore-O ll it·e. Si;;tl i110111h.
Realonomirs Corp. 6i5-6i00
Store·S:?ti \Y. 191h St., cr-.1
$11S/mo. * 646.7414
Industrial Rental 450
SMALL UNITS
COSTA MESA
$9.i & Sll5 mo. 1rn mcd occu.
parlC)'. 660-77 5 srr fi. * NEW BUILDING * 12.80 sq It units: office, resl·
room, 110-22.0 pci\\'er, ·plenty
of parking. 18th & Whittier
Ave. Costa J\fcsa. c~ RObert Nattress, Realtor
Costa Mesa £.12-1485
500 SQ. FT. BLDG.
E. l7th St., Costa r.1esa za:i Eltttrical Power.
Sl.00 Mo. 675-6700 • Brok(>)'"
NEW bldg, 3728·2300 gq. n.
Nr Baker & Fairview, l
.)'I' lse. SUl.llvan. 540-4429.
Rentals Wanted
31 ~ N. El Can1lno Rea!,
San C!<'mcn!r
~91-~ll :16. ·192-0076
Oncnlal, Swedish & Fr•'f1Ch
MASSAGE
10 A.I\!, to 12 P .Tl1.
1~13 Ne\\'port Blvd. Cilf
642·0450
Li Censed
WILL PAY
F::C-:. 71 yrs. Approved for rcnioval. Y11W ren10{lt'i1ni::, ~----
Ve!enuls. Eligible institution Trash liaulin( 101 c!r:inuii. P1\INTIN!,; Hnn1~s!, g11an1n-V A Better Position
trndrr thc federally insured Rf'pair sprrnklrr-s f>i:l-lllili. tl'f'd ''.~~~:. LlL·"o! .. ~1cal re['s.
sturlcnt lw n pl"Obrram, 1-----------C:ilJ (.,,,.,11 IO aft.,, EUROPEAN l~/\NDSCA.PI::ft T J
Airline Schools Pacific
610 E . 17th, Sant• Ana
54J.6S96
PIANO Lessons your homr
certified 1cnche>rs. r.luslc
Syslems. Mr. Hathoock,
£.l&-1368
Clean up • 'rrC'e Surgery
Reasnrui.blL'. EvC'.~. 4%-3383
PAINTJNf;/paf)erll\g, IS rrs
in H"rhnr arc:i. Lie &
ho11!11•rl, n~r!'> furn. &12-2356. * Residential -Apts * -----------* Comm<'reial * PAINTING-E x1-l11L .18 yrs.
Complete Care &16-98:15 l;'\'~r. ln~. ~ic. ~·:r1; .~·st.
I
GEN Cl Actoust Cc1hngs. '.)(;s • .JJ~!i.
eanup. treC' & sprnkl r 1~~--·-~-~-~~-"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"":~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~II serv. Ro1otil. Handyin (Hl, INT/Ex1rr Painting. Ftee j, $l,OOO
odd jobs. Hea~. 6-lf;..~'84/l est. fil'f's, Jn1n1ed . Service. =EX~J>iJ'iE~RfiTr-t.L;;,~.0;;---;, ;,7,;,~L~64~6--0~2~IO~. ~642~-~:>.0~1~4.:_ __ _j ACCO UN TING l\1AN AGER. t.: Jlcsu111C's h"ld in Confidence
1(5] 1'1aintenancc only, c a J J I NTER/Extcr. Spt'Cialist~
Ne-«rl ride daily to & from [,_"" __ •_•_•_•_"'_"_'_~_·,._ anytinie, j.1G-6i51. Lic'd, bonded , ins. \Von'\ if now cmp!oyrd, .l\1ust have work. Live in Laguna· l\'ork -· "" I I 'd' · 1•1s-4 d('~l'f'. U ical. Fre Paid by EXPER I' .. G _, .,,, Ullf('rll . :Jo, 4 . in Costa .l\1cSR, 1-1011.rs 8 to · • .-awa11an a1 uener1~~=~==~~==-Co. \Also f!'c jobs\ C;ilJ Ann .
:.. Cllll 6-12-4321, eX1 270: Cu mrlete Garden i ng * PAPEH:HANGING 6-U.2770, \\"csli'liff f't•rsonn~I
home 494-ST.:9. Service. Kamalanl, 64&4G76. & PAJNT~G. • 968-24 2:1 Ag<'lll'y, :l(J.IJ \\IC'stc!iff Dr., General
YOGA FOR WOMEN Complete Yard Ca rel Pl p h , ~"~·",;.·=~==~==II "-f Id 1 t J'"~t ~· ...... ~7 aster, ate , Repair 1 · SpeciaJ class.demonstration & Spec, .x:rv, or e er y or •·" ... """""' ARE YOU \\10 HTH ;1s,OOO
talk Wed. niorn. al 10 a1n . 1u1y nee<ls. Shopping, bank. * PATCH PLASTERING IN A YEA.R? l\.losl o( our
8 Week ~rie5 starts Jan. ing or specl errands. 536-2979 General Service1 All types. Ff'{'e estimates rnen earn less hut are
20. Yoga Center. 445 E. l71h Reas fees. Call ~25 plcasanlly :;urprisr.d \\"Ith
St., CM. 646-8281. I=============: IRAUll Gutters Ins I a 11t>1\ ,I=========== I splendid inc .. 'nme Hwy <lo en-
Boby1lttin9 Quality \\'flrk. Reasonable. Pl b " joy. Nt'C'd n1en over 40 to
SWINGER Or11nge Co· i----------i :""'::;:':o;'~''~· ;!161<-;;;;"°'~~·====l---;u~m-;;;'~";;9;;;;:-;;;;;;;;;--I take short i~uto trips in Gulde. }'ree info OCSG P. Be h c··· A. ·1 · LOTS or Love, nw OOme, PLUi\tBlNG REPAUt ac l 1es arta. 1nnn1 0 . Bo:< 2111, Anaheim, Hauling B B o· k P ~. $39-!IOSJ. 6 days \~·k, hot lunches, lrg No job too small So.
1 • 1
•c Pmm
1
o. 1 res.,
fr~ yrj, 50c hr per child. e 642-3128 e u11wes <'m c ro e u m TRASH. & Garage clean-up, 71-============I c F w th T ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.
Phone 542-7217 or \\'rite to
P, 0 . Box 122.l Costa lllesa.
Xln'l rrf's. E. :J:lnd St., d $10 I d Fr 1-~·~'opc .. ='clo.~'-'-' c''-'-'-··--·11
C M ... 1~1 ays. a oo . ee est R 1. c ·' · .,...,.. ""' ' Anytime, 54$--5031. 00 1ng A RESUME PUis your ap-
BABYSITI'lNli n1y home 6 plication on TOP! \\Ir oom·
NlCE "' I · ' HAULING, <:lcanup '°''· ro<>I· LEE ROO"-ING CO·. Rooling young man "''· \\'an s ·mo 10 4 yrs oht. Loving r pose & print 100 copits -
non°"'peaki.ng trft!"nd!. Box catt, gd ttf's, lncd yd. K· Ing, painling. l fftndJ.'111an or all types, r e cover , only $15. (;all 64G--0&)4 for
WE NEED
TYPISTS
CLERKS
STENOS
FlEXOWRITER
SECRETARIES
PBX OPERA TORS
ASST. BKKPRS.
ACCTG. CLERKS
american
girl
needs YOU
• HELPlll ,1213, San Clemente, Mart area C.M, 64~1473, anylime you call, 6'15-0788. repall'S, nx>( ('OOtings. Lie appointment.
Needed at once, proximity to flTGH School girl .,.,.ants YARD, Garage cleanups, & bonded i;ince 1 9 4 7, I AR~~rw=o"RK~.~D<~,~ig-n<-,-,-w-,-,~,-.1111 •--------I
LA. lnt'I, Atrpon, by sin· "·b 'ttl f til trees dirt lvy removal, skJp, ~64~1-07~222~·~-~-~~~ ed for lrcclance products &
...... de1e-"-couple, 3 ""'• I ![SJ .on ysi ng rom noon loader, backhoe. 962-8745". 1~BEfORE Yo" b"y, call T. , ... u,. J· L0ttdfound 6PM dally. 642 -0022 1===='=========! " new ideall of professional
old boy A 6 mos. baby. 2-3 , --------' Newport Hghts area 1 · Guy Roofing Co. Rerover quality; suitahlr for Greet. BR. houR, apt or duplex ln . Hou1ecleaning s p e> cl a Ii ll t. 6 4 5-27!!0, ing Card; Crrarnic & Gift·
rental rflJllt at. p!iO mo. Xlnt ·--------· 1 BABYSimNG Eve>! & 1 -----~----1 548-9500. tenant. who care for perm. wknds. f\.1y home. 67S-1283 HOUSE OF CLEAN I"'========= I ware Depti1: to be mttnufac-~ .. ·~I!' --•. Ple•"'• Found (frM ad1l SSO days, Evell. 548--0417. Con1plett' Hou~e. Cleani""' · lured in Japan, \\/'ill pur. -=10 """ ""'" ..., ..... S•wing(Alter1tions chase! outright or royally
call: 6C24SD Afftt 8 PM. FOUND . C.oll p k Bl1byglt1lng my hon1e, day or 1 -..,.,-~~""'0:!·"24~~~--1;;-;;;:~;;::;;:;::;;;;;;;:;:;: I basil\'. ~96-1881 or Dally Pllol
Will rent 11-unNm, C.M., Bh1ck ~nnd ,;r. !. ~~~ ni2llt, 11ny ~. 1ncd Yd. Oot Mesa Oeanlng Servict • bttS9Sftt~klingO -·HAHe,rations Bo:< M-50.
nieal 64G-3738 Carpe ts, Windows, F1oors tic pecia n em I ~===~~----.-11 NB. Barbar H.S. dist, F&m· M collar box trained, LI 1 -~0'==~-----1 C'tl Jo * 646-6446 A!.iSISTANT hou.i;e molhl'r
II,)' of 5 I; sml doc. Approx 8-7697 af1 JI A.1\1. BABYSITIER, 811 ages, 24 Rei & Comrnc'I, !)4l!-4lll 'i 642 5845 h1r WQ111tTI's alrQholic rehah
$200 mo. 646-7070 ANY Day ls tne BEST day "to hours. Warm mt'als big ExJWr. l11dy uwn lransp, By Alter at ons --horn<>. Sorne k 11 0 "' 1 rd 8"' back yarrl, 642-1592, Cr.1. clay or hrly.. Neat, accJ1ratt, 20 yt>ars exp. 1 REFINED career woman nsn en ad! Don' 1 t1l('()ho i~m. Roo111, board ,
want. studio apt. Cc. mov-dele.y, .call today, 642-4i78 EXPER. Child c&t'CI, xln't M&-7R01 THE }~astei;t draw ln the salary. 5-<lay 11·{·Ck. \~'rite
trw to N.8. Call eve•. att It.ems •1th eate, ~ Daily re.rs my honMt. Any age, THE SUN NEVER SETS on Wt!"Bt. •. a Daily P 11 o I zr.xi Harbor Blv,:1., Sul!e 301,
6pm wtatyt. (213) 31415, Pilot Clal!.~lfiP.d. 642-56711 Call ~9503. CUM 1u-ca . Pilot Ciaultied Classil!ed Ad . 642-.5678 Costa Mes& 9~ -~~~~~~-.~~~~~~~-·-~~~~~~-
2172 Dupont
Suite 12
Newport Beach
(Nr. Orange County
Airport)
• •
•
, , • W• Are Currently
Interviewing For
Th• Following
Positions
In The
Hawaiian Islands
Restaurant &
Bar Manager
$700-$900 + Car & llouse.
F.xper., married, preferably
no child~.
Goldsmith
$500-$1000. CrafJsman to work
in very pleasant newl.Y
opened shop right on th('
ocean.
Silk Scrt1en
Artist
Salnry Open. To prinl !not
spot) yardage in oewly
opened shop right on !lie
Ol:'ean.
COOK, 2ND
$3'16 r-10. \Veil estab. conval-
escent home nee-ds exper.
lady 2nd t-ook on day shill.
Beach area,
CALL ZENA
!714) 9S6.IDDO
CAL·FAIR
EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
625 So, Euclid, Suitt• f
Anaheim
COUPLE to 1nanage 10-unlt
apt. house for free apt.
r.1Ltsl be able to do garden-
Jng & n11nor repairs. Write
cxper. lo Box. 1\1-2081 Tbe
Daily Pilot, 330 \V, Bay ..
Costa !11esa .
DENTAL ASST., ch.airsidr.
cxp'rl. only_ Und r 3 0,
9an1-11, !tloo. 'Tues, Thurs
& Fri except Su111mer. Hun-!
t.ing!on Harbor. 846-0617. !
ORJV ER. KENNELMAN;
Pe>rn1. position. Good oppty,
ror right mature mun. Must
have good drivlng record,
Apply at :!0612 Laguna Can-
yon lld. Laguna.
ELDERLY \\Dn1an nr.eded a~
babystr il1oslly dys, poss
nites Cdr\1 ar>:>a 67H553
E xper Medical Recept
for busy G.P.'s office , good
typist. 6~6-3903
E XPERIENCED i\ITST
Salesman operator fur part time
Salary open tor \\'e.lding ni ght s near a irport. Call
supply company. l\Tust have 5.)7-9900 betWe{'!J l & 3.
\~'Clding ex!JC". Good salary I =;-=;oc;=1A-L~Ec-Ll-·1,-1a-,-,-.. -.,-w-o-,k-.· I
1st Irw months, then com-lull Unie only.
mission added. Allio ex· * 642-5446 *
pense also included.
newport .
personnel
agency
Flexowritt1r $2 Hr
\VILL TRAIN. at $1.75 hr if
expcr. on IBM e!ec, X!n't
co. CalI Jllliss Dotti, 557-6122,
Abigail Abbot Personnel
Agency, 230 \V, \Varner,
Suite 211 S.A.
833 Dover Dr., N.B. FULL Or pl-ti1ne, no exp.
642-3870 necessary, \Ve tr<lin, gtcat
l ~=====~====I oppo r tunity. K·osc o t
AUTO Inerplanitary Jne, ~18--9840;
646--2919.
D.M.V. GIRL
$450. r-.1ust be exper, on eon-
1.racts. Xln'l \ocaJ co. Reg.
ulal' pay inrreases. Beach
area,
Call Zena
(714) 9S6.IOOO
CAL·FAIR
EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
625 So. Euclid, Anaheim
(Suite 4)
AUTO POLIS HING &
DETAIL Positions. Exp'd
engine cleaning & paint-bur-
ling. Salary open. Growth
co . METRO CAR Y.1ASH
2950 Harbor Blvd. C.~t.
Baby!itler/Hskpr, Jive in,
children 5 & 7. Some Eng
pref'd Ref's 893-7892
BABYSITTER, lite hsekpng
in teacher's homt. Ref's
req'd. Own transp. 646--67()6
Banking * COMMERCIAL
TELLER
Exp"d, Apply in pc.rron
Newport N•tional
Bank
SU~rior & Placentia. N.B.
BARMAID-No exp nee, no
costume~. Nights, N.B, Age
30-40. fi75--5In.
BEAUTY /",dv i sor to
demonstrate {'xciling TIC\\'
produc1s. No door to door.
Selling require<!, new con1-
GIRL FRIDAY
Pat•t time help needed lo as·
sis1 act. dir, no exp. nee.
Apply in person only. Jeanne
Ed1v11rds. Wed 13th 11 AM-
2 Pi\I Gree.nbrook flee Club
l\lagnolia. bt.,.,·n Ellis & Tal-
bc!'1 , FV,
GIRLS, be your own boss.
Sell quality brand. name
cosrnetics. 5 0 •;r,., com·
nilssion. ¥.'orl< your O\vn
hours. No door 10 door.
S.!8-3750.
• GIRL WANTED *
lo work small unit collection
desk, Exp. not lll'C. but
helpful. Must be able to
converse •Nilh people, Jte.
typing & tili ng. $1.85 hr.
lo s!arf. Conlact Mr. Gibbs,
642-7960 C.:\I.
GIRL FRIDAY
NP.At handwriting & typing
will capture this interest.in&
job with sharp i;alesmen.
Start $'150. Call Helen Hayes
COASTAL AGENCY
A member of
Snelling & Snelling Jnr.
2790 trarbor B!, CM 54(}..605.)
Harbnr Blvd. at Adams
GIRL, Live in, babysit for
\\Urklng 1>fom w/2 ~T. old,
111ost e\'eS free. £.12-99.)0.
HAffi stylist and/or manL
cunsl Jor shop u1 Laguna
Beach. Rent space. 497.1315
HELP YOUR
HUSBAND!
pany-let~ gro1v 1ogether. You can ear11 up tn s12 .. ·i0 in
Call 847~12·1. ' tin hi>Ur lakrni; orders from
BOAT CARPENTERS, V1n1e your lnend~. ne ighbors and
exp. Apply: LUHR'S BOAT relatives for Studio Glrl's
CO 17Rl Placrn1ia, C.M. beautiful Good Housekeep.
FULL i:harge book keeper, ex-ing npproved \\'JCS, WIG·
LETS, FALLS a"d c00mo. per1enee ln payroll reports, "~ tics! acct remnciliation, journaJs
& eti:. Ask for Mrs, Branl,
J ohnson & Son Lior:oln r.tcr.
cury, 2626 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. 540-5630.
BKKPR, 1'>1edical office ,
Laguna area. Must be ac-
curate. Sornc recept. \Vork.
State age & qua!. Box
M-1097, Daily Pilot, LB.
BOOK1CEEPER 1.hru TB,
need~ immed. Typing
req'd. Perm. 5 day wk,
salary open. Ex:p. nee.
642·3432 N .8.
CATALOGUER/INDEXER
For technical n>ports &
<'ngineering drawings. \Vill
use BUSHIPS Tile9QUnlS for
del!Criptors, Salary plus in-
centivt-, Send resumt-to Box
M-40 Daily Pilot, 330 W.
Bay, Costa Mesa.
CARRIER
BOYS
WANTED
for the
DAILY PILOT
Dana Point, San Juan
Capiiltrano a.nd
Capistraoo Beach.
Contact Mr. Seay nt
DAILY PILOT
San Clement@ oHlce
305 N, El Camino Real
m«io
CASHIERS-Car Wash
time "'pert 1lm@. Cali~ * 644-4450 •
fall
Top profi!s, No 1c1Ti!ory re-
strictions. Also sell .,.,,here
you \\'Ork. Full lime or spare
hot1rs. Side line OK. Phone
loll free 800-621-4005 or writ>:>
STUDIO GIRL llOLLY-
"'000, DEPT .. NC-164. U461
Hart St., No. Hollywood. Ca.
91605 for full information
and free samples by n1ail.
No one will call on you. AH
replies confidential PhoM
1oday. •
lfOUSEKEEPER & child care, 5 rlay week, .live-in,
salary open. Spanish speak-
ing OK. 962-9960 after 7
Pftl.
Housewives
Retired Peoplo
Students-anyone over lS
FULL·PART TIME
No exp, fl('C. \Ve train
Intervie ws Daily J0-3 pm
TAXCO
Nl?'eds Income Tax
Preparen; Now
31006 Camino Capistrano
San Juan Capi!trano
493·118.'i for appt. * INHALATION * -THERAPIST-.
Graduate of Inhalation 'l'h!r.
apy 1ch00!, or minimum I~
yrs. W(Jrk.lng t-xpcrlence.
P erm .. full tlmr 11 pm to
7:30 am. 0 WESTMINSTER
COl'ltMUNITY HOSPITAL e
App I y l"'rrlOnnt!J, J7n2
Beach Ulvd., Jtuntlngton
~•ch, or call (tt~J 347·78G1.
' •
.
"
I
' '
• f
·t
'I
'
[
'
0
t
0
g • l
'
l
' 5
ti
t
' '
• I l
•i••·····--·~. Me J'i
Monday, J.i11uary l l, 1971 11,t,ILV PILOT :IS -ttt'
r --· 1rw 1 ·-,-· 1/ill 1 ·--· /ill ·--1rw 1 -,... 1~ 1 -.. 1~ FREE ro YOU 1 -"'t.l':-1~ 1 T--, ______ _,_l!!J c. ------'LliJ , _____ _,JL.tiJ (.._ _____ J.l!!J ~------J.L.YJ ~------~~NEED Cd horn• tor lovablt 1··------· ~ l[iJ
,,________ ·-------··-------male poodl• Ind wlnt hair ·-------•l•-------t~~r mlx, rood t:Otn·
Help Wen .. d, M & F 710 Help Wented, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wented. M & F 710 Furniture
Gxeculive
Pe,.:Jon.ne/
_A'J<!llC'J
ON THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS PLEASE
SEND RESUMES ONLY.
EVERY INQUIRY WILL
RECEIVE IMMEDIATE
• REPLY.
FINANCIAL MGR.
Northern Calif. area.
t.lust have extensive ex-
per Jn acqulsitlons &
mergers. Prefer electron-
ic bckgrnd.
ASST TO V.P.
Large Orange Co. com-
pany searcfllng for a spe-
cialist in their commer-
cial business develop-
ment dept. Studies, mkt-
ng research, analysis rnr
new products & 11cq11isi-
tions of small businesses.
Con1putC'r pc>riphera.I ex-
per desired.
CIRCUIT DESIGNERS
Ri>sponsible for deslgTi lng
& devt>loplng th,. circuit-
ry for telC'phone lrans-
m\ssion products. B.S.E.E.
req'd. ~1.S.E.E. pref'd +
5 yrs exprr in thr telc>·
phon" indus try Orange
Co. firm,
INDUSTRIAL
SALES MANAGER
Responsiblr for industrl-
aJ process cnnlrnl insl.ru-
ment srstrm. Trl'hnitnl
degree pref'd. Riverside
Co.
ELECTRONIC TECH
3-4 Yrs min. exper. in
electro -n1rrhanica! as·
sembly & prorlur·tic>n . S11-
pe-rvi~ory canabilitf Ps de-
sirable. Br.ach area.
JR. BUYER
Min. fi mo.-;, rxflC'r in
elecl ronics. CnmmerC'iR.I
application dr~irable. Or-
ange Co. firm.
MGMT TRAINEES
~grrrd, mnrried. prrfrr
2 yrs rxprr ln 1Jus1nPSS nr
rrcf'n! mill !11ry 1:>0.-k-
gro11nd . .loin Orfln.L'C' C'n.
leadin~ insuranrr rn. tn
"" undf'!'\vri!ing & oper-
ation suf)('rvision.
ON THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS PLEASE
CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT
MARKETING
SECRETARIES
Techni('al mk1ng exper
desltl'ri. SH 80, 1yp1n~
70. U-"din,r: rlrc. mfgr in
Orangr Co. Xln't salary
& fringe benefits.
f /C IOOKKEEPIR
Con11trurtion tw-ki:rnd 11. mu~L Hvy expcr in pay-
ables.
REC EPTIONIST
M•turt> 1voman, l!tr typ-
ln1. Orange Co. Airport .,.. ..
STAT TYPIST
Xln't typi•t w/bank f'.'I(·
.. r.
410 W. C-t Hwy
lolteH Newpon loac~
645-2716
HOUS EKEE PE R F'('lr
ooup!e. Live in or tiur.
WaterJront N.B. $225. Ph:
673-1352.
HSKPRS Emplyr (WIYS l ee ,
Georee Allen Byland Agney
lo&.B .E. 16th, S.A. 547-0395.
l-IOUSECLEANER For home
of teachtl'S, 1:00 to ~:30 pm
J\fon th ru F'ri. 548·211:?.
. -
810 Mlacellen.oua 118 pan!Of1, 539-8466; 539-n.81 Oener•I
1112
tOO Cycle1; Bikes,
Scoot.rs
Private Secretary SERVICE CENTER Custom Draperies COMPLETE Onipery work BEAUTIFUL SUkle blond pt __
To Prtsldtnt E I 1 A room equipment for sale, poodle and pom. rqp!e am. V nt mp oymen 9ency Decorator draPf:ry workroom h c 8 v y-du 1 y se Y.' 1 n g bl'Hd needs lovlna home,
ery co identlaJ. Must bt closing out 2500 yards ol machines-. heavy wooden loves child. 539 _7181 : Buie Boating Cour&e otf. 1ntelll~ni, young, attractive *Sec'y/ Adm . $700 dtapt'ry tabr!c. and made.up tables, automatic tabler 548-0813 1/12 ered lo the pubUc by the womannl.a~ledto1 travel. Fu. Top position for career or. drAPerie1. Materials t!'oni '".'euures <iNifl"rieli & !IP-\"NG A"Ciit ~ltl••. 5 ......_2 Balboa PoWC'r Squadron.
lure u 1m1te or right per. iented individual w/previou3 75c a yard and c:lnt""r!es I b kroo I Odd & ..---Sall as well ., power F •-p 1es uc m . s yn 1ame -uwred .Ornt son , orme!' sl'!Crttary Pn> exper, reporting co top from $5 pair. ~ BlrC'h SL, ends-all must go at once? 00;.neutered IOm; Ion& boating taughl, Starting
n1oted io executive posiuon. mgmt/req's xln 't SH & typ-Newport Beach 546.1431 adj m1 Randolph CM 546-6300. ha(r .ome ihort 8J6..U9l 7 pm Moq,. Jan 18. !:very ~'ri nen resume &. any help-Ing skills + Ure bkkpng, l'.l Orange County Airporr. 548-bets '-IJJ.2 Monday n1te to;. 13 wt!eks.
fu! screening lntormalion 1o *Sec'y Legal $475 * AUCTION * At Ntwport Harbor Yacht · · · · SUPERB Dome top arn1o!re FREE Cine! A T.t., P.O. Box 1865, Costa Some exper, proba1e & trial/ Spai, oak dining table, 8' Fine Furniture " y" ne~1 II. eood Club, 72-0 W. Bay Ave.,
r-·lesa, Ca . 92526 ., gd typist, lire SH helptuJ but Spftn oak stt1w a.mple stor. &: App!i811~S ho~le a~ lami:Y· Beau
1
titul Newport Beach. Bring
PART Or tulllirnean1hitlous not essential... copper fridg 31::., Chan-Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m. C(]. ecoor,llhetleand ong no!ebook It pencil flrst
IX'(Jple. Let us! Show you *Bkkper/FC -··· $550 deliers assort n1 lrrors Windy'-t Auction Born rea:11J~,83~J!hmix. 7 I~ nite. Any questio'm call
how 10 make ntoney 1 G!n ofc/abl!ity !O close & 6Th-8922. 207•1, N ) ~68686 673-18:>:;, 213/592-~,.')39. ::. -.. e"'I>Ori. er-· FREE 1'o good home must 1 ----==~=~---I pUll a stmt/accur. typist. t.1UST SELL 5 Rms r.fedit Behind Tony's Bldg, Mat'!. gl\'e 1111 male b I a c k FREE
PERi'.f. Part time {M·W·FJ, *Clerk Typi$t ... ' $300 rur11, sttl'f'O eqpl, gtins, BICYCLES miniature poodle approx-6
acc. 1ypiog w/fi""•re abil, Fun :lob w/g:rear ~ple lonJy Spanlsh "·all pl!:1quf's, min) _,, . .. ~ 3 If: 5 S""ed Stingray Ty..... yrs. g ........ , co m p a n 1 o n lte SH, diet mach. Exp'd, lite lyplng & some clerical b!kts, TV 23" B1\V. lamps. ,.. ...-4~1050 -'I 6 1111 Z4 & 26" Boy• & Girls. JJ-.., • .\alary ope-n. Box M-2088 The req'd, Must see to Apprer!
FREE nn.l'VU'.'I
TH•
HONDA ...
"FRIEDLANDER"'
Int toat ntW'f', .,,
537-6824 • 893-~
NEW.USED.SE RV.
l'V'V'l.n.n
Daily Pilo!. 330 \V, Bay, * 642-9492 * Also, haYe 10 spd. 4 MONTHS old part Cocker.
Huntington Beach Po"·er
Squaclron'a bulc boatin&'
COUI'Sf'_ for sail or pov.ocr.
Mfgr. Secretary Costa ~-!"... N C Dr NB 642.9867 ll"rrier, falher had "coyote rnterestlng, busy job. SH 90. I -=~".~'--=~~---500 ewport ·tnrer " SOFA and matching (oyeseat blood.. s II t Classes start: fltond~'-'. Jan.
..
Publt'c R1lat1'ons Suite 535 I &14-4981 110 foe both. Floral prlnt LG _ BRAIDED \\'OOJ rug .. · m~. • cu 'Y ans. -.. lyp1ng 60. ,\fust haYe manu. to Peaches 84&-1680 1/12 U"""' 11th
material, good condition tcleaned\, $60. Vanity bench ~~ 'JO HONDA 450 CC fa('luring cxper. Nice peopl'e If you have a promotional SERVICE E••ab'd F"ll•r 6,, 1140 "'IP•d 13 5IJ ''2-0"~" DACHSHUND mix fomalo Time:. 7:00 P.M. to ''"ek w>.11>. ''''·' bck•rod tho »y ;, the · " '" ~-.-· " · ' "" ,,.,,,, • · " • B h 11''111-k I ,. yr 0 Id G d At : Huntington Beach High Hn1it for salary. Also, assisr rus rte, .r ::. 1" · to END TABLES, one oc-NE\V iltarquis diamond ring ~ . · · 00
Dental Assistant
Frnt ofc & chair asst-Prefer
ei<per. but will train.
General Office
Pleasant infonna! o!c. in Tus·
tin. Cd ryptng, personable.
Cen 'J olc cxpcr.
Secretary
Top slrills req'd + poise &
flexlblllly, \Vork well under
pressure.
Sec'y/Bookkeeper
Construction bck.grnd helptul.
1 Girl ore. Gd skills & know.
ledge of bkkpng.
Receptionist
New !inn in our area req's
lovely hosress to greet. vis.
itor:s. l\.laturity, poise & grac-
iousness are MUSTS.
advertising, l\lini skirt OK. st., also pt. time 54&-5745. tagon11J ·maple $12, one & ll'Cdding band .. !ltus! Sac-w/children. 8JS.19Ci aft School. Room lZl. h Low mileage. Excellent con •
6 1/11 For information telep one: di·11·0 ... die. 'l"•t ''"· .. ~ Call ~1iss Laura, 557·6122, French Provincial Sl 5. 12 Price. 545-3689, 544---9384. · " ''" ...,.,., VIETNAM SAMOYED H k I 11 538-4138. full price. (#908442) Will Abigail Abbot Personnel 64~1140. ASH Blonde, natural ha.it · us Y ma e
230 W mos To family w/lg yard 14 FT Crackerbox, h I· take car in trade or tlnance Ag{'nr..v. . Warner, * CUSTOr.f FURNITURE \\.'kg $2tl. '' . ' · Older children experience powettd, small block, Chev private party. Call 545-8736 Suite 211, S.A. Sheet Metal Worker RENTAL. Se~ ad dass Call 645-0955 11 d 67:;:,1518 1112 V--8 Inboard w/traller, See or 494-6811.
REAL ESTATE SALES Electrician -4000. Call !'J.18-3481 w g ogs . at 32852 Calle San ~tl'll'COs,l--=,-.,-,-==~--1
Join a going organization & Diesel Mechanic ·~D~R"O"P~-Lecc-,~,-mc-c.,~1~,-1a=b1""e. Musical Instruments 822 BEAUTIFUL Young adul1 San Juan Capi~trano or call WANTED
start the new year right! seat5 six .. S15. I ·1-20--B-A_S_S __ B_e_ill_;,-,-10--.-,·_I ~:~~e & c~~Uysi~1:fver~~'~:~ 493-4TI6 or 493-4166 $425 Any year 250 or 305 Honda
Bonus CQ01mlsslon p I an _ AUSTRALIA Call 645-0955 cordion y,,•/casC'. Very good 546-7308 1112 '67 BOSTON WHALER: 13', Scrambler, not running.
Ooly 2 "ptnings. Call tor in-LOVEL'' G Id " d "65 J h 40 hp ol•c 549-1690 o "ro ca e cond. $115. 5'18-3576 before ~-; Male J{usk ie black y,<Jt h ~ 0 mon · --~-~~~~--
terview, Bud Corbin • Paul Crine Oper•tor Hide-a-bed. Alniost new. noon white, alltrfld, shots, love!! start, trlr, fully eqpt. $1000. '70 Am. Eagle 250
Marrin. M Sa· 1100 962·~" h'ld ... 1181 -" 5 645-1462 Eves, D • Y" 30 hp. F•·t•. Llko ... ,. CORBIN.MARTIN ason L, • ....,.,... C-0-CLASSIC GIBSON c 1 ren ~ ..... er = ""'
BEA'"TIFUL I 3 d 557-6191 ~"""· 67~ 6998 aft 5 REAL TORS 644-7662 Mill Wrights .:.i c1est, -rawtr GUITAR Vi /CASE $75 pm. 1/11 =========:/--;-;;;:,,;:i;'iei;;;;;,.;~-1
P ipe Fitters FrenC'h Provincial. Antique e 673-2174 e T\VO short haired Persia ns 1970 HONDA 350CB
ROUTE Salts-$130 v.·k f(l st. "'hite. $100. 673-3372 ==========I _females 9 mo old, Lovable Boats/Marine •XL.NT COND. e
Take ov estab Fuller Brush UPHOLSTERED CHAIR, Office Furniture/ and well trained , Equip. 904 $600. 96U796
rte in Laguna. Xlnt pt time $ 125 blue, low barrel shape $20. Equip. 824 5-i;r...J910. 1/121 ----------70 TRIUMPH Tr. lOOc. SOOcc
·wk also avail !'J.12-7573. Total Fn 644-1140. -~~-------INBOARD 1to1 ve'!vet drive undtr 1500 miles. $1000
SA L ES W 0 MEN, E x-ORTHO r.tattress, box Rcfin'd 34x60 \YOod desks, LONESO:t~.~-oorge \5 ~Y trans. 2-23 gal gu tanks. Firm. 64~2384
..... r1cnced, retail food store. UNIVERSAL $69.50 e Refin'd wood arm name .' 1 ing a oving · t I ·-~•ht'tld• r-springs & frame. Double , 01vner 1s my game How 1 n 5 rumens, Wlil\.I • '70 HONDA SLlOO. Llke new, f>,!S> ll{'ed 11,.·oman cook, ex· rotary chairs $2950 e We ' b kt 1.11 O t board
per.irnced, for preparation 714 /956 .. 2251' 2 Months old S45· 673_7(l3fi, have lhe ]~est . selection about you! S46-ll22G 1112 fl.~~r:ucy seap~ps, u controls, ~~Ssroo or make ol!er.
of foods & counter 11·nrk. Open 7 d!iys a week LGE H.nee-holr, w a 1nu 1 of used otfice turn In this FREE Puppies ¥.i Shepherd cables, 1vindshlelds, sea1s1..:::.,:::c:..,.,~==-=-I
Give derail~ & background. finish, 5 drawr.rs & file area. & hall Poodle, Call aft 5, S.275 Cash for all $1 000 * 197(} 350 HONDA Motor
Transporation neressary. * * \VAITRESS..l\1ust have draw;r. oflice chr. 962-2719. Mc Mahan Desk 537-9630. 1/11 worth of stock. 54!)..Q530 , Sport. 1400 miles. Xlnt cond.
General Office C.:-01. area. Wr:ite Box M-25. local references, Full or I 1800 Newport Blvd. i\1ALE 4 mo. old hunting BOAT Bath 20', floating. 7 ,16_25_._64_2-_5751 _____ _
Beginning position 1•:/xln't D11ily Pilot, 330 \\'. Bay. pan time. Apply in person Garage Sae 812 642-8450 bird dog_ 548-4346. 956 W. Mo'i old. Below 11' Pl'ice. 1967 TRIUMPH Bonn. T. T.
oppor. firm. Llfe ryping &/ C.t-1. only, 5930 \V. Coast Hwy, 13 Ft 1..,-... haped e:'lecutiYe \Vilron, C.r-L 1/11 $100. 846-9518 New top end. Best otter.
or 10 key adder. Ir-IMEDJ. 's~A~L~E~S~\7V~0~,71~E7Nc,-.--•--x-N.B. Surf & Si rloin. SAT-Sun. Patio Sale-2 hohbY' desk. 12 drawers, 3 Darling black Cock-a-Poo ----------1548-8542 after 5:30.
ATE OPENINGS, [X'rienced, career m111ded to l -.-'-~t~V~A~t~T~R~E~s7s=E~S~.-,-,--matchlng Antiqut> st YI e 1vide document storage C'Ost puppies. One female, two Boats, Power 906 BULTACO head. exp an.
\11ork into ass1. mgr of fint' perienced. Apply , in pt>rson. chairs. good condition S20 $11j, ne1v, will take' $95, mal~s. 6 "'ks . 645-0653 1/12 cam. new knobbyri. Broken
llZVI NE PERSONNEL
SER.VICES£"AGENCY
488 E. J71h lat Irvine/ C.l'l1'.
642-1470
ladies clothing chain .. Please ];30-3:3(), 2633 w. Coast ~~l'hh 2-4 ft lon
1
•1 picnic 64&-5077 675-3670. SIA MESE SeaJpoint, altered e 28' CALIFORNIAN e leg must sell. 675--0662 evt!.
app !y in person H NB uo:nces new. each. • FLYBRIDGE • wy .. ' · ' Fi __ , · · ELECTRIC A.B . Dick mall', exceptional hm.o & sz. BACKSTREET No. 2.'i ower i;anJen "'1re lenc1ng "'''"" M bll H \VAITRESS, e>p'd, Apply p · f Id' h Id I printer n1 imeograph & ap-53&-0-176 1/11 $10.850 * 675-899:1 O e omes rash1on Island, N.B. at10 o ing c airs·. o o ,1 -"-~~=~~==-I 2052 Newport., C.M. Brunch I 1 k •-1 " 5SO r. _"'., S50 supplies. $150. BLACK P"PPY, female, 7 wk!! 16'7" Used Boston Whaler
*
SALES CLERKS arge run , ~s ouer. 133
935
LADY tor restauran! "'Ork Full and par1 ume
exp des'd , Please call -APPI.i'-
Housr. ~H;•m~il~to~o~. ~CM~·~·===== l :'~·'='-=c=' "';';:=====:::I old. Good with k i rl s , wllrlr It cover & xtras. ,;; 5-11-9830 1/12 2131498-1535, 6#-1967.
Miscellaneous 818 Piano•/O rgans 826 FREE Short haired puppies ====='======
I I!""" l D h h d d T · Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908
Surround!d by
Irvine Oranges!
54>.1686 The Tobacconist Inc. Mtrchandi5e V ----------Beginners Organ Clas• pt ac s un an erner
'--------'· HOYER 12 string e!ec/gu itar ENROLL NOW 846-6511 1/12 Real rural living yet cloae
to ocean, shopping &
recreation LOOKING for n1ore than just l!unt1nglon Cen1£'r. H.B.
another job'-: Join the "New SALES WOM AN _rtf'erlrrt for
B£'1tutif1il Jdrils" Div. of l11'rnserl Charm &hool. No
GENER,\L FOODS. Help 11i::e limit ~10-55-10-Antiques
.
800
Berni-o-Matie prtbJ refrig. Class s1ar1ing Tur.s., Jan. FREE 1o good home I ANNOUNCING Cap'n Eds
Bohn conttxr calculalor. Pal. J2, 7 p.n1. 6 11•teks cour:se altered male cal. Greyish Sailing Club. 29' Diesel
omar microscnpt. RCA S12. l~AMMOND ORGAN black. fi4&-~79 Jill Sloop. Low rates, Cal 25
BIW TV & i\1isc po11·er 100!~. STUDIOS. 28.">4 E. Coast PT ttrrier k """'1\e_ pup~. & SS 40' also avail. 645-2244. ALL ELECTRIC '""""' Eves 968-4MO. Go1n,r: Ovr.r.:>eas 1\1us! sell~ Jiv.'y .• Corona de I ll1ar. 11lmm;t 2 mo old, very tiny, 1-=:':::.,-:;::,.::.::;.--,,----.,.cl
D11vr•: 64&-223.l fi~,l-8930. :I ma.le, I fem. ;i.1s.:m2 JIU LOCAL Sport fishing· 416
o~hers to enhance their SAR1\ll Coventry In<', full
persor1al beau1y \\•hile Pn-or pt-time help needed, no
joying 11 profitable buslnes~. investment. 557~&1.
•" $15-0 k N =~===~--~-i\fOVING Sale: \\1estlnghsr
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS FINAL GIRL'S 20" bike. Old, bul pas11. charter boats wlnter Choose from
105 floor plans,
you name it!
~~·" 11' up. o ei<p nee. SEAMSTRESS For par! time " d d ''' =t 22 refng, $300. Dinette srt •~o oor 1o nor. ~ -L= 1vork 1n J-luntlngton Brach. VEAR END u~ahle. 968-4~1 1112 ~"-'~"-"~&-~9000~---~= ~ JlOO, bdrm set $125, loungr
r-tARINE Engine Installer 846-4221. Egoism -Jerky -Biped -chr $25, davenport S2.'i, CLEAR OUT Baet1, Sail 909
want Pd, Ex Per ; enc" tl * S~cE~A~M~S~T=R~E~S~S~*~-\Vhaler -SHEIK rhande-l ier S25, !1l1ng <"'ab of P ianos & Organs I ![El
ooly/Flpply LUH!l'S BOAT r·-~.1 Have you heard about thr $2:i. crp'"" & rugs. Misc. Many at wholesale prices Petl ind Suppllt& 'L.. COLUMBIA 28', 1969, SlG.750 Adulta-Pttl O.K.
Co 1181 Placen(ia, c .,.,f. ~~ulJ !imc or part li!TIP, -"Nil ~.... "''ARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO "' L-Oaded In c I: PWS, • "">'• C•ll Ct.OWN CLEAN-Sul1a11's seventy-rv.·o ll'lvt"~ 644--0916 ~-------p 1 ete Clu• •3QO QOO -,--1819 Ne1vport, B!vt.i. 642-fM84 w I s how er . Dys : r v -... i 1-IAJURE l\Ian or lady clerk ERS. 644·6113 aftrr 2 PM. wlio:i were surprised one nlght 'o~E7·s=K~-,,-d~cdrn~fl7i"-,-,-,7bt~c 213 / 6 36-o 7 s 7 Eve 5 : Recreetlon Center
in c.t-1. liq-deli, 2-lG pm and lrl out a terri!itd i•omhinal i o n , locking Hamrnond, Ste inway, 71 646-5724 daily. EXp <l<'s'rl , ~!'l921_:_ SECRETARY For property SHEIK? drawl'rs on both sirle.~. Ari· 'Yamaha. New& used pianos,1-D--------8-54-,='-'-=._.,..,...· -,,c;c-,:--::=
111anai:::<'mrn1 divl.~fon of cA~T7To~E=N~TJ=o=N~, -="~--=ra7t~o:C".r•.· o· mos! makes Best buys in ogs CAL 20, Immaculate cond, !>1ECHAN!C, Full tin1r. Xln! t'slahlisheil real es!alt:' com· ,_,._.,_., jusfable lilt top, All mf.'tal. " · · .1----------In d d / RDF 14 BEAUTIFULLY
FURNISHED
MODELS
wages & benefits !or right Louis PhilllPf' canape lrofal iOClrl <-'Ollrl1tion with ad j. So. Calli. At Schmidt Music EV~R \V 1 d OLD a e w extra5, • P'°'· T,vpin". shorthand, _, z~ C• 1901 N M•io Santa ~ ane an spin xtra sails etc man. Richfield, l!lt h. & lite bookkrrp'ing. S· ability i o!rl rlamask, a sted.J, $1 ,,.,, eha1 r $85. 549--053(} v., • • £NGL1Stt SHEEP DOG , ' • •
Ne\i·porl, C.:'11.. to 1~·ork ll'illl puhlir re-1 .~&t='-''="'=7~6.======= SACRIFICE: Two Good,;'ear l =A="='=· ========I bu l didn't wan! to spend I ~64,w.t6~-=1~c,--~~--I (Dir. TR193)
•500 & " F h NEW 16' Glau Catamaran MEN wanter! hill k part quirrd. SJOll + htnelits. Polygla~s G 70 x 14 11•fde S • M hi 828 " I.IP"' at er was R · A 1· 802 ew1ng ac nas Slbt · H k h and trailer for $595. Ph.: time, $1200 for 12 wks work. Send resume f,, salary ~ PP 1ances ovals. i\'lountl'rl on n•'111 lg, , nan us y mo! er 14851 Jeffrey Rd. Zl~! 438-9911-quircmt'n!s \Q Box /'11-27, <'hromr reverse .rims. Only 1970 Sln~er Zig-Zag Auto, 11 champion Old 'En.glish.1 :'::""="="'=·=======/
Daily Pilq,t, 3.3-0 \Y. Bay, GE: Elrc dry<'r s4o. Kenmore 300 miles (J/ 11o-ear. Excelltnl beauWul walnu t console. 10 Big, beautiful, furry
C:'<l e!rcdryer$40.Westinghous~ condition! t.fu st sell, now r.lakes buttonhol1>s, pups, 8 wks old $00. Boats,Sllps/Dock1 910 In Irvine Betty Bruce
mi:J:J lxec
Agenc'J
Accounts Payable
2 Yrs ,,i<per. Conslruc!1'1n
prrl'd Typing ;-)(), 10 kry
adding by iou~h.
Secretary
Tr> V.P, properly rlevel np·
ni.-nT !lr fll'_' Typini; t.· SH
f:St:row '-'·~Pf'r good . Oleta.
phone.
General Office
SH 80. typing 60, rlic111phonr,
phonPs. Front olc 11pf>('a.r,
Beautiful ofcs on waterfront.
Gen'I. Ofc./Bkkpng
J.lunt. Bea(·h, l g-\rl ofc. E~
f;J'OW or R.E. necess. SH,
typing. To T.B.
Receptionist
No t.1inJ! Typing, filing, good
potential fur a young lady.
410 W. Caast Hwy.
Newport Beech
By Appl. 646-39'9
MOTEL HOUSEKEEPER
Ntwport Beach
Ph: 675-.Wil
NEW OR EXPERIENCED
SALESMEN LA R WIN
COMPANY Reaale Oiviak>n
needs •"en.I 1eneral real
t11ta1e uenis, New offict
oprning Jn Huntlnglon
Beach approi< Feh. 1111.
Lisiing leads, m It j or
medteal Insurance pit id hy
1..'-0mp11.ny, lncen!l11e rontests
and bonu11 p\fUl, Get in on
tilt ground floor AM grow
with us. call Le.Mn Realty,
Inc. 962-6988 or Si'T-2221.
confidence kept.
OPERS-S!NGLE NEEDLE
Spec. mach. Exp'd only.
1
sporl'iwe11r, ad. pay. N.B.
00·3472
ORDERLIES-Days, f!. time.
Exp _ prnl'd but will tn1ln, I
PrrMJnnel Dept HOii.a Jlo~p
t'!l't' dryer S30. All )(I nt cond, only $86. 89J--&160. ove"ca•I• •••m•. b 1 ind 642-5472 . .SERVICfo.: STATION AT-guar. & deHY. 8•17-8115, ' ·~=~=~=~~~~ \VROUGHr Iron & woo<l hems designs etc. Guar. AFGHANS AKC Female It
TENDANT all shift.~ open. 5-l6-S672-dinl'lte sci $100. &hick floor S4•1.44' cash, or small pymts. male. Whl w/blk ""ask, Top Appl ,v in person. 4678 Cam-FR!GERATORS \V 'LG "' RE , · mn<lrl hairdryer $7'.'J. 2 lge 545-8238. h!oorl line, Champ 11tock.
YACHT B r o k e r sttks S ml. South of TusUn, and
Newport Bch location ~mi.S.o!Santa'Anafrwy.
w/dork acce11 . (2mi.N.otSanDiegoFrwy)
213/379-STIS. p11s Dr,, Nrwpt Brh. FR"EZERS l "l "I" I k "' · .,,,.. ''~ ""· milk cans SlO ta. Son1e an-* REPAIRS * Good 11•/chi!drtn, isbr n.
""HF:l::T i\lrl(ll tlfa c l1 1n f'. ** 64&-7820 ** t1qurs & col lectables . CJ & -fi.l&-ifl58. ran, ciil · ar!Jusr your ma.1~==-=-c:--:-:=,.,--;,7" 15'-30' slips avail tor power Oµt'ralor_ ;..Ju•! h .<1 ve RCA \\'hirl[>OOl dishwasher. tJ.12-9929 all 4. rhinr in your honic . .Spec· GREAT Dane puppiP5 .AKC. l>oal.•. Bayside Village, 300 832-8585
prrss-hrake exp. Appl,v in Likr ni;>w/white portable.
1
GOLD \Vool rur,:, 12xt9' S200. ill! $3.95, 11 11 "'Ork guaran· J2 wc('k~ old, 1 fawn . l
!>t'rs R-1 9 \V, lfiJh St, .NB. S100 or best. 645--0TG5 .<:.e.Jmrr trun1pe1, r:.n1o<lifif'd, !e.C'rl, 5'15-8238. brind!r, bo1h femall'. Evt. E. Coast Hwy, N.B. Triple Wide Cornell
SLIPS AVA1LABLE, 25' to c u p START JOB 24B $150. \I/rt suit, 1:io Jhs, only !'>46·3708 after 6;00 pm, 40. on nental e aramount
Youn~ g<1! ll'1th .'Sh,1r1 work [Ill :i'4", $20. r.1etronome $5. Sporting Goods 83(1, MUST SAC, Aust Shep pup~. 673_6606 BllJT!niton • Univenal
t''\r. coorl 1yp1ng, ()JI Lo-I [mp!fl~menl I i I 673-0740. SURFBOARDS Rrg. Blue Merle~. ihots. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifj Flamingo • General ra1nP \\'ei;!(•Jiff r ... rwnnf') t l-1-0-s7pt1~cb-tC)-.-cl-,-,-4c,-,-.;o-,-1,-5c , Cornf' see & make otr.1 1 broadmoor e Star Agr n~·~" 2fl4.1 \\-~1~tclJf! Dr .. ~------~ l-J. ~pets. Gel cond, R£>~.~. 6'10'' "Creek" J<Jw railer, &12-64(}0 1·6 pm. 644---8160
1 1 ~ Hillcrest e Cambridge
"" ,.~ '1"-•0 rlean shR"'", S6<L 7'()"·-~~~·=~---~c T 1 ,. rib CHAPMAN "' , . ., ""'·' Heavy han d !ruck .t2:J. ''Gte.rk" pt~;;11 ,25_ 644_1742'sN1ALL Black toy poodle r1n1por I ion m
---------f.42.1212 ~ ruppie~. 1 malr, 1 lemalr. ~-------~· MOBILE HOMES
Help Wanted, M & F 710Help Wanted, M & F 710 P~O~\V~E~R~,-d~,-,.~,~25~,-o.17m-.,,-.c1 : h'.NEISSL~200 rent Rer! Siar!! 646--0142 or M8-l022 333 E. I········--1206 N, Harbor, S.A..
Rt!staurant
ANNOUNCING ANOTHER
E xciting
Cocoj
AND
We will accept appllcetlons for -
• WAITRESSES
• BUS BOYS
• DISHWASHERS
• HOSTESSES
•COOKS
• BARTENDERS
• COCKTAIL WAITRESSES
St1rtln9 Dectmber 29
9 :0M:DO Delly
Apply In Person
24001 Avtnida de la C1rlote
Legun•, Hills
Santa Ana or San Diego Frwy. to
El Toro Rd . -Corn er of El Toro
Rd . and Avenida de la Carlota.
Owned by Far West Services, Tn c.
Operators of Sno ck Shops. Coco''
Reuben's, Reuben E. Lee,
The Whaler, Isadore's
no11' "Jo~,, off. Hearl sran· 17th St. Cf\1. I' , _..,.._*_7l_<J53 __ 1_.si_05_• ___ 1 0
0ew .m1 o\\ingb m•1chint 1 ~:-.00 : d11rrls 205 cent $45, &12-85.84, , s·i~· i 1 1 _, Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 ,. T C II erat rr 1cyc" ::. . "71--;):IO:I .. 1 ,,1 pupp e~. em ... e rlple Wide arne
64 2--0863. =-==========I Ma.Jte!e, 11 mos. Gorgeous ,64 f d C V Hillcrest • FlAmlTliO
11 SQ. YAROS 0 y 1 "° TV R d' H 'FI 646-0Hl oc 548-1022 333 E. Or amper an P""moWll • Uruvm'1 , a 10, 1 • 11 h s c 't Ba-Jn..ton • Bro••--· carpeting. Blue with green Stereo 836 t t., ·" · '' •• ...,,....,.
fle cks. Good condition $40. ----------! e DALMATIANS Completely tqulpped with Contiiiental ¥Star
549-0674 LARGE ponab!e "Silvertone" AKC e pop top, ice box, 1tove, dlr. General e HU!cre1t
Radial t1re11. 1 owner. (UED. CHAPMAN CHELSEA 8-day us Navy itereorecordplayer.4 speed ** 642-1937 ** 104) Will takt! car in trade MOBILE HOMES
deck clocks, l~!i ea. Mi n-1urntuble,. remote speaker11. • BOXER PUPS AKC • fi ... ~•• J dif d ·d 1 or nance. .nv-f!'olU or 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. ney's, 25.17 W. Coast J.hYy, ust rceon 1onc · 1 ca 6 Wks old. Pvt Pty: 494-6811. * 714/530-2930 * N.8 , 548-41 92. gltt. $40.00 Or be!lt offer. AJ. S42--'IW or 962-2331
so a Muntz 4 track all'reot===~=~----'50 Ford Sehl Bus Camper, Want To Live In
MllLER Blue(?'au: Banjo ta"" P''"oe. 4 §C(s output CJ-lOOJl:.ATE brown mini 1_oy New mtr & tranlJ, brkl. COSTA MESA $100. 4 track car &tereo $30. ,,,_ " --'I M•' AKC l5IJ "' ~ .. term inals including 1terN Puuu ea. ...e, · · """'"-...,. Local -ces available '10W! Old time phonograph $15, Ph 962 "554 ~ 499-1051 evei1. · phone jack • includes as-: "' · '69 IMPERIAL CAMPER U you are serious about buy.
FOR SALE sorted !apes. $3(1. Phone a"'c'-oc=KAP'°''°oo°"'"?u<=pp:ci,::,,-,,.::r (8'ia'.) WITH TRUCK m, a motiUt! hOme •• _Now'•
642-7497 between 8 am and aale $5. tach· $1100. ** 646-2233 the tlnM to see
Used double tier lockers. F11!r :I pm. * 54~2716 * BAY HARBOR
condition. Mr. Laney, Daily 1 =,.:..-"'=~~====d-~,-,==,-,==:::::-C I B'k MOBILE HOMES Pilot. TV REPAIR SERVICE 3 German Shepherds ye es, I es,
RCA zenith f\!l)torola Ad · 2 mos. Beautiful $20 each. 1_S_c_oo_t_er_• _____ 92_!.
1
t~25 Babr Sl (at Harbor}
FOR aalt: Used 4' fluore8· mir~I gpecl~is!s. 21 .. 'color 544--4488 Costa Meaa 54ll-9C7ll
cent fixtures, SS each, as 111· picture tube $79.95 i.utAllec:. * SRERRY'S POODLES * Contact Mr. Laney or Mrs. GreenmAn. Dally Pilot, 330 Antennas Installed, Radio Yr ~nd puppy aa!e, groom-
West Bay, O>ita Mesa Oispatch!d truckii:, 1 hour ini;. Frte pk-up. 54~2848 .
1ervlce. Call 636.431:. AKC BLK MINIATURE CARPET Layers have ahag 1;, romm'! tweed crpts. Deel 21" COLOR TV $150 • POODLES. 3 MO'S OLD •
COSTA MESA
Casual Mobile Estate Ltv'1
Ne U. 20 .\ 24 Wld,, Modell
Now on display In 5 St.tr
GREENLEAF PARK
1750 Whittler Avenue 642-1350 d il"l!ct. Exper Installer, can 17" Portable TV $25. $75 * 673-013!1
rlnance. 5.19-3327. 827--874(} ** 548-6529 ** IRISH SE'ITER pUpple9. 8x36. t BR mobllfl home,
FOR Sale Ulum!nated plate 2.1" Motorola corl60!e color AKC ttf. Champion blood 1970 HONDA SL.'JSO: Xlnt space av&ll. Awn1rc. New
a:Iu11 dlq1lay easel', 5iax2, TV, $135. Jines, Call 846-3994. cond, Dunlop K70 tltts, hot wtr beater A root
$50 f!A. Call 962-55.,1. * 645-3918 * e IRISH SETI'ER Pupa. AKC chrome rack. Wixom Jug. &fi&.95(&.
'IWO nllnl bikes, xlnt cond , Rea. Ch&mplon Lfneqe. i&ie box, $895. Must SeU! '12x_5& __ l_B_R_S_port __ cnlt ___ Pvl_,
HalletT &. Dtivis Spinel FREE TO YOU *•892.-0258** 642.--0558. pty. 10it22 llvtna mi 0 •
Plaoo. Call 546-280'5 ST BERNARD Pupple1, AKC 1967 Honda 160cc ten.Ion, Sac! Ma..s343. Black fe1n.11Je Coc-A-poo, loves Re&. $150. .. -BABY'S coming. Milli! ell chlltlren, 5 mo's old. 897.g:i64 * Call-. ..., .. """" * S2Ml or 8e8t otter. ANGELUS 10x50: Expa.DdD
Stauffer table. Excellent? I cn."";;<,,.-o;::;::-;:c-;;;;;;;;l,=7.-,_;;~~-=,~·~::::,·.::..-, Call ~ li · 2 B l pxma.
Beat ofter! ~~4 GORGEOUS 81.tc:k &: while DALMATIAN Pupplft:, 7 ,70 YAM.AHA-LO Ml v a:~· MS..~1 ** . 's~IL~v=E=n-""'~-J.-,7,c .. -. -,,-"'-I ~~~red m&le CAt. 1 ~2 ~~·~.KC reabtertd. $400. • MS-9884 NICE SXG None tralltr, ltl
c:ond. 2 Evening drei~e•, l iUmm'R;lcOd,C:il<~iell='=='=:::i.:==:.o==;;:;:::::;:::_ TfllED or that old tumJtur11 adults park, no peta. sm. tz-14. Reu. 673-5652. HA'i\1STER, lood, cage etc. !t'o --'ly not •"·t ... _. 2191 Harbor, CM No. 19, 963-9425 1111 Llvettock 151 ._ u.. ,...,,,.
IT'S Beach bow.e time. Bir-to ttplaol. Juat Mtch the ntE "Ydlow Paces" Of
gHt selection fW!rl See the SM 31il mo •llky terrier mix e Box 11All Sl a day e turnltun I: m~Uaneoua cl&a<led. , . ~ P 11 o1
N.R. , .. ____________ _ DAJLY PILOT Oaulftt!d 10 Rood home. 842-7623 l/ll Orange Co, Fairground.I columns tn the O.U.Ultd Service 01rtdoty. Checi tt
1ectlon now! Baby whit.! mice 642--t!f • 532--2374 e Section. tOr the Mrvicf: you need.
' r
• • ..
•
,, ,.
I -.
1
!
f 1
3t DAILY PILOT Mondaf, January 11, 1971
-l._._-_ .. _-_.l§JJ ---l§J 11,___-_ .. _ .. __,J§J I· _. .... l§J l..__-_ .... _s.i.___,J§JI .___ ...... _ .. _"1·___,l§l l..__-_ .. _-__,l§l I· ,.... ..... l§J I· ........... ----· '
Trucb N2 Trucks ff% Autot, Imported 970 Autot, Imported 910 Autoa, lmportitd 970 Autos, Usod 990 Autos, UMCI 990 1 Auto5, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990
-. G;M.C. TRUCK CENTER
"THEY!RE HERE"
71 GMC CAMPER SPECIAL
Power br•lc:e1, H.D. springs, 8 $3295 pty ti,.., rudy for big c•m!Nr. n1ossn (Stk. #10051
CALL 546 ·6750
24 hr. Phon•
SALES e SE~VICE
.UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
2150 H1rbor Blvd., Cost• MIN
Autos, Imported 910
'--'-"""""' __ .. 1_ .. __,ll111l 1 _A_u_s_T1_N_A_M_E_R1_c_A_ I
MERCEDES IENZ I
MG
Sales, Service, Parta;
Immediate Delivery,
All Model.t
TOYOTA
1971 TOYOTAS
ARE HERE!
Mark II CorollcH
Coronas Pickups
1970 TOYOTA
CORONA SEDAN
$ SAVE $303.00
From window sticker price
• Ser 6892 Demo, R&H, auto-
matic.
.JJrM Lewi&
QllJ TOYOTA
VOLKSWAGEN
Autos, Import.cl 970
'69 VW SEDAN
Radio & I.feater. (Zs:R.939)
$1595
Harbour V.W.
18711 BEACH BL, 842-4435
CADILLAC
1966 Cadillac Sedan
Deville
FORD
'70 FORD LTD
WORTI-1 WAJTING FOR
It you won't settle for any. PRIVATE PARTY
thin& but the cleanest, this
beautiful car is for you. Like Bh1e with black Landau top,
new Ermine wh ile Unish air cond, a111/ln1 strl'eo ra-
with Immaculate leather in-dio, 4 new lires, 26,000 mlles,
terior, .J.u x u r y equipped custon1 inll•rlur. pis, 11/b,
throughout, automa tic trans. 390 engine.
mission, AM -Fr.I radio, heat· $3, 100 HUNTINGTON BEACll er, power steering, power
__ L_oo_k~i~n..:g..:l;.o.cr..:•=ca..:r=?::......1 brakes, power windows, 6 673-1176
way power seat, fac:tory air !"::~~~=~~~~ EASY rondi1ioning. tele-tilt Wht>e-1, ]iii
Call Auto Referral free ol etc. Ask for demonstration lll59 Ford Galaxie, 4 door, VS,
charge. \\'e have sellers in this outstanding car. Aulo. Trans., Air Conrt .
waiting. All types & prices ROR557, Johnson & Son, Radio, Heater. Good u·ans·
Sellers also welcome. ' 2626 Harbor, C.M. 5-10.5630. portalion car. $200 or best
642-4431 offer. Call 549-0214.
Mobil• Homes 935
AUSTIN AMERIC A
Sales, Service, Parll
lmmerllate DelivetJ
All Modili
J1rlupon
31111port"
3100 W. C.OUt Hwy., N.B.
642-9405 54().1764
Aulo Referral Service CAMARO 1-"'-H_a""'-'~· _c._M_. -"-~_9_30_3 -'fi·5~2hlvwijj'-~S~E~DAi:Nif'-1--~~~~~-1·66 c'"""" Sq"'"' .... ,, '69 CORONA, dark blue, 4 "69 Camaro 350 SS,, AH pwr, Ford station v.·gn. Air, x!nt
12'x60' Mobile home, carport,
av.·nings, skirting. Tool shed
& landscaping inc I u ded.
Reduced to SS950. 17f,O \\/bit-
tier AVI.'., C.l\1. 642-1][1(1.
............. dr. 4 spd, t.l int rnnd. 4 air cond, auto trans. major c:ood. 40,000 n1i. $1375 Jinn. Radio & ht'!ate r. (Z.X\l.'267) G "'"3176 9 new whitewall lii"es. 24 tuneup & oodyea r ,,.,.,.... or 5-17-m<I.
J1rluport
31111ports
-~ THINI &"~!"
mi. pe r gal. A good buy $699 Polygla.~s tires wfin ~ast 1969 FORD Fairlane, P/S,
11.t S1250. Firm 673-3388. 3000 m! s, Mu.st sell, $2500. PIB. 1''.A. Very 1 ow
945 Trailers, Travel 3.100 W. Coast Hwy., N.a
b-12-94<15 5'0-17M
TRIUMPH
"FRIEDUHDER" TR 3 '59. V~ry good ron-
1 7 ~. SElS--CONTAINED 1J1M ••ACM (HWY. Jtl dilion. Hardtop & c:on·
Aristocrat ('63). M a n y CITROEN 893--7566 • 537-6824 •12rtible. $57S or best oller.
Xtras. Sll25. Easy-L i lt NEW-USE~SERV. 548--66M.
avail. 673-7615. -~~ '68 TR 250 Triumph,
'58 Fl~ll\'ood 8x40 '60 CITRON ' ~ overdrive. Must sell. T.O.P.
Ad ult. 2 BR, 1 ba lh * MG-TD * 548-5358 ait 3 pm.
Harbour V .W. 64:.-2485. mileage & equip?Cd to pull
trailer. 220 Ogle St. 6•16-1718
18n1 BEACI-t BL. 842-4435 CHEVELLE '65 CTRY Squire st. wgn.
HUNTlNGTO RIH. P/B. P /S, 9-pnss. =~~°""'..:..:.;.N_B:.E=A..:C:::H::......I 1969 CHEVELLE SS new trans. gd ti res $700.
'69 V\V Fae:. air. f<'.M & Radio, heater, air, IT'S 642-3827.
Lape stereo, car rover. Must GREAT!: New car trade in.1:1"'966~"F~,-,,-1.,,-,~500~-5~1,-1-10-0
sell , A.m, prcl'd c: a 1 J $2099 Wag, air. ]ow mil. $U60.
... 64,.,v"'w· SUNROOF CHICKVWIVERSON c~.1 "'•· ow""· .,,_., .. 1 a uuut many exlTas!
BEST BUY '63 Sta-wgn near new motor
Trailers, Utility 947
lz:=*=5J6.80==n='=. =H=.B=. =*== The French Cadillac. fl.Just Will sell all or parts. '60 TR-3. Rebuilt engine &
see to appreciate. 1 own-546-5837 or 968-5682 l1'ansmlssion. Xlnt rond. Artie: 'A'hite. 'A'i!h contrasting
er. dlr. 38,000 miles. (QEX· Best ofter. 644--0498. red leatherette interior ra·
549.3031 Ext. 66 or 67 & Trans. Good rubber &
1910 HARBOR BLVD, brakes. 1lus t sell $299 c:ash.
COST A MESA 673--0209.
MERCURY OLDSMOBILE
1969 Mercury Marquis * 1964 OLDS *
2 Or. H.T. CUTLAS..'i. Burket sci.its. new
LARGE & LUXURIOUS pau1t, b'<>Od tires. Mullt :ieJJI ,
This beauu.lul top o! the Mer. i ..:'=585=·-c.:pc.'c:'o..· lc.'t:ocYo..· :.":::'-877='-'--I
cury line. retlec:ts good Cal'1! "63 Olds SR, 4 door, auto ,i
throughout and Is equipped trans, air, psfb. &16-778~
with all the luxury features. days, ;.o1S-lli80 eves. ).
Automallc transmission, Aflf. '62 Olds f85. Need •
FM stet'eo radio, heater, trllnsmission. llcsl olfcr,
power steering, power brak-673-8809
'&t Olds ronvt, New tire! ..
Good cone!. $100. 646-5639
or 673-57UI afr 6.
c~. power windows, 6 way
power seat, factory air con-
ditioning. c:ruise control, .liJt
Wheel pl us Mic:helin X ra ·
dial tire~ & sty]{' s!eel
\l'h{'els. See & drive loday. PLYMOUTH
XTP478. Johnson & Son, 2626 \---------·I
Jlll.J'bor. C.W.:. 540-5630. I 1968 PLYMOUTll ROA D
1953 r.tercury Conv. Good RU NNER 426 H" rn I ,
transportation. Sl50 or-Best ( 4-speed & taeh. 962-0091.
offer 547-900i_ '61 PLY BELVEDERE
'55 MERCURY 1s175. * 5-18-5998
Best offer. 548.7947 PONTIAC
MUSTANG
1967 Mustang Coupe
SPORTY ECONOMY
Beautiful hi-tone blue metal-
lic exterior with two ton<'
rnalchlng interior, a u to
trans., radio, heater, powc-r
!;fcering, air c:ond .. ronsole,
new fires. Economical to
purchast". el'onom.ical lo
1lrive. XEL 316. $1450. John-
son & Son, 2626 Harbor,
C.f'.f. 540-5631).
'70 GTO
455 cu, in. Ram Alr,
close ratio 4-specd,
hood tac:h_ Ride ,v,, Handl'g
pkg, P/S, P/D/B, Radio
& heater, New Firestone
\Vide ovals. "ALL BLACK"
Mukc offer or l.radc for
latr modc-1 Ford truck.
646-466.'1
1964 CATALINA Stn \Vgn.
Loaded Gd. cond $SCIO or
Bst 0[r, 673-3622.
'6S GTO 14' Tandem Trailer. all steel, 663) \Viii take trade or tin-MGB •'57 TR 3, Good cond red dio, heater. Lie. YWzs8s
welded construction J,4" ance private. party. Call -~--------1 convt, new brakes, 0$375. $899 '70 COUNTRY Sc;ulre-429.
Deck plating. 545-4j61 or 1-=546=·=87:::36:="::='":::-:::681=1=·== MGB-GT '68. 17,<XX> ml, 646-5807. CHICK IYERSON 1 __ C_H_EV_R_O_LET ___ 1 Loaded, air, all xtras. S5865 3!!
9 *:: 4
-speed 642·5&45. \Viii trade on Pic:k I• AM/FM, Air-eond, New ~.,-l -T-R--3-.-C-l-,M-.-~-w-fire-,,· 1 Ne,·;-$4300 Now. 532-2548, Power steering , air cond, low , .-======="='"'="=-
31
Up, DATSUN radials. $2350. IH6-3863 aft En gine x 1 n t . Ne eds VW '66 CH EVY 396. Stick Hurst 541-1393. miles. dlr. #9R02M12.183. J·
'69 MACH I
1 pm. transmission. S350. 548-6056. 549-3ll31 Ext. 66 or 67 4-spd, &licks, Holly 4-barrell_;;;;_;;:::::..._ ______ , \Vilt take older car in trade
carburelor, sir li!ls. SlOOO. LINCOLN or finance private party.
T-BIRD
T Bird 2 Door HT
CLEARANCE PRICE
Auto1 for s.re I§]
'67 1600 ROADSTER OPEL 1970 HARBOR BLVD. p,, ply. 54>--0340 ll aml-;;;;;;7,:;;;;;:;~~:;-:-!;c~a~U ~54~~8~736~o~r~494";·6S~l~l.;__ r:. VOLKSWAGEN --,,,-;C;C,O'C'ST"'A~M=;ESO-A'=-l.;'.'°,'.'.'.!;P'.'.'.m.:'.o'.'.'.oly~·----11 1970 CONTINENTAL· pp ~ MACH 1970. i'<1usl Sell~ Xlnl
!'---------' 4 speed. radM>. heater. Exc:el-* 1968 Opel Rally * 1---------65 V\V GHJA CONV. SHARP e CLEAN 2 DR. H.T. Cond. 15,000 mi, 351 Eng. ~1edium Blue me!alic finish
I••••••••-lent cond. dlr, Low mileage. 102 J-1.P. engine, 22,500 miles. Large Selection GOOD CONDITION S!XIO '66 Impala Sedan, VS, auto, LIKE S!iOV.'ROOt.l NE\V 5 Yr \Varranty. with matching interior, ra-
General
CVGZ531) Will take trade or Many extras. '71 tags. Low Of VW 675-3480 before l O AM r/h, 52,000 local mi . .$975. 1400 111JLES * * 67:.-5028 • * dio. heater, power steering,
950 fina nee private party. Call BIUe Book. $1 l50. Must See Campers. '68 KARMANN GHIA like 6<14.{)532. This beautiful au1omobile is ,65 •1 1 A VS I power brakes Au to trans 1---------· 1 "" ~36 494 6811 V K b" d·1· 26 000 · al 1·k "us ang ronvt. uto., · R ood
0
NB F 514° '-~-~~·='~'=~--=-0,·=~-1 to Appreciate. Private Party ans, om IS, "'.w c:on I ion. . actu '6:. Che v lm"'~la Sia. Wag. I e ne\V in every f('SJX'(."t . Good d >I . 1700 etc. uns g • . '67 CHEVROLET Sport.svan 1 • I 114~ '92 3678 •-A c:on • oving. or 1700 J h . So --DOT DATSUN 642-6643 CM. m1 es, ""· ., · PS/PB. Orig. O\\ltlr. Bst ttrnc:tlve medium bro wn offer. 642-4993. , o nson ·'= n, ""'""'
8 pas. 6 cy l, auto trans, r/h, OPEL 1968 K•d<" "-"y Buses, New & Used .68 BUG, Zenith blue. Al\1/ Ofr. Days 842_2511, Afl 6-metalic fi nish 11>'il h ginger ----------Harbor. C.M. 5-1()..;>6..~.
1 ownr, priv pty, $12511. OPEN DAILY " ~ 1 -"· t D 1· 1 th . 1 h' . I
492
_
746
.; Sport: 4 Spd, air, vinyl top, mm-1a 9 e 1very FM, excellent cond. $1350./ 53S-4187. ea er in erior , w lie an-MUSTANG "66, 289 V-8, auto. T-BIRD, "62, 58.000 actual
AND $1195. 548--329-1. CHICK "IVERSON offer. Eves. 492..(}1123, 1966 CHEVY Bel Aire 6B,OOO dau roof. Automalic trans., air , p/s, r/h. Sharp $1000. miles. Mint c:ond. See Jo
I
SUNDAYS .;;=:;~~=====I . rarJio & stereo tape system, 830-6251. opp recia le. 548-6288 Antiques/Classics 953 18835 Beach Blvd. -VW '66 Fstbc:k, R/H, Alnt cond, mi. Power steering & healer, power steering. pow. I..::::...=::.._ ______ ~c:c-=~;-~----1
H1m"-on •-,-"" PORSCHE Wht ex1er w/blk iuter, Pvt brakl'S, new tires $650. '57 T~Bird, 2 lops, new
...,"', ix = 549-3031 Ext. fi6 or 67 ply, $l0.15_ 644-{i316_ 544-8506 er hrakes. po1ver windows Did ytlU ever think of swap.. engine & paint. $.l950.
842-7781 or ~0-0442 '66 PORSCHE 1970 HARBOR BLVD. I ~~OC::CC-"'C.:::;:'-,...---l,;:;;--:C-ii;;-,=::::--=-::=I & vents, 6 way powf!r sea!, ing that White Elephant In * 675--'.N2S * 1967 DATSUN 1600 Roadster. COSTA MESA '63 V\V, engine rcbuil!, very '60 2 DR. Chevy for sale, fJO\\'f'r door Jocks, cniise con.
•1939 PACKARD 4-<l.r sedf!n.
! Reblt engine: almost fully
restored. MS-1245. Very good cond, gd ml. C.ouPe 912. 5 spttd, brown --~~~==--good condilion. Pri. parry. $150. trol & factory climate con. the atlic for something you e '63 T-BIRD •
I Wkdys TI-4 : 633-9393 -ext 165; with blac:k interior. Brand WANTED ~l'.:'.600~ . .:";2-:C54~25'...,..~~--11°"=..,..:C::al::.1_6::.4~~~97:;:05:_,.,==:I lrol a ir condirionin1t Onr c:an use! Try the Traders S'JOO. * 548-3793
1
oune Buggies 956 wknds & eves TI4: 673-l8ll. new Perrelli tins. XYJ-474 r u pay top dona~ for )'OtD' • '67 BUG-Original owner. '62 Chevy Van. R!H, A~f/FM o\llll('r trade on 'TI r.1ark III Pan.dise column ill We Dai· SELLlNG Your boa t! ••List"
I
FOR Sale or trade. Dune No c:a.sh down, take over $3299 VOLKSWAGEN today. Call R&H. Black exterior. Gd. c:ond. PVT. Pty. 646-0796 003ASL. J ohnson & Son, 2626 ly Pilot \Vanl Ads. 'A'ilh us .. sell it fast. Daily
Buggy ·frame &. engine. pymnts. CHICK IYERSQN and ask for Ron Pinchot. $895. Call 557-3360 llarbor, C.f'.f. 54()..5630, Pilot Classified. 642-5678
Straight axe!. 401 cu in 1968 DATSUN 2JOO Roadster. 549-3031 Ext 66-6':. 67J.-OIY.Kl. CHRYSLER
F0="='·='=150=·="=,.,.,,.==·== .f~'°P. ~""'· 847-0452 54~3031 ~ 66 or" '64 KOMBI BUS ___ v_o_Lv_o ___ ll966 Chrysler Newport
,_•_u_c_k_• ______ 96_2 I===='====== 1970 lIAR.BOR BLVD. 4 speed. dlr. Radio. heater. 2 Door HT
FER• ARI COSTA ~fESA • VOLVO BARGAIN OF THE WEEK 'St Ford i,i To n Pickup ~ ~==~~~-=-I (0SF!l66) Will take trade or Bucket seats, Chevy 31 ---------'-'70 9llSt5 2.2 Liter Sliver finance-privafe party, Call All 71 's Ar• Her• The very popular NeWpOrt
speed. Chevy V8 Chevy rear FERRARI coupe. black in ter I o r 546-8736 or 49'1-681.l . Savings Up To Cpe. equipped with auto
end, M 8 n y e x tra,. Newport Imports Ltd. Or-AM IFM. air, close ratM> 5466 trans, radio. heater, power
1
642-8593--642-5920. ange County'• only author-gears. P<'rf. co n rl I t ion, '69 VW BUG steering, pov.·er brakes. new •·-d d•ol<r ·-557 9159 on rema ining 70's (il8782) car trade in runs beaulitul-
'67 Chevrolet ~ ton 8 fl """ · · ...,"""· -· SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 'S6 p h 912 5 spd Radio, heater. (TURl.24) dlr. OVERSEAS DEL. SPEC. ly. TXT060. $1000. J ohnson
I ~!· t•u:~~a~ ~~:~:~ 3100 W. Coast Hwy; radial~;iu: xtn;. Lo mi's~: Mus t aac! Will take older & Son. 2626 Harbor C.M.
I ply tires $1300 or best offer. Newport Beach xi n t c o nd , $ 3 J 9 O. c:ar or finance. 54&-8736 o; flP.llll Lewi& 540·5630. ' 557-731.5. 642-9405 '540-1764 673-2271/546-4120. 494-6811. '70 Chrysler Newport Custom
Aulhorl"" F"""1 o..ier C:.6S~PO-o-',.,c..,h.:..• .:.:9:::1.2~.~i..o.-d~,-•. 1--:,~6:::6 :..,VW=-S~E-D-AN--. VOL VO 4 ''· R"l Sh•rp' O"IY
Auto Leasing 964 23,000 ml. Silver. Rfc:aro 13,000 ml. Still on 5/50 War· FIAT seats. Askint; $4 950 . ran!y, A/T • AIC ·PIS · '71 Dodge Van 642-2113. Radio & Heater. fRUF081) l 96£ HRrbor, C.t.f. 646-9303 P/B • \\l.\V . 383 eng. Re-
6 cyl. auto. 127'' wheel base. - - -----~1968="°"0,:::°'c""-9=1~2."o1-,,~-,h-,....--,.· 1 $1125 '68 VOLVO L('asc at $105 per mo. Call l !~~a:il:~ ~!~WJF) $ml • -:'THINK=-• ~~t39~~ ml 1 owner. 1:~m:~~e~a~~lss~~~e~ ~~ck ~:~~aS~R 541>-3672
'69 Mustang GT Option 637-0029 or 838--0251 rlio, heater. white side 'wall Cntry. i;tatlon wagon; Rir.
1Aircond.VinyJ1.op,lmmac-~amfl SHARP ,66 P orsc:h e: tires,ctc.Chi ck'sspccial a! etc, T~ke over pyts. $ill
ulate. 12,!0> miles. CXSK· • Amffm shortwave. c:hrome 18711 BEACH BL. 842..ol435 r.tONTIO 1-="='=· ="'=~=1=79='=· ===== 1 8.S4i $2700, r ims, new eng/S spd. S3lOO. HUNTINGTON BEACH $1999 I·
I '69 Firebird 400 NEW 124 CPE. DEMO or I•'"',.,, pym~. 67J,.58;3. "69 VIV CamP'r. p,,,..,,. CONTINENTAL
.ConVl:'rtible. Air cond, rally $2795 ,64 PORSCllE Sunrt, i d In· r&h, factory tent. Owner CHICK IVERSON 1----------
1 \Vh!'els & J,":la.ss belted t1rrs. S.. "ll'B.1115 action $2750. No vw '66 CONTINENTAL 4 dr, tu!I
I
Sport equipped, 18.000 nules. 1'fRIEDUHDER'' ter. Runs perlec:l. $2900. trades. 5-W--6831. r>"T. air rond. $15 7 5. (YCN ;..tOI S2.:150. 842-5003. 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 6-12~m9 aft 6 pm.
CORT Fox 1J150 llACH ILVD, "67 911, 5 _ spd, Weber~. nu 'G6 V\V SEDAN, Reblt Eng. 1970 lli\RBOR BLVD.
IH Jtl Quick Sale S~75.
I wy. ti re!. 48,000 mi·~. S3950. * 2131592-5039 * COSTA iltESA CORVAIR 893-7566 • 537-6824 543-8105 days, ask tor Greg.
LEASING NEW-USED-SERV. 1965 PORSCHE-C-• 1968 vw C•m!".-.N;;
L-- - -• Xlnt cond. Lo mi. 5'1!).2047 engine, new tires.
- - - - -St995.
830-2570
Z";.&i NE\VPORT BLVD,
Costa Mesa. Cs.lit. 92627
l'n~1 MS-3€£1 (213l 622-621 1 '68 FIAT 1!50
SPY DER
/Autos Wanted 968
WE PAY TOP
RDSm, Red with black l1'-
tcrior. Like new, YQY83fi
$999
CASH
tor used cars A: trudcs j\mt
call us tar fr'ft etrtimate.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Aak for Salal Manqer
18211 Beach Blvd.
Hun!inpxl Beac:b
CHICK IVERSON vw
549-3031 Exl -66 or 6T
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA * '69 FIAT SPYDE,R. ·l(M)d
cond. $))J L Take over
pymnll. Call 847-USl
HONDA 8t1-6'.l87 Kl s.3331
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET --m.d. °'""' -ISi(\.""" WE PAY TOP OOIJ..AR
* * Honda SS convutib1e,
1966, Xlnt cond. Lo ml. $7511.
5.l>-9711.
JAGUAR
JAGUAR
HEADCj)UAR'iERS n;...a,·.a-JAGU.lll
~-.--.....
FOR 'IUP USED CARS ()pi•\ I• 11 ,... car ii extra c1.... SALBI
-"'BA~ &U!CK SBRVICE
2M E. 17111 St. PARTS
a.ta Meta Ml-1765 BAUER
Dll'Oi1' WANTED IUICK o.a..,.-IN BILL~.,.:OTA COSTA MESA
1m a-ell Blvd. 1'W E.. 17th StnM a -I'll. M7-l!l!O 1,,,,...,..-.:; ... ;;;;l"Nll=..,. ___ , •r;r ,.,.... XKE <if. OuUfu.
""""')""""' .. AUS11N
970 ding cond. Lo ml's, 4 1pa, atem>. S3500.~g.u:.nf7.
KARMANN GHIA
'61 ~ A.llllln uoo sea, *°· frlew tlra• • battery . IHI KARMANN GHIA
675-2973 a.lter 7PM. I SflOO ••• 968-1~8!1 -. --------
'
TOYOTA
'68 Toyota Corona
Local owner, new car trnde
in, 18,IXX> orig. miles, eu10-
n111tic lr8.1'11., radio, healer.
Lie:. WAR.052.
$1399
CHICK IVERSON vw
5f9-3031 E 10 . £i6 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'69 CORONA
Hardtop. Vlnyt root, 4 1peetl',
immaculate, Sky Blue, Sac.
rl.flce. Will take trade or
finance pvt. pty. Call Sid,
dlr. 540-3100 or 494-75ai a!t.
10 a.m. XTS 343.
1966 TOYOTA Corom; 4 dr,
red, r/h, oveniaed t1res.
$695. *. * 642--0558
'71 COROLLA
• -·66 Squareback e
See to app~ciale $1200
• 673.--2370 *
'65 VW Squarebac:k, Sunroof
& luggage rack. Owner \\'ill
sacrilice. 64+-1:170.
'67 vw
SQUAREBACK
Vadora green. Radio heater ~~:mtion spec
0
iaJ, Lie'.
$159'1
CHICK IVERSON vw
M9·3031 Ext. 66 or 6i
]970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA M ESA
I
11750 •IACi. (HWY, Jt)
893-7566 • 537-6824
NEW-USED·SERV.
• '63 Corvair i\tonza Convt,
New eng, brakes & tires,
Clean. $290. !lGS-3011.
CORVETIE
.............
'67 VETTE
Fastbac:k • •·427··. 4-speed,
§] AM /Ff'.1 radio. New poJy.
]
r:i. g~8:ss tir"~· • Excellent con.
_ .-. dition, Dri\-cn easy.
.• $2850
Ask !or t.1r. Grannis 515-8640
Autos, Used 990 '64 CORVETIE CONY.
---------I auto. Best cash offer 673--0338
BUICK Jack
CAMP E R-'69 VW '68 BUICK GS 400 Westphalia, w/2 bed 1 ,
COUGAR
Eng/Pop-top. gas htr. Xlnt 4 speed, vlbraso~lc speakers. '68 Cougar, auto, pfs, pfb,
cond S3005. 540-1135. brand new vres, bucket vinyl top low mllcage Im·
----------1 1~ats special Wheel covers. mac! * Call 4%-2072. · VW DESERT P.U. '61; 6 Lie. X:Ez528.
pa.u, cloth/top. fold i n g $1699
windsh!eld. Looks & Runs AT
gd, $.550 Finn, 8.U-7249
DODGE
GREEN vw .. 68• x1,1 •ha-. CHICK IVERSON "" Dodg, M'""'" soo. n .~. Radio, heater, dtsc brakes, ,,~ VW 37.000 mi's. Take over pyn1ts
faciory air. low. low miles! Sl395. See at 1808 W. Ocean· n.-5
'
t NB bt .rv l pty. Call altr ;3() pm.
Take older Car or small ron • · • wn l & 4 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 847.5105
down. Uridfto tact. WIUT&I1~· l -'-p~m"°'=~-----1 ;:'""~CO~ST~A~M~ES~A~--1;==7:::::=:==:=:==== Call Maury dlt. aft 10 am '69 VW camper AM-FM '70 Stn Wen. like new cond, FALCON 51J.311X1 or •t!W-7506. 037327. N~ Adventure Camper. air c:ond, p/b, p/1, S2975.1---------'
ublt S2950. &f.S-1666. 83J...3S35, 644--0637 eve1. '68 Falcon VB klr BII.L MAXEY 1 '"6.1,,--;vw=~a-u,-. ~1.---"'"'ro-,,.-. ""'· LD0 mh, ·
Cl•••· li25. c.11. CADILLAC >t&-231L
11111 Ill.CH IL VD. Hunt. ...... 147..W
JMl l'f. olo..tJhJ. •Bdi
'71 TOYOTA PICKUP
With deluxe 30" camper, FUii
price $2251. Take small
down or trade, dlr. 4!M-n.oJ.
540-31tXJ. •03448.
-1 --.,-,69~vw=°"B~U~G~--1 !965 e1 1 •1•ci< ea'~"' FORD
Xtru/x.lnt cond 613-&70 O>upe de Ville. Lots of1---------
64 miln but ~uliful cond. '66 Falrl&ne GTA. 300, maga,
• VW camper. Extru. All xtrlla, 11n.o. Owner. Stereo tape.. New tm &
$1250. * 67>.3348 * • f144....0IB * brakes, Call 673-2&12.
1965 VW • $475 '62 GAD. Convertible. 38,000 '64 FORD Country sedan
actual miles. Needs paint wagon_ lmmae. & good
t 646-S639; aft 6, 673-5n9 $300. • 492-3818 cond. $575. 673-3958.
1968 VW Bug. Radio, rear CADILLA '69. DeVil!e. 2 dr. '69 COUNTRY Squire. Air
11ent 1peakera. $1315.. prl. pty. $500 under retAil . By <1wner: cond. MH. luggage rac:k.
64-H6S1 a.fter 6 PM. D)'ft &42-6667 Eves: ~Z746. Loaded. S2'.ll0. 833-1467
,
CLEAN UP
ON'
ALL s
AT
DEALERS: COST!
• COUGARS •
•MERCURY ~ND MONTEGOS
NEW 1970 COUGAR
Power steering, power disc: brakes, white side waU
tires, deluxe wheel covers, radio & heater.
Johnson&.
son
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA l40.S630 642.1)981
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