HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-01-12 - Orange Coast Pilot. -....
ows e are
Los A1nigos Digit
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Nixon to Depart
~rohle111 •nairy~; Coast on Thursday~
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5 ·8 Get Suspended Plans Ca1npus Talk
DAILY PILOT
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JUESDAY AFTERNOON, ~ANUARY"l2, 1'71 . ~-'"'"'':-"~"'WW ... fMh>• 1 llc:'hMfl. U l'AHS
U.S. Rest~· Case
Against Lt. Calley
IT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -The
government rested its murder case
against J,J.. WH)iam L. Calley Jr. today
with testimony by a fellow soldier that
Calley specifically ordered him to fire
into two· groups of women, children and
old men.
"The government rests, finally~" Capt.
Aubrey M. Daniel III, the chief pro-
secutor announced at rnid·mornir.g of
the 24th day of the Calley court-martial.
Paul D. Meadlo, 2.1, Terre Haute , lnd.,
was the final prosecution witness. He
Nixon to Depart
Coast Thursday,
Sets Campus Talk
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of,-D1llY ,.lltt Sl1ff
President Nixon will end his San
Clemente sojourn Thursday morning and
awing by the University of Nebraska
to address a convocation of studenlll
and faculty.
The afternoon address in the university
coliseum will help celebrate the 11chool
begihning its second hundred yeais of
mslt!lct. ~es said the Nebraska stop en route
to Washington, D. C. will also give
the nation's number one football fan
• chance to congratulate the university's
<:omhusters football team for the 1970
1euon. The team was Big Eight champ,
won .the Orange Bowl and wu ranked
nwnber one ln tbe nation by As8oclated
Pr.f:!. Uncoln, Neb. address will be Nlx-
on'I first to a campus audience since
he ~aced a vocal minority of hecklers
.i ftaua1 State Unlveralty last summer. 'lie 'visit idea originated wllli ACrI<ulture Secrellry Clllford HM-
din •lie NOilJ>ed IS chancellor of the
antY.nlty to Join the cabinet.,
lf''Wlll be the first time • President
haa."'vlsited the University of NebrukJ
campua. Al hll nine-day wort vacation drew
~ a cloee. the President Monday eona.mnec1 a! "tnoraUy wrong" the
bombing attacks on soviet faclli\les in the u.s:-·
'
said he stood barrel to barrel with
Calley at My Lai on March 16, 1968
and pwnped automatic fire into as many
as 140-V~ns.
Mead lo insisted, as he had Monday,
that although he was emotionally upset
at killing human beings, he thought ~
was doing right because of a briefing
the night before by the company com-
mander to dest roy everything in My
Lai. Also, after a first group of 35
to 40 civilians were killed, he said the
ocmmander passed by and seemed to
condone it by not commenling.
Charlie Company Commander Capt.
Ernest L. Medina is under investigation
of charges of overall responsibility for
the My Lai killings but has not been
committed tci court.martial.
Under re-direct examination by Dariiel,
which the defense charged was an at-
tempt to destroy the credibility' of ill!
own witness, Meadlo said be had been
afraid that even the babies in mothers'
arms at My Lai would be booby-trapped
to kill him and his squad members.
calley, 27, is accused of t h e
premeditated murder of 102 Vietnamese
civilians during the infantry sweep
through My Lai.
Another veteran or the operation, Sgt.
(See CALLEY, Page I)
58 Suspended
" By Los Amigos;
Problem 'Hairy'
By TERRY COVILLE °' "" 0.tr """ ... ' A controversy over ba1r ·and -o\het
dress code fe.atures it Lot Alil.i&• HIP
School, Fountain Valley, came to•· Mad
Monday. Fifty~igbt boy• were ~ ·for
wearing long hair, lklebUrol or beard.I.
The 1uspen1lcm followed •arninp 'lt-
sued last Friday to nearly Ill boyi with
long locks. By ,Monday, l!lOll had ·bafr·
cuts.
"The only way to clian(e the *"' code is by acUon cf the board cl tru-
tm," Fl:ed a.nut. ullllant ~pol,
explained.
one IUldent loader. Terry KJDc, 17,
was sent home for hi.I Jona skletlurnl.
He was adamant about removtnc them.
0J'm readJ to ·ave them oil H tbe
.(Boe AM!OOI, l'• ll
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Ex-MP General Indicted
On Fitearms, Tax Raps
DAILY ,.ILOT •tiff l'MM
SIGHTS, SAVES, CITES
Newport's Sgt. Mill••
Officer Sights
Sleeper, Saves "
Then Cites Same
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ~ DlllY ...... ,.,,
A Newporl Beath polite sergeant saved
·the Ufe of a .gu sf,ation attendant early
thil rnorrlll)f 1t'hen 1he ·draged tht aleep-
lng man from his flaming auto. ' . . '.l'he f!liioet-!!>en died the, attendant
for \liolallon·ol • city ordinance agalnll
aleeplng ~. -lies.
Ntltller S11'. 'lllcilard Miiier, rr; nor
1as lllllon·•lllJllo)'e WWiam,F. GUlltd,
:Ill, Anahelm,;~J "'7 lnNrlta In
tbe L'M:ident wh1Ch occutnd at 15~30 a.m.
ot lht Douillal Gu lllllon, 31111 Newport
Blvd. ,
8iate Highlights
Reagan Outlines Key Points
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Excerpts from Gov. Ronald Reagan's state-0!-
the-state message to t.M Legislature:
SCHOOL FINANCE -" .•• The various formulas for school subventions
have outlived their usefulneaa to school d1stricts .and must be simplified."
TEACHER TENURE -"The original and legitimate reasons for tenure
\ no longer exist. Tenµre bas become a haven for the incompetent teacher. It
\ . s~ld be altered to include a system of merit pay which provides real in-
centives for quality teaching."
TUlTION -"We face some unresolved problems in higher education.
For one thing, wit hthe University (of California) charging tuition an imbal-
ance exists so long as the stat.e colleges do not.·•
EDUCATION FEES -"Nonresident fees for out-of-state and foreign
students should be reviewed. It is hard to justify subsidizing these students
when it grows increasingly difficult to provide an tclucation for our own resi·
dents."
SOLID WASTE -"I am suggesting one state agency should be given
the authority to coordinate, encourage and assist local and regional entities
to plan for and regulate solid waste disposal systems and sites."
COASTAL PROTECTION -"The preservation and protection of Cali-
fornia's coast .rea>UrCeS must surely rank amon gou rhighest environment-
al priorities.'"
puME -"The tiling. of a law enforcement officer while Qn duty
ablMld be fin~ murder ,and it should be a felony to 11pecifically ad-
vocate .k8llng or lnjUring law enforcement officers."
: •WELF AJlE -uWbile we assist the tnily needy who have nowhere else
.to tam, 'Wt must al!o insist tbat able-bodied adult recipients work and meet
tbeir own repaoolibilities.''
MEDI.CAL -"During this session we will present for your considera--
tioo a plan tq limit our bealUl care aerylces to the poor so they will be aim-
parable with the health benefits ptovkted by the various prepared health tn-
aurance ·plans covering most of oUr citizens."
·BUDOn -"We are at the. point where this state can no longer sustain
ill npera.Uons on the revenue 1t now takes from the people. Therefore, we are
confron~ by a choice. We can reform government -reduce the cost of
aervicel, partlcularly in welfare and medi-cal, or we can increase taxes. I
will submit a budget which can be balanced without an increase in taxes."
VOTE -"Now that the Cor;greas and the U.S. Supreme Court have
given the 13-year~lda the vote in fedua.1 elections, I certainly think we should
tab ttme stepa neceaury to let the citiu:ns of California detennine whether
tbal sblll be uteoded to Ute and local elecilons."
:WeHare Called 'Cancer';
• ·Reagan Pledges eutbaeks
MIDtr Aid ht -Cll roodrie Min>( · wiloii bl~ ..... 1~ 'ifonf· ._ ~~NTO (UPI) -C... R<lbold public aalstlDce ronl ...S turnJnc them
Into • ''pobllc wort ,.,... .. lw -
mtnt projecta.
a ·c.r · tn tba Im ·r•ck area ~an propoHd In • no-noneeme Jtlte ..
of ... . iiOil. Ill aloo -~· body .,_ -lodoy nooplna
ID the -.. 1 of tho-. -In well~ ...S Moill.c.I u Miil .. 1""" ot GUl_ord l'!f ~.. Iii'~ to 1~ m lnq'we.
.,_,,,,. ...0 bi on ottanpt to -. • Ji. -.nied ·Ibo' two• -~I
bllD. • -. u "cancer eUln( 1! our
"'1 tried to kick In tbe doar, bat 1 tttlla."
It wooldn~ movt," Miiier Mid. "I ilollceol. 'lbit ~bllcon It v tr a or recom-
thert .... 1 cnck In the plate ·p.. mendoll, •moni Olbor thlnp, reinovlnc
(a. MD.!JCll, "."" _.. ·-bodied ftHara ' reclpltnta from
• '
He • ...... od ~ Medl-Cll hOoJib
.,,.1... to the -.. the lenl ' of ~ JXOl!ded by· print& prepeJi[
be ... ~Dlans. RaPn -blttlJns • nu buc -alao
mi!de -bniad p1Cf!JOllla lo 1 l ,OIJll. word 1dd,.... prepll'ld lor dellvvy \o
(Boe Will' ARI:, Piao I)
• • -
423 Gifts
Charged by
Grand Jury
WASHINGTON (UPI) -n.tlred Maj.
Gen. Carl C. Turner, the Army's former
top policeman and also former chief
of U.S. marshals was tndlcted today
o_n charges of unlawfully obtaining
firearms and of federal tax evasion.
Turner, 58, was indicted by a federal
grand jury in Richmond, Va., Attorney
Gen. John N. Mitchell announced.
Turner, who now lives at Springfield,
Va., In Washington's suburbs, was in-
dicted on 13 counts.
Five counts charged him w I t h
unlawfully .soliciting gifts of 423 flfell'm:I
from the Chicago Police Dep&rtrnent
and misrepresenting that they were for
government we.
He was accused of evading $16,879
in federal income tu payments.
Turner was a key witneu at hearlnp
in October, 1969, by a Senate IUb-
commlttee on openUons of clubs for
servicemen on military baaea Jn \larioua
parts of the world.
During his testimon", Turner to J d et
purchaalng 536 confl3Cated ~ Md
other flreann1 from ·the -C!miiO-mt
Kansas City, Mo., police dei>!trtmonts.
He sald at the thne tbet'6 ·was fUJI
underslandlng that he IDtendeC-lbe ums
for his per110r1al use.. '
Grall••
Weaftier
Better ke!R your raincoat on for
the next couple days. The outlook
for Wednuday la for ckludy'
weather and showers, with tempo
eratures mlr<d In the mlddlal
lifU ...
INSIDE TODA.Y •'
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~ DAIL '1 PILOT 5 Tuesday, J11nu1ry 12, 1~71
C:apo Mayo1·
Recall Move
Called Dead
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of tr1t CNihr l'!ler '""
t he recall action against San J uan
Capistrano Mayor Tony Forster is dead,
Don Routt, spokesman for the COm·
mittee for Good Gover nn1enl, announced
the eleventh hour deci sion !tfonday pr ior
10 the Ci ty Council meeting .
Petitions were to be filed with the
city clerk today in order lo call a
i;pecial election
Routt refused In say how many
signatW"es h.ed been collected. He dld
say, however, tha t the committee would
be "destroying the many pages of
signatures collected v.·ilh only the signer
and the earner having knowledge of
!heir con!en!s. ··
Routt said the decision to call off
the recall came about becduse of a
marked improvemcnl in city govern·
ment. in bo!h attiturlc and economy.
"'The entire council appears lo have
undergon e a complete soul searching
period during these past few weeks,
\\'hich has produced a good working
atmosphere within and outside the coun·
cil cha mbers," said Routt.
"This change to a better attitude has
been the main objective sought by
citizens including I.he council mem bers
themselves.''
Routt said very little about the formal
charges of malfeasance in office. The
rl!{:al/ action had charged the mayor
with ignodng the chain of command
usurping the right of another counci!ma~
to ~~st lhe . city's vote at a league
of cities meeting. and aJ lowing an il legaJ
land use on his mother 's property. He
a_lso. was ~layed for allegedl y picking
!1$tf1ghts with fellow councilmen.
"We _ are satisfied that these charges
are being corrected," said Routt. "There
have been enough changes of a signifi-
cant nature to warrant dismissal of
the recall action."
Forster. v.·ho was present at the press
conference, suggested that the first two
charges may have been a result of
misunderstanding. Routt did not dis-
agree .
Forster added. regarding the third
charge, that a land use permit had
been sought for lhe operation of a private
stable on his mother's property by the
&table manager. He said !he committee
had thought there was a commercial
stable in the agricultural zone.
"I went ,lo emphasize that there v.•as
no dea l made," said Forster. '"I'll feel
sorry for people who will feel this way."
added Routt. The recall spokesman had
bt:en up for an appoi ntment lo one
of ~ Planning Commission's special
committees. Routt said he was nov.•
declining the appointment so that no
''deal" charges could be leveled.
Stars in Thei1• Eyes
New $252.000 Zeiss Planetarium P rojector at Charles Hayden Plane..
tar ium of Boston's r..Ju seum of Science captures imagination of Mark
1'.1yette. 9, (left) and Raymond Giuffre, 9. The instrument, reported·
ly the most modern and complex planetarium projector ever built,
'vas demonstrated for first tirne Monday.
Huge Dinosaur Found;
Said Biggest of /(ind
LOS AJ\'GELES (AP\ -The remains
of a sea-going Duckhil! dinosaur larger
than any of its kind ever found before
have been uncovered in Baja California
by a learn of U.S. paleont ologists.
The creature was aboul JOO feet long
and 75 million years old. Dr. William
Morris of Occidental Coll('gc said. His
team included scientists from Occidental
and the Los Angeles County Museum
of· Natu ral History.
The discovery "'as made on a hillside
eight miles south of El Rosar io, /\fexico,
and about 200 miles south of the U.S.
border v.·hcre the group has dug for
several years in cooperation with the
Institute of Geology at th@ University
of Mexico and the Natienal Geograph ic
Society_
f'ron1 1•age l
Morris said the four bones returned
to the Los Angeles museum include a
humerus or arm bone 100 centimeters
long. He said the longest such bone
ever found before mea.!ured 67 cen·
timeters. WELFARE ATTACK ••
a joint session of the Leglslalure:
-A statewide eleclion to determine
whether Californians want to extend the
lS.year-old vote to state and loca! e!ec.
tions. The U.S. Supreme Court rece11tly
ruled Jg.year-olds could vote: ln federal
elections.
-/\loving lhe California primary from
June to September to "shorten the game
by hall." He said this "v.•ould save
11 lot of v.·ea r and tear on candidates
and . I suspect, on the public, too.''
-The '"judicious, sensible phase.out"'
of teacher tenure. He said "'the original
and legitimate reasons for tenure no
longer exist"' and it should be replaced
by "'a system of merit pay v.·hich pro.
vide~ real incentives for quality teach· ing."'
-Pilo t tests in selected districts lo dete~mine. fe;isibility _of a "voucher plan'"
for financing educBt1on. Under this, the
i;tate would pay a set amount to each
child to attend the school of his choice
-Tuition for state colleges. There
already is tuition at the Universi ty of
DAllY PllOT
N1wport le~ch L.t•11• •••:h
C..N MH1
H111ti""e1 .._.
h111Ni111 ~ ... ..,
Sn Cl11M11,.
OllAHOE CO.UT PUILISHING COMPAHV
Robert N. W11d
Prt1~tnl l r d PUblllMr
J 1clr R. C11rl1v
Vitt Prt1:01nr t r.cl G-••I M1n1~c.·
lho11111 K11•il Et•tor
Tho11111 A. M u•p~i111 M1n1gln1 U I!.,.
Ri,h1rd P. Hill
loulll Or•nt~ C011n1r Eclllllr
Offlc•
C0.11 MKI: llO Wu! II'/ S!tHI
HIWPWI •••en: 1211 Wn t l111M11 t OUTIVI ..
l•fllll4' !111(1., nl f'OrH! llwonu1
H11Mln(lt• 811cn~ HllJ l•t<ll l oultvtl'4 '-~ Gltmt Me: .JCIJ Norlh El Cimino Re.i i
OAl\.'f PILOT, "'l!h w~ldl lo tom11111t• fltl ,.._,_\,. .. pUb\11~ cll llT -~ ,_ ... ., "" _.,I!. COll-o I ... 1..t ..... i&ttc.11"
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......... 1 tcflllOM, Or.,.._ C•ut "1Alllllllf9 ~ ... ll!tiftll Jlll fl'1 1-. 11 2'11 W .. t ..... l lWf,. NewPOrt I.MUI. ,,.. J» W•t .., ltrllf, (Mii Mtll .
, ........ (714) •42·4111
~ Aifttthl .. 641·1671
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c-.;w. ... _, llatkt. """"''*"'· ........ .....,., .,. tcl ... 111tt 'Nfllfo ""' .....
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fMlllW)' •IWtllon., U.li "*""'"·
California .
-Requiring ''recreational subd1visons··
to include "strong environmcnt;i.I as v.·cll
as engineering consideralions. ·•
-Making the killing of a Jaw en·
forcemenl officer wtulc on duly first·
degree murder. and thus punishable by
death in the gas chamber.
-!l·!aking it a felony lo ad\•OCatc killing
nr injuring Jaw enforceme11t offirers.
Also. 1nrreasing the Sl.000 ma ximum
rev.·ard money the governnr can offer
for information leading to th t' arrest
and conviction of persons injuring
policemen.
Reagan pledged ll"J present t h e
legislature a balanced slate budget early
nest mon1h and ag111n rei ected a 1ax-
trK'rease. wh1 rh many Democrats s;iy
is inevitable
'"A la.~ increase is inevilah!e only if
\\e refuse to accepr. readily available
alternatives,., the governor said.
"\1le are confronted by a choice \Ve
can reform government -reduce the
co.!l of services. particularly in welfare
and Medi-Cal -or we can jncrease
taxes. To choose !be latter v.·ithout ex·
cising the cancer eating at our vitals
is to face tax increases year in 11nd
year out for as long as we shall be
here. 1 intend to travel another course."
Reaga n said Californians now make
UJ:I IO percent of the: nation·s populalion
but have 16 percent o( all y,·ho are
on welfa re. State and local costs. he
said. average '57.SS for every man.
woman and child in the !tale -double
lhe national average.
Reagan said he v.·ill ask I.he legislature
to help counties locate absent fathers
who desert l h e i r welfare-receiving
!amllies.
"There are. today. too many Instances
where the taxpayer is forced lo suhsldize
some father·5 yen to travel." he s11Jd.
The gove rnor said the legislature will
be. asked to place R celling on the
amount of earnings a person ca n receive
and sUll remain on welfare.
Ile recommended removing j'lhe cloak
(If secrecy'' from \\'elfare ;ind opening
now<I06ed records to inspection .
On Medi+(;al , he: said experience during ,
the five years has shown the program
"cannot meet Calif9rnia ·~ needs."
He promised a legislative proposal "to
limit so they wil be c.omparabte: with
poor so they will be comparable: with
the health benefits provided by the
various prepaid health lnsurnnct plans
cOVering most of our citizens."
The: e:overnor noted six weeks ago,
In an attempt lo avoid a 1140 mlll!on
deficit In the Medi.Cal program . he cut
doctors' and nursing home fees by 10
perce nt and delayed "nonesse:ntlal"'
1ervlcts to recipients.
The other bones include two neck
vertebrae and a broken fi bula or leg
bone. The neckbones are twice the size
of those of comparable SO.foot monsttrs.
r..torris s11id. and the humerus itself
v.·eli:hs almost 25{1 pounds .
Morris said ht thinks they belong to
R duckbill dlnosaur but final confirmation
is yet to be made.
The bones are lhe property of Mexico.
"Jrs really incredible." the paleon-
tologist said. "If I could explain it/
l"d be. glad to.''
Such dinosaurs ha\'C been found before
in the Baja California peninsula along
?-.1exico·s v.·estern edge and in Canada and
Siberia. said Morris, but even the giant
ones have measured only 50 to SS feel
in length .
The Los Angeles group plans to return
next sun1 mer !(I the area where the
bones v.•ere found .
From Pnge J
AM IGO S ...
board will take some action toward re·
pealing the dress code,'" he said.
King is a membe1 of the school news·
pape r staff and the yearbook staff. He
says most of the youth are sincere In
their batlle against the Garden Grove
Unified School District dress code, and
are not trying to make trouble.
'"The school is here to teach. not to
tell us how we're supposed to look," he:
emphasized.
Prior to the suspensions. studenU held
a rally F'riday to pro te!t the dres! code.
Goyette said the rally was peaceful and
broke up quietly.
"I can·t condemn what the kids have
done to thi:s point,'' Goyette. explained.
•·nu t I am disappointed by lhe number
of kids who didn't abide by what we re·
quested this morning fhai r cut.sJ. Toda y
lhey·re challenging the rules I have to
uphold. We've taken 1 stand we feel we
heve to take:."
"I am irked because so many of :he
k.ids are sincere. but a few are tagging
along just to be suspended," Goyette
added.
The last dress code change: made by
district trustees was la!l J uly 2.8. when
!hey said socks were no longer ne«$·
&ary and shirt ta.Us might be worn out.
side: the pants. ·
Students and parents are expected to
attend the ne1t meeting of the: board at
& p.m .• Jan. 19, II the board room of
dislrl~t offices, 103.11 Stanford Ave., Gar·
den Grove.
Los Amiga! students 111~ have plart-
ned an interd lstrict rally this Saturday
In a park at Haiard Avenue and New·
hope Street in Santa Ana,
Home Loan· Rates Cut·
FHA ,~ A Drops Maximu1n to 7~ Perce11t
\YASHJNGTON (API -TwQ rederal
agencies insuring new mortgage loans
cut maximum allowable inteest rates
from 8 percent to 71fr. percent today.
The reductions announced by the
Federal Housing Administration and the
Veterans Administration v.·ere the second
In Jillie more-than t"'o months. The
rate dropped from a record 8~ percent
lo 8 percent Dec. 1.
The lowered rate will apply to all
applications for mortgage insurance
received by offices of the agencies after
close or the business today.
The new rate will not apply to 1hc
nearly $70 blllion of outstanding FHA
mortgages. The age ncy said also il will
contin ue to honor all firm and conditional
commitments for mortgage insurance at
previously contracted rates, al though
whenever possi ble the parties will be
encouraged to adj~ the rate down ward.
The reduction followed reeent euts in
the prime rate charged by banks to
their best qualified borrowers and last
week"s drop in the dist'Ount rate charged
by the Federal Reserve System on Joans
to member banks.
George Romney, secretary of the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development which includes FHA, said
Chotiner Said
Read y to Lead
Nixon Campaign
From Wire: krvke1
WASHINGTON Key confidante
t\turra y M. Chotiner of Newport Beach
will quit the White House staff soon
to begin engineering President Nixon·s
1972 re-election campaign, according to
private sources .
The New York Times announced
Choliner's imminent departure today and
he confi rmed it.
Only Choliner -who recently appeared
in Ora nge County Superior Court as
his wife Mimi dissolved their storm mar-
riage -didn't say just what his assign·
ment will be.
''J know wha t my plans are,'' said
the Newport attorney, who bitterly com·
plained tha t the widely publicized end
of his ma rriage might cost his job.
"But I can"t say yet.'' he added.
"lt"s not time to announce them.''
No date was given for his departure
from President Nixon's staff , but Vt'hite
House sources lold the New York Times'
Washington bureau th at it won't be long.
He wlH reportedly head a privatel y
financed campaign unit based in
Washin gton, under fie c\Ole eye of Al·
torney General Joh n1N. ~1ltchell.
The 61-year..ald lawyer has been a
close confidante of Nixon for 2:'1 years,
since directing his publlcily campaign
in 1946 when he ran for the House
of Represent atives.
Chotlner was headed for a key post
with the Republican National Committee
ea rly in ~·s Administration bul
Chairman Ila& C. Bliss resigned over
the plan.
Bliss· successo r. Rogers C. 8. Morton,
rebuffed the move: to 11et Chotiner up
in the: committee:.
He was then assigned to a White
House office as a special political agent
of the Administration.
!\'lob Halts Firefight
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -About 50
rock-throwing Negroes Mond&y night
hampered firemen fi ght ing a blaze in
the former headquarters of a Black
Panther group. Flremen left the. scene
but they returned later with pohce pro-
tection and put out the fire withou t
incident.
he approved the lower mortgage rate
because of ""the continuing large inflows
of funds to mortgage lending institutions
and the recent furthtt drop in market
interest r11te11, particularly in corporate
bonds and other Investment that compete
wi1h mortgages ."
Romney said the \ov.·eretl ~citing should
'"unfreezr some of the demand for homes
fr om prospect1l'e bu_yf'rs who h11ve been
waiting for a return of lower interes~
rates ··
"llouslng production is already headed
for a banner year in 1971." he said,
"and 1/us added den1and should make
the outlook even br1gt11 cr.'"
Ge1·man Freigl1te1· Si11l{s;
May Have Hit Sunl{e11Sliip
DUNGENESS, England (UPJ) -The
2,69a-ton German freighter Brandenburg
sank within two minutes early today
when it hit wh11! was believed lo be
the hulk of the ranker Texaco Caribbean.
The tan ker had sunk only Monday .in
collision with a Peru vian freighter.
Coast Guan\ officials said seven bodies
were found llnd 14 crew members \Vere
ml.~sing of th e. crew of 32. Eleven
survivors were rescued by fishing vessels
and take n lo F'ol kestone Hospltal.
Gert Jz.schaschel, 29, of Kellinghuscn.
Germany , the ship '~ second officer. said
he was in his bun k when "a tremendous
crash·· slammed the vessel first lo
starboard. then to port.
"My first impression was thal we
had hit a wreck, .. he said. "When we
got on lop we were to ld the ship ·w;is
sinking and ordered over the side. It
was pitc h black when we jumped into
the water. Two minutes later we could
nol see the ship.''
A spokesman !or Lloyd"s. which in-
sured the (icrman freighter. said '"it
is apparent that the Brandenburg struck
the wreck of the Te xaco Caribbt>an
tan ker."
The Brandenburg went down only two
miles from where Lhe l3,fi04-ton Panama-
nian tanker Texacn Caribbean and the
Peruvian freighter Paracas collided Mnn·
day. The Texaco Caribbean exploded
and split in two and the Paracas suffered
damage but stayed afloat.
The captain and seven Italian crewme n
of the Texaco Caribbean were missing
and feared dead.
A Coast Guard .!pokesman said the
Brandenburg could have hit part of the
scattered wreckage of the tanker in
the shallow water of !he channel coast.
The lifeboat Viking Warrior, which
1-ionday participated in the re!cue of
From Pnge l
CALLEY ...
Charles E. Hutto or Tallulah. La .", is
~1and1ni:: court-martial at ft. l\1 cPherson.
in Atlanta for intent to 1nurder civilians
during the att11ck.
A witness at the Hutto trial today
said that Capt. Medina·s superior officer
al My Lai, Col. Frank Barker, observed
the operation lro1n a helicopter and
rommented : ''Things are going fine,
sn1ooth, according lo plan.'"
Barker was killed in a helicopter ac·
cident about three months after the
1"-1y Lai sweep.
Before the prosecution rested in the
C<1lley trial, Dan ie.! ~sked ~1 eadlo ir
he got his orders to kill JS to 40 people
in a clearing and 75 to 100 others in
a ditch "specifically from LI. Calley.''
"I received my orders from Lt.
Calley ," ~1eadlo replied .
"No further questions," Daniel said.
"Bui'."' 1\-feadlo went on. "Capt Medina
was there (at the lir3l group ) before
this ditch incident and I assumed
everything was okay because olherv.·ise
the captain would have put a stop to
ii right there."
f.1 eadlo added tha t. "with all the bodies
lying around I assumed he !Mcdinai
would have put a slop to all the killing ·•
part of the cr('\\" of the Tl'.'xaco Ca ribbean.
also picked up six of today·s survivors
and took thf'nl to rnlkestonc. Onr uniden·
1H1ed survivor fron1 thi! Brandenburg
said he h:id bi•en below deck and when
he heard a cra sh "'1 rushed Ull <>n
deck and was told lo abandon ship.·•
A num hcr of fishing vessels in thC'
area also helped pick up survivors.
Dra.f t Directo r
Sees Nu111bcr 195
As Tops for 1971
WASHINGTON (AP ! -Desp.ite predi c·
tions of lowered draft calls this year,
Selective .Service Director Curtis W. Tarr
says lottery number 195 may prove to be
the upper limit ag;iin.
Tarr says the 19il draft pool, consisting
of men just turned !9. \1'i!! be smaller
than the 1970 pool which consisted o! men
aged 19 to 26. Thus, he said, although
fewer men migh t be tailed, it will take
higher draft numbers lo get the nian·
power.
Tarr said he doesn·1 know how many
draflees will be needed in 107 1 but cited
published reports that Secretary <>f De·
fense Melvin R. Lai rd estimated th e to.
lat would fall betv.•een 80 .000 and 120.000.
The draft director discu ssed !he 197~
outlnok in a conve rsation ~1ond11y fo!lov.·.
ing a news cnnfercnce in which he an·
nounced admin istra tion plans to seek an
end !o college student deferments this
vear. He also said !he administration
Y.·ants to start a unifo rm nat.ional call,
allowing the same lottery numbe r to be
called everywhe re. instead o! the prt!sent
system of geographical quotas. Both
mo\·e~ "'ould req uire congressional ap-
proval.
Fro••• P1aqe 1
MILLER • • •
window next to !he dl)(}r . so 1 broke
out part of it \1·ith my !lashlighl and
reached through to open 1he donr ,'"
Onc-e inside lhe g~r,11:(('. i'o1iller pulled
a burning coal l"lff liill;i rcl and pul out
lhe flanir~s.
Officers who arrived ;it the scene
moments later said 1L would have bee n
;i matter nf second~ befnre thP youth
w11s (1vr.rcome l'.'1!h sm!lke and burned
by the flaming co;i l.
Gillard told his rescuers he was sleep-
ing in the car hccause nf thefts tha t
have occurred recently al the s!Atiort.
HP had plugged 11n clecinc noor heater
into a garage ou!c>t and put JI on the
nMr or 1hc ca r
The heater apparl'.'ntly 1gn11crl the coa t
!he attendant "'as u~ing for a blanket.
officers said.
"'\Ve\·e found pc(lple frnm !he gas
sta l1on sleeping 1n !heir car~ before.''
Miller said , "11nd I '\"(' warncrl them abou t
it, but they JU.~! <1 10n'1 sl'.'rm lQ listen.
1"1nyhe nnv.· thr.1 11 ill
MEASURE FOR TREASURE "
buying carpeting One factor overlooked by customers ' 1n is the '
measuring for yardage.
All of our Salesmen know how to measure and figure exact .
'1
yardage, often providing our customers substantial 'savings ' in
yardage alone.
' ,
Also, w ith the tremendous installation experience our salesmen-·
hove (each previously was on expert installer for us), we ore able,,
to forsee any potential problem.
:n1
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through·,.:.
our store. We hove a gigantic selection, ohd the measuring will b11 ..
ACCURATE! "
SANTA ANA, OUN.I
TUSTIN C .. I .•.
ALDIN'S
llD HILL C.t.1"11
' D•APlllU
11JJ4 rm .. , Tllltta, c.tlf .
IJl·JJ44
ALDEN'S·t'l
CARPETS e DRAPE$:;~.
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
~ '"' .... '
•!L '"
n. '' .,. I
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 Sot., 9:30 to S ' " Pt•'.
I '
t'
I I'
--·
•
•
-"Huntington Bea~h Teday'1 l'ln•I
EDITION-
VOL 64, NO. 10, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, '1971 TEN CENTS
County Sets Election Date for Rib al Seat
By ALAN DIRK.IN
01 ,... D.lll'f' l'lle! ll•tf
The Orange County Education Depart·
menl agreed today that the letter o(
th~ law is being broken in setting the
special election lo fill the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dislrict seat
ol Dr. Joseph Ribal for April 20.
Tech{llcally, the on should be called
no later than April 12 -120 days
after the vacancy bec.ame ofUcial -
but in.stead county officials decided to
combine the vcte with the regularly
scheduled trusiee election April 20.
"The law says a special election must
be held 120 days after the vacancy
occurs, but another section of the educa-
tion. code says that i1 the vacancy occurs
within four month! of a regular election
the special election may be combined
with it," Robert Matthews, director of
admini.straitve services for the county
schools office, said this mornlng.
Matthews a&reed, however, that the
58 Suspended
Hair Controversy Comes to Head
OAILY PtLOT lt8lt ,,...
SIDELINED BY SIDEBURNS
Los Amigos High's King
By TERRY COVILLE
Of Ille O•llY •11et ltlll
A controversy over hair and other
dress code features at Los Amigos High
School, Fountain Valley, came to a head
Mo'nday.
Fifty~ight boys were suspended for
wearing long hair, sideburns or beards.
The suspensions followed warnings is-
sued last Friday to nearly 100 boys wilh
Jong locks. By Monda y, most had hair-
cut..
"11le only way to change the dress
rode is by action of the board of trus·
tees," Fred Goyette. assistant principal,
uplain<d.
0. lbtdmt lnder, Terry King, 17,
wu sent home for his long sideburns.
He wn -adamant about nimovlng them.
"I'm rudy to shave them off if the
board will take some action toward re·
pealing the dre53 code," he said.
King Is a member of the scbool news-
paper staff and the yearbook staff. He
says most of the youth are sincere in
their battle against the Garden Grove
Unified School District dress code, and
are not trying to make trouble.
"The school is here to teach, not to
tell us how we're supposed to look," he
emphasized.
Prior to the suspensions, students held
(See AMIGOS, Pa1e %)
Nixon to Leave Thursday;
Sets Nebraska School Talk
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 IM 011tr Pilar S!lll
President Nixon will end his San
Clemenle sojourn Thursday morning and
swing by th e University of Nebraska
to address a convocalion of students
and fa culty.
The afternoon address In the university
c:oliseum will help celebrate the school
beginning its second hundred yea.rs of
e1istence.
Aides said the Nebraska stop en route
to Washington, D. C. will also give
Former Actress
Of Huntington
Succumbs at 57
Mr!. Regina Marla Holderleth, of Hun-
tington Beach, a former actress and
~rust. died SUnday at the age of 57.
Funeral acrvices will be held at 3
p.m. Wednesday in the Pacific View
Chapel in Newport Beach.
A taldenL at· 1$282 Angler Lane far
•i>el put 10 ynn. she succumbed ot
~ ~emorlJI llospltal aft.tr a
'Sim WIS wen known among movlegoen:
of the lllDo when llhe sppwod In the
1*1)ead F..nd Kids" comedy aeries u
Regina Trautman wtth Mickey McGure.
• She wu 1lso a featl.lffii planLst with
thrt Spode Cooley Band In Sanlo Monica
dm1ng the lt!Os. oppearlni Wlder lhe
riill'1o ol Regina Shrode.
if" aoclal acUvlties Included mem-
behlblp In the. Jobs Daughters and
!'.l:ltern Star.
S\mllvors lndude her bu.band, Dr.
Robert e. Holderleth of Huntington
~ach: thtte tons, Dav,kt E. Shrode
of Huntington Beach: Charles Shrode
rf Granada 111\ls; Elmer D. Shrode: of
Tbouland f\nks: and one daughter, Mra.
1 F. Brenton of San Diego. She
ts allo survived by two grandchildren. ' .
the nation'• number one football fan
a chance to congratulate the univer~ity 's
c.ornhuskers football team for the 1970
season, The team was Big Eight champ,
won the OrarJie Bowl and was ranked
number one in the nation by Aasociated
Press.
The Lincoln, Neb. address will be Nlx-
on's first to a campus audience since
he fa ced a vocal minority <1f hecklers
at Kansas State University last summer.
The visit idea originated
witb Agriculture Secretary Clifford Har-
.. din. He resigned as chancellor of the
university to j(lin the cabinet.
It will be the fir&t time a President
has visited the University of Nebraska
campus.
Al. hUI nine-day W<lrk: vacation drew
toward a close, the President Monday
condemned a11 "morally wrong" the
bombing attic.ks on Soviet facilities in the
U.S.
This came amid threats by the Jewish
Defense League to continue assaults to
win better treatment for Jews lo Russia.
Thursday Final
Day ~ Register
'Ilmnday ii the laat day to re:el.!ter
f<1r vottta wilhlnc to cast their ballots
in the MaWI t tu override .In the HUll\.o
lngtM Beach u-Hig1> School -trict. •
A "'llslrar wlll be on duty In the Hunt·
lngton Center Mall, in front of P@nney's,
lrom 7 p.m. to I p.m. tbJs Wednelday
and Thurldoy, accordlnc to Mn. Jean-
ette Ttlrk of the Le.,ue of Women Vot-
ers.
R<tllslnltlanl will be .,,..plod durin(
daytime houri unlll Tbunday at the
Huntington Bead! City Clerk's office In
the civic center compleL
Ttie tu measurt, U approved, would
raile the dlllrlct'1 aperaUng rate from
111 current $1.19 to 12.oe per $100 ol oa-
leued valualkll.
'
vacancy which occurred officially Dec.
14, missed the legal proviaiona for com-
bining the two elections by nearly a
week, but added, "After conferring with
the county counsel we agreed that the
intent of the law was not to have elec-
tions one week after another.
''What purpose would it serve~ We
felt the intent of the law was that
the elections should be combined."
The additional cost of a special el .. ,..tion
is estimated at $15,000.
ows
-
"An election can still be called a
week earlier, if anybody wants it," Mat-
thews went on. ''To me it would be
senseless, but it could be done. There
is still time to call it."
The timing of the trust~s in declaring
his seat vacant after he had been absent
from the state for more than 90 days
was criticized in a letter received by
the district Monday from Dr. Ribal.
Rlbal, a psychology professor at El
Camino College currently engaged in
e
Lie Detector
sex educaUon research projects at
universities in Sweden and Denmark,
said the election could ha ve betn com-
bined with the March 9 ta:i override
election "if the trustees had not objected
for their own political reasons."
"Only the wlllful and hypocritical viola-
tion of this Jaw by the Orange County
School Superintendent (Robert Peterson)
who adminl.sters school district elections
was able to cover up this ~Uy act
of malice," Dr. Ribal wrote.
-._/
are
Coerper Passes Tests
By RUDI NJEDZIELSKJ
Of TN 01llJ l"li.t Still
Fired Huntington Beach police officer
GJlbert Coerper has passed a lie detecl<lr
test dealing with his handling of goods
from a department store.
That was the surprise testimony of
Chris Gugus, a private criminologist,
who appeared before the Huntington
Beach personnel commission Mooday.
The commission -ft: ·eonsidering whether
the motorcycle officer should be rHn-
stated. ..
"He did not attempt deception. In
my opinion, Mr. Coerper answered all
Phoenix Asl{ed
Phone Number
Of I Victim
By WM BARLEY
Of .... 0.llJ '''-' 11111
Gary Harold Phoenix 's supervisor
testified today in the Orange County
Super:ior Court rape-kidnap trial of the
tall Costa Mesan that his wo rk
performance visibly deteriorated ciuring
a 28-day period last summer in which
he allegedly attacked nine women.
The young woman manager of a
Westminster health spa said her assistant
ma nager's output slumped to the point
that she asked him : "What do you
do all night?"
Phoenix told her, she testified, th at
he ''drove around looking for girls and
someone to be wjth.''
The manager's testimony came in the
closing stages of a trial in which nine
alleged women victims of the 29-year-<1ld
defendant ha ve told stories of rape, sex
perversion, robbery and violence suffered
at the hands of the defendant.
An l8·year-<1\d Huntington Beach girl
who identified Phoeni:i as her attacker
told the jury Monday that she was
walking to her apartment last June 30
when Phoenix sprang from his car, grab-
bed her and forced her into the vehicle.
She testified that a garment was tied
<1ver her bead and she was forced to
undress. She said Phoenix then raped
her and repeatedly struck her with the
warning that she would be kJIIed If
she did not cooperate.
The young victim t<lld police that she
was ordered by her attacker to give
him her telephone number, She testified
Monday that she gave him a false
number and that she received several
calls from a man she believed to be
Phoenix after police installed a special
telephone at her home.
Police taped those conver!Btions and
the victim recalled from the witness
boit that her caller told her <1n one
occasion: "l want to see you a g a In,
we could have a good time together."
Deputy Dlstrld Attorney Mlcba<I
Capizzi will ask the jury to' impose
the death penalty ii PboenlJ: ls convict.cl
M charges of rape, kid.nip, usauJt with
intent to commit rape 1t1 pervenl<>o
and· nibbuy.
~oh Halts Firefight
NEW ORLEANS tAPJ -About !O
rock-throwing Negiou Monday night
bampertd firemen flihllnl • bl.,. In
the former beadqUll'ten· of· • Black
Panther group. Flreiliin left · tho -
but they returned later wfth police pro:-
tectioo and put out lbe nre lfltbout
lncidenl
.. ..
of the questions truthfully," said .Cugus.
He was retained by Coerper's atlorney
for a $175 fee. paid before the result&
of the test were known.
Coerper was fired Aug. 21 for his
handling o( Montgomery Ward merchan-
dise, which according to some witnesses,
was given him for Police Wives Guild
charity activtties.
Gugus' testimony appears to st.and in
contradiction to an earlier lie detector
e:iamination given by the Huntington
~ach police department during wlicb
Coerper allegedfy lied •bol.Jt what ht
had done·wttb the mercbandlst.
"Mr. Coerper told me why he bad
lied," Gugus t<lld the five-man board.
"He said he wanted to protect his officers
lo whom he had given some of the
merchandise.''
The new test, according to Gugus,
co nsisted of seven key questions about
his involvement with the merchandise.
They were interspersed w.ilh control
questions.
Coerper answered truthfully when be
said ;'no" on..wbetttef M bM._ner.IOld
any or the soods or ever exchan&ed
!Se COEIU'Ell, P"I' II
Retired Army General
Indicted in Tax Charge
WAS!DNGWN (UPI) -Retired Maj.
Gen. Carl C. Turner, the Army's former
top poUceman and also former chief
of U.S. marshals was indicted today
on charges of unlawfully obtaining
firearms and of federal tu evasion.
Turner, 58. was indicted by a federal
grand jury in Richmond, Va .. Attorney
Gen. John N. Mitchell announced.
Turner, who now Jives at Springfield.
Va ., in Washington 's suburbs, was in-
dicted on 13 counts.
Five counts charged him w l th
unlawfull y soliciting gifts of 423 firearms
from th e Chicago Police Department
and misrepresenting that they were for
government use.
He was accused of evading $16,679
in federal income tax payments.
Turner was a key witness at hearings
committee on operations of clubs for
servicemen on military bases in various
parts of the world.
During his test.imon'. Turntt to Id of
purchasing 536 confiscated handguns and
other firearms from the Chicago and
Kansas City, Mo., police departments.
Hf! said al the lime there was full
understanding t:nat be intended the arms
for hi.a personal uae.
Officials of both police departments
dented under oath that there was any
such understanding. The chairman of
the lnvestJ&aUne aubcommittee, Sen.
Abraham Riblcoff (D-Conn.), on Oct.
22, 1969, accwed Turner of perjury and
asked the JwUce Department to in·
vestigate.
Rlblco££ also accuacd Turner of helping
tD arrange "an extensive cover-up"
within the Army of questionable activities
of Sgt. Maj. Will iam O. Wooldridge in
connection with alleged racket.s in opera-
tion of clubs for Gls.
T uJo T een,s Hurt
l1i Canyon Fall
A pair of Sllverado Canyon teenagers
v.•ho survived a sickening, 450-foot plunge
down a ravine In their sports car Sunday
night are improv ing today.
Chapman General Hospital officials
said David Burk, 16, ls in fair condiUan ,
while his buddy, Mike McCormick, 15.
Is in satisfactory condition.
They were injured when Burk's sports
car slithered out of ccmtrol on a Sllverado
Canyon Road curve not far from their
homes.
A following · motorist aaw the accident,
leading to a call for help via citliens'
band radio that btougbt • U-man rescue
team l<I bring them up the bruaby canhon
wall to safety.
Fountain Valley Planners
Take Look at High Rise
The dly al:yllne ol Fount.In Valley
may one day ltretch el&frt., nine or te11
storl .. hlal>-41 lea.st around Mlle Square
Park. ,
The. pit•• ... cotnmlaslon tool; Ill lint
look Mooday nJcbt •t poltllUal nlles
1overn1n&-. hllh rtJe •parlments wblch
cum!nily ore not covered . by cJ1y ordl-
nancn.
Here's what came (IUt of the Informal
atudy aesalon:
-Any high ri.. apartments •!lowed
should have I mlnimum of fOW' Of five
ltorles. . ,
· -At Jeaat· !O percent ol ·Ille lone! un-
cl<r • hlCh rlae project shall l>e laod-
acaped P'MI aru.
-High rtJe loc•tklns 1ppear poutble
alona Wll'Olf Avenue and Euclid Street
i.
lacing MU. llquoR.
Commlolloom . ......, tbal U.bl'1>fue
aporlmenll ...,. 1"1Ht.aar Mlle Square,
10me potaitlal opodJueol uua In olber
parts al Ille dly might bo f elhnloat..i.
. Plonnlng -Clinton Sherrod aid be thoulhl u. city mllht ,..,_
hlCb r111 bullcllnu or u .. or. m -.
but lt'a DOI · w.a!y to· pl uy ...,. · 10
1torlt1.
Sherrod wa told to' wrHe lurlher do-
toill on hlCb l'loe. At I-,.. or Rio
more lludy -.. will. be held bolon tho commluloa llllMI·• JpeClllc ,_ ·mend-. .
.fl lllcl> ·rllll -..... 1'> •be de-
velopid, pabUc lielflnp ..id bl '1111111 •
before the commilllon ond before the
Cily COWICU.
The professor's seat was declared va-
cant at tbe Dec. 8 board meeting, but
the vacancy did not beoome official
until the COUflty received the minutes
of the meetmg Dec. 14, Matthews, 811
aide to Peterson, eitplained.
Mattnews said that there was not sur.
ficient time for filing to have combkaed
the election for Dr. Ribal's seat with
the March 9 vote.
In b.is letter received tbis week, Dr.
(See ELECl'ION, Pqe I)
._......uts
Work Force
Proposed
By Governor
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed In a no-nonsense state-
of·the-stale address today sweeping
reductions in wellare and Medi-Cal as
an alternative to·another tax increase.
He described the two conU"overslal
programs as "cancer eatin& at our
vitals."
The Republican go v e r n o r recom--
mended, among other thinp, removing
ablc-bo4ied welfare rectptenta from
public assistance rolls and tumlnr them
into a "pub~c work: force'' for eovem·
ment projectt.
He suggestf:d limlUng Medi-Cal health
services to the poor to the level of
benefits provided by private prepaid
health insurance plans.
Rea@:ah -battling a flu bug -also
made these broad proposals Jn a 4,000-
word address prepared for delivery tt
a joint session of the Legislature:
-A statewide election to det.crmine
whether Californians want to extend the
18-year-(lld vote to state and local elec-
tions. The U.S. Supreme Cclurt recently
ruled 18-year-<1lds could vote in federal
electl<1ns.
-Moving the California primary from
June to September to "shorten the game
by halt" He said tJUs "would save
a lot of lA'ear and tear on candidates
and , l suspect, on the public, too ."
-The "judicious, sensible phase-out"
of teacher tenure. He said "'the original
and legitimate reaS<1ns for tenure ni>
longer exl.st" and it should be replaced
by ''a system of merit pay which pro-
vides real incentives for quality teach·
ing ."
-Pilot tests in selected districts to
determine feasibility of a "voucher plan"
for financing education. Under thi~, the
state would pay a set amount to each
chlld to attend the school or his choice.
-Tuition for state colleges. There
already is tuition at the University <1f
California.
-Requiring "recreational subdivbons"
to include "strong environmental as well
as englneertng·considerations."
-Making the killing of a law en-
forcement officer while on duty finto
degree murder, and thua punlahable by
death in the gas chamber.
-Malling It a lelony. to advocate k1l1lni
or injuring law enforcement officers.
AJso, increasing the $1,000 mulmum
Teward money the goverMr can offer
for infonnalion lead.Ing to the arrest
(See WELFARE, r.,. I)
We•tller
Beller bep your nlncoat on !or
the nexl·coup1e days. TM outlook
for Wednesdly ls for cloudy
weather Ind showers, with temp-
eratures m1nld In the middle mu ...
INSmETODAY
' Th• Suprmt Court.liar rtlUd
that Ulfl/ore poVlll'ftll -be
withhtld Jrom rccipientf t0ho
refu.se uiritl bu caa'load toor~
ers. Set storu. Page 4. -. *""' ,... "' _....... ......... --IYMI ,._. II """' , .. ., ............. ,, T-If -" -. .......1 ..... ,.,. --..
2 DAILY PILOT H Tutid•J . .l"""'1 12, 1971
Home Loan Rates Cut • .
FHA, ~A Drops Maximum to 7t Percent
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Two le.deral
agencies insuring new mortgage. loans
cut maximum aUowable interest rates
{rom eight percent to 71"' percent.
The. reductions announced by th e
Federal Housing Admlnistratton and the
Veterans Administration were lhe second
in little more than two months. The
rate dropped from a record 8h percent
to eight percent Dec. 1
The lowered rate w1J! apply to all
applications for mortgage 11\Surance
received by offices of the agencies after
close of the business today.
The ntw rale will not apply to the
Sunset Bay
Hotel Hearing
Date Delayed
An Orange County Superior Court hear-
ing into a Huntington Harbour resident's
opposition to the multi-million dollar
Sunset Bay hotel developmenl has been
deterred until Jan. 29.
Both sides in the dispute told Judge
Robert A. Banyard tha t they needed
more lime to prepare their arguments
in that la"·suit filed by Arthur Knox,
3322 Easter Circle, Huntington Beach.
They were ordered to appear Jan. 29
before presiding Judge William C. Speirs.
Knox's lawyers will ask Judge Speirs
at that time to order lhe city of Hun·
tington Beach to y,•ithdraw the use
variance granted by the City Council
tn Real Property f\lanagement of Beverly
Hills builders of the Sunset Bay complex.
That zoning variance, Knox argues,
was granted despite the fact that the
developers were unable to prove that
any legal hardsbip existed in the toning
dispute. The proposed creation of the
Sunset Bay complex was approved by
councilmen after being reviewed several
times by city planners and cowicilmen.
Development of the 35.6 acres at Sunset
Bay calls for creation of a peninsula
with an eleven-story apartment building
and four three·story apartment struc·
tures. Plans also reveal an eleven-story
hotel on the mainland, a four-story office
building, a shopping center, several acres
(If single family homes and 300 boat
slips.. ..
The complex would be b~ilt off Pac.1flc
Cout lfiihway at Adpuralty Drive,
across from HuntlngtM Jhrbo\lt.
From Page I
ELECTION ...
Ribal also said that he. had intended
to resiin at the Dec. 22 board meeting
and that this would have made the
April 20 election "legal."
Matthews agreed that the election
details would have been ''cleaner" if
the date of the vacancy had been Dec,
22.
Board President Matthew Weyuker ex·
plained that the board had no other
recourse. but to declare Dr. Ribal's seat
vacant because by Dec. 8 he had ex·
ceeded legal provisions for a leave of
absence.
"We didn 't know he planned to resign,"
he commented. •·He never told us that.''
Fellow trustee John Bentley said the
board action simply clarified the si1ua-
tion. "Technically he had alre.1dy taken
himse1r off the txiard by being absent
so long ,'' he said. "A lol of people
~·ere asking us about 1t. particularly
thOse thinking of runn ing for election.
\Ve simply clarified the s1tuat1on. ·•
In the April 20 election. voters will
be asked to pick two candidates for
two four-year terms on the. board -
the seats ol Weyuker and Ribal. In
addition voters will be asked to pick
a candidate to fill the unexpired lerm
o:-Dr. Ribal un!il July I.
DAILY PILOT
Oil.ANGE CO.t,.ST PUILl~ING COM.l"Alil't
Rob.rt N. w,.i1
Pralldt<!I •1111 P'lllllW!w
J •c\,; It. Curl•y
Vkti Pm ldmt •r4 OMGl'•l MAl\Ql'f
Thorn 11 K••vll
fllllor
Thol'l'l11 A. Mur,.hf1111
Mt..avlnt ill!oOf"
Al•111 Dir.l111
Wnt Or1~1 Counry l!dllet
Alb1rl w. Iii••
Auoda!I l!dl...,.
H•ltl"ft.• .._ .. Offlc.
17t 75 l•1ch loYl1•1•d
M1i!i"f .A.dif11111 P.O. h r 790, f2WI
0ti.r Offlaa
L•11u1111 llHC"' ZI) Forni ... \'f!\\HI (0111 M ... : )JO W•I 11~ ~11"1 l'llWfllll'I lt•d" 72!1 W1tl ...... , 9o!illwlrll a." Clfmlnlt> Jill NOrlll Ill Clmlrll .....
,
'
nearly 170 bllllon of out.t.lldlnc FHA
mortgqe1. The agency said al.Ml It will
continue to honor all firm and coodJUonal
commitments for mortgage Insurance al
previously conlracted rates. although
whenever possible the parties will be
encouraged to adjust the rate downward.
The reduction followed recent cuts in
the prime rate charged by banks to
their best qualified borrowers and last
week's drop in the discount rate charged
by the Federal Reserve Sy11e.m on loans
to member banks.
Ctorge Romney. secretary of the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development whlch includes FHA, said
he approved the lowtr mortaaae rate
becauae of "the continuing large innows
of funda to morteage lendlng Institutions
a.nd the recent further drop in market
interest rates, particularly in corporate
bonds and other investment that compete
with mortgages."
Romney said the lowered ceiling should
"'unlreeze some or the demand for homes
from prospective buyers who have been
\Vait1ng for a return of lower interest
rates "
"Housing production is already headed
for a banner year in 1971.'' he said.
"and this added demand should make
the outlook even brighter."
Beach School District
To Seek Pay Increases
Once again the subject or sala ries
will grab the attention of Huntington
Beach City School District trustees.
Last week. trustees accepted a six
percent increase and fringe benefits for
teachers. Tonight, the district's prin·
cipals, and perhaps top administrators,
will seek further increases in their
salaries.'
Secretaries, janitors. bus drivers and
other classified lnon·teaching ) employes
also will find their wage system switched.
"We're going on the merit system
tor classified employes." explained
Charles Palmer. deputy district
superintendent, "There won't be any
more automatic salary increases for
classified workers.'•
When the teacher salary batlle began
last year. district trustees decided t.o
separate administration salaries from
teacher sa laries. As a result, all ad·
ministrators from the superlntendent
down to assistant principals received
from $60 to Sf>OO raises last spring.
Tonight, principals will ask for raises
ranging from about $600 up to SI,700.
Palmer said he., S. A. Moffett,
superintendent. and f\fiss Belt y
Funkhouser. assistant superintendent,
would not diteclty ask the board for
raises.
.. But if trustees ask about our sa]arie!I
we have two different proposals in our
pockets." Palmer added.
The board meets at 7:30 p.m in
the library of Dwyer Intermediate
School.
* * * * * * F ou11tain Valley De-an11ex
Actio11 Scl1ecluled Friday
Supporters of tbe campaign to pull
northeast Fountain Valley out (If the
Garden Grove Unified School District
may file one of four petitions needed
to do that by Friday.
Jim Bennet, 16089 Shasta St.. said
the first petition should be Ii.led with
the Orange County Board of Education
Friday and three more should fo\lo"'
in the next three weeks.
Bennet said his group has about 1,000
signatures ot registered voters "'ho are
seeking to transfer 2 I square mites
of Garden Grove territory in Fountain
Valley to the Fountain Valley School
District and the Huntington Beacb Union
High School District.
The move would change an estimated
1.200 elementary school children and 400-
500 high school students, plus Los Am igos
High School and two elen:entary schools.
Bennet also said his candidacy in
today·s election for the Carden Grove
school board has no efrecl on the petition
Boys Club Seeks
•
Young Wrestlers
Young boys who wanl to learn v.•res!·
ling can sign up now at the fountain
Valley Boys Club for once·B·\\'eek in·
structions.
Two coaches will teach wre stling In
the boys from 10 a.m. to noon, eaeh
Saturday at F' o u n ta i n Valley High
School starting Jan. 23.
Boys may register at the B<lys Club,
9840 Talbert Ave .. weekdays (rom 2 p,m.
to 7 p.m. and from 11 a .m. to 4 p.m.,
Saturday.
for more information phone Boys Club
Director Bill Di Prete. 968-5252.
From Page J
AMIGOS ...
a rally Friday lo protest the dress code.
Goyette said the rally was peaceful and
broke up quietly.
.. , can't condemn what the kids ha ve
done to this point," Goyel\e exp\aineri.
"But I am disappointed by the number
of kids who didn 't abide by "'hat we rt'•
quested. this morning <hair cuts). Today
they're challenging the rules I have tn
uphol!. \Ve've taken a stand we feel we
have to take."
"I am Irked because so many of ~he
kids are sincere, but a fe.w are tagging
along just to be suspended," Goyette
added.
The last dress code change made by
district trustees was last Ju.l y 28, when
they NM:! socks were no longer nects·
aary and ahlrt talb might be worn out.
atde the pantJ. ...
Studenll and p1renl5 ire expected to
attend the nea:t meeUna of the bo&ni al a p.m., Jan. lil, Ii lhe board room of
d.lstnct offices, 10331 Stanford Ave .. G.11r·
den Grove..
Loe: Amtaos st:ude.nta also have plan-
ned an lnte.rdistrlcl rally lb\~ Saturday
in a park el Hau.rd At1enue end New·
hope Slttt:l In Santa Ana.
"We're not oppo!ed to 1!1 dress codes."
K.ln& uplatned. ''When health and ~fety
realOllS are Involved, the schoo.I should
1tep Jn."
drive.
"The transfer we hope to accomplish
will take some time. I want to have
a hand jn giving my child a better
education here during that time," Bennet
explained. "But the petition effort is
still on ."
Bennet and a large number of other
Fountain Valley resldenls have been
. working for several monUis to pull nut
of Ute Garden Grove district. They ha ve
divided the affected Fountain Valley area
into fnur separate zones and are seeking
transfer in each one.
Nothing officia l has yet been ac-
complished. The filing or petitions with
!he county is tbe first necessary step. •
3 Westminster
Youth s Jailed
In Theft Case
Three Westminster youths arrested
after they carried out what was describ-
ed in court as a "commando raid ..
on a local service station "·ere found
guilty of petty theft f\·londay and sen·
tcnced to 90 days in Orange County
Jail.
Orange. ColUlty Superior Court Judge
James F. Judge imposed that sentenct>
on Robert E. Estes, 19, of 13441 Olympus
Drive. Quentin Earle Grassitt, 18. of
69\.18 Homer Drive and Charles Harding
Riddle Jr, 18 . of 8061 21st St.
He set an identical term for Daniel
PRUI Hamann, 18, nf Garden Grove,
the fourth youth arrested by Westminster
police last Oct. 12 following the bur~lary
of a Shell service station at Brookhursl
and Bolsa Avenue.
The four defendants and Lu Ann Ricks,
19. of Anaheim, were charged with grand
theft and burglary after they allegedly
forced their way into the service station.
bound and gagged the attendant and
loaded their pickup truck with tires,
batteries, oil and other a~ssories.
All five were grabbed as lhey drove
ctH by police who were alerted after
the attendant managed to slip from
his bonds and summon help.
The jury Monday was unable to agree
nn a verdict for Miss Ricks after scaling
down the charges to pelty theft. It
was decided by the prosecution to charge
her with misdemeano r petty theft in
a new complalnt and take the. ls11ue
to municipal court.
Clean Air Plea
Made in Valley
Fountain Valley school trosteu •re.
righting for clean air.
ScbOol trustees hive adopted a re:Mlu-
Uon ca.lling for strong aod lmmedlat.t
1ction on the part of California
leglsl1tors to eliminate air pollution.
In part the resolution reads: "The fact
that many school districts are In com-
pliance wilh county policies of curtAlllng
21lrtnuous activity on cert•ln 1moggy
days indicates tile severity of the ea:istlng
air pollution condition ."
The re~olution called for state and
!edera.1 lawmakers to pa11s li:aislatlon
providing for "tmmtdlatt steps lo more
effectively combat air pollution."
'
Well Said
Charles Price, a junior at Edi-
son J.li gh School, has won the
oratorical contest sponsored
by Amer ican Legion P ost 133
of Huntington Beach.
f'rf>m Pa11e J
COERPER ...
them for money tlr favors, according
lo Gugus.
He also answered v.:ithout lying on
the questi on. "Were the Ward 's items
given to you with the understanding
that they all had to go to the Guild.''
His reply wa s "no."
A further question dealt with Coerper's
friend, Robert Osley. a construction
worker to whom Coerper had given some
of the merchandise afler he had helped
him with a home conslruclion project.
Michael Milser, the attorney represen·
ting the prosecution has lried to establish
that Osley had been pa id nf f for his
work with some merchandise. Coerper
on the other hand. has maintained Osley
helped him out of friendship.
''Did Bob Osley expect tn receive any
money or special favors from you?"
the lie detector r ead.
The motorcycle nfficcr's ans"•er was
"no" and was certified as truthful by
Cugus.
The lie detector test given by Sgt.
Robert Sorenson of the Huntington Beach
Police Department reportedly recorded
"deceptive responses" lo three questions:
''Did you keep any or the merchandise
for your o"'n use? Did you give any
of the merchandise to friends or
re latives? Did you give any of the
merchandise away as favors for labors?''
Coerper. who "''as called to the stand
himself during the proceeding. said he
was asked to take the po 1 ice
department's test by Capt.. Michael
Burkenfield.
"He told me, 'It ""'ill either prove
th at you were a good Samaritan or
a damned thief. Personally. I think we
h11ve a bunch of thieves aroWld here.'"
Coerper said he repeatedly insisted
lhe charge against him was the result
of a ''big misunderstanding '' he would
like lo clear up. He 'A'as rebuffed, he said.
At one point in the investigation, con·
ducted by Officer James \Valker. CocrpEr
said Walker told him, "Thls is no
misunderstanding. I've got enough right
now to take you in there and book
you"
lie further said that al no time had
the department store personnel advised
him that !he goods were intended for
the Police \'•lives Guild. ''Nobody ever
said. 'Coerper. this is "'here the stuH
has got to go'.''
Reece Ballard. a private investigator
hired by Coerpe.r's lawyer. Cecil Ricks.
l.eslified that he interviewed l\lontgomer.v
Ward employes on that question a n d
received corroborating answers.
State Highlight~
R eagan Outlines Key Points
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Excerpt! from Gov . Ronald Reagan'& 1tale_.of.
the-stale messaie to the ~gislature :
SCHOOL FINANCE -" .•. The various forn1ulas for school subventions
have outlived their usefulness to school districts and must be simplified ."
TEACHER TENURE -''The original and legitimate reasons for tenure
no longer exist . Tenure has become a haven for lhe Incompetent teacher. It
should be altered lo include a system of merit pay which provides real in·
centfves for quality teaching."
TUITIO N -"\Ve face soine unreso lved problems in high er education.
For Qne thu1g. w1! hthe University (Of Ca!llornia ) charging tuition an imbaJ.
ance exists so long as the state colleges do not .''
EDUCATION FEES -.. Nonresident lees for out--0f·state And foreign
students should be reviewed. It is hard to justify subsidizing these s1udenl5
when it grow5 increasingly diffJCt1ll to provide an education for our own res!·
dents."
SOI.JO "'ASTE -"I am sugges!inR one sta te agency should ~ given
the authority to coordinate, encourage and as~1.st local and reg ional ent ities
to plan for and regu.late solid 1,1·aste disposa l s~·stems and sites."
COASTAL PROTECTIO/\l -"The preservation and prolectlon of Cali-
forn ia's coast resources must surely rank amon gou rhighest environment·
al priorities."
CRCM E -"The killing of .a la"· enforcement officer while on duty
should be first-degree murder ,and it should be a felony to specifically ad-
vocate killing or Injuring law enforcement officers.''
WELFARE -"While we assist the truly needy \\•ho have nowhere elge
to tum, we must also insist that ab1e-bodi~ adult recipients work and meet
their own repsonsibililies,"
MEDI-C AL -"During this session we wlll present for your considera·
tion a plan to Hmlt our health care services to the poor so they will he com·
parable with the hea lth benefits provided by the various prepared health in·
surance plans covering most of our clllzens."
BUDGET -"\Ve are at the point where thi s stale can no longer sustain
its operations on the revenue it now takes from the people. Therefore, we are
confronted by R choice. We can reform government -reduce the cost of
services, particularly in welfare and medi·cal. or we can increase taxes. I
will submit a budget which can be balanced without an increase in taxes."
VOTE -''Now that the Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court have
given the 18-year-o!ds the vote in federal elections. I certainly think we should
take thtise steps necessary to let the citizens of California determine whether
that shall be ea:tended to slate and local elections."
From Page I
WELFARE ATTACK • • •
and conviction of persons injuring
policemen.
Reagan pledged to present t h e
legislature a balanced stale budget early
next month and again rejected a tax
increase. which many Democrats say
is inevitable.
"A tax increase is inevitable only if
we refuse lo accept readily available
alternatives."' the governor said.
"We are confronted by a choice. We
can reform government -reduce th e
cost of services, particularly in welfare
and P..ledi-Cal -or we can increase
taxes. To choose !he latter without ex-
cising the cancer eating at nur vitals
is to face tax increases year in and
year out for as long as we shall be
here. I intend to travel another course."
Reagan said Cali fornians now make
up 10 percent of the nation's population
but have 16 percent of all who are
on welfare. State and local costs. he
said. average $57.55 for every man,
woman and child in the state -double
the national average.
Reagan said he will ask the legislature
lo help counties locate absent fathers
who desert t h e i r welfare-receiving
farn ilies.
''There are. today, too many Instances
where the taxpayer is forced to subsidize
some father·s yen to travel." he said.
Tbe governor said lhe legislature will
be asked le place a ceiling on the
New Supe r visor Se ts
Talk in Huntington
Ron Caspers. freshman Orange County
supervisor. will speak lo membfrs of
the Huntington Valley Teen age
Republicans at 7 .30 p.m Thursday at
Sha key·~ P11.za Parlor, 19300 Beach Bl vd ,
Huntington Beach
The public is invited to Caspers' talk
For further information phone 536-IIOL
or 842~5817.
amount or earnings a person can receive
and still remain on welfare .
He recommended removing "the cloak
of secrecy" from Welfare and tlpening
now.closed records to inspection.
On Medi·Cal. he said experience during
the five years has shown the program
,.cannot meet Ca\if9rnia's needs .''
He promised a legislative proposal "lo
limit so they wil be comparable with
poor so they will be comparable with
the health benefits provided by the
various prepaid health insurance plans
covering most of our citizens."
The governor noted six week.! ago,
In an attempt to avoid a $140 million
deficit in the f\1edi-Cal program, he cut
doctors' and nursing home fees by 10
percent and delayed "nonessential''
1ervices to recipient!.
Reagan pvinted out to the lawmakers
I~ was they who wrole the law requirin~
h1n:i to take these drastic steps for
which he has been severely criticized.
"Honesty and simple fairness," he quip-
ped, "compel me to Jet you 1bare in
the glory."
Holiday Runyan
La st Rites Held
Holiday Runyan, a HuntinRton Beach
horse trainer. wa.~ given h.1.<1 unusual
fir.st. name "'hen he ll'as born on the
first day of January. 8.'> years ago.
At 11 a.m .. loday, ~1r. Runyan was
huriccl Jn Fairhaven Ccmelrry with
graveside services. Me died Saturday.
J\otr. Runyan lived 49 ye ars in Hun -
tington Beach. His last address wa~
618 Adams Ave.
Survivors inelucle his "'1h.•. ~fary .:i.nd
t"·o dau~htcrs , Mr~. Jean .James nf Hun-
tington Beach :.ind .'-'!rs. Betty Frisbie
of Laguna BC':ich.
MEASURE FOR TREASURE
One factor overlooked by customers in buying carpeting is the
measuring for yardage.
All of our Salesmen know how to measure and figure exact
yardage, often providing our customers substantial savings in
yardage· alone.
Also, with the tremendous installation experience our salesmen
have (each previously was an expert installer for us ), we are abllf
to forsee any potential problem.
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through
our store. We have a gigantic selection, and the measuring will be
ACCURATE!
~~ I J ~,~~1111 ! 1• I~~~ O'I _ 11 1 I·• ., .:. _ ·.-··-~· ' l ·l -,_ ... '"C:-...... -
--·-::: ---P• •.. . . -·-....-~. -. __ ..
UNTA ANA. OIANel
fUSTIN C .....
ALDIN'I
llD HILL CAl"'1
& DllAPlllU
111"1'4 k-fl-. T ...... c.llf.
1114144
ALDEN'S"
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA M!SA
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thura .. 9 te 5:30 -Frl .. 9 to 9
646-4838
S.t .. 9:30 lo S
1 l
I
I
' ..
Nixon Acts to
By BARBA.RA KREIBICll
In an effort to •·cool off" inflation
;ind c::reale jobs for lhe unen1ployetl anti
for youth enterin1: t he labor force.
President Nixon Monday announced the
first ma jor chang~s in depreciation prir
visions ol the lax la\v since 1962 .
The moves wlll reduce business la'.J:
oayme nts by $2.6 billion in the current
calend ar year and continue the reduc-
tions to a ma'.J:imum of about $4. billion
in 1976, after which the process .,,,•]II
be grartually reversed .
Designed to step up pern1issibie tax
write-offs for tlcprcciablc cap 1 t a 1
tqulpment. the changes permit the
lnternal Revenue Service to accept
li:!preciation based on a "life·· not more
than 20 percent shorter nor 2il pe1·cenl
larger than under flf'esent guidelines,
established in 1962,
In addition. a full year's depreciation
may be claimed for assets placed in
)wvice in the lirst half of a year ,
and one-half year's deprecialio n for those.
acquired in th e second half. This alone
could double the \\'rite-0ff in some in-
stances.
"'l'be name of the 11:ame Ui lobs."
Undersecretary of the Treasury Charis
E. \Valker Iola \Vestern While House
correspondents at a special briefing 1'.lon-
Stars in Their Eyes
Ne\v $2.52,000 Zeiss Planetarium Projector at Charles Hayden Plane-
tarium or Boston's Museun1 of Science captures irnagination of !\.1ark
Myette, 9. (left ) and Raymond Giuff.re, 9. The instrument. reported-
ly the mos t modern and complex planetariun1 projector ever built,
\vas demonstrated for first time Monday.
Ge1·n1a11 Freigl1ter Sinl{s;
May Have Hit Sl1i1} Hull{
DUNGENESS. England (I.JP!) -The
2,695·lon German freighter Branden~urg
sank within two minutes early today
.,..·hen il hit what ~·as bcl1C'ved lo be
!he hulk of the 1.<lnkcr Texaco Caribbean.
The lanker had sunk only ~1onday in
coll1s1011 wilh a Peru vian freighlcr
Coast Gut1nl o(f1cuils st1id seven bocl1es
v.·cre round and 14 l'rew members were
missing or the crew uf 32. Eleven
i.:urvivors were re scued b_v fi shing vessels
• and taken to Folkcstonc Hospital.
(;ert J zschaschcl. 29. of Kcllinghusen,
Germany, lhe ship's second officer. said
he was in his bunk "'hen "a tremendous
crash'' slammed the vessel first to
starboard, then to port.
"My first impression was that we
' had hit a wreck ," he said. "When we
1 got on top we were lold the ship was
' sinking and ordered over the side. It
1 v.·as pitch black \\'hen we jumped into ~ the water. Two minutes later we could
I! not see the ship."
~ A spokesman for Lloyd's, which In-
' 1Jured the German freighter, said "it
; Is apparent that the Brandenburg struck
the v.Teck tlf the Texaco Caribbean
tanker ."
The Brandenburg v.·ent do1vn only two
miles from "'here lhe 13,604-ton Pana1n11-
nian tanker Texaco Caribbean and the
Peruvian freighter Paracas rollided ~Ion·
da y. The Texaco Caribbean exploded
and split in t1110 and the Paracas suHered
damage bul stayed afl oaL
The captain and seven Italian cre1~·mcn
o( the Texaco Carib bean v.·ere missing
and fea red dead.
A Coast Guard spokesman said 1hc
Brandenb urg could have hit part of the
scatl.ered wreckage of the tanker in
the shallow water of the channel coast.
The lifeboat Viki ng Warrior, which
Monday participated in the rescue of
part of the crew of the Texaco Caribbean.
also picked up six ·of today's survivors
and took them to Folkestone. One uniden-
tified survivor from the Bra ndenburg
said he had been below deck and when
he heard a crash "I rushed up on
deck and was told to abandon ship.·•
A number of fishing vwels in the
~rea al.so helped pick up survivors.
I
' ; Nixon Condemns Bomb . ' •
: Attacks on Ritss Buikling
tn a statement issued at the Western '
; White House Monday, President Nlxon
1 joint'! with 50 Jewish community leaders
• from 27 major cities across the nation
1 ln condmini.ng as a "crimloal act of
I vlolt:nce" the e1plodl ng of a bomb outside
f the' So vit.t cultural buUding i n
t Washington. • The 60 Jewl~h leaders, ln a telegram
fl addressed to the President, stated their
: poSltion with regard to the "protest''
, against Soviet treatmen1 of :-ould-be
1 Jewish emlgres from the Soviet Union .
" "'We are qutraged by the bomb ex·
• ploslon outside the SoVict cultural
• llWJstjJig In Washington ," the. telegram .
rtad. "Such irrc sponsihle and criminal
actions must be stopped. \\'bile v.·e are
uni~ In our convtctlona lhlt thole Jews
in I.he Soviet Union who wllh to emigrate:
should be aJlowed to do so, and U'IOl8
who wish lo remain ahould be permitted
religious and cultural freedom, we are
equally united In our abhorrence of thae
acts or vlolen~ .• ,
"All d~t and l1w-Jbidlng American•
share our outrage," replied the Prtsi·
dent, in a statement lsst.ttd through preu
secretary Ronald Ziegler. "You may be
certain al$0 that this Administration,
reflecting: lhe traditional liberties upon
which the country was founded, }oin
with you in urging freedom of emigra-
tion ... but acts of vi-Olence !Ind Jawlcss--
ne!lll such as t h o 1 f!. tha t ha v-: occurred
in this country lately wlll not advan~ our
common cause.''
·-
Fight
<la)'. "Anylhlni;:: that promotes In-
vestments stim ulates jobs and this "'ill
help put people back lo work.''
The br iefing was scheduled at 12:~0
p.m., an hour an d a half later than
usual. It coincided with the closing of
the New York Stock Ex change.
Depreciation reform has a long histo ry
of bipartisan support , said Walker. and
has been under intensive study by a
Presidential task force on business
economy appointed in September 1969.
\Val ker fl ew to San Clement e to finalize
the Presidential annowicement "This is
a big step toward a full employment
ecqno1ny." he told ne~·smen. I
Ile emphasized that the moves con-
DAILY PIL<i~ 3
Inflation, Create J obs
stltute a tax deferral, rather than a
tax cut. "moving back in time" Ole
period ~·hen tile L11xes \1·111 have tu
be paid.
ffe cited as an example a small
businessman who set up and equipped
an office at a cost of sa,ooo.
Under the 1962 depreciation guidelines,
the equipment would have a JO.year
"ll(e,'' <1t the end of which it would
be full y depreciated .
The. new .provisions woold permit
speeding up ll! depreciation to eight
yea rs, or, if preferred, extending it to
12 years,
Under the old rule, if the equipment
Y>ere put into operation in Jwie, the
first-year wrlle off would be $.1?.0. Under
the new rule, which would give a full
year's cred it, the w1ile-urr would be
!800.
"Th is Is significant,'' said \Yalkt'r, "in
view of !he billions of dollars in capital
cquipn)ent in business and Indust ry
throughout the country.
"lt also will help agriculture, which
involves large capital investments. Jn
fa ct. even hogs are capital equipment
-they are machines for producing little
hog~. and have a thr ee-yea r life," he
said.
Although the moves will result in an
immediate loss of tax revenue to the
government, Walker explained, this will
be recovered ln time.
For example, the owner of the $8,000
worth of office cquipn1en l who took ad-
vantage of the opportunlly to derirecia te
it fully in eiihl yea rs. would, trom
then on , have to pay full ta x on hi'
income ~·ithout any further write-of( U
the equlpment continued In use.
Furthennore, it is expected that
libera llullion of depreciation regulations
v.•ill stimulate the pace of spending on
new plan! and eq uipment, thus creating
jobs and, in the long run , increasing
Federal ta:r rollections.
fmpa· '" the tax move. which Is
retroa• .~·e to Jan. 1, should be im·
medi:· , Walker concluded,
Angela Didn't Violate Oath
Not a Communist When She Took Loyalty Pledge
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Justlce
Department says black Communist
Angela Davis, \\'ho received federal
educational funds while a graduate stu·
dent, can't be prosecuted for violating
a loyalty oath.
t.tiss Davis stated she was not a Com-
munist "'hen she applied for and received
federal fellows hips from ri.1ay 17, 1967
through June 30, 1969, and apparently
never made anv known statement to
the contrary unu'1 Sept. S, 1969, Assislant
Attorney General Robert C. ~1ardain
said Monday.
t.1ardain v.·as responding to Rep.
\Villiam Scherle (R-lowa ), who had asked
the Justice Department to prosecute if
there was sufficient evidence that Miss
Davis violated the loyalty oath by stating
she was not a Commwiist.
Mardain told the congressman he could
find no grounds to prosecute Miss Davis
President Signs
Bill to Extend
Food Stamp Act
At the 'Vestern \\'hi te House In San
Clemente Monday, President Nixon sign-
ed into la'v a bil l e:<tending through
fiscal 1973 the Food St.amp Act of 1964
v.·hich helps provide food for 9.3 million
needy Ame ricans.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said
!hat participants in the program have
increased from 3.2 million in 1'.1ay ,
J9ti!I to 9.3 mill ion today.
The legislation "extends distribution
of fod to the needy substantially.'' Ziegler
said. 'rhe bill authorizes $1.75 bH!ion for(
fiscal 1971 and "such sums as ma}'
be necessary" for 1972 and 1973.
It limits the charge for coupon
11llotments to 30 percent of household
income and provides free allotments to
families of four with less than $30
1nonthly income.
The slates are required to ronduct
"outreach'' programs to advise low-in-
come households of their el teibility and
lo facilitate their participation.
The bill provides that public assistance
11ouseholds mav elect to have coupon
charges deducied from I.heir v.·clfarc
checks and makes it possible for elderly
persons to use st.amps for meals
delivered to their homes. Stamps are denied lo entire household~
con taining an able-bodied adult be tween
the ages of 18 and liS who refuses
to re gister for or accept employmenl .
This prov ision does not apply to st1irlenl"
nr persons responsible for the care of
children or incapacitated adults.
Chotiner Said
Ready to Lead
Nixon Campaign
From Wirt Sen+lce1
WASlUNGTON -Key confidante
Murray M. Chotlner of Ne\\·port Beach
will quit the While House slarf soon
to begin engineering President Nlxon ·s
1972 re-elecUon campaign, according to
private sources.
The New York 'l'imes announcect
Chotiner's Imminent departure today and
he confirmed it.
Only Chotiner -who recently appeared
In Orange County Superior Court as
his wife Mimi dissolved their storm mar-
riage -·.didn't say just what hls assign -
ment 1'01 be .
"I know what my plans art.'' said
the Newport attorney, who bllterly com·
plained that the widely publicized end
Of his marriage might cost. hls job.
"But I can't uy yet,'' he added.
••tt's not time to announce them."
No date was given for hll departure rrom President Nixon's staff, but White
HOUR sources told the New York Times'
Wuhlngt()n bureau that It won'.t be long.
He will reported!)' bead a privately
financed campaign unit baaed i n
Woahlnglon. under 'Ult • ..,. eye of Al·
tom<y Generol John N. MltChell.
The ti-year-old lawyer hN bun "
close confidante of Nlxon for 25 years,
since dlrectlng his publlclty campaign
In l!M6 when he ran f<lr the llouse
of Representatives.
Chotlner was headed for e kCy post
with the 'Republican National Committee
e11 rly Jn Nixon's i\dmlni11trallon but
Chairman Ray 'c. Bllss resigned ovt.r
the plan.
•
because her first admission of being
a member of the Communist party came
more lhan two months after she finished
the academic year under her last federal
grant at the University tlf Californla
at San Diego.
"After thoroughly examining the fa cts
and related evidentiary problems, we
concluded lhat prosecution was not war-
ranted inasmuch as the only evidence
available for use Jn court is Miss Davis'
admission in writing to lhe Californ ia
Board of Regents on Sept. S, 1969, and
subsequently in a number of public ap-
pearances, that she was al that time
a member of the Communist party,"
Mardain wrote Scherte.
Mardain said that ''In the event evi.
dence should become available to estab-
lish thal Miss Davis was in fact a mem-
ber of the Communist party at the time
of applying and accepting (federa l)
funds ... we would. of course. re~valuate
thi s maller in the light of such evidence."
Scherle replied to !\lardain. who heads
the Justice Department's Internal Securi-
ty Division, that the FBI should intervie1v
Miss Davis in jail in San Rafael to
determine when she became a Com-
munist.
She Is pr esentl y awaiting trial there
on ~arges of murder, kidnaping and
conspiracy for her alleged role In the
Aug. 7 convict escape attempt at the
Hughes 'Flushed~
Judge Orders Court Appearance
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Quite ex-
pectedly, billionalre Howard Hughes
didn't show up f\.londay, but attorneys
in a $50 million suit against Hughes
Tool Comp any began legal maneuvers
which prom ised to be Jong and drawn
out.
Rober t !\1aheu, ous ted head of the
industrial ist's Nevada business empire,
filed the suit claiming defamation of
character , The suit technically was a
counter action to a suit filed by Hug hes
Tool Company of Houston which resulted
m ~e ~i.sm issal of ~aheu.
I ling the s~1t, ~faheu claimed
u . did not fire hrm, He \'Oiced
crcern !hat the fiAan cial recluse lef1
Las Vegas Thanksgiving Day aga inst
his will. Dire ctors of llughes Tool say
Jlughes wanted Maheu fired and won
thei r point in court.
Thirty minute s after Hughes was to
show up for the laking or a deposition
~1onday, District Judge Howard Babcock
issued a stay on lhe notice and se t
a he aring for Feb. 3.
Babcock was expected to rule today
on whether or nol H.ughes should be
named a party in the Maheu suit and
whether sealed ro urt documents should
be ope~~ lo ~aheu's attorney. If lfughcs
were Joined in the suit he rould be
tlrdered to appear in person.
oi11g Not So Great Now;
P Am Slates Flight Cut
NEW YORK -The going isn't so great
with Pan Am.
Pan Ameri can World Airways an-
nounced here today that it v.·i!l ask the
Civil Aeronautics Board for perm ission
to suspend mainland to Hilo, Hawaii
Shotgrui Plastic
Blasts Brenk Vp
Prison Fighting
SOLEDAD (A P) -Soledad prison offl·
cials di sclosed Monday that shotgun fire
with plastic projectiles was used to break
up two fighU Saturday among inmates.
Bill!e Harris was hospitalized "'ith 11
stab wound arter a shower room fight in-
volving six inmates of the maximum se-
curity section. One shotgun charge was
fired to break up this fight.
Two inmates were Injured in a later
brawl involving 16 inmates in a chow
lfne. One suffered burns from hot soup,
another a hand fracture.
Four shotgun charges and two tear gas
projecLiles were fired quell ing this dis-
turbance. said Charles Stllwel!, prison
spokesman.
flights for two years.
Officials said the market is .so dismal-
with five other airlines compeUn1t for
passengers -thal it is being forced to
suspenrl Pan Am fligh13 to the. second
majo r island.
Flight.s to Honolulu will continur.
"\.\'e hope the passag e. of lime will bring
brighter prospects for serving Hilo," re-
marked one Pan Am execu1i1'e.
"ln the meantime, howevrr. immediate
action i~ necessa ry to alleviate at least
Jn some degree the dismal picture that
now exists ," officials added.
A loss of more than $3 million on the
llilo flight s t1uthorized iPI 1967 is the pri-
mary dark spot Jn that picture.
Pan Am beca me so confident when
85,701 passengers flew lo lf!lo In 1968
!hat a new service pattern in 1968 was
established, nine flights from Los Ang~les
and three from San Francisco each week.
A declslon to open the Transpacific
market to five olher ca rriers led to a bit-
ter batlle for passenger handlin~ for Ha·
waii aod some. of the l/ight.s were cut
back.
Pan Am officials point out tha t all air-
lines are suffering on lhe Hilo flights ,
With A total operating loss o( $23 mJllJon
as of last June.
"Whal we have here Is a situation th11t
Is bleak Indeed and one that cries out for
some correcti ve action," said a Pan Am
executive.
75 Million Years Old
t.lii rin County Civic Center. A judge
and three of his abductors died in a
shootout outside the center.
After leaving UC San Diego , she
became an instructor in the philosophy
department at UCLA , where she WaJ
fired by the regents after she announced
her Communist party affiliation.
She is C'harged with purchasing the
guns used in the Aug. 7 episode and
is being lried along with one of the
principals in the shootout, San Quentin
convict Ruchell t.'lagee. under a stale
Jaw which Mids au accomplices equally
C'Ulpable.
DAILY PILOT II.,, rMfll
RECALL FIZZLES
Mayor Tony Forster
Capo Recall
Move 'Dead'
Against Mayor
By PA!'ttELA HALLAN
OI UM Ot llJ P'll•I Sllll
The recall action against San J uan
Capis trano ~1ayor Tony Forster is dead .
)on Routt, spokesman for the Cont
'l'l ittee for Good Government, announced
the eleventh hour dr.cision Monday prior
to the City Council meeting.
Petitions were to be filed with t~
r\ly cle rk today in order to call 1
special election .
~ult refu~ed to say how man"
si~natures had been collected. He did
"3.y, however, that the committee: would
~ "destroying the many pages .C.
signatures collected with only tbe signer
'Uld the carrier having knowledge M
lbeir contents.''
Routt said the decision to call orf
the recall came about because of •
marked improvement in city govem-
ment. In both attitude and economy.
'•The entire council apDears to hav1
under2one a comolete soul aearchinc
i;ieriod during lhest past few weeks.
which bas produced a good working
atmosphere within and outside the coua-
cll chambers," said Routt.
"This change to a better attitude htl
been the main ob)ective sought bJ
:~Ufens including the council mem.,_
themselves.''
Dinosaur Remains Found
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The remains
&f a sea.going Duckbill dinosaur larger
than •ny of its kind ever found before
have been uncovered In Baja California
by a team of U.S. paleontologists.
The creature waS about 100 feet tong
and 75 million years old, Or. William
Morrill of Occidental College said. His
team Included scientists from Occidental
and the Loll Angeles County Museum
of Natural lllstory.
The discovery was made on a hillside
eight miles south of El Rosario, Mexico,
nnd about 200 miles llOUth of the U.S.
border where the group has dug for ,.
several year! In cooperation with the
tnstllute of Geology at the University
of Meilco and the NaUonal G«igraphlc
Society . ·
Morril said the four bontS returned
to the l<le Angeles museum Include a
humerus or arm bone 100 centimeters
Jong. He said the longest such bone
ever found before measured S7 cen-
timeters.
The other bon~ Include two neck
vertebrae and • broken Ubula or leg
bone. The nec:kbones &rt twice the size
of lhote or ~mparable 50-(oot monsters.
Morria !'aid, and the humerus itself
weighs almost 260 pounds.
Morris said he thinks they belong to
a duckbill dinosaur but Unal.coafJnnaUon
is yet to be made.
'The bones are the ~ty of Mextro.
"It's really ln<ftdlble," the pal~
tologist said. "JI l coU!d uelaln II.
I'd bf glad to."
Such dinosaurs have been found before
In the Baja C:IUfornia penlnsu.11 atbrc
Mexlco"s W1!Stem edge uu::l ln C.nada and
Sibttla, said Morris, but even the gl.ant
onea havt1 menmued only 50 to 55 fttt
In length.
The Los Angeles group plJnl lo fttura
nert. summer to the area -.here the
bones were toiind .
'· I
t
. . -. ~ . . . -.. . . .
f DAILY PILOT Tutstlay, J.a11uary 12, l'J71 ... ,...
Supr eme Court Upholds Welfare Visits
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court ruled today that welfare authorities
may cut off benefits if a caseworker
is barred from entering a recipient s
home.
The decision. on a fi-3 vote. cam e
in the case of ~1rs. Barbara James
cf the Bronx, N.Y., mother of a pre-
school child.
Mrs. James, who received assistance
R uss R ecall
Of Envoy
Pondered
MOSCOW IUPI) -?\loscow Jewish
leaders today delivered a protest to the
U.S. Embassy against acts of "brigan.
dage and terror" against Soviet diplo-
mats and ciliuns in the Uniled Stales,
The Soviets again attacked lhe U.S. gov·
emment for conniving v.•ith "Zionist Ku
Klux Klansmen" in the anti-SOviet vio-
lence.
ThP.re was no word here on lhe activi·
ties of Ambassador Anatoly F. Oobrynin
\Vho flew here from Washington for con-
sultations. presumably in connection
with the attacks and other harassment
of Russians in New York and Washing-
ton and Americans in Moscow.
(Dobrynin left Washington Sunday and
t here was some speculation there that
he would not return to his past.)
Violence against Americans in Mos-
co1v slopped. at least temporarily. There
were no further reports of vandalism
or personal intimidation against U.S.
residents here.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said three
~Ide r Iv Jews represeiting Mo!ctlw·s
Grand Khora] Synagogue, the largest
in the capital, presented the protest peti·
ti on.
In the Aid to Families with Dependent
Chi ldren Program (AFDC), told ber
caseworker she would supply a ! I
necessary information but would not
permit a home visit. Benefits have rnn·
tinued under a court order pending the
outcome o{ the lawsuit.
Speating for the Supreme Court ma-
jority, Justice Harry A. Bl.ackmun said
''home visitation as structured by the
New York statutes and re&ulations is
a reasonable administrative tool."
He said as wed in New York it
is not "an unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy."
Justice William 0. Douglas, Thuraood
Marshall and William J. Brennan Jr.
dissented.
The 4th amendment to lhe Con!tltuUon
bars ''unreasonable'' searches a n d
11tizures and requires the issuance of
a v.·arrant, based on "probable cause"
Lh at some violation has occurred. The
warrant must describe the place to be
searched and the persons or things to
be seized.
On that basis, a s~cial three-judge
federal court in New York City ruled
Aug. 17, 1969, that denial of entry to
a caseworker could oot be grounds for
The Soviet Union accused the United
States of "connivance" in an official
statement last week that warned the
safety of Americans in Mo!CQw could
not be guaranteed unless the anti-Soviet
incidents were stopped by U.S. auth·
orities. The new attack against the Unit-
ed States came in a commentary by the
official Tass news agency.
HENRY CABOT LODGE TURNS AWAY FROM HE CK LING STAN FORD AUD IENCE
Shouts of 'Pig', 'Fascist' End Envoy's T•lk on United Nations
~~~~~~~~~~-
Brazil Dem and s
Note Fron1 Envoy
Before Ransom
Raucous S tanford Mob
·•The unbridled anti-Soviet campaign
slaged by the Zionists in America is be·
ing conducted with the knowledge and
connivance of official Am,rican author-
ities," the Ta.!S commentary, v.Titlen by
Yuri Kornilov, said.
S houts Dow n Diplomat
D.C. Home Rule
Mak es Progress
With Elections
\\'ASHINGTON (AP J -Residents of
lhe District of Columbia. y,·ho gained
and then lost a \'Oice in Congress 100
~.:ears ago. look a step back lov.·ard self.
&O\'ernmeot today.
The 200.000 Democrats among the Ois-
lricrs 257.000 registered voter s Y.ere
t'h00~1n~ from seven candidate~ vytn&
for their party's nomination lo be n<>n-
voting D. C. delegate to !he House of
Represen1 ativts.
Only one Republican ts rWlning ror
the position.
\" Cnngress first gave voice to the Dis-
tricrs residents in 18il "'hen it created
the city 's first nonvoting member of the
llouse and allo\1·ed a partially elected
city go\'ernmenl.
Norton P. Chipman. a Republican \\'ho
settled in Washinglon after the Civil
War, "'as the first delegate but the posi-
tion was abolished two years later when
tile District gove rnment went bankrupt.
JtlO DE JANEIRO (AP) -ApparenOy
lo win time for last·mlnute maneuvering.
lhe Brazilian government has demanded
a note signed by the kidnaped Swiss am·
bassador before flyi ng 70 prisoners to
Chile as his ra11Jsom.
A month of negotiations ended late Mon -
day when the government announced Jl
\\'Ould exchange the prisoners for Ambas-
sador Giovanni Enrico Bucher. and the
Chilea11J government said it would gr3nt
them asylum.
However, the Brazilian government de·
manded another note from the Popular
Revolutionary Vanguard , over Bucher·s
signature. that he v.·ould be released as
soon as the prisoners· arrival in Chile
\1·as confirmed.
Since several similar no1es already had
been received. the military regime was
he!ieved stalling so that doctors could
put together a medical record showi'1g
1ht. prisoners were not tortured while con·
fined . G'lvernmenl sources sl'lid !hey y,·err
undergoing "rigorous medical examinA·
!tons.''
Sixty prisoners released as ransom for
Brazil's three previous victims of pol1tlcal
kidnapings gained worldwide publicity
with slories of torture by the Brazilian
authorities.
Dozens of pri so11ers v.•ere: brought to
Rio de .laniero from outlying districts and
their relE:ase was expected ~1onday night ;
then the government demanded the addL·
lional note.
STANFORD. Calif. (UPI\ -Veteran
U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge
"'as booed from the stage amid !!houts
of ''pig'' and "fascist'' J\.1onday \vhen
he attempted to deliver an address al
Stanford University.
U:idge later made hi s speech in a
smaller room with an audience about
one-fifth the siie <lf the crowd that
packed Dinke\spiel Auditorium where he
originally had been scheduled to make
the opening address al a conference
on the performance and prospects of
the United Nations.
Student body officers, the chairman
of the faculty senate and President
Richard W. Lyman deplored the incident
and apologized to Lodge. who said the
interruption of his speech .. speaks for
itself."
"They 're afraid n( the truth," said
Lodge. "All through history. people like
this \\'ant to take over. ..
One young "'oman 11·ho took part in
the demonstratiOTl said it "'a~ aimed
at Lodge for his support of the Vietnan1
\var.
"He is <lne of the prime movers of
the Vietnamese war and still i~,'' she
!laid. "Unless he is going to talk about
leaving Vietnam, we feel he should leave
wherever he is speaking.''
About 800 persons were crowded into
Dinkelspiel Adu.itorium when Lodge arose
It's Time to Go South
Nation 105 Degrees • T eniperature Va ries by Ul
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lo make his address. About 150 members
of the audience then began booing and
shouting. prompting Lodge to fold his
prepared text and le;ive the podium.
About 45 minutes later he delivered
his addre'ss to 1~ persons in Cummings
Auditorium, calling on the United States
and the Soviet Union to avoid sarcasm
and inve<:live in the U.N. and ··strive
for agreement.·•
Lodge's address opened a lhree-day
conference on the United Nations. which
is celebrating lls 25th anniversary. The
ffoover Institution at Stanford is sponsor-
ing the conference.
In an evening address. Charles H.
r-.1alik of Lebanon. a former presidenl
of the U.N. General Assembly. said Com·
munist conutries have made the greatest
ideological gains-since the United Nations
was founded.
~1alik, professor of philosophy aL t11c
University of Beirut. said lhal the
~·estern world "must first pul Its 011.n
moral house in order before it can
battle ideologically at the United Na tinns
1\'ith any hope or making a dent upon
the world ."
stopping benefits. Blackmun ·s opinion
reversed the decision.
Al that time, New York required visits
every three months to those receiving
home relief, veterans' assistance or aid
to dependent children. Visits every six
monlhs were required for those reci·
pients of aid for the aged, blind a n d
disabled
Mrs. James· benefits were cut off
June 2, 1969, but Federal District Judge
Charles H. Tenney ordered them resum·
ed and barred city and state welfare
agencies from slopping benefits because
recipients resist home visits.
Blackmun wrot.e lhat a contact by
a social worker was not a "search"
in the constltutional sense. But even
presuming that il was the New York
program is not ··unreasonable ." -......... .. £~...:....-.. _ • ~ .. -,.~ -~
Jtlissil e Si te
2nd Air Attack
In North Bared
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command
announced today that a second U.S.
plane made a "protective reaction" air
attack inside No rth Vietnam last Friday.
A spokesman said the Shrike missile
fired by the American fighter-bomber
missed the enemy antiaircraft missile
site on the coast and landed in the
&ea.
The air strike 110 miles north of the
demilitarized zone was made after the
missile launcher's radar began tracking
an unarmed Navy reconnaissance jet
and the A4 fighter-bomber escorting it,
the spokesman said.
The U.S. Command considers this a
hostile action. the spokesman explained,
since once the radar Jocks onto an
aircraft it is in position to fire and
thu5 poses a threat. The spokesman
said the North Vietnamese did not fire,
but the attack by the American lighter·
bomber was the exercise of the "inherent
right of self-defense."
The U.S. Command on Saturday an·
nounced another "protective reaction"
strike last Friday, by an Air Force
FIOS fighter-bon1ber escorting 8 5 2
bombers on a mission along the North
Vietnamese.Laotian border. The com·
mand said the Fl05 fired two Shrike
missiles at a SA~1 site in the Mu Gia
pass region after the enemy's radar
began tracking the U.S. planes. There
has been no report that those Shrikes
hit the target 'ither.
In ground combat, South Vielnamest
headquarters claimed its forces killed
78 North Vietnamese in sharp fighting
on both sides of the Cambodian border.
Field reµorts s;iid se\'en South Viet-
namese "'ere killed and 18 "'ounded.
A small U.S. ~1arine patrol of less
than 10 men beat back an attack by
50 Viet Cong 2Q mile!'; south or Da
Nang, killing I~ with the help of air
Bethleh en1 Steel
R aises Prices
BETHLEHE~1 . Pa. (A Pl -Bethle-
hern Steel Co .. Amenca's No. 2 produc-
er. has announced higher prices for steel
used in construction and shipbuilding-
1ncreases !hat may rventua!ly be re·
ll ected 1n higher costs for consumer
goods .
Bethlehem said r-.1onday prices y,·ou!d
go up by 80 to 85 cents a hundredweight
on piling. structural shapes and carbon
plates used in the construction of ships.
1'he boosts of l l to ll per cent "'ill take
effect feb. 16 and to.larch I.
The increases marked the end of a
year-0ld policy Bethlehem instituted and
the rest of the industry quickly matched
under which steel purcha~ers were giv-
en a J2·month, no-price-change guaran-
tee.
strikes, a spokesman said. One Marine
was wounded.
But three Americans were reported
killed and eight wounded in several booby
trap incidents elsewhere.
In Cambodia. a large force of South
Vietnamese marines v.·as reported at
a crossroads close to one of the key
enemy positions blocking Highway 4,
the road between Phnom Penh and the
sea.
Shots S hatter
New Truce
111 Jordan
By The Associated Prelis
Palestinian guerrillas and the Jorda·
nian government signed a new cease-fire
agreement today but barely an hour
later artillery 1nortars and machine guns
o;>Cned up in Jordan's capital. Amman.
It could not be determined immediately
which side started the shooting.
People who had ventured on the streets
in the first hour after the cease-fire
was announced scurried for shelter and
the street.! were deserted within minutes
after the firing began.
r-.fost of the shooting was in lhe are11s
of the Intercontinental Hotel and most
go\'ernment ministrie~.
The explosion of shells and the chatter
of heavy machine guns was echoinji
in the city more than l"'O hours after
it began.
The cease-fire was to have ended
fighting between the guerrillas and
Jordan's arn1y, while U.N. special
mediator Gunnar V. Jarnng pressed his
pe11ce efforts between Jsrael and the
Arabs in Ne\v York.
A joint state1nent by the Jordanian
government and the guerrilla comm•nd
in Amman s11!d anyone disobeying the
cease-fire would be tried as a traitor.
U.S., Briti8h Qui t
Ui\\-Colonial Panel
UNITED r\ATIO\S. N.Y IAP)
The United States and Britain ha\'e quit
the United Nation s special comn1ittee on
colonialism. apparently because of lt!
don1ination by African m1l1tants 1vith a
pronounced anti \vhite bias.
U.S. Ambassador Charles \V. Yost
notified Secretary-General U Th3nt ~1on
da y of the Ainerican withdrawal. Yost
~ave no reason. but U.S. delegates have
oflen objected to the co1nn1ittee'1 •P·
proval of antiWestern resolutions.
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Canadian Prime tl1ini!iter Pierre Trudeau and Pre·
mlcr Indira Gandhi greet one another Wd ian fa sh-
ion upOQ his arrival in New Delhi today. They con·
(erred alone and it was reported they \\'ere in ba ~H·
agreemen t In the approac hes oi the two natiOn~
to main lnternatiopa11ssues .
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Foo11tai11 Valley N.Y. Steeb
voi:. 04, NO. 10, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAG ES ORAN GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY '12, 1971 TEN CENTS
County Sets Election Date for Rib al Seat
By ALAN OIRKJN
01 Ill• 0.11,. ~1111 "'"
The Orange County Ed uca tion Depart·
ment agreed today that the letler of
the law is being broken in setting the
special election to fill the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dis tric t seat
of Dr. Joseph Ribal for April 20.
Technically, the on should be called
no later than April 12 -120 days
after the vacancy became offic ial -
but, in.stead county officials decided to
combine the vote with the regularly
scheduled trustee election April 20.
"The law says a special election must
be held 120 days after the vacancy
occurs, but another section of the educa-
tion code says that if the vacancy occurs
within four months of a regular election
the special election may be c<1mbined
with it," Robert Matthews, director of
administraitve serv~ for the county
schoolll office , &aid UUs morning.
Matthews agreed, however, that the
58 Suspended
Hair Controversy Comes to Head
'SIDELINED BY SIDEBURNS
Los Am igos High's King
By TE RRY COVILLE
01 "'9 QeUJ Plltl Jltfl
A controversy over hair and othe r
dress code features at Los Amigos High
School, Fountain Valley, came to a head
Monday.
Fifty~ight boys were suspended for
wearing long hair, sideburns or beards.
Tile s~nsions followed warnings is-
sued last Friday to nearly 200 boys with
long locks. By Monday, most had bair-
cu'-'.
"The only way to chan ge the dress
code is b'y action of the board of trus-
tees," Fred Goyette, assistant principal,
uplained.
One atude.nt leader, Terry King, 17,
wu aent home for hls long sideburns.
He was adamant about removing them.
"I'm ready to shave them off if the
board wl11 take some action toward re·
pealing the dress code," he said.
King is a membe1 of the scbool news-
paper staff and the yearbook staff. l .. e
says most of the youth are sincere in
their battle against the Garden Grove
Unified School District dn!ss code, and
are not trying to make trouble,
"The school is here to tea ch, not to
tell us how we're supposed to look,'' he
emphasized.
Prior to the suspensions, studenl'I held
(See AMIGOS, Pace ZJ
Nixon to Leave Thursda y;
Sets N ehraska Scl1ool Talk
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of Ill• 01llJ Pll•I ll•fl
. President Nixon will end his San
Clemente sojourn Thursday morning and
11wing by the Un iversity of Nebraska.
tG address a convocation or stud enUs
and faculty.
The afternoon address in the university
cOliseum will help celebrate the school
~ginning its second hundred yean of
atstonee.
w Aid~ said the Nebraska stop en route
to Washington. 0. C. will also give
' Former Actres s
J pf· Huntington
'Succumbs at 57
' 'Mr~. Regina Marla Holderieth, of Hun-
~· Buch, a former actress ud
·l lanJilt. died Sunday at the age or 57.
~ Funeral services will be held at 3
Rom. Wednesday In the Pacific View
Chapel ln Newport Beach.
~A ~sident at' 16282 Angler Lane. fl1t
1he put 10 years, sbe. succumbed at
Lmt: Beach Memorial Hospital after a --*Sbt: wu well known among movlqoen or the !t20s when """ appeored in tile
'-"Dud End Kids" comedy aer"• a ·~glna Trautman wltb Mickey McGure.
•1 .. ~~· wu alM> a featur.ed pianist with
lie Spode Cool!l' BAncHo !l'nla Monka
. dlirlil "tbe llliOs. ·-"" under Ille 11iimf or 11q1rui Shrode•·
I "'lier ·IOC:lal ICIMl!a· indudclt• ... .,_
~ In the Jobi o.,.htm ""1
·r~star.
"'Scnlwn lnduck! btt -.ct, Dr.
~ E. Hotderie!I> of ~
.... ch ; -""'· !livid ~ -o1 Huntingtoo ll<lch; Cblrloil Slin>de
,..( 0·111nada Hills: Elmer D. Shnlde of
1'llOl11111CI 0.ks; end ono douaJ!lel-, Mn.
",, '· -of San Dtqo. She •alto sur vived by two grandchildren.
• '
the nation's number one football fan
a chance to congratulate. the university's
Cornhuskers football team for the 1970
season. The. team was Big Eight champ,
won the Orange Bowl and was ranked
number one in the nation by Associated
Press.
The Lincoln, Neb. address will be Nix·
on's first to a campus audience since
he faced a vocal minority of hecklers
at Kansas State University last summer.
The vis it Idea originated
with Agriculture Secretary Clifford Har-
din. He resigned as chancellor Of the
university to join the cabinet.
JI will be the first time a Pr~ldent
has visited the University of Nebraska
campus.
As hia nine-day work vacation drew
toward a~close, the Pre!ident Monday
condemned as "morally wrong" lhf!
bombing attacks on Soviet facilities in the
U.S.
This carrie amid threats by the Jewish
Defense League to continue assaults to
win better treatment for Jews in Ruasla.
Thursday Final
Day to Reguter
Tbunday la the last day to register
for voten wilhlng to caat their ballot!
In tht Marclt t tu overrtde ln lhe Hunt-
ington Beach Union HJCh School Dia-
lrlcl.
A n giatrar will be on duty in tht Hunt.
lngton Center Mall, ln rront of fetm(ly 'a,
from 7 p.m. to I p.m. r&hls WedoetUy
Mel Tburtday, aceordfcilo . Mn. Jell>-
ett. Turk of the Leal\I< of Women Vof,
era. R4ialr•"-will be ll<Upl<d durJnc
d1ytime 1-o omtD Tbunday II the
H111111ngtoo Be1ch City Clerk 's office in
the elvk: ~ comple1.
The tlx measure, if approved. would
.rabe the dlatrict'• operating rate from
111.cumnt 11.31 to 12.oe per ftOO ol ..
teued valU1tkm.
vacancy which occurred officially Det:.
14, missed the legal provislons for rom·
bining the two elections by nearly a
week, but added, "After conferring with
the count y counsel we agreed that !he
inte nt of the Jaw was not to have elec-
tions one week after another.
"Whal purpose would it serve? We
felt the intent of the law was that
the elections should be combined."
The additional cost of a special election
Is estimated at $15,000.
ows
"An election can still be called a
week earlier, If anybody wants it," Mat-
thews went on. "To me it would be
senseless, but it could be done. There
is still time to call it."
The timing of the trustees in declaring
his seat vacant after he had been absent
from the state for more than 90 days
was criticized in a letter received by
the district Monday from Dr. rubal.
Ribal, a psychology professor at El
Camino College currently engaged in
e
Lie Detector
se1 education research projects at
universities in Sweden and Denmark,
st1id the election rould have been. com·
bined with the March 9 ta1 override
election "if the trustees had.not objected
for their own political reasons."
''Only the willful and hypocritical viola·
Uon of this law by the Orange County
School Superintendeot (Robert Pelencin)
who administers school district elections
was able to cover up this cosUy act
of malice," Dr. Ribal wrote.
are
Coerper Tests
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 1111 O.llY 1'1111 ll•fl
Fired Huntington Beach police officer
G.ilberl Coerper has passed a lie detector
test deali ng with his bandling of goods
from a department store.
That was the surpr ise testillWny of
Chris Gugus, a private criminoloeist,
who appean!d before the Huntington
Beach personnel commission Monday.
The commission is considering whether
the motorcycle officer should be re.f..n-
stated.
"H~ 4id not at\eJJlJll ...deceplioo . .Jn
my opinion, Mr. Coeiper answered all
Phoeni x Asl{ed
Phone Number
Of 1 Victim
By TOM BARLEY
Of lflt D•ll'f 1'1111 11•11
Gary Harold Phoenix's supervisor
testified today in the Orange County
Superjor Court rape-kidnap trial of the
tall Costa !\-1esan that his work
performance visibly detcrlorated during
a 28·day period last summer in which
he allegedly attacked nine women.
The young 'M'Oman manager of a
Westminster health spa said her assistant
manager's output slumped to the point
that she asked him : .. What do you
do all night?''
Phoenix told her. she testified, that
he "drove around looking for girl s and
someone to be with."
'The manager's testimony came in the
closing slages of a trial in which nine
alleged women victims of the 29---year-old
defendant have told stories of rape. sex
perversion, robbery and violence suffered
at the hands of the de£endant.
An 18-year-old Huntington Beach girl
who identified Phoenix as her attacker
told the jury Monday that she was
walking to her apartment last ;Jne 30
when Phoenix sprang from his car, grab--
bed her and forced her Into the vehicle.
She testified that a garment was tied
over her head and she was forced l-0
undress. She said Phoenix lhen raped
her and repeatedly struck her with the
waming that she would be killed if
she did not cooperate.
The young victim told police that !ll'!e
was ordered by ber attacker to give
him her telephone number. She tesU6ed
Monday that she gave hi"J a fa!be
number and that she received several
ca lls from a man she believed to be
Phoenix after police jnstallid • special
telephone at her home.
Police taped those conversations and
the victim recalled from the witness
box that her caller told her on one
occasion: "I want to aee .you a g a I n.
we could have a good time tocelber."
Deputy Distrl<t Attorney Michie!
Capizz.l win ask the jury to 'impose
the dtalh penalty if PhotnJ1 ls conv1cted
on charges of rapt, kidnap, uuult lfilh
Intent to commit rape, IUl perYenlon and ·robbery._ • ~ . . '
Moh Halts Firefight
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -AbOul i10
roek-tllrowing Negroes Mondly nlaJ!t
hlmpored lirtmen llghU1111 1 blaze In
the former headquarkrs of. •a DIP
Panther group. Firemen left the .cine
bul they returned lo..,.with poll"" plo-
teetlon and put out' tbe flttl wltbWt '
incident.
r
of the questions trulhfu11y," said Gugus. ''Mr. Coerper told me why be had
He was retained by Coerper's attorney lied,'' Gugus told the five-man board.
for a $175 fee . paid before the results "He said he wanted to protect his officers of the test were known . Coerpe r was fired Aug. 21 for his lo whom he bad given some of the
handling of Monlgomery Ward merchan-·merchandise."
dise, which according to some witnesses, The new test, according to Gugus,
was given him for Police Wives Guild consisted of seven key questions about
charity activities. his involvement with the merehandise.
Gugus' testimony appears to stand In They were interspersed w:ith control
contradiction to an earlier lie detector questions.
examination given by tbe ~untingtan Coerper .answered truthfully when· be
Beach police department durinl ~ aald "no'' oa whether be bid ...-IOld
~ alle.a:edly lied a~ Wbal...hl _ ...&D)'. of .r.i.. coeds...-...-. a:dla•-1
·badaoiie "wllh 1he merchandise. !Se COERPER, ~ .. I)
Retired Army General
Indicted in Tax Charge
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Retired Ma j.
Gen. Carl C. Turner, the Army's former
top policeman and also former chief
of U.S. marshals was indicted today
on charges of unlawfully obtaining
firearms and of federal tax evasion.
Turner. 58, was Indicted by a federal
grand jury in Rich mond, Va., Attorney
Gen . John N. Mitchell announced.
Turner, who now lives at Springfield ,
Va ., in Washington's suburbs. was in·
dieted on 13 coun~ .
Five counts charged him w I t h
unlawfully soliciting gift! of U3 firearms
from lhe Chicago Police Department
and misrepresenting that they were for
government use.
He was accused of evading $111 ,679
in fe<leraJ income tax payments.
Turner was a key witness at hearings
committee on operations of clubs for
servicemen on military bases In various
parts of the world.
Durin~ his testlmon~, Turner t o I d of
purchasing 536 confiscated handguna and
other fireanns from the Cb.lea.go and
Kansas City, Mo., police deparbnenls:.
He said at the time there wa11 full
under11tanding that he intended tbe arms
for his penonal use.
Officials of both polioe departmenls:
denied under oath that there wu any
such underslandlng. The chairman 9f
the inveatigaUng subcommittee, Sen.
Abraham rubtcoff (D-CoM.), on Oct.
22, 1969, accused Turner ot .perjury and
asked the Jwtice Department to in·
vesligate.
Rlbicoff also accu!ed Turner of helping
to arrange •·an extensive cover·up"
wi t.bin the Army of quesUonable actlv!Ues
of Sgt. Maj. William O. Wooldridge in
connection with alleged rack.els: in opera-
tion of clubs for Gls.
T 'W O T ee ns Hurt
I n Ca ny on Fall
A pair of Silve rado Canyon teenager•
wh(l survived a sickening, 45().foot plunge
down a ravine in their sporta car Sunday
night are improving today.
Chapman General Hospital officials
said David Burk, 16, ls in fair ·con.dlUoll,
while his buddy, Mike McCormick, 15,
Is in satisfactory condition.
They were injured when Burk's sport..
car slithered out of control on a Sllverado
Canyon Road curve not far from uteir
homes.
A following motorirt saw the t ccldent,
leading to a call for htlp via cltbeoa'
band radio that brought a Moman rtlCUe
team to briog !hem up the· bruoby canboii
Will to safety,
Fountain Valley Planners
Take Look at High Rise
The city skyline ol Foomtaln Vllley
may one day stretch elsht. nine or ten
, atarles bJ&b--al.least around Mile Square
Park.
The ptaMJn& cotnnilaatoO took Ill first
loot M'"1dly 'ill&lit 11.'.pcitentlal l'lllls
..,..,.In& bl,!h 'rue 1partmepto 'wtili.h ""1lmnlJ¥·•re not,covered ,by dty ...st-._. '
Here's whit came out of the infonul
study session: ·
-Any blih rile 1partmenll 11lowed
should have a miDimwn Glf four or flit
ltorles.
-At l...t-IO percent of Ibo laod un-
•der I high rile project obaU bTe llnd-
.-Pod p-een ......
-High• rite lcatloM lppolr pDOlible
along Warner Avenue and Euclid Slrtt:t
' ). y,
The professor's seat was declared va-
cant at the Dec. 8 board meeting, but
the vacancy did not become offltjal
until the rounty received the· minutes
of the meeting Dec. 14, Matthews, an
aide to Peterson, explained.
Matthews said that 'there was not suf.
ficient time for filing to have combined
the election for Dr. Rlbal's seat with
the March 9 vote.
In hi! letter received this week, Dr.
(See ELECTION, Pa&• %)
Work Force
Proposed
ByGnvemor.
SACR AMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed ln a no-nonsense state-
ol·lhe-<tel< addreu today sweeping
reductions in we.Uare and Medi-Cal as
an alternative to another tax increase.
He described the two controversial
programs as "cancer ea.tin1 at our
v.ital&. ..
'Ibe Republican . I o v er no r recom-
mended, amoftg other thirip, removing
Ible-bodied welfare ndl>iebte from
pulillc ~·llllc:•J'O]ll and~
lnto a "public work force '' fDr eOvem-
meDI prnjods.
lie· .qge.ted llmltlnf MectH;al health
services to the poor to the level of
benefit.\ provided by private prepaid
health imurance plans.
Reagan -battling a flu bug -at.&
made tmse broad proposals in a 4,QOO..
word addresa prepared for delivery tct
a joint session o{ the Legislature:
-A statewide election to determine
whelber Californians want to extMd the
JS-year-old vote to state and local elec·
tions. The U.S. Supreme Court recently
ruled IS.year-olds could vote in federal
electiom.
-Moving the California primary from
June to September to "shorten the game
by half.'' He said this "would save
a lot of wear and tear on candidates
and , J suspect, on the public, too ."
-The "judicious, sensible phase-Out"
of teacher tenure. He aaid "the original
and legitimate reasons for tenure M
longer exist" and It ahould be replaced
by "a system or merit pa y which pro-
vides real incentives for qua lity teach-
ing."
-Pilot test.s in selected districb to
determine feasibility of a "voucher plan"
for financing education. Under this, the
state would pay a set amount to each
child to attend the school of 'his choice.
-Tuition for state collegea. There
al~ady Is tuition at the Un1versity of
California.
-Requiring "recreaUonal subdivisom"
to inclu de "strong envll'onmenta:I is well
as engin~ing cooslderationa. ''
-Making the killing of a Jaw en.-
forcement officer while on duty first·
degree murder, and thus puniabable tiy
death in the gas chamber. 1 -Making It a felony to advocate killtng
or injuring law enforcement offlcen.
Also, 'increasing the Sl ,000 mulmuol
reward money the pernor can offer
for information leading to the .mat
CS.. WELFARE, Pop II
0r ....
Better ~ 1'JIU' l'lln<oat on for
the DOii ""'Pie' cloys. The CJCllloo1<
for WednelUy ii for clocldy
weal.her and abowers, with tern~
-lunl -In the middle
llftlel. '
INSmE TOD.4.Y'
' . ; .i!~i::~=~~':'t~~ . Wirh/1114. fro.m rec:iJiinl< who r•/UO• <>iril< bV ·..,..road ,..,1c,.
"'· Sie 11011/. Poot . ., ' ·--. -... ·---.. -.. .......... t ....... , .. ' !-!'.'!~·-· ,, ........ •H ......... 14 .... .._ .. ---·
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.............. t l1MI ,..,_ ,. ........... ,, ....,_.... •n -" ~ ''· -. __.. ...... ,.,. ...,. ...... ..
I
•
2 DAILY PILOT H
Home Loan Rates Cut
FHA , VA Drops Maximum to 7t Percent
WASlflNGTON (AP) -Two federal
agencies Insuring new mortgage loans
cut maximum allowable interest rates
from eight percent lo 7 11"~ percent.
The reductions <tnnounced by the
Fede.rat Housing Administration and the
Velerara Administration were the second
In lltUe more I.ban two months. The
rate dropped from a record 81A P'Tcent
to eight percent Dec. l.
The lowered rate will apply to all
applications for mortgage insurance
received by offices of the age ncies after
close of Ule busmes.!i today.
The new rate will not apply to the
Sunset Bay
Hotel Hearing
Date Delayed
An Orange County Superior Court hear-
ing into a Huntington Harbour resident's
opposition to the mulli-mlllion dollar
Sunset Bay hotel development has been
deferred until Jan, 29.
Both sides in the dispute told Judge
Robert A. Banyard that they nuded
more time to prepare their argumen~
in that lawsuit filtd by Arthur Knox,
3322 Easter Circle, Huntington Beach.
They were ordered to appear Jan. 29
before presiding Judge William C. Speirs.
Knox's lawyers will ask Judge Speirs
at that time to order the city of Hun·
tington Beach to withdraw the use
variance granted by the City Council
to Real Prope.rty Management of Beverly
Hill s builders of the Suru1et Bay complex.
That ronlng variance. Knox argues,
was granted despite the fact that the
developers were unable to prove t~at
any legal hardship existed in the zoning
dispute. The proposed creation of the
Sunset Bay complex was approved by
Councilmen after being reviewed several
timea by city planners and councilmen.
Development of the 35.6 acre3 at Sunset
Bay calls for creation of a peninsula
with an eleven-story apartment building
and four three-story apartment st.rue·
tures. Plans elao reveal an eleven-story
hotel on the mainland, a four-story office
buildlng, a shopptng center. 5everal acres
of single family homes and 300 boat
1Ups. .1. The complex would be built olf Paci 1c
Cout Highway at Admiralty Drive,
•CTOSI from Huntlngtnn Harbo\lt.
Frem Page 1
ELECTION ...
Ribal also said that he had intended
to resign at the Dec. 22 board meeting
and that this would have made the
April 20 election "legal."
Matthews agreed that the election
detail:; would have been "cleaner" if
the date of the vacancy bad been Dec.
22.
Board President Matthew Weyuker ex·
plained that the board had no other
recourse but to declare Dr. Ribal's seat
vacant because by Dec. 8 he had ex ·
ceeded legal provisions for a leave of
absence.
"\\'e didn·t know he planned lo resign."
be commented. "He never told us that ''
Fellow trustee John Bentley said the
board action si mply clarified the situa-
tion. '·Technically he had already taken
himself olf the board by being absent
so long," he said. "A lot of people
were askin g us about ii, particularly
those thinking of running for election.
We si mply clarified the situation "
1n the April 20 election. voters will
be asked to pick two candidates for
two four·year terms on the board -
the seat.a of Weyuker and Ribal. In
addition voters will be asked to pick
1 candidate to flll the unexpired lerm
o: Dr. Ribal until July L
DAILY PILOT -ORAHOE «IA't l'UILl1HING ((W.,ANY
91.oli•rt H, w •• 4
,rtlldlnl I Pll hlllllllltf'
J1,k R. C11r l•v
\/~ l'rwildwil •r.d G4n;ll'•I M41\999f
Etllw
Tllo'"•' A. M11t11hiftt
MtMll1t11 IEdl,1W"
Al1ft Dirkift
Wt11 Of'11191 COU11IJ Cllllw
}.lhtrt w. l .rlt•
~i. Editor
H1 .. 1..,_ '-ell Office
11e1' letc:h loultYtrd
Mtllillf "'"'""1 P.O. lox 7t0, t2•41
""'"'"""" UfUM' •Nefl: m ,Orn!.-,,._
C.11 --= UI WMI a.v '1rNI .......,., ••.clu tJll WMI ··~· lfvllYtr• iM ~; • NorHll al Ct.,...,. ll•I
nearly f70 bllllon of out.ltandin& FHA
mortgages. 'nle aaency said alto It will
continue to honor all firm and conditional
commitmenls ror n1ortgage insurance at
previously contracted rates, although
whenever possible the parties will be
encouraged to adjust the rate downward.
The reduction followed recent cuts in
the prime rate charged by banks to
their best qualified borrowers a11.d last
week's drop in the discount rate charged
by the Federal Reserve System on loans
to member banb.
George Romney. secretary of the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development which includes FHA. said
ht approved tht lowv mortgaae rate
becaU1e of "the conUnutna large inflows
of funds to mortgage !ending institutlons
and the recent further drop Jn market
lnterest rates, particularly in corporate
bonds and other inve.stmcnt that compete
with mortgages."
Romney said th e lowered ce iling should
"unfreeze some of the demand for homes
from prospective buyers who have been
wailing for a return of lower interest
rates ."
"Housing producllon is already headed
for a banner year in 197!." he said,
··and this added demand should make
the outlook even brighter.''
Beach School District
To Seek Pay Increases
Once again the subject of salaries
will grab the. attention of Jfuntington
Beach City School District trustees.
Last week. trustees accepted a six
percent increase and fr inge benefits for
teachers. Tonight, the districl'11 prin·
cipals, and perhaps top administrators.
will seek further Increas~ in their
salaries.
Secretaries, janitors. bus drivers and
other classified (non-leaching) employes
also will find their wage system switch ed.
"We're going on the merit system
for classified employes," explained
Charles Palmer, deputy district
superintendenl. "There won't be any
more automatic salary increases for
classified workers."
When the teacher salary battle began
last year, di strict trustees decided t()
separate administration salaries from
teacher salaries. As a result, all ad-
ministrators from the superintendent
down to assistant principals received
from $60 l.o $500 raises last spring.
Tonight, principals will ask for rai ses
ranging from abou! $600 up to $1.700.
Palmer said he, S. A. Moffett,
superintendent. and Miss B e t I y
Funkhouser. assistant superinlendent,
"·ould not directly ask the board for
ra ises,
"But If trustees ask about our salaries
we ha ve two different proposals in our
pockets," Palmer added.
The board meets at 7:30 p.m in
the library of Dwyer Intermediate
School.
tr * * tr tr *
Fountain Valley De-an11ex
Action Scheduled Friday
Supporters of the campaign to pull
northeast Fountain Valley out of the
Garden Grove Unified School District
may file one of four pelilions needed
to do that by Friday.
Jim Bennet, 16089 Shasta St., said
the first petil.ion should be filed with
the Orange County Board of Education
Friday and three more should fotlO\V
in lhe next three weeks.
Bennet said his group has about 1,000
signatures of registered voters who are
seeking to transfer 2, I square miles
of Garden Grove territory in Fountain
Valley to the Fountain Va lley School
District and the J.luntington Beach Union
High School Distr.ict.
The move would change an estimated
1,200 elementary school children and 400..
500 high school students. p!us Los Amig os
High School and two elerr.enlary schools.
Bennet also said his candidacy in
today 's election for the Garden Grove
school board has no effe ct on the pe tition
Boy s Club See ks
Young W restlers
Young boys wtio "'ant lo learn wre.~t
l1ng can sign up now al !he Fount11in
Valley Boys Cluh for oncc-a·"·eek in-
structions.
Two coaches wLll teacl1 wrestling !n
the boys from JO a m lO noon, each
Saturday al F' o u n t a in Valley High
School starting Jan. 2.l
Boys may register at. the Boys Club,
9840 Talbert Ave., weekdays from 2 p.m.
to 7 p.m. and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m ..
Saturday.
for more information phone Boys Club
Director Bill Di Prete. 968·52.S2.
From Page 1
AMIGOS ...
a rally Friday to protest the dress code.
Goyette &aid the rally was peaceful and
broke up quleUy.
"I can't condemn what the kid~ have
done to this point," Goyette explained.
"But I am disappointed by the number
of kids who didn't abide by what we re·
quested U\ls morning (hair cuts). Today
they're challenging the rules I have to
uphold. We'\le taken a stand we feel we
have to take."
''I am Irked because 110 many of the
kids are slnctre, but • few are tagging
along just to be suspended," Goyette
added.
The list dress code change madt liy
dl1trlct trustees was last July 28, when
they uid socks wt.rt no longio:r necio:s·
sary and lhtrt ta.Us might be worn out-
Alde the panlJ.
Studenta ind parents are elpected to
attend th8 nut mt(!ting of the bo.ard at a p.m .. Jan. UI , Ii the board room of
dlatrict. offices, 10331 Stanford Ave., G111r·
den Grove.
Los AmlfOI 1tuden\.8 also hove plan-
ned an lnterdlstrtct rally this Saturday
la a park at Haiard A\lenue and New-
hope Street ln Santa Ana.
"We're not opposed lo Rll dress codes ,"
Kina explained. "When health and safety
reasons are Involved, the !!Choo! should
11tep In.''
\
drive.
"Thio: transfer we hope to accomplish
will take some time. I want to have
a hand in giv.ing my child a betler
education here durin g that time.'' Bennet
explained. "But the petition effort is
still on."
Bennet and 1 large number of other
Fountain Valley residents have been
working for several month• to pull out
of the Garden Grove district. They have
divided the affected Fountain Valley area
into four separate zones and are seeking
transfer in each one.
Nothing official has yet been ac·
romptished .. The filing of petitions with
the county is Lhe fir st necessary step.
3 We stminster
Youth s Jailed
In Theft Ca se
Three \Vestminster youths arrested
after they carried out "-'hat was describ-
ed m court as a "commando raid"
on a local service station v•ere found
guilty of petty theft Monday and sen·
tenced to 90 days in Orange County
Jail
Orange County Superior Courl Judge
. James f _ Judge Imposed that sentence
l)n Robert E . Estes. 19, of 13441 Olympus
Drive, Quentin Earle Grassitt, 18, of
69118 Homer Drive and Charles Harding
Riddle Jr., 18, of 8001 21st SL
He set an identical term for Danirl
Paul Hamann , 18. .1f Garden Grove,
the fourth youth arrested by Westminster
police last Oct. 12 follo"'ing the burglary
of a Shell service station at Brookhurst
and Bolsa Avenue.
The four defendants and Lu Ann Ricks.
19, of Anaheim. were charged with grand
thefl and burglary after they allegedly
forced their way into the service station.
bound and gagged the atteQdant 1.nd
loaded their pickup truck with tires,
batteries. oil and other acce3sories.
All five "'ere grabbed as they drove
off by police "-'ho were alerted after
!he attendant managed lo slip from
his bonds and summon -help.
The jury Monday was unable to agree:
on a verdict for Miss Ricks after scaling
down the charges lo petty theft. It
\vas decided by lhe prosecution le charge
her wittt misdemeanor petty theft in
a new complaint and lake the Issue
to municipal court.
Clean Air Plea
Made in Valley
Fountain Valley school trustees are
lighting for clean air.
School trustees have adopted 1 rtaolu-.
lion calling for strong and imm~l•te
action on the part. of C&lifornia
legislators to eliminate air pollution.
In part the resolution reads : "The fact
that manr, school dlstrirtJ are in com-
p\lance with county policies of eurtalllng
11trt:nuous activity on cert11ln smoggy
day' indicates the severity of the existing
:ilr pollution condllion."
The re!:olution called for sla te l!lnd
federal 111.wmake.n to pass leglsl11Uon
providln~ for "immediate steps to more
effectively combat alr polluUon."
-
Well Said
Charles Price, a junior at Edi-
son 1-ligh School, has won the
oratorical contest sponsored
by American Legion Post 133
of Huntington Beach.
From Pa11e l
COERPER ...
them for money or favors, accord ing
to Gugu s.
J.le also answered without lying on
!he question, "Were the Ward's items
given ttl you with the understanding
that the y al\ had lo go to the Guild.''
His reply was •·no,"
A fur ther question dealt with Coerper's
friend, Robert Osley, a construction
worker to whom Coerper bad given some
of the merchandise after he -had helped
him with a home construction project.
Michael Milser, the attorney represen-
ting the prosecution has tried to establish
that Osley had been paid off for his
work with some merchandise_ Coerper
on lhe other hand , has maintained Osley
helped him out 1of friendship,
''Did Bob Osley expect to receive any
money or special favors from you ?"
the lie detector read.
The motorcycle officer's answio:r Wa!i
"no" and was certified as truthful by
Gugus.
The lie detector lest given by Sgt.
Rebert Sorenson of the Huntington Beach
Police Department reportedly recorded
"deceptive responses" to three questions:
"Did you keep any of the merchandise
ror your owo use? Did you give any
of the merchandise to friends or
relatives? Did you give any of the
merchandise away as favors for labors?''
Coerper , who was called lo the stand
himself during the proceeding , said he
was asked to take the. p o I i c e
department'~ !cit by Capt. Michael
Burkenfield.
"He told me, 'It will either prove
that you were a gocx.I Samaritan or
3 damned thief. Personally. T think WC
have a bunch of thieves around here.' "
Coerper said he repeatedly insisted
the cha rge against him was the result
of a "big misunderstanding'• he wou!d
like to clear up. He was reburied, he said.
At one point in the investigation. con·
ducted by Officer James Walker. Coerpt!r
said Walk er told him, "This is no
misunderstanding. I've got enough right
no"· to take you in there and book
you."
He further said that at no time had
the department store personnel advised
him that \.he good!i were intended for
the Police ~1.'i ves Guild . "Nobod y eve r
said, 'Coerper. this is where the stuff
has got lo go'."
Reece Ba!lard. a private investigator
hired by Coerper's lawyer. Cecil Ric k~.
resti!ied that he inte rviewed Montgomery
Ward employes on that question a n d
recei ved co rroborating answers.
.. ' .....
State Highlights
R eag an Outlines K ey Poittts
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Excerpt.I from Gov. Ronald Reag1n '1 1tate-<lf·
the-state mesuge to the Legislature :
SCHOOL FINANCE -''. . , The various formulas for school subventions
have outJived their usefulness to school districts and must bt simplified.''
TEAC HER TENURE -"The original and legitimate reasons for l.enure
no longer exist Tenure has beco:ne 1 haven for the incompetent teacher. It
should be altered lo includ~ a system of merit pay which provides re1I in-
centives for quality leaching."
TUITION -''\\'e face some unresolved problems in higher education.
For one th ing. wit hthe University tof Califomia) charging tuition an Imbal-
ance exists so long as the state colleges do not.··
EDUCATION FEES -"Nonresident fees for. out-of-state and foreign
students should be reviewed. II is hard to justify subsidizing these students
when it grows increasingly difficult to provide an education for our own resi·
dents." ·
SOLID WASTi'~ -"I am suggestinJ,?; one state agency should be given
the authority to <.'OOrd inale, encourage and assist local and regional entities
to plan for and regulatr solid "'aste disposal systems and sites.''
COASTAL PROTECTION -"The preservation and protection of Cali·
fomla'.!I coast resources must surely rank amon gou rhighest environment·
al prioritie s."
CRII\IE -"The killing of a law enforcement officer while on duty
should be first-degree murder ,and it should Le a felony to specifically ad·
vocate killing or injuring law enforcement ·officers."
WELFARE -"While we assist the tn1ly nio:edy who have nowhe-re el~
to tum , we must also insist that able-bodied adult recipients work and meet
their own repsoosibilities."
MED I.CAL -"nuring this session wr will present for your considers·
lion a plan to limit our health care services to the poor so they will be com·
parable with the hea lth benefits provided by the .... arious prepared health in-
surance plans covering most of our citizens."
BUDGET -•·we are at the point where this state can no longer 11ustaln
its operations on the revenue it now takes from the people. Therefore, "'e are
confronted by 11 choice. We can reform government -reduce the cost of
services. particularly in welfare and medi-cal, or we can increase taxes. I
will submit a budget which can be balanced without an increase in laxes."
VOTE -"Now that the Congres.s and the U.S. Supreme Court have
given the l8-year-0lrls the vote in federal elections. 1 certainly think "'e should
take those steps necessa ry to let the citizens of Califomia determine whether
that shall be extended to state and local e\ection5."
From Pa11e 1
WELFARE ATIACK • • •
and convicti&n of persons injuring
policemen .
Heagan pledged to present t h e
legislature a balanced state budget early
next month and again rejected a tax
Increase, which many Democrats say
is in-!vitable.
"A tax increase Is inevitable only if
we refuse lo accept readily available
alternatives," the governor said.
"We are confronted by a chtiice. We
can reform government -reduce the
cost of services, particularly in welfare
and Medi-Cal -or we can increase
taxes. To choose the latter with out ex·
cising the cancer ea ting .lit our vitals
is lo face tax increases year in and
year out for as long as we shall be
he re. l intend to travel another course."
Reagan 1aid Californ ians now make
up IO percent of the nation's population
but have Ill percent of all who are
on welfare. State and local cost!. ht
said, average S57.55 for every man,
woman and child in the state -double
the national average.
Reagan 11ald he will ask the legislature
lo help counties locate absent fathers
who desert t he i r welfare.receiving
fam ilies.
''There are, today. too many instance~
where the taxpayer Is forced to subsidize
some father's yen Ill travel." he sa id.
The governt1r ~aid the legislature will
be asked lo place a cio:il!ng c.n the
New Super visor Se ts
Talk in Huntington
Ron Caspers, freshman Orange County
su pervisor, "'ill speak to member1 of
the Huntington Valley TI!' I!' nag e
Republican.'! at 1 .. 10 p.m. Thursday at
Shakey's Pi1.za Parlor, 19300 Beach Blvd .,
Hunting ton Beach .
The public i~ invited to Caspers' talk.
F'or further inform ation phone 3.16-1101
or 842·511 17,
amount of earnings a persC'ln can receive
and still remain on weHare.
He re commended removing "the tloak
of secrecy" from Welfare and opening
now-closed records to inspection.
On Medi-Cal, he said experience du ring
the five years has shown tbio: pro1ram
''cannot meet Ca\if9rnia's needs.''
He promised a legislative proposal ''lo
limit so they wil be comparable with
poor so they "-'ill be comparablio: wlth
the health benefits provi ded by the
''arious prepaid health insurance plans
covering most of our citizens."
The governor noted six week• ago.
In an attempt to avoid a $140 mUlion
deficit in the Medi -Cal program, he cut
doctors' and nursing home fees by 10
percent and delayed "none1se:ntial"
services to recipients.
Reagan pointed out lo the lawmakers
It was they who wrote the law requiring
him to take these drastic steps for
which he has been severely criticized.
"Honesty and simple fairness,'' hio: quip·
ped, "compel me ttl let you 1h1re in
the glory.''
Holida y Runyan
Last Rites Held
Holiday Runyan , a Hunlin,l:(lon Beach
horse trainer. v.•;is givt'n hi.'I unusual
first nan1e when he "'as born on the
first da y or January, 85 yea r~ ago.
Al li 1.m., today, Mr. Runyan was
buried in Fairhaven Ccmelery "·1th
graveside services. lie died Saturday.
Mr. Runyan li1·ed 49 yct1rs in Hun·
tiogton Beach. His last address l'!'a.~
618 Adams Ave.
Surv11'ors 1nclurte his wife-, Mary 11nrt
twn daug hters, J\1r~. Jean Jamrs nf Hun-
tington Bea ch and Mrr;. Betty Frisbie
of Laguna Beach \
MEASURE FOR TREASURE
One factor overlooked by customers .
In buying ca rpeting IS the
measuring for yardage.
All of our Salesmen know how to measure and figure exact
yardage, often providing our customers substantial savings in
yardage alone.
Also, with the tremendous ins tollotion experience our salesmen
hove (each previously was on expert installer for us), we ore able
to forsee any potential problem.
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through
our store. We hove a g igantic selection, and the measuring will be
ACCURATE!
ALDEN'S
.. ~~~'~:~~~·· ( --CARPETS e DRAPES
ALDIN,
Ill HILL CAl"'1
& DlA"lllS ,.,, •• ,...., , ...... c.tlf.
IJl.JJ44
1663 Ploc•ntla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Men. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -S.t., 9:30 to J
• . •
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-Newport Beaeh Today'• Fllla'I
N.V. St.oeb
,
, VOL M, NO. 10, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1971 .TEN CENTS
'
City May Write Freeway · Ballot Arguments
By L PETER KRIEG
Of !two 0.ll'J.l"lllJI S!llt
The City Council may write the formal
arguments against the two anti-freewa y
tnJl!atiVeS 8cheduled for election in
NeWport Beach March 9.
ID what may be a showdown of opinion
on the controversial Pacific Coast Free.
way, the councll Jan. 25 will .vote on
whether or not it will oppose the
measures proposed by the Citizens
Coord~ting Committee.
Councilman Carl Kymla Monday night
uid be will author a fonnal argument
for submission to the cound l at its
next meeting In two weeks.
Jan. 25 is the deadline for filing
arguments and lht council has the
prerogallve to file the official statement
on either side of the issue.
The council declared it will allow the
CCC, sponsors of the measures, to write
the argumenlll in favor ef the pr~
positions.
If the council declines to formally
adopt the. (lpposiog argument, it can
•otd Poli~e 1-2~
Officer Saves Man, Cites Him
SIGHTS, SAVES, CITES -pori'• Sgt. Miiier
Netvpt>rt Council
Delays Hearing
On . Apartments
· The. Newport Beach City Council Mon-
4ay night -delayed establishing a public
Marllig <late for lhe proposed Promon-
t;.ry Point apartment developmenr at
~ request of the Irvine Company.
The hearing date will be established
at, tf!e . councll 's Jan. ~ meeting. It
could be a special meeting at the same
itte as the last planning comm ission
hearing on the project, the Little Theater
at Corona de! Mar High School.
City Attorney Tully Seymour re.com·
mended the use of the high school ,
pointing out the large delegation of
Balboa Island residen ts protesting the
projects at both of the planners' hear-
q s.
Seymour also noted ~at, even lho~gh
the council declared tt wanted final
authority OD the. projeCt, the Irvine Com.
piny will formally appeal the planning
board's rejection "to protect the record,
Ul!mical!l ...
.<•
• . "
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ""' ~n,. l"w.t ll•ff
A Newport Beach police sergeant saved
tht life of a gas station attendant early
this momiqg when he dragged the sleep-
ing man from his flaming auto.
'lbe officer lhen cited the attendant
for violation of a city ordinance against
61eeping in automobiles.
Neither Sgt. Richard Miller. 37, nor
gas station employe William F. Gillard,
20, Anaheim, reported any injuries in
the incident which occurred at 5:30 a.m.
at the Oouglaa Gas station, 3201 Newport
Blvd.
Miller said he was on routine patrol
when he spotted 1moke billowing from
a car locked in the lube rack area
of the station. He also saw a body
in the front seat or the car.
Mlner Ytlled at Gillard and pounded
en the wall In an attempt to wake
him.
"I tried to kick in the door, but
It wouldn't move," Mlller said. "l noticed
there wu a crack in the plate glass
window next to the door. so 1 broke
out part of it with my fla shlight and
reached through to open the door."
Once inside the garage, Miller pulled
a burning coat off Gillard and put out
the flames.
Officers who arrived at the scene
momeats late said it would have been
a matter of seronds before the youth
was overcome with smoke and burned
by the flaming coat.
Gillard told hi! rescuers he was 11leep-
lng in the car because of thefts that
have occurred recently at the station.
He had plugged an electric floor heater
into a garage oulet and put It on the
floor of the car.
The heater apparently ignited the coat
the attendant was using for a blan ket.
officers said.
"We've found people from the gas
station sleeping in their cars before,''
Miller said, "ind I've warned them about
it, but they just didn 't seem to li!ten.
Ma ybe now they will."
Thursday Fiual Day
For Voting Signups
Newport Beach City Clerk Laura
Lagios said toda y lhat Thursday is the
last day to register to be eligible to
vote in the March 9 freeway election.
Residents of Newport Beach may ap-
pear at the city clerk's office be.tween
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. to be made voters.
~ewport Council ,Adopts
. f olice Department Bid
Acting on a Civic Center Building
Co m m i t t e e recommendation, the
Npport Beach Oily CooncU Monday
! adopted a resolution declaring It
' bWld .... Pollce · ~t
1 U.. In eoojuncllon .with· m:c:tlon
Jll• .. oew Count~ courthOUae st N"'POrl c.:;;. . . , ~ ae "'surprlee 1cUon establiahlng the
·te111auv1 construction timeta~e Included
~ the city will -.. Piii
=al obllgatlon bond !,.... lo finance ' =.. l\khard Crout, bulldlnf dlllliDllt<e chairman, aal!I blo penol Is
' g Jn lb 111•tgnmeot to• -alse and e<>ell elf the ·,_. chic
'' which hive been tttlmated· ,at -than •ts million. •
' r did nQt elaborate, but It •at ltarieid
.,mmtttee will recomtnd rtducloa i.: .. or both the ..., police bullillqc
!!iikClty Hall by 11 much u JD,OIO _feol .. ch.
. ~ .... 111d, both bad been ln· UClll ·o1 ........ 1eel -' .It.ta eipecled th< committee wltl
) .. ··~
' • J
'
recommend establWling a bond election
sometime this fall, well in lldvance of
councilmanic elections in April ef tm.
Approval of the resolution w a s
unaNmous but came only after 'Vice
Ma)'Or · Haward Rocu• IUCCHded ln
ellmlnaUng I-In the document
tbal · parllally p<omlsed It .on Ille !act
that the -Huber Judlctal D!strlct
Courl3 will be COllllruct<d adjocent to
the city 1lte.
Roc•rs had lnslstod the r.lei:enca to
tM city'• contract -the cwnty for die court be alridten "to Jet thl1 project
dud on Its mm."
WordJnc In the ,..,1u11on 'thet lndle1t.d
-flllohdclc -wocild be Uled if a bond tuue Is rejected wa1 a1se
removed, al lht request of Clouncllman
CUI KJm!a.
Xymla conb!llded. "'this would be
holdlq a club ... , the buda .r 111e
voters-''
Oriplally, the molullon bad otalecl'
"In "ltw or the fact that the use
of --' obU,allon bonds olfen the
(l!ee CENTER, Pap ll
authorize tille or more Individual coun·
cilmen lo file the offi cial negative report.
One argument each pro and con are
formally distributed to voters by the
city cle rk 's office.
ScheduJe for ballot ing are CCC pro-
positions that would rescind the existing
agreement for a portion of the route
of the coastal freeway throug h the city
and a charter amendment that would
require referendums before any future
routes can be adopted.
Discussion of th e issue Monday night
* * * Mayor's Bid
On Freeway
Voted Down
A move by Newport Beach Mayor
Ed Hirth to "offer an alter:<::itive" on
the March 9 freeway ballot "for those
who feei a need for a freeway" failed
to receive City Council sanction Monday
night.
Hirth proposed the council approve
a ballot measure thal would have, in
eff ect, endorsed a freeway and authoriz·
ed the council to select a freeway rouie
"compatible with the preservation of
the environmental q u a I i t y and
transportation needs of the city."
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers blasted
the idea, which he said was "first pro-
posed in a confidential memo issued
by the mayor two weeks ago."
Although later retracting the remark,
he called the measure "subterfuge."
He sa1d it is "an attempt to c<>nfuse
the voters and to 4ilut.e the main iaue
the"'°ple want a voice on."
Rbfers maintained the public lhouJd
have an opportunity to comment on
the measure before lhe council placed
it on the ballot.
City Attorney Tully Seymour said that
according to the election code the
measure must be approved by the council
by Wednesday to be placed on the March
9 ballot.
Rogers said even if a special meeting
was called for Wednesday, the public
would not have sufficient notice.
Rogers also opposed a suggestion by
Councilman Milan Dostal that the matter
be approved for the ballot with the
option or removing it after a public
hearing that could take place Jan. 25.
"This is the only way to give the
people a voice and still get it on the
ballot." Dostal sai d.
Rogers said it would be "much cleaner,
more clear cut, if we set It off."
He suggested it could be consolidated
with th e school board elections in April.
!firth said, "this will be no good a
month later.
"It Is intended to give an alternative
to those who don 't want to vote for
eitber of the other iniUJtive measures."
He called it an attempt "to clarify
lo the people wha t is going on."
Rogers called it. "essenlially an argu-
ment against the freeway initiative;;.
"People have an <1Jternative." he said,
"they have a 'no' vole ."
The two measures already approved
for lhe March 9 ballot are proposals
lO resci nd an existing agreement with
the state on a portion or the Pacific
Coast Highway through Corona del Mar
and a charter amendment requiring
future referendums before any freeway
route could be adopted.
..
Included a needling exchange between
Kymla, a freeway proponent, and Vice
Mayor Howard Rogers, a 1"8ding sup-
porter of the move ment to k i 11 the.
superhigRway.
Rogers pressed for the council to
authorize someone to write the argument
while Kymla insisted the matter be
brough t to a vote to determine if the
council wished to oppose the initiatives
as a body.
"If a majority feels this referendum
Is wrong,'' Kymla said, "then the
State Message
legislative body, ltseU, should argue, not
jwt its members."
Rogers maintained, ''The c o u n c 11
should not take a council action, if
an tndlvldual feels strongly , let him
write an argument.''
Kymla said, "I am going to prepare
and submit a draft of an argument.
if four councilmen approve, then It is
the official position."
There is a possibility the vote may
never coome, however, if a group of
former Newport Beach officials is 1uc·
ttSSful in stopping the referendum before
the neit meetl.ng.
The group, iocluding former mayon
Charles E. Hart and James B. Stoddard
and former vice mayor Hans J. Lorenz,
has threatened a ta.Jpayers' suit to bar
the. expenditure of funds for the election,
claiming the city canpot,legally reteind
the agreement or establish the propc>Rd
charter amendment.
If the group obtainl! an injunction
before Jan. 25, the city could take no
further legal steps towards conducting
the election.
Reagan Proposes
Big Welfare Cut
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed in a no-nonseose state-
of-the-slate address today sweeping
redllctions in welfare aod Medi-Cal as
an alternative to another tax increase.
He described the two controversial
programs as "canCt!r eatini at our
vitals."
The Republican go v e r n G r re~m
mended, among other things, removing
able-bodied welfare reeip\ents from
public assistance rolls and turninc them
into a "public work forCt!" for 1overn-.
ment projects.
He suggested limiting Medi-Cal health
services to the poor to the level of
benefits provided by private prepaid
health insurance plan!.
Reagan -battling • nu bug -also
made these broad preposai! in a t ,OOI)..
word address prepared for · delivery t•
a joint session of the Legislature:
-A statewide election tG determine
whether Californians want to enead the
Retired Army General
Indicted in Tax Charge
WASH1NGTON (UPI) -Retired Maj .
Gen. Carl C. Turner, the Army's former
top policeman and also former chief
of U.S. marshals was indicted today
on charges of unlawfully obtaining
firearms and of federal tu evasion.
Turner. 58, was Indicted by a federal
grand jury in Richmond, Va., Attorney
Gen. John N. Mitchell announced.
Turner, who now Jives at Springfield,
Va., in Washington's suburba, was in·
dlcted on 13 counts.
Five counts charged him w I t h
unlawfully soliciting gifts of 423 firearms
from the Chicago Police Department
and misrepresenting that they were for
government use.
He was accuBed of evading $16,879
in federal income tax payments.
Turner was a key witnes.s at hearlnga
committee on operations of clubs for
service men on mil itary bases in various
parts of the world.
During his testimon~, Turner to I d of
purchasing 536 confiscated handguns and
other firearms from the Chicago and
Kansas City, MG., police departments.
He said at the time there was full
understanding that he intended the anns
for his personal we.
Officials of both police departments
denied under oath that there wu any
such understanding. The chairman of
the lnvestigaUng 1ubcomm.itt.ee, Sen.
r----.,
I I
I I
I I I I I
I I : I : I I
, .......
: I ..___,
.........
,. ......
'
Abraham Ribicoff (D-O>M.), on Oct.
22, 1969, accU3ed Turner of perjury and
asked the Justice Department to in·
vertigate.
Ribicoff also accused Tu.mer of helping
to arrange "an eztenslve cover-up"
within the Army of questionable activitle!
of Sgt. Maj. William 0. Wooldrl<fle in
connection with alleged racketll ln opera-
tion of clubs for Gls.
Petition Lashes
Jews' Treatment
A petition signed by 90 Harbor Area
Jews prote!ltlni Soviet treatment of the
l t Jews on trial in the USSR will be
forwarded by the U.S. State Department
by the NewpOrt Beach City Council.
The petition was delivered to Mayor
Ed Hirth Friday night follawing a
candlelight processional.
The delegation, representing the Har·
bor Reform Temple, had requested the
petitions be aent W the Russian embassy,
but council member! aajd. Ibey felt tt
should be tranamllted tllroqb formal
U.S. government channel!.
r---1
I. ""'" I t I
18-year-old vote to state and local elec-
tions. The U.S. Supreme C.ourt rectnUy
ruled !&-year-olds could vote in federal
electlpns.
-Moving the California primary from
June to September to "shorten the game
by half." He said tbi3 "would save
a lot of wear and tear on candidates
and, I 1w:pect, on the public, too."
-Tbe "judicious, sensible pba$&(1Ul"
of teacher tenure. He said "the ori&Jilal
{See WELFARE, P11e I)
Nixon Ending
San Clemente
Stay Thursday
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of ,... Dllb" l"li.t ll•ft
Prt&ident Ni.zoo will end bis San
Clemente sojourn Thursday morning and
1wing by the University of Nebraak.a
to address a convocation of 1tudenta
and faculty.
The afternoon address in the university
coliseum will help celebrate· the tchool
beginning iU 1tCOnd hundred yean of
uistence.
A.ides said the Nebraska stop en route
to Waahlngtoo, 0 . C. will alao atva
the nation 's number one football fan
a chance to congratulate the university'•
Cornbllllker1 football team for the 1970
season. The team was Big Eight champ.
won the Orange Bowl and was ranked
nmnbeT one In the nation by As&oclated
Pr ....
The Lincoln, Neb. addreSl!I will be Ni.z·
oo's first to a campll.1 audlen~ since
he faced a vocal mlnority of hecklers
at Kansas State University laat summer.
The visit idea orig i nated
with Agriculture Secretary Clifford Har·
din. He resigned as chancellor Of the
university to join lhe cabinet.
It will be tht Ont time a President
has visited. the Unlffrsity of Nebraska
campus. ,
Aa his nine-day work vacation drew
toward a close, the Preaident Monday
condemned a "morally wrong" the
bombing attacks on soviet faciUtlu Jn the
U.S.
This """"' amid threat. by llie J ew!all
Dtfente League to continue aaaultl to
win ·better treabnent for Jewi tn Rulllia.
l BeUer keep your ralncolt an for
llle -""""' days. Tbe -!or Weclnaday II !or cloudy
-and ...... with tamp. eratures mired In tbe middle
fllUel.
. INSmE TODAY
-. -~*:',"" 1~ -" l:.l:r'"-'I --. MWM Ill " ........ ,.,1 -.. ,... ......... 14
THIS IS MASTl1l
0
PLAN FOll•NlW CIVIC CfNflR. ADOPnD 'r<.·NIWl'ORT llACH CITY COUNCIL --·
•,
)
.
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•
J DAILY PILOT H
Newport ;Salnr.v StuaY, -
Incentive Pay Plan Endorsed
State Highlights
Reagan Outli nes Key Points
SACRA.MENTO (UPI} -Excerpt.a lrom Gov. Ronald Reagan'a lllte-or·
the-st.att message to tbt l...egis.lature: Two lnoentive. pay plans ror city
tmployes and a declaration that future
Wary contract!. should be negotiated
for at least two-year periods were en-
dorsed Monday night by the Newport
Beach City Council.
At the tame time, the council declined
to approve Int.trim P3Y raises pending
Its mid-year budget review ne11:t month.
The proposed raises, which would cost
a total of $.15,471, including fringe
benefits if appro\•ed, were promised dur-
ing wage negotiations last year.
The council indicated the raises would
be retroactive to J&n. 9 y,·hen they are
approved.
'Queen' Gets
Harbor Permit
From Council
Phil Tozer's Pavilion Quetn, the
flightseeing vessel that features c()('klail
cruises of Newport Harbor. was 2rar:lled
a permanent Harbor permit by "1he
Newport Be.acb City Council Monday
night.
The .action came after a public bearing
th.at evoked bo1b plaudits and laments
about the ui1tance ef the ISO.seat tour
boat.
Unhappy residents labeled the ship
everything from ''an invasion of privacy"
to "a menace on the high seas" and
one man even called it a threat to
!lafety on the ltreeb.
John 6. NegUJ, m2 E.
first cbaraed the Queen
food .
Balboa Blvd.,
doe1n 't serve
"I took the booze cruise," he declared,
"and I sttw no food ."
He ;iJso maintwined that riders con·
suroe "four or live drinks the hour
tbly're CMl board 11nd there's no ad-
vtinllge to the ptopie ef this city when
they get aft in that condition.''
!"!!gus said 45 percent of traffic dealhs
.ar• the result oi drinking. Answering
a c.ur.cllman's que.stlon as to whether
(Ir nc.t he bad that many drinks while
, aboard, Negus said "I don't drink in
lpub~. I dwi't •~l to be p.art of that
.4' ·pm.eot, I'd rotbct be part of th•
M percent."
, ~~tbase suppertin& the ~ce
r (If tlte perrii!t was Al Glamtr ofB1lboa,
' who observed, "In 12 yeal'I in this town,
I've yet ID see anybody whose conduct
is impaired by four drinks."
The II.st of supporters or the Queen
lllso Included the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce and former
Mayor Dora Hill. who commented, "The
Pavilion Queen is an asset to our bay,
we like to share the bay with others.
"We live on the water ," she said,
"and we never hear noise coming from
the boat"
School Trus tees
To Mee t Tonig ht
A special meeting of the 1''ewport-Mesa
Unified School District board of education
has been called for 7:30 o'c!()('k tonight
in the administrative (){fices. ltiOI 16th
St., Newport Beach.
Superintendent William Cunningham
1aid the meetillg will be a "study session
on the district's management model and
oo decentraJizalionlcentralizatl on con-ce l.S."
:fhe 15tudy session is open to the public.
The next regular board meeting is
at 7 p.m. on Jan . 19 in the lyceum
of Costa Mesa lfigh School.
DAILY PILOT
OIU~COE CO.ul PUILISHIMG COM.,.AMY
R•Mrt N. w,,J ,.,_IHrlt tl'lll Pllbllsl'lw
J •c.li a. c ... 1.v
V\c9 "Ntl!Moi! lnol Gentr 11 Mt~to-t
n,,,,,, ICte•il
1!41W
Theintl A-M11rphi11e
M-Oil'ICI Edller
L "'''' Krie9 N...-.OfT ltlC!I Cl!l' l!fller
N-l"'f .._. OHJce
221 r w,,, 11111<>• lou1••••d
Mtilil'lt ""1d•Mtl P'.0 . le~ 1171, 91•61 --COtlt M-T >II Wet! lty $trMt
~ ... e11, m • ..._ ·-HUftll!!flM hfftl• 171B '-"' ... i.v-11'11 &ell (IWM!lte1 at ....,. II CA,,..,. R-..
Both tho couocU and 1 rei>...,.nl>U••
of the employoi' UIOCl>Uon MM tlley
favored ettablllhlng mulU-year contracts
and the employe negotiator. William
Bowert, said he would draft an outline
for such an agreement for presentation
to the CCIUncil Feb. 8.
The benchmark: standards used in
establishing pay raises also came in
for criticis m by Councilman Lindsley
ParSOlll.
Pointing out that each year employes
of one city point to the salaries of
employes or another city in the salary
fights , Parsons said instead "the laws
of supply and demand !Should prevail."
$1,000 In Bag
"ltllber tMn look at olhen aJ bench-
n\llU, ~· -., 141(. "UW. t\\Lllt be Mint
other gauge of the labor market."
H.e said, ''At some point, somebody
is going to caU a ha.It to keep raises
of munlcipal employes from going up
1111 the time."
He cited lhe large number of peopll'l
who are unemployed loday "who are
willing to work at half the sca!t..''
He said his proposals wtre not made
"jwt because there is a ttemtndous
'.:iUpply of labor, but because ta1es are
increasing so rapidly."
Councilman Donald Mclnnt!'l pushed
hardest for the establishment of multi-
COIN Citi zens Rais e
Coins for Irvine City
Citizens for COIN (City of Irvine Now) tion ()[ the part of incorporation volun·
have raised $1.000 for this cause. ac-teers.
cording to the group's chairman, Andrew Burton, who filed incorporation papers
May. with the Local Agency Formation Com-
May's announcement was made al a mission (LAFC), emphasized that the
fu nd raising luncheon sponsored by COIN Councils of the Commun.ities ef ITYine
wbicb "'as held Monday at the Airporter are not work.ins for the ITYine campany.
Inn. He called for incorporation workers
Attended by about 4-0 Irvine residents, to stick together. "We 've sot to · be
the luncheon featured Cliff ~t iller, UC prepared to hang together on this thing,"
Irvine camplll! architect: John Burton, he said, "or surely we'll hang separate·
president of the Council of the Com· Iv "
muoitles of Irvine, and Robert Smith, · in speaking for Mason. Ferguson said
Newport Beach attorney retained by the land company believes the residents
COIN to aid tbl! incorporation move of the area have the right of self determi-
by the group, nation . "We don't understand 'bow a
Irvine Company President \V illlam R. company can say they 're going to 'build
1'.!ason was slated to attend , but had a city, build ~t. and then have someone
a last minute change ()f plans and sent outside that city tell them they can't
Gil Ferguson. vice president for cor-dJ that. It should be up to the people
porate communications. that live there,·· he said .
The four speakers talked abciut the The incorporation issue is scheduled
current status of the incorporation effort to be taken before the LAFC Wednesday
an d all called for continuing determine-afternoon.
Newport Traffic Signal
Given Top City Priority
A temporary traffic signal at the cross.
ing of B1lboa ind Newport boulevards
was placed at the top of the traffic
light priority list by the NeiA·port Beach
City Council Monday night.
The council authorized dr.stgn work
on the signal, at McFadden Square which
Traffic Engineers Robert Jaffe said
would cost no more than $5,000, to begin
immediately.
Jaffe was also instructed to begin
designing sianals for the East-West in-
ter~ion of Newport Center Drive, the
inter1ection of Bayside Drive and Jam·
boree Road and Balboa Boulevard and
47th Street. in that order.
fie it stimulates "will cnate chaos there
and at the intersection of San Joaquin
Hills Road and r..111cArthur Boulevard.''
The signal at the Balboa-Newpor t
Boulevard crossing is CC1nsldered tem-
porary. Jaffe pointed out. because or
the need to eventually redesign the entire
Intersection.
The signals Will attempt to control
only traffic at the actual crossing , not
at any or the side roads approaching
t.he intersection, he said.
F rom Page 1
CENTER ...
yur centnett.
CIUn& tbe "vicious circle' 'of employe
ra11¥, Mdnnll ur1ed the city stipulata
that tht employes agree to multiple-year
contracts: aa part of the forthcoming
mid-year hikes.
This waa not done but Bowers did
agree to have the proposal ready by
the ti me of the budget review.
The two incentive pay plans providr
one·year salar increases based on job
performance and .teholastic achieve ment.
Under the plan11, specific percentage
hikes iA'ill be granted based o n
supe rvisorial evaluations and degrees ob-
lained in relation to the education re-
quired for lhe job being performed.
Phoenix Aslled
Phone Number
Of 1 Victim
By TOM BARLEY
01 111t D•llJ ~lltl Slt lt
Gary Harold Phoenix's supervisor
tMtified today Jn the Orange County
Superior Court rape-kidnap trial of the
tall Costa Mesan that his work
performance visibly de~riorated during
a 2S-day period last summer in which
he allegedly attacked nine women ,
The young woman manager of a
Westmin~ter health spa said he r assist.ant
manager's 11utput slumped to the point
that she asked him: "Wha t dll you
do all night?"
Phoenix told her, she testified. that
he "drove around looking for girls and
someone to be with."
The manager's lestlmeny came !n the
closing stages of a trial in which nine
alleged women victims ()f the 29-year-old
defendant have told stories cf rape, sex
perversion, robbery and violence suffered
at the hands of the defendant.
An 18-year-old Fluntington Beach girl
who identified Phoenix as her attacker
told the jury Monday that she was
walk.ing to her apartment last June 30
when Phoenix sprang from his car. grab-
bed her and forced her inte the vehicle.
She testified that • garment was tied
over her head and she was forced to
undress. She said Phoenix then raped
her and repeatedly struck her with the
warning that she would be killed if
1he did not cooperate.
The young victim told pollce that she
was ()rdered by her attacker to give
him her telephone number. She testified
Monday that she gave him a false
nu mber and that she received several
calls from a man she believed to be
Phoenix after police installed a special
telephone at her borne.
Police taped those conve rsations and
the victim recalled from the witness
box that her caller told her on one
occasion : •·r went to see you again ,
we could have 11 good time together."
Deputy District Attorney Michael
Capizzi will 4'Sk the jury te impose
the death penalty if Phoenix is convicted
on char1es of ripe. kidnap, assault "·ith
intent to comrrtit ripe, su per~·ersion
and robbery.
SCHOOL. FINANCE -" ... The various formulas for school subventions
have ouHived their usefulness to school districts and mu!'il be simplified."
TEACHER TENURE -"The. otlginal and legitimate reasons for tenure
no longer exist. 'Tenure has berome a h11ven for the incompetent tea cher. It
should be altered to Include a system of merit pay which provide.. rul in-
centives for qua lity teaching."
TUITION -"We face some unresol\•ed problf'ms in higher education.
For one thing, wil hthe Universi ty tor California) charging tuition an imbal-
ance exists so Jong as the stale colleges do not.''
EDUCATION f'EES -'"Nonreside nt fees for out-of·state and fore.ign
students should be reviey,·ed. II is hard W justify subsidizing these students
iA'hen it grows increasingly dil licult to provide an education for our own rtsl·
dents."
SOLID WASTE -"! am suggesting one slate agency should be given
the authorilv 10 c.'Ollrdinale, encourage and assist loca l and regional entities
to plan for 'and regulate solid "'aste disposal systems and sites.'•
COASTAL PROTECTION -"1'he preser\'ation and protection of Cali·
fomia ·s coast rrsources must surel y rank amon gou rhighest environment·
al priorities." I
CRIME -"The killillg of a law enrorcement officer while on duty
should be first-degree murder .and it should be a felony to specifically ad·
vocale killing or injuring law enforcement officers."
WELFARE -"While we a!Sist the truly needy "·ho ha ve nowhere el.$C: •1 to tum we must alSI> insist that able-bodied adult recipients work and meet ,
their o~ repsonsibilities."
MEDI.CAf. -"During this session we will presen t for your consider.a·
Lion a plan to limit our health care services to the poor so they will be com·
parable with the heallh benefits provided by the various prepared health in.
surance plans co vering most of our citizens."
BUDGl:.I' -"We are at the point. where this state can no longer sustain
its operalions on the revenue it now takes from the people. Therefore, we are
confronted by a rhoice. \\le can reform government -reduce the cost of
services, particularly in welfare and medi-cal, or we can increase taxes. I
will submit a budget which can be balanced v .. ithout an increase in taxes,"
VOTE _ "Now that the Congress and 1he U.S. Supreme Court have
given the 18-year-olds the vote in federal elections, I certainly think we shoul d
take those steps necessary to let the citizens of California detennine 1'-"hether
that shall be extended to state and local elections."
From Pa"" 1
WELF ARE ATIACK •••
and legitimate reasons for tenure ne
longer exist" and it should be replaced
by "a system of merit pay which pro-
vides real incentives for qual ity twch·
ing."
-Pilot tests in selected distrlcts to
determine feasibility of a "voucher plan"
for financing education. Under this, the
state would pay a set amount li> each
child to attend Lhe school of his choice.
-Tuillon for state colleges. There
already is tuition at the University of
California.
-Requiring "recreational subdivisons"
to include "strong environmental as Yi'ell
as engineering considerations."
-Making the killing of a law en-
forceme nt officer while on duty first-
desree murder. and thus punishable by
death in the gas chamber.
woman and chil d in the state -deuble
the national average.
Reagan said he 'Mill ask the leglslature
fo help counties locate a.bsent fathers
who desert t h e i r welfare-receiving
families.
"There are, today, \()(I many insta.nces
where the taxpayer is forced to subsidize
some lather's yen to travel," he said.
The gov ernor said the legislature will
be asked t& place a ceiling on the
amount of earnings a person can receive
and still remain on welfare.
He recommended removing "the cloak
of secrecy" from Welfare and opening
now-closed records to inspection.
On f..1e<li·Cal, he said experience during
the five years has shown the program
"cannot meet Calif9rnia'1 needs."
Carol A. Makely
Services Slated
-f..1aking it a felony to advocate killin g
or injuring law enforcement officers.
Alst , increasing the $1.000 maximum
reward money lhe governor can ()ffer
for information leading to the arrest
and conviction of persons injuring Rosary will be reeited lonight For Carol
policemen. Ann Makely, Jong-time resident of the
Reagan pledged to present the Harbor Area \\'ho died Sunday after
legislature a balanced stale budget early a leng\/Jy illness. She was 45.
next month and aga in rejected a tax: increase, which many Democrats say Mrs. Makcly wa,; born in Los Angeles,
is inevitable. and moved to the area 25 years ego.
"A tax increase is inevilable only if She se rved with lhe US . Coast Guard
we refuse to accept read ily available for three years during \Vorld \Var rr
alternatives,·• the gove rnor said, and was an aclive member of St.
"We are confronted by a choice. We Joachims Catholic Church in Costa
ca n reform government -reduce the Mesa.
An expected furore over the priority
list failed to take place "·hen Vice P.1aynr
Ho..,.•ard Rogers, who two weeks ago
had raked the Newport Center Drive
sign.al, finally dropped his opposition.
cost of services. particularly in welfare Mrs . P.iakely leave!'i her husband.
entire electorate the opportunity li> be and Medi-Ca l -or we can ~ncrease Russell; son. Russell John; t w 0 heard on the subject ()f financiig public l\fob Ha]ls Firefight taxes. To choose. the lauer without ex-daughters, Kathleen and Nancy, all o! He did so only after calling the
signa lization program •·a $210,000 give-
aiA·ay program," ccnlending the Irvine
Company, developers of Newport Center,
should be made to pay for the light.
Public Works Director Joseph T. Devlin
pointed out that the city counci l two
years ago had agreed the roadway is
public and it is responsible lor the y,•ork.
Rogers al10 stuck by an earlier opinion
that the signal is not needed at the
intersection. Two weeks ago he h11d
said a four ·way stop should be tried
first .
The council also directed the ct1y staff
lo begin design work on wldtning San
Joaquin Hills Road ea.st of h-1acArthur
Boulevard .after Councilman Lindsley
Parsons pointed out the rapid develop-
ment or the area.
Parsorui said a ma jor ahopping renter
is under construction there and the traf-
Charter Group
Formation Out
The Newport Beach City Council Mon-
day threw out the proposal that it con·
sider new methods of electing the mayor.
Althouah not taking any formal action
on the suggestion, made last month by
former councilman ~ Cook . the councll
voted to put of[ until September the
form•lion of a new Charter A,mcndment
Committee. ,
Cook had expres!ed ·crll.lciSm of the
current system, wide?r which the council
tlects one of lb own members for 1
tw<ryear ttrm. saying the polltics in·
volved produced bitter, u n he 111 n g
ln')unds.
Councilman Don ald Mc.Jnnl1 said,
1'There are only two people In this
town I've ever hf:ard t1lk about the
•!Jdom or a change, and that certainly
ii no mandate. to do anything."
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers sugg,sted
the ma}'Or rirer the matter to 11 ('On·
1ultanl -"like Dee Cook. and ttll him
to N!port back ln 2i.l years.·•
COunc.llman Carl Kyml a said ht felt
the councllmtJa had too much otl1tr com·
mlttee work at this time le ronslde.r
the propos1l.
(
facltities, it is the intention of this council cising the cancer eating at our vitals Costa Mesa: mother Ednl'I Cla rk ;
to flr11 present a general obligation bond NE W ORLEANS IAP) -About 5Q is to fa ce tax increases year in and brother, Evans Clark : sister~. Nancv
issue to the voters or the city for CC1n-rock·throwing Negrot.!I Monday night year out for as long as .,.,.e shalt be Smoke. arid Joan Dunklev 811 Ot
l!ilruction of the city po llce facility ~for~ hampered firemen fighting a blaze -in here. I intend to travel another course." Sacramen10. ·'
considering any alternatlve method• of the former headquarters of a Black Reagan said Cahfornlans now make Rosary ""ill be rct'ited at 7 r m. al
flrancill& •aid (acillty." Panther group. f iremen left the scene 11p 10 percent of the nation "s population St. Joachim':-Church and Requiem Mas.!I
The 'A"Ords "first'' and ''before rori-but they returned later with police pr(l· but have 16 percent of all who are "'Ill be celebrated a!. the same church
fiidering any alternative methods of tecticn and put out the fire without nn "'elf are. State and local costs. he at 9 am. \\'edne~day with f'ither
finan cing said fa cillty" 'A'ere deleted. incident. said, average $57.5:-i for every man. Thoma s Nevin officiiitin~.
Inclusion of those iA'ords. Kymla said. lr:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-
"is like saying, if you don't vote for
the bond issue we're going to roll ri&ht
on and build it regardless of CQ.'lts ."
Councilman Lindsley Parsons 11&id the
wording should remain, C()nten&ng, "The
city h.as an obligation to consider need:1:
-we cannot tie the poli~ buildlnf to
this or any other method ()f fin ancln1."
He said. '"If it is turned down , we
can'! consider it a mand1te."
A key consideration is the present
requ irement that bond issues must be
approved by two-thirds of those voting,
This may be. lowered if the U.S.
Supreme Court , in a case pending before
it, applies the one man-one vote principle,
as expected.
If this requirement Is not changed,
however. and the issue wins 11 majority
but not a two-trurm vote. Kymla and
other councilmen agreed that they would
consider other financing methods.
"If a majority is for the bond issue,"
Kymla said, "then we are obligated
tc consider other method!."
He pointed nut, "we are not closing
any doors hy rtr!king U.ese won:le;. ''
The council also •dopted a m11ter
plan for the entire Civic Center that
establishes general locations and pr1>-
perty sizes for the various projecta.
Airport Commission
Ge ts New l\fembers
Two new membeTB wlll lake 1eats
tonight when the Orange. COunty Airport
Commission},'!eeU at 7 o'clock al Pardo
Enterprl.sts, 1~1 Cam pus Drive at the
lllrport.
New lo the commission are Willard
S. "Sam" Voi, Newport Beach. named
by Supervisor Ronald Caspers and R.
R. "SAndy" Ablott, of Orange Park
.Acres, named by Supervi,or Ralph Cl1rk.
' I
MEASURE FOR TREASURE
One factor overlooked
measuring far yardage.
•
by customers buy ing ca rpeting .
Jn is the
All of our Salesmen know how to measure and figure exact
yardage, often prov id ing our customers substantial sa vings in
yardage alone.
Also, with the tremendous installa tion experience ou r salesmen
have (each prev iously was an expert installer for us ), we a re able
to forsee any patential problem.
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through
We have a gigantic selection, and the measuring will be
ACCURATE!
our store.
SANTA Atf.t.. OU.Mel
fUITIN C .....
ALOIM,
l lD HILL CAIPIB
& DIA"llD
11174 lrt+-. ,_.., c.llf.
IJ .. JJ44
ALDEN'S ·'
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 te 5:30 -Fri., f ht 9
646-4838
S.t .. 9:10 to 5
I I I '
I
'
I
--. --~ '... ... ,.
Today'• .Flmal
N .. Y. Steeb
' YOL 64, NO. 10, 2 SECTIONS, 24 'PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY ·t2, ·197f
Mesa Police Turn Sights on· Juvenile Crime·
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OI ltll Deity PU.I H•lf
, A 17-year-old·deals heroin.
An 11-year.(lld is taken into custody
and .proudly tells OOw he has cut dowR
his herctln habit and ho!)e! to get off the
.Beedle eotitely.
.. A 14-y.ear-old is shot, fleeing down a
da~k alley behind a camera store at mid·
night, ignoring commands to bait and dressed ·in bur1lar's tradiUonal black. ~ the .Coata M"8 Police Depart-
Nixon Set
For College
Appearance
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of "'9 Dlllr •1t1t Si.ff
Prealdent· Nixon will end his San
Cler:nente JOjourn Thursday morning and
awing by the UrrlversHy ot Nebraska
to addrea a convocation of student!
and fl<lllty.
The afternoon .ddrees ·in the university com.um will belp celebr•" the llCbool
11e1!1Mm1 Its -lilnd!'td ,.... el
Nisteoce.
AidOf Ald'the Nebi..U lliol>'" ,_
to ·Wuhlngltn, D. C. will al'° glV.
the nation's number one· football fan
a chance to congratulate the university'•
Cornhwker• football team for the 1970
eeason. 'lbe team wu Big Eight champ,
won the Orange Bowl and was ranked
number one in the nation by Associated
Press.
The Lincoln, Neb. address will be Nii:-
on's first to a campW1 audience since
he faced a vocal minority of heckler•
at Kansas State University last.si;!mmer.
The visit idea originated
With Agriculture Secretary Clifford Har-
din. He resigned as chancellor of the
university•to join the cabinet.
1t·will be the first lime a President
has visited the Universily of Nebraska
campus.
As .bis nine-day work vacation drew
toward a close, the President Monday
Oondemned as "morally wrong " the
bombing attacks on Soviet facilities in the
U.S.
This came amid threats by the Jewish
Defense League to continue assaults to
win better treatment for Jews in Russia.
M,.ny Jewish leaders have expressed
outrage at the bombings.
'The President's acti ons to rejuvenate
~ economy by giving commerce and
industry better tax and depreciation
bt'eaks meanwhile came under fire from
the AFL-CIO and some Democrats.
The big labor federation said, " ..•
tt4 is incredible that the President can
fidd no better action than to erlend
a tax .windfall of several billion dollars
ti) the nttion'I corporatiOOI.
~at America needs tlQW lJ 1trong
~eroment action to create jobs, curb
fnflatton and Jift our 1Bgging economy
_. .not 1immicks to reduce the taxes
ot.eorporat.e business."
Cou&
Weatller
Better keep .)'OUI'. raincoat on for u.e' nest couple diya. 'lbe outlook
for 'fledneaday is for cloudy
mt.her and ahowers, with temp-
eratures mired in the middle nru...
" INSWE TODA. 'l'
...... ~
• + '1 • ..
ment files.
Get the :i:o-<:alled DR numbers aad have
the girl:i: in Records pull the folders and
find out what happened to those three
boys.
One is in the California Youth Author-
ity.
One is in Orange County Probation De·
partment supervision.
One is ill his grave.
Faced -wU.b a risiJ.g rate ol juvenile
c:rime, the Costa Mesa Police Department
•t~ •• . , !# "U~~ T • .-..re
.. NQICTED· ff GRAND· JURY
Fw ... r Army Cop Tur~
Former Top Cop
Of Army Faces
13 U.S. Charges
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Retired Maj.
Gen. Carl C. Turner, the Army 's former
top policeman and also former chief
flf U.S. marshals was indicted today
on charges of unlawfully obtaining
firearms and of federal tax evasion.
Turner, 58.. was indicted by a federal
grand jury in Richmond, Va .. Attorney
Gen . John N. Mitchell announced.
Turner, who now· lives at Springfield.
Va., in Washington':i: suburbs, was in-
dicted on 13 counts.
Five counts charged him w it h
unlawfully soliciting gifts of 423 firearms
from the Chicago Police Departmen t
and misrepresenting that they were for
government use.
He was accused of evading $16,679
in federal income tax payments.
Turner was a key witness al hearings
commiUee on operations of clubs for
servicemen on military bases in various
parts of the world.
During his testimon.,. Turner t o I d of
purchasing 536 confiscated handguns and
other firearms from tbe Chicago and
KaMU Ctty1 Mo., police departments.
He aaid at the time there wa~ full
understanding tliat he intended the arw:
for hiJ personal use.
is going all out fO!' those under 18, who
comniitted more than 60 percent of last
year's crimes.
The Detective Bureau opened for busi-
ness Monday split right down the middle
in a major reorganization, with half its
manp.'.lwer detailed to juvenile work.
Not only criminal cases -but people
problems too -are to be solved under
the 11ew system initiated by Detective
Capt. Bob Green.
He recently completed another in the
ows
Sex Suspect
Super,isor
On Stand
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ille Dtllv' '°lltl Stiff
Gary Harold Phoenix's supervisor
testified today in the Orange County
Supenior Qiurt rape·kidnap trial of the
tall Costa Mesan that his work
performance vi sib!y deteriorated during
a 28-day period last summer In which
he allegedly attacked nine .,.omen.
The young woman manager or a
Westminster health spa said her assistant
manager's output slumped to the point-
that she asked him: "Wha t do you
.. do all night?"
Phoenix told her. she testified, that
he ''drove around looking for girls and
someone to be wjth."
The manager·~ testimony came in the
closi ng stages of a trial in which nine
alleged women victims of the 29-year-old
defendant have told stories of rape. sex
perversion. robbery and violence suffered
at the hands of the defendant.
An 18-year-old Huntington Beach girl
who identified Phoenix as her attacker
told the jury Monday that she was
walking to her apartment last June 30
when Phoenix sprang from his car. grab·
bed her and forced her into the vehicle.
She testified tha t a garment was tied
over her head and she was forced to
undress. She said Phoe nix then raped
her and repeatedly struck her with lbe
warning that she would be killed if
she did not cooperate ..
The young victim told police that she
\\'as ordered by her attacker to give
him her telC'phonc number. She testified
~tonday that she gave him a false
number and that she received several
calls from a man she believed to be
Phoenix after police installed a special
telephone at her home.
Pollce taped those conversations and
the victim recalled from the wi tness
box that he r caller told her on one
occasion : " [ want to see you a g a i n ,
we could have a good time together ."
Deputy District Attorney Michael
Capizii will ask the jury to impose
the death penalty if Phoe!li:i Is convicted
on charges of rape, kidnap, assault with
intent to commit rape, sex perversio n
and robbery.
Residents May Throw
'
Water on New Billings
A delecaUon of trailer park and
apartment owners is expected to pour
into the Coeta Mesa County Water
District Board of Directors' meeting
'J'tluraday to complain over new, in·
creased billings.
'MM!y plan to throw cold water on
1 procedure in which they will pay
$1 per month for each trailer space,
apartment or living unit.
HOopltata, .~ lllCI mo"I• 1lso wHI
pay sq crilf ,par bed under the CMCWD
water rate tncreue effecllw Jan. L
Olrectorl meet at 7:30 p.m. Thurtday
in their civic center board room .
"We feel IL would b;e to ou.r adva11tage
to be there and flnd out what we can
do," aaid Eleanor Tulowetzke.
Sbe i. a part owner al the Aloha
and ~Alolia Palms mobile l1ome parka,
two 1mong ti repreaented Monday et
• strategy meeting .
•
prestigious series of annual Delinquency
Control Institutes c0-sponsored by USC
and an insurance company foundati oa to
improve juvenile Jaw enforcement.
"The theory behind this is that 60 per.
cent of our crimes and arrests are re-
lated to juveniles," says Capt. Green.
mentioning narcotics, burglary · and even
homicide.
Monday's reorganliation is actually a
return to the old Juvenile Bureau system
that was integrated two years ago with
e
adult ·crime Investigation all an experi·
ment.
But It will be a much. different system
th.an the old segregated pattern of dealing
with. young people in trouble apart from
older suspects and offende rs.
"Normally in a department our size,
with If tun-time investigators, you would
have three or four handling juveniles,"
he explains.
"We're going to update and streamline
it, with seven assi&ned, '• he add:i:.
are
Capt. Green said the integrated .,...
tern in which 110 specific indJviduals bin-
dle juvenile problems has, unfortunatet,,
led to some Joss of rapport ·with you.l:lt-
oriented agencies.
Detective Sgt: John Rega.1 -ane cl.
several men who have warted · doleJy
with city schools -will bead tbe new
unit administrati•ely with teVen 'tnvutl gators· a.s,,igned.
His staff includes detectives Liada GJ.s..
(S.. CRIME, PIP ZI-
58 Suspended Work Force
Proposed
By Governor
Hair Controversy Comes to Head
SIDELINED BY SIDEBURNS
Los Amigos High'• King
Mesa Planners
Schedule Study
On Two Projects
Diverting a pair of knottier problems
to fu ture study an d discussion. the Costa
r-.1esa Planning Commission Monday
night moved routinely th rough its agenda ,
A zone exception permit for Lucille
Warren. 115 Santa Isabe l Ave., to build
17 hotel . type units over Ye Ole Inn.
2376 Newport Blvd., was held over until
the Feb. 8 mee ting.
Various problems surround the project
planned in the commercial zone, such
as original construclion standards and
a change in the appli cation as presented.
Another zone exception permit for a
27-unit apartment at 2068 Newport Blvd ..
requested by Phil Spiller. 1649 Westcliff
Drive. was also held for the Feb. 8
meeting.
Staff specjalisls have atlacked the pro-
ject as poorly designed and lacking in
green area and parking. with discussion
due next Monday at the commission's
study session.
In other action Mon day, com·
missioners:
-Recommended approval for Harry
Wright, 126 Rochester St., to construct
a commercial building for re ta i I
hardware and storage use at 1776
Newport Blvd., -with on-site parking
reduced.
-Recommended approval for Robert
0 . Br.iggs, 2941 Java Road, M> install
and operate a storage rental Jlrd for
boats. campers and trailers at 201S
PlecenUa Ave., In an industrial ione.
-Set a public hearing Jan . 23 for
rezoning land south of 19th Street and
west of WhJttler Avenue to lhe Newport
Beach city limit, from indU1tri&l to
residential use.
Queen Elizabeth Set
For Visit to Turkey
LONDON (AP) -Queen 1'1-b
II 11 e•peded to villi Turkey sooo.
A Bttt!dn,gham Palace spokesman ,aald
Sunday Pr.,ldent C.vdet SUnay of
Turkey · Invited her "hen be mldt 1
llate. visit to Britain In Novombef' Itri
.and . commented: "It is µauallt the
cwitom for state vbita le be excbaii&ed. ..
,
I
By TERRY COVILLE
Ot Ille D1llv' •11t1 S11fl
A controversy over hair and other
dress code features al Los Amigos High
School, Fountain Valley, came to a head
Monday .
Fifty.eight boys were suspended for
wearing long hair, sideburns or be.ard:i:.
The SWlpen:i:ions followed warnings ts.-
sued last Friday to nearly 200 boys wllh
long locks. By Monday, most had hair·
cuts.
"The only way to -change the drw
code is by action of the board of trus.
tees ," Fred Goyette, assistant principal,.
explained.
~ atudent leader. Terry lting, .. 17,
wa sent borne for b1I Jong llideburna.
He was adamant abom removing tf1em.
"l'm ready io shave them oft If the
board will take some action toward re-
pealing the dress code," he said . / King is a member of the school news.
paper staff and the yearbook-staff. Ht
says most of the youth are sincere in
their batUe against the Garden Grove
Unified School District dress code, and
are not trying to make trouble.
"The school is here to teach, not to
tell us how we're sup~ to look,'' he
emphasized.
Prior to the suspensions, students held
a rally Friday to protest the dress code.
Goyette said the rally was peaceful and
broke up qu ietly .
"! can't condemn what the kids have
done to this point," Goyette ewlained.
··But I am disappointed by ~umber
of kids who didn 't abide by what we re-
quested th.ls morning (hair cuts ). Today
they're challenglng the rules I have to
uphold. We've. taken a stand we feeJ we
have to take."
''I am irked because so many of :he
(See AMIGOS, Page Z)
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Rooald
Reagan proposed in a no-11ensenae 1tate-
of-the-1tate address today 1weepin1
reductions in .weUare end Medi-Cal 11
an aJternative to another tax inc:reue.
He described the two controversial
programs u "cancer eaUn& at' our
vitals."
The Republican go v e r n o r recom-
mended, among ether thiDIJ,. F!IDO'Vlnl
able-bodied welfare r«iplenta · from
public assistance rolls and twuinl tbem
int() a "ipubJ.IC wort force" ter 1overn-
ment projects .•
He suggested limiting Medi-Cal health
services to the poor to the JeTel of
benefits provided by private prepaid
health insurance plans.
Reagan -battling a flu bug -1lso
made these broad preposals in a f,OOG-
word addres:i: prepared for delivery to
a joint session of the Legislature:
-A statewide election to determlnl
whether Californians want to extend the
18-year-old vote to state and local elec-
tions. The U.S. Supreme Court recentl1
ruled IS.year-olds could vote in federal
elections.
-Moving the Callromia primary from
June to September to ''Ahorten the game
by hall." He 1<1id this "would aave
a lot of wear and tear on candidates
and, J sWJpect, on the public , too."
-The "judicious, sensible pbase.()Ut"
of teacher tenure. He said "the original
and legitimate reasons for tenure nG
longer exist'' and it should be replaced
by "a system of merit pay which pr~
(See WELFARE, Pace Z)
State Highlights
Reagan Outlines Key Points
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Excerpts from Gov. Ronald Reagan'1 state-of.
the-state message to the LegislaU.re:
SCHOOL FINANCE -" •• , The various fonnulu for IChool subvenliona
have outlived their usefulness to school dlltricts and must be almplified."
TEACHER TENURE -"The original and legitimate ruaooa for tenure
no longer exist. Tenure has .become a haven for the Incompetent teacher. It
ahould be altered to include a system of merit pay which provide. real br
centives for quality teachJnt."
TUITION -"We face 11>me unresolved problems in hiiber educaticn.
For one thing, wit bthe Univeraity (of California) charging tWtJon an lmbaf..
ance exists so long as the st.ate colleges do not.''
EDUCATION FEES -"Nonresident fees for out-of-etite and foreign
students should be reviewed. It is bard to justify subsidizing these students
when It grows increasingly difficult to provide an education for our own resi·
dents." '
SOLID WASTE -"l am suggesting one state agency should be given
the ai.tthority to coordinate, encourage and assist local and.. regional entiUes to plan for and regulate 10lid waste disposal systems and lit.ea."
COAST AL PROTECl'ION -"The preservation and ,pt;Ot.ectlon of_ Cali·
fomla's coast resources must surely rant amon fO\l rhllbfst envlronmeat-
AI prim ...
-"The ldlllng of a law enforcement officer while on duty
ahoul be flm<legree murder ,ond It should be a felony to tpeelflcally •d·
vocate ltllllng or injuring law enforcement officers."
nt.F'AltE -"While we aulst the truly needy wbo have nowhere ebe
to tum. we muat aleo lnalll that able-bodied adult rtciplent. work and meet
their own rep10MlbUIUes." ,
MEDI.CAL -1•0urtng thia aes1Jon we will present for your consldera·
lion a plan to Umit our health care terVice5 to the poor IO they will be ~
parable with the health beoeflta provided by the varioul propared beollll tn-
suranoe plans coterini _most o( cw cltiaM." •.
BUDGET -"We 1~ 1t tho point wbere this Ila .. CUI M looi« Mlaln
Its operatl011s on the mtmie tt now tlktll from the people~ 'lbtrtfore, we an
confronted by a .choice .. We can reform government -reduct the 001t ol.
RrVlcet. particUlarly Jn welfart Ind medl-ca.l, or we can lnc:reQe ~ J
wUl submit.a builiol which CM be balucld willlOul 1111 -ID·-·"
VOTE -• ".Now that tho c.m.,... llld the U.S. s._ Oourt -
given tha a.y .. r .. ldl the ..te In federal elecuo.., I «<lalnly lldnt wo lllauld
take thote at.po ··-to· tel tha clthena of Callloml• -Wtieuoar !hat sb&II be '""'do<! fi) •tale and locll llectloN."
I
'
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JI OA!l V PILOT c Tuesday, Janu1ry 12, 1971
Lt.Calley
Prosecution
Rests Case
FT. BENNING . Ga, (UPI) -The
t:overnment rested its mu rder case
against Lt, \\'illiam L. Calley Jr. today
\lllth teslimony by a fellow soldier that
Calley speciflca.Hy ordered him Lo fire
Into two groups of women. children and
old men.
''The government rests. finally," Capt.
Aubrey P.1. Daniel Ill, the chief pro-
secut.or, announced at. mid-morning of
the 24th day of the Calley co urt-martial.
Paul D. Meadlo. 23, Terre Haute, Ind.,
wu the final prosecution witness. He
uid he stood barre.I to barrel with
Calley at t.ly Lal on March 16, 1968
and pumped automatic fire Into as many
as 140 Vietnamese civilians.
Meadlo insi!ted. as he had P.tonday,
that although he wa' emotionally upset
at killing human beings, he thought he
was doing right because of a briefing
the night before by the company com·
mander to destroy everythi ng in My
Lai. Also , after a first group of 35
to 40 civilians were killed, he said the
o:::mmande.r passed by and seemed to
condone it by not commenting .
Charlie Company Commander Capt.
Ernest L. Medina is under Investigation
of charges of overall responsibility for
the My Lai killings but has not been
committed to court-martial.
Under re-direct examination by Daniel,
which the defense charged was an at-
tempt to destroy the credibility of its
own witness, Meadlo said he had been
afraid that even the habits in mothus'
arms at My Lai would be booby-trapped
to kill him and his sq uad members.
_·Calley, 27, is accused of t h I!
premeditated murder of 102 Vietnamese
~vilians during the infantry sweep
through My Lai.
• Another veleran of the <lperation, Sgt.
Charles E. Hutto 01 Tallulah, La., is
Sta.ndia1 court-martial at Ft. McPherson,
tn AUanta for intent to murder ci vilians
during lhe attack.
A witness at the Hutto trial toda y
Said that Capt. Medina 's superior <lfflcer
at My Lai. Col. Frank Barker, observed
the operation from a helicopter and
commented : "Things are going fine ,
~ooth, according to plan."
~ker wa! killed in a helicopter ac·
<;ident about three months after the
~y Lai sweep.
· Be.fore the prosecution rested in the ~lley trial, Daniel as~ed Meadlo if
ie got tits orders to kill 35 to 4{) people
ti • clearing and 75 to lpcl otbers in
i ditdi ••specifically from Lt CallfY;"
"I received my orders from Lt.
Ca.lley,'' Mudie replied. t
"NO further questlons," Dltniel aid.
"But!" Mead.lo went on, "C8pt Medina
was there (at the first group) before
tbis ditch Incident and I assumed
everything was okay because otherwise
the captain would have. put a stop to
it right there."
Meadlo added lhat. "with all the bodies
lying around l assumed he (Medina)
would have put a stop to all the killing."
Young W restl.ers
Can Still Join
Nobody"s twis ting your ann -not yel
-· but it still isn't too late lo join the.
Costa P.lesa Recreatior, Department's
Junior \\-"rtstling progra m.
Coach Gary Lambeth vdll take sign-
ups tonight at 7 p.m. ,.,.hen the fi rst prac-
tice session gets under '"'ay at the Es·
tancla High School gymnasium.
I n t e r n at i o n a I and lr.terscholas·
tic v.Testling styles will be t~ugtit boys
6 to IS, ~·ho are to be match ed by age
and weight class for lnter-ciry meets.
Eight tourna men ts begin ning Jan. 16
under Southern California Junior \\'res!-
ling Associ11tion auspices offer a chanc e
for champions to compete next Jul y in
Mex ico City.
DAILY PILOT
O•ANG• C04ST PUallSHIHG C'OMl'4HY
Jlob•rl N. W • .J
Pra111.,1 '"" hbtl1111r
J •c~ It Curl•y
Voce l'nuld.,I .,,.. ~••I M•~•Qto
Thom11 K1•wil
E"IOf"
11'iom11 A. Murphin•
MMll""9 E•ltar
C:.... M .. Offke
llO W .. t l1y Str .. t
M•ilint MJr11': P.O. hs tl60, tlll'
°""' 0-HIWll'Drl IMd!: ltll W.I 11•1 ....,._,.
1...-htdl:m!'-1A_,.
~"..,... a.di: 1n1s aMCh l~N
ltn ci.-i.: XS Nam. 11!1 c..mi.. ll .. I
••
HEADS COUNTY LAWMEN
Cost• Meu'1 Gl11cock
Mesa Officer
To Take Over
As Group Head
A career Costa Mesa policeman who
has laugbt at UC Irvine and elsewhere
will be installed Jan. ig as president
of the Orange County Peace Officers
Association.
Sgt. Thell E. Glascock will take office
along with other associ ation leaders at
a luncheon al the Cost.a 1'.-1esa Golf
and Country Club.
Guest speaker will be former Los
Angeles Police Chief Thomas Reddin,
now a newscaster.
"Problems Concerning Law Enforce-
ment in the Seventies,·• wilt be Reddin's
topic.
The newly elected president of the
county lawmen 's group has been a
member of the Costa Mesa Police
Department for the past 8 years.
Sgt. Glascock 's duties and assignments
have included: pistol team, search and
rescue squad SCUBA diver , color guard.
department lecture bureau, crime scene
investigator pistol range.master and tac·
tical squad member.
Academically, Sg t. Glascock has a BA
degree in police science from Cal State
Long Beach and next June will take
his MA degree from USC in public
administra tion.
He has taught at Cal State L-Ong Beach
and UC Irvine. and has served as an
instructor at the Orange. Coast College
Police Academy, where he is an advisor
to the DCC Police Science Club.
His busy schedule includes community
service, too.
Sgt. Glascock is fi rst vice president
of the. Costa Mesa City Employes
Association, has been vice president of
I.he Jaycees, and is Cubmaster and Assis·
tant Scoutmaster to units at Fairview
State Hospital.
From Pllfle 1
WELFARE ...
vides real ince ntives for qualify teach-
ing."'
-Pilot tests in selected districts to
de termine. feasibility of a "voucher plan"
for financ ing educalion. Under this, the
state wou ld pay a set amount In each
child 10 attend the school or his choice.
-Tuition for slate colleges. There
already is tuition at th r: l 1ni,•ersity nf
California.
-Requiring ··recreational subdivisons·•
to include '•strong environmental as well
as engineering con sidera tions.'"
-!I-laking the killing of a l::iw rn-
forcemc.nt off icer ~·hlle on du t.y first·
degree murder. and thus punishable by
dc.ath in the. gas chamber .
-tl-1aki ng it a felony to advocate. killing
nr injuring law enforcement officers.
Also, Increasing the $1,000 maximum
reward money th e.. governor can offer
for information lt adin g to the arrest
and conviction of persons Injuring
policemen.
Reagan pledgtd to pre.sent t h e
legislature a balanced state budget early
next month and again rejected a tax
increase. which many Democrats say
is inevitable.
"A tax increase. i!l inevitable only if
we. refuse lo accept rea dily available
alternatives,'' lhe governor said.
"We arc. confronted by a choice. We
can reform government -reduce the
cost of servtce.s, part icularly in welfare
and Medi-Cal -or we can increase
taxes. To choose the latter withou t ex-
ci~ing the cancer eating at our vita ls
is to face tax increa ses year in and
year out for as long as we shall be
here. I intend to travel another course."
Reagan said Californians now make
up 10. percent of the nation's population
but have 16 perceni of all who are
on welfare. State and local costs. he
said, average U7.55 for every man ,
woman and chlld in the state -double
the national ave.rage.
Re1gan saJd ht 1,1.ill ask the lelJl!lature
to be.Jp eounttes locate absent fa thers
who desert t h e I r welfare-receiving
famille.'i.
''There. ire. today, loo m11ny ln!ltt1nce~
wbtrf I.ht taxpayer Is forced to subsidize
some father's yen to travel," hi! s.1dd.
'Ibe governor ssld the legislature will
be asked to pince 1 ctillng on the
•mount of earnings 1 penon can receive
and 1tlll remain on welfart.
'3 Robots
Innocent'
In Theory
LOS ANGELES (UP I) -Defense at-
tcrney Maxwell K1?ilh lold the jury today
at the Tate murder trial that if they t>e...
!levee! the theory lhat the kH!ers were
simply robots and zombies directed by
Charles Manson they must find all three
of the fema le defendants innocent of mur-
der.
Kelt h, winding up the fina l argumcnl.S
for lhe defense, said that the prosecution
itself had advanced the idea that the
threl! girls and Charles "Tex" WatR<>n
were simply "automatons."
"If you believe that theory, then the
female defendants and Wa t.son were ex-
tensions of Mr. Manson as if they were
his anns and legs.
"If this is so, then the female defe11d-
ants just can't be guilty of premeditation
and they cannot be guilty of conspiracy
because they have no minds of their
own."
Keith contended that Deputy District
Attorney Vincent Bugliosi 11dvanced the
rnbQt theory because ht'! felt that 110 one
could accept the enormity or a concept
in which people went nut and killed vie·
tims they had never seen or even heard
of.
"Th is is kind of like a horror show.''
said Keith. "The mad scientist and hi!!
ass istant Igor exchanging brains. But
this isn't science fictio11, it's real life.
This is Mr. Bugliosi's argument -this
is his baby."
Keith. counsel £or Leslie Van Hnuton,
obt;llnerl a day 's delay Monday in his
summation when he told Superior Court
Judge Charles H. Older his daughter's
serious illness had worrJed him too much
during the weekend to prtpare his case.
From Pqe 1
CRIME ...
ler, George Wilson, Art Courteau, Walt
Silver, Don Casey, Bob Lennert and
Norm Kutch.
"By this method , we hope to have bet·
ter rapport with juveniles and discover
some new ideas and angles on solving
some of their problems," says Capt.
Green.
''Our overall goal is to provide a closer
working relationship with other city and
cou rity agencies and our aim Is to try to
keep the juvenile out of the 'system' as
much as possible ."
"We're going to dig Into his back·
ground." Capt. Green continues.
"We know nobody is born to crime."
he adds. "So the question Is: Why dkl he
do what he did?"
Capt. Green said the OCI seminar In--
eluded talks by representatives of vari·
nus agencies whi ch can be helpful hri
curbing the cause. or crime before police
act ion is required.
They spelled out what they can or can-
not do and a similar familiarization pro.
,11ram will be one of the first training aids
fo r the seven-member juvenile bureau.
"A Jot of these klds need psychiatric
help and in some cases it's the entire
fa mily." Ca pt. Gre~n remarks. .
One idea is <lrgan1ze some type <lf big
brothe r program for fatherless boys, but
not a large scale operation.
"We're no~ going to go into a counsellng
service beyond th at first. one-shot de11I ,"
he says. noting other agencies prOYide
such a program.
The ktv is fo r his meri to know where
and 10 ":horn particular ca ses shou ld be
refe rred .
Records for 1970 -which included a
crackdov.·n on narcollcs dealers expec-
ted to show up in the index -are not ye!
complet!'d, but Capt. Gre en cited 1969
rallies.
Drugs v.·erc probably the most hea vily
fc!t crime involving juveniles. who were
responsible for M percent. nf al! _C~:i;la ~1esa burglaries in the pr1or stat1s t1cal
vear. b -1-te said the figure s will probably e
different this yea r, but he hopes t.he new
svs tcm wlll change them greatly -do~·
wa rd -when thal 1971 score sheet is
added up.
Mesa Bar Taking
'Sound Survey'
After Complaint
Noise complaints generated by a
Costa Mesa bar. formerly known as
Pier 11, are literally une~forceable
because the city has no ordinance on
noise. measurement.
This was the aS!lessment by City Mana·
ger Fred Sorsabal as the city cnuncll
reviewed ·again what to do about Vtmon
Rankin's nightclub.
Coimcilme.n were pondering action tn
control the ·sound and parking problems
generated by t:he spot at 1976 Newt>Ott
Blvd., but had to fore&Ull action a third
time.
Rankin, who saya he i!1 anxious to
be a good nei,gbbor , has retained Hun-
tington Beach acoustic•! engineer John
Tamassy to conduct a thorough aound
survey on the premises.
Tama!sy told councilmen he will
need about three to four weeks to
determlnt lf it can be adequately
soundproofed.
Dodge Dealer Opens
Costa Mesa has a new Ood1e de1ler·
ship.
Cou rtesy Dodge ha~ opened for busl·
ne:M 111 2888 Harbor Blvd. at the loc1Uoo
formerly held by Worthington Oodae. •
,--~····-
~old Poli~e 1-2~
OHir..er Saves Man , Cites Him
DAIL V l'ILOT lttH l'Mll't
SIGHTS, SAVES, CITES
Newport's Sgt. Miller
1970 Limits
On Draftees
May Hold Up
WASHINGTON (AP) -Despite predic-
tions of lowered draft caUs this year,
Selective Service Di rector Curtis W. Tarr
says lottery number 195 m11y prove to be
the upper limit again.
Ta rr says the 1971 draft pool, consisting
of men just turned 19, wiU be smaller
than the 1970 ponl which consisted of men
aged 19 to 26. Thus, he. said , although
fewer men might be called, it wili take.
higher draft oumbers to get the man·
power.
Tarr said he does n't k111ow how many
draftees will be needed in 1971 but cited
published reports tha t Secretary of De-
fense. Melv in R. Laird estimated the t~
tal would fall between 80,000 and 120,000.
The draft director di.st:ussed the 1971
outlook in a conversation Monday follow.
ing a news conference in which he an•
aounced administration plans to seek an
end to college student deferments this
year. He also said the administration
v.·ants to start a uniform national call ,
allowing the same lottery number to be
called everywhere. instead of the present
system of geographical quotas. Both
moves would require congressional ap-
proval,
Tarr also commented on his testimo111y,
just released by a House. subcommittee.
that some colleges were refusing draft
board request& for information on stu·
dent!l .
School Trustees
To Meet Tonight
A special meeting of lhe Newport-Mesa
UnUied School District board of educat ion
has been called for 7:30 o'clock tonight
in the administrative offices , 1601 16th
St.. Newport Beach.
Superintendent William Cunningh~m
sai d the meeting will be a "study session
on the district's management model and
on decentralization/centrali zat ion con-
cepts."
The study session is open to the public.
The next regular board meeting is
at 7 p.m. on Jan. 19 in the. lyceum
of Costa Mesa High Schoo l.
By JOANNE. REYNOLDS
0t tM DI~ ~1191 tt.it
A. Newport Be1cb police sergeant aaved
the. life of a gas station attendant early
th is morning when he dragged the sleep-
ing man from his fiarnlng auto,
The officer then cited the attendant
for violation or a city ordinance a1a i'nst
sleeping In automobiles.
Neither Sgt. Richard Miiler, 37, nor
gas station employe William F. Gillard.
20. Anahe im, reported any injuries in
the inciden t which occurred at 5:30 .t m.
at the Douglas Gas station, l201 Newport
Blvd.
Miller said he was on routine patrol
when he spolled smoke billowing from
a car loc ked in the lube rack area
of the !talion. He also saw a body
in lhe front seat or the car.
Miller ye.lied at Gillard and pounded
on the wall in an attempt to wake
him .
"I tried lo kick in the. door, but
it wouldn't move,·· Miller said. "I noticed
there wa!I a crack In the plate glass
window next to the door. so I broke
out part of it with my flashlight and
reached th rough to open the door."
Once inside the garage, Miller pulled
a burning coat off Gillard and put out
the names.
Ofrice rs who arrived at the scene.
moments later said It would have been
a matter of seconds before the youth
was overcome with smoke and burned
by the naming roat.
Gillard told his rescuers he was sleep-
ing in the car because of thefts th11t
have occurred recently at the station.
He had plugged an elect ric noor heater
into a garage oulet and put lt on the
floor of the car.
The heater apparently ignited the coat
the attendant was using for a blanket,
officers said.
"We've found people from the gas
station sleeping in their cars before.·•
Miller said, "and I've warned them about
it, but they just didn't seem to listen.
Maybe now they will.''
From Paflfl 1
AMIGOS. ••
kids are sincere. but a few are tagging
along ju!ll to be suspended," Goyette
added.
The last dress code change made by
district trustees was last July 28, when
they said sock!l were no longer neces·
sary and shirt tails might be worn out-
side the pants.
Students and parents are expected to
alle.nd the next meeting of the board at
8 p.m., Jan. 19, U the board room of
district offices, 10331 Stanford Ave., Gar -
den Grove.
Los Am igos students also have plan·
ne d an interdistrict rally this Saturday
in a park al Hezard Avenue and New -
hope Street in Santa Ana .
"We're not opposed to all dress codes ."
King explained . "When heallh and safety
re asons are involved, the school should
ste p in."
Hal Butler, Los Amigos principal. add·
ed his commen ts: "I understand th e
phi lo§Ophy an d the motive. causing some
of the. st ud ents to take this action. How-
ever. the act of br eaking tht' rule ·whil e
\Yaiting for public support to influence a
speci fic board pollcy i! detrimental lo
!he ideals they hold."'
Most of the suapended st udents were
expected back in school to d a y ~ith
fresh hair cuts bul .:t numb er had vow·
ed they would not trim their locks.
Freeway
Arguments
Pondere.d
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 ""' Dlllf PllM ll•tf
The City Council may write the ferm1I
arguments against thf two anti-free way
initiatives scheduled for electlen In
Newport Beach Ma rch 9.
Io what 111ay be a showdown af epinlon
on the l'On troversial Pacific Coast Free·
'>''<iY. the cou ncil Jan. 2:> will vote on
whel her or not it ~·ill oppose the
measur es proposed by lhe Citizens
Coordina1ing Co mmittee,
Oluncilman Carl Kymla Mondlly night
said he will aulhor a formal argument
for submission lo the collncil al its
next meeting in two week!.
Jan. 25 is the deadline for filing
arguments ·and the council has the
prerogative to file the official statement
on either side of the ls.sue.
The council dee.Jared it wlll allow the
CCC, sponsors of the measures, to write
the. argumen ts in fav or 11f tbe pro-
positicins.
If !he council declines to formally
adopt the opposing argument. it can
authorize one or more. individual coun-
cilmen to file the offic ial negative report.
One argument each pro and con are
formally distributed lo Yoters by the
city clerk's office. ·
Schedule for balloting are CCC prQ..
positions that would rescind the existing
agreement for a portion of the route
of the coastal freeway through the city
and a charter amend ment that would
require referendums before. any future
routes can be adopted.
Discussion of the issue P.fonday night
included a needling exchange between
Kymla, a freeway proponent, and Vice
~1ayor •lo~·ard Rogers, a leading aup·
porter of the Jll<lVement lo k i l I the
superhighway.
Rogers pres!ed ror the councl1 to
authori ze son1cone to write the argument
while Kymla insisted the matter be
brought to a vote lo determ ine if the
council wished to oppose the Initia tives
as a body.
"If a majori1y reels this referendum
Is wrong." Kymla said, "then the
legislative body, itself, should argue, not
just its mem bers."
Rogers maintained, "The c • u n c 11
should not take a council acli&n, .if
an individual feels !ltrongly, let him
write an argument."
From Pqe 1
RESIDENTS. ••
break considering the fact lhat the 11
and 50 cent -per -unit fee contain! no
,·acancy factor.
Ray \l.'allace, CMCWD executive man-
ager, disagrees .
He says the mult iple-unit property
owners ha ve been geUing Uieir waler
cheaper than the indivldu"al homeowner
a 11 a long.
"They fi re being service<\ by nne meter
and getting their water at a bulk rate
si nce it is not individually metered ,"
says WalJace.
"We think it is equitable," he adds.
Wallace al.so contradicted the concept
t11at a vacancy factor should be con-
sidered in making the blankel payment.
"The wa ter is there and al'aila ble
for their units, all or them ," hr explains.
indicating lhal if there ::irf' 1·acancies
there will be sli~htly less water used.
\Vallace added that the trl'.'nd ln
building i! toward multiple unit!l and
away from single family homes, the
trad itional CMCWD rate base.
He said most other surrounrlini;: agen.
cies alrearly have marle such a rate
adjustmrnl.
MEASURE FOR TREASURE
One factor overlooked by customers in buying carpeting is the
measuring for yardage.
All of our Salesmen know how to measure and figure exact
yardage, often providing our customers substantial . savings • Jn
: ardage alone.
Also, with the tremendous installation experience our salesmen
have (each previously was an expert installer far us ), we are able
lo forsee any potential problem.
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through
our store. We have a gigantic selection, and the measuring will be
ACCURATE!
p·~i:·,1 ~, ~ r1 , ~. -~ iJ l~t~ "'1 I J'.-
,,j I j . ~--· .....:_ .. · •c-.:;, -=-
_ l ~.-;;: -~--•.
-:: ~~~.
ALDEN'S
.--.. -.-,.-•• -.. -0-.. -•• -,--. CARPETS e DRAPES
MTIN C.il •• ,
ALOIN'S
111 ""' .. ,,... 1663 ·Placentia Ave.
1U1-4 ~!:':.!: c.m. COSTA MISA
........ 646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 Stt., 9:30 to S
<
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Saddlehaek •
Today's n..I
N.Y.
voe. "'· No, 10, 2 SECTtoNS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1971 TEN CENTS
Nixon Acts to Fight Inflation, Create Jobs
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of ftlt DIHY 1'1111 Stiff
In an effort to "cool off" inflation
and create jobs for lhe unemployed and
for youth entering the labor force,
President Nixon Mond ay announced the
first major changes in depreciation pro-
visions of the tax law sinCe 1962.
The moves will reduce business tax
payments by $2.6 billion in the current
calendar year and continue the reduc-
tions to a maximum of about $4 billion
In 1976, after which the process will
be gradually reversed.
Designed to step up permissible tax
write-offs for depreciable c a p i t a I
equipment, the changes permit the
Internal Revenue Service to accept
depreciation bas~d on a ''life" not more
than 20 percent shorter nor W percent
larger than under present guidelines,
established in 1962.
Jn .addition, a full year's depreci.alion
may be claimed for assets placed in
service in the first half of a year,
and one-half year's depreciation for those
acquired in the second half. This alone
c-OUld double the write-off in some in-
stances.
"The name of the game is jobs,"
Undersecret.ary of the Treasury Charis
E. Walker told Western White House
correspondents at a special briefing Mon-
day. "Anything that promotes in-
vestments stimulates jobs and this wi ll
help put people hack to wor~."
The briefing was scheduled at 12 :30
p.m., an hour and a half later than
usual. It coincided with the. closing of
the New York Stock Exchange.
Depreciation reform bas a long history
of bipartisan support, said Walker, and
has been under intensive study by a
Presidential task force on business
economy appointed in September 1969.
Walker flew to San Clemente to rinalize
the Presidential announcement "This is
a big step l9ward a full employment
economy," he told newsmen.
He emphasized that the moves con-
stitute a lax deferral , rather than a
lax cut, "moving back in time " the
period when the taxes will have to
be paid.
He cited as an example a small
businessman who set up and equipped
an office at a cost of $8,000.
Under the 1962 depreciation guidelines,
the equipment would have a IO.year
"life," at the end of which it would
be fully depreciated.
The n e w provisions would permit
speeding up its depr~iation to eight
years. or, if preferred, extending it to
12 years,
Under the old rul e, if the equipment
were put into operation in June, the
first-year write off would be $320. Under
the new rule, which wou ld give a full
year's credit, the write-off would be
!800.
"This is significant." said Walker, "in
view of the billions -0f dollars in capital
equipment in business and indwtry
throughout the country.
''It also will help agriculture, which
involves large capital investments. In
fact, even hogs are capital equipment
-they are machines for producing little
hogs, and have a three-year life," he
sai.d.
Although the moves will result in an
Immediate loss of tax revenue to the
government, Walker explained, this will
be recovered in tlme.
For example, the owner of the $1,000
worth of -Office equipment who toot ad-
vantage of the opportunity to depreciaie
it fuliy in eight years, would, trum
then on, have to pay full tax on Illa
income without any further wrile-oU ii
the equipment conhaucd in use.
Furthermore. it Is expected that
liberalization of deprtciaUon regulations
will stimu1ate the pace -Of spending on
new plant and equipment, thus creating
jobs and, in the long run, increasing
FederaJ t.a:r: collections.
Impact of the tax move, which ls
retroactive to J an. I, should be im-
mediate, Walker concluded.
Reagan: No Tax Hike,
tlAll-Y I'll-OT SIHI "llel9
INSPECTING DETERIORATED DRAINS IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
County Supervisor Caspers, Ch.mber President Curtiss
County Studies Solution
For Capo Drain Pip e
Dangerous deteriorated drain pipe
through Capistrano Beach palisades'
Pines (Bluff ) Park will not be repl aced
lo the flood control project scheduled
to begin Wednesday, but it could be
removed by a speci al authorization action
by the Orange County superviso~.
·New 5th District Supervisor Ronald
Caspers visited the park Friday and
IS studying means to eliminate the
biUtrd.
Jim Williams, Orange County planning
eilgineer, said new drains could be in-
stalled before next winter's rains if the
board of supervisors moves quickly to
1lve special authorization for preliminary
ep.gineering studies for the project.
"If the engineering is done by the
•
Weather
Better keep your raincoat on ror
the 'not couple days. The outlook
for Wednesday is for cloudy
wulher and showers, with ~mp
erahares mired in the middle
l (ijli<s.
INSIDE TODA l.'
TM Suprtme Court ho! 1uled
..._that toelfare paymniu ma~ be
'"withheld from recipient& w~o
'riftue visit.s by C01tlood '1Dork.-
tr1. Sec atory, Page .f.. .. ~.. . ,_ ...
·-~ "". , °"""" IS <1111•rl ,, --. --. :.-. ............ ,,
.... ,..... 1•11 ,t ......... 14 . ~ u ~.;::n... ~--t
....
•••
' "
-" MIJllflll ,. ... , 11
NatllM4 '"'" ...... _._ .
Ir .............. II ..,. , .. ,,
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,.......... 11
11M-'-" It .. ..,.,., . ....,.., .._ ,,., .
W.rloll N...n "1
July budget hearings and the project
is .approved in t he budget, we could
award a contract immediately, and the
construction could be done in the fall,''
said Williams.
Jack Snipes, president of th e
Capistrano Bay Parks and Recreation
District board, said he will ask his
board tonight to request the special
authorization by the supervisors.
The Gapi..strano Beach Chamber of
Commerce Board sent a letter to the
supervisors last week asking that the
park drains be added to the current
piilisades drain project.
However, Williams said the extension
of the project could only be accomplished
if another projed were cancelled,
because funds have all been allocated.
Flood waters from Harbor Estates and
a major portion of the palisades draining
Into Calle Fortuna will be channeled
by the new drain system and. dumped
into the park,
The chamber's request cited erosion
threat, dangerous drain pipes·and sheer
cltfls of the perk u grounds for im-
mediate action by the supervilon.
C.W.ty engt-.. said ·the park aru
was not Included in the project becall8t
at the time tbt engineering was done.
the park bad not been awarded to the
public by Superior Court .. uon.
Quee~n Elizabeth . Set_,
For ·visit to Turkey
LONDON (AP) -Queen Elizabeth
II b expected in •fall Turkey soon.
A Bucldngham Palace spok:eaman said
Sunday President Cevdet Suoay of
Turkey invited her when he made a
st.ate visit to BrlUtln In November 1967
and commented: "It l!I usually the
custom for 1l11te visit.! to be exchanged.''
"
Welfare Cuthacl(s
Mcintire
Seeks Okay
For Rally
Dr. Carl Mcintire,~ ~ from a rally
in Phoenix, was due in San Clemente.
late t.-Oday to fight for city permlsslon
to hold another in this city.
The radio evangelist from New Jersey,
was scheduled to arrive in San Diego
Ulis morning, He plans, sources iiaid,
to travel upcoast for a battle in city
hall.
Dr. Mcinti re, who organized the huge
march in Washington D.C. late last year
in support of the war in Vi etnam, had
sought to launch a series of 54 hometov.•n
marches for the same purpose, using
San Clemente as the starting point.
But city councilmen last week denied
permission for the fiery conservative
ministe r to c-0n~uct a rally with sound
equipment at Old Plaza Park.
But the parade around stree ts near
the park apparently still has -Official
city permission, granted by Police Chief
Clifford Murray according to city policy.
Dr. !l.lcln tlre denounced the council
action in a statemen t made last Friday
In the nalion's capital.
Local supporters of the rally late last
week began preparing for a push to
revive the issue before councilmen when
they meet again next we ek.
The rally and march had been schedul.
ed for ,Jan. 30 at 2 p.m.
Dr. Mcintire had said that if hill
rfforts prove fruitless in San Clemente
he would :;eek a place out.side the city
for the event
F ormel" Top Cop
Of Army Faces
13 U.S. Charges
WASHINGTON (UPI) -ReUred Maj ,
Gen. cart C. Turner, the Army's former
top policeman and also former chief
of U.S. marshals wu indicted today
on charges of unlawfully obtaining
flrearmJ and of federal tax evasion.
Turner,. fl&, wu lndk:ted by a federal
grand jury in Richmond, Va., Attorney
Gen. John N. Mitchell annbunced.
Turner, who now lives at' Springfield,
Va .. in Washington's lllburbl, was in-
dicted on 13 COW1ta.
Five counts charged him w I t h
unlawfully IOliciting gttta of"4D Ore.arms
from the Orlcago Polfoe Depattment ·
and , mlsrepre:tenUoe that they ·were for
government use.
He WU !acauted of evadJnc $16,S'19
ln,lederil'laooille•IU ~ -Tunroil-•.:lreY-....., u 11e8rlllp Jn Oc1ober, t•, "by lienale IUl>-
c:ommlttee on ~'Kc lubs !or
,.rvlcomon on milJluy lioia 'm varlOllS porta of the world. ,.,..
During his leltlmoo', 'l\\rn,,o lo I d of
purchulng 516 conlilcated•illhdguna •nd
other llte1nns from the <:'IJCM• ud Konsas City, Mo., polloe ~
lie said at the Ume lbfre ftl. till.
undcralmldlna that he Jntorided U...mm·
for his personal uae.
Fire A.id Set Up
Pen.dleton Victinis Ge t Supplies
The Red Cross. Marine Corps and
others have begun a program to help
279 Navy medical corpsmen whose
belongings were destroyed last week in
a , barrllclll I~.• which bollb' ·lnJUfed
1Jx men.
M1rlne ii111aiJs ot camp Pendleton
said ..,.t·al the corpsmen billeted in
the aging barracks near the Camp
Pendleton Naval Hospital acaped only
with the clolbes they were wearing.
Many others were away, from the
building when tbt costJy fire erupt~.
The six injured men were reported
recovering from burns, cuts and smoke
inhalation suffered in the dinner-hour
blaze Thursda;y night.
Special government pay has been
issued, and the Red Cross has granttd
$65 to each man for purchase of health
and comfort items, plus civilian clothing,
The Pendleton Post exchange will r~
main open after normal heurs to·'li1Ut
men with odd ti)illl \o WI' ..,...
artictea. ~
The Red Cross alao hal &Iv.en an
emergency issue or shavl.og and other
personal artieles to the fire victims.
Formal claims for personal effects
lost in the fires will be handled by
appropriate base agencies ne:r:t week,
spokesmen said.
A dollar amount to the loss in the
fire has not been given.
A boiler explosi-0n is the apparent
cause of the fire , officials said.
Attempt Fails to Recall
Capistrano Mayor Forster
By PAMELA HALLAN
OI IM Dt llY .. llltf S!t lt
The recall actl-0n against San Juan
Capistra no Mayor Tony Forster is dead.
Don Routt, spokesman for the Com-
mittee for Good Government, announced
the eleventh hour decisinn Monday prior
to the City C-Ouncil meeting.
Petitions were to be fli ed with the
city clerk today in order to ca\J a
special election.
Routt refused to say how many
signature! had been collected. He did
say, however, that the committee wou1d
be "destroying lhe many page! of
signatures collected with only the signer
and the carrier having knowledge -0f
their contents."
Routt said the decision to call -0ff
the recall came about because of a
marked improvement in city govern-
ment, in both atUtude and economy.
''The entire council appears to have
undergone a complete soul searching
pe riod during these past few weeks,
which bas produced a good working
atmosphere within and outside the coun-
cil chambers," said Routt.
''This chan1e to a better attitude haJ
been the main objective sought by
citizen! lncludlna: the council members
themselves."
Routt aald very little •bout ~ form•I
charges of malfeasance in office. TJle
recall actJon had charged tbe mayor
with lanoring the chain et: comrhand,
Capo Bay Promotion
'.f alk ~t for CofC
· Mayor Wallar' Ev.w .'fr, '~--Sir\ CJ~1':-.ri!I ~t· <ll• -,o( CaRislrino 8'y area• , lniii'eoia '!'ed-
neoi!ay at CaPjairulo . ileacll ~ber
of Coriunfrce ••DerJil.~. .
Fkans fill -est l!">Jeds oo ·wlllfh -led ellor!a of :the chamben ot
the Cap\itrano 'Bay area may be pn>
4uctln. ' 'l'be. w~ .. noon lunch -.,.
at i'do and p.r.'1 Cale la· San Juan
~ .... ' ii ,tho lint under the
p...ia.acy ol "Vaughn Curtlli, lmtalled
In December. It Is public.
~ ..
· RECALL0 PlllLIS
Mayar Tony. Fonter •
UIUl'plna the rlgbt of 1noU>er. councilman
to cUt the city'• vot41 at a league
of cities meeting, and lllowtng an illegal
land ..,. on his mother'a ~ty. He
abo '!U . Dayed for alleaedly picltin&
llaU181rts with fellow councUmen.
"We arei sltilfitd· that ""tbelre ctia~
~ !Jei.qe1~,:· satd .~tt.-'"~e
Ila\• b!OO,l/""llh,cha111Cf of .. ·~ catl\. •IJ#llre ~ wmanl, -aj \>;o(
U)e. ~t·lctlon.'• . I , "
r0nitr,• Who WU preterft I t. the p~ ~ -;::,_ .... tho! lhe llrW111A> . , ..... ~ char.., mar have been• a ,...ii, al
-~· Roull did not ' dli-
't"oriter added, regarding tbo tlllid chaa•. tho! a land ..... pennll> --ilouil>l for the opanil<ln qt a ~
liable Oll •bla -·a P'Ol)ertJ. br'tlle
otoblo m-er. He aid the --bad tiloolbt tbOtt waa a colmnarclal
1lable in the •IJ'icultural :zone.
~· ' '
----.... -,.... -
Due
Work Force
Proposed
By Governor.
s,lCIW!EliTo <UPI\ -Gov. llmakl
a-,.. JlflF *1d kt a ne-utimme ....
of·thHlale addrul today aweeptni
reductlooa tn· well are and MedH::al · u
an alternatlv1 to another tu incruJe..
He described the two controverslal
programs as "cancer eating at our
yjtaJs."
The Republican g o v e r n o r recom-
mended, among other things, removing
able·bodied welfare recipients from
public assistance rolls and turning them
into a "public work force" for &overo-
ment projects.
He sugge!ted limiting Medi-Cal health
services to the poor to the level of.
benefits provided by private prepaid
health tnsurance plans.
Reagan -battling a nu bug -alse
made these broad proposals in a 4,0CJO.
word address ·prepared for delivery ta
a joint session of the Legislature :
-A statewide election to determine
whether Californians want to extend the
18-year-old vole to state and local elec-
tions. The U.S. Supreme Court recenUy
ruled 18-year-<1lds could vote in federal
elections.
-Moving the Callfornia primary from
June to September to ''shorten the game
by half." He said this "would aave
a lot o[ wear and tear on candidates
and, I suspect, on the public, too."
-The "judicious, serui:ible phase-out''
of teacher tenure. He said "the original
and legiUmat.e !'!:a.sons for tenure no
longer exist" and it should be rej>laced
by "a system of merit pay which pro-
vides real ince.nUvq for quality teach-
ing."
-Pilot testa in selected districts to
determine feasibility of 1 ''voucher plan''
for financing educaUon. Under lhlJ, the
state would pay a set «lllount to · each
cltild to attend the scMol of bis cboiC.. ~Tuition for state colleges. There
already is taltl-0n at the umverlity iof
CalUomi•.
-Requiring ''recruUonat aubdivilaaa ..
to include "strong envlroNnenlal u well
as englneering considerations."
-Making the tUUng of a law en-
forcement officer wbUe on duty fif'it..
degree murder, and lhas punishable by
death in tho gu chamber.
3 Students Win ..
Broadcast Prize
--""'--~<lb..--
1
I
~--.-.... -
% DAILY PI LOT SC
State Di·ghlights
Reagan Outlines Key Points
SACRAMENTO fUPt ) -Ezc:trpt! Crom Gov. Ronald Reagan 's 1tat!-Of.
th@-slate message to the Legislature;
SCHOOL FINANCE -·· .. , The various ronnulas for school subvention.a
have outlived their usefulness to school dl1ltld.s and mwt be simplified."
TEACl lER TENURE -"The origi nal and leg itimate reasons for tenure
no longer exist. Tenure has become a haven for the incompetent teache r. It
should be alte red to include a s.vste1n of merit pay which provides real in-
centives for qual1ly teaching."
TUITION -•·\Ve face son1e unresolved problems in higher educa tion.
For one thing. ~·it hthe University (of Cal.ifornia ) charging tuition 'a n 1mhul-
ance exl.!!ts so long as the slate colleges do not."
EDUCATION FEES -"Nonresident fees for out-of-state and foreign
students should be reviev.·ed . It is hard to justify subsidizing these students
when it grows increasingly difficul t ro prov ide an tducation for our own resi·
dents.··
SOLID "'ASTE -''I am suggesting one state agency should be given
the nuthorit y to coordinate. encourage and assist local and regional entities
to plan for and regulate solid V.'aste disposal systems and sites."
COASTAL PROTECTION -"The preservation and protection of Cali·
fomia's coast resources must surely r.ank amon gou rhighest envi ronment-
al priorities."
CRIME -"The kil ling of a law enforcement office r while on duty
should be flrst·degree murder .and it should be a felony ro specificall y ad-
vocate killing or injuring law enforcement off icers."
WELFARE -"\\'hile \~1e assist the tntly needy who have no~'here el se
to turn, we. must also insisl that able-bodied adult rec ipients work and meet
their own repsonsibilities."
ME Df-CAL -"During this session we will present for your considera·
lion a plan to limit our health care services to the poo r so they will he co m·
parable with the health bene fits provided by the. vari ous prepared hea lth in-
surance plans covering nlos t of our citizens."
BUDGET -"We are at the point where this slate can no longe r sustain
its operatlons on the revenue it now takes fro m th'e peo ple. Therefore. we are
confronted by a choice. We can reform government -reduce the cost nf
services. parlicularly in v.'eifare and mcdi-cal. or v.•e can increa se taxes. J
will submit a budget which can be balanced wilhou! an increase in taxes."
VOTE -"Now that the Congress and th e U.S. Supreme Court have
given the l8-year--0lds the vole in federal elections. J certainly think we should
take those steps necessary to let the citizens of California determine whether
that shall be extended t.o state and local el ections."
Evicted Capo Families
Win Council Reprieve
San Juan Capistrano families facing
eviction from 12 condemned dwe!lings
were given e short reprieve by th e
Ci ty Council h1onday.
The city agreed to postpone a decision
on the eviction untll hearing all sides
of the issue at a spe cial administrative
hearing next Monday.
An appeal to the city council had
been made by the property owner, r.trs.
Lillian Za englein of Pasadena , who ex-
Niguel Seeking
Additional Funds
For Recreation
A $12,000 county appropriation for ad-
ditional recreational improvements is
sought by members ol the Niguel
Homeowners and Commu nity Associa·
lion.
At a general mee ting of the associatio n
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Crown Valle y
Elementary School. residenls will be ask-
ed to approve a reques t to the Orange
County Board of Superviso rs for alloca-
tion or the amount from County Service
Area I\o. 3 tax money for lhe second
phase of the Laguna Niguel recreation
program.
I n i t i a I improvement, implemented
under a joint powers agreement bet v.•een
the school dis~rict and the county,
benefited the Niguel Little League \Vhen
ful!y developed in fl ve to six )'ea rs.
the Improvement will provide \\\'O
baseball diamonds, a football fic.ld. two
ligh ted tenni s court s and a field house.
pressed concern about the v.·elfare of
lhe fam ilies housed there.
She stressed that she would abide
by the council's d<'cision but hoped that
the city could ma ke arrangements lo
relocat e the families.
.~1rs. Zaeng!ein had rented the property
to local rancher William Reid until Dec.
31. He in turn rented the dwellings
to the Mexican-American families.
City Attorney James Okaza ki suggested
that the la w may indicate that the
council will have no choice but to evict
the residenLS or the condemned shanties
unl ess Mrs. Zaenglein can prove thal
there was an error in the findings of the
Department of Bullding a11d Safety.
Mayor Tony Forster said in his opinion
Mrs. Zaenglein \\'as appealing for time
until so mething could be done to rel ocate
the tenants.
Henry Orthman
Funeral Held
\Veekend fu neral services \vere con-
ducted in Si1n Clemente, fnr Henry P.
Orthma n. a former South Coast residenl
\\'ho died late last week in Costa t.lc.sa
Mr. Orthman. v.·ho had live d with his
son. Ralph. of 152 ,\!_ Escalones. also
leaves a daughter, ~!rs Ru th He imb ign er
of Tacoma . Wash .
Other survivors include two brothers,
Fred and Kar l Orthman of Kansas,
eight grandchildr en and four great-
grandchi!dren.
Services were held <1l Sheffer t-.lortuarv
in San Clemente \Yith shipment tO
(;reeley, Colo., for burial in Lin o Gro\'c
Cemetery.
Nixon Set
For College
Appearance
BY RICHARD P. NA LL
ot th• c.u, I'll•• s1.u
President Nixon will end his San
Clt'.'mcnte sojourn Thursday morning and
sv.•ing by the University of Nebrask11
to address a convocation of students
and faculty.
The afternoon address in the university
cot!seum ..,,,ill help celebrate the school
beginning its second hu ndred years or
ex istence.
Aides said the Nebraska stop en route
to \Vashington, D. C. will also give
the nation's numb er one football fan
a chance to congratulate the university's
Cornhuskers football team for the 1970
season. The team was Big Eight champ,
won the Orange Bew! and was ranked
number one in the nation by Associated
Press.
The Lincoln, Neb. address will be Ni:t·
un·s fir st to a campus aud ience since
he faced a vocal minori ty of heckl ers
at Kansas State Uni versit y last summer.
The visit idea o ri gin al ed
\Vi!h Agriculture Secretary CI Hford Har-
din. He resigned as chancellor of the
university to join the cabinet. .
It will be the first time a President
has visited the University of Nebraska
campus. .
As his nine-day wor k vacation drew
toward a close, the President f\1onday
condemned as "morall y wrong" the
bombing attacks on Soviet facilities in the
U.S.
This came amid threats by the Jewish
Defense League to continue assaults to
\Vin better treatment for Jews in Russia .
r.la ny Jewish leaders have expressed
outrage at the bombings.
The President's actions to rejuvennte
the economy by giving commerce and
industry better tax and depreciation
breaks meanwhil e came under fire fro1n
the AFJ....CIO and some Democrats.
College Board
Won't Pay Tab
For Candidates
Candidates for the three openings oc-
currin g this year on the Saddleback Com·
munity College Board of trustees will
have to pay their own way if they want
a blurb on themselves "in the County
Registrar of \1oters' summary of qualifi-
calions booklet.
After Dr. Fred H. Bremer, su perinten-
dent. told trustees Monday night "lt is
legal for the coJlege to pay th e expense of
the quali fications summary for all can-
didates." Board presi dent Hans Vogel
said ... It may be legal, but It isn't
mora l."
The bonrd voted not to pick up !he
~fiOO fee for candidates \\•hich the educa-
l.ion code says is a legal election ex pense
for a school distr ict. Vogel said the
hlurbs are campaign materials and
shn uld be paid for by the candidates.
The hnnrd adopted the Apri l 20 elect ion
date set by the County schools off ic!!,
The three Saddleb ack board members
\l'hose term~ expire this year are: John
B. Lund. clerk nf Laguna Beach: Alyn ri.1
Brannon. trustee fr om Santa Ana . and
r.1ichael T. C-Ollins, trustee from Lagu na
1-lllls.
The $600 ree for listing a candidate•s
riualiflcat ions in the official publi cation
is prorated after the number of candi-
dates fili ng for the election is determined .
and covers !he cost of printing all candi·
date's background.
Vogel !>aid the. unused share or each
candidate 's filing fee is returned.
The second phase, for v.•hich the new
allocation ls sflught. V.'ill consist of fen -
cing the recrea tional site from the school.
refinishing the tennis courts, installing
a sewer line to lhe field house and
in.stalling water line~ and drinking foun-
tains. Simple Majority Accepted
DAILY PILOT
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OltANO! COAST PUI LISH!NG COMPANY
Robert N. w,.4
Prn id1"1 er.d P11bl1ther
Jeck It C11rley
Yie. Pret~Oetll 1r.d G-.1l 11\•MOtr
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l hom11 A. M11rphin1
M-11'1"' E~llOr
ft ich1rd /'. Hill
lo\llh Onnoo Coun1v editor
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mlll11r-, d•!ln1t"1n•, llJJ ll'ltlllllly,
In Tustin Bond Election
Expecting a decision this mnnth from
the U.S. Supreme. Court on the simple
majority voter approva l of bond Issues,
Tu!tin Union High School trustees f\1on-
day night accepted a 51 percent yes
vote as being 11 success.
Board Presi dent Chesler G. Briner.
of Mission Viejo, said !he district wlll
proceed with sales of the $25.8 milUon
jn bonds authorized by the vote. ac-
cording to a review by the county of
the Nov. 3 election.
"These will not all be sold :il once.''
Briner said. "but wl\I be sold as needed
for construction. Formerly districts were
required t.o cbtain a two-thirds majority
on bond voles. but the Callfornla
Supreme Court ruled last year that a
simple ma jori ty would suffice. A similar
decision Is expected to rome from the
U.S. Supreme Court this month, Briner
said.
In other actions. the board tabled ac-
tion on the awardln11 of bid! ranging
from $47.000 to $114.000 for lns tallatlon
and servicing of an Intrusion •larm
system for all permanent district
buildings va lued at more than SI00.000.
The 1y1tem is be.Ing requtred h)' Ule
district's Insurance carrier. TNA . Inc .•
Jack S. Roper said. He i.!I 11ssi.!ltant
t1uperlnLendent, bu.slness se rvices.
Supt. Wll lillm Zogg asked trustees lo
delay 11cllon on the alarm system
bec ause the b[ds tha t were received
were too compl icated to dctcnnlne which
system wou ld best meet d I s t r t c I
•
specifications and ins u r an c e re-
quirements, Briner said.
Roper noted that the. bids were recelv·
ed last Friday and varied widely es
to the type of equipment offered -
from simple wiring methods to complex
electronic systems.
Trustees approved several equipment
bids for University High School including
a $23,196 total award to four rompanles
to supply instructional electronics equip-
ment. much of which will be used by
the occ upational education program
course in electronics, Roper said.
Only four bids were received for th~
cars and two trucks needed et University
High. The low bids were $3, 13R each
for the cars and $2,829 each for the
trucks, Roper said.
Three firm:i shared a mld·year
purchase. award totalling $18.587 for
warehoused instructional supplies.
The third extension for the completion
date in the con\ract with Shirley Bros.
contractors w11s granted In a change
order approved by trustees. Briner sald
th e original rontract provided for a ctr·
lain amount or delay due lo weather
and strikes. The board has authorized
a delay in the completion date totalling
29 da ys, in cluding the 25 day utenslon
approved Monday ni ght.
The bo11 rd fliso 11pprove.d 11 resolution
!!Upporting the Orange County Depart-
n1ent of Education which the County
Grand Jury last month had !luggested
be atolished.
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Pl>GID By Chlr(eo I Yertt
Old Salt Creel~
Salt Creek beach or yesteryear is c aptured here on
canva s by Laguna Beach artist Joyce Cl ark, right.
She donated the painting a s a contribution to the
Save Sa lt Creek Fund. Mrs. Hele n \Vilcoxen drew
\Vin ning ticket for Hobie Alter. center. of Dana
Point. Mrs. \Vilcoxen's son , \Vil liam. a Laguna
Beach attorney, led the fight to insure public ac-
cess to the pitcuresque beach.
Witness Tells of Slaying
As U.S. Rests My Lai Case
Draft Limits
For 1971 Pool
May BeSanie
F'T. BENN ING , Ga. !UPI) -The
government resled iLS murder case
aga insl LL \Viltiam L. Calley J r. today
with t.estimony by a fellow soldi er that
Calley specif ically ordered him to fire
into two groups of women, children and
old men.
"The government rests, rinally," Capt.
Aubrey M. Daniel 111, the chief pro--
secutor, announced at mid.morning of
the 24th day of the Calley court-martial.
Paul D. Meadlo, 23, Terre Haute, Ind.,
was the final prosecution witness. He
sa id he stood barrel lo barrel with
Calley at f\1 y Lei on f.1arch 16, !968
and pumped automa tic fire into as many
as 140 Vietna me se civilians.
f\1eadlo lnsisted. as he had Monda y,
!hat altho ugh he was emotionally upset
al kill ing human belngs, he thought he
was doi ng right because of a briefing
the nig ht before by the company com-
mande r to destroy everything in My
Lai . Also , after a first group of 35
lo 40 civilians were killed, he said the
ocmmander passed by and seemed to
condone it by not commenting.
Charlie Company Commander Capt.
Ernest L. f\1edina is und er In vestigation or charges or overall respons ibi lity for
the f\1y Lai killings bu t has not been
comm itted lo court-martial.
Under re -direct examination by Daniel,
y:hich the defense charged v.·as an al-
lempt lo destroy the. ~redibility of its
ov.•n witness, Meadlo said he had been
afraid that even the babies in mothers'
arms at My Lai would be booby-trapped
to kill him and his squad members.
Calley, 27, is Bccused of the
premeditated mu rder of 102 Vietnsmese
civilians during the infantry sweep
through My Lai.
Another veteran of the operatio n, Sgt.
Ch11rles E. Hutto of Tallulah . La .. ls
standing court.mart ial at Fl. McPherson,
Dana Resident
Gets Scliool Job
A Dana Point v.·oman has bee11 named
an extended-day instructor ol arl by
the Saddleback College Board of trustees.
J\11ss Lyn n Gamwell, former ly of the
Pitzer College art faculty. Claremont,
v.·as hired on an "if needed " basis.
Su ch appointme nts b<'come effective if
en rollment warrant! the addit ion of an
instructor. a spokesman said
f.1 iss Gamwe!I holds a master's riegree
in fine arts from Claremont Cnl!ege,
and a bachelor's degree from the
Uni\'ersily of Illinois.
in Atlanta for intent lo mu rd<'r civilians
during the attack.
A witnes.!J at the Hutto trial today
said that Capt. Medina 's supe rior officer
at My La i. Col. Frank Barker, observed
the operation from a helicopter and
commented : "Things are. goi ng fine,
smooth, according lO plan ."
Barker was killed in a helicopter ac-
cident about tllree months after the
My Lai sweep.
Ethel Merritt
Funeral Set
On Wednesday
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Wed-
nesday in Pacific Vie w Chapel for Mrs.
Eth el Gertrude Merritt. 484D Via Cadiz,
Laguna Hiils, who died Sunda y al South
Coast Community Hospital. She was 73.
Mrs. Merritt was well known in
Southern California as an interior
decorator. She started her ca reer in
the decorating field in Beverly Hills
in HH6 under th e name of Ethel G.
Pealx>dy.
She was a member of the America n
Institute of Dewrators, South Coast
Alumni Club of Pi Beta Phi. Laguna
Hills Art Association, Aliso Club and
Colo rado Club.
She is survived by he r husband,
Wendell C. Merritt of the home; thr ee
sons, Dr. Homer D. Peabody Jr. of
Sa o Diego. Wendell C. Merritt Jr. and
Kennet h Merritt , both of Texa s; two
da ug hters. Mrs. Trudy Rogers of Balboa
and Merry Ann Merritt of Houston ;
three sisters. Mrs. Julia Lee Davidson
of Laguna Hills; t>.1 rs. Florence Lindsay
of Denver and Mrs. Belly J ane Hewell
of Nixon, Tex.; and by six grandchi!dren
and two great grandchildren.
A native of Wichita , Kan .. f\.frs. Me rrill
allenried the Univ<'rsity of Colorado. She
h<.id lh•ed in Cal iforni a for 41 years
and served for eight years as house
niolher for Pi Bela Phi :;{lrorilv and
the University of Southern Califo rnia.
Visitation is scheduled from 9 a.m.
to nnon Wedne~day al Pacific View
ChaJ)<'l. The Re\'. Henry Gerard ~·ill
offi c1a!e at !he 1 p m. service. follciwed
by burtal at. Pacific View f\iemorial
Park.
f\l e1nber~ of the fAmily sui;zge!t th::it
mcmn rial con!nbu tions in lieu of fl owers
be mnd<' to Rrese-Srealy Medical
Research F'nundat;an, Sa n Diego.
WAS HlNGTON (AP) -Despite predlc·
lions of lowered draft calls this year,
Selective Service Director Curlis W. Tarr
says lottery number 195 ma y prove lo be
the upper limit again.
Tarr says the 197 1 draft pool, e<>nsisting
of men just lu med 19, will be smaller
than the 1970 pool which consisted or melt
aged 19 to 26. Thus, he said, although
fewer men might be called, it will take
higher draft numbe rs to get the man-
po~·er.
Tarr said he doesn't know how many
draftees will be need ed in 1971 but cited
published reports that Secretary of De-
fense Me lvin R. Laird estimated the to-
tal would fall between 80,000 and 120,000.
The draft director discusse d the 197L
outlook in a conversation Monday follov.·-
ing a news conferen ce in which he an·
nou nced administration plans to see k an
end to college student deferments this
year. He also said the admin istration
wants to start a uniform national call.
allowing the same lottery nu mber to be
called eve rywhere . instead of Lhe presl:'nt
system of geographical quot.a~. Both
moves would require congressional a~
prov al.
Terr also comm ented on his testimony,
just released by a House subcommhter,
that some colleges were refusing draft
board requests for information on stu-
dents,
He said he. th inks nothing will be done
about it. pointin,1? nut that the sc hool!!
are not legally required to provide the
information.
Shortly af ter Tarr spo ke, the Defensl!
Department announc ed a February draft
call of 17,000, the same as J anuary.
Holiday Run yan
Last Rites Held
Holiday Runyan. a Hun!1ngton Reach
horse 1ra1nC'r. \\'BS _ill\rn h1~ unusual
first nan1c when he. was bo1n on the
hrst day of January. 8f> .vears ago
At 11 a.m .. today. ~Ir. Runyan "'as
buri<'d 1n f'n1rha\'en Ccmc1rrv v.·1th
graveside sC'rvlccs lie died S:1t11rciay
i\lr. Runyan l1v"d ~9 ycnr:; 1n Hun-
tington Be11ch. His la st address was
618 Adams Are
Survi vor.~ 1nctur1 c his \\1fr. Marv <1 nd
1~·0 dau ghters. J.1rs .Jc<1n .J11n1cs of ll un-
tington Beac!1 anrl r-.1 r.~. Belty F'n~b1e
of Laguna Reach
MEASURE FOR TREASURE
One factor overlooked by customers in buying carpeting is the
measuring for yordage.
All of our Solesmen know how to measure and figure exact
• yardage, often providing our customers savings substantial .
in
yardage alone.
Also, with the tremendous installation experience our salesmen
have (each previously was an expert installer for us ), we are oble
to forsee any potential problem.
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through
our store. We have a gigantic selection, and the measuring will be
ACCURATE!
ALDEN'S
.-.. -.-,.-.-... -0-.. -.-.. --. CARPETS e DRAPES
fUITIN C.tl ••.
ALDIN'1 1663 p HD""' cums lacentla Ave.
'I DlAPlllD COST• ME
11J14 1m ... '""" c.rrt. '"" SA ........ 646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurt., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -S.t., 9:30 to 5
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l a I ! Beaeh
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vor. ""· NO. 10, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY ·12, 197f
ows e
~ ,
~Crowd Law Backed
•
Laguna Businessmen Support Mo ve
DAILY PILOT Slefl' .......
SIDELINED BY SIDEBURNS
Los Amigos Hlgh'1 King
Los Amigos
Issue Hairy;
58 Suspended
111 TllRllY COVILi:&
.. 1119 o.ltr ...........
A coatroveray ever bU' and other
dress code features at Lot knipl High
Sr..hool, Fountain Valley, c~~ to a head
Monday.
Fifty-eight boys were suspended for
wearing long hair, sideburns or beards.
The suspensicns followed wamiogs is-
sued last Friday to nearly 200 boys with
lo'ng locks. By Monday, most had hair·
Cills.
"The cnly way tD change the dttn
code is by action of the board of tru,s..
tees ," Fred Goyette, aa.sistant principal,
explained.
One student leader, Terry King, 17,
was sent home for his king sideburrus.
He was adamant about removing them.
"I'm ready to shave them off if the
board will take some action toward re-
pealing the dress code," he: said.
King is a membe1 of the school news·
paper staff and the yearbook staff_ He
says most of the youth are sincere in
their battle again st the Garden Grove
Unified School District dress code, and
are not trying to make trouble.
"The school is here to teach, oot to
tell us how we're supposed to Jook," he
emphasized.
Prior to the suspemions, student.a held
a rally Friday t.c protest the dress code.
Goyette said the rally was peaceful and
brnke up quie:tly.
hJ can't condemn what the kids have
done to this point,'' Goyette explained.
''But l am disappointed by the number
of kids who didn't abide by what we re·
quested this morning (hair cuts). Today
they're challenging the rules I have to
uphold. We've taken a stand we feel we
bave to take."
"l am Irked because so many or the
kids are sincere, btit a few are tagging
alOng: just to be 1U!pended," Gcyette
added.
By PATRICK BOYLE
ot llM "'IY Pn.t l hfl
A proposed emergency ordinance to
CO!Jlrol ·large gatherings of people in
Laguna Beach bas been given the official
11upport of the Downtown Business
As!OCialion (OBA).
After bearing a detailed report of
the Christmas Happening from city coun-
cilman Ed Lorr at this morning's
:meeting,. tbe OBA voted unanimously
to back Lorr's propooed Jaw. Lorr said
such an ordinance would be modeled
after Uie existing Orange County ordi-
nance controlling such events and called
for ill! enactment immediately to control
the rumored "Easter Happening."
"Any gathering," OBA president Bill
Marriner said, "even or our own people,
If they are oot properly oontrolled, can
be med u a front for burning and
loottni our town."
Lorr gave the OBA members a com·
plete history of the behind·the.sce11es at·
rangements made by the city prior and
during the three-day event at Sycamore
Hills when several thousand youths
descended on Laguna Beach.
The councilman said the first signs
or any possible troubl e in relation to
the "Drug Fest" came a few -days prior
to the council 's Dec. 16 meeting. He
said a group of hlppies attacked the
lifeguards on the Ma.In Beach and from
that point on, the police department
began working 12 hour shifts.
He said the city had been made aware
of the even t through advertising and
began making preparations ror sealing
off the city if the "Happening'' was
held on the Main Beach , Kn owing
members of the Students for a
Democratic Society (SOS) were in town.
Lorr said, the council decided to follow
a policy of doing nothing to provoke
Parking Structure Bid
Q~~twn,ed by Lagunan
Ji ,,_i le ertd a four·t ... t parking
~ On tM existing city parking
Jot • C G!enneyre Street today was
challtnged In a seven.point questionnaire
addressed to the Laguna Beach City
Couocil by resident David Munro.
Accusing the council and Planning
CommWiOn of approaching the parking
problem "backwards," Munro said, "I
fear you dO this to create a climate
of acceptablllty when nD 1t.1cb ac·
ceptabilty exllts.,.
The main question, he noted. ls whether
er not the city should !pend a milliDn
dollm for such a structure.
He cited as more acceptable the
Citizens' Tcwn Planning As:sociaUon 's
downtown plan, which envisicned malls
and parks, with all low service structures
and higher buildings placed at the base
of the bills.
The parking structure proposal, says
Munro, is an attempt to "bail out"
·downtown businessmen facing inevitable
dispersal of the central business district
concept.
While no firm declsion to proceed
with the parking structure has been
made by the city, the Planning Com-
mission , after studying a num ber of
propGSals, advised the council that a
four-level facility on the Glenneyre lot
seemed most appropriate. The council
then instructed the city manager and
staff to investliate alternatives for fin-
ancing such a structure.
In a two-page memorandum addressed
to the CUy Ccuncil, Munro. a retired
professor, poses seven q u est ions
regarding the proposed structure:
-Can any city, large or small, reverse
the trend toward dJspersaJ of Its central
bushrest: dl.!trict !
-How far will a wOman lhopper carry
an electrical aPlffi_anct, a 10-pound bag
of fruit, etc.'! How far can a senior
citizen or a woman with little children
walk? How much environ men ta I
unpleasantness will shoppers put up
with?
-If Olis first million dollars is In· ·
sufficient to bail out downtown
businessmen, ls the City Co u n c i I
prepared to subsidize them further by
tax concessions, er direct rent subsidies?
-If your parking structure ii.self
becomes a white elephant, unable to
pay off lls bonded Indebtedness by park-
ing fees, what will you de> with It then?
-Won't any kind Df above-ground park-
ing structure In the central business
district be an eye-sore ? Aren't parking
structures amDng low buildings always
eye-sores?
-Assuming that your parking structure
works .. .that downtown hums with peo·
pie and cars again, what will be the
effect of this planned further traff ic
congestion in this one narrow basin?
-Are you correctly advised as l'l
lawsuits or other adverse actions by
business interests elsewhere in the city
v.·hi ch have provided and paid for their
own parking facilities, often on orders
of the Building Department?
Munro concludes his observations by
noting , "This whole quest ioo arisell
because or a slated lack of parking
spaces on such busy streets as foregt
Avenue. yet you always have al hand
a means of opening up these spaces
to any desired extent.
"You simply raise the parking meter
rates unlil the desired openness is at·
tained . You build nothi ng, you do not
r isk any of the taxpayers' mcney, you
Jay the added charge directly UpGn the
user of the spa~."
To ~cool Ott' lnll.ation
President Eases Tax Laws
By BARBARA KREIBJCR
Of ... OMf l'lltl .,...
In an effort. to "cool cU" lnflatJon
and create jobs for the unemployed and
for youth e:ntering t b t labor force,·
l'r1oldent NI""° -y announctd the
tint major changes 1n deprtdatloa ,...
vlskml of the tu law since 1962.
The ~ will redoce 00..lneal Uix
Pl)'Tt'ltDb: by $16 bllUon ill 1hfl current
calendar year and continue tht: reduc·
tlons to a maximum of about ft bdlion
In 1978, after whl~h the proct:l8 will
be ·rradually reverwed.
Deolgned le mp up pmnlulble tu
wrlte<iffs for depreciable ca p J ta 1
lquJpment, tne chances permit tt>e
lhternal ~vMue Service to accept
'tlepreciaUon baled en a 1'life" not more
then lJl percent ahor1er nor lJl -t
lar1er than wider ......,t suJdellna,
atablbhed In 11'2.
In addition, a full ~ear'• deprec:laU<ln
I
\
may be claimed for aa,,,eta placed In
tervioe in the rm half of a year,
and cme-ball yur~ depreclallon for !hose
•cqutred fn the leeond half. Th.ls alone
cGUld double the write.off Jn tome in· -''Thi name or the came Is jobs,"
Vndenecretary of the. Treuury Charts
E. Wal.br tok! Western White House
comapondtnta at a special brle(Jng Men--
day. "Aoyt!>Jnc that promote• ln-
vestmenb otlmulata jobo and lhla will
help put people back lo -le."
The brtefin& Wll scheduled It 12: 3D
p.m.l an boor and a hall later Ut.n
U1UJ Jt coiadded with tht: clolin1 of
the New York S&od: EJ.chan,e.
ileprfdalJon r<form har I tong hiltory
ot btputlan IUJl!Ol'l., aald Wl!,lker, ind
har --'bllenjlva 1 ll!\ldY '111 '• Pmldentlal .... ~ lo.ce "' -_...., appointed 1n September ltll.
Walker new to San Clmlente to firiaUze
the Prt.tdtnUal announeemf.flt H1'biJ ll
a big step lclward a full employment
economy," he told newsmen.
He emphasized that the mov!I con.
stitute a tu deferral, rather than 1.
tax cut, "movin1 back Jn tlme" the
period when tbe' tua: wUl have to
be paid.
He cited as an example· a sman
bwlnessman who let up and ·equipped
an office at a coat of 18,000.
Under the 1962 depreciation guideline:!,
the equlpm..,t would beve 1 IG-year
"life," at the end or which It would
be f\llly depreciated.
The n e w proviltona would permit lf>"'!dln& up 111 depredation lo eight
yean, !", il p<efemd, utendln1 It lo
12,..,... ..... _: '
Under 11ie; old~ If the equipment
...,. pit •ln\o • · u.n Iii June, the
lint.ytar write off wour.!'be.1!31. uiider ~ ne1f rule, •fdch would lf"N· a full
yeD'• ....r1~ the . wrlte·ofl would be -
)
or encourage a confrontation.
When the organizers of the event decid-
ed to hold it at Sycamore Hills instead
of the Ma.in Beach, Lorr said the cit.y
C<Juld nol evict them from the Great
Lakes Devel1>pment Company-owned pro-
perty. Since there were not any "No
Trespassing" signs pc>sted en the 450-
acre site, the festival organizers were
not illegally occupying the land.
Lorr said the city police department
came under the Cilntrol of City Manager
Larry Rose when Police Chief Kenneth
Huck became ill. He said Rose. made
the decision to close the roads leading
into tmvn on Christmas Day when the
city streets became congested.
"When a community is faced with
this type of phenomencn." Lorr said.
"there is nothing to go look at in a
book to so lve the problem. It must
be solved as it is evolving.
"We did this in the best way possible
with the legal avenues we have and
we did it without a confrontation.''
Lorr uld the city council met
Christmas Day to decide what course
of action to take and decided to follow
the non-confrcntation policy already
established.
A meeting was held Dec. 26 between
City Manager Rose and about 20 leaden
ol the "Ha-ning" ~mmw\ity. Ttie
ltallera e.m:iiild food,~, nnltallon
facttlttn-'lnd naiedltal auppUes and Rose
&old -them DO( l«r aald. Re.· met qain
with five cf the leaders that evening,
and the five agreed to terminate the
event by the evening of Dec. 'll.
In return for the agreement to end
the festival, Rose allowed three vehicles
carrying food and water to pass through
the pciliee barricade to help the five
representatives assert their leadership
over the group, Lorr said.
The council met again on Dec. 'l:1
and made the decision to ctear the site
by the morning cf Dec. 28.
"We knew we cbuldn't stretch cur
resources any flµ1her ," Lorr said, ooting
the lack of aleep by the pciliCt!men could
soon cause shorter tempers, aiding the
possibility of A confrontation.
The ordinance proposed by Lorr would
require organizers of any future rock
festivals or other large gatherings to
meet several regulations... A license would
be required 60 days in adva11ce and
would only be granted after a public
hearing. The organizers would have to
provide medical facilities. a security
force, food ccncessions and would have
to deposit 11. $5.000 bond with the city
for clean-up and damages caused tD
resident.! by the participanta:.
Former Top Cop
Of Army Faces
13 U.S. Ch arges
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Retired Maj.
Gen. Carl C. Turner, the Army's former
tGp policeman and also former chief
of U.S. marshabi wu indicted today
on charges of unlawfully obtaining
rlrearms and or federal tax evasion,
Turne:r, 58, waa indicted by a federal
grand jury in Richmond, Va., Attorney
Gen. John N. Mitchell announced , '
Turner, whc now 1ives at Springfield,
Va., in Washingtcn'1 suburbs, waa in-
dicted en 13 counts.
Five counts charged him w I t h
unlawfully soliciting gifts of 423 firearms
from the Chicago Police Department
and miarepretenting that they were lot
gcvemment use.
Re wu accuaed of evading $15,879
Jn fe:deral Income tax payments.
Turner wu a Uy witneu at hearln11
In Qclober, 19!11, by I Senal<t IUb-
commftlet oii op<raUGnl of ctuba for
1ervicemen on military bales· ln vutaua
parllJ er the world.
DUrlng hll te1Umon", 1'lmer t D I d of
purdwlng 5311 conllac:ated bancfluna and
other firearms from tbe CbiQCo 111nd
Kansu CUy, Mo., police departments.
lfe said 1t the time there wai full
understanding that he intended the anM
for hit penonal ....
Oflklalt of l>oth police departmonta
denied under oath that there was any
suc;b understandina. The chalrm1n o(
lhe lnvt1Ugaung aubcommltte<, Sen.
Abribim Rlbl<Off ([).Conn.), on Oct.
2:1, 11111, accuted 'l'llrner of perjlrf and ••be! the JUltice Department lo In·
v61Ugata.
,.t
are
DAILY PILOT Sl11f l'!Mt.
RECALL FIZZLES
Mayor Tony Forster
Capo Recall ·
Mo ve 'Dead'
Again st Mayor
• 111 PAMEl\A HAI.LAii. ., .. _,... .............
The recall actloo againtt 'Sn Juan
Capistrano Mayor Tony Forst.eris dead.
DDn Routt, spcikesman for the Com-
mittee for Good Gcvernment, announeed
the eleventh hour decision Monday prior
to the City Council meeting.
Petitions were to be filed wilh the
city clerk today in order to call a
special election .
Routt refused to say hew many
signatures bad been collected. He dld
say, however, that the committee would
be "destroying the many pages of
signature! cDllected with only the signer
and the carrier having knowledge (If
their contents."
Routt said the decision tD call off
the recall came about because of a
marked improvement In city govern.
ment. in both attitude and economy.
"The entire council appears tD have
undergone a complete soul searching
per iod during these past few weeks,
which has produ ced a good working
atmosphere within and outside the COU.O·
cil chambers," sai d Routt.
"This change lo a better attitude ha~
been the main objective sought by
citizens including the council members
themselves."
Routt said very little about the formal
charges of mal feasance in office:. The
recall action had charged the mayor
with ignor:ing lhe chain of command,
usurping lhe right of another councilman
to cast the city 's vote at a league
of cities meeting. and allowing an illegal
land use on bis mother's property. He
also was flayed for allegedly picldng
fistfights with fellow councilmen,
"We are satisfied that these charges
are being ccrrected," said Routt. '"l'here
have been enough changes cf a slgnlf~
cant nature to warrant dismissal of
the recall action."
Forster, wbc was present at the pre.s
conference, qgeated that tbe. finrt twD
charges may bave been a ruu.Jt of
misunderstanding. Routt did not df•
agree.
Forster added, regarding the third
charge, that a land UM permit had
been S()Ught fDr the operation cf a private
stable on. his mother's property by the
•table manager, He said the committee
had thought there wa1 a commercial
1table in the agricultural zone.
T wo Tee ns Hurt ..
In Cany oIJ Fall
A pair cf SllveriMSo. Canyon teenagers
who survived i 1lckeolng," fSO.foot plW'lle
down a ravine in their 'P.91'\t·Clr SUJlday
nrwit are lmprovJnc loday.. ·
Qiapman General ~Ital offlclall
.. Id David Burk, H. 11 1n la~ C011dltloo,
whHe hlo buddy, Ml"' Mc:Cormki, 16, r. In oatbfactoey c'""1ltlon.
They were Injured •hen Burk'• sports
car allthertd out of·eontrol on a SUverado
Canyon Rold curve· not far from tbt.1r
homes •
A following motorltt PW the: accident,
le•dlng to a Cl)I for help via dllltne'
l>Jnd radio that"brought 'a 24-man rtlCUe
i.am tri brfnr'lhem up the1'nlllly clllllon
_ wall to llfety. . . .. .
Today'• F l•al
N. Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
Work Force
Proposed
By Governor
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ren.aid
Reagan proposed In a no-noftlenSe atate--
ol·lbe-state addre:s& tt>day sweeping
reductions in welfare and Medi-Cal u
an alternative to another tax Increase,
He described the twD controversl.al
programs as ';cancer eatioa: at our
v.itals."
The Republican g o v e: r n o r recom-
mended, among other things, removing
able-bodied welfare recipients from
public assistance rolls and turning them
into a "public work fDrce'' for 1overn·
ment projects.
He auggested limiting Medi-Cal health
services to the: poor to the level of
benefits provided by private prepaid
health insurance plans.
Reagan -battling a flu bug -also
made these broad proposals in a 4,000-
word address prepared for delivery to
a joint sessiDn of the Legislature:
-A statewide election to determine
whether Californians want to ertend the
18--year-old vote to state and local elec-
tions . The U.S. Supreme Ccurt ncenUy
ruled 18-year-olds could vcle in federal
elections. • ---
-Moving lbe California pr~ frora
June .. Sepletpbrr 1•-"-·.lllO-
by iJlr." He U!d .thll ..... -
a let of WW' and tear on candidatet
and, I suspec_it, on the puhlk, too."
-The "judiclow, sensible pbale-out ..
or teacher tenure. He said "the crtginat
and legitimate reasons for tenure: no
longer exist" and it ahculd be replaced
by "a system of merit pay which pro--
vides real incentives for quality teach--
Ing."
-Pilot tests In selected district! lo
determine: feasibility Df a "voucher plan''
fDr financing educati1>n. Under this, the
state would pay a set amount to each
child to attend the school of his cbcice.
-TunJon fDr state colleges. 'Ibere
already is tuition at the University or
CallfDrnia.
-Requiring "recreational subdivlsons''
to include "strong environmental as well
as e:ngineering considerations."
-Making the killing cf a law en-
forcement officer while on duty ftrSt-
degree murder, and thus punishable by
death in the gas chamber.
-P.iaking it a fel1>ny to adVOcate 1dlllng
or injuring law enforce:ment officen.
Also. increasing the $1,000 maximum
reward money the governor cao cffar
for information leading to the arrest
an~ conviction of persons iojuring
policemen.
Reagan ple:dged to p~sent t h e
legislature a balanced state budget early
next month and again rejected a tax
increa se, wb.lcb many Democrat.a say
is inevitable.
"A ta:r increase is inevitable cnly If
we refuse to accept readily available
alternaUvell," the govemDr said.
"We are Cilnfronted by a cbolee. We.
can reform gove:mment -reduct the
cost of ·services, particularly ln Welfare
and Med.I-Cal -or we can lncrqse
taxes. Tc c:booee the latter without n·
cislng the cancer esttng at our vitals
is to face tu increues year 1n and
year out for u long u we aba!l be
here. I intend to travel uotber course."
Oruge
Weatller
Better. keep your raincoat 1111 for
the nm couple day• The outlook
for Wednesday is for cloudy
weather and lhowera, with tern~
,.-alum mired. 1n the mkldle
IJIUea.
INSWE TODAY
Thi Supr,,.. Court 11o1 ...Z.d
that i,oelfort pavmcnu mar bf
wlthMld-trom rtcipknU WM
T"1/1t1c Wica bv out looa worJc...
er&. Sec atoru, Poot 4.
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2 DAIL V PILOT SC TuHda.)', J&nu.vy 12, 1971
State Highlights
Reqgan Outli nes K ey Points
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Excerpta from Gov. Ronald Reagan's 1lale-<ll·
the-&tate message to the Legislature:
SCHOOL FINANCE -''. .. The various formulas for school subventions
have outlived their usefuln~ss to school districts and muat be almpliiied."
TEACllER TENURE -"The original and legitimate reasons for tenure.
no longer exist. Tenure hes become a haven for the incompetent teacher. It
should be altered lo include a system of merit pay which provides real in-
centives for quality leaching." •
TUITION -"\Ve face some unresolved problems in higher education.
For one thing, \rit hthe University lof California) charging tuition an imbal-
ance exist..s so long as the stale colleges do not."
EDUCATION FEES -"Nonresident fees for outoCJf-slate and foreign
s1udents should be reviev.•ed . lt is hard to justify subsidlzing these stude nts
when it grows increasingly difficult to provide an education for our own resJ·
dents."'
SOLID WASTE -"f am suggesting one state agency should be ~iven
the authority lo coordinate , encourage and assist local and regiona l entities
ttl plan ror and regulate solid \Vaste disposal systems and sites .. ,
COASTAL PROTECTIO~ -··The preservation and protection of Ca li·
fomia·s coast resources must surely rank amon gou rhighest er.vironment·
al priorities."
CRIME -"The. killing of a law enforcement officer while on duty
should be first--degree murder ,and it should be a felony to specifically ·ad·
voe ate killing or injuring law enforcement officers."
WELFARE -"\Vhile we assist the truly needy who have nowhere else
to tum, we must also Insist that able-bodied adult recip ients work and meet
their own repsonsibllities.''
MEOl~AL -"During this session we will present for your considera·
tion a plan to limit our health care services to the poor so they will be com·
parable with the health benefits provided by the various prepared health in·
surance plans covering mosL of our citizens."
BUDGET -"We are at the point where this state can no longer suslain
its operations on the revenue it now ta kes from the people. Therefore, we are
confronted by a choice. We can reform government -reduce the cost of
servlces, particularly in welfare and medi-cal, or we can increase taxes. I
will submit a budget which can be balanced without an increase in taxes."
VOTE -"Now that the Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court have
given the IS.year-olds the vote in federal elections, I certainly think we should
take those steps necessary to let the citizens of California determine whether
that shall be extended to state and local elections."
Evicted Capo Families
Win Council Reprieve
San Juan Capistrano families facing
eviction irom 12 condemned dwellings
were given a short reprieve by the
City Council Monday.
The city agreed to postpone a decision
on the eviction until hearing all sides
of the issue at a special administrative
bearing next Monday.
An appeal to the city council had
been made by the property owner, Mrs.
Lillian Zaenglein of Pasadena, who ex-
Niguel Seeking
Additional Funds
For Recreation
A $12,000 county appropriation for ad·
ditional recreational improvements is
sought by members of the Niguel
Homeowners and Community Associa·
lion.
At a general meeti ng of the association
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Crown Valley
Elementary Scboo l, residents will be ask-
ed to approve a request to the Orange
County Board of Supervisors for alloca·
lion of the amount from County Service
Area No. 3 tax money for the second
phase of the Laguna Niguel re creation
program.
l a it i a 1 improvement, implemented
under a joint powers agreement betv;een
the school district and the count y,
benefited the Niguel Litlle League . When
fully developed in five to si:r( yea rs.
the improvement wil l provide l\l•n
baseball diamonds, a football field, two
lighted tennis courts and a field house.
pressed concern about the welfare or
the fan1 ilies housed there.
She stressed tha t she would abide
by the council's decision but hoped that
the city could make arrangements to
relocate the families.
Mrs. Zaenglein had rented the property
to local rancher \Villiam Reid until Dec.
31. He in turn rented the dwellings
to the 11exican·American families.
City Attorney James Okazaki suggested
lhat the law may indicale that the
council will have no choice but Lo evict
the residents of the condemned shanties
unless Mrs. Zaenglein can prove that
there was an error in the findings of the
Department of Building a111d Safety.
Mayor Tony Forster said in his opinion
Mrs . Zaenglein was appco!ing for time
until something could be done to rel ocate
the tenants.
Henry Orthman
Funeral Held
\Veekend [uneral services \\'ere con·
ducted in San Clemente, for Henry P.
Orthman. a former South Coast resident
v.·ho died late last week in Costa ~1esa .
J\olr . Orthman, who had lived with his
son, Ralph , of 152 \\'. Escalones, also
leaves a daughter, ~trs. Ruth lleimbigner
of Tacoma. v.·ash.
Other surVl\'Ors inrludc two brothers.
Fred and Karl Orthman of Kansas:
eight grandchildren and four great·
grandchildren .
f>ervices v.·ere held at Sheffer Mortuflrv
in San Clemente \\•ith shipment tO
Greeley, Colo., for burial in Linn Grove
Cemetery.
Nixon Set
For College
Appearance
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 1111 D11!1 l'llol Sitt/
President Nixon will end his San
Clemente sojour n Thursday morning and
swing by the University of Nebraska
to address a convocation of students
and faculty.
The afternoon address in the university
coliseum v.·ill help celebrate the school
beginning its seeond hundred years of
existence.
Aides said the l\1ebraska stop en route
to Wash1ngLOn, D. C. v:ill also give
the nation 's number one football fan
a chance to congratulate the univer!lity's
Cornhuskers football team for th e 197()
season. The team was Big Eight champ,
won th e Orange Bowl and was ranked
number one in the nation by Associated
Press.
The Lincoln, Neb. address wi lf'bc Nix·
on·s first to a campus audience since
he faced a vocal minority oi hecklers
at Kansas State University la st summer.
The visit idefl o rig ina ted
with Agriculture Secretary Clifford Har·
din . He resigned as chancellor of the
university to join the cabinet. .
It will be the first time a President
has visited the Unive rsity of Nebraska
campus.
As his nine-day work vacation drew
toward a close, the President Monda y
condemned as ''morally wrong" the
bombing attacks on Soviet facilities in the
U.S.
This came amid threats by the Jewish
Defense ~ague to continue assaults to
v;in better treatment for Jev.·s in Russia.
1'.1any Jewish leaders have expressed
outrage at the bombings.
The President's actions to rejuvenate
the economy by giving commerce and
industry better tax and depreciation
breaks meanwhile came under fire from
the AFL--CIO and some Democrats.
College Board
Won't Pay Tab
For Candidates
Candidates £or the three openings oc·
turttnl-1.his year on the Saddleback Com·
muniiy College Board of trustees will
have to pay their own way if they want
a blurb on themselves in the County
Registrar of Vo!ers' summary of quallfi·
cations booklet •
After Dr. Fred H. Bremer. supt>rlnten-
denl, to ld trustees Monday night "it is
legal for the college to pay lhe expense ot
the qua lifications summary for all can·
didates " Board president Hans Voge l
said, "It may be legal, but it isn't
n1ora1. ''
The board voted not to pick up the
S600 fee for candidates which the educa·
lion code says is a legal election expense
for a school district. Vogel said the
blurbs are campaign materials and
should be paid for by the candidates.
The board adopted the April 2Q election
da!c set by the County schools office.
The thrre Saddteback board member!;
\\·hose terms expire this year are· John
'R . Lund , clerk of Laguna Beach: Alyn ~I.
Brannon. trustee from Santa Ana, and
~1ichael T. Collins. trustee from Laguna
llills.
The $600 fee for listing a candidate's
riualifications in the official publication
i~ pror::ited after the number of candt·
dales filing for the election is determined,
and covers the cost of printing all cand1·
da1r·s background >
Vogel ~aid the unused share of each
candidate's filing lee is returned.
The second pha se. for which tbe new
allocation ls sought. wt!I consist of fe n-
cing the recrea\1on<il site from the school.
refinis hing 'the tennis cou rts. lnslal!ing
a sewer line to the field house and
installil'lg water lines and drinking foun·
tains. Simple Majority Accepted
DAILY PILOT
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M 1n19lng ltlltlf
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mlllt•ry d•UIMI~ 0.25 '""""'''"
In Tu stii1 Bond Election
Expecting a decision th is month from
the U.S. Supreme Court on the simple
majority voter approval of bond Issues.
Tustin Union High School trustees r..1 on·
<lay night accepted a 51 percent yes
vote as bei ng a success.
Board President Chesler G. Briner.
of ~fission Viejo, said the district will
proceed wilh sales of the $25.8 million
in bonds authorized by the vote . ac·
cording to a review by the count y or
the Nov. 3 election.
"These wlll not all be sold at once."
Briner said, "but will be sold BS needed
for construction. Formerly district.s were
required tn obtain a two-thirds majority
on bond votes, but the California
Supreme Court ruled last year that a
simple majority would suffice. A simllar
decision is expected to come from the
U.S. Supreme Court this month . Briner
said.
In other actions, the board tabled RC·
tion on the awarding of bids ranaing
from $47,000 to $114,000 for inst1ll11t ion
Bnd servicing of 1n Intrusion all!lrm
11ystem for all permanent di.strict
bu ildings valued at more than $100,000.
The !)'Stem It being required by the
diJlrict's lruurance carrier, INA. Inc.
Jack S. Roper saJd. He i!I assistant
superintendent. business ~rv\ces.
Supl WUHam Zogg asked trustet~ IJ1
delay action on the alann system
because the bids that were received
wt:rt too complicated tn determ ine which
systtm would best meet d I 1 t r I c t
specificalions and 1 n s u ra n c e re-
quiremen~. Briner said.
Roper noted that the bids were receiv·
ed last Friday and varied wldely a!I
ro the type of equipment offered -
from simple wiring methods to complex
electronic syslems.
Trustees approved several equipment
hids for University High School including
a $23.196 total award to four companies
lo su pply instructional electronics t:qulp-
ment, much of wblch will be used by
lhe occupational education program
course in electronics. Roper said.
Only fou r bids were received for thre.,
cars and two trucks needed at University
l~igh . The low bid-i were '3.138 each
for the cars and $2,829 each for the
trucks. Roper said.
Three firms shared • mid·year
purchase award totalling $18,587 for
warehoused instructional supplies.
The third extension for the completion
date in the contrtct with Shirley Bros.
contractors was granted In a change
order approved by trustees. Br iner said
th e orig inal contract provided for a cer·
lllin amount of delay due to weather
and strikes. The board has authorized
l!I delay in the com pletion date toto:tlllng
29 d11.ys, including the 25 day extension
approved fi1onday night.
The board also approved l!I resolution
supportiiig the Orange County Depart·
1nent of Education which lhe. County
(irand Jury last month had suggested
ht abolished.
1'1>91• l y Chtrln lh ·1rtt
Old Sult Creek
Salt Creek beach of yesteryear is captured here on
canvas by Laguna Beach artist J oyce Clark, r ight.
She donated the painting as a contribution to the
Save Salt Creek Fund. Mrs. I-Jelen Wilcoxen drew
\\1inning t icket for Hobie Alter, center. of U~na
Point. tvtrs. Wilcoxen's son, \.Villiam. a Laguna
Beach attorney, led t he figh t lo insure public ac--
cess to the pitcuresque beach .
Witness Tells of Slaying
'.A s U.S. Rest s My Lai Ca_se
F'T . BENNING, Ga . (UPI) -The
government rested its murder case
against LL \Villiam L. Calley Jr. today
with testimony by a fellow sold ier that
Calley specifically ordered him to fire
into two grou ps of women, children and
old men.
.. The government rest.s, finally," Capt.
Aubrey M. Daniel 11 1, the chief pro.
seculor, announced at mid.morning of
the 24th day of the Calley court·martial.
Paul D. Meadlo, 23, Terre Haute, Ind.,
was the final prosecution witness. He
said he stood barrel to barrel with
Calley at My Lai on March 16, 1968
and pumped automatic fire into as many
as 140 Vietnamese civilians.
Mead!o insisted, as he had Monday,
that although he was emotionally upset
.at kill ing human beings, he thought he
v.·as doing right because of a briefing
the night before by the company com·
mander to destroy everything in My
Lai. Also, after a firs t group of 35
to 40 civilians were killed , he said the
ocmmander passed by and seemed to
condone it by nol commenti ng.
Charlie Company Commander Capt.
Ernes t L. Medina is under investigation
of charges of overall responsibility for
the My Lai killings but has no! been
committed to court-mariial.
Under re-direct examination by Daniel,
which the defense charged was an .al·
tempt to destroy the credibility of iL~
own witness, Meadlo said he had been
afraid that even the babies jn mothers'
arms at My Lai would be booby·t rapped
to ki ll him and his squad members.
Calley. 27. is accused of t h e.
premeditated murder or 102 Vietnamese
civilians during the infantry sweep
through My Lai .
Another veteran of the operation . Sgt.
Charles E . Hutto 01 Tallulah, La., is
standing court-martial aL Ft. McPherson,
Dana R esident
Gets Scliool Job
A Dana Point woman has bee11 named
an extended-day instructor of art by
the Sadd!eback College Board of trus1ees,
~l iss Lynn Gamwell. formerly of the
Pitze r College art faculty, Claremont,
was hired on an "if needed " basis.
Such appointments become effective if
enrollment warrant.s the addition of :tn
instructor. a spo kesman said.
Miss Gamwell holds a master's degree
in fine arts fr om Claremont College,
and fl bachelor's degree from the
University <lf Illinois.
in Atlanta for intent to murder civilians
during the attack.
A witness at the Hutto trial today
said that Capt. J\1edina 's su perior officer
at My Lai, Cot. Frank Barker, observed
the operation from a helicopter and
commented : "Things are going fine,
,;mooth. according to plan."
Barker was killed in a helicopter ac·
cident about three months after the
My Lai sweep.
Ethel Merritt
Fu11eral Set
On Wednesday
Services will be held al I p.m. Wed-
nesday in Pacific View Chapel for Jl.lrs.
Ethel Gertrude J1,1erri!I, 4840 Via Cadiz,
Laguna Hills, who died Sunday at South
Coast Community llospital. She was 73.
Mrs. Merritt was \Yell known in
Sou thern California as an interior
deoora tor. She started her career in
the decorating field in Beverly Hills
in 1946 under the name of Ethel G.
Peabody.
She 11.·as a member of the: American
Institute of J)ecorator.<1, South Coast
Alumni Club of Pi Bela Phi. Laguna
Hills Art Association, Aliso Club and
Colorado Club.
She i!I survived by her husband,
V1lendell C. Merritt of rht home: three
sons. Dr. 11omer D. J>eabody Jr. of
San Diego. Wendell C. Merritt Jr, and
Kenneth Merritt. both of Texas; two
d<iughters, Mrs. Trudy Rog ers or Balboa
and J\1erry Ann Merrill of Houston ;
three sisters, Mrs. Julia Lee Davidson
nf Laguna Hills: Mrs. Florence Lindsay
of Denver and ~1rs. Betty Jane Hev,.eil
of Nixon. Tex .: and by six grandchildren
and two great grandchildren.
A native of Wichita. Kan., Mrs. f\1erritt
attended the University of Colorfldo. She
had lived in California for 41 years
and served for eight years as house
mother for Pi Bela Phi sorority and
the University of Southern California.
Visitation 1s scheduled from 9 a.m.
to noon \Vednesday at Pacific Vlew
Chapel. The Rev. Henry (:!'rard v.·ill
nffi riate at !he l p.m. service. follov.·ed
by burial at Pacific Vie\\' f..!emorial
Paik
J\fembe rs of the family suggest that
memorial contribul1ons in lieu of flo wers
be made to Reese-Stealy ~1ed1cal
llesearch F'oundatlon, San Diego.
Draft Limits
For 1971 Pool
May Be Same
\VASH INGTON (AP) -Despite predic·
lions of lowered draft <:alls this year,
Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tarr
says lottery number 195 may prove to be
the upper iimit again.
Tarr says the 197 1 draft pool. consisting
of men just turned 19, will be smaller
than the 1970 pool which consisted of men
age d 19 to 26. Thus, he said, although
fewer men might be called, it will take
higher draft numbers to get the man·
power.
Tarr said he doesn't know how many
draftees will be needed in 1971 but cited
published reports that Sec retary of De·
fense ~fe!vi n It Laird estimated the to-
tal would fall betw!'c.n 80.000 and 120,000.
The draft director clis"ussed the 1971
ou1look in a convers<1llon 1\·tonday follov.··
ing a news confe rence in which he an·
nounl:t'.d adrnini,strallon plflns to seek an
end to college student dcfern1ents this
year. He also said the adn1inistrat ion
wants to start a uniform nationa l cal!.
allowing the same lottery nu1nber to be
called everyv.·here. instead of the present
system of geographical quotas. Both
moves y,·ou!d require congressional flj)-
pro\'al.
Tarr also commented on hi s teslimony,
just released by a House subcomm!ltec,
tbat some CQJ!cges were refusing draft
boa.rd requests for information on slu·
dents.
He said he thinks nothing w11! be donl!!
about it, poinlln.11 out that the school!!
are not legally required to provide the
information.
Shortly afler Tarr spo ke. the Defense
Department announced a February draft
cal! of 17,000, the same as .J anuary.
Holiday Run yan
Last Rites He1d
Holiday Runyan , a Huntington Bearh
horse trainer, \\'a~ given his unusual
hrst name when he 1vas born on the
first day of January, 85 .vears ag11
At 11 am . today . J\1r Runyan was
buried ln Fairhaven Cen1etcrv ~·1th
graveside services He died Saturday
Mr. Runyan lived 49 years in Hun-
tington Beach. His last address V.'llS
618 Adams Ave_
Survivors include his '>l'ife. :\1ary and
1v.·o daughters, ~lr~ Jran James of Him·
fington Beach find Mrs. Re1ry Frisbie
of Lagunfl Bea ch
MEASURE FOR TREASURE
One factor overlooked by customers .
'" buying ca rpeting is the
measuring for yardage.
All of our Salesmen know how to measure and figu re exact .
often yardage,
yardage alone.
provid ing ou r customers substantial savings .
'"
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Also, with the tremendous installation experience our salesmen •
have (each previously was an expert installer for us ), we are able
to forsee any potential problem.
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through .
our store. We have a gigantic selection, and the measuring will be
ACCURATE!
\
~------~ IANlA ANA. 0U.N61
fUll lN C•,.,
ALDIN'S
llD Hill CAIP'll'S
1-ou.r1a1n
1 IJ74 '"' ... , ...... c.Rf. 1Ja..JJ44
ALDEN'S':.·
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Pla~entla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs.0 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sot., 9:30 to 5
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Today's Fln•I San Cle111en1e
Capis1ra~o EDITION N.Y. Steelu
voe. 1>4, NO. 10, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
Nixon
By BARBARA KREJBICH
01 l~t OtllY !"Ji.I 51111
In an etfort to "cool off'' inflation
and create jobs for the unemployed and
for youth entering t he labor force,
PrC!sidenl Nixon ~1onday announced the
first major changes in depreciation prD-
vi sions or the tax law since 1962.
The moves will reduce business tax
payments by $2.6 billion in the current
calendar year and continue the reduc·
tions lo a maximum of about $4 bill ion
in 1976 . after which the process will
be gradually reversed.
Designed to step up permissible Llx
write-offs for depreciable ca p i t a I
Acts to
equipment the changes permit the
1nteraal Revenue Service to accept
depreciation based on a ''life'' no t more
than 20 percent shorter no r 20 percent
larger than under present guidelines,
established in 1962.
In addition, a full year 's de preciation
may be claimed for assets placed in
service in t.he first halt of a year ,
and one-half year's depreciation for those
acquired in the second half. This alone
could double the write.off in some in·
stances.
"The name of the game is jobs,"
Undersecretary of the Treasury Charis
E. Walker told Western White House.
co rrespondents at a special briefing Mon-
OAILY l"ILOT Sti ff l'llct'9
INSPECTING DETERIORATED DRAINS IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
County Superviior Caspers, Ch1mbet President Curtiss
County Studies Solution
For Capo Drain Pipe
Dangerous dclcrioratcd drain pipe
through Cap istrano Beach palisade~·
Pines (Bluff ) Park will not be replaced
in the flood control project scheduled
to begin Wednesday, but it could be
removed by a special aulhorizalion action
by !he Orange Coun ty supervisors.
New 5th Dislr1ct Supervisor Ronald
Caspers visited the park f'riday and
is study ing means to eliminate the
hazard.
Jim Williams. Orange County planning
engineer. said new drains could be in--
stalled before next winter's rains if lhe
board of supervisors moves quickly to
give special authori zation for preliminary
engineering .studies for the project.
"lf the engineering is done by the
Oruge
1''eaCher
Better keep your raincoat on for
the next couple days. The outlook
.1or WedneSday is for cloudy
lfeather and showers, with temp-
eratures inlred tn the middle
• fifties.
INSIDE TODAY
The Supreme Court hilS r uUd
thot ioctfarc payments -mau be
, withheld from recipients who
• re/M$.e vilfts by COJeLoad work-
ers. See .JI.Ory, Page 4.
Ctl,..,.,... I MtYIM j f 11
' Ci.Rl111 U• I Mlllv•I jrwoh I f ci...11• 1t-n 1111111ot•l Nl'ft ,.,,
C9'1lo H Of-•-c.vnty t <.............. lJ Srlvi. .....,,. lt
'"'"' ltftlal ' ....... 1 .. 1, , •• 1,.rlll "'"' I llOCM Mlfttm 1 .. 11 •11i.rllllNMfll 11 T ... ...blt11 11
"JM~ 1 .. 11 'nl••t.n n ~ If Wt11!11r I I ,
1,.1111 LllMltr• ti W.-'1 -.W. lJ·ll
IMM-1-.. LlcMlll f Wtrllll ....... ...,
•
7· '
July budget hearings And the project
is approved In I he budget, we cot1ld
award a contra ct immediately, and the
constru ction could be done in the fall ,"
said Williams.
Jack Snipes, president of t h e
Capistrano Ray Parks and Recreation
District board, said he will ask his
board tonigh t to request the special
authorization by th e supervisors.
The Capistrano Beach Chamber or
Commerce Boar& sent a letter to the
supervisors last week asking that the
park drain! be lidded to the current
palisades drain project.
However, Williams said the extension
of the proj ect could only be accomplished
if another project were cancelled,
because funds tlave all been alloca ted.
Flood waters from Harbor Estates and
a major portion of the paUsades draining
into Calle Fortun• will be channeled
by the new drain system and dumped
into the park.
The chamber's request cited erosion
threat, dangerous dr.ain pipes and sheer
cliffs of the park a.s ground!! for Im·
med iate action by the supervisors.
County engineers said lhe park area
was not included in the project bccaU!e
at the time the engineering wa s done,
the park had not been awarded to I.he
public by Superior C.OW-t action.
Queen Elizabeth Set
For Visit to Turkey
LONDON (AP) -Queen El~abeth
JI is expected to visit Turkey soon.
A Buckingham Palace .Kpokt~man said
Sunday President Cevdet Sunay O(
Turkey Invited her when he made a
&tale visit to Brllain ln November 1987
and commented: "It Is usu11lly tha
custom ror atate Visits to be exchanged.''
r
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 197f TEN CENTS
Fight Inflation, Create Jobs
day. "Anything that promotes in-
\"estmenlS sti mulates jobs and this will
hel p put people back to work."
The briefing was scheduled at 12:30
p.m., an hour a n d a half later than
usual. It coincided with the closing of
the New Yor k Stoc k Exchange.
Depreciation reform has a long history
of bipartisan support, said Walker, an11
has bee• under intensive study by a
Pres identi al task lorct on business
economy appointed in September 1969.
\V alker flew lo San Clemente to finalize
the Presidential announctment "This is
a big step toward a full employment
economy," he told newsmen .
He emphasized that the moves con-
stltute a tu: deferral, rather than a
t.ax cut, \''moving back in time" the
period when the taxes will have to
be paid.
He cited as an example a small
bUiineS!man who set up and equipped
an office at a co.st of $8,000.
Under the 1962 depreciation guideline!!,
the equipment would have a . 10-year
"life," at the end of which it would
be fully depreciated.
The n e w provisions would permit
speeding up ils depreciatian to eight
years, or, if preferred, extending it to
12 years.
Under the old rule. if the equipment
were put into operation in June, the
first-year write off would be $320. Undu
the ne w ru le, which would give a full
year's credit, the write-off would be
$800.
"This is significan t," said Walker, ''in
view of the billions of dollars in capital
equipment in business and industry
throughoul the country.
"It also wi[] help agriculture, wh ich
involves la rge capita l investments. In
fact . even hogs are ca pital equipment
-they are machines tor pro4ucing li~tle
hogs, and have a three-year life," he
said.
Althoug h the moves will result in an
immed iate loss of tax revenue to the
goverr.ment, Walke{ explained, this will
be recovered In time.
For example, the owner or the 18,000
worth of office equipment who took ad·
vantage of the opportunity to depreciate
It fully in eight years, would, from
then on, have to pay full Lax on his
income without any further write-off if
the equipment continued in u.se.
Furthermore. it is expected that
liberalliation of depreciation regulations
will stimulate the pace of 1ipendi.ng on
new plant and equipment, Uius creattng
jobs and, in the long run, increasinl
Federal tax collections.
Impact of the tax move, which Is
retroactive to Jan. 1, should be im-
mediate, Walker concluded.
Reagan: No Tax Hike,
Welfare Cutbacl{s
Mcintire
Seeks Okay
For Rally
.
•0r. Carl Mc:IDl.h;. fi'e.h from • ·;-any
In Pboentr. ws· due in San Oernente
late today to fight for city permi.ukm
to hold another in thi.s city.
The radio ev~eliat from New Jersey,
was scheduled to arrive in San Diego
this morning. He plaM, sources aaid,
to travel uproast for a battle in city
hatl .
Dr. Mcintire, who organized the huge
march in Washington D.C. late la:st year
in support of the war in Vietnam, had
sought to launch a series of 54 hometown
marches for the same purpose, using
San Clemente as the starting poin t.
But city coun cilmen lut week denied
permission for the fiery conservative
n1inister to conduct a rally with sound
equipment at Old Plate Park.
But the parade around streets near
the park apparently still has official
city pe rmission, granted by Police Chief
Clifford Murray according to ci ty policy.
Dr. ro.tclntire denounced the coun cil
action in a state111ent made last Friday
in the nation 's capita l.
Local supporters of the rally late last
week began preparing for a push to
revive the issue before councilmen when
the.v meet again next week.
Tiie rall y and march had :.,een scheduJ.
cd for Jan. 30 at 2 p.rn.
Dr. Mcintire had said that If his
efforts prove fruitless in San Clemente
he would seek a place outside the city
for the event.
Former Top Cop
Of Army Faces
13 U.S. Charg~
WASHINGTON (UPI) ~Retired Maj.
Gen. earl C. Turner,· the Army's fomw:r
top polJceman and abo· former chief
of U.S. marshals was bxticted today
on charges of unlawfully obtaining
firearma and of federal tax evasion.
Turner, 58, was lndicted by a federal
grand jury tn Richmond, Va., Attorney
Gen. John N. MJtchell announced.
Turner, who now lives at· Springfield,
Va., in Washington's tuburbt, WU lil-
dlcted Oil 13 counts.
Five counts charged him w I th
unlawfully soliciting &ifts ()( US Ott.arms
from the Otlcago Polloo: Department
and misrepruenUng that they were for
government use.
He was ACCllled ()( evading tlS,871
In federal Income tu l'OY1D<!lll.
Turner WU a key wttne.; at. hurinf:a
In Odober, 1111, bl' a Senile 111\.
coounlttee Cf!. tipel"IUone al clubl for
lttVlcenJen on mlliWY buoa '1 ·~ parts of the world.
During hia tettimon", TUmer t o Id' of
purchaaln1 5S6 confiscated handcunl •nd
other tJrearms from tht Chicago and
Kansas City, M<J., poUce deptrtmentl.
J{e aaid at the time there w11 ruu
understanding that he intended the lf1I\.'
for his .ptrtontl ue.
..
Fire Aid Set Up
Pendwton Victinis Get Supplies
The Red Cross, Marine Corps and
others have begun a program to help
279 Navy mecHcal corpsmen whose
belongings were destroyed last week in
a barracks fire which badly injured
1ix men.
, ,Marino, olflclllll at c;..,. ""9odleton
iold moot ul the corpamen bille~ lo
the qlilt barracks near the Camp
Pendleton Naval Hospital escaped only
with the clothes they wer.e wearing.
Maqy other• were away from the
bulldb:lg when the costly fire erupted.
The six injured men we~ reported
recovering from burns, cuts and smoke
inhalation suffered in the dinner·hour
blaze Thunday night.
Special government pay has been
issued , and the Red Cross has gran~ed
$65 · to each man for purchase of health
and comfort items, plus civilian clothing.
The Pendle ton Post exchange wilt re-
main open after normal hours to assiat
men with pdd shilt:s to buy nt;ed'4
articles. • • .
The Red ~ss alao ha! givfn an
emergency issue of 11having and other
personal articles to the fire victims.
Formal claims for personal effects
lost in the fires will be handled by
appropriate base agencies next week,
spokesmen sa id.
A dollar amount to the loss in the
fire has not been given.
A boiler explosion i:s the apparent
cause of the fire, officials .said.
Attempt Fails to Recall
Capistrano Mayor Forster
By PAMELA HALLAN
01 llM Otll'I' 'l'-1 Stiff
The recall action agaimt San J uan
Capist rano Mayor Tony Forster is dead.
Don Routt, spokesman for the Com-
mittee tor Good Government, anno unced
the eleventh hour decision Monday prior
to the City Council meeting.
Petitions were to be filed with the
city clerk today in ord er to call a
special election.
Routt refused to say how many
signatures had been collected. He did
.say, however, that the committee would
be "de1troying the many pages of
signatures ct11Jected with onJy the signer
and the carrier bavtn1 knowledge of
their content!."
Routt said the decision to call off
the recall came about because of a
marked improvement in city 1overn-
ment, in both attitude and economy.
"The entire council appears to nave
undergene a complete soul searching
period during these put few weeks,
which has produced a 1ood working
atmosphere within and outside the coun·
cl! chambers," said Routt.
'""1.la chan1e to a better aUJtude~bas
been the main abjecilve !Ollpt by
citizens tncludin& the council members
them1elves."
Routt said very little about the formal
charges of malfeuance in oftlce,. '.J'he
recall action hid char1ed the mayor
With 1&norin1 the chain of command,
Capo Bay Promotion
Talk Set for CofC
Mf)'OI'" W•lttr Evans Jr. of San
Cletnellte will opeak oo P<fJlllOtloo or
C.pta!t"'° 8"y orea tni.mta Wecl-
l)Uday at C.piltrao Beacb Olamber of~ 1-al meeting.
Evam will sugeat projects on wblch
CXIO!<linated el!Or1a of the chimbers of
the" Capistrano Bly aru may be Pro-
ducilve.
The W edneaday noon lunch meeting
al Pete and Clara's cate in San Juan
C.platrano la the f~1t under the
preakl<ncy of v aughn Curtlol, inatalled
ln Docembtr. It "' public.
RECALL FIZZLIS·
~yor Tony Forster
usurpillg the right of another.councilman
to cast the clty'1 vote at a leque
of cities meeting, and allowing an lPecal
land use on his mother's prope1;ty. He
also was fltqieci for :tllegedly pickin1
fistfights with fellow councilmea.
"We are aaUafled th1t these cha~
ar. being corrected," said Roaµ. ·~
have been enouah changes fOr· a .aJgn~
cant nature. io warrant 1dl•m'-'I of
the rteall action, tt • , I •
Fonter,:who wai present it .~~ conr ........ llllU<Sted that the flnt t\jo
<ball!' --.... •beeti a !Miit of
rnl••n\lersta!ldlnC. Routt dJ<I llOt ~ agr ...
Forster 1dded, rqardjng lhe lhlrd.
charge; that a land use pennl.t bid
bot:n sought for .the operallon of aiprivfite
stable on hi.s mother's property b1 ·!be
i t.Able manager. He 1ald tbe• committee
had tho\igbt there wa• • cOllUllUtlal
stable iJl tbe agricultural .....
1
Due
Work Force
Proposed
-By Gove1·nor
SACRAMENTO !UPI) -Gov. l\ooald
Reagan proposed in a n<>-nc:nense atate-
of-the-:stale address today sweeptnc
reductions In welfare and Medi-cal u
an alternative to another tax incru.se.
He described the two controversial
programs as "cancer eating at our
vJtals."
The Republican go v e r n o r recom-
mended, among other things, removln1
able-bodied welfare recipients from
public assistance rolls and turning them
into a "public work force" for 1overn·
ment projects.
He suggested Limiting Medi-cal health
services to the poor to the level of
benefits provided by private prepaid
health insurance plans.
Reagan -battling a flu bug -atse
made these broad proposals Jn a 4,000-
word address prepared for delivery to
a Joint session of the Legislature:
-A :statew ide election to determine
whether Californians want to e:r:tend the
18-year-old vote to state and local elec-
tions. The U.S. Supreme Court re«ntly
ruled IS.year-olds could vote in federal
elections.
-Moving the California primary from
June lo September to "shorten the game
by half." He said this "would save
a lot of wear and tear on candidates
and , I suspect, on Ole public, too."
-The "judiciou.!l, sensible phase-out'1
of teacher tenure. He said "the original
and legitimate reasons for tenure no
looger exist" and it should be replaced
by "a system of merit pay which. pro.
vides real incentives for quality teach-
ing."
-Pilot tests In selected diatr.lets to
determine feasibility of a "voucher plan'1
for finan cing education. Under tbls, the
state would pay a set amount to each
child to attend lhe achoo! of his choice.
-Tuition for slate collegea. There
already is tultion at the Univerllty Of
California.
-Requiring ''recreational subdiYlsonl ..
to include "strong envinmmenlal u well
as engineerin11 comlderaUons."
-Making the tllUitg of a law en.
forcement ~ficer while on duty rJllt..
degree murder, and thus punl&hable by
dealb in Ult 111 chamber.
3 Students Win
Broadcast Prize
'!1ll'ff Son, Clemente lllgll School
atuM'lta have won cub award& bt an
anitua1 Voice of 0e.mocr9C)' broMcut
..,:;pt wrlU,.· contest -ed bl' poat
71~ of the Veforana ol Forelp Wara. •
The studenta -·In, •'ncel •wards ·dinner' are S.. lllcCllre, fll"ll
place, '$100; Brent Waten, aecond •;
lllck Wa-. third 13$.
The ocrlpt written by Miao McCl,,..
wm be entered In • dlatrie! tompeUtioo.
and U It wins thero, wauld IO on lo
state and n1Uon1l contests. '\'11< project ~ the 21th a..Ual ocrlpt
writing contest sponsored by vnr
organilaUons.
Tbitl year•s theme w1s "Freedom -
Our Htritlt•.''
•
•
I
I
----..----.. ~-----' .. .. . . ..
•
2 DA!L Y PILOT SC
State Highlights
Reag an Outline.s Key Points
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Excerpt.s from Gov .. Ronald Re11an's sllt&of·
the-state message to the Legislature: • ••
SCIJOOL FINA NCE -" ... The various fpnnulas for 1ehool subventions
have outlived their usefulnes~ to scllaol districts and mwt be simplified."
TEACll EH TE\'Ullt -"The original and legi timate reasons for ten ure
nu longer e-.;i~t Tenure has bf'Co1ne ti haven for the incompetent te acher. It
should be al11;rl'd to 1nrluc!e a sys1cm of merit pay "'hfch provides real in-
cenlives fnr qualily te11ching "
TUITIO:'\ -"'l'e fric1· so1ne unresolved problems in hig her eduC'alion.
For nne 1h11~g . 11•it hi/1t' LnJ1crs1ty tof Cal1fornia1 charglng tuition an imb<il·
ance exists so Jong as the stah· cnlleges do not.''
EDUCAT ION FEES -•·Nonrestdent fees for out-of-state and fnreign
sludents should be r«\'IC\\l'd fl is. hard to justify ~ubsidizing these students
Y>'hen it grows increa~1ngJ~ d1ff1cul! to prcvide an education for our o'>'·n resi-
dents"
SOI.JD \\'ASTE: -'I nrn suggesting one slate agency should be given
!he authority to coordinate, encourage and assist local and regi1Jna l entities
to plan fnr and regul11lc solid v:asle disposal systems and sites."
COAST AL PH01'ECTIO\I -·'The preservation and protection or Cali·
fomia's coast re sou rces must surely rank amon gou rhighest environn1cnt-
al pr1orJties ''
CRl~1E -"Th! killin g of a Ja y,• enforcement officer ~·hile. on duty
should be first-degree murder ,and it should be a felony to specifically ad-
1·o<:ate killini: or injuring law enforcement ofrJce rs."
\\'ELFA HE -'·\Vhile we assist the tntly needy who have nowhere else
to !urn. v.·e must also ini-is! that able-bodied adult recipients work and meet
their fl\.l'TI rcpsonsib1Ht 1es "
~1EDI·CAL -"During this session \\'e will present for you r con~idera·
lion a plan lo limit our health care services to the poor so they v.•ill be co m-
parable ll'ith the health benefi ts provided hy the various prepared health in-
surance plans covering most of our citizens."
BUDGl:.I -"\\le are at the point where th is state can no longer sustain
if s operntions on the revenue it nov.· takes from the people. Therefore, \\'e are
confronted by a choice. \\le can reform government -reduce lhe cost of
services. parlicularly in \\'Clfare and medi-eaL or we can increase taxes. I
\\•ii! submit a budget whic h can be balanced 11•ithout an increase in taxes."
VOTE -"No1v that the Congress and the l1.S. Supreme Court have
gh'Cn the l8-.year-0lds the vote in fede ral elections. 1 certainly think we should
take those steps necessary to let the citizens of California determine v.•hcther
that shall be extended to stale and local elections.''
Evicted Capo Families
Win Coiincil Reprieve
San Juan Capistrano families facing
eviction from 12 condcn1ncd d\1·ellings
\1·ere given a short reprieve by the
City Council ~londay.
The ci1y agreed to postpone a decision
on the eviction unlll hearing all sides
of the issue at a spt•c1al administrative
he:iring next !\londay.
An appeal to the city counct! had
been made by th<' properly owner. Mrs,
L11!1an Zacng!ein of Pasadena. \\'ho c»·
Ni o uel Seekin o ~ ~
1\.dditional Fu11ds
For Recreation
A $12,000 county appropriation for ad·
d1l ional recreational in1provemenls 1s
sought by members of the Niguel
Homeo\1·ners and Community Associa·
lion.
At a general nice!1ng of the as~oc1 a1ion
at 7 .30 p.m. Thursday 111 Crown Valley
Elementary School. residents \\'Ill be ask·
ed to approve a request to the Orange
Cuunty Boarrl of Super\·1sors for alloca-
tion of the amounl frorn County Service
Area ;\o. 3 tax money for the second
phJse of the Laglln a :\'igui:I recreation
p1'1gram.
! n i I i a 1 impro\•en1cnl. imp!cmented
under a J01nl pu11 crs agrl·Cmenl bc111·ecn
the school disi.irt and the county,
b<·nefited the X1guel Little League \\'hen
ful!y d \·eloped in ft\·e to six y('ars.
the 11npro1·cn1ent 1r 11 provi de t11(1
h:i~eball diamonds. a fo11:hnll fi(·!cl. l\\'O
l1~h~cd lennis courts ;ind a f1t:!d huu~c
pressed concern about the welfare of
the families housed the re.
She stressed that she would abide
by the council's klsion but hoped that
the city could mare arrangements to
relocale the families.
~1rs. Zaengfein had rented the properly
to local rancher \\1illiam Reid until Dec.
31. He in turn rented the dwellings
to the {\>!ex:ican-Arnerica n families.
City Attorney James Okazaki suggested
that the !aw may indicate that 1he
council \\'ill havr no choice but to evict
the residents of the condemned shanties
unless ~1rs. Zaeng!ein can prove thaL
there \\'BS an error in the findings of the
Department or Build ing and Sa rety.
i\layor Tony Forster said in his opin1nn
r.trs. Zaeng!ein \\'as appealing for time
until something could be done to relocate
the tenants.
H e11ry Orthman
F uneral Held
\\'cekcnd funeral services \vere con-
ducled Jn San Clemente. for Henry P.
Orthman. a former South Coast resident
11·ho cl1rd late las1 ll'eek in Costa i\lesa.
~1r . Orthman. \\·ho had lived '>'tt h his
son. Ralph. of 152 \\' F:scatones. also
lcares a daughter. i11rs Huth He1mb1g ncr
of Tacoma, \\'ash.
Other survivors include two brothers,
Freel ;ind Karl Orthman of Kansas,
ei~ht grandchildren and four ~real·
grandchildren .
Services v.·ere held at Sheffer ;.,.1ortuar~·
in San Clemente \\'11h shipment tn
c;reeley, Colo., for bunal in Linn Grove
Cemetery.
..
Nixon Set
For College
Appearance
Bv RICHARD P. NALL
01 !~I DI!!~ l"il•I Stall
President Nixon v:l\I end his San
Clemente sojourn Thursday morning and
sv.•ing by the University of Nebraska
to address a convocation of students
and faculty.
The afternoon address in the universit.y
coliseum \\'ill help celebrate the school
beginning its seCQnd hundred years of
existence.
Aides said the Nebraska stop en route
to \\'ashington. 0. C. will also give
the na tion's number one football (an
a chance to congratulate the university's
Cornhuskers football team for the 1970
season. The learn was Big Eight champ,
won the Orange Bowl and v.·as ranked
number one in the nation by Associated
Press.
The Lincoln. Neb . address will be Nix·
on's first to ;i campus audience si nce
he raced a vocal minority of hecklers
at Kansas State University last summer.
The visit idea o r igi nated
,1·ith Agriculture Secretary Clifford liar-
din . He resigned as chancellor Of the
university to join the cabinet.
It v.•ill be the first time a President
has visited the University of Nebraska
campus.
As his nine-day work vacation drew
toward a close, the President Monday
condemned as ''morally wrong" the.
bombing attacks on Soviet facilities in the
U.S.
This came amid threats by the Jewish
Defense League to continue assaults to
1vin better treatment for Jews in Russia.
Many Jewish leaders have expressed
outrage at the bombings.
The President's actions to rejuvenate
the economy by giving commerce and
industry better tax and depreciation
breaks meanwhile came under fire from
th e AFL-CJO and so me Democrats.
College Board
Won't Pay Tab
For Candidates
Candidates for the three openings OC·
curring this year on the Saddleback Com·
munity College Board of trustee!! v.·il l
have to pay thei r own way if they wan t
;i blurb on themselves in the County
Re!Xistrar or Voters' su mmary of qualifi -
cations booklet.
After Dr . Fred H. Bremer. superinten-
dent. told trustees ~1onday night "it is
lega! for the college to pay the expense of
the qualifications summary for all can-
didates " Board president Hans Vogel
said. ··it may be legal, but it isn't
moral."
TI1c board voted not lo pick up the
~MIO fee for c/\ndidates v.·hich the educa·
tlon code says is a legal election expense
for a school district. Vogel said thP
blurhs are <'ampaign material~ and
shoul d be paid for by the candidates.
The hnard adopted the April 20 election
dale sel by the County schools offict.
The three Saddleback board member!il
\\•hnse terrn~ expire this year are: John
R Lund. clerk of Laguna Beach, Alyn i\1
Rrannon . LrU5tee from Santa Ana . and
i\ltrhael T Collins, trustee from Laguna
I 1111~
Thf.' Sf-00 fee for list ing a candidate'~
f)Ua l1ft cations in the official publication
i!'> prorated after the nurnber of ca ndi-
ria\f's ft ling for the election is detern1inerl,
::ind covers th!" cost of printing all candi-
da1e's background.
Vot:PI ~aid the unused share of each
candidate's filing fee is returned.
The second pha~r. fur 11 h1ch th e new
all ocation is sough!. \rtll cnn.i:;i~t nf fen-
cing the rcrrrn!ir•nal Site frorn the school,
rcf1n1sh1ng the tennis courts. installing
a se\1•er line to the fie ld house and
instal ling 1vatl'r lines ;ind drinking foun·
ta ins. Sim11le Majo1·ity Acceptecl
I
DAILY PILOT
Newport ft,th
Lf'I~"• 110:1\
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Vl't Prts.11•n1 ••.d C•n•••I Mtftlllf
' l ho"''' IC 11•il Edolor
7h11..,11 />,, Murphiftt
M1n1glnl EOo!o•
~i d•t rd P. Hell
$0\l!h O••noo C<>Un!y Editor
Offlcn
Co111 Mtu: lJO WHI Jlo'f S!•tol
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In Tustin Bond Election
Expecting a decision this month lrom
the U.S. Supreme Court on the simple
majority voter approval of bond issues,
Tustin Union High School trustees ri1on-
day nighl accepted a 51 percent yes
vote as being a success.
Boa rcl Pres ident Chester G. Br iner,
of Mission Viejo. said the dis trict will
proceed with sales of the $25.8 million
in bonds authorized by the vote. ac·
ccrding to a revie w by the county of
I.he Nov. 3 election.
"These will nol al! be sold al once,''
Briner said. "but will be so ld es needed
for construction. Forme rly districts were
required to obtain 11 t~10-thirds majority
on bond votes. but the California
Supreme Court ruled last year th11t a
simple majority would suffice. A simila r
decision is expected to come from the
U.S. Supreme Court this month, Briner
said.
In other actions. the board lsbled ac-
tio n on the awarding Of bids ranging
from $47,000 to 1114,000 for imtalralion
and servicing of an intrusion alarm
~ystem for All permanent dl!trlct
buildlngs valued al · more lhan 1100,000.
The system is being requirtd by the
district'• insurance carrier. rNA , Tnc.,
J ack S. Rnpcr said. lie i!I assistant
superintendent, business services.
Supt. Wllllarn Zog~ asked trustees In
delay Action on !he Alarm system
because the bids lhal were received
were too complicated to delermlne which
systtm would best meet d is I r I c l
J
specifications and in s u ran c e re-
quirements, Briner said.
Roper noted that the bids were receiv·
ed last Friday and varied widely as
lo the type of equ ipment offered -
from simple wiring methods to comple1
elecl.ronic systems.
Trustees approved several equipment
bids fo r Universi ty High School including
a $23 .196 total award to four companies
to supply instructional electronics equ ip-
ml'nt. mu ch or which will be used by
lhe occupational education program
course in electronics, Roper said.
Only rour bids were received for three
cars and two trucks needed at University
High. The low blds were $.1.138 each
for lhe cars and $2,829 eac h for the
trucks, RoJ>('r said.
Three firms shared a mid·year
purchase aY:ard totalling $18.587 for
\\'<1rehou5£'d instructional supplies .
The third extension for the completion
date in the contract with Shirley Bros.
conlract.ors was granted In a change
order approved by trustets. Briner said
tht original contract provided for a cer·
lain 11mount of delay due to weather
and strikes. The board has authorized
11. delay in the compl etion date totalling
29 days, including the 25 day extension
approved Monday night.
Th e bo:1rd lllSfl approved a resoluUon
!iupporting the Orange County Depart·
mcnl of Education y,•hi ch th e County
(jrand Jury last month had suggested
be abolished.
. .
Old Salt Creek
Sal l Creek beach of yesteryear is captured here on
canvas by Laguna Beach artist Joyce Clark. right.
She donated the painting as a contribution to the
Save SaJt Creek Fund. Mrs. Helen Wilcoxen drew
winning ticket for llobie . .\Her. center. of Dana
Point. Mrs. \Vilcoxen's son, \\'illiam. a Laguna
Beach attorney, led the figh t to insure public ac·
cess to the pitcuresque beach.
Wit11e ss Tells of Slaying
As U.S. Rests My Lai Case
FT. BENN ING, GR. (UP!l -The
government rested its murder case
against LL \Villiam L. Calley Jr. today
with testimony by a fellow soldier that
Calley speci fically ordered him to fire
into two groups of women. children and
old me n.
''The government rests, finally." Capt.
Aubrey M. Daniel 111 , the chief pro-
secutor, announced at mid-morning of
the 24th day of the Calley court-martial.
Paul D. Mead\o, 23, Terre Haute, lnd .,
was the final prosecution witness. He
said he stood barrel !fl barrel wJth
Calley al r.1y Lai on ~tarch 16. 19611
and pumped auton1atic fire into as many
a.~ 140 Vietnamese civilians.
Meadlo Insisted. as he had Monday,
thal although he was emotional ly upset
at killing human beings, he thought he
was doi ng right because of a briefing
the night before by the company com·
n1ander lo destroy everything in h1 y
l~ai . Also. af1er a first group of 3$
to 40 civilians were killed, he said the
ocmmander passed by and seemed to
co ndone it by .not commenting .
Charlie Company Commander Capt
Ernest. L. Medina is under investigation
of charges of overall responsibility for
lhe My Lai kill ings but has not been
committed to court-martial.
Under re-direct examination by Daniel,
\\'hich the defense charged '>''as an al·
tempt to destroy the credibility or its
own witness, Meadlo said he had been
af ra id that even I.he babies in mothers'
arms al My Lai would be booby-t rapped
to kill him and his squad members.
Calley, 27, ts accused of the
premeditated murder of 102 Vietnamese
civilians duri ng the infantry sweep
through My Lai.
Another veteran of the operation. Sg!.
Charles E. Huttn or Tal)ulah, La .. iii
standing court-martial at FL r.fcPherson,
Dana Resident
Gets Sc hool Job
A Dana Po1 nL woman has bee• named
an extended-day 1nstru('tor of art by
the Saddleback College Board of trustees.
i\1 1S!il Lynn Gam\\·ell. formerly of the
Pitzer College art faculty . Claremont,
was hired on an "1f needed " basis.
Such appoint1nents becrime effective-if
enr0Hn1cnt warrants the addition of IHI
instructor. a spokesman said.
ftf1ss Gamwell holds a maste r's degree
in fin e arts frnm Claremont College.
and a bachelor'!! degree from the
Un1\'ersi1y nf llhno1s.
ln Atlanta ror intent lo niurder civilians
during the attack.
A witness at the Hutto trial today
said that Capt. Medina's superior officer
at My La i, Col. Frank Barker, observed
the operation from a helicOpler and
commented : "Things are going fine,
smooth, according to plan."
Barker was killed in a helicopter ac·
cident about three months after the
My Lai swee:p.
Ethel Merritt
FLu1eral Set
On Wednesday
Services will be held at l p.m. Wed·
nesday in Pacif ic View Chapel for f\.1 rs.
Ethel Gertrude Merr itt, 484D Via Cadiz,
Laguna Hills, who died Sunday at Sou th
Coast Community Hospital. She was 73.
Mrs. Merritt was well kno\\'n in
Sou thern California 11s an interior
decorator. She started her career ln
the decorating field in Beverly !~ills
in 1946 under the name or Ethel G.
Peabody.
She .,.,.as a member of the American
Institute of Decorators . South Coast
Alumni Club of Pi 8eta Phi. Laguna
Hills Art Association, Aliso Club and
Colorado Club.
She is survived by her husband,
Wendell C. /\1crri!l of the home : three
sons. Dr. Homer D. Peabody Jr. of
San Diego, We ndell C. Merritt Jr. and
Kenneth Merritt. both of Texas: two
daughters, Mrs. Trudy Rogers of Balboa
and f\.1erry Ann Merritt of Houston ;
lhrr.e sisters, Mrs . Ju lia Lee Davidson
of Laguna Hills : Mrs. Florence Lindsay
of Den\'er and f\.1rs. Betty Jane Hewell
of Nixon. Tex.: and by six grandchildren
and two great grandchildren.
A native of Wichita, Kan .. Mr."I. Merritt
altended the University of Colorado. She
had lived in Calirornia for 41 year.~
and .served fnr eight years as housl'.'
n1olht'r fur Pi Reta Phi surontv and
lhe Un ivcrsit~· of Southern Californ;a
Visitation is scheduled frQm 9 a m.
lo noon Wednesdav at Pacific View
Ch:tpl'I Thf' Rf'v. '11r.nry (;erJrrl 1r111
nH1c1atc ;iJ !he l p m service. follnweri
b~· burial <1l Pacific View Memorial
P;irk
r-.1cmbers nf lhe fan1il y suggf'51 thal
men1or1~I ('nn !r1butions 1n hru Gf lln\\'Cr~
~ made to RecsP·Stcaly Medical
Research Foundation. Sen Diei;:o .
Draft Liniits
For 1971 Pool
Mciy Be Sanie
WASHI NGTON {AP l -Despite predic·
lions or lowered draft calls this year,
Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tarr
says lottery number 195 may prove t.o be
the Gpper lim it again.
Tarr says the 1971 draft pool, consisting
of men just turned 19. \\'ill be smaller
than the 1970 pool which consisted of me n
aged 19 In 26. Thus, he safd, although
fewer men might be called. it wi][ take
higher draft numbers to get the man ·
po\\'er.
Tarr said he doesn't k11ow how many
draftees will be needed in 1971 hut cited
published reports that Secret/\ry of De·
fense Mel vin R. Laird esti mated the I~
tal would fall between 80,000 and 120.110().
The draft director discussed the 1971
outlook in a conversation Monday follow-
ing a news conference in 1vhich he an·
11ounced adminlstratlon plans to see k an
end to college student deferments lhi!i
yea r. He also said the administration
wants to start a uniform national call,
allo wing the same lottery numbl'r to be
called everywhere. instead nf the pre!ient
system of geographica l quotas. Both
moves v.·ould req uire congressional ap·
proval.
Tarr also commented on his te stimony,
just released by a House subcommittl.'c,
that some colleges were refusing draft
board requesu for info rmation on stu-
dents .
He said he thinks nothin~ will be rlnne
about it. poinlini;: nut that the schools
are not legally required to provide the
Information.
Shortly after Tarr SPQke. the Defense
Department announced a Febru ary draft
call of 17,000, the same as January.
Holiday Runyan
Last Rites Held
llnl1d:iy Runyan. a H 11nl1n~ton BeaC'h
hor~e lrainf'r. \\'a.~ gl\en h1~ unu~ual
first n:ime \\'hen he \\'.1!i horn on the
fir st day of .Jan11ary. IL'> }car.~ agn.
At 11 a m , tnday r.1r Runyan was
buned in Fairhaven Ct'mel r rv with
gr/\ves10e SCf\'1('e~. He ched S;itu rdil.}
i\f r Runyan h\·rO 4!f yf'ar.~ !n Hun·
tin ~ton Beach Hi~ las! addre~s v.·a5
618 Adan1~ Av('
Surv11·nr~ 1nclur1e his 111fr ~lary nnd
t11·n rlaughlcrs. t-.1r" ,/f'an .J:.1n1r~ nf 11un·
t1nglo11 !:leach and ~1rs. Bett~· Frisb ie
of Laguna Bef'!ch
MEASURE FOR TREASURE
One factor overlooked by cu stomers in buying carpeting is the
measuring for yardage.
All of our Salesmen know how to measure and
substa ntia I
fig ure exact ,
yardage, often
yardage alone.
providing our cu stomers saving s . in
Also, with the tremendous installation. experience our salesmen
have (each previously was an expert installer for us), we are able
to forsee any potential problem.
Please stop in and look at the treasures available to you through
our store. We have a gigantic selection, and the measuring will be
ACCURATE!
SAN TA ANA, OU.HQ.I
ruST IN Ctn •..
ALDIN .I ••o HILL c••m1 ' ., .... , •• ,u
11114 1m,.., Tntt•, Clllf.
IJl·Jl44
ALDEN'S.'.;.
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plac•ntla Ave.
COSTA ME SA
HOURS: Mon. Thiu Thur1., 9 to S:JO -Fri., 9 to 9
646·4838
Sit., 9,30 to J
" •
I I I I
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Fo1~ The
Marriage
Licenses
Olt,t,HGE COU"lY a.. 1111
JONES MOOO't -To"y H .. 10, ol
Ill l'lo•fntlo, S•n (l•m•nt• •'1<1 "T•re~· A .. P9. 01 J•I '""*· Vo~~erc, Son Cl•'Jl!'Mt
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1•71 L••~wu• Oro,o. >iunlln9!on
B••<" ""a C<!'noll•, 19. 01 Munli.,9•0•!
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cnorl•• J , It. An•l>onn
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L IVINC.!TONE·!l.O.CON -Jonn M.
:Ill. of :xi1 1'•~ S••ee1, P<!ewoor!
8••<11 ona l•obel o , J.O. 01 "'""'""" Beotn
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v+cl0<I• O"'"' Logun• !loocn ond
Jo•~ l , 16.0ll oQ...,Ol•ocl\.
OOTTA W1 ELER -Wllllom ", Jt.
or '°~' Comoncl\t, w .. rmln•lpr ona lton M . JJ. ol We<tm ln•I••.
WILW..,·ENGl EMAN -Benn• J,
lJ o! tn "'"''a;o, Coll• Mt••
ond Yolando £ .. "°· of Co1!1 M•••· NEWBY-PELLHAM JlcO £, 1',
o• 111!7 N•su u Lon•. H11nli"111C"
B•ocn •n<I Dororv M , l 1, "' 15•51
B•lbu ~'''''· W•<!"'l"11t" $l.6,NLEV.HOWE -WllllOm II , I', n• 601! Shlol<11 or .. ••, Hun1on9•on
B~oc~ •nd IColM••n I>, 11, 01 tOOI
Devi• Orh•r. H11n••ng1"" B••<"
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Jl>CQBSO .. ·Ml>MA V GMUNNA~.
1• •• or-'•''' Baleorlc D•IY•· Ca"~ Wuo •nd Er>1l11n l, ~-al Ca•t•
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cl &•I t ombordv L•"•· L•111 n1 Btocn
ona Sandro l , 11, cl L19un1 B•1cn
Deal/1 Notice•
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M•n lon Motlu•••. Go•df" Gr•••· O•••t
HOLOIR!tTH
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£~1nt Clor~; •ISi•••· N•ncy SmoO.• ond
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will bf r•tl•od 1ttn;,M, Tu1'41•. 7 PM.
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r,0,.1an IRtOI Sl<•ncn b9t 50. of lllll
Flont!lant l~"'· Mt1nlin9IO<" 8 •ach. 01••
ct oeo!n. J1n111"' 1a Su,.i•t<I bv wit•,
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"' . 4 ARBUCKLE & SON
N Westcllff l\.1ortu•ry
~ ltfl'l E. 171b St., Cos t• Me11 11.... ......... . ~ .
f _.~BALTZ l\IORTUARI~
i 't!Orona del J\lwr OR 3-H~
'1
I
Costa Me11a mi ~%U4 • DELI. BROADWAY
J\10RTUARY
110 6roadw1~-. Q:isl• J\le1a
LI 1-3f3J • l\lt-C:ORMJCK l.AGUNA
,BEACH J\10RTUARY
lflS Laguna Canyon Rod.
49fJHIS • PACIFIC VIEW
i\1EJ\fORJAL PARK
Ceme:ll:ry "lorta.ary
CU pd
l$89 Paclric Vie" Drtvt
New port Beach, CaJllonli•
14C-Z70I • PEEK FAAllLV
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolu A'•e.
We1lmln1ter 813-ml • Si\llTHS' J\IORTUARV
127 llilliD SL
lluntln1ton Reacb
'3M5lt
Grant
By JACK BROBACK
Of "" 011r, ,li.1 $lilt
ANA HEIM -. .\ new ap-
proach to Orange County's
proble1n o( thousands 0 r
unempl oyed aeros pa ce
worker~ "'llS launched 1\-1on·
day.
New Age Srhool s. \IOI \\I ,
Katella Ave., with lhe aid nf
a $140,000 erant from the U s.
Press Club
Ba1u1uel
Set Jan. 30
Ai\'AHEJ~'\ -Ti1ne IS run·
ntng oul on reservations /or
lhe Orange County Pres.~
Club's ans.,,,·er lo the Academy
Awards
Scheduled Jan JO al the
Disneyland Hotel's Embassv
Room, !he 16th annual Orang~
County Press Club Awards
Banquet is expected to be the
best-attended ever.
Representatives of
newspapers. rad i o and
television stations will gather
a1 7 p.m. for champagnt'.
followed by a steak dinner
and recognition of top talent
in their field.
A Iota! d 618 news stories,
photographs. teatures. col·
umns and coverage of s porting
events are entered by the
county's press corps for judg-
ing this year.
Hundreds of dollars in prize
money . dozens ol lrophi~s and
the prestigious Sky Dunlap
Award for outstand ing con-
!ribution to journalism will br
besto~·ed.
General Cha irman A. \V.
''Bill" Stewart r e rn i nd s
anyone i n Le rest e d th al
reservations rt'celved by Jan.
I ~, al $7.50 per person, give
a chance on prize A i r
California tickets lo San F'ran-
cisco.
No tickets will bf' sold at
the door on the night the
nien and women of the Orange
County Press Club are in the
spotligh t.
Orange Park
Grcrvel Pit
Study Told
ORANGE -Results of an
engineering study released by
the county Flood Co ntrol
Dis1rict indical.e more trouble
tor Con so I i d a Led Rock
Products Co . in gaining a new
gravel pit franchise in San-
tiago Creek.
The firm has been involved
in lengthy hearings before the
county Board of Supervisor~
for more than a year over
the project in the Orange Park
Acres area. Arrayed in op-
pos1L1on are residents nf lhe
are11.
The engint't'rtng study b~ 1
tht' Santa Ana firm of Con-
verse, Davis and Associates
points to a "potential in·
stability" to the slopes of an
exist ing sand p11 if the new
operation ls allov•ed. I
The report states thal c~·en
v.1thou! the proposed ne w dig-
ging lhere is a .. maJOr pro-
blem of seepagr in \he <1rc<1 " I
Consolidated Rock Produc1.~1
nrig inally presented a plan for
reclamation of the area after
1he digg ing is completed.
Planned ~as 11 large lakt' and
creek botlom recreation area.
The engineering r e p o r I
stales that only ma jor mod·
ifica1ions nf the :tlo]X's or the
e:(isting pit would make ii
suitable /or use as a reservoir.
Date Set
New Trial
SANT A ANA A new
Superior Court trial date has
been set for two men accused
of the apparently moliveles1
killi ng of a Vietnam war
veteran who9e beaten body
was round behind a La Habra
apartment building.
Judge Byron K. f\;lcMil!an
i;cheduled Feb. 16 as lhe date
on which George Albert Scott,
20. Pico Rivera aod Michael
Thomas Terra.z.as, 22. Avalon,
Catalina Island , will go on
trial. Both were ordered to
attend 1 pretrial hearing Jen.
28.
Trains
Department flf Labo r. began
!raining 100 u n c rn p Io ye d
aerosp«1ce n1anageri;d l:l.ni.l
techn1cal personn1d to start
lheir own businesses.
The appruat·h differs 1run1
other projects a i me d al
retraining men $0 they can
work for son1eonc el se.
The 100 initial studentl'i 1n
lhe projecl have one thing-
in t•ommon. They ha>Je bee11
on some forn1 of wt-lfare.
The trainees will nol hav1·
an t'H:>y t!rne IJ 1Lliz1ng a
11·urkshup·lt!Clurc plan. !he
class day 1vill be. lO hours
Jong. rive days a "'eek
i'roJel't Cord1111ator Fran<.:1~
N. Evt'rftl S<l)S !hr JOO
Chief Police
Chief Named
•
Aerospace
I I
Our lowast priced 4·Ply Nylon Cord tire
"All-Weather Jll"
Blackwall
, r.1ro~n 111rltv.111l d"~ign, r•di11l darts nn 1houldet • Trip!•·
ll':mJl'"r~d n)l!'.ln , nrri l.Ol\~lru1 •ion • Buy now 1 1t h ~~•
lo w rrru.r~
'"' 6 so . 1.! bl1eh .. 11 1~b•'"' olu• s1 16 ''' r, 11• N~ !q~· n··~·~
IK[ e11• l llN c1111:• ~•O&•Alll
Rfro11~• o< '" ••P•ol1d "'"""to-''""d lor f;o11d1111 ll•u . '"' ~•v 10• out ol •0"11 ""' durl•l Ill>~ n~u. bu!"'' .. 111 ho ••PPI lo ordlf
)'flUf l!lO l!ft II l~t l dVlllilld ''\ti •n~ lnu•'J~" • u l• •hor k for t11tw11 ~.11 .. 1, , ... "'"t~ ... dl••·
3 WAYS
TO
CHARGE
* S11rr•d loc•uoris
Do Not Honor
Bank Credit C1rd1.
1.~2 .• 3.=
GOODfiEAll
"OT AYA09LI AT LOCATIONS
' WITM Ttl&I l'f'Mao&. 0
GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS• TIRES
1• • •
La Habra police arrested • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 1 1 1 1 • • • • 1 • • • 1 • • • • • 1 • • 1 • • • • 1 • • •••••••• the pair in tbe death last ,
OCt. I& of Philip Castanon,p-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -21. Pico Rivera. who w11 I ~:t~~.~u~:p~~1 1:'.!:~~• YOUNG & LANE 1'1RE CO INC
rtce1vtd 1n Vietnam. The y uy I • •
the trio became involved ln
, 11g11t and th• c .. 11e1eoo'"" LAGUNA BEACH COSTA MESA
fled when Castanon coll1psed I
with 11 crushed skull.
Both
Ora nge
bail.
412 OCEAN AVE. • Phon• 494-66'6 IS96 NEWPORT BLVD • •
' -
•
T11tst11)', J1n111r)' 12, 1q11
Mlnr 1,th Morion
Nollr¥ Publlt . Colllo•nl1
f'rl.,c1Pl l Oftlc1 In
Or1r11:1t Co<Jnlv
MY Cornmfulon E•1 irts
...... u '· It)! Pubth l'lld O•~n•• Ce11l 0111v Pf101.
J 1n111•v 11, 1', 11 1...i l'tbr1J1n-?.
1111 SJ·ll
LEGAL NOTICE
1'·'141J
NOTIC I TO C•fOllO•I
IU,IRIOll (OU•T 0'
THI: tTAT' 0, CAl,.ll'O•N1•
1'011 TH• COUNTY 0' O•AN•I .... ·-~· E.rat• o1 HEN!IV P, "'EISLElt. 11so
known 11 ... ENIY P"UL HESSlli R,
Oec11i t<1
NOl!CE IS HE!IEBY GIVEN lo !hi
DAILY .rtOT ft
LEGAL N011CE
~.,. ....
c •llT1,ICAT£ Cl' 1u11111ss
l'ICTITIClUS MAMI
lht """"~lol>ff dOOS c•rllly !~ I~
cona11tllno • Du•lntn •t l o• .. ~•. l•Ylne. (1!llcrni1, t'H64 11no1r ti.. 11...,
tlllot11 ll•m n•mt al 10 1H£ POINT
a<><I 1h1! ••TO llrm 11 e<>mP<>H<I of •~• lollowln1 "*""'" wno,. n1m• ln
lull '"'a Pl•c• of ·~slaent~ I• 01 toll~·
Mro. Ru!h Romm. lfll Sudvl•w r,1f\e.
Co•on1 d•I M•r 9'125.
Cell<! D«•TT'lbor '9, ltl'O
Mrt. lllllh Romm
Siii• o! CAll!ornl1, 0<1"~' Co.,n!v·
o" Ott.r,,,b•or 71. !tlO, i..to•• "'"·
1 No!onr Public 1" and fttr s1;d Sii•~.
ot......,1llv •PPoa•f'd Mro. Ruth Ror>'tn
kt1Cwn IO m• lo lw lno Pl '30n who••
n•"'• Is •ubK•!ti.d to '"• ,.!thin In-strum"'' 1n!I otkn-!1<111<1 1lle •~etull!'d
t~e ''"''· !OFFl(IAL ~EAL)
R~l>I t-1. C1rn11tl
NOl"V P11b!l<·C1lllarn(•
Pr!ncleal Otrlce In
Orono• Coun•v Mv Comm1,.1,,., £••Ire•
Stpt, 14. 1t n
"ubll1hH Oranoo (01s! O•Hv ,,l•I
Ott.1mN r 7'. 1'10 •nd J l "Ul'V 5. "· 11, 1'11 ,.,.1'1J
LEG Ai. NOTICE
cr..:lltoto ti lht 1tl9Vt n1m1<1 dK"°""l 1----
"'"' 111 P~90"1 ~vln• c•1lm• ..,11~·! NOTIC• TG ClllDITOllS th1 t1!d <1ecr<1.,.r l<t ....,ulre4 to 1110 1u~1•10Jt COU!IT DI' THI'
lht m. wlrft !lie nKt>tl rV VO\O(h~r •• tn IT.I.Tl 01' CALll'OllNIA 1'011
!hi olfl<• of th• cltt~ al lht obov• l HI CCUNTY 01' Oii.i.NOi
..,111rod court, or lo pre~•"' '"'"'· wl!n NI. A"ntt tho ntc1111rv vouchert. lo lh• un· E"1!r cl ANIT• M. JONES, 01<t•••d
dlfll1nld •I "'I oltlt• of ht• 11!"""'"· NOTICE !S HE !I EBY GIVEN '10 tho
OONALO N. BELVEAL. U SJ 1fflh9• C•f'dl!Oro or lhr •Do~r n1m..t aeutdtnl
C1nvon l oultv1>d. S11Ho j!)l, WOOdlln<I Ille! •II Pf•\O•U n1vlnt c!1lm• 111lnit '"•
Hlll1, C1 lllo1n11 •lX., wMc~ I• Th,. ••Id d•c.Or nt a t• re<11Jl•.O to Ill• llll m.
Pllct ol Du1lnt u of 1nt underolt,...., with !ti• n•~''"'v voucllers, I" Ill• I" •11 miner' OOf''lt!"fnt 1(1 1~• •<tel• o!"t • n! !111 tier~ of Ille •btt•I •n•
of u ld dtct<11n!, wllhln !au• montno llllrod tout!, o• tq or1HM tnem , w\fh
•II•• "'' 11 .. r ovb!lc1llM of l~lt no!lct, tn• nece u..-v voucllor•, ro ltit 1111dtr·
01te.:i J1nH1•¥ I, 1f)1 1lon1d ~! lh• oHlce pl lllt Atl~rnl':V!.
BU!• M1tlt H1 .. 1rr lln,.on 1...r llro•on, doa C1mPu1 D•I••• £~tculrl;r ti lilt Wiii 1t Sult• Nutnl:o!t 5.10. N•.._.t 811cn,
tne t '>ove n•med lltctd""'· c 111tornl1 whlcll ls Ill• 1l1ct or bvtl""'
DONA LO# l•lY•Al cf '"" vnd•rtlOl\ld In ol! m1!11••
llJH Tw11111 C•~r.., •lvt .. p.,-il lnlnt to tM ••••I• ti .. 10 <IKtd•nt,
Swll• U1 within four montll• 1ft1• l!tt llr~r
WIM1111f Hlll1, Clllflrllll t1~ 1t11bllti1lon of this ""!let.
Tl!: 111J) ltl-f.. Oiied Oecf"'lltl' 1', 1110.
All-V l9r l ;rK wlrl1 ' Mtnn-l . JOtttJ, J<,
'"bllo/114 Oronot Ceo\! O•llf •1•0•. Ex•c11IOT
J 1nu1..... 11, 1', II I ntl FHru1•Y ). Of "'' Wiii pl lllt
1'11 51·11 1Do•e """'" dK1<!1nl ----------lllOXOltl ol,llD l .. OXGN LEGAL NOTICE 15'1 C•m•us Drive, t wltt Nw,.,•1• IH
/-----H-Hrl 1•1<11, (f lll9rll!a Tt l: flU ) t••11tt
Arr•""'' fir ••Ku11r CUt "11. l'·llfH
Clll l"ICATI 01' I Ul!Nlll
l'l(fl1!0UI l'lllM NAMI
..... !fl1
Puttll1n1<1 O••,..t c.,.,, Do.iv l'•lnl
0Ke,...I>"' 11. 1'. 1110 •nO J1nu•tV !. 17 .
1'11 ll11·10 Tne Vnd••1ltnl<! t!o ~trlb1 (t Mif\o
rn1r lh•v 1t• cOt<d<JCllno • bu1l,,.1~
!1s Co·'•'I~•''' 11 ~ E"tt•o•l1t LEGAL NOTICE
Sltet•, Co110 Mtu, (olllot"I•, undo• l-------1~ llcllllO<I• llfm nome of SAMMl>QA ~·"Ttt
DEVELOPMENT CO. on<! tll1t 11ld ll•m ClltT!,ICATI 01' (C!l~O!lo!,TICM l'Olt
1. COmPO•l<I or "'' l0Uowl1>1 ........... , .... ,. .... ,,,ON DI' &UlfflllSS UNOl!I. w~o•• "•m•; Jn 1.,11 •"d oil <t• of l'IC TtTtOUS II.I.Ml
rula..,co 1,1 U lollo""" la-wit: 1HE UNO!RStGNEO CORPOllATIOtf
""doon 8 S•llell, 11 11 Sompr11I dot'• n•t•b• c•rlllv th•I It I• cO<lO<t<llttt 1
l •n• Nt1ooo•• B••<h, Ctl ; Rlch1rt! b!Jt ln11• h:><1•11<1 t • lll lJ S-v '••-Clrcl•. E Mc.At!•m, ll» O•l!!wo<ld lloot!. S•,.I• Anl , Clllfo•11l1 uni!•< '"" lt(l!!lou•
Coreno t!~I M"' C.11 I Alt •l "t!Ot S. firm nlm t of COMPUlER SOf'TWAR E
llot!o,. 111 W1•t Mu >I• Av•nt1t. DEVELOPMENT CO RI'. •nd rn11 •l il'I
Monrovl1. COi , Wollor llodo,, 111 11,.,, I• comao•ed cl lh• lollowln<>
W••' Moel• AYt11ue. M•"'o"I•. Col 1 coroor1llon, who•• p•lnc101I plot• of
S!tont" "'""'· 117 Wt1• M••lt Avonue. bv•'""" 11 •• 101tow• MOf'ro•T•. Col C.5.0 . Co•o•r•1lo11. 11135 S~v '•••
0111<1 D101mDor 11, 19 1~. Circlot. S1nto An1, C1llh1t.,!1
Hy010<l B S11f•ll WllNESS Ill hi nd t~I• ll!h t1v ol
ll lChU d E. Mc•a.,., °"c•mbtr, U l'O Alt,1n~t< J lt ot°" (CORPO!l.ATE SEALI
W1llor lllt!O! C.S.O COR,Olt'°'TION
S!eon•n Al6o! w 11111m Fulll1ubo, '"1ldenr
51aT£ o • (ALll'OllNI... STAT£ OF CAlll'0 1t .. 1•.
C.OU"ITY 0~ L05 ANGELES.''-COU NTY OF Oii.ANGE. H.
On Ol<ttnbtr 11, !'70, Doto" m•• On lhl! lllh 01• ti 01eomllo•, A.Cl,
1 No11rv 'w•lk In i ncl tor 0116 CoVM• 1t7G, belo•• mo N1no;v E Wet! 1 No••r• •~a St1t1, oor111F1allv 1op1111<1 HUii,..., Public In •nil f11r ''Id Countv 1<><1 St111•
1. s.ne11 .,,., Rl<l'll•d E. M<:Ad•"' •••ld;n0 •Mr~ln, du,.,. to!O>"'lulotlltl """
"""wn to m• lo lw l~t '""""' who•• tworn, pttson•llv IPPl••ld WLlll•M
"'me• olt t ub!crlbed !o TM wl tMfl l'ulll•ubo k,,....." to mo "' "° rtw
I"'''""""'· '"" •cl(-IMOld .. .... P• .. ld.n• ol ,~. CO•P011llen "'•' t•lcvflO 1n11 111.,. •ktcllll<I tlle , • ...,.. IM wl.,,ln l"1ltu......,1 .., Doh1H of ""'
wn ... u ,.,. ~'"° 1<><1 H •L corP01"111on !lllr11n N mld, • n d
!OFl'ICIAL SE.I.LI •C--1 ......... !O "'" ,,,,, ouch coo--•llM
Slll•1"" Y, (ern¥n ••Kull<! Ille 1•m1.
Ne••rv '11•11t . (11\ll•n·• ... WllMH w+.o .... 1. I "••• 111 .... 1111
0•11111 CO<IJlh "' mv h1<><1 i nt 11110111 tn• ollk ll l 1111
M• CommlttlOll E1•!'"$ !!It a1v Ind fllt In 11111 Cll'llllc1t1 11,.1
.1.1rll J7, itn
5TAfl! 0, Col,Lll'OllNIA
COUN TY OF LO$ ANGl!Li!S l u .
o" thl1 l•"' G1v el O.c1m!l!'r, n 10. "-'°" ..... 0 Het•rY ~utl!lt In • .,..
fot' 11ld (OliftlV 1no Still, H "Otlll ....
1P1Nttd Alt111ndlt s. ·-·· k"OWn
11 m1 lo i.. 1111 -'°" Wiit~ nt mt 11 wttKrtbod le the wl!llln lfllll'\lf!>enl.
tnd •<k"'6wl1<!91<! !111! Ill t•teufM lftt
•
tb<l~t written .
(OFFICIAL SE.I.LI
NANCY E. WEST
t-1ot1rv P 11bllc • c1111orn11
,,l,.cl••• Ol!lce '" <111,..1 Cov"h
MV (O!l'llPllHIOll EK•lro1 ,.,,,, 10, 1t14
J1o11•ll1"°"' o .. ,..., CN tl OtliY Jlollo
01<...,.llt'f' 11. ,., lf79 1nor1 J•nu•rv 5, 11.
1t11 U•l·79
LEGAL N011CE
'f
I
'
J 0 DAILY PILOT St
LEGAi. NOTICE
--,=,=.=,=,c,coc=•=·n o, 1u11Nrn-
•tcTtllOUl NAM•
Moaert'• 1f o r tla
1 I'll u-rt'9flH -(t rt Iv l'lt I
C-UCllM • ltutl ... H 11 TI' y,,.,.~ OWf'
Mu<>llfltton I H Cll C• fO "II Unclll If"
t ~ llou• 11,,,. 111m• ot MEL TON AU10
l!IODY '"" 111• ••1(1 I 'ti I ~Otr'll><I
., ~ ll)llow "ti " ton wllo.. "'" e " IV •1'111 11 ac• u ••lleMe •
Yorn· Food Cost s
~-· G-E M~ Of\ Il l.I 01~< ~
W11"" "' • °"""' Jtf\ ' ltl
Ca11 Be Cut Down
G"°'11e Mt 1111'1 ~••ol CI o nla Oor1te Counv
On Jt f\\ll N • It! l>e!O e mt I
No •rv Pull c ",.'I.If to.< 01 1(1 ~·•
Of! "°'11 V I P,,.t ..., (;~l)t9f W MC Oft
ll:nown lo ""' lo bf "~ "" •~" wl'lo•• "'"''~ • I boc btd to ~ w "" tn • umt" t nd tcknow ed1110 fir e ~ u oo
~~ • ...,p
Ot=F C A.l ~l.'.Al!
JClf\ Jot
"I03 V P (o Ono
P nc 111I 0 , In o an11• Co~n v
Mv Comm• on E~• ~•
1\1 c~' ltll Pub '""'d 0 •"11~ Co• 01 v
• Utr'Y I 71 i nd Feb \10
"
LEGAL NOTICE
IUP!I Olt C0Ut11 OI< Ttll<
ITAl'.I: 01' CILIPOIN I 1'01
THI" COUNTY 01' ORANGE
No A ... 1 II
' " "'
NOT Cf OF H!AltlHG 01' Pl!T TON
FOlt f'ltOl,llTE OF Will .t.ND 1'01
Ll"TTl!ftS TEStAMEHtA•Y l&OHD
WA Vl!DI
E• I ot EMMA M Cit t z D CPb~l,!d
HOt !CE S MEll EBY G VEH h1!
( 0PP•l hl$le<ll>f'•n 1 ~ IJ<I
fo p ob.at• ot W ind lo ,.u.nc•
o L! •< T•s •m•"' v o P• <1n•
Bo"d N• .... l • •r>Cf lo WI\ ell
"'"~ o lu Th• "~rt cu• i nd '"• • !mt &n<J Pl{O M he1 ,,. Ill• • "'~ h•• ~n s• " Jo" •"' " 101 1 •10 •m n lh• cou roo .,
o D o.,·•menl No l o $1 <I Cll<Jr1
1 700 C"c Ce • D ,., w est In
th•C lv ofSl n• Ahl r 1 111 • D• .0 Jb" .,..... 1 ti
W E ST Of.I
CuntvCo k
CY• l A W.ALTON
3! s t.,r•~tt ""' t•1 <11 'TO,.,.I" I (•I'"'" 1 H.MJ
,.. ' l\ 211 .. 11 A"orn•r f6t l'el 1 t~
Puhl h"<I 0 ~"9• (o>1• 01 v
J1nu1 r 12 13 I "
LEGAL NOTICE
~U,.EltlOlt CO lt 'T 011' t HI!:
ST•TE 011' CALtll'O•HIA ,.Olt
THE COUNTY 011' OltANOE
Nt ,. ... 91
NOT CE OF Ml':AlllNG OF ,..TT ON FOii ,.._OIATI! 011' W LL AND P'Olt
LIETTEltS tF.<'TAM~NTl•Y
E ~ "' CA1tl05 GOSTEL Oec••••d Nf'IT Cf IS' Hf'"'l!Y r VEN h ...,
Cook n~ "•• •~ h• n • .,. I on f o o o~• • of w and o u1N:e
o Le•' T•$~menarv o P•I n •
• • ence o wh h m•de lo fu he
" < • ' •<Id t~• ~· m• •"" P ec• o hel <111 ~e •&me ~. ""9n ~·• ~ J• u "' ?9 ,, ~ 9 0 • ,.,
!h• CO<lr1 CJC)m ~f 0-0• "'• I N~
Sl<I CO<J l 11 7M C:v Ct • e l'I•• ~ lh• Ctv 01 ~•n • ._,.. 0
C ~ n 1
Dalt<! J1~ • v l 9
V E ST JOHr-1
C~l!r> \'..I ~
14UltWIT? 11U•WITZ AND lt l!:M Ell
,J .. J1 .... S~I
N•WPDr1 fl••c~ !:1 lftr•I• '3Ul
T1 Piii •7J '°'' A I ""YI fw ~II .......
l'ub hed 0 •n11f (CISI 01 V
J1nu1 v 12 3 t '1
LEGAL NOTICE
" ' '
By SYLVl4 PORTER
Ju.st by sidestepping the
tonven1ence foods the
frozen dinners the prepared
'egetables tht 1uet add milk
or "atcr maxes -and cooking
from scratch you can .slash
~o to 80 percent off the costs
of the foods involved As one
dramatic 11lustratwn the ctlllt
of a frozen turkey din ner
bought a! the store is 59c
per serving agamst 26c per
serv ing for a turkey dinner
you prepare from scratch
But 1f you re a typ1cl\I U S
foci ~!lopper you wi ll aot
reduce your buying of con
ven1encc roods and 10 fact
you II greet each new advance
with delight and pay whatever
extra 1s demanded Okay
there are 10 other ways to
cut your food bills
( 1) Buy foods on the basis
of prire per pound or per
ounce or per p111t or per .quart
and sa\ e more hundreds of
dollars a year w i th o u t
sacrlf1c1ng any quality m the
items I have a sm.,11 simple
unit cost table which yoo can
easily slip into your purse
and use 1n all stores to help
you compare the unit cost of
packages and thereby select
the biggest bargain Send a
self addressed s tamped
en\ elope to me at this
newspaper and I will forward
the table to you
(2.) Sh-Op those. advertised
weekly specials at the food
markets on a regular bas s
On a SJ igle weekend my
studies show over and over
agai n }our savings on meats
alone can range to 3fl percent
::tnd more If you own a home
freezer you can then multiply
these savings by buv1ng 1n
bulk Also regularly shop the
discount stores where food
prices are 1nd1sputably lower
,. "•'' This ru le alone can shave your ;~::: g: c~~~:;.~".., ;~; food budget by hundr~ds of
1111' co NT.,. o,.. o•AHGE d1 ll ars a ~ear I guarantee HOT CE or: ::A: ~1r.61
0 ,.. PETIT n'I (3) Buy meats according to
1<0 1t P•o••TE o,.. w1LL _ .. o the cost per cooked portion
COOCLS AND FOlt lt!Tt E ltS TESTAMEN,.A•.,. r 1ther than the overall pnce E~ 8 ~ D PANSY MAUll Ell COlE 1'o get this cost d1v1de the
tl•c a• a NOT ce s t-1E 11 e11v h•l price of the amount you
" ,. fl f _ 0~ "" purchase bv the number o
oc1 < • ~<1<1 o .. u~n , • portions the amount \VIII sup-,.~••men• v lo ~· Pl! one e1 .. once o wh c~ m•d• 10 '~ "'" "" cv • $ p!y Say you pay 69 cents ~"d h• ~· me 1<>d "oct o ht• no !or , pou"d ol grourui beet ~· '"'" ~. been •• o J1nu•"'
9 •71 ~ t ;;II I m In !he COU {)Om and 69 Cents fOT a pound O[
o O~• "'"n J o '' " coor1 • no c v c c.,," o v• w.. n '"" c "' spareribs The heel Wtll pro-~·" • ~n• Co .,.. n• \1de four portion~ the ribs
Do ..i Jonuory I 97 w E s,. JOHN minus bone and fat will pro-
1tou •1eE ac~;L~io'o~ v1de 1 1-J portions The beef
"' N•n~ t1 o•tlw•v su • 1t (OSts 17 cents per serving
S1n I A•• (I llM•il '1701 T• 11 • 5-014" the sp11rer1bs cost 52 cents
-----A n I I P 1> '",... o •ne• co•i 0 • ,. per ser~ 1ng s a ge era ru e
J1f)u1 rv 2 ll It 9 OI-;·;', J---'-----'----C..------1 --'~----"-~~~--''--L~CALNOTICE LEGA NOTICE
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Cfll:TIF CATE 0 1" &U111'11"Sf
I" CTIT OUI NI.ME
Tn• nde i 11ned c!o c• v h• I • <ondu( "" 1 l>u• n•H I ) 12 Oul>G~
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NewPO B•~<h C• f 91!.60 D e ~d
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c;~n• 11 I'• lne ,.
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COUNTY OF O~ANGE SS 0" J1nUtN 1 01! bflMI m• ht
tmcle ~ "'elfl • i'lolt'Y l'llb c ~ •"'1 ..,.
ild Ste l>eOOMI V 1-.. ~ Jol'IM D
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Pt lntt"ll'I P 11111 e•Kutwd the "' hi!!
"' rumtn •"" 1cMnow o:clae<'I o mt' LEGAJ NOTICE t~11 1uch p1'1nt! II> P ••Kii tel !ht •~m• 1----------------1
w TNESS m y 1'11"11 I nd off t ill 1t 1 "°'""" IOFFIC "-l .SE•Ll CEltT l'IClllTE 01' I UI N•lt
DONNA RI EllElt ll'IC,.ITIOUS MAME
No • y Pub c Cl ,.,... • T"' Unde .ignt:d ~· c•rl "' .... ,,
0 lllflf Cou"lv C()n~\Jclll'l9 1 bill""' 11 I' 0 1!<»1 } 4J Mv COttlm Hlorl E~• •• CO$ 1 MUI Ctl torn 1 lllldt ll'lt
/o,\1v 21 1tl1 t ct 1 ou~ O•m n•mt cit Eltl( ~C Pub -Or•nv• (Ofl, 01 y ,. ol l(f:Nl.lf 1"4 ,~., u cl I .... h «111\l'OJ..:I Jt,,u•~J n i• ii Ind Fe-bru•...,. ? cil lf'lt to1-1.,. person wl\OM n.,,,, n
i";'•'••·········-~·~"ii 'u ' Incl p Kt ol rflkltnc:t I., fO ltwJ Ct ro I Ith "•rt"' ~I 1• 1" MtnSf lltbol Ct f
Oaled Of( 1f 1t10 1 torS OJ OIL PAINTINGS
WHOUIAU WAllHOUH
OHM TO THI "'IUC
30•1 .. off , .... •itt••• Slofll,.111 ••A -·-.-.L••s w.un•o
The DAILY PILOT-
Thtt Ono Thot Corts
Ct roU fl:•• Pt ~ .., s 1 t ol C11 to nit o ,,_~ count,
On Ol'C 11 910 be!Ort 11'11 I NlltN
,.ulHI<; In 11'1<11 tor ••Id S111t '"tontl v
1ot1•1red C1rrol JI:•• Pei-ln1 •-n to mt IO ~ ..... "'"on whost ... ,,,. I
1ull•C Ibo-cl ,, lh• w !llln ''" llll'ltnl Ind 1rtnaw Mlttd "'-e•91;1.11tod fht 11mt
(OFF CIAL IEALI
MAltY I( NENltV No ll'Y ,.Ubl c Ct lftrn 1
Pr nc:kl1I Qff u. In
0.11191 Coo..f'llY
MY (~:lllell l:•l'lrtll NO¥ ,. nn
llllbllti'lld 0.-1 CO.Ott 01 IV .. lol 0-C.rnt.r n. 7t 1t1t •l'lf Ju'IU•rv J lt IJJJ tl~,.
a boneless ('Ul "111 yield
vide l 1/3 portio ns I he
corn
m ' money
above
•" '"
(8) Buy day-0ld bread ()fl
sale et supe rmarkets for its
no different from the bread
Unity Firm,
Portfolio
Will Mer ge
Joseph Cherry president
and chief execut1ve olbcer of
Unity Capital Corporation of
America a publicly held com
pan y located 1n Newport
Beach Cahforn1a tod ay an-
nounced lhat t ha s entered
into an agreeme nt n pr inci ple
" . management and
!lfltv1ces company w 1 t h
branche!! lhrougOOut the ~
weatem stall's It b a a
aubsldlar1e1 1n real estate
securiUes insurance mutual
funds and payroll deduction
plans
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OVER THE COUNTER
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"'lcff • Ml' Ill<..,._ n11H w """""• -"'·-,. '*""' oliH
NASO L11hn9 1 for Mond•y Ji1nu1ry 11 1971
'Buy Black'
MINNEAPOLIS
I
FUNDS
Compl ete-New York Stock List
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Market Finishes
011 Strong Note
NE\V 'ORK {UPI) -The stock market f1n1sh
ed strong in heavy trading Tuesday
Advances "ere leading declin es by almost a
ruur to one margin nea r the <lose 1 he Dow Jones
Industrial Average v.as up 699 at. 84" 29 v.h1le
:Standard & Poor s showed a gain of 0 65 at 92 63
A volume of more than 17 000 000 shares
con1 pared 1v1th 14 720 000 shares traded Monday
Closing prices includ ed A f&T 51 up. V-t Beth
!ehem Steel 24 up 111 ('hrvsler 251;, off % DuPont
134 1/, or 14 Ford 551;, up 114 General Electric
93 " up Vii and General Motor~ 79 up l ~
The f1rn1er tone in the steels largel}
ed belief lhat higher industry prices 1vill
un proved earnings 1n 1971
reflect
lead to
On foolonday Bethlehem Steel the nation s sec
ond largest steel manufacturer said 1t woul d raise
o;truct ural steel prices by $16 a ton effe ctive Feb
16 and (arbon sheets by $17 a ton March I
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JI DAILY PILOT TundaJ', Janu.vy 12, 1'971
·Close!! No Cigar
Poliw Priest~ost Pool
MESSINA, Sicily (AP) -Politeness has cost a
Roman Catholic monsignor $192,000 in Italy's big
New Year's lottery.
'fhe Rev . Raimondo Salvaggio, an archpriest
here, didn't gel a cenL when $3 million in prizes
were drawn in the lottery Wednesday.
During a visit to Rome last October, he had
bought an 80 cent lottery ticket in the popular
Colonna Arcade.
"As I stepJ>ed up to the counter a man In a
hurry rushed," the prelate told newsman today, "In
the interest or pohteness I let him buy first and
'>''ished him luck."
Msgr. Salvaggio bought the next ticket, num·
bered BB62820. 'fhe one he let the hurried man
buy-BB62819-was drawn for the fourth prize
in the lottery. The identity of lhe winner is not yet
known.
n•e ea.•, .... ••&J !i• ,., . ..,.,,,. ffe,_ a +•W&W?r.I
The Joneses Travel
In Private Luxury
WEST PALM BEACll, Fla.
(AP) -Travelers who want
to keep up with the Joneses
would have a hard time
matching James and Edna
Jones. ~y cover the miles
in an air conditioned. all~lee
lric private railroad car.
Jones, a reitred Pullman Co.
executive, winters in West
Palm Beach in a $400,000-plus
railroad car that is one of
four he owns. He says it beals
fighting crowded highways or
fretting in airplanes that can't
get permission land.
"ll's a marvelous way to
travel," said the soft-voiced
Jones. "There aren't many
private cars, now. There were
plenty at the turn of the cen-
tury, but I th.ink there are
only a few privately owned
cars left. The rest of the
private cars belong to big
companies and the railroads."
Jones. who spends his sum-
mers in Lillie Switzerland,
S.C., named all the cars for
is wile.
The car in y,•hich they Jive,
"Edna III ." is JO feet wide
and 85 feel Jong.
Inside is a lounge, dining
room, kitchen, three bedrooms
Netc Manager
Hugh R. Dunnion has
been appointed mana·
ger of Security Pacifi C'
National Bank's new
1-luntington Beach. of·
fi ce on Brookhursl
S treet .. lie., his 'vile and
two children live in
Santa Ana.
and quarters for a porter and
cook.
The car has two systems
for generating electricity. One
draws power from the car's
axles when the train is mov-
ing. The other uses a diesel
generator fur power when the
train is stopped.
The lounge, paneled with
Venetian glass mirrors, houses
big, comfortable furniture, an
electric organ and a television
set.
Jn the stainless steel kitchen
are a dishwasher, electric
stove and microwave oven.
"These cars are pretty ex-
pensive," .Jones admitted. "A
company that bought one
recently paid .$450.000 for ii.
And the coach building com-
panies are. so busy with mass
transit orders today that they
won't even build one for you."
The cost of running a
private car also is high.
To pull Jones' car between
Little Switzerland and West
Palm Beach costs t h e
equivalent of 10 first class
tickets for the car and one
for each passenger aboard.
MONTREAL IAP ) A
four-year-old Peruvian boy
who recently emigrated with
his family to Quebec has
dazzled scholars in S o u t h
America with his knowledge
or philosopny, music and
metaphysics, clippings from
the family scrapbook say.
The newspaper r e p o r t s
claim Alfonsito Wes h n e r -
Portugal has been placed on
stage before students and
teachers and correctly
ansy,·ered their quest ions
about history , literature,
geograph y and the
Philosophies of Aristotle and
Plato.
The boy's father, a pianist
and composer, says his son
not only know the works and
life of each philosopher, but
has developed his own theories
and interpretations of their
beliefs.
"He learned all that in five
months by reading a multitude
nf books," the father said.
"After that. he worked out
his own conclusions."
Sex Game Ban
' '
To y Fair Bars 'Libido'
HARROGATE, Eng I and
(AP) -Sex has been banned
al Britain's biggest toy fair
htrt.
"llle show will not go on,"
said fair director Jeff Aldam,
ruling that a sell game called
Libido-complete with four live
players prepared to slrip if
they l<l.'t-wasn't fit to be.
lhown 399 other exhibits
designed mainly for children.
"This is a re11pttlable fair,
not 1 atrl~tease show." said
Akt1m, Jn charge of the ex-
hlblOon that is ea:pected to
attract toy buyers from 26
countries.
Libido's inventor said thr
game, played with a board
and little beds as markers,
would help players "liberate
basic human urges." Players
win or Jose paper money and
their clothes if they He in
answering questions a b o ti t
their sex e~periences.
Four Leads UniverAily
studcnt..1 -two male and two
female-had a II: r e e d to
deomonstrate the gam'e at the
toy fair.
Revolutionizes
Denture Wearing
I
Airli ne
Safety
Mark Se t
. .. ... ~
F AMIL V CIRClJS
1111 F"HIGIDAIRE
P'"OOUCT 0 .. O•N•"AL MOTOftS
MlllUl •• UllSllU•C•
COSTA MESA
• 11 E. S..entffftth St.
644-1484 dolly ,_, Sat. ,_,
•
I
. .
R esearch
Island
Vacated
SANITIZES DISHES
POTS AND PANS
e EASY LOADING-UNLOADING
ROLL.TO.YOU RACKS
e Sl:PER SURGE WASHING ACTION
NEEDS LITTLE OR NO PRE-RINSING
e 2 WASHING CYCLES-bO
CYCLE LENGTH
MINUTE
e DUAL DETERGENT DISPENSER
INCLUDES 5 YEAR PARTS
AND U.IOR WARRANTY!
EL TORO
Lot ... Hilk l'lao
(nert l• S••..On)
ll7-lll0 dally 10·4 M/F 10·f
LK(lAL NOTICE
I
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DA ILY PI LOT :;
-Patient Survives With 5th l(idney T rans1Clla nt
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -As Dr. Chad
Calland war wheeled bllo an operating
room to undergo his firth kidney trans-
plant, he told the sur&e<kl : "I have su!·
Jettd too much, Let me die."
The $year-old heart specialist's weight
had dropped (rom 150 10 86 pounds. }le
\l.'a.' hemorrhaging, depressed, unable to
walk and scarcely able to speak.
But his surgeon disregarded lbe plea
and went ahead last May with a fifth
kidney that had only beea matched for
blood type.
Nursing
Training
Approved
Saddleback Community C o 11 e g e
trwtees l\1onday night approved a
registered nurse training program to
begin in the fall quarter of this year
with an enrollment limited to iW students.
Mrs. Gertrude C. Baker, chairman
or the division of nursing education,
told trustees the program will offer nurs-
ing students opportunities lo work with
l\\·o area hospitals, Mission Community.
being constructed adjacent to Saddleback
college campus, and South Coast Com·
munity Hospital in South Laguna.
P.1rs. Baker said the college has ob-
tained commitments from the. two
hospitals for use as training locations
for students in the Saddleback nursing
program.
Four other area hospitals havt been
survt-ved. she said. as possible future
secondary training silts. These include:
-Fairview Stale 1-lospital. Costa Mesa,
for nurse training in mental retardation.
-Jo:I Toro Marine Corps Air Station
hospital. (or \\·ork in pediatrics and
maternity nursing.
-Parklane Residential School, El Toro ,
for work with young mentally retarded
children .
-Santa Ana Psychiatric Center, for
experiences in psychiatric nursing. •
Board President Hans Vogel. trustee
from Santa Ana. noted that 150 students
~ad applied for entrance in the nursing
program.
Mrs. Baker sa id a faculty committee
screened applicants selecting students
on a revie1v of their high school
transcripts and personal interviews.
Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent
and president of Saddleback. told trus~
a nUrsing program advisory committee
of la 9 people is being formed to advise
tht administrators of the nursing pr~
gram. but !hat the. screening committee
or raculty would continue evaluating
students desiring lo enter the program.
The chle( faclor limiting the size or
the enrollment to 40 students. 1\.lrs. Baker
said, is the requirement that clinical
portions of the program have a teacher-
siudent ratio of one lo 10.
Wllh four faculty members assigned
to the nursing program. and with the
facilities available to house the teaching
portions of the program. only 40 spaces
re.suit. ~lichael T. Collins. trustee from
t..aguna Hills had hoped the program
might be doubled. ?\1rs. Baker did not
estimate ...,,hen that might occr.
Regisler.ed nursing curriculum presen-
ted to trustees Monday night provided 11
units of fundamentals , eight units of
matemal-ch.ild nursing . three units of
foundations of nursing. 10 units of
psychiatric nursing. 19 units of medlca\-
surgical in three semesters, three of
cootemporary problems and four for a
seminar course .
During the two year program students
also \viii take courses offered in other
pepart.ments of Saddleback including
physical education. biology, psychology ,
.English. speech, humanities. sociology
and Ameri can Heritage and government.
, One of the two hospitals with which
6addleback's nursing program will work,
~·ill be completed in mid-summer,
ti,1iSl!lion Community will be located on
the college's former ll:mpotary 1ile, ad·
'acent \o the new permanent campus
1
Calland's body accept!d the kklney and
.now he ia-bac.k 1t work on a Umi\ed basis
-savoring what he calls the Utt1e th!ngs
.in life that most people tate Ior 1r1nted.
Recalllni hb death wlih before the
fifth operation, Call and said Monday:
"By all scientific crittrla, this fifth k.id-
ney should hav,e been another mismatch.
But it wasn't. Maybe it was luck. And
maybe it was God."
He added that hi!: survival W8.J also
due to lhe "extraordinary faith " of his
surgeon, Dr. Samuel Kountz, cochJef of
LAGUNAN RETIRES
Col. Harold Mehaff•y
Meliaffey
Retiring
From Corps
After 27 years of active duty, Pi,arine
Col. Harold N. r-.'lehaffey of Laguna
Beach. has retired.
Col. f.1ehaffe y received a second Legion
of Merit a1,1•ard during a retirement
ceremony recenUy at El Toro Marin e
Corps Air Station.
The gold star honors his outstanding
performance as chief of staff for the
3rd Marine Aircraft Wing in 1969-70.
Col. Mehaffey enlisted in <the corps
in l!Ml and was commissioned a second
lieutenant in lKt He attended fllgb t
school at Corpus Olristi Naval Air Sta-
tion and made Naval aviator on gradua-
tion .
He saw action in the ?o.1arshell Islands
campaign of World War II, the Korean
Conflict and in Vietnam.
Mehaffey's other honors include the.
Distinguished Flying Cross with two gold
stars, the Bronze Star. an Air Med.al
\\'ith seven strike awards, a Navy Com-
mendation medal and the Army Com-
mendation medal. He earned the Joint
Service Commendation medal for service
with the U.S. Military Assistance Com-
mand in Vietnam.
Col. tt1ehaffey and his wife, ~1ary Jane.
and their two daughters. live at 1165
Noria Ave .. Laguna Beach .
Novelist Offers
UCI Filrn Course
Novelist Niven Busch. Regents' pro-
fessor at UCl for the winter quarter,
begin3 a fikn screening and commentary
series with a showing of "The Informer"
7 p.m. Wednesday in room 1 6 I
llumanities Hall, UC Irvine.
During the quarter, Busch will invite
people involved in the production of
films to comment on their own products.
Writer of more than 20 screenplays
and well-known autbor who has adapted
g()me of his own works tnto film, Busch
hopes to involve people from the com-
munity in the screenlnis series.
:Nixon Condemns Bomb I .
I
L4ttacks on Russ .Building
I •
' • In • statement luued al the Wut.t.m
IVhll< House Mondly, Pruldlnl NlX011
foltl<d wllh JG J1!11'1111 comrnunllj leod<n
l>Oin 27 major du .. KTOU the .. Uon
In coodenulln( 11 1 "crlmlnel act ol
\'iolf.GC8" I.ht G:Pocltnc or a iiomh outalde fbO Soviet cultural bulldlq i n
f'~'llnatoei·
1 The 50 Jewish leaden, ln a telqr1m
pddrewd to the President, stal<d their
I
P air Shot in Back,
I ' . :Slain in Bank Theft
~,CHIOOPEE, M-. (AP) -.A .......
t'n..r u.. """"'" o1 • -llont ~ • ...... telltr by lhooGil both
lhe blcl< Monday ., they t.y on
floor durlni 1 l>oldup. Poli<e uld
men ned with •10.000.
I The victims were. Edward Elsen:n1n,
i. and M11ry J. Hammack, 44. botb.
" Springfield. ,._lr1. llammack was the
,......... of threr dnughte.1'$ and a ton.
)
•
poeJtkn , with re1ard to lbe ••protut"
agalnlt .SOVlet tr .. tme'!_I' o10 wli!Jld-bo
Jewllh emip lrom the llOVl<t'Unloo.
"We .,.. oultapd by 1be. bcmb : tx·
plolloo • ootaklt the &vi<t cultural buUdltc In Wllddnpn/', the telqr1m reoc1: "Sach ~ble one! ·criminal
-mpot be lloppod. While we .are
1mtf<d In .... COl1VlctlGnl lhll -Jtw• in lhe 56\>lol UnlGn P,·wlah to emllflt<
should'be -lo do .... one! -who wllb lo remain llbould'.bl pmnltted
reUgklUI and cultural ft1 1 ~a.n1• we are
equally united In"" allboo 1-o1-..
actl of violence .••
"All -llld law .. bldllil Americanl share "' outr.,e," nplllcf th! PrHl.o
dm~ in.• --llnu"1 praa
_.tuy -ZMIJer. "Yau ""'' be certain mo °"' th1I AdmtnlstraUon, ttn.ctlng the l<lldtllono) liberties upon
which the ""'"1try wu rounded, join
with you tn urging freedom of tmllfl·
lion _ .. but acts of violence 111d l•wJess.
n~ such a5 l h o 1 t that have QCtU1'Ttd
In this country lately will not advan<t our
con\ITion CAU9'.''
tht University or Call!omla Medical
School's traruplanl divlslon, who spenl
59 hours at Calland 's Side after the oper·
atlon.
Kounls recalled : "He was the sickest
man I've ever seen wile pved."
Ca.Uand. the top UC Medical School
graduate Of 1959, will oot be able to r!--
turn to pracllce and e:it:pose himself lo
the possible contagioUJ or infec::tlous dis-
ease Of his patients for some months yet.
But he is back at work re.adit11 cardio-
grams and holding two additional part·
Ume job! closely atlifit with medlclne.
lte aid he's also enjoying simple ·things :
"Uke \J,klng a walk and going fishing.
And a:otng out of tov.·n to my parent.'! in
Sacramento for Christmas."
Calland's ordeal began in 1968, when he
was felled by kidney disease. By Febru·
ary 1969, he had suffered viral septice-
mia , mening itis, encephaliti5 pancreatis,
bllat.erel pneumonia and perhonltis in
·rapid succession.
To keep hfm alive, surgeons placed h,im
on a kldney machine, to take over the
Angela Didn't
• funcUon of h1s own ru ined orgaN, while a
suitable transplant could be found.
In May of 1969. Calland's wife, Hosa-
llnd , gave hlm one of her own kidneys -
an adva~ "birthday pre!e11t.'' she
called it. The couple have. three children,
"The kidney maleh was almost per·
feet." Mrs. Calland said. But rejection,
the human body's reaction ro alien tissue.
set in, The next month anolher kidney
was transplanted , and it 100 >A'SJ rejected.
Last April a third kidney was insta lled
-also a (a.ilu re. In May, a kidney wa.~
made available which a computer de-
clared "perfect," but within l4 hoors I:
was useless, loo, ~jecled.
Calland "·as given the fifth kidney as a
desperaUon move >A'ltbout any of the
sophisticated matching.
"There was one kidney Jn the hospital.
lt had just come in, There was no time.
for elaborate tissue typing. The blood
matched, and that was all," Calland said .
Galland estimated that the first trans-
plant and two years ot intermittent ho,.
pit.allzation cost brtween $'70,000 and $80.·
000 -paid by tbe UC Medical Center re-
search budget and other sources.
Violate Oath
Not a Communist When She Took Loy alty Pled ge
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Justice
Department says black Communist
Angela Davis. who received federal
educational funds whl~ a graduate stu-
dent, can't be prosecuted [or violating
a loyalty oath.
AUss Davis stated she was not a Com-
munist when she applied for and reeeived
federal fellowships rrom May 17, 1967
through June 30, 1969, and apparently
never made any known statement to
lhe rontrary until Sept. 5, 1969, Msistant
Hughes •Flushed~
Judge Orders Court Appearance
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Quite ex-
pectedly, billionaire Howard Hughes
didn't show up Monday, but attorney ..
in a '50 million suit against Hughes
Tool Company began legal maneuvers
~·hich promised to be Jong and drawn
out .
Robert Maheu, ousted head of the
industrialist's Nevada business empire.
filed the suit claiming defamation of
charac ter. The suit technically was a
counter action to a suit filed by Hughes
Tool Company of Houston which resulted
in the dismissal of Mahe u.
In filing the suit, Maheu claimed
Hughes did not fire him_ He voiced
concern that the financial recluse left
Las Vegas Thanksgiving Day against
his will. Directors of Hughes Tool say
Hughes wanted Maheu fired and won
their point in court .
Thirty minutes afler llughes was to
sho\v up for the taking of a deposition
!\1onday, District Judge Howard Babcock
Pre.sident Signs
Bill to Extend
Food Stamp Act
At the Western White House in San
Clemente Monday. President Nixon sign-
ed into Jaw a bill extendlng through
fiscal 1973 the Food St.amp Act of 1964
"'hich helps provide food [or 9.3 million
needy Americans.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said
that participants in the program ha ve
increased rrom 3.% million ia May,
1969 to 9.3 million today.
The legislation "extends distribution
of fod to the needy suMtanllally," Ziegler
said.
The bill authorizes $1. 75 billion for
fiscal 1971 and "such sums as may
be necessary'' for 1972 and 1973.
It limits the charge for coupon
allotments to 30 percent of household
income and provides free allotments to
ramilies of four with le!!: than $30
monthly income.
The states are required to cooduct
"outreach" programs lo ndvise low-in-
come tiouse:holds of their eligibilily and
to facilitate their participation.
The bill provides that public assistance
households may elect to have coupon
charges deducted from their v•elfare
clleck5 and makes it possible for elderly
persons to use stamps for meals
delivered to their homes.
Stamp1 are denied t.o entire households
containing an able-bodied adult between
the ages of II and 65 who refuses
to register for or accept employment.
This proviaion doea not apply to sludent!I
or persons responsible for the care of
children or incapacitated 1dulu.
Program Open
For Wrestling ,
lss~ a stay on the notice and set
a hearing for Feb. 3.
Babcock was expected to rule today
on whether or not Hughes should be
named a party in the Maheu ruit and
whethe r sealed court documents should
be opened lo Mahcu's attorney. If Hughes
were joined in the suit he could be
ordered to appear in person.
ROTARY SPEAKER
Stary Gange
Rotarians Hear
Talk on Youth
Laguna Beach Rotarians will hear
Stary Gange , special consultant for
Southern California Gas Company, at
their luncheon meeting Friday in the
Hotel Laguna .
Discussing "\\'hat On Earth Should
\l.'e Do Now", Gange v.·i!l point out
the similarities of youth today to those
of yes terday.
Gange is known for hi s enthusiastic
presentalions about America's luture.
and for his work In agriculture , banking
and community affairs.
T ailor Who Designed
Ike J acke l Snccwubs
TAOOMA. Wash. (AP) -Joseph
Rome. the tailor who designed the World
War IJ Eisenhower jacket that for many
years "·as the slandard Army uniform,
died Sunday.
Rome, 15, had recalled that in 1940,
Dwight D. Eisenhower, then a lieutenant
colontl stationed at Ft. Lewis near here,
asif.ed blm to design an Army Jacket
to hil speclficaUort.
Attorney General Robert C. fifardain
said Monday.
Mardaln was responding to Rep.
William Scherle (R-Jowa), v"ho had asked
lhe Justice Department to prosecute if
there was sufficient evidence thal Miss
Davis violated the loyalty oath by stating
she was nol a Communist.
Mardain told the congressman he could
Patriots Day
Parade Draws
Many Entries
!\fore than 2,500 persons from 23
Sou thern California cities already ha ve
registered for Laguna Beach's fifth an-
nual Patriots' Day Parade.
The theme of the Feb. 20 event wlll
be "This Is My Country" and it \Viii
be sponsored by the Exchange Cluh
and the Patience Wright Chapter of
the Daughters of the American Revolu-
tion. The parade will begin on Park
Avenue near Laguna Beach High School
at 11 a.m. and will end at the Festival
of Arts grounds.
The fi.1ermaids of the Chamber or Coin-
merce will serve cold drinks to
participants at the conclusion of the
parade and awards ...,·i\I be 1nade to
the most patriotic. entrants.
Those communit ies represented so far
include Anahe im, Buena Park. Barstow .
Claremont, Colton. Covina, Cypress, El
Monte-. EJ TQro, El Cajoo, Fullerton.
Glendale. Huntington Beach, Lakewood,
Laguna Beach, La Puente, Newport
Beach, Pasadena, Santa Ana , San
Clemente, Placentia, Riverside and \Vhit-
tier.
The senior class or Laguna Beach
lligh School will be selling parade pro-
grams a Jong the parade route to
onlookers. The only rule concerning en-
lrants will be strict co nformity with
the Flag Code and the American Legion
and VFW will be checking all entries
for violations . ·
Parade enlry blanks and additional
inrormation may be obtained by con-
tacting Mrs. Fred C. Ross al 494-8656.
Capo Beach CofC
Opposes Parking
Site for Buses
Formal opposilion to a school bus
transportation center any .... ·here on the
Ser ra School SJ!e ca me last l'.'eek from
the Ca pistrano Beach Chamber of Com-
merce Billi.rd of Directors.
The chamber vo ted to oppose the school
pla.yground nrea bus location in
December , anl1 President Vaughn Curtiss
ha s led the community effort to obtain
a board of trustees reversal o( plans
lo destroy half of the playground. 11le
board now ls st udying alternatives.
The action . was cou p I e d \\'ith
a motion to give chamber approval to
closing of La Playa Street so that the
school district may use lhe street for
temporary bus parking.
The chamber will see k closing, rather
than abandonment, becaiue director An-
ne Potter suggested that the Ca pistrano
Bay Parks and Recreation District may
seek to purclwe the playground and
perhaps other portions of the site.
Curtiss will appoint a committee to
seek a solution t.o lhe bus-parking dl!em -
rrui.
V .s •. Surgeon Says
fiod no grounds to prosecute Miss Davis
because her first admission of being
a member of the Communist party came
more than two months after she finis hed
the academic year und er her last federal
grant al the University of California
at San Diego.
"After thoroughly examining the facts
and rela ted cvident iary problems. ...,.e
concluded Lhat prosecution \vas not war-
ranted inasmuch as the only evidence
available for use in court is Miss O;ivis '
admission in writing to the Cali fornia
Board of Regents on Sept. 5, 1969. and
subsequently in a number of public ap-
pearances. that she was at !hat lime
a member of the Communist party,"
Mardain wrote Schcrle,
Mardain said that "In the event evi-
dence should become available to estab-
lish that Miss Da vis was in tact a mem-
ber of the Communist party at the time
nf applying and accepting (federal)
fund s ... we would. of course, re-evaluate
this matter in the light of such evidence."
Scherle replied to Mardain, who heads
the Justice De partment's Internal Securi-
ty Di vision, that the FBI should inlervie\V
Miss Dav is in jail in San Rafael to
determine when she became a Com-
munist.
She is presently awaiting !rial there
on charges Qf murder . kidnaplng and
conspiracy for her alleged role in the
Aug. 7 convict esca pe attempt at the
Marin County Civic Center. A judge
and three of his abductors died in a
shootout outside the center.
Arter leaving UC San Diego. she
hecame an inst ructor in lhe philosophy
de partmen t at UCLA . where she wa!
fired by the regents after she announced
her Communist part y affiliation.
She is charged with purch asing the
guns used in the Aug. 7 episode and
is being tried along wit h one of the
principals in the shootout, San Quentin
convict Ruchell ti1agee. under a stat&
law which holds all accomplices equally
culpable.
U.S. Document
Reproductions
Give11 By Club
A J?reedom Shrine of 28 authentic
reproductions of hisl<lricatly famous
America n documents will be installed
in the South Orange County Courthouse.
Thursday .
'fhe plaque-mounted documents. span-
ning 325 years from the Mayflo wer Com·
pact to the \Vorld War II surrende r
of Japa n are a gift of the Crown Valley
Exchange Club 10 1he county.
Dedication ccremonieli \\'il l be held
at 2 p.m. in the new courthouse with
a .... ·elcome by Robert Ballin , chairman
of the Board of Supervisors, and a
dedicalory address by F'lfth District
Supervisor Ronald Caspers.
Presentation on behalf of !he Exchange
Club will be by David Palagyl, Accepting
for the South Orange County Jud icial
District will be Judge Richard Hamilton.
All o[ lhe historical papers in the
Freedom Shrine col!ectkm are exact
reproductions of the priceless originals.
Each document is protected from
deterioralion and damage by plastic
lamination.
The Freedom Shrine is dedica ted tG
the memory of Maj. George Sperbeck.
father of Fred Sperbeck, charter member
of the club. Laguna Beach and IJ'tl residents In·
leral<d· .Iii a<l>levin& physlologlc1I el-
llcleaey .,. lnvltM , to Join South CoPI
YMCA'• Fl-program b<llnning
Thursday.
The class Dieoets T u a 1 d 1y1 and
Tburlday1 from« 1:31 "° 110:901 a.m. at v camp Dolph, behlncl 111e· ~-Pe•dl Coontry Club. • .Mom's Habit Hurts Tots
ParUclpal'rtat are te:Nd for ,heart rate,
blood -·· body lot _.u., ..... ypn _.,,p11on, aocl i:M>l!lt~ balore
•nd .n.r °" three """'1h -to -men-In ....,.., ... lcal of.
~ the c1aso -: ~ u.n
put In llW1IMlp -. Jiall1C Ind waWnc lnt<rvlll, Yop,type am:laes
lllcl --ol ,..,.,... Ind bldmlnloo. ' Geno Ad11111, wlio holdll ·,. toochlng
credol1Ual Ind • -· deilf.. In phy1Jcat utrdle from UCLA, dlrecb
lhe 111ne,, progrun,.
Thirty spactl m av1ilable In the
class at $35 for new members Ind $2(1
for prcvi(/US parUclpanta. Call the YMCA
at 4K-K31 for furtbu lnfonuatklO.
11
' ..
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. Surrreon
Gf.neral Jesse L. Steinfeld said Monday
tba1 the molher who smokes is subjecting
her unborn child to the tdverse eUecl.I
oltobo<to. ·~ ~ 1 result we •re losina babies
•114 ,._1y hlncliclpping babies," he
.. i.t.
-bly rt.er men att smoking
l10p i-.i '!Id 15 yeon 8(0, he IOid,
"but Ibo '~ ol women amoken
ln every,tjil j;oop u&pi 1~24 b higher
todiy 'Ulllt..~ Wh In 1916," be told
• .... une o1 the N1tlonil tnter•aency
Council nn Smoktng arid Reallb.
The meeting· inarlled the seventh an-
ntver1ary of the 1urgeon aeneral'a 1964
report on the heal~ hazard or 1mokln5.
It al~ marked the beglMing of the
ob1trv8nce of National Education Week
on Smoking and Health.
Dr. Steinfeld 1aid that a new report
now In the process of belng submitted
to Coriaras valldate1 once again lhe
conclualonl ol lhe 1"4 r<port.
Prevklul reporta, he aid, dealt with
the lnnuence of amokJng on prepncy.
"Now there la a substantial body of
evidence which clearly support.I tM
earlier view that maternal amoklag dur·
Ing pregnancy harms the unborn child
by (!Xertlng a rttardlni Influence on
felal growth," ht Jald.
"ln addiUon lo the already t1tlbllsbed
data on low birth weight in the prqnan. ·
cies of smok:lng mothers. there ls new
data on fetal wastage and neonatal death.
One study showed that Uieee women
have 20 percent more unlUCCeldul
pregnancies lhan they would have 1f
they bad not smoked .. "
Dr. Steinfeld aald that data for 1170
ahow lb.at ab1ve 25 .,,ercent cf ~It men
smokers man.aged to quit. while 15 per·
cent of women 1mokers were able to
give up tho bablt.
On another 11.ibJeci,, he said: .. It Is
"hlp:h lime to bfln smoklna for all oonfln~
public place.s such as restaur11nls,
the.ate.rs, airplaDCI, tt1lnl and bWlel."
1.
I
J DAILY PILOT Tu~dil)', Jilnu.ar1 !2, 1Q71
Supreme Court Upholds Welfare Visits
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court ruled today that v.ellare auth<Jrllles
may cut off benefits if a caseworker
is barred from entering a recipient's
home.
1lle decision. on a 6.:! vote, ca rn e
ln the case of Mrs. Barbara James
of the Broni:, N.Y., mother of a pre·
school child.
Mr~. James. \\'ho recrived ass1slance
Russ Recall
Of Envoy
Pondered
/>.!OSCO\\' 11..iPI l -1'.toscow Jewish
leaders today delivered a protest to the
L'.S. Embassy against acts of "brigan-
dage and terror'' against Soviet diplo-
mats and citizens in lhe United States.
The Soviets again attacked the U.S. gov·
ernment for conniving v.·ith "Zionist Ku
Klux Klansmen" 1n the anti-Soviet vier
Jenee.
There was no v.·ord here on the activi·
ties of Ambassador Anatol)' F. Dobrynin
\1•ho flew here from \Yashington for con-
sultations. presumably in COMection
\\'ith the attacks and other harassment
ol Russians in New York and Washing·
ton and Americans in Moscow.
( Dobrynin left Washington Sunday and
there v.·as some speculation !here that
1 he v.·ou!d not return to his past.)
.. Violence against Americans ln Mos-
• co1v stopped. at least tempo rarily. There
\1 ere no further reports of vandalism
·or personal intimidalion against U.S.
residents here.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said three
e I de r 1 v Jews represeiling Moscow 's
Grand Khora] Sy nagogue. the largest
in the capital. presented the protest peti-
tion .
in the Aid to Families wllh Dependent
Children Program (AF'OC), told her
caseworker she would supply a J I
necessary information but \VOUld not
permit a home visit. Benefits have con·
tinued under a court order pending the
outcome of the lawsuit.
Speaking for the Supreme Court ma·
jority , Justice Harry A. Blackmun said
"home visitation as structured by the
Nev.· York statutes and regulations i.s
a reasonable administrative tool."
I-le said as used in New York i1
is not "an unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy."
Justice William 0. Douglas, Thurgood
1'.1arshall and William J. Brennan Jr.
dissented.
The 4th amendment to the Constitution
bars •·unreasonable" searches and
--''~"'"-'~---
seizures and requires the issuance of
a v•arranl,• based on •·probable cause''
th;;it .some \'iolalion has occurred. The
\\'arrant must describe lhe place to be
searched and the persons or things to
be seized.
On !hat basis, ·a specia l three-judge
federal court in New York City ruled
Aug. 17. 1969, that den ial of entry to
a caseworker could not be grounds for
stopping benefits. Blackmun 's opinion
reversed the decision.
At that time , New York required visits
every three months to those receiving
home relier. veterans' assistance or aid
to dependent children. Visits every six:
months were required for those reci-
pients of aid for the aged, blind a n d
disabled. ~1rs. James' benefits were cul oH
Missile Site
June 2, 1989. but Federal District Judge
Charles H. Tenney ordered them resum-
ed and barred city and slate welfare
agencies from stopping benefits because
recipients resist home visits.
Blackmun wrote that a contact by
a social y,·orker was not a "search,.
in the constitulional sense. But eve n
presuming that it was the New York
program is not "unreasonable.''
'1.' • -·-"".iC!:."T.
2nd Air Attack
In North Bared
SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. Command
announced today that a second U.S.
plane made a ''protective reaction" air
a,ttack inside North Vietnam last Friday.
A spokesman said the Shrike missile
fired by the American fight.er-bomber
missed the enemy antiaircraft missile
site on the coast and landed in the
sea.
The air strike 110 miles north of the
demilitarized zone was made after the
missile launcher's radar began tracking
an unarmed Navy reconnaissance jet
and the A4 fighter-bomber escorting it,
the spokesman said.
The U.S. Command considers this a
hostile action. the spokesman explained,
si nce once the radar Jocks onto an
aircraft it is in position to fire and
thus poses a threat. The spokesman
said the North Victnanlese did not fire,
but the attack by lhe American fighter-
hombcr v1as the exercise of the "inherent
right of .!iClf-defense."
strikes. a spokesnliln said. One Marine
\'las wounded.
But three Ame ricans were reportcti
killed and eight wounded in several booby
trap incidents elsewhere.
Jn Cambodia, a large force of South
Vietnamese marines v.·as reported at
a crossroads close to one of the key
enemy positions blocking lfighway 4, •
the road betv.·een Phnom Penh and the
sea.
Sliots Shatter
New Truce
111 Jorda1i
By The Associated Press
Palestinian guerrillas and the Jorda·
nian government signed a new cease-fire
agreement today but barely an hour
later artillery 1norlars and machine guns
o;-ened up in Jordan's capital. Amman. The Soviet Union accused the United
"states of "connivance" in an official
statement last week that ""'arned the
safely of Americans in Moscow could
not be guaranteed unless lhe anti-Soviet
incident~ were stopped by U.S. auth·
orilies. The new attack against the Unit·
ed States came in a commentary by the
official Tass news agency .
HENRY CABOT LODGE TURNS AWAY FROM HECKLING STANFORD AUDIENCE
S~out1 of 'Pig', 'Fa~ist' End Envoy's Talk on Un ited Nations
The U,S, Cornmand on Saturday an·
nounced another "protective reaction·•
strike last Friday. by an Air }?orce
Fl05 lighte.r-bornber escorting B 5 2
bo1nbers on a mission along the North
Vietnamese-Laotian border. The corn·
mand said the FJO~ fired lwo Shrike
1nissiles at a SAf\.I site Jn the Mu Gia
pass region after the enemy's radar
began tracking thC' U.S. planes. There
has been no report that those Shrikes
hil the target either.
It could nol be determined immediately
whi ch side started !he shooting.
People v.•ho had ventured on the street~
in the first hour after the cease-firt
\\·as announced scurried for shelter anri
the streets were deserted wit hin minutes
after the firing began.
~~~~~~~~~~~
Brazil Demands
Note From Envoy
Before Ransom
Raucous Stanford Mob In ground combat. South Vietnamese.
headquarters claimed its forces killed
78 North Vietnamese in sharp fighting
on both si des of the Cambodian border.
field reports said ~ven South Viet·
namese were killed and 18 wounded.
"The unbridled anti-Soviet campaign
staged by the Zionists in America i& be·
ing conducted v.·ith the knowledge and
connivance of official Arn•rican author·
ities." the Tass commentary, written by
Yuri Kornilov, said.
Shouts Doivn Diplomat
A small U.S. f\.1ar ine patrol of less
lh<1n 10 men beat back an attack by
;io Viet Cong 20 miles .!iOUlh of Da
Nang, killing 15 with the help or air
Most of the shooting was in the are•~
of the Intercontinental Hotel and most
government ministries.
The explosion of shells and the chatter
of he avy machine guns was echoing
in the city more than two hours after
it began.
D.C. Home Rule
Makes Progress
With Electio11s
\VASHINGTON IAP1 -Residents of
the District of Columbia, who gained
and then lost a voice in Congress 100
~cars ago. took a step back toward self·
government today.
The 200.000 Dem ocrats among the Dis·
lr1c\'s 257.000 registered v o ters v.·ere
choosi ng from seven candidates vying
Jor their party's nom1natlon to be non-
voting D C. delegate to the House or
Representatives.
Onl~· one Republican is run ning for
!hr pn~ition.
tongress firsl gave voiC'e lo lhe Di:<·
lriC'rs residents in \Sil when it created
the c·ity·s first nonvoting member of the
llnuse and allowed a partially elected
c11y government.
Norton P. Chi pman. a Republican v.·ho
l;ellled in \\la.~hington after the C1v1!
\\'ar, \1•as the first delegate but the posi-
tion w11s abolished two years later v.·hen
the District government went bankrupt.
RIO DE JANEIRO 1AP J -Apparently
to win time for last-minute maneuvering.
the Bra1ilian government has demanded
a note signed by the kldnaped Swiss am-
bassador before flying 70 prisoners to
Chile as his ra1sorn.
A month Of negotiations ended late Mon-
day when the government announced it
v.·ould exchange the prisoners for Ambas-
sador Giovanni Enrico Bucher. and the
Chilea1 government said it would grant
them asylum.
However. the Brazilian government de·
rnanded another note from the Popular
Revolulionary \'anguard, over Bucher's
signature, that he would he released as
soon as the prisoners· arri\'al in Chile
•••as confinned.
Since several similar notes already had
been received , !he military regime was
believed stalling :so !hat dOC'tors could
put togethe r a med ical record showi11g
the prisoners were nol tortured while c<ln-
f1nf'd . Government sourct>S ~a id thry we re
undergoing "rigorous medical examina-
tions."
Sixty prisoners released as ransom for
Brazil's three previous \'iClims of pol iti cal
kidnapings gainer! v.·orldwide publicity
"'ilh stories of torture by the Brazilian
autho rities .
Dozens or priso11ers were brought tu
Rio de Janiero from ou!lyi ng districts and
Lheir release was expected f\.1onday night :
lhen the government demanded the addi·
tional note.
STANFORD. Calif. (UPI) -Veteran
U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge
was booed from the st.age amid shouts
of "pig" and "fascist" Monday when
he attempted to deliver an address ;i(
Stanford University.
L-Odge later made his speech in 11
smaller room 1vilh an <i udience Clboul
onc-fiflh the size of the crO\'ld thal
p11cked Dinkelspicl Auditor iun1 whrre he
originally had been scheduled tn make
the opening address al a confc ren<:C'
nn the performa nce and prospects of
the United Nations
Student bod y officers. the cha1rma11
o{ !he facultv senate and President
H1chan:I \V. Ly.man deplored the in<'1dent
and apologized to Lodge , \Vho said th<'
interruption of his speech "speaks !or
itself.''
"They're c.frai d (If lhr truth." ~a1cl
Lodge . "All through history. peop!e like
!hi<i \\ant to takl" over:·
One young woman who took parl 111
the demonstra11on said 11 was a1mc>cl
at Lodge for his supporl of the V1c!nam
\\'<II'
"Hr is one of lhc prune 1novcrs nf
the Vietnamese v.•ar and still is," shr
said. "Unless he is going· to talk about
lcriv 1ng Vielnam. we feel he should le.av('
\'lhercvcr he is speaking "
About 800 per.;ons v.·ere cro\\·ded 11110
Dinkelspiel Aduitorium when Lodge arose
It's Time to Go South
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lo make his address. About 150 members
of the audience !hen began booing and
shouting. pron1pt1ng Lodge to fold his
prepared lexl and lectve the podium.
Abou1 ~fl minutes later he delivered
his address to 150 persons in Cummings
Auditorium. calling on the United Stal{'S
and th(' Soviet Union In avoid sarcasm
and invective in the U,N, and "stnvc
for agreement."
Lodge 's address opened a three-day
co nference on the United Nations, v.•hich
IS celebrating its 25th anniversary. The
lloo\'er Institution al Slanford is sponsor-
ing the conference.
In an evening add ress. Charles H.
!\1ahk of Lebanon. a former president
of the U.N. (:enera! Assembly. said Com·
n1unist conutrics have made the greate::;l
ideological gains since the United Nations
\Vas f0unded
;\·l;1 l1k. profess~ir of philosophy at the
Un111 l·rs1ly of Beirut. said that the
v.·cstern world •·n1ust fi rst put 1ls ov.·n
moral house in nrder before 11 can
hC11lle 1dcolng 1cally at the United Nat ion~
with any hope of making a dent upon
lhe world ·• --
Bethlehem Steel
Raises Prices
BETHLEHE!'lt. Pa. tAP l -Bethle-
hem Steel Co .• America's No. 2 produ c-
er. has announced higher prices for steel
used in construction and shipbuilding-
increases that may e\'entually be rc-
flec!ed in higher costs for consumer
goods
Bcthlehen1 said l\londay prices \\'Ould
go up by 80 to 85 cents a hundredweigh l
on piling. structura l shapes and carbon
plates used 1n the construction of ships.
The boosts or 11 to 13 per cent \1·ill take
effect Feb. 16 and March I.
The inc reases 1narked the end of a
year-old policy Bet hlehem instituted and
the rest of the industry quic,kl y matched
under which s!eel purcha!iers were gi v-
en a 12·month, no-price-change guaran·
'"
lt'fteta J,eaders Meet
1'he cease-fire V.'as to have ended
fighting between the guerrillas and
Jordan's army, while U.N. special
mediator GuMar V. Jarring pressed his
peece efforts between Israel and the
Arabs in New York .
A joint slaten1enl by the Jordanian
government and the guerrilla command
in Amman said an yone disobeying thc
cease-fire v.•ould be tried as a traitor.
U .~., British Quit
UN Colonial Pane.I
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 1AP)
The United States and Britain ha\'e quit
the United Nations special committee on
rolonia!ism, apparently because of its
domination by African militants with a
pronounced anti white bias
U.S. Ambassador Cha rles \V, Yost
notified Secr.ctary-l;ene ral U Thant Mon-
day of the American v.•ithdrawal. Yost
gave no reason. but U.S. delegates have
often objecled to the committee's a p-
proval of antiWestern resolutions.
' " .
f'nnadian Prilnc l\fini!'ter Pierre Trudeau and Pre·
1111cr Indira Gandhi gree t one another Indian fa sh·
ion upon his arrival In New Delhi today. ,Tiley con-
~
(erred alone and it \\>'RS reporled they were in basic 1
agreement in the approaches of lhe two nat.fi>l!S"-
to main international issues.
(
\
. '
• • ---.. ~ -• -------__ ...., ---~ -..
~~~,~·~~·St'_"~'~Vl!._:)~2!:_. _:1 •~1::_1 ____ --~AJLV PILOT 5
17~21% Range Mortgage Rates
Pared to 73A% Price Stickers
On Cars Argued LOS ANGELES (Al')-Two
of Southern Calltorn1a'1
largest savings and Joan or-
ganizations have reduced the
minimum interest rate on new
home mortgages fl'Om I to
7% per cent.
a dlffertnct of about 13.50 on
$2.00 monthly payments for a
$20,000 loan.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Ford Motor Co. argued today
against changing automobile
pricing pracUt'CS under which,
it said, most new cars sell
at 17 to 21 percent less than
lheir "slicker" prices.
•·A suggested price in the
automobile industry cannot be
the exact price at which cars
are sold." John J. Nevin, Ford
vice presiden t ror marketing.
told the Federal Trade Com·
mission tFTC) in prepared
testimony.
"In some s ub stantia l
measure, it must continue to
be what the Congress intended
it to be when · it passed the
Automobile Information
Disclosure Act of 1968 -a
credil.able reference p o I n t
from which bargaining can
begin ," he said.
written statement to ~ ITC.
G~f said the proposed rule
"would lead consumers to
belleve that the e 1. is ting
aticker price is the fair and
reasonable price, and that the
purchase or autos, I i k e
purchaaes in a department
store, are no longer subject
to bargc.~ing."
Both firms said prices vary
widely from model lo model,
season to season, city to city
and dealer to dealer, making
it impossible to pinpoint a
nation';".ide "right" price.
Holy Cross OK
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP)
-lloly Cross College will
admit women studenl:i in 1972,
a d m I nistrators announced
~1onday, The college is the
last of the nation's Jesuit in·
stitutions to be exclusively for
men.
Other saving• and loan
groups in the area are expect-
ed to follow the pattern soon.
The lowering isn't so much
a savings for the prospective
home buyer as It is an at-
tempt to stir up some activity
in the home loan market.
The decrease announced
Monday by Glendale Savings
and Laan and Gibraltar Sav-
ings and Loan would mean
Glbrall.ar President Herb-
ert J. Yoang said savings
"have accelerated their in-
flow ln the last 10 days.''
He added "We're gQing to
have to work to 1et this money
loaned out, and that's the
reason b e h i n d the rate
change."
The 7:1M per cent rate has
been in effect for some time
ln the San Francisco Bay
Area , but the I per cen t rate
-in effect since November
-prevailed in Southern Callo
(omla unUl Monday. But Rep. Benjamin S . ~~~!{~~.~J~:.~:q.~11 _____ U __ S __ H __ E __ ~_l_'_S __ G __ R __ E_E __ N _______ _
3 percent all owance "permits .
the perpetualio" o( ftctitiou.
sticker prices, although at a STRIPE ·SCOTCH substantially reduced level."
Rooeniilal called the auto
industry a ''malignant
monopoly,'' said the ~ARTTHE NEWYEAR OFF. domi"'"'' of three huge (~ms \J I 1 · ~~~'~,.the.,~"'~:~ ·~. ~: ~~ WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS drastic action against auto
me.leers. 1W1C1U ~ 'lllllSK'l'-a ,_.._llllllMODWI D!SJWISCW ~lDCllMU. u.•tm
Y. 911.now ... $111t Nevin te stified a!I the F'l'C
opened public hearings on its
propo!led ruh~ to m a k e
"sticker" price s -the
ma nu afcturer'! suggested
retail price, required under
the 1968 law -be within
3 percent of a .level "at which 1----------------------------------------
substant.ial sales are actually
Ul'I Ttlt,hotll
SAL TY IS BACK HOME IN DETROIT AFTER TRIP FROM CHEBOYGAN
Journ•y Through Snow-covered Terrain Took Resolute Dog 18 01ys
Salty Travels 300 Miles;
Returns Home 'for Good'
DETROIT (AP) -'V et and tired, her
pa.,.,·s bleeding, her black and white spttk-
led coat covered with layers of grime,
Salty came home -after walking some
300 miles through ~1ichigan's bleak, snov.··
CO\"ered Lov.·er Peninsula. And she's home
Lo :r1tay.
Salty, a dog of indefinite breed, return-
ed home Ne w Year's Day to l'vl.rs. Margie
LaBeff and her 6-year-0ld daughter
~lichelle.
"She's home for good. \\'e're not going
to let her go again," Mrs. LaBeff said ~1{ln·
day as Salty-shiny, wet-nosed and bright-
eyed again -bounded back and forth,
wagging her white-tipped tail. 1 Last August, the LaBeffs gave Salty to
a family in rural Cheboygan, some 300
miles from Detroit. so she would have
room to romp. On Dec. 14. however, f\frs.
LaBeff said the Cherboygan family told her
Snlty ran away.
Then. recalled f\Irs . LaBeff, on New
Year's Day "I had gone downstairs to take
out the trash, and there !!ihe was. She
knocked me down and started licking my
fa ce and kissing me.
"She was wet and tired and so dirty that
it was difficult to tell what color she waa.
Her pa\\'S v;ere bleeding and she was
starving ."
Salty \1•as given to l\trs. LaBeff by a
friend who said he found the dog on a
street comer. too scared to move.
"Jim opened up the car door, she jump-
ed in and Jim brought her here for us to
keep." f\1.rs. LaBeff said.
F'or the next two months Salty lived at
the LaBeff home, but because neighbors
called the pound everytime the dog got
loose. Mrs. LaBeff gave her away.
"We decided she liked running around
so much she should have a place where
she could do so without getting into
trouble." Mrs. LaBeff sald.
But Salty apparently preferred Detroit.
And l\fJ"S. LaBeff said Monday : "\Vhen she
goes through all that just to get home you
have to keep li er. She loves this place more
than all of f\.Uchigan. And she 's had her
choice."
U.S. Funds
'S iphoned'
Youthful Cigarette
Smokers on Increase
WASHINGTON (AP ) be impressed with tobacco'!
While more and more of their effects on pregnancy and that
elders gave up smoking over smoking be forbidden in some
the past tv.·o years. teen·agers public places.
made."
His testimony c 1 o s e 1 y
paralleled points made by
Genera) Motors Corp. in its
Teachers Go
On Strike
In Chicago
CHICAGO !AP) -The
Chicago Teachers U n ion
1truck the city's public school
system for the second time
in two ye an today, canceling
cl~ses for more than half a
mlll:ion elementary and high
school pupils.
Negoti ators met into the
early morning. but the strike
machinery already had been
set in motion hour!! earlier
when the union's House of
Representatives rejecttd a
Board of Education offer of
a ~ percent salary Increase .
Union President John E.
~mond said the vote Mon·
day night was unanimous , and
he termed the board's ()ffer
"an insult."
James F. Redmond .
superintendent of .schools. said
the union's demands were "in
excess of resporulble ex·
pectations." He announced
after the vote that schools
would be closed today to the
577,679 elementary and b!gh
school pupils.
DIAMONDS
AND
ESTATE JEWELRY
PURCHASED
\VASHINGTON tAP)
State and local school official s
have misused millions of
federal dollars earmarked for
the education of impoverished
Ind ian children, two pro-
n1lnent legal groups charged
today.
took up the cigarette hab it "It is high time to ban
Souih Co11t Pl111 in increasing numbers, ac-smoking for all confined public
J 8ri1tol 11 th1 S1~ Oi190 Fwy, cording to the U.S. surgeon Paces such as r"t.aurant.s, C o.+1 M111 S-40-9066
grncral. 1r~th~·~·~''·"·· ;;;a;;;irp~l;;;'";;;';;;'·.'.".i";;;';;;";;;";;;d~~~~~~~~~~I buses. Dr. Jesse L. Steinfeld,
Jn a study CO\'ering 60 school
districts in eight states. the
NAACP Legal Defen~e Fund
and the Harvard Center for
Law and Education said the
money v.·as used "for every
conceivable school sys t em
need except the need that
Congress had in mind."
noting increases in new teen-1
age smokers are greatest .Rt
the age s of IJ. 14 and 15,
said Monday~ "This is a very
sad situation, indeed."
He urged girls and women
Go Fiestacoach
1971
Are You Having a •••••
PARTY
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I
f
I DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
UC-Still at Top
••nest balanced distinguished uni\•ers1ty in the coun·
try."
NO\Y I.he UC Board of Regenb has requested an
operating budget of $374.2 million for 1971·72. to at·
commodate an anticipated enrollment of 106,283---an
increase of 4,500, or about 4.5 percent, over the Curfeot
year. Yet , Reagan seeks to cut the budget by about 10
percent.
Those were the words used five years ago by the
prestigious American Cou ncil on EdiJcation (ACEJ to
describe University of California, Berkeley's graduate
education.
Today the latest ACE survey r anks six UC campuses
among_,.the best in the nation in graduate education and
UC Sl"rkeley is No, I, follo\\•cd by Harvard. Yale and
Stanford.
This recognition has been earned in the face (I(
stale and fed<!ral budget cu tting and in spite of turn101 l
and di sruption on UC campuses.
The. State College Board of Trustees is a.lso asking
for an increase lo handle an expected increase of 22,000
full time students. ~t ~gan's proposed budget would
cu t 15 percent fro the state college request.
Both systenls ·ay no\v have to consider turning
a\\'ay qualified students and also compromise \\lilh qual·
ily.
Berkeley Chancellor Roger \V. Heyns credits "the
loyalty of the faculty. Jot s of hard work. and scrupulous
effort for UC Berkelev to overcome budget cuts and
achievf' No. I ranking."
Jfe warned. ho,vever, that budget cuts place the top
position in jeopardy.
Granted that California has a se vere budget prob-
lem calling: for n1ore economies or more revenues, or
both. the fa ct appears to be that the governor is much
too ready to cripple higher education ~·hen the drive
;c;hould be to find ways to meet its needs in full.
Perhaps the AC'E report \\"ill impress the governor.
Jt should. Perhaps the achievement or Dr. C. 1-1. Li. di·
rector or Hormone Research Laborat.ory at UC San Fran·
cisro, '\'ill help to provide the dramatic impact necessary
to impress the budget cutlers to look ane\V at the in1·
portance of UC to California in the scale of human val·
ues and priorities.
Both in human terms and self-servinJ? economics. a
hea lthy· system of higher education isaan increasingly
vital necessity to California.
Glen Camel Tournament?
Dr. Li climaxed 32 years of research by synthesizing
human growth hormone for the first time. The imme·
diate benerit 'vill be to help children \Vho other\vise
\vould be "n1idgets" or d\varfs due to thei r inability to
make enough human gro\vth hormone lliGH). Paten·
tials in addition are. new trealmenl<> for cancer, arteriQ<
sclerosis and infectious di seases.
~.ith ciga.:ettes banned from further advertising on
t~lev1s1o_n, th~1r manufacturers are sending up smoke
signals 1n their search for ways to protect lhelf invest-
ment~ Rumors:
-That they'll try to place ads in comic pages to
keep after the young audience.
To achieve this in the face of a budge t cutback, Dr.
-:-Th~t they'll s.ell _pipe tobacco and cigars in. pack-
ages 1dent1cal to their cigarette packages, as a reminder.
_-T~at they'll sponsor major sports events and put
up signs 1n such a way that they can't be kept off TV.
Li \Vas forced to borrov,.i equipment from an eastern
foundation.
Jn hi s first year in office. Governor Reagan pro-
posed a 10 percent reduction in the higher education
budget He later changed his mind, however, and agreed
to a somewhat higher figure.
Glen Campbell, the pop star, says he wants to spon·
sor the Los Angeles Open GoU Tournament again next
year. M~ybe it'll turn out to be the Glen Camel tourna-
ment, with spectato~s walking a mile just to get in.
A $10 Billio1i Blunder
, Civilians Bu~gled the TFX
WASHINGTON -The ten billion dollar
bungle of the TfX aircraft procurement
program has now been a m p 1 y
documented in the fina l report of the
Senate Commitl.ee. on Governmen t
Operation.!'. after an eight-year-long in·
vestigation.
The committ ee's
report is largely
technical. The pri-
mary tactical fight-
er for the Army and
Na\'y for the decade
'Of the &O's and 70's
would not do what
It was supposed lo
do. Its cost was far
in excess ot esli·
males.
Civilian authority overrode military
1udgment to choose I.he design of Texas-
based General Dynamics Corp. over lhat
,of Seattle-based Boeing Co.
THE CHOICE, DICTATED by forme r
Secretary of Defense Rober t S .
McNamara, has proved, in operation,
to be a colossal mi stake.
There the committee on government
operations leaves us.
Only this single sentence gives a hint
of the inwardness of this whole matter .
"What part lhe Wh ile House meetings
played in the decision is nol kno'ol'n."
That is the part which most needs
lo be known. for it has to do with
whether or not this huge contract wa!I
awarded to the Texas.based concern
wholly, or In part. out of political con·
5iderations.
Those who pushed and participated
In the investigation have son1e very
, pror.ounced vfews on th e subject. The y
j Richard --
talk at length about the political reasons
111 the Kennedy-Johnson administrat ion
for awarding the contra ct lo a company
opera !ing in the slates of Texas, Illinois
and New \'ork -all of whi ch was
Kennedy-Johnson territory in the 1960s
-and for nol awarding the contract
to a company operating in the state
or Washington, which went for Nix:on.
but had the better and cheaper design
for the TFX pla ne.
TJIE WHITE HOUSE meetings look
place, President Kennedy said "0.K.."
to the recommendation of the civilian
secretaries. The secretaries swore under
oath that they fa vored General Dyna mics
for cost and technical reasons. And the
mystery rema ins.
It remains in large part because lv+'o
of the four decision-makers had definite
prior lies lo General Dynan1ics, and
a third was not a determi ned advocate
of the military judgment in hi s service.
The fourth . Secretary of Defense
l\1cNa1nara, was mistaken . President
Ken nedy's "O,K." was po I i ti c a 11 y
palatable, and it ren1ai rls a question
how lul!y informed he was of the
technical problems in volved.
So this inc iden t is going down in history
11•ith cen1ral questions unanswered and
the cloud remaining over the civilian
con trol or the Defense Department whi ch
11'\lS a feti sh under McNamara in the
Krnned y.Johnson administ ration .
IT \\'AS f\;OT WAR-1\IAD generals and
admirals who made the mistake but
the civilian authorities who were assign-
ed to hold them under leash and bring
them to heel.
This was a set-back for \\•hat was
properly known as ''the establishment"
before that term was broadened to in·
elude anyone in authority. Thes e
establishment figures 11•ere from in·
dustries and Jaw firms and, as in-
dividuals, many had made valuable con-
Lribtllions to the national security.
Now the pendulum has swung and
civilian control of the Department of
Defense is lodged in officills who are
frankly political, and thus presumably
fl\Ore sensitive to the booby-trap!! of
public office if less confident of their
own judgment in military matters.
BUT THERE IS NO insurance against
future blunders of equal or greater
n1agnitude althoug h the Pentagon is now
supposed to be undergoing a little noticed
refo rmati on.
Strange ly enough, Lhis reformation
downgrades the Joint Chiefs of Staff
(11·ho, incidentally. were mainly right
on the TFX matter);
Procedures are to be changed, when
the recommendations of the Fitzhugh
commission are put into effec:t, on
developing, testing and contracting for
new w~ns systems like TFX.
But will take a greater reformation
than this o eliminate any hint of political
fa voritism and restore badly shaken
public con!idence in an agency so essen-
tinl lo our survival as the Pentagon.
\Vhen the mistakes of the past are
examined the civ ilian leadership stands
in disrepute a;i:; much or more than
the aenerals and admirals they control.
A Bad Hippie Goes Square
Once upon a time there was a young
man named Irv ing \\'ho was a hippie.
He wasn't a good
hippie who loved
1nd created and re.
Joi~. He could
have done many
wonderful h i p p i e
things -like danc·
Ing in the mountain
meadows or maklng
1eashell necklaces
or learning to play
the flute.
But, unfortunatrl y, he was a bad hip-
pie -lhe kind who smoked pot. drank
•int and sat around all day muttering,
"Wbat a dumb world it is. Life is sure a
drag." ffil· parent1, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Wup. .,.,.. very ashamed of him. "Why
ckn't~ l"D'I oat your hair, buy tome decent: dothel, get a ;ob ind make '..in ..... c of yourself," they told him
---flu-. day.
··-·"·]--'
Tuuday, January 12, 1971
T1w ft111orf11 pagt of th< Dail~
No& ...,. to inform and 1&im-
... ~ bw l""'"'"'D ,.;, ••• ,_.. opiftlonl mid MIO-
•: ' 1 o9 toiri~. of i!'-dt<i resi .-1 ..,,../lmftu, •• 1)!'0111 no a ,.,,_ for IM .,,,,,,,;cm a/
-_. opiftlOJU, ond bw ~ tlU dlonll vi.w-
.,,.,. Of inro-<I *"""" . !ftd .,.._..,. .. '°"'"'OJ lh• ~·
flobert N. Weed, Publisher
\
Art Hoppe
It seemed as though Irving would
never change. But one evening he got
stoned in front of the televi sion set
and inadvertently sat through three old
Doris Day movies in a row.
Something inside Irving snapped. In
the morning he woke up a square.
HE CUT UI S ltAlR. bought a $49.9~
suit and got a job. His parents were
very proud of hi1n. "At last," l\1r. and
Mrs. Wasp told all their fr iends. "Irving
has found himself.''
lrvlng's job was to n1ake card board
cartons to contain fa ncy gift packages
which contained handsomely-shaped bot-
tles which contained cheap whisky.
He found his job very interesting -
tor about the firsl 15 n1inules. But he
soon discovered he could fold the cartons
w\thoUt think ing. withoul thinking of
anything ~l all.
J~e did thl!t eight hours a dsy, Monday
through Friday. But he had job security .
He had a medical pl11n, a dental plan
and & retirement plan, for which he'd
be eligible in 38 years and 11 months.
N1turally, he ·didn't smoke pol any
more. He smoked flller·lipped, men-
tholated, king-sized cigarettes instead.
They often gave him a sore throat
and FcOUgh.
NATURALLY, JIE didn 't drink cheap
wine any more. He drank bourbon and
7-Up Jnste•d. ll oft~n m11de him nauseous
at night and hung-over In the mornJn1.
No• lrviDg could have done many
wonde:tful equare th ings -llke bicycle
riding 1n the park. maklng cloisonne
eoffte table• or ltflrnlng to play the
piano. Out he. preferred watchifl8
television instead.
!·le would come ho1ne. from work , heat
a tee-,·ee dinner and sit in front of
liis sel from the "I Love Lucy" re-run
right through the Johnny Carson Show.
He could even tell you what was on
every slalion at any hour 1vithoul looking
al the paper.
OCCASIONALLY his parents would
visit him. "How are things going, Irv-
ing?" they would say :
"What a dumb world it is," Irvi ng
would muller. "Life is sure a drag .\'
Nothing shocked ~tr. and Mrs. Wasp
anymore. "How can you say that, Irv·
ing," they would aRk, .. \\"hen you look.
so neat, dress so well and have such
a good job?
"Son,'' tney would say, embracing him ,
"you don'I know liow proud you 've 'made us ...
l\IORAL: l{ you're bound • n d
determined to lead a dumb We, be:
a square. At le.ast you'll make your
parents happy.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
These are the times when 1ft wish
the governor had spent Jess time
11tudying the dr1matic artt and
more Umll studying economlca.
-A. A.
""' .......... """"" ,....,,. ,........ ...
_. ... .....,"' • ••uu . s...
-HI _,.. 19 OliloMlr ..... lletlY' Pl19t.
Legal Moves
Possible to
Help POWs
\VASHlNGTON -At least three possi·
ble legal maneuvers, in the international
arena. are currently under study to he}p
assure better treatment for U . S .
prisoners of war held by the North
Vietnamese.
Research by top legal authorities has
been conducted on behalf of POW
famil ies. Top governmenl officials have
been contacted with respect to official
initiatives in international tribuna ls to
support the 1,600 men who are !isled
a!I prisoners or missing in action in
the Indo-China war.
Some or the steps do not require
government involve.men!, however, and
could be iniliated by POW families in-
dividually or in concert. All the moves
are time consuming, but they are not
mutually exclusive 2nd all could coti·
ceivably go forward at lhe same time.
Here, according to one of the
researchers, are three possible lega l
moves which are currently being ex·
plored by experts in international law :
UNITED NATIONS -A suit could
be filed, seeking treatment in acrordance
with the Gf:neva Convention, with the
United Nations Commission on Human
RighLs .. Such suits have been filed , unsuc·
cessfully, in the past on behalf of such
rontroversial prisoners as Moise
Tshombe and Francis Cardinal Mindzen-
ly.
United Nations instrumentalities have
ne\"er formed a tribu nal to deal with
:!'UCh act ions by citizens of member
stales. There is, however, a rather active
body of legal opinion, in the United
States and elliewhere. whi ch supports
the creation of such a tribunal.
l\'ORLD COURT -An advisory opinion
could be sought, by the United States
or by a U.N. agency, from the lntema-
lional Court of Justice at lhe Haeue,
with respect to whether the: prisoner!!
are being trealed in accordlfft with
the international standards set forth in
the Geneva Convention.
The Court's jurisdiction would almoSt
certainly ~ questioned, howeveir, 'and
an proceedings In the court are very,
very time consuming.
WHITE PAPER -An international
agency, such u the. Red Croes, could
be asked to appoint a bod~ to prepare
a "White Paper" on the prisoner quell.Ion
-staling whether U.S. pri~ners have
been treated Jn accordance with the.
Geneva Convention.s. Such • White Paper
would not be formally filed in an i~
tematlonal tribunal.
Jf It found violations on the part of
North Vietnam, however, the White
Paper could be used tn persuade other
govemmenu -perhlpt the signatories
of the Geneva 1ccords -that treatment
of prisoners 1hou~ be brought into com-
pU1nce, that sic.: and wounded should
be returned, Ind 10 forth.
All of thell!I actk>na .. 1rt full of un-
certalnUts, of course, and none of them
offers any real assurance of remedial
actJon. However, each of them would
generate 80me steam In the Jonirq of
world public opbtJon wtlett, more and
more, the tre1tmeol or prieonen ii
b«'omlng an ISSUt •
By ftobtrt S. Allta
11d Joll1 A. Goldtml'*i .
Quotes
AJ Hellud, Sn JON -"We Shbuld
be th!'nkful to Algeria . It Wt'.IUld be
nice If aU our tertwball!! moved over
there.''
7fere's Olli' /£gacy to you.'
Not a 'Tragedy'
-a 'Catastrophe'
We say Lhat di'fferences in words are.
"ju.st semantical" and so \\'e fail to
undersland the important dislinctionll
bet"'een words that we u s e ill·
lerchangea bly. But if \\'e use the wrong
\Vord, it is hard lo think properly.
For a few days last November , lhe
newspapers were filled with the story
of "the Marshall Universily air tragedy"
that killed 75 persons returning from
a football game to Huntington. W. Va .
lf l said il was not
a "tragedy" but a
"catastrophe." you
would retort that I
am just quibbling
about words, or that
I am being shallow
and unfeeling. 1
think I can show
that you would be
wro ng on both
counts.
AN AIBP.LANE crash is a catastrophe
<literall y. rrom the Greek, an "overturn·
ing"). like a sudden fiood, a fire,
a falling girder. Such accidents are a
part of the natural order and of the
human condition ; they result from the
contingency nf things, and are sad or
shocking or piliful -but lhey are not
tragic.
There was, however, a tragic.element
in the l\farshall University air crash:
and we can recognize tl only if 11'e
co mprehend the differen ce between lhe
two words. The tragedy fa y in the com·
munity's frantic effort to ha ve a winning
football team, coupled 1vith its in-
difference to an unsare airport.
THE SCJIOOL 'S, and the city's, hung('r
for football fame prompted the formation
of 1 booster organization, the Big Green
~
t • ~ '·
. '
Sydney J. Harris·
Club, n1ade up or wealthy local and
business professional men, "'ho collcc1ed
funds to help pay for the college's
athletic program .
Two years ago, lhe alh!el.i c
department's budget began lo bloorn,
a new coach \\'as hired. players were
recruited froin other slates. and the
college's presi<lent re signed und e r
pre&fiurc from the sports burrs. Vig orous
lobbying attempts \\'ere made in the
state legisla ture !o obtain $1 million
for 1he bu ilding of an athletic. fi eld
and fa cilities.
~1 EANWmLf., TllE pres1rlen1 nf t.h~
Tri'-Slale Airport Board confessE'd lhe
day after the crash : "i'l'C been sleeping
\\'ith this possibility f(lr the la st eight
year<:" lie blamed a lack of funds for
tht! airporl failur e lo have either radar
or a warning light systen1 -which
v.·ould cost about $1 n1illion, exactly
t~e Jlricc of lhe proposed athletic field .
In 1he clssstc c:reek eoncept1on of
tragedy, hubri~, or false pride. is follo\~'·
ed by ham artio , or si n. and th is in
turn is followed by oen1csis. the f111f'
thal ca tches u11 v.·il.h hurnan pride and
roll\. \\1h('n ha VIJ)j:? a \'iC'!OriOUS foo1bal[
teain n1rans more to the cit izrns lhan
ha ving a safe airport. !hen co1nmunit.y
hubris is riding for a terri ble fall. The
players paid 1vi1h their live~ for this
sui. bul only if we understanl\ the true
na1L1rc of their "t1·aged y" v.·ill lhC'y no!
have died in vain.
Bush's Fascinating P la1i
In this day of en vironmental concern
a University of California at Los Angele s
engineering professor has come up with
a fascinating plan for the re-use of
waste products which could tum brush·
choked, fire-endangered wildlands into
safe green belts and rttreational areas.
With the worst br~h fires in Southern
Califomia history fresh in mind, Profes-
sor Albert F. Bush has urgrd harne~ing
waste producta for fire prevention, flood
control and environmental beautification.
In the 90Uth there is major concern
over how to prevent the disastrous annual
fires which result from the relatively
dry brush whi ch covers the hills there.
KEYSTONE OF the Bush plafl is
reclamation of sewer water, 750 million
ga llon,, a day of which is presently
dumped in the ocean off the Los Angeles
County coastal plain alone.
About half this amount could be
purlrled and reclaimed at u1>3tream
treatment plants. whk.h would intercept
the sewage water before it reaches tbe
oce1n, and then be used tor 1 triple ,,..._,
-To crtate and fttd lakes, in high
rtachea of mountain canyons. which
WGUld double u recrea.Uonal 1pots and
11 fire flghtlna rutrvotra.
-TO RAISE TH:E moisture content
of mountain vegetation and lnigatt grttn
belts , a move which would 1umt.antlally
reduce I.he pre3tnt nre h81.ard in
Southern California brush country.
-To replenlth underground v.·ater
levels In the lower part'! of the ~
An1elcs basin v.1llh reclaimed watt.r not
requfred In the mountain areas.
Professor Bwh also call.!1 for dam
I
Guest R e.port
C'OJlstruction along natural waler courses
to control flood s which normally follow
brush fires in the south and says that
green be.Its nourished by reclaimed waste
water also could help prevent damaging
runoffs during heavy rains.
THE UCLA sanitation and en·
vironmental specialist also urges that
reruse disposal, a major urban problem
throughout Cslifornia. be made an
ecological asset by tumlng barren can-
yons into recreational areas through.
sanitary landfill .
Proper use or waste wutcr for nre
prevention and flood Cfmtrol. plua lno
telligent solid wash.' mana1e.mcnt. mat
well point I.ht woy to a naturnl recyclln(
system which wUI substnnth11ly 'nhRnce
the whole ecology of cna11t~I mountain
areas throuRhout Callfornle, Proressar
Bush believes.
\
l\11ke Abrammn
CaUfrrrnl• Feature Service
By fieorge ---.
, Dear Georp:
Nobody writes
dtmwils.
Dear P.T.·
Ma}'he ynu ju~
fertority complex.
lo you bul
P.T .
havf' an In-
Total
Disco.unts
Tutsday, January 12, 1<171 DAILY PILOT l
~WESELLONLY.
USDA CHOICE BllF.
EVERYDAY ,:ool;' AT DISCOUNT
PRICES EFFECTIVE WED. thrv TUES. STOii HOUIS: Dolly 10 • .-. to 9 P·'"·
SAT.&SUN.10•.M.te7p.M. JANUARY 13 thrv JANUARY 19
;. JONNY
.· ~!"1
lliid[\
!/\' . 11~\ ... . .. .t, ,,
FAD SLICED
STEWING ~~gJE
HICKENS
CORNISH rJ:~fJi
FROZEN
ME HENS
WMI FAD
STOllfS OISCOUNT
CHAl!GE PlllCE
SOML FAD
STOIHS DISCOUNT
CHA~GE PlllCE
8 OUNCE PKG • llEGUlAll OR SWEET MILK
Pillsbury Biscuits J.O'' 9'
GOLDEN GROVE • l /'1 GALLON
,.Ai) ORANGE JUICE
Vil!J · BLENI;> j5• 79'
MINUTE MAIO e 16 OZ.• FROZEN
Orange Juice W 67'
6 OUNCE CAN lf 25'
~«r.V· ASSORTED OR DECORATED • SOME STOIES CNAIGE 4lc
ZEE~ -ZEE TISS'.UE ~:~~l
_-• SliflifliifJAM ---•· ' ··-(ji?,ilJ I GALLON SIZE • SOME STOHS CMAlll 60c
-·~--flPURIK BllACH
'
GROUND
F
FRESH
LEAN,
DEPEN DABLE
QUALITY
CHUCK
ROAST ~:;~~~~ICE
SHOULDER ~~~~~:ss
CLOD ROAST
•
GOLDEN MEADOW
DINNERWARE
,,. 4 PllCE 99c PLACE
SETTING
BEAUTY & QUALITY
is~<ffidd o ::.:~ ·---,,---' ~ .... ::.::. .....
• NO COUPONS •NO PUllCHAS(
• DISliWASHfll.SAr[
• PLUS DISCOUNT ~V!NC.SON All
COMPAN!ON PIECES ANOACCESSOflV
PIECES .
QUALITY DINNERWARE AT
DISCOUNT PRI CES
• J.Pl(C[ CO M PP,NION 1.49
• SUGAR & CtE,liMER 2.99
• VfGEll\Bll llOwt 1.99
• TWO t.611GESOUP l'\AllS 1.99
• IHtlH(fN !NCH PlAnll! 3.99
• COVE RfO Cl\SSEROLE 4.99
• SAll·PfPPfR .. eunu1 DISH 3.69
e C.Rl\VY 801\T & STA.NO 3.69
• COfflEnEA SfRVIR 4.99
SOM! FAD
SJOIHS DtSCOUNI
CH,<Gf PRICE
•
Oll:E-IOA • I lB. PKG e Fll:OZfN ~ ll:EGULAll: 011: Cll:INKlf CUT
. French Fries '9'' 26'
4STAR
SPICIALS
ARE EX TRA SA VINGS MAD E
POSSIBLE BY SPECIAL PU R·
CHASES FROM THE MANUFAC·
TU RER & PASSED ON TO YOUI
,,
' GOLDE N RIPE • DELIC IOUS
' CENTRAL AMERICAN
BANANAS
0:.
BEST 8 UY •6'!2 OZ. PACKAGE
INSTANT POTATOES 15 c
# 1 GRADE BARE ROOT ROSES aac •..
10 LB. BAG NAVEL ORANGES 97c
10 LB._IA.GAPPLES 97c
SALAD OR COLE SLAW IOc1A.
KIWI FRUIT 5C1A.
VEGRABLES :~~~T~~~:~~~:~ I Oc ...
LmucE •O!OlfA• IOc •&UITER •SA1.,1i080Wl , M,
JUICE ORANGES 6L11 •.. 1.oo
FORGET-ME-NOT FLOWERS
/.
•
~-. ··-~~·
\
I
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ . . ' • p • • • • • • • -• . . . .. ~ .... . ~ -. . ..
11 O•ILV PILOT
QUEENIE 'By Phil lnterl andi Sho11ld1i't Get Aid ...
CHECKING
•UP•
Wiretap
Laws Get
Clarified
U nho1·11 Children
What? Mona Lisa L08 ANGELES !UPI) -
The government may not use
wiretapping in national secur-
Jty Ci.!llS involving e ntirely
domtstlc situations \vithout a
warrant, a U.S. D i"s tr i ct
Court jud ge ruled Mu11day.
Not Needy-Post
SACRA MENTO (UPI) Post said the study found
Reall y a Male
1Jnborn children should be that imposing the M P B
dropped from ca 11f 0 rn 1 a "resulls in an average unmet
need of S33 per case. As a ·welfare rolls a nd aid to needy result, those families for
families should be increased w h I ch a public assistance
lo meet living costs. according grant is the sole soure of in-
to the legislature's chief fiscal come lack funds to support
adviser. minimum basic living ex-Token. Fees
/11 ~1edi-Cal
H}' L. f\1. BOYO
LET'S SA\' ;1 doodler's
n1oon facf' 1s ;i circle \\'i\h
1hree dvts in 11. And let's say
vou s1L do11 n 111 th a p.:id of
Paper and s~art dra111n.e sue h
n1oon latt'S How long would
11 take you to get bored?
Maybe 60 seconds" No. pro--
~ably longer. Scholars at the
Universit y of California tried
this boredom 1est on a siz.able
batch of grownups and found
the a verage citizen, I.hat pa·
lient soul. kept at it for 17
minutes before tossing down
the pencil. This experimen t is
!!Upposed to mee.!lurl: your
resist<1nce tb getting led up.
r-.1ight try it.
KLEINFELTERSVlLLE in
Pennsylvania is the longest
one-word name of any town
1n Lhe country , I think.
THE NAME JULlUS means
soft-bearded. Or it did. In old
Rome. But not anymore. of
course. How could a molher
know to call her newborn In-
fan t soft -bearded? Better she
christen it Aquarius Terminus
or some such A
SWED ISH AtrrHORITY on
the arts insists the model for
Leonardo da Vinci's Mona
Lisa was not a woman, but
a young man. The same young
man, he contends. who model-
ed for the faces of John the
Saint and Bacchus the Boozer.
IF' A STRANGE BLONDE
flirts v•ith your gentleman
friend, you n g lady, think
nothing or it. A man expects
a blonde lo be flirtatious. He's
ready for her. But if a strange
brunette flirts with the old
boy, look out. She can catch
him off gu:ird. Rare is the
fellow who is prepared to deal
-nith a flirtatious brunette.
Besides, the blonde rum hit
and miS3. Just 1 game. But
\l'hen th e brunette flirt!, she
zeroes in. Her C'.ampaign is
unde r way. Or so cont.ends
another of our Love and War
man 's numerous highly ex-
perienced advisers.
CUST0:\1ER SERVICE -Q
.. \o doubt you're acquainted
111th Smokey, but have you
ever met Gladly, the cross-
eyed bear?'' A. Nope. never
heard of hymn .... Q_ "Hov;
many drops in a teaspoonful ?"
A. Technically, 120.
WlllLE IT LASTS, your old
hair is always falling out and
your new hair ii 1lw1y1 1row·
ing in. that you know. All
righL Jt's a fact the ne\Y hair
grows lwice as fast a., the
old , , . . NOBODY, NOT a
soul, contradicted old Abe
Martin when he said, "I don't
know of nothin' heller than
a woman if you want to spend
money \Yhere it'll show."
IN CRIPPLE CREEK,
Colo., the thoroufhfar• or tht
nllht l1d1N }'UJ'll ap WU
called 'fi.fcyers Avenue, a most
remarkable redlight enclave.
The author Julian Street aUud·
ed to it repeatedly in his book,
"Abroad at Home." This
shook up the townsmen so
greatly they called a mass
meeting to devise revengr.
Boycott. maybe. Or lawsuit.
Something. anyway. But in
the noise of their indi&nltion,
1 councilm1n rou quietly and
said. "Gentlemen, let'! mark
this man's affront for all time.
I move the name of Meyrrs
Avenue be changed to Julian
Street." Whoop went the
crowd. And so it was.
Y oltr auesttoM and com-
ments are welcomed and
will be used tn CHECKING
l.'P wherever posrible.
Pl1a.i1 addre11 11ovr l1ttrr1
to L. M. Boud. P.O. Bn
1875, Newport Bea.ch, Calif.
Judge W I r r e n Ferguson
found unC"Onslitutiona l a pow·
er of the attorney general al-
to~·lng eavesdropping on or·
gani1,at ions within the nationa l
boundaries suspected of being
subvei-sive,
The case involved t.1elvin
penses." He reported a "t.ol.al
'"\Ve recommend t h a l unmet need " of over $200
legislation be enacted pro-mi llion stateside.
viding that only needy children The Nixon Administration
between birth and 21 receive has U1reatened lo withdraw Get Boo st
Carl Smith, 41. an alleged 1-rl..
$684 million in federal welfare
public assistance," Legislative funds from California because
Analyst A. Alan Post said lhe MPB, which is set by S . .o\CRA~1ENTO (UPI) member of the Black Panth. ) ,;;;:i;:~~ er Party, who was convicted t.;;..::;,.:.;,;;,;;:;;..;.;;...; ______________ _. Monday in a 35-page report the legislature, allegedly does The director of the defi cit-
on lhe f i n a n c i a I charac· not reflect the official need Oct. 24, 1969 of t-n·o counts of "Hell> a. ski bum get on the ol' chair lift?" being a felon in posses.sion of '
.,,.1,·c· ol ,-,·plents of Aid . threatened Medi-Cal progr am ,_ .. " ..... of recipients based on living to Families with Dependent costs. for the µoor says recipifnts a firearm. -----------------------Children (AF'DC). Eliminatina the Ji.1.PB would should make •·token" druf(g ist During an appe a l of the
conviction, the U.S. Ninth
Circuit -CoW't of Appeals v.:as
lold by the Justice Depart-
ment that agents had moni-
tored Smith 's telephone con-
versations on (ive occasions.
The court then returned the
case to Ferguson for dispo-
sition.
Ferguson ordered a JU-day
slay of e1ecution of his rul-
ing, wh ich is expected to be
appealed. If it Is upheld. the
rullna 1tipulattd the Justice
t>tp1rtmtnt mmt make lull
dl~losure to Smith of the
conversations recorded by the
agents.
A hearing would then be
held to determine whether
the wiretapping evidence fig·
ured in Smith's conviction.
The judge said hi s opinion
was applied specifically to
domestic organizations be-
cause or their involvement in
the poUUc&l proce ss.
Police fl u1it
Missing Tot
Canipaign Guidelines
Emerge_During Trial
A woman wtth children wh o meet tedtril requirements, and doctor payinents :-o thry
la alrt1dy r1ctlvln1 welfare 1ccordln1 to a spokesman in would • •share in the
11 1lqlbl1 to h1vt htr ar1nt Pa1t'i oflfct. · inc reased when she becomes responsibility for the scrvtces
pregnant under present rules. 1:f -fr---!::: they wa111.··
"The basis of need un-Federal law currently pro-
derlying the AFDC program Stale Colirl hibils such pay1ncnl but Dr.
is not present in the case Earl Brian told a group <if
or the unborn child," the docu·
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Pay a $3,000 ~texican money order ment said. "There is no 'child' E F" } businessmen Mond ay that "11·0
now and be reimbursed later from former San Diego Yellow in need. Other than increased lllCl'S ~lg lt are hoping that the Congre<:.S
has emerged as the guideline Cab Co. President Charles medical need, lhe situation or or our o~·n administration \1•iH
Pratt, put half the money in th nl an 1• not O AFDC for handling Out-Of-pocket ex-e pregna WOm S ver find a way to experin1ent \V i\h his campaign bank account malerially different than it penses in the 1968 campalan and kept the rest to reir,1burse was prior to preanincy.'' this approach if no repeal is
of former Assemblyman Tom himself for campaign t i· Th• cut would 11v1 the state SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) _ possible."
Hom, h•"s wife and his cam-penses paid with hls own Sll.9 million, with a total 9av· li S Co 1 Meantime, a special l'Om· The Ca ·fornia upreme ur paign manager. money. ing of $26.4 million for the miltee of three Democrats and
Hom, his wife Dorothy and I-lorn v,.as accused ol ac-statl, federal and county has entered a simmering three Republicans \\'as ap-
Los Angeles public relations cept:ing a total of $4,000 from governmennts, Post said. welfare controversy by agree-pointed by Assembly Speaker
man Tom Tomlin were the Pratt ln 1967 in return for Post also .!Juggesled the ing to consider a request that Bob ~1oretti lo investigate
first three defense witnesses suportlng a cab fare increase amount of outs ide income be it order the st ate to increase cont rover s i a I Reagan
'
·n Hom 's b"bery and con· granted by the city council cut that a welfare recipient Administration cutba("ks lo ·~ Aid to Families w i th spiracy trial in Superior Court. th1t year. At the time. Hom can earn and still stay on head off a proje('f('d $141)
"You didn't keep receipts was a city councilman. the rolls. Another recom-Dependent Children IAFRC) million Med i-Ca l deficit.
or anything,'' Mrs. Hom told mendation called for step-payments. "Cuts are not the only snlu·
the jury before Judge William fathers Lo "1upport step-The high. court t.1onday lion to a deficit and if \.I('
T. Low. "You just trustld Comnu"ttee chlh1r1n t.o the 11mt e1tent a1r1ed to consider a petition. find adverse effects because
somebody." 11 a nttural f1ttl1r." by the California \Ve!fare of the cuts. -n·e v.·il! ha ve litlle
All three witnesses testified Combined, th e recom-Rights Association and several choice but tn rccon1 mcnd the
to paying /or parking and Heads Told mendations for which fi gures mothers. The petition asked cuts be niodi fi cd or rescinrl -
meals for volunteer campaign were given would cost U1e the court to require state ed," declared Republican As-
workers, and Hom said he state an additional $ 3 1 · 7 welfare director Robe rt semblyman Gordon Duffy,
often hired persons on the B M tti• mUliori. a spokesman In Post's Martin to pay "minimum C"hairman of the ne1Y fa ct-fin d·
spot at rallies to pass out y Ore office said. Figures were not ne~s'' to AFDC recipients in~ committee.
campaign literature. given for some economy and to repeal the regulations Brian, director of health
"N th d 1 r th SACRAMENTO /U PI) _ measure~. he issued last Nov. 19. care services. la~t n1onth SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) -ear e en ° e cain-Post reC(lmmended the state ordered at. G<1v. Ho n" l d
Pol ice are searching fo r a paii;in) things really aet hect ic Assembly Speaker Bob Moret-spend an additional $69.8 The petition is based on a Reagan's direction an ;icros.s-
two-mon\h-()ld girl who was and haywire." Mrs. Hom .said Ii will appoint Democrats as million, and made suggestions su it already before the the-board 10 percent cul in
taken from a hospital ei-f.ionday. "This is when you chairmen of 20 reg u Jar for federal changu which, Sacramento County Superior health care ptO\'ldcr fee!':
1mln1tlon table during the really start spending the combi·ned w 1· 1 h Jhe cu I Court. along with other economv.
d Assembly committees 1 n d L11l week a fe d e r a I contu1lon C'ause by the influx money regarding unborn children, • moves aimed l't ,1verting a
of several accident victims. ~·lrs . Hom. who testified she give the remaining seven to "'ould save $3S.l million. decision -to cut off $700 deficit this fiscal year.
The little girl, a light-com· kept campaign accounts for RepubLicans. Based on a study of soo million in AF'DC aid lo Moretti said the inquiry
San Luis Obispo Site
Picked for Desalt Unit
plexloned Negro, -n·as a t her husband. said she cashed Except for the committees Sacramento County welfare California because the slate "was ordered to determinf' ~fission Emer&ency ~lospital a $500 check offered as a 1 h · 1 ""Ses, the document suggested had not conformed with a re-what the deficit actually is. I on Heat . Agr1c u ture, ..... f J for a routine medical checkup campa llD contribution ''Io tht state ellminate its "Max-quirement for coat o lving H any," l ie said he also
Sunday when she disappeared. reimburse myself" for oul-<Jf· WeHare and c r J m 1na1 tmum Pnrticipating Base·• increases -W11 rtveraed wanted to kno1v how it came
She was put into the care pocket elJ)enses. Procedure, Democrall W111 bl (MPB ), which sets a ceiling quickly after critlclam by Gov. 11b<1ut and its imoacl on the
of civil authorities after com-"1 knew I had spent much named chairmen of the most on state participation in fun-R~agan. counties and rccipicnl<i.
plaints that her mother had more than that," she said. major assembly committees, ding -n·e!f;irc. and instead allot ;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -
The "Department of \Va!cr
Hesources today announces
selection of Diablo Canyon in
San Luis Obispo County for
construction of California's
first multi -million g a 11 on
desalinization plant.
The department said the
prototype planl -n·ou\d be built
in cooperation with the federal
~overnment to se rve an area
rovering San Luis Obispo and
Santa Barbara Counties.
If the legislature a n ct
Congres~ vote money t o
finance the undertaking, plant
construction will bi!gin in mid-
1974 ;ind e-0mpl etion 1 s
t:irgetrd for 197R, the depart-
1nent said.
The proposed de s a l l i nR
<1pera!lon \1·ould be powerc<I
by an adjacent nuclear-fueled
ceneratlon plant now under
con~truellon by Paelflc G11.!I
& Electric Co
A department s pckesman
said the desalinization plant
·would convert sea waler into
Robber Sets
Store Fire;
Owne r Safe
HOLL YWOOO IUPll -A
fire touched off by an in-
cendtary device which pollot
qJd WU~ thrown br I robber
Jn Mt 1tttmpt to ktl f\11 vlclim
ca'8lld ao.ooo dam•ae to five
t.wlr1•11 oa Kellywood
llcNlnm Ml>llcl11.
Mar Dan11. 30. owner or a
linen and gift shop, escaped
the blaze In the loft over his
store. The robber took $412 .
Police said lht tall, mlddle-
•ged bandit used a 124nch
knife to take the money from
Dana. lie then forced Dana
into tbe loft aod loaed in
~ device, potSlbly a MololOv
coclttlll.
Tbt fin! spread. thtoup an
c"Hrhetd iatUc and to the cell·
inp of lhe other shops. 'Ille
t 11ln111• damlfld included
M'Oooa'. A •1"1)1, Holl)'WCOd
-and 817lilta' Shop ... Ula Mr. Sladt'1 clotlli.,. ......
'l1llmeo d1y fire companiel
controlled tht n1.me1 In JI
minutes OOt Utt lhoroughf1trt
was closed to traffic ror two
.hours.
\
disappeared rrom the family Tomlin said he spent about sources said. funds according to actual
bclween 30 million and 50 residence In the Potrero Hi!! $500 of his o-n·n m oney on Morelli ( O.Van Nuys), ex· need. The change \YOuld cosl
million gallons of fresh water District. incidentals during the can1 -pandcd !he number or C."<ln1-the slate $69 .8 mi llion.
a day. The average person The baby's niolher has since paign and was reimbursed by mittees to 27 from the 21 Federal and counly funding
uses about 200 gallons of water conlacted 11uthorities and the Mrs. Hom two days after the which existed when he look would be increased by $96.4
a day, the spokesman said. re.!ll of the famil y, Lhree election. control o{ the Assembly from m i 11 i on and $33.8 million
Tbe only desalinization plant children, }las been reunited Ear!Jer. Hom said he cashed the Republicans Jasl week. respectively.
now in operation in California ~·ith the wo man. \rm;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii,_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
is in San Diego County arid Authorities described the
produced about 50,000 gallons missing Infant as weighing [0;
a day, the spokesman said. seven pounds. 18-inches long }!6:T"
No cost estimate was given having curly hro\l·n hair,
for the proposed g i a n l bro.,.,•ri eyes. and a dimple on
~!~~l~~~:~~onsai~~~u:i~dy th1~1 _h_e_r chin. ---1 ~~IE
~~i~~r\a~~y to determine a WHAT IS YOGA? ~
State \\later Resource s -
D"cctor William Gianolli said ~'"'~ SIUU E the plant would h•lp California ~ r.i.1 IL Ii plan for its water needs into \ ?) E -
thr next century. ~ h
Dr. C. 1\1 . \Vong. director -
of lhe Federal Office of Saline DEM0HsT••r10H & TALI(
Water, said the plant "offers CLAs~~D5.,~1:;r,;.~;s'.Mi ,..M..
the bul opf.!:rtwlity"' for
delermlnln& ih1 economic
ff'!aslblllty and relleblllly of
large.scale desalting."
YOGA CENTER
44S I . Ht~ " ~wl!• 1
C1t11 M111
4#-tHI
THE SHOE SALE
YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR
J)
CHILDRENS & TEENS SHOES
GIVE HER THE LIFT OF LIFE
Lt1amond bridal Hta in 18 and 14 kar at
gold. From Jett : S550. S575.
S350. $450. $395.
We're in Show Business.
DMded Payments Arrano-d.
c111e,.. ~" ,.,..1,... •-"'" ........ 1...iiA~l'I •• M1tl« Clllfwe. rw.
SIAVICK'S
J-Slnftltl7
11 FASHION llLAND
NIW,OU HACH -644-1 JI~
Op111 Mo11tl1y •" F11~ • ., u11lil 9!10 p.m,
Reguler to $17 .00
NOW 290 to 890
,lt11e ,., Alt ,.1 •• E''" N1 1-.t ,,._.
., ... 1111111
30 FASHION-ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER • o«-2464
"Wcdlichs Music City
PRICES SLASHED!
S~VE UP TO '
$200
EXTRA SPECIAL
Hurry -Only 3 of these Spinets
by Wurlitzer left -we sold 57!
MELVILLE
CLARK
REGULAR $795
$595
Tlllt lew ,rtn l11clud .. be11Ch,
ffll"'J -... "" 111 lltMt h1111.,.
INTERESTED IN AN ORGAN?
Corne In to Walllchs N 0 W -
SAVE UP TO $40000
lano Instruction?
UI fer lnform•tion.
Wllliehs Music City
SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA
Phone 540-3165
For The
Marriage
Licenses
O"ANG£ COUNTY Pee. Jl1I
JO>JES-MOODY -I•'"' M, 10. nl
ll6 F'loro1><i~. ~•n Cl•m~nl• ... a
lr•1 .. A .. It, nl J'7 A•e "'•a11oro, ~~n c1"11•n1r
lt1CE·OA'4J:NPOl!T -l•rrv "·· ii .
o• nt.• M~Plr "'••. (o"• Me..10 end sn11lr• A., l), or Co110 Mr51.
NEWTON-DEVOS L1rry, 71, or
6•1! L~rk•Pur o .-,... !-lu11l lng!o'1
B•ech on~ Cornelo1, 19, of Huntl11g1on
8 11ch.
llURl(E-SM1TH -Jim•\ f> -II. o/
•1~• Gr<'n Ave , Lo1 ,ldfm•IO• 11'0 (narle• J.. 11. ol 919 Hi llla1v,
A.,1ne1m,
l IVI NGSTONE-BACON John H ,
JI, ol 1()1 l"h ~!•to!. N!WPO"
Brien •<Kl 1sot111 O , JO, ol Ntwpor!
B11ch.
LINN-KLINE -J""n v. ~l. of ?680
V•ttor l• Dri•t. L1gu,.. 811cn 1na
Joan L, 1•.otl •1un1ll•1dl.
DOTTA-WIELElt -Wllll•m A , 36.
01 tllSl C.omanchr . W•stmln>ter 1nd
Root M .. lJ, of Wulmlnstt•.
WILSON-ENGLEMAN Br n11y J,
0 of 111 P"sldlo. Costa Mt s•
•nd Yo11na1 E .. .o, ot Cou a Mu1.
NEWBY·PELL!-<AM -Jl <k E . .!".
ol 1•111 N1n1u LtM. l-1unllnflon
Boacr. ••d Ooro1v M , 11. o• 15•}1
811~ Sir~•. Woumlnsl"'.
STANLEY.HOWE -Wlllla"' •, It, ot ~I Sr.ltlas Drivo. tlun•lnt!on
Bo1cr. ••<> l(,inloen •, 11. ol •001
Do•I• Driv~. liunllng!on B••<h.
O.c, lln4,
J1'COBSON·MAli.lV GMUNNA<>,
I " 0~ '<"I B•lo111c Oriv" Cosio
l>'fSI and [ngll•r. L , 11, O! CO!lt
~\t1a.
SEYMOUl!·FR..lSER. -Tull•• H., 1.1.
01 /ti? •voc100 •••, .(o•on~ oel
"'"' a nd Timmi• IC , 11, ol 271 v.1 ICo•on, Newwr! f!t1cn.
l(R.AMER·5HUPE -J•m•s J . n, o• "I L1>mb1•dv L•oe. L11un1 B••<ll 1no S1ndr1 L .. n, ot L1~un• B•1ch.
Death Notices
l lTTNEll
Edn.t llil!nt• 15' S~erwood ~!, Co•••
Mou ~trvice• ""ndin9 •1 Wn!chtr Cnoo·
el Mo.,u1rv, ~-•Ht
CiOVAN
J1<nt > L Co••" ll•••••d h111b1no ol
lhln GO••n. !ov•n9 111ntr of Go•1ld l
Govin 1nd "°" J•n•nt f'">(lbbtll. .ll•o
•urv111ed bv 1011• ~·•ndcnoldrtn Me.,,orio•
'"'111tos, ""•one1d1•. ) OM, sr A..O•t w•
Ot11b¥ lo d i n (hu•cn. !&llO 51 Andrlw•
Ploce. Now""'I Boacl>l F 1milv 0111outo
!l'l>u wl1h1n• lo ono~t m.,nc,.111 <onhl
b</1-1. 01.,..1• co~l•lb\llo 10 rnt llv!ldlno !'"'"' ol Sr 1...i""'' Cnvrcn. C1111n•n
Ml.,lon Mcrlu•"· Ci1taon Ci•O•I, Oirec
'""· HOLllElllETH
J!H •nt Mar!• Hold"''""'· 11111 A.,.io,
L•nt. livn!Jng!on llt•tl' 0•!• ol dflll'I.
Jonua•y 1g 5u•v•ved b• !>u1bt nd. 0•.
Poii.•T E 11Dldt'1t lh; l0"'' Oa•ld E
S~root. Hun•ln9 lcn Beoch: cna•lt •
~nroae. Gr~n•O• 1-<lu1: Elm" 0. Sh•Ddt.
l""u••nd O~i<!' <louQhlOr. Joon" F I to,,.
•on, Si n 0•1~0: •••nd"'"'· D•vld E.
Sl'l•oclt Jr ; g•1nd<11u9Mo•. Cvn!h1&
Shrodt Servlct•. Wtdn••d••· l •M. Pa<•·
''' V;tw (l'l ot l EnTomb'T'tM, Ptclllc
v ,1w M1morl•I P1r~. P1t lnt Vlt w Mo•·
•u••~. olr0<to,.,
M.lKELY
C:trCI Jinn M•••lv "~" •~. ol 706 0.1 Mor
Avt ,, CO"I M1•a 0•1• Cl dfllh, J1nu·
MY 10 Survlv..O bV hu1b1nd. lluuellt
•1n, l1:11j1e!I Jonn1 '"'O 01uqM1,.. 1(1!1>·
le«n 1nd tHncv Ma•oiv. 111 ol Co>t•
M•1•: mom.,, Fdn~ Clor>.: ~••!htr.
Eva"' Cl&•i<: .•l•I•"· Nancy Smoi<t 1..0
Jotn °"""''"•· 111 ol Slcr1men•o. 11 ... .,,
w,11 be rtcl,.~ •oni~h!, Tuo1d1•, 1 PM..
Reavltm M111. Wednt•d•v, • AM, b<>!I'
~I SJ. Jc•thoml (11llOl•C ChurU., wit~
Fltntr ThomH N,.1 ... otlltl•ll"'· 1 .. 1 ..
mtnl, HOIV St ...,l<ht r Ctmt1t •v. 11•11
ll•otdw1• MtH"tu&rv, D"t Clo•I
MllllllTT
E•"tl G Mttrlll. '11·0 Ct llt C1d1T. L•·
ouna H•ll' Cott ol Of11h, Jl ~Ulf'V !G
~"""l•ea b• nu1b•~<1. Wer'd1H C Mf r•
,111. Jr ; l(onnt!~ >,\t"l!I, b<>H! Qf Te''"'
<1111ehlt", Mrt Trudv Ito••''' Btl1Kt1:
M•"Y Ann ,,..,.,ii!. Hf>ll .. on; 1lSl!'I• ""'"·
Jul/1 Leo. D•vld1on. l 1vun• lllllo; M•~
Flor•n<-L;nauv, O.nve.: M•1. 11e1•v
Jono Hewell. Nl•on, T1•15; 9tln<ICft•I·
<l•en, Rooor1 [ R.og1•1c tlo,.era Rooe"
Jr , Margl'e• L Ito••'" M••, cn1r••1
(.nrl~!l1n: M••. ""'' Wol!O<>I Davia Poe·
bof!•; o•t1T·t••norn11a,.n, Jtl+•1v en.,,.
l•l n ~nd J~Mllfr Wl!!.<!r SfrVi(t j, Wea
~~·<l~v. 1 ,.M, P1co!lc "'""' C1'1ofl VI••
1!1!.nn. w.anos~•Y· • JIM '" 11 Noon, P~cihc Vlt w (""Pfl. F •mllY l119GU'S 1 ~•• ""'"'"" I~ m1lo.• "'emorl~I <onld
tiunon" .. io11• con"'bvl• 10 ~ ..... si.11•
Me<li<•I ~ue1,,n, S~n Oltoo. ln1Umt M,
P1c!lit View M•mo.,~I Pt•I. "•rifle
V"W ~D<IUI'> 01rec1o•• ~l(El TON
Gnr<ltln (~o<I\ Sk•lfon 1'0• !C. ol )I'll
Fllnn l""t Linr. 1-<un!,no 1on Beacn. O"•
o! oealn, J1nu1rv 10 Sun1ivea bY "'lit,
FIO•tn(o: d1u.,Mtr>, lleckv Lvddon •nd
\l o<~• \kenon: mo•n•'• M'I. l•'"'• s-ol-
1on. Service>, Wodnna1v, l PM, Smll"
cnipel. ln1't•mon•. GoOd Sneanord Ctm·
•tt•v. ~..,11111 Mcrluarv. O!•I CIO•t.
ARBUCKL E & SON
:;, Wntcliff l\1ortuary Jr1 E. 17tb St .• Cotta l\le1a . -• =~BALTZ l'o10RTUARIES
Cflrona del l'olar ••. OR J..f4SI
Cotta 1\le11a . . . .. ml 1-Zu.4 • BELL BROADWAY
l'olORTUARV
11 n Broadway, Cost.II l\le1a
LI W43l • tt1cCORMJCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Ca.nye1 Rod.
4H·H1S • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAJIJt
Cemetery ti.lortuary
Cllapet
SSll Padflc View Ortv1:
Newport 81!.ach. Calllorllia .... .,. • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL f'UNllJIAL
ROME
7111 Belll Ave.
We1tmluter ... llWW • SMmts• MORTUARY
U1 l\1ala SL
ll11JJllnito'fl Beacll -
Grant
By JACK BROBACK
01 I .. Oallv "1111 11111
ANAHEIM -A ntw ap-
proach to Orangt C<x£nty's
problem of thou&<indll fl r
unemployed a e ro s pa ce
"'Orkers v.·as launched ti.ton·
day.
New Age Schools, 1101 \\1.
Katella Ave., with the aid of
a $140,000 grant from tbe U.S.
Press Cluh
Banquet
Set Jan. 30
Orange Park
Gra'vel Pit
Study ToW
ORANGE -Resul ts of an
engineer.1ng study released by
the county flood Control
District indicate more trouble
for CG n s o I i d a te d RocK
Produ cts Co. in gaining a new
gravel pit franchise in San·
liago Creek .
The firm has been involved
in lengthy hearings before the
county Board or Supervisors
for more than a year nver
the project in the Orange Park
Acres area. Arrayed in op-
posit.ion are residen ts (If the
area .
The l'ngineerin g study by
the Santa Ana firm or Con-I
verse, Davis and Associa tes l
points lo a "potential in·
stability " to the slopes of an
existing sand pi! if the new
operation is allo~·ed.
The report stales that l'\'en
\\·ithout the proposed new dig ·1
ging there is a "m111or pro·
blem of seepage in the area."
Consoli dated Rock Products!
or iginall y presented a plan for
reclamation of the area afte r I
!he digging is tompleted.
Planu.ed wa s a large lake and
17eek bottom recreation area.
1'he engineering r e p o r t
states lhat on ly major mod-
ific11 tinns of tM slopes of the
existing pit ~·ould make it
suitable for ust as a reservoir.
Date Set
Nen' Trial
SANTA ANA A new
Superior Court trial date has
been set for two men accused
of the apparently motiveless
killing or a Vielnam war
veteran whole beaten body
"''as found bthlnd a La Habra
apartment building.
Judge. Byron K. McMiiian
scheduled Feb. 16 Q the date
on v.•tuch George Albert Scott,
20. Pico JUvera and Mk.il•el
'Jbom~ Turaiaa, 22, Avalon.
Catalina lsland. wtll go on
trial. Both ~·ere ordered to
attend a pretrial heating Jan.
"· La Habra pc:>llce arrested
Trains
Deparllncnl Gr Labor. began
!raining 100 u n e m p I o ye d
aerospace man llge rial lind
Lechnicnl personnel te start
!heir own businesst<s.
The approac h differs tron1
01her projects a 1 m l' d al
retra ining men so they can
work for so rneone else.
The JOO .initia l students in
the project have one thing
1n com rnon. They have been
on snme form of welfare.
The trainees l't'ill not have
an easy lime. Utilizing a
workshop-lecture plan. lhl'
class day will be 10 hour~
Jong , fiv"e d<Jys a week .
Projec! Cord111alor Francis
N. Ever'!tl says the 100
Aerospace
Our lowest priced 4·Ply Nylon Cord tire
"All-Weather Ill"
Blackwall
•C1e1n 1idet,\·1Jl dt!ign, n di1l di rt& on •hou\drt •Triplr·
1tmp•rrd nylon c:nrrl con~trui:;lion • Huv now •I lh•s&
Jo 1v prlr;t1
LARDER SIZEB·ONE LOW PRICE
•?1~•1 ' • 1.1s~1c
• t .11•1 I
BlACKWAll
TUBELESS
$1595 p1w1 s1.1•
Iv $1 )] IHI.
r ... ho. !lo
... ~. ~ttdtd.
s ... i. ~o, 1 J h1 ... • ... •1
111b11· .. ~•11•\l lti•te f•
1" No l'ld• "''~'~
US[ ou• ,1111 t!ll Cl ,.,.~lflf
Hfl '"" OI on ••D•t ltd """' d .. n,.n4 !OI '•OO/tU llfH, ....... ,
run 0111 nl '""'" •lrt• du•l•r 11,,, o~•« bu•"' "ill II• 1'!1ppy to ord1r
)""' "" 111• •l 1h1 ldvr r!"'" o•lc• '"~"'"'you o '""•ht<~•~ I~'"'' """"'l ol Htt ,.,.,c~••dln.
3 WAYS TO
CHARGE ,.m2·•3·==
GOOD/YEAR
1t Staned Locations
Do Not Honor
Benk Credrt Ctrds.
llOT ll¥MUl&f IT lOCATIOllS
WITTf TIU fllllOI. 0
....,. U.I. l'lllo. ,.uh •1tr1 If •.;i:..--NdH, ~ V ti< t in
•1111 .. , clNlltlllftkl&
Tt1lned .-xpr.rll win •df111I lmllilJ'l l'.ll'I •11 four wh~1!-.
Add bN.);1 Onld ii nnclllll •nd 11!11 .• C:J1111, ln1p<H;I ind nt)IM:k
Jl'011I w ht"I b~trfn11. ""·•ll1n fronf ~nd. C.,ITf'(;t \:t lflbnr,
t tll«r 1n<l '"••!n. Mnhl"' 111 • w h""I•,
.... :·• 77 ) ..... '
GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS• TIRES
!ht pair in the death last
Oct 16 of P!\llip Ca11anon,p • - - - - - ---- - - - - - - - - - - -21. Pico R ivera. who waa ~~~m!;~1 YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. INC.
a fight and the «><1e1endants LAGUNA BEACH COSTA MESA
fled v.•hen Castanon coll•psed I
with ~ crushed skull. 4'2 OCEAN AVE .
Both men are held In I ALSO
Or11nge County Jail without THEODORE
• Phone 494-6666 1596 NEWPORT BLVO . • Phone 549.9393
ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor llvd.. Costa Mesa 642-00 I 0 -----------------------
LEGAL NOTICE
T41HJ
NOTIC I 'YO ClfOITOllS
SU •El lOll COUllT Of
TNI •TATI 0 ' CALt ,OllNIA
FOii TH I COUNTY 0, OIAMGI
Nt. A·Utll
E\lt l• 01 HENllY P HESSLEll. •l1c t 'IO'"n ti HENR Y PAUL HESSLER,
D•Crt ••d
DAILY >!L DT 9
,._,..,...
CallTt,tC.t.TI! 0' aUllNISI
'ICTITtOUI IU1MI'
lht un<>trslt ned dOH cerllf\I •M I•
'""ouc!lng 1 bu•ln1u •I II•• 'lit.
Irvine, C•Oltornlt. ""' vnde• 11'1t !le· !lllou~ tl'm nam• ol TO THE "01NT
1nd 11\at ••id llm> h com""ff<\ of
lh• 1onow1ne 00<•on, wh•M "''"" I"
lull """ plac• of ,ulatnct 11 t• lollltWI"
Mn . Ruth """""'' J511 Surlvlew 1.1nt,
Coron• d•I Mor t1•1S.
Oa!td DKtmblr 1t, 1'70
"'"· Ruin llomm 51t!t of Calllo•nlt. D•t •t• Countv•
On 01c1ml>lr 11, ltlO, btl<ltl mo.
1 Notaf'Y Pu~llc In i ncl for •ti' S!1!•,
oe .. on1llv tPlttrtd Mr1. ll11l h llomm
known !o me to bt 1no 1>1"0" wno•e
nome 1, 1ubscrlbed "' lllt w11nln ln-
•trumt n• 1'111 1ck....,..lt<lttd 1he • .. •<11!0!1 I"• ••m• <OFF ICl .. L SEALl
R•l>I H. C••notll
Nolt•• Public-Ct lllo,nl•
l'•\nclp•I Otllce In
Or1n1• Ccvn!V
My Comml11lon E •t irn Se••. u. u n
•ublhl\ed O••""• CHti D•llW ~nor
Otcembo• 29. lfJO tnt J1nul •Y lo. "· tt, ttll ,_,_,.,
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE ts tlEllEBY GIVEN to 1ht
<rH lt••• ot '"' 1M v1 n1mH 00<•"""' J---~~~-,~~~~~----tn11 t ll _>e,,, htvlnt cl•lm• 1Qaln•l lllOTICI TO Cll'OllOllJ
11!• .. Id <>•<Mlll<ll 1rt rM ulred 1'0 1111 SUl'lllOI COUIT 0' THI'
thtm, wl!~ l/>f net H H IT 11.._.f~"'I• jn STATI' 0 ' l'.ALl,OINIA ,011 rne ofllc• ol •he cle•~ "' !ht t b<>v• Ttll COUNTY 0, OllANll'
tnllll.O COll•t, o• to P•t!la'r>t !1'1t m , will\ Ht . .t. .. 71tJ
rnt n0<:•Ut •11 11oucht••• to tnp un• E•l•I• ol ANITA M, JONES, 0Ktt lf'd
d"'1lont<I 11 11'11 otflct ol ~t' •llarnov. NOTICE IS tlER£11Y GIVEN l't lhfl
OO NALO N. IELVEA L. 6l5J l~•l>I• crMllots of ti'to l ba•t nam..0 decf\lerll
Ct n•on Bou1ov1•a, Sulit Siii, WOO<ll•<i<l lhar 11! '~"ons navlng Clt lmo attln•t Iha
H1lh, C1lll0<nl• fl3'4 which ii th• ••Id dt<•<>enr ••• '"ulrMI ro lilt lhtm.
olt c• cl butlneu of ltle underolan...:i wlln lh• nKtt n rv •ovchtro, r" m~
In 111 mt ll••• pl rl1inlnv to lht t•t~lt n!ll<t ol 1h• cit•-GI •tht 1bavt '""
of ••Id dKodtnr, wl!hln fOu• mon1~1 tlllPd <Gurl, •• Jc '"'""' tnt m, wl!P>
all~' ll>t l!ril p~bllctllon of 1n11 nollc• !ht ~•CeSIM• 11oucll1r1, to "'• un•lf,.
D1tt<1 Jtnvt •v I. rflt •lontd •' 11'1• ol!IC• Qf Mt AllC•nt v•.
:
61!1Y Marl• 11tHl•f B•o•<>" 1na ll•C•Otl, HDO C•m•u• Drlv~.
E•tcv!•I• ol 1h• Wiii or Suite Nvm~t '-10. N1ww•l llttch,
lh• •tiov• r•mM de<:•d•n! C•lllnrnl1 which Is l~e ol1ct ol bu1lnt s•
OONALO N llLVIAL 01 r,.,. 11na•'ll9"td In 111 mil"''
l lH r...,,.,., t1nyH 11v•.. oor!llnlno 10 1~t •11•1• ot ••I<> a .. ed•nt,
Sllllt Jtl wl!nJn 1...,, mon!ho 1!11• lllt !1•11
Wtofl•"" NU11. Ct llftl'n11 t llM 1>ubllc1llon ol thl' ""'lco.
ltl: UIJ) !44-4... Dllt<I O..:ambolr 16, l'11.
All..,.•Y ,., l•M11trl• Htnf'Y L. Jone1, Jr,
Oubll1ht<I Orantt Co••• 0 1llv •1•0•. Exocuto•
J1nu••• n. II, JI ""' F•O•Ut nl i. "' '""' W!lt Of lht ltll 51·11 t bovt namMI d~.,;11nl
----llOX ON ANO lllOXON LEGAL NOTICE o Ot Camt111 D•ln , '""' N11!Mtf' ..-1-----~c~c-----J N"'H<t a1ac~, C1Ul"llltt
t 111 "'· •-nm T••= Hltl Ml-t\fl
CllTl•ICATI 0' IUSINISI AUNMYt ttr INHlll9t ,ICTITIOUS ,l.M JtAMI. Publlllltc:I Ora"'' c .... , Ca lly •1101
1.0.11 ini D•<.,.,bol• n . :tt. 1•1&1 '"" J1n111rv 1. 11. lt7! JD).JD T"' ..,.ae•1lont<I do ~e<tl>v ctrtl1¥
11'1fl 1nev '" cOl'du<ll"' • buslnus
!U CO-"••lntr•! •I ~ E"tl!'o•!tt LEGAL NOTICE
SI•~•, Co ol• M•11, C•lllornl1, 11nd••1-------1""' llcll11ou• '"m """'" ot SAMMAll.l ".Jtltl
OEVl!LOPM[NT CO. 1..0 th1! 111<1 firm C•ll Tll'ICATI 0' COlll'OllATION "O"
11 tO.,,OOlt<I o! If>• loll-'"' ot•>en1, TllANIAl'.TrOM 0, IU11N•ll UJtOll
wl\O>• n•mt1 in t11il •nd ol•ce1 o! ,ICflTIOUI NAMI'
rHIO•nct ••t 11 !ollow1, 1.,.wn; THE IJNOEll;SIGNEO COll,.OttAT10'4
H~<11on I S•t!ell 1!11 Som••s•I a~ M •en• c••!l!v rn11 11 11 c11<1d11cll"' •
Lin• ~11woort lle1<n. C1l.i Alch•'" bu11,,1n locoltd ti 1111! s~v ••ft: Clrcl•,
l M<A<lam, lCJ Odl1wood lloto. !t nl• 1'n1, (1lllornl1 ""°"' the lld ll!ou•
Co1on1 Otl M••• (II,; Al••t ndt • 5 llrm nam• ol COMPUlEll 50,TW.lllE
R1<1Q,, Ill Wu ! M1~I• Aven111. OEVELOPME'-IT (0111'. """ Ill•! '"'"
Monrov••. C•1 ; W•ltt r 11100$, lll firm h tomac••d ol II\~ !otlow,n-.
W•1! M1ol ' ""'""' Mon•ov11, C•I ; cor~crolicn, ... ~.,. ••lncl•al ollco ol Sle1>~•n ll•doo, Ill WIJ1 M1Plt Avtn11t . bu1l"t'' 11 •• IOllow1
Mon•ovlt , (~I C.S,0 CorPO(fllon. !11JI Sky Pf•llt
Olltd Dtc•"'~' I•. 1t7~. (lrtl•, S•nl• An•. Ct tllo,nl•
tluO•<>n fl S•ll•ll WllNE SS II• 1'11nd IMS ll!n do, of
Rlch1•d E. Mt.ld•n1 I C•~tnibtr, 1'10
.lif ••ndtr S ll1do• ((011POll4TE .>EAL)
Wi ii•• lltOo• c..~o COllPOfll."t lON
S!-..no~ lltaos Wllll1m Full!•ubc. Preila•nl
ST.ll[ Of CALIFOttNIA, ST1'TE 01' CALI FOlll<t.t.,
COUNTY 01' LOS ANGl!LES. H. COUNTY OF OllAl>!CiE, u .
On O.c""'ii.' ll, 1110, be!<>•• me, On 11\i• llln div ot DKt'f'!'lbo!r. •.D.
• NOii'>' Ovbll< In ..... "' 111<> Coun1¥ 1'10. !lelo•• mo '"'"'' E West a NOlllY
and 5111•. 0111011111, ••••••tel Hud..,nl ,ublic In end tor 'lid Counlv •nd Sl•I•,
8. S1f!el! 1nd Rlcn1 •d E. McA<>•m •••ldint lht1•I,,, dll!v comm!ttlllfltd 1NI
i<nown lo mt It bl I""' ""'"" whtl.e •worn, 1>1•10tt1lly •-••H Wlllltm
nam•• "l •ubK rlbed lo 1111 within 'ullhubo k,_" to mo lo be 1"•
1'>1lr11m•nl. 111<1 •ck-!Atd I& ,... P,..11dtnt ot 11\t co•...,rall.., lh1t ••tcv-
1n11 lh•Y t•rcvled tne .. mi!. tl'!e wllhln lnolr11.,..,nl .., lltrltll "' '""'
w t1"'11 m• l'!tncl and 11•1. co•-•111111 lhtrtl" l'amool, • n d
(01',1(11'l SEALI •Cll;-1""9.0 !O ml th1I l<ICft tor-•llon
ihlrlrt Y. Co'"'" UICI/ltd ""' llmt. N<lll f'V ,.ubtlc C1!llo1n11 In Wllr.tH Wllotr~I. I 1'11Yt l'!etount"
Ott"'t (0111'11v wt m• h•nd 1nd 1t!lxed mY 1fllclt l lltl
My C1mm!11lon E• .. l•r • th• ...... Ind YI•~ ltl lflll ctrOlk tlt llrit A••ll )1, lt13 •bo•e w•ln 5TAf E. Of (ALIFOll N11'
• COVNTY OF LOS ANGllES I "·
• On 11!1• 1.in a1v ct Ot<:""'tll!'· 1910.
bellte ..... • Notl•Y "ubllt In a""
for llld C.u"rv .,,.. Siii•. H fl9NlllY
t""•t•N Alt Mtnd'' S. It-· ~-~
to mt te bo •n• at'lon -• n1m• ii w1>1trlbed 10 tn• wl"'ln ln1lrvm1n1,
and acll1111wl1C1Htl lhl l 1\1 ••..:u•M int
!OFFICIAL SE.ALI
NANCY IE. WIE~T
tlollf'Y "ubl!t . Ct lllornl•
"•ln<lP•I Ot!lct In
O<an.t Ctvnlw
My Commloslon l!••lttl
Ml • lO. 111• "ubh~l\ea O'""" Cooot D1ll1 ~Ill Dt1:t..lbtr n. l'f, 1910 and J1nv1ry 5. ,,, ttn ms-111
LEGAL N011CE
" I
-, ' . • ~ • l ....... . ~ .
1
JO UAILY PllOT s l .itS<l .. y Janvary 12 1971
LEGAL NOTICK Jtfo11ey'• Wort#a
OVER THE COUNTER Complete-Nelv :tori\. Stock List
<•H 111'11UT9 O' •1J1U11!'' • 1<'1 ITIOUI Id.Ml!
ltw -M•Ma lklf'l <t 1!11 he It
~loC'llnl t "-"*""'' t t 1 I Yo'11~W'I HllOltlftelw ••Kit, C. lorn t und<t ,.,,
f ct ti-I tfn ,......, of MEL TOM AUTO
•00'1' -1h•I "°"" t "" h ,_ ., ... fol...... ""''°" -.,. .... fl IUll -p-.:a '4 11,Go»(o I •> .......
You1· Food Costs
Jr4A$0 Ll1tlng1 fot Mond•y. J11nuary 11 1971
GewM I! ~1111'1 IU. 01~c t W°"ttnbslt o • ..., Jt" • •11
Ca11 Be Cut Down 1 ..... ~;:-· ..... ··-
I NEW VOllK fA"ltqoa""' C
J. ,. :='r~ ffo ACF llCI 1-. Pr ll' Atm&Ci.~ lo) •i. ...... 1 18 ,II(" .... llo• ,. A<11ME> ..MoD
G«w'tt Mt ltM
.... ol CaMfOfflll O••nt• c ... " v
On Jt nut rY I 1'1! ""n • "' •
No!lrv l'llbc "'""" ,+.i !•• •t-~ t1>Pffed G-oc \ i..·~
k11DW~ o """ ~ &t llt n• """ .,no...t fttmt h uitloc ~ " "• .., " n ' 1unonl lt>d a<~""W Ol<lGt<I "' l<t u •d ,... . ....
!OFFIC Al SE.til l J•>ll L Jt
Not•• P' tC • 0tn •
P' nc 1>1 Ol'I C• n o •n .. Coun • ~'fC°"'"' llfl(P •J
At O:..~ I t ]
Putl! ~..., 0 l "ll Co~• D•
J• u• • n • u '"" r•t u• ltll
I EG \L ~011CF.
<U"'" Dt CDI OT 0 ' fM' Sf ATE OF CAl l,011 .. A 1'011
THI! CO Hf'I' O' Oll ANGf No .Ii UR
•• .,
NC>T CE 0' H'Alt >IG ll"' l'FT TIO"
1'011 "llO•ATI! 01' W LL •ND I'll" Ll!TTE•S TEST.lMENTtltT •ONO
WA!Vl!Ol r t• p "' f.MMA .. CG Tl O•c••••O NOTICE IS Hfll.ESY G VEN 1111
Cu l O<>P•ll'lts led"-t """' on
to p otlt ' o wl I •"" lo uu•11t• o l• e T•••"' ,,.., o P•ll on~
CS""<I Va v..i ele ence o wn •" ' m•Ot lo urll\f o~ cu I t n.d !h•I
,., .. !me """ ••ct m ,. •• ,,. ll'le
>i"'lf 1\15 bfo•n •• IGr J1nut "' 1' •l t •:!O •"'"'""cou,,.,.,,
n D•o" ""'" No l o 1 1! ca.. I /OD (Y< Ctn • D .,, Wu
1wci..01s1n1An• Ca Ion• D~~J1n ,,.... I 19 WEST J011
Cnun.•C •~ CTI: L A WALTON
ll I TorrtllCI .°"" .. "'" TOrTIMt (II ton•• N5'l ,., l11ll JI .. Ml
"
... "'"'' ,., ,.,11, .. ~. P~D ol>!'<I 0 ~..... (QI
J•f\UI f U ll I 1f1
Dt, P lot
LEG o\L f'rriOTICE
SUl'E•tOlt' cou•T 0 ' '"' ST,t.TI! 01' CAL l'OllNIA 1'011 THE COUNTY OF OltANGI! ,._ A-U t
n n
NO'I' Cl O" Hl!.t.•ING OF l'l'TIT ON 1'011 P•O•liT£ 01' W LL ANO FOlt
L!TTfAS Tf~TAM!NTlt.T
F. • of CA.R LOS GOSTEL Ooc:etS•d >iOT CE S HE'!FBY \. VEN ~I m Con~ln9 h1< I ed h••fl I o ton
lo o ob• • ot w ! 1<><1 lo 1>U•n<e
,,I l • •• T•1 1m•~•"' o Pt lonf
• e •n<• o w~ ch • mid• lo !u "• p•tt •• .o.GTI\• "'•!me ~n!l oi
o "•• "'II •~• 11me 1\1 been 1e
1•u Y t 91A•:?t\t-
•O ca. !room ol pont ,...,n I ' l
• ••~ .... t • 100 c ~• C• O ~• ~ 1~ " h• C r. ot S1nt1 •n•
C• " " " 01 fd J~" A,.,, I '1 WfSTJOH..,
CCKJ •C•~ ttUttWITZ ttUllW TZ AND lt f.ME tt
I f.n"' Sl'°'ol IOWff I lfl<~ f I .,ft 1 'U.l Toi I I Ill ff1•
A • n41YI 1 .. l'tl tM<
"ub $nMi o '""" Cot s 01 " 01 J1nuonr 17 3 t '1 _____ c'__:_'
LEGt\L NOTICE
c~ SVL\1"-PORTER
Ju.st bv s1destepp1ng the
cou\er11ence foods !ht
rrozcn d inners the prepared
\ egetable!l the Just-add milk
or v.ater m 1xe.!I -and cooking
from scratch }OU can slash
40 to 80 percent orr the costs
of lhe fOod.!I involved As ont
dramatic illustrahon the COit
of a frozen turkey dinner
bought at the store is S9c
per ser\ 1ng against 26c per
serving for a turkey dinner
you prepar e from scratch
Rut if vou re a typ1cnl U S
fod shopper you "11/ 110t
reduce your buyin g of ron-
\lenience foods and in fact
)OU II grtel each new advance
"1th delight and pay ~ha leve r
extra IS demanded Oka}
there a re IO other ways to
cut )OUT food bills
( l ) Buy foods on the bas is or price per pound or per
ounce or per pint or per qua rt
and save more hundreds of
dollars a year w 1 l h o ut
sacnf1c1ng any quahty in the
Hems I have a small sim ple
u nit cost table whic h you c an
easily shp into }our purse
and use Ill all stores to help
you compare the unit cost of
packages a nd thereby select
the biggest bargain Send a
self addressed s t a m p e d
envelope to me a l this
ne~spaper a nd I will forwar d
the. table to you
(2\ Shop those advertised
\\eekly specials at !he food
markets on a regular basis
On a single "'eekend m y
studies sho1v ove-and over
a gain )Our savings on meats
a lone can r ange to 35 percent
and more If you own a home
freezer }OU can then mulh ply
these s avings by buying tn
bulk Also regularly shop the
discount stores where food
prices are indisputa bly lower
'""'"" Tins rule alone can sha\e your
5UP!lllOll COUll"f 01' ,.tt E food budget bV hundreds or STt.l[ 0' CAL FOJIN A 1'011 Tttl! couNtT 01< 01t•NGE dollars a vear I guarantee
NOT ci 0, ::-:;:,.,6 0 , •ET ,1n.,. f3) Buy m eats a ccording lo
,oo. ••os -1E. o, w LL •No the cost per cooked portion ~~~T~~~,.:::v "011 L 1 ' T E 11 ' r 1lher than the overall price
E• I ' or PAN SY ~•U REJI: COLE 'l'o get this cost d1v1dc the
D• ·~ •d NOT CE 15 ~Ell'E ~Y r. VEN ~., price of lhe amount you
f •• R A m ! O<ll ~al Pd ~~ •" h b t'-b of A ~· on 10 "ob•• or w on!I pure ase v •ot: num er
""cJ ~ • .,., to !nv1nt• o t • , • portions the amount will sup
Tu ""''" 1" lo "" 1>~! ""' e • ence n w11 ~" Is "l~rl• '"' ~ n• •• 'cu • , pl) Say )OU pay 69 cents and hi I~ II-11\d 0 ICf Of hOlf nt fOf a pound or ground beer n1 s~me ht~ t>o•n !-! to Jt nu1rv
, " •' • ;.o 1 m in "'" '"" 1 oom and 69 cents for a pound of ~· OtP• •men1 l c "d '"",., 0 no spareribs The bee( will pro-c v..c: C•nltl 0 Vf. Ve! n 11\t {IY D
S•n • •n• c1 10 ~· v1de four portions ilit: ribs
O• !'Cl Jtnuo'l' ' ~1 bo d ( II w E sT lO>if'I minus ne an at w1 pro.
co,,..• c • • '1de l 1-3 portions The beef llOUlllCI': A NOLlllDOk "' Ntnh 1 qlft1v su • 1• costs 17 cents per s erving
Si ft l• An• C•t '"'" • n1• the spareribs cost 52 cents ,., (11) 511,t • •<~''' ,,,.. ,, ,....,, per serving As a general r ule
Puc 1ne<l O ar19• Co••I DI w "c l--'------'----'------1 ~•nuorv 1 n_•_o -'-"---,--"-'-'
1
___ _'1~E'.:'.'GAL NOTICE
LEGA ~ NOTICE
P lffU Cll T I' CI TE 0" I UUNESI FICTIT OU\ NAME
Tn• ur>de • t nJ<I "" tl"rt!IY ht~ • • •on<IVC "!I I bvl ...... O ) 11 011110!'1 O .,. Svl!• ll• N""oort &each
Ct o " • un.O• Ille nc1 ''°"' t m Mmt o 11.AUC t<O V ST.t. Gll:AN DE tr>d ~It
,. d m I C""'llO.e<i ot ,.... lo IOW ~
P• •on• wno1• n~m•• 1., fv 1rnl I>•<••
e el o•n • t ' •• lo OW• II K~n l h Ga«!,..•" ll 0 H1 H1n1 11.o•d L•~tl Ot C• font ll ol>ort W
!touch J!ilO Lo 11 L•"• llo n• H E. o u (1 lo<n • Joh" Wt~~'"' JI (huckw•~"" Rotd 11.e n1 H 1 1 '
C1 f0tn1 lllt>ntd C W l'l<le-< 16<'1
HO!'•Y ( tt~ •o8d Po lo! Ve ~·· p..,, n•~ 1 C• lo n 1 J t ow one• s on• •73' C""'monwe• n Ay~ Lt
C•nlOI Ct to ft t "°"'~ "" 1 P1u tY 311 ~" (tmdtn o s~~e y H
Co lo n • 0 Ian B M • "'"' 11 Pl "'°'~Pb• II~ L D en 1£1J
E E ~ho " Avp s."'1 Ct Ion •
N J S•c• Jl~)ol s uP "C•d Si n
""" o Cl c n o Lo i Com•1nv
• ~•ftt I Pl ! • •I\ o ~v Om~ Leno
• ttn• t "' n~ •'11 C•mout 0 ~• l./•>!oo0'1 B•oc~ Co I t761>(1 tlv ft 10
M ..... I Qt ll• I ·~ ne 1)7) C•m•U• D Newoo R•1cn C1)1f t 1MO
N en~ a J. O Oo""' 1 9tn• •
01 "' I\ q II• J()l'I~ 0 0 Oor.n• ~go•• ea <'It tolo G1 ••r 0 N•w01> S•o h (• I 7MO S~
I t~I• ,t. N ~O t )}II iO,ftl 1111
l./•Wll<> 6o&(h (~ c n . t?MO
01 .er J1nu1 \I 1 tll 11.t.NCHO V ST A Gl•..,OE e.v N <"°la• lo O Oonn<'
Gene•• 1>1 "" •
J""n o o Do""''
"''"'' 5 ..,re:...,•• \T•T" OF CALIFORN A) COUNTY OF Olt.t.NGEI SS
O" J1"""rv I '1 belO • me lt\f
u,.,,. ••ned •Noa y 1"..t:lc In 1nd "" tOl•t ~\Ona••-•11<11.,.,nO
O Oonlll' 111(1 M chl•t A Nk:~•I known
0 "'f O bore boll'I DI '"' Pll'"I,.. t pl M ~I Int 1h. ,~. •~Kul"'1 th• ""lhln ~~ u,,_, •nd 1cknow edo.., It> mt
l~•I 'ut" Pl '"""'I e•fCIJ Ill Inc ,.,,,.
Nt P 11"' •All ?tJl CE llTI' CAT I: 0, OISCONT NUANCI O' Ull ANO/Dtt A•ANCIONMINT 0' I' CTIT DUI NAMI
l !-<E VNOEll.~IGNEO ..... M.1 c~M IY
n1 elled "• J•""""' 1 n 11 ht <"•ad to ao but n•n undt 11'• I cl llous u .... nl mf al SAW!>AllA OEVE'LOPMENT
CO t JOC6 Enea It Sl•f (01 1 M••1 Ct fprn t wl\ ch ~ llt\l w•1 tomoo••O of nt lo ,..,,,.,""' •• Of'• ... no.e
n•m•' n •u '"a p acu o "a""'"
I 0 •I 0 OWi r:t-W I Ito~ J Mtu • 'JO'-" EnhP •• ~C<t •M•"C:•' C1 ll t~t lo 1 .. 11 1e o bu•nl
II "' "• 1beV t c.t I Ou• n•m• '"d alf d•v ot o !! o on ht eel I• on
'' n Th• o • o! mr Couni.. ''~ ol o Ant• c""""' ~no• t~• " ov .te<a of St e °" 7"6 Cl! ~. Cl !o<n o C Y
'~ Dt Id I~• lt lh Clt Y ol OKt"'O. ,,.
"obi 1 M•u t 5TITE 0~ CA FO ON I COIJNTV 0~ lOS •NG~lfSl 5S
On O c•mb If 9JQ W-o f m•
nt undt • o'>ed • Nol~f'I "ub ( " 1n~" ... ~ (oun 1nd ~lie•• •cnl v
•P••• od llot>o Ma u f •nown to
mt o bt 11'1 ot $On w~&I "'"''
' 1ub" l><!d lo "• w ~ " n• umfn 1nO ~c~now Mlgod n1 ~' ·~ttUltd 1.-
s1""t IV TNESS MV Ind t nd oU r I .-1
OFF C t.L SEAL 'l!(IYMO 0 YI t< flf,011
No1vPubC Ct lon • P ncot Ofltr ln
C011n1'< Pl Lot .t.nat'
M• com ... i.1 !I" E•• ••
NoYtmbf;r '° '11 llOl•HION l'OWllll A •Alli.ANO
Altl,,_.,1
4>4t Cll""" DtlYt N....,..,t •t•tl'I C1IH rMIJ Toi (114! t-.J..MI
Pub 1hed 0 A.,.. (.01 1 DI Iv ,. O!
11.,111 1 ! 1' 16 11'111 F1tiru1 v 7 1f1! 64-71
LEGAL NOTICE
YI TNESS my h11'1d t nd .,Ilk t ,.. I' JnH
OFF C Al SE"L C•llT ,ICATE 01' •USINlt' OD..,NA II EBEll. "!CTITtOUt NAM•
No t v l"util c Cl ... ~ t Tht u-1 tn.., -· ctf"I IW hf Is 0 ·~ Cov~tv condlJCI ..... bv1!MU •• I' 0 II•• 71'3 Mr Commi&•loto E1.olr•~ en• Mn• C• to n 1 ....a.. Ille MtV 2l 1tt1 I d ltloo \ I rm n•,... Cl! Elt C MAC
PllbllSlllCI 0 t"ft Cc11I D.11 ' " o! kl':Nl!E ancf !~II ltlt ll1m t C-IOtttl
J1nu• 1 17 IJ X 1,.. F...,..nr 1 of lt\t !()lklw nt ,,. '°" -· ......,, l" i'•'•"jji;;;;;s;;;;:;;;;;;;;Oiiiiiiii;;;;;iii;';'~'ill 11.11 .iw:t •lice Cll r••iN<KI 11 •• tolltwe C1 toll llM ,.,,r no. All IOI !Qj
Mo n SI l1 n... Cl f Dtlid Ot< It If'° t ~ OF OIL PAINTINM C• ·~ 1 11: .. l'1tt 1it
WHOlnAU WAllHOUSI S 111 tf C.1 tor"l• D '""' CO\lntv
O .. ~ TO THI PUIUC on o., 11 1t7'D l!tlor• "'' • Natt rv .. l"\ltt Le in t rid tor 'tld Sltlt M'MMI 1
300 10 off •"l'tl...S C1 ro r "" 1'1 klt11 k~ to
fl "'' '° bf ll>t H f -wft&M rllml 11
••• L ......... -. ANA tVtlKr bfd to ll'lf wlll>I" ,..,,,,,.,..."t t .i.I ... .. , 1ckf'OW tdlMI ft• ~ec:ulff Ille w-. t'ltOlll ..... -·-Jr COFFI( AL SEAi..) ~ DUL8U '#ANl•D MiO,l'I' IC Hfif'lllY
Tho DAILY PILOT-
Tho One Thot c.,.,
Noll'T l"~blk Ct '°'"11
l'rlncle1 Off c.1 '" Or11111e CMnlY My C-lttio.. l!Rillfll
No~ 11 itn l'lltlll1n"11 Or1nt1 COHI 011!• 11'1111! 0...ltnttl• ,, tf ltll •1'11111 J•~•'T ~ It ,,,, J)11,.
•
-TM tollowlnl b ••on C"
I •nd HilN 'Ilk! • at>h :I< a boncle~ cut \\ 111 } 1e d three t on1 ...... ue<1 o.-" Mro
0 N• -A •oc::I· '"" Ml '1de I J /3 portion~ T he beef ''"" 01 ~ .. "' '"' •e. Oe•I•" I~< 1 o\lt P a >try bony cul \\Ill )leld l'I01 •<'uJI ''"''( "'w h n I l>nl but 1re fttl !JWl dn C
o"' tu1n 1 !Ye 111111 u t n <lelloef o en I t o rodn • t'-d 111trrulm•t.e v 3 11>0Yr s l ~l 1ry uc pri\alc bra n !I Pm • "'~ch t twH••"' In
I f • . I E $KU,. fl coulO tl1nrld F a your a~Ufhc S ore very h•v• Deen 1>11• Hl'fl! Cp
lood chaon and man) •n ch•~~ !1st1111 Hkltlc: nr o d (b d) ntu Holmfl
dependents sell p r i v a t e J ) "'1 •• ,..,,r10;.n He o11tn c.ti•n~• 111 !Mlh-ttotlvar
labeled foods al savings of!out lt\c e11• Prk:1t 0 .. 11 lie GO "" nc UO. Hllw d GI 5 to 4U percent which a re ••• m•rlw• """' " lm•rk"-n o com H\IC-Ml of iden\Jcal quality lo the na mu..... H1><1 PP Al< (pro , n Hu• G•• t1onally adver tised brands At .t.FAP s a~. t111 Hu,.., P
I h ADnc99HY•llC•
east taste the c eapcr pro-.o. TS 1r1C ~ ''' Hv•n nt
duct once !18 p'(5 i'' ; '" H~::e As~ AVM Cp 9 o 0>1 11(1 Nu' t5) Learn how lo use Aber• n p:, JI>'" • d iO,cme E I' n!Con
su bstitute meats vegDables All s • 1h t • n m n
and rru1ts w~1 more e x ! net ""J' ~ ., ill :~: !~~,
I tart A be I• t A In! Sv1 pensive vers on s omg "(0 1e , '"" int sv 0 ,
out of sight LOc your ! ~0 s'e": ;" '#-i~ 1~t:s
freezer and pantry with these !1~'!° G';: ~~ I't ~~,;:11.1
subst itutes when theu are on i0,1111lk P ' JIQ~ln c. 1 Am Bus" 11 '"'Ji m w.
sale Study the recipes easily A e1 I..•~ •'• • , J1me1 " Am E•P I!'/ l l J1muiv
available everyv. here to make A.m Fu n 1\:1 • \ Jllh> Fd~ A G tt •1 •1"' Jh<1>11 "d the substitutes appealing " '"'"" <P 1J , n Vi ICPA Nu' Am Tt!Y 10\ 1 ~ 1(1 If St (6) Cons1dtr quali ty Jn rela .t.nn~u• fl 11 IS"" Kt ss1 pf Ani<•s n T' t , Ka va
lion lo your use of food If '"' cs • ..,., 1 ,, K••• c n I>. ~n M f t \:O IC•Y•m
corn on the cob JS the heart Ard~n ~• ~ Keir T
f 1.-A~ MoP lol•oK•i<!! 0 your meal buy luc be SI A ow H ~J l • IC•I wd
II fl I I th Avid• 1>, hlCe..r E qua1y I I s par o ano er .o.,cc Bo , '7 Kovr Fti
dish YOU uf do JUSt as \Yell :~ 011 S~ !~! n: ~:~~I 'Jte
\Vilh a far Cheaper form O( ~!~"p1 n 1: 0 1f'-~t:::, lnE
corn If you re using meal :~1';;' ~ 1 1 J , 'U'! ~.,! ':oi
1n a ste1~ 1t s a wasle of llaumri 11 4't;, K trii Ba, l!U !1\~ 11llo ~""' In money lo bu} any qua11ty BIHtChm 76\.':I ,,,,., '"" 11. .. ,
'
,_.,, US Good Be h! lsh! 16 11,., 1111 W<1 UV• Bekn I"" 4, !4 :il>n ee~I Mg '""" 17Y> l..H<lv Cp
(71 Use the sum mer specials I:~ ~.·b ~v-. :i'h t:h.Yif~i
on meats poult ry a nd fish : ~P~o~ ii~ ~ i. ~:; 1 M~•
In summer you can slash B ch i • l .. u1>11w & acl< k :u,. :u, tel Cdr
the costs of frwts a nd &-..e e ' 1 , oo e n
vegetables as m uch as so per ~111'Aif 1! • l:~ ~~hG~1
cent lrom winter s levels a nd l "'1o;1e'n"0 : ~ t~ ~:I k ~ 11
f f d ,_ 8 nl<! n •l ii M111" M I you reeze or can an Swre &tts Sea 70 20,J Monor c
I'· foods ~-I h srwn A 10 oo, Mt • Mlt 11<e you can ., .. "' c out BruVi lie H 1y.' Mtrm c;r
the savmgs Time y o u r !lutt•r 1 • ,.,,, ~.~'~; Bu"n C• ] lV1 Ml~· O purchases of canned a nd Bu n11<> s 21 , 211 ~g'.,y
CC L•t1 l"li '"'Miii< H frozen Irwts a nd vegeta bles <• w ~., "t. 16>..i. M1t1 Mtg
f h nd f I Cmtl!lg N IOI':. • Medi n or t e e -0 summer s urp us C•non M n 11 M1 " 1,,
I CtnnM B 11 1S Mid 11 Ct saes ca ... a 1 . '"Mdt•• C1P Mtge 11 II~> Mklw C. T (8) Buy day-0ld bread o n Cap i.o... 1 • ""Mr,• c;1s
I CIP Int.I. 1>.o li'M 1t VG sa e at supe.rma rkets for 1t s CaPT'h JV. 1:i;. Mo 11,ch
d f f '· d Ca,.t Otv ,1,;, 10..-Mod Sc no if erent rom tuoe brea c1 t• B 1\~ ,.. Mohwk "
k b d Cl Ir Gp lt\lo 19., Mon! Col you eep m your own rea c11c NG 1yv. 10"' ~m Pk
box for d ays Double wrap l:~~.C•P ~1\: ;"' ~:,: :
your bread to keep Jt fre.!lh ~:~, '{~~ 1;.';! 1:!: ~1:l T~
for longer per iods °'''"'' n. '""Match M Ch• I 0 I\~ ~~/Ito Cl.ill
(9) Jr you drink a lot of g:~ ~~ 1~ 1m; ~~"ir Es
milk buy gallon container s c,.,, u1 1 1•v. Hiio Ml' " Ch l rLI U i7 N C It><!
If )OU use a lot of grated Ch i,1 s 1 I I 6 H• •II c (/\ n pf f9 aJ NaC1 It cheese 1n your meals buy c1 •II• , ~ 1 HCmo CP (It I Mil 11 , 1J !. NI El"' tht cheese 1n blocks and save c 1 i u"' 11\lo ttv. N• G o
b 'I' l u l!I 21\• 2t N•I Lltl 50 percent y g rating d c t1ln Mt I Ro 11 ~Na Med
II C Irk Mf 2214 1lV. Nf l'tl yourse C n Mt n._. l~'h N•! StGR \10~ t\lin11n11.e f ree 1. e r f~""'c.? 1: ~ ,: 4 ~i' ~~
spoilage by keeping foods 1n ~=r ~. ,~. 1~"" ~ ~"~ G
1t only for recom mended f:r~. si l,z 1~\ .. $~~1nA "
periods of time Dale each co1on sr 30 »•\E.:•11:~~ Comu 610 ll• (It NG
pac kage ~-c • ••v. 50\~ Eu• 0 1
All I can squce1e into thi.s c::: ¥:t ~!:Z Js"' ~~·N~rJ
space 1s th1.!1 smattering on l::: ~~';-1~t 1;~ ~:1 '~~
food but surely 1t 1nd1cates ~=" c~ ~" ~it 8::1: ¢i,\
hO\\ much you can s lash your t:::_~ ~~·~ ~'! ; ~ 8~,,,0~•n rood bills even IIl this era com•~j ' 't 01 e ,, Con 11.ock ~l l> 8ve ..,A
Of Ulflahon Conr ~ ~ • ~ ••Ct Con ran I o )OPEC I
Unit y Firm,
Portfolio
Will Merge
Joseph Cherry president
and chief e xecutive ofhcer e r
Unity Capital Corporation of
America a publicly h<'ld com
pany Joc;ited 1n Ne"porl
Beac h Cahforn1a today an
nounced that Lt has entered
,_ L u l. II Pall~! "' Corp S l• Jl4 P1c Auo CoSM Vt 9 ' 0 Pt< F1E Crwl,... 11"" ll 't l'akto Co C OJ! Co 3)/. )11/.o Ptncot Ctu!rh R 1 1'1 t\ O
C••••C I 1 ,P1kwW 01~J Lbs 6 o , Ptu •1 I' 0~" V M ID 10 • Pa\IO!!f Dt 1 0~ (~ ._., ttr1 Ml 01 1 Gil!> It I :JC)~ PH•lt• T Oalt n P •'-2~0 • Ent1!n
OaYt Fd 1 o m'• Cl.W Otv Mir 16'4 17 l'tnn ,.,c OMO n I lo i -t Ptlll Wt Dell D A9 JI,,., •1 Ptl1 Oii!
0.. 11 In 9 ~ •J.4 P~l'I"! " Oe u• en •l '> t4\ll Pl'lli uD Oe C1nT s , it\\ Pt.o!on Oft B 1• ?Ii 't Pln-t n tlowev E 3 ~ lnl Po It klC Ol m Cr l''t 17 l"ro Gol O!C l~c J 1 l"Dtl An•
O Y! CM 2 o :~u~1 1;i~ Po<:uie ~ C Onldsn I.. 1 ~ Pull 5 N Dow Jc" JI 11~ Pub 'h ao.. • Dl 4 11 P11<1oa o ,,.. NL 7VJ I' e ... nrt Ouf'llt n ii I\., h\lo Pvdh St Ou "" S S PD"" CP
El P1 "' 10 , 111'1 j¥1 ~y\M Ett C WI l O Rid Ovn E1• Sil IV. Rtht I C Eton L•b Jl ~ o RontD El Eal.IC SY• )\.o l • R1Vth C1>
into a n a greement 1n principle ~ P••E s•• is .... "•""' '" itlo s I I l •RrcDll Eq 10 merge \1.1\h Por L[ol10 ,," ,se '' 1111.e• Crtd ! 1 7•1 11.ltldt Pt.1
Securit cs co~porat1on of Gen E' l./uc I I '-!. II ev s·o
l C Sy, 1 7•1 Road f;I(
urv C1Ly E D~ • 61 1•lJo 11.00 " M
I E Modu l • l'lo•e"" t s conteinplatcd EmPS o t , 1 1101 ~·s
Portfoho Secun!1es Cnrpora ~~: !v R~ 1"' 2J:;':. :~:n ~~
11 b •· d I Enw•I s4 •~Sid'°"
on a ro .. er ea er Eo" co .. 1 ''!''"'" E subs1d1ary of Porlfolio r-.1ange ~"~ ,°..; : : ,~ ~l"'c~1"
ment Co rpora t 1 on a ~:b C.,:: l • t,-~~1 ~1
registered investment adv1Sor ~·"" =~ : • ; '~~1= ~
"111 be merged into Unity upon F "' "' • 1 '~ ~ •• e •' Fs1 8G .... 51 e1CmP
the mutual consent or the F11G Rfl , p, ent1•n FstP M q 1f'o 20>1 •C G o parties pnor to J uly 1 1971 FtPMt un n,, 7J ..,..,, UP
and subJC<'.t to the approval ~:1'1P 14. 1~"' m th ""M
or stockholders of Un 1 t y ~~ •0 fl' ';~ ~!f 5J,.,-'
Capital c 0 r p 0 r a t i 0 n of ~gf~,,,G "' 7~ • 2~\li. t!NEv.t~
Amer II Flll:I Cl So I Sw E5vc ica as we as ap F•riloin 10 , 11 , >••,•rv propnat~ regulatory agencies ~:;:: ~W ~ ~ ~ ~,:""l.J.1•
Cherry succeeded W1lham ~A1 ?"P ,~. ~>.i 1:~1"51~
A McDonald a~ chief ex ;s:• tns~ 1:~: 1~ : t!:::" f!
ecullve officer Of U n I t y o :1~1, : Ji~ ~~:::1 F~
Capital C D r po r 1 t I on or 811 1t·~~' ! 1~~ l~~.~n111
Am erican Jn July of 1970 81~'.~; 1 •j ; 2}'" i:~:i· 111
Donald ~1 Berliner conhnues Gausn w '' 11t:. Tv com GlaO ll~b .. 1\~ 1enMn a! chairman of the board and God eve 11 1s Thtr"' A ~ LS 11.!i IJ Tl!tny CD
e xecutive v ice pres ident Good <ft , ., J oT "'" 1"
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MINNEAPOLIS (UPIJ
Hed"'! lftMli'R W• •I U161,,. l"Sou Rv
-w M•"" 11••1 •1 WM • 11111' Ifft Pac: I • strvlct.!J company 1v 1 l h
branches throughoot the :;
western at.ates It h a s
StJbs1d1arles 1n real estalt
securities 1n!Uranet mutual
funds and payroll deduction
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bu s1nes.s co""1\J'at1ons to JU"-...... - -.. --~·" ~; 2i .,.,... ,... ·~ f-*
port • national buy black .o. • ••., "' hvlld ec11 1001 ""'" ..t : 11 • ~ plans "Cl~I IOt" 11\olt det~ftlled !I) wl'I th ~1,.,~ 1 10
effort launched by ll P ete r • • .. .....,. in 1• ~· • 11111 111<1 c1tt1M 1 CO.-.
USHER'S GREEN Meyerholf Minn ea pol is :,::: ,c;;:;.'\!,"0~ .. :,;~:·;.~• ;:;:~~~:~
Publisher of a directory lislln" 0 1•• 1~1 <1•c ••eel v Nici 1e '-• 11111 tflCO '"• :i6 ft l'Nr nt '""'' ••It fcl .,...,...1nt ""' .,,, ,,,.,.
1100 black owned f I rm s 1Ktu1N111•tt!I er1V1Mlld\ tllfl oiler •111 &i;.1ti..'1 l ~
STRI OTCH
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PE Sc capable or doing buslneu na ••'• '~~ 11w~ d ~kMn<l1 1111 1111d "''• ''" 1Ps · 1.,.
uonally ;;:•"Z."'.:':O"' .::-!:."' ::: ::: i,I;' ,',\'
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$ 99 ... _ .......... '" -... whtn •wt<I (wt! ........ ft.. c~.-...
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Ma1·ket Mixed
111-leavy Trading
NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock 1narkel was
nuxed in heavy tradin g near the bell tilonday
The Dow Jones Industria l Average was up 0 20
at 837 21 after being doY.n n1ore than 41,, points
at I p n1 StancBrd & Poor s ;)00 stock tndex was off
0 40 at 91 79 But of lhe I 658 issues crossing the
tape 716 ad\ anced and 642 declined
A turnover of around 14 500 000 shares com
pa red \\Ith 14 100 000 shares la st Friday
<losing prices included AM T&T 50~ up 1/..,
Beth St 2341 Chryslter 25'7i off % DuPont 134 1 z
off V.,, ford 55 Gen El 93314 up 4i Gen P.1otors
77 1~ nff ~ IBM 3 l21h: orf 2
rhe n1arkcl had a very big rise over the past
se\er 11 Y.el.'k :; and the next mo ve 1s tn11ard lov.er
prices nne analyst con1mented
Electronics and 01\s were among the softest
spots on the list although fractional gainers al so
"ere noticeable 1n both groups
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1971 DAILY PILOT
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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JZ DAILY PJLDT lutSdaJ, Jlnwy 12, 1971
Close" No Cigar
'
Polit,e Priest Lost Pool
MESSINA, Sicily IAPJ -Politenw has ?''t.a
Roman Calholic monsignor $192,000 1n Italy s big
New Year's lo ttery.
The Rev. Raimondo S.alvaggio, an archpriest
here, didn't get a cent when S3 Jrlillion in prizes
were drawn in the lottery Wednesday.
During a visit to Rome last October. he had
bought an 80 cent lottery ticket in the popular
Colonna Arcade.
"As I stepped up to the counter a man in a
hurrr rushed,' the prelate told newsman today. "In
the interest of politeness I let him buy first and
wished him luck."
Msgr. Salvaggio bought the next tickel. num-
bered BB62820. Tbe one he Jet the hurried man
buy-BB62819-was drawn for the fourth prize
in the lottery. The identity of the winner is not yet
known,
,...,,..,,,.,.,,...,=.1wwwmr.1c~o='~"'••-"'•-••S10KZL"""""'w•"'"""I••••=""""'•-"
The Joneses Travel
In Private Luxury
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
I A Pl -Travelers who want
to keep up with the Joneses
would have a hard time
malching James and Edna
Jone!. They cover the miles
In an air conditioned, all-elec·
tric private railroad car.
Jones, a reilred Pullman Co.
execulive, winters in West
Palm Beach in a $400,000.plus
railroad car that is one of
four he owns. }le says it beats
fighting crowded highways or
frelling in 11irplanes that can't
get permission land.
"It's a marvelous way to
travel,'' said the soft-voiced
Jones. "'rhere aren 'l many
private cars, now. There were
plenty at the turn of the cen-
tury, bul I think there are
only a few privately owned
cars left. The rest of the
private cars belong to big
companies and the railroads."
Jones, who s~nds his sum·
mers in Litlle Switzerland,
S.C., named all the cars for
is wire.
The car in which they live,
"Edna Ill,'' is 10 feet wide
and a:> !eel Jong.
Inside is a lounge , dining
room, kitchen, lhree bedrooms
N~1v Mnnnger
Jfugh R. Dunnion has
been appointed mana-
ger of Security Pacific
.National Bank 's ncv.•
llunhngton Beach of·
fl ee on Brook hurst
Street. Ile, his v.rife and
two ch ildren Jive in
Santa Ana.
and quarters for a porter and
<'<IOk.
'fhe car hall two system!I
for generating eleetricity. One:
draws power from the car's
axles wh en the train is mov~
ing. The other uses a diesel
generator for power when the
train is stopped.
The lounge, paneled with
Venetian glass mirror.;, houses
big, comfortable furniture, an
e~tric organ and a television
set.
In the stainless steel kitchen
are a dishwasher, electric
stove and microwave oven.
"These cars are pre.Uy ex-
pensive,'' Jones admitted. "A
company that bought one
recently paid $450,000 for it.
And the coach building com·
panies are so busy with mass
transit orders today that they
won'! even build one for you."
The cost of running a
private car also is high.
To pull Jones' car between
Little Swilztrland and West
Palm Beach costs the
equivalent of 10 first ctasll
tickels fo r the car and one
for each passengtr aboard.
Sex Ga1ne Ban
To y Fair Bars 'Libido'
HARROOATE, En g \and
(AP) -Stx has been banned
at Britain's biggest toy fair
here.
"lbe shnw will not go on."
said fair director Jeff Aldam,
nlllng that a seI game called
Libido-complete with four live
players prepared to strip i!
they lost-wasn't fit to be.
Mown m other eihiblts
designed mainly for children.
"This is a respectable fair,
not a ttrlp-ic.se 11how.'' said
Ald1m. In cllarae of the ex·
hibiUon lhlt ls es:pec:te<I to
attract toy buyers from 26
countries.
Libido's Inventor said tbe
game, played witll a board
and little beds as markers,
would help players "liberate
basic human urges." Pl•yers
win or Jose paper money and
their clothes if they lie in
amiwering questions • bout
their sex es:periences.
Foor Wds Uni ve r sl l y
students -two male and two
female-had agreed lO
dromonstrale lhe game 1t the
toy fair. --
-
Revolutionizes
Denture Wearing
...
Airline
Safety
Mark Set
FAMILY CJKC(JS
llR F"HIGIDAI:RE
P"DOUOT 0,. ORN•fllA&. MOTOfllla
COSTA MESA
411 I. s ..... ,..,.,._ St.
'46-1614 dally ,., Set. , .. I
. .
Research
Island
Vacated
INCLUDES 5 YEAR PARTS
AND L.ltOR WARRANTY!
EL TORO
Lotuna Hiik !'Ian
(Mlt to l•v-On)
IJ7.JUO dally 10.6 M/F 10·9
LEGAL NO'l1CE LEGAL NOTICE
.
' ~
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A d emu re li ttle
coverup to do n
an 1a.ct ive ga me
;, a fa vorite.
' '
afte r
of tenni!
6men
BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor
•••• u
• • ' •• • ,, '\:"rt ....... . ·,-.... ' -.
And They Didn't Like to Sew ,
CREATIVITY LIMITLESS
By JODEAN HASTJNGS
Of -O.llt l"l!.1 $1111
What does Mrs. American Homemaker
do when she finds too n1uch time on
her hands because lhe children are grow-
ing, growing and gone?
We need more exercise, agrfed Betty
(Mrs. Peter i Eastman of Balboa Island,
and lt1rs. Peggy Grenz, Newport Beach,
so they turned to a mutually.favored
sport: tennis. But afler shopping around ,
they rouldn 't find any tenri!s dresses
that suited them.
Jn an effort to get away from "that
litlle sharkskin pleatai thing," Betty,
an artist in oil painting, and Peggy,
an interior decorator. dtcided to design
their own styles for one of the predicted
"in" sports of the 70s.
Both women, who used Ii"! sew for
their daughters (and didn't particularly
enjoy sewing) began their new enterprise
-that of creating chi c designs for
the tennis courts -i~ Peggy's back
bedroom until, as Peggy said, the wa lls
bulged.
Within a year. they acquired a show
room in Costa Mesa. and were donated
a desk and a portabl e display rack .
BUSY YEAR
'·We've learned a lot in a year,"
claims Betty, president of the company
which now distributes nationally through
sales representatives.
Fabrics are making news on the tennis
courts. \\'ilh easy-care ixilyesters being
shown in an finishes, from knitted to
sleek and slithery or pique weaves. For
t he tennis plaver who has everything,
Betty and Peggy have designed an exotic
after-five tennis dress of pann e velvet
(completely machine-washable) wilh
matching shoes and accf'ssoriied with
a rhinestone dog collar. To "go with,"
they have created a fake-fur racket
cover trimmed in rhinstones.
The designers favor the contoured look
on the tennis courts. body-skimming with
slightly flared skirts. They used to test
their designs themselves for comfort,
ease and washability, but with increased
hours spent at lhe designing board, they
now find they have to rely on friends,
too .
JDEAS VS TTh1E
··we have more ideas than we have
time." explains Peggy, vice president.
"Each or us inspires the olher and
y,·e might come up with 20 designs:
obviously we can't use them all. Our
office hours are from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m ..
but creativity doesn't stop when the
doors close."
Each dress ts d~gned with a zippered
panty for better fit ind features lingerie
straps for added comfort on the courts.
"People used to play teMI! in any
old sloppy thing," recalled Betty, "but
now even people who don't play are
very tenni.s-clotbbtg conscious because
they are comfortable, and they've
become a sort of statu!-lhing_"
Gone are the days of the high-laced
ten nis dress {ri9ht) and
the panne vefvet for
after-five wear are easy-
care polyester fabrics.
tennis shoes, long skirts, long sleeves
and hats. Even short~shorts and midriffs
are making their appearance on the
court.!.
Both sailors, Betty and Peggy have
. ' '
disc()vered that their tennis togs adapt
very Ytell to boating. They favor
the spanking-clean look of white with
touches of color for trim in their line,
Pegan Original!.
' '.
Sew-at-home Fash ion Package
" .. . -..
" .. ....
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' ~
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Designer Blazes New Trail
By ~1ARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -W himsic a l
designer Stanley Herman of 1'.fr.
Mort -()ne of fashion's influentials
-has been purposely sloughing
off from creating clothes to live
hippie style in communes stret·
ching from Boston to Santa Cruz.
His seeming madness thinly veils
a method.
Jlippie Herman, 40 years old,
Hippies ere tumlng to
yettet)'e•r fnhlon •ml
so is St•nley Herm•n
of Mr. Mort. Love god~
den maxi dren amack1
of .... 30o.
is tuned out of Establishment
fashion because "sister, the sales
figures are down and busi ness
slinks." What's more, s a y s
outspoken Herman, America's 25
million campus dwellers are having
a negative impact on fashion which
the bulk: of American designers
realize and cu~se -but '11.'i!I not
face'.
l lcrman, imbued with the pioneer
spirit of survival, dares to tell i~
like it is :
"The young are kill ing fashion
in the traditional sense. They've
bogged down our big, beautiful
machine. The 60s was a period
of coostant growth -skirts went
up, up, up and so did vo lume."
Now: "Polarization of society has
set in. The 70s will see designers
stripped of their power. 1f fashion
was writing a Greek tragedy, the
midi would be used in lhe beginning
ol the second act. Designers have
been guilty of planned obsolescence
and the young conside r that ap-
proach despicable."
Not only is lfe rman constantly
rapping with anti-materialistic hip-
pies, he is interpreting what he
sees-hears with f,ashion ideas in
rhythm with the "now generation."
His findings a r e n ' t in·
COnllCQuentlal.
Mr. Mort, which does a $5 million
annual volume, is owned by Russ
Togs, a fashion-oriented con--
glomerate with a combined volume
of $1*> million. By digging der.p
to find suecessful new avenues,
it's oonceivable that Herman will
blaze trails other manufacturers
eventually will follow.
Two revolutionary routes on the
Mr. Mort drawing boards now :
By fall-winter 1971 Herman -
who is vice-president of his firm
-plans to package precut clothes
that a customer sews and decorates
herself. 1be unsewn clothes, to
retail ln the $10 • $2S range, will
come with a designer label .
"Faahlon desperately needs a
new face,'' says ~I er m a n .
"Elegant.es used t o pooh-pooh
clothes made at home with tender,
loVinc can. But the young, in
turn, snubbed mass-produced
fashion and put their personal
stamp on v.·hat they wear. Now
practically everyone from elegante
to hippie wants to write her own
fa~hion signature.··
I Jerman and major big.name
retailers also are exploring the
idea of setting up boutiques where
talented hippies will come in to
sew precut fashions right under
the cuslomer's eye. Mr. Mor! will,
of course, manufacture the pieces.
Both the designer and store big.
wigs realize that not everyone has
the time or the inclination lo sew
the parts into whole fashion
themselves.
The visionary designer, who sees
precut fashions as a future Mr,
Mort division, speaks out:
"I Wa! shocked lo stumble over
hippies sitting in the aisles of slores
like I. ~ . .fagnin. There they were·
- stitthing together leathers which
were selling like hotcakes. I never
realized how pass ionately :he young
desire the agrarian ideal. They
want to redu~ fashion to its
simplest components again."
Herman has taken more im·
mediate steps to keep pace with
the student revolt against haute
couture by moving in on their
level.
The spring-summer 1971 ool·
lection is jammed with clothes
made from denim. Most ?~vious
are the blue-jean pantsults which,
as even the casual fashion observer
knows, is the big-seller to campus
dwellers.
Levis are the "young unifonn"
because they are simultaneoUJ!y
utilitarian and lhe one-and-only
fashion that is strictly American.
Students !ind it psychologic•llY
comforting to retreat to paJt eras
when there was still great hope
that the American ideals would
• sltteed •
The designer's idea: "The bJue.
jean fad ls a symbolic gesture
of holding onto something precious .
It's linked to the dream of
eslablU!hlng the American prairie
into a sociological Utopia." ' HOBBY I XPANDS -·Modeling tennis togs o! their
own· destgtt are Mrs. Peter· Eastman Oeft) wearing
Countdown , 1 favorite of Julie Eisenhower's, and
' I l>jrs. Peggy Greru: (right) In cbalk·white Cutup . lllrt.
Roy Romano's dress, like Mrs. Eastman's, Is trim·
med in red and bi ue.
l
J4 OAILY PILOT Tutsd"1· Januvy 12, 1972
Coco's Classics Live On Your Horoscope Tomorrow
~ Scorpio: Play Waiting Game
I' WEDNESDAY, equal time. Accent on friend!, Others may be so m e wha t Some ideas could lud you
' I ' 'th ·t ab!enl-m!Dded. down troublesome p 1th•.
!1 JANUA·RY 13 hopes, re at.ions w1 oppo111 e c • "RICORN 1n--. %Wan. Guard health; finish basic ·r se."<. Games are apl to be ,....-u= 1 By SYDNEY OMARR for keeps. 19): Obtain hint from Llbra chores: Live ~P to promises,
• SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): message. Nothing is apt to potenllal. Fulfill responsibility. A SagJUarlus woman is Take ii slow and easy. Main· occur halfway; all the way Keep the fa ith . . .
" 1
1 sexy, but doesn't want to be lain aplomb. There is red tape or nothlng. KnoDow lflis antf a~t1 , obvk>u1 about IL Like Virgo, to consider. Take delays into accordingly. n t comm1 IF TODAY IS Y 0 UR
she muid flr11 respect ~be account in plans, Stick. to yourself to risky proposition. BIRTHDAY you are due for
n'lind. Her world 11 one of rules. regulations. Av<>id un-AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. change, trave l. IJ single, rou
ideas. Dull or ordinary pceple necessary risks. Play waiting IB ): Litigation may be may soon marry. lf married,
bore her ; she W<>uld rather game. featured. Be sure you know be ready fo r addition to laml-h have 1 bright, Idealistic man SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· wtlat is happening in legal !y. Y<>u are a frank, truthful
.. than a ri ch one. Sbe 11 not Dec. il): Stress on travel, senst. Get expert counsel. individu al; integrity is your
\) devoid GI contradictions. She wor k preparation. Means you Leave nothing to chance. keynote. You have come ~ Is the opposite <>( easy lo have to ouUine schedule so Study Capricorn message. Be th rough period of 11ome ad.
understand . But, t bro ugh you can vary routine. Take sure _ and safe. versity. You now begin to en-
I
travel, 1be galn11 a broad personal charge <>f revillions. PISCES (F'eb. l~March 20): joy life! ~ hackgr<>und. She is lucky In
money matters for Scorpio
men and Is physically drawn
to me• born under Ar ies.
>'
' • ' ,
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' ' t
UPI TtJMi~
Coco Chanel, the seemingly ageless queen
of French haute couture, died Sunday in
her Paris apartment. Two of her crea·
lions from her fall and wi nter collection,
unveiled last June are a beige suit with
raspberry stripes and a pantsuit .in black
wool. Green and orange sequins dec-
orate jacket.
•
Diagnosis: MDs Overworked
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I attended
a lovely dinner party last night and
'9ritoessed the crude exploitation of a
tovely man who chose medicine as a
µreer. Wil.hin 30 minutes. three women
converged on him. One wanlecl lo know
if she should stay on The Pill -or
is the IUD beller -or should her
busband have a vasectomy?
ANN LANDERS ~
. Another woman said she had been
hoarse for two weeks and would he
look in her throat. The third wom an
-Ann , you won't believe this - dragged
. him into the utility room and confided
that she had just noticed a lump in
her breast and would he mind taking
a quick look and put he r mind at ease.
This particular evening was worse than
most but every time we go out it's
the same story. Why do people do this?
Is there a solution? -THE DOCTOR'S WIFE
DEAR WIFE: People do this b~ause
they can't rt:1i1t the temptation to get
llOIMl.hJllg for nothln~. fll'1 utually a
dame.I One doctor M>lved the problem
th ls way : Whenever a clod approached
ltlm at a social affair for profes1looal
advice he •topped her cold by 5aylng
-"Undre11 10 I can examine yo u."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have 11 new
mother-in-law problem fo r you . Mummy
is 70 years <>Id and we just foun d out
that she is an alcoh<>Uc. She has been
falling a lot and has broken a leg.
an •rm •nd a .ishoulder. II never occurred
t.o us that Mummy was drinking. In
fact. she never touched a drop so far
as we knew.
Twice las! wet>k she was saved by
the rescue squad. (The landlady has
a key and looks in on her from time
to time.J Yesterday my husband found
Mummy passed out <>n the co\Jch with
a LlGHTED ciga rette in her hand. He
told me this morning that we must
take her into our home.
Ann , T don't know what to do. My
mother·in·!aw and I never got along.
For years she called me by another
girl's name - tthe girl she want ed
him to ma rry.) Jn addition to the
personaJity con flict, 1 am afraid to have
an alcoholic in the house -especially
a chain smoker. l'l! have l4l be a fire
marshal, a nurse and a caretaker. How
far should I got" -PAN ICKED
DEAR PAN: Go as lar as you must,
bul win th is ont. Your mother-ln·law
needs custod ial care or a constant rom-
panlon. (f your husband has brothers
and sl11.trs, they should •hare i.be cos t
II fl1ummy can 't manage It on her own.
Whatever the sacrifice, be prepared l.O
make It. It will be worth II.
DEA R ANN LANDERS : I suspect you
don't kn<>w the difference between •
Experts to Speak
lesbian, a transsexual. a transvestite
and a bisexual. As a lesbian who resents
being lum ped with the others may I
educate you?
I am a homosexual woman. 1 do
NOT want to be a man. 1 have the
body of a female. Since no one has
been able to prove that the mind has
gender I will say I have the mind
of a human, My emotions are those
of a homosexua l woman. This is my
only deviation. J am not sick. In fact.
I am healthier than most straight women
who insist on hanging the "sick" label
on me.
I do not want a man or a straight
woman or a bisexual woman. And most
of all, I do not want to be bothered
by cu nous straight people who view
me as a freak or a conversation piece.
1 enjoy a pleasant life with a single
lesbian like myself. We do not bother
anyone and we ~·ould appreciate it if
people wouldn't bother us.
The grie f-st ric ken mother w hose
daugh~r wanted a sex-change <>perat1on
called the girl a lesbian. She is NOT
a lesbian, she is 11 transsexual. Please
print this Jetter or at least reme mber
it. -SUE OF L.A.
DEAR SUE: I wlll do both. Th•nk
you for wrlUng.
Las Vegas
Captured New City ·· Discussed
Bridge Series
Begins at Club
Bridge less<>ns will be 1iv·
en by Mr5. J03epbine Walt·
.A Las Vegas party with pro-
ceeds to be divided among
v1rioos club philanthropies
will be sponsored by Delta
A)pha Phi Chapter. Beta
Sigma Phi. In the Huntington
'7alley hom e of Mra. Wayne
Updike, president.
Raymond L. Watson. Irvine
Co. dim:tor, president of
C<lmmunity Cablevision Co.
and a dirt>Clor <>f Irvine
Rea lty Co .. will speak whe n
the Newport -Costa Mesa
Branch of American .Associa·
tion o( University Women
meet tomorrow.
proposed new clty <>f Irvine. ers Smith in Irvine Coast
The event, laking place
Saturday, Jan. 18. a190 will
bt the chapter's monthly
aoc:ial.
Woman's Club
Serves Lunch
The group will assembl e in
the Newport Rivera Pavilion
for coffee at 7:30 with th e
meeUng scheduled for 8 p.m.
to hear Watson dlscuas the
Also speaking will be Rich· Country Club beginning to-
ard E. Ramella, principal morrow at 7:30 p.m. and con·
planner of !he Orange Coun· tlnuing each Wednesday and
ty Planning UommJJsion. Friday through Jan. 29.
He was in charge of a study Registrations will be ac-
ror the county which evalu-cepted at the county club for
lated the proposed plan for the series. formerly offered
t.h e new city .. He also helped in the Balboa Bay Club.
to develop master plans for 1--------'----I
regional park5 in the county
and community plans for
San Juan Capi.strano, Sunset
Beach. Tu15Un, Yorba Linda
and El Toro.
The meeting is open to the Nuts 'n Nibbles bll
Wnch will be .erved for , i.;ipui;;;;;iiiciii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO
rnember11 and guests ol the Attending meetings every YOGA FOR WOMEN
Woman's Club of l.llguna Friday at 10 1.m. are the SPECIAL CLASS Beach precedinf 1 card p1rty women of Fountain Valley 1 at noon oo Friday, Jan. 15. Nuts to Nibbles TOPS Club.
Past president Mr!. J. W. Member• tflve seleeted lhe
Lansdell ..UJ hod the Jun-R e c r e a t l o n Center in
cheon c o m m I t l e e with Huntington Beach for the
rewvati0oa belnt l cctpttd meeUna place.
by Mn. Clifford Louc1<1 •nd r==="';i:;=====•ll
Mrs. o. w. Price. STARS 0 t h tr chatrm.n for lh<
tvent include the Mmes: Syt111,., Om•,, '' ,,., ol tll•
Edgar Axtell , Ru th Hull. w,,14·, 9r••t •1ttol"'"' Hi1
Frank Hale And Miss Janel coh""" 1• ""• of ti.. DAI LY 1 HWJ. l'ltOT'S t•••* ft1h11••·
1
DIMO#OIJTllATION & tALlt
WIO. MOl.NINI II AM. t Wti:, 111111 ST•lllTI JAN, Jt
YOGA CENTER
4"' •· 1'111 Sl. S111ho I
... * ..
Ju.<t •mved ...
lloreDce ellemu
cnal1twe1r
tfw. 1111101 1kliJh1fl1llr ""in111I
tl1il1ln:11', •••re h1the 1•11tlilud
] ~?.?11~1~':'~!1~M St,
(71• "6-1666
ARI ES (March 2l ·April 19):
Check reins <>n spending. Be
aware of values, need for sav.
ings program. Make decision
concerning home appliance,
luxury item. Gift for family
membe r adds to pleasure.
TAURUS /April 2Q.May 20):
Weight of problems becomes
obvious. Pace slows , There
may be lack of pu rpose
because you feel blocked. Key
is to bide time, ride with
tide. Overcome tendency to
be impatient.
' GEMINI (Ma y 21 ·June 20): >I
Be 11ure of directi<>ns. in-
structions. You ha ve mission !l
and you can accomplish it. .. ',
Toss aside fea r. You have •
more on your side than might ~ ,;;.t'!_.t
be imagined. Proceed ac-l.t r'*'f<l
cordingly. ~~ 1.'
CANCER (June 2l ·July 22 ): 0,)---
Friends may not be well-in·
formed in rinancial area.
Finish what vou start. But
don 't throw gOOd money after
bad. You may be relying too
much on past records. New
ones are upcoming.
Susan Eisenhower Wed
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): You
accomplish, create o wn
rhythm and style, Obtain hint
from Cancer message. Strive
for independence: build con-
fi dence, Accent on pushing
across project through original
methods .
Mr. and Mrs. A.!exander Hugh Bradshaw pose in (rant of St Francis Xavier
Catholic Church. Gettysburg with the father of the bride. J ohn Eisenhower, U.S.
Ambassador to Be lgi um. , i"Oiiii-OiiiiiiOOiiiiiiOOiiiiiiiOOiiiiiiiiiiiiOOiiiiiiiOiiiOOiiiiiiiiiiiiiOOiiiiiiiiiiiiOij VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22 ):
Idea ls are put to tes!. Your
feelings compel you lo take
certain action. Fol I<> w
REad Graffiti 11
By B;il Leocy DR. JOSEPH MURPHY
5f'U.!UNG ON through: heed inner voice. lmiiiio;ei.,.~-;;;;rn..,.
Learn by leaching. A-leans
share knowledge. Hold oH on
joumey .
1,!)00'; OF Oil PAINTINGS
WHOLESALE WA.ltEHOUSI
OPIN TO THI PUILIC
"PRAY and PROSPER in 1971"
LlBRA [Se pt. 23-0ct. 22):
W.dnesday, January IJ, 1971
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Emotion11 • f!y high; feelings
are intense. Control tendency
to act on impulse. Give logic
30°/o aff
1'1t I'. EDIHCEll, S.t.HTA ANA
!'HONE IJ~I
O!ALf:llS WAl'flf:D I;?"
CHURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE
600 GOLDIEN CUlCllE DR., SANTA ANA
COff 41~ n. l"w•en "'••POrl f're1w1y "Ml St nll .t."1 il'•HWly)
LIVING COLOR PORTRAITS * LIVING COLOR PORTRAITS ..
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~.
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HANDLING
Not the old style tinted or painted black &.
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SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
or your money refunded.
FOR ALL AGES!
Babies, children, adults. Groups photogra phed
at an additional 99~ per subject.
LIMITED OFFER!
One per subject, two per family.
'
1 · '
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO l lMIT
QUANTITIES.
ihis very special offer Is presented as an
expression of our thanks for yo ur p1tronaae.
1st On linen Finish! The newest thln1 In color photography
AT THE FOLLOWING SIAllS STORES THllU JAN. 17:
ORANGE COSTA MESA SANTA FE ~PRINGS
SANTA ANA BUENA PARK NORWALK
PHOTO HOURSr 12 NOON TO I P.M. DAILY
:!l:l:Z!lliil:l~SUaNmDAY12NOONT04P!.!Ma.~iliZ!:lliiC!I
l . ' I •
•
'.
' '
, .... .. . , ..... ,_ ... .. ... _ ..... -'•\~ ... "\·
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
YA·YA MEAN
YEii 601N'fiHE
DANCT llllTH ME.
A l.A
CHAPEl'IJNO,
HONEY!
0UTI roN'T
Ni?WNO
AN' YE.R
DAUGHTER?! N'ESi-CE ll\S? S flAPl"!'IWllE !
... ,,,.. ........ -·-, .. ,_,, .... ~
MUTI AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
NO~ IT'LL STOP ~ 1•
RllJGIN()
EVENTUALLY'.
PLAIN JANE
/-12
•
I DAIL y CROSSWORB ••• by R A POWER I
ACR:OSS
1 Soun d
S P ing··-~ Cl Room
1¢ Frenchm~ 's
nam ,
JS Big na mr
in baseb~I!
lb For bidden l.1 Sing le
thing
18 lristi
King~'
hom e
19 Bod~ of
salt w~ter
20 Quantity ol
ice cream
22 Al ohas
24 Barracuda
Zb Rich P'oplt
27 Calla
Ii ly
29 Man's
nicknamt
30 Ach ll've
)) Asia 1nd
Alricl
37 Kind of
communi·
cation
38 Bay window
39 Driving
area
40 Black-···
41 Makt 1 loan
42 Superior
44 Part of
tile root
'
45 Stic~y
subs la nt e
4b Lone
41 Sou1he111
US city
4'1 Moocher
53 D1s111 tl'9riit"-
;,7 Sol t of
plow
58 Storeho11~1·
5 ~ Re 51dr
bl River of
E nQl~nd
b2 Eman~lions
li 3 lmrnesslon
!i4 D11ed 11 11
b5 Franz -····~
Composer
!iii Fo1warded
!i7 Killed
DOWN
1 fas te n with
skewers
2 Therefore
3 Plpl' filling
4 Cauird to
t Xplodr
5 Football
sc ore: .&.bbr.
6 l(in9 of
Norway
7 Fem in ine
nlml'
8 5tands
behlnd
'f Put awa y
10 Wa!ks up
and dow n
'" • T l L C
T O RY [l lol
11 A.c1or
Wil ltrr -···
12 Fuel
13 Timt
ptriod>
2·1 Jeopa rdy
23 Tim es
of day
25 Conta iner
28 large
community
JO Far's
compan ion
Jl Element
32 5alamander
33 Young
animal
34 Mountain :
Comb . form
35 lnd tans
or E~pos
J& lnd icatillg
maiden name
1/12/7
37 5!l'mwart
ill'm
40 Tricks
~2 Word
in Elgar
\I tll'
4) Crowd
45 Most
pl uc ky
47 Gtm
48 Dramat ic
speech
SO Courlroom
symbol
51 Worship
52 Rrpl rnish
53 "Big··-!"
54 Va nily
case
!15 Vr hitll's
Sli levr1
bO Wear
away
11 l 1
1112 n 1
\
~ .
I '//AS 'f)UNlllNG OF MY 1WJ&1111!11!
so's 1 !
By Al Smith
By Horold Le Doux
THAT'S STRA.NGE •• THE SECRETA~
AT WAND 15 INDUSTl?lES SAID THA.f
SAM l-IAD 60t0E HOME • .l~UT TMEIZES
I.JO ANSWER'. rD l!IEITER,.,.-,,..."-.dll
CALL JUD()E P.A.RkE~ '.
By Frank Baginski
PERKINS
,.
MISS PEACH
MAlrLIA $EE:MS ro HAVE THE
f.NTI~ CL,A S5 F~IGHT£NEO
OF ~El', MJl.GfZlllVt115!
w~v is Tf.-14T,
MAR'CIA?
STEVE ROPER -loot<, MO.ROPE•! I llOPE MOT! BECAIJSE
-IW SPITE· OF ALL TME "'MON1TOQ'S ~VE~ DID IT JS
UNFAIR: ATTACKS Oii MY FATHER, GOING :ro TRJ\DE ~E YK>l!LD NfVEIZ BE 6UILTYOf.A MAS NAME FOR A
COWARDLY,, NUMBER./
CONTEMPTIBLE
THING LIKE A
BOMBING/
PEA·NUTS
• HE LIKES IO TR'r' TO CATOl
SNOU.fLAKES 0-I HIS 1D6JE
•
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' • • • • •
-·~ • -· . • • • • 1-•l • • •
,
•
Ll'L ABNER
AVINKL'(, A.H
DRUTHER DIE
Tl-lAl>J TAKE
'IO"E. ·9'tJoC,;IE"Af·
·rf(£"fr>'-E.,'!-:ioe·-
SALLY BANANAS
•
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
'fir~ Li.;;111;
-5rJ/!.llRl6Hf~
:!~UWJT"
'IOI) ro IOIOlll•
--ntAT; ~ "7 I'M llOr" o;a>.W. 'TO
.Wl<l! /Qffl 11!15111!'$
"Tiii$ 'f.YaJlll"" ! -·
OH,
Tl-if.Y'l<E
NOT
AFUID or: M~,
e)(ACTt..Y.
• • •
YOU'D DE5Cl<18E rr A>A
HEALrl-<V 1<£5PE:CT,
WJ.41Cl-l COULD
EASILY
-T"URN TO
Fe.Al'.:
By John Miles
lU
€<] . ' "")r .. -: ,,,
By Mell
-AKIN
TO THE
FEEL.ING
O N E GETS
f"l<OM AN
EMPT"l-
HAN0£0
Di'NTl51.
MCU,.: ll'JJflUll!).!'. /-/l..
• •
• 0
0
• 0
By Charles M. Schub .
• ' • I • l
!1 • a
Fl~ HE'S 60INS 10 HAVE
10 SAIN A Urn.£ llJEl61IT .. ,
Tl!fsday, January 12, 1?71
A. 00'/ WITH '10UR
SE.NSITl\/l"N-"lt:XJR.
$HOULDERS-"OJR
MUSCLES ···-~
"
•. 1'. tf.41J%!l flOl<l HA~D
</OJ l«llOC, NJD :!
lllAllr ro -n:u. r;ro
1'~.tr, ~l)l!.11'
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ArPlllCIAfE6 rr ! -
ntt: STUNOf WOllD
~
MR.MUM
t.OST
AND
rouf\JD
DAILY PllOT JS
,By Al Capp
By Charles Barsotti
0 •
0 " •• 0 •o • • •
By Ferd Johnson
CEi"TAINLY WITHOUf
A SCHEC>ULE1 I C,AN1T
·~LL ONE SITUATION
COMEDY FROM '----. /.NOTH SR ...
By Roger Bollen
_ IJE.VU APff.OK.H
"f"a! kllfH rHe lDfA
Of MAKI!!& A t<IU.1.\JG
«VY r1Me-rris1HI!!
WI.Ml ~ 1i1A1' ClJOl)f.S!
• ,
DENNIS THE MENACE
ID '·
(I
! •
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I
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~AILV PILVI
Super Bowl J-ust Another Ball Game--Unitas
MIAMJ IAf>I -.. ,.ly rn1nd ketps
flashing back." says Earl Morrall ... I
k.tep thinking 'lf!ii ' 1>11er i:lnd over i11
my mlnd -if I had done thu;, 1f
lhis play had work@d. Jl's always thcrf'.
J '11 oever for get 11. ·•
"I ca.n·1. rtmembt•r past yesterd ay.''
quips Johnny Unitas. "We just got beat
-tha!'s lhe way I look at i! /l's
A blow, but 1f you've done everythini:
vnu cnn. you ('Hn '! ery abour ii or ~omplain about H ...
In those lw<t d1fleren! retrospecl1vt'
lO(lks at tht'1r -;tunn111g UPS<'! by the New
'Vnrk Jets 1n !he Super Bowl !\1•0 years
aco, Balt1more·s vencr;1blc <JUartcrbaeks
have indelibly underscored the two d1f·
rereol worlds thC'y arf' opera ting in lh1s
\Vf'f'k.
But words arf' onl)' ont picture. The
olhe.r picture 1!1 equally langible and
poignant -~1orrall , virtually ignoreci,
aJOne with his thoughts. far from lht
center of the action. the spot where
Unitas 1a lks 10 newsrnen and is hounded
by photographers.
Un ilas is lhe rocal point. Unitas means
redemption. Unitas has a golden arn1.
Unit1:1s reads df'fensf'~ better lhan
anyone. Unitas. Un1tas. Un1tas.
And lhal perspect1vr as lhe C.:oll!!
prepare for Sunday's meeting in Super
Bo"•I V with the Dallas Cowboys i!I
refl~cted by the scene.
Unitas, who st.ood on lhe sidelines
two years ago while Morral] floundere<J ,
1s consciously cool. He points out the
only difference from two years ago 1s
that his hair is a little longer, and
then he says;
"It's just another ball gamti . It's v.·orth
more money. and there's prestige and
pride involved -you want to win it.
It's lhe thing we played for all year
Jong, you don 't want to blow ii.
"People came up to me after the
last one and there were always the
que!ltions : •·\\'hat happened lo you guy~,
I beL $3 on you? Or what hatn~.
I be\ $50? But my only concern i.s
what I do -that 1give110 percent."
And what about the game Utis Sunday?
''We're a diffe rent ball club than \'ll'l'O
years ago ," Unltas aays, "lhl!! lime
we 're still on the way up. Two years
ago we had pretty well reached our
peak. \.\'e might have been a lltUe
overconfident But not this lime, We
know nobody's invincible -especially
us."
Tv•o year!! a11:0, the Colts were sui:;
posed to be invincible. They had a
defense lhal coul dn 't be cracked, and
the Player of the Year -Morrall.
Ageless Blanda Athlete of Year
"'f'.:\V YORI\ (AP 1 -\\'hen Geo rge
Blanda was already kicking and throwing
footballs. Bobby Orr and Johnny Bench
\\'£>re iu st learnin g how to walk
Now, more than 20 Jear.~ later. Orr
1s lhe scourgl' of Lhe National Hockey
League and B~nch ts the 1na1n cog
10 baseball 's Big Red Machine in Cin·
cinnati -and Blanda is st ill kicking
and throwing footballs.
Hr did 1t so well iri 1970 -and
\Vith last"gasp heroics that 1vould have
made Pearl White shudder -that 4.1-
year-<>ld "second slring" quarterback ()f
the National Football League's Oakland
NBA All-stars
Clash Tonight;
West Favored
SAN DIE:GO I AP I -Ostar Robert::ion
\\ rll be on rhe bench for rhe "'est
tea1n at l1poH lin1l' bu\ hts presf'nce
may be ominous in tonight's Na tional
:S.skelbail Associa tion All-Star gan1 e
The 32-year-old ''Big o·• has played
Jn 10 All-Star ·games. His le.ams are
9--1 . including last )'tar's 142-135 East
triumph when he 1~1as ~·1th Cinc1nna11
He 's been the most valua ble player m
Raiders .,.,•as named The Associated Press
Male Athlere of the Year.
Blanda rect1ved 332 voles 1n the )'Car.
end nationv.·ide poll of sportsv.•riters and
sportscasters, beating out Z2·year-0ld Orr.
defensf'1nan of ·the Boston Drulru; who
received 246 1·otes. catcher Bench who
got 224.
And just by being a football player
-excelling in a tough. often brutal
sport against players hall his age -
he ;:ilso manage<! to break baseball's
fi\'C-vear hold on the award and become
the f1rs1 grid great to capture ii since
How ard "Hopalong" Ca!lsady of Ohio
Stale was selected in 1955.
Filling ou1 1970's top 10 vote getter~
werti Bal!irnore lhird baseman Brooks
Robinson , New York Knicks (..'enter Willis
Reed , former heavyweight champion
Muhammad Ali, college f o o Iba 11
quarterbacks Joe Theismann of Notre
Damf' and Jim Plunkett of Stanford
and pro basketball stars Jerry \Vest
of Los Angeltis and Lew A!cindor of
Milwaukee.
Blanda pla yed college football under
coach Paul "Bear" Bryant at Kentucky.
quarterbacking !he Wildcats lo a 2g..g..2
record during his three varsi ty years,
IS4&·48.
lie began hi s 21-year pro career with
!he Chicago Bears of the NFL. In hi'I
!tJ..year. ll~game career with the
Monsters of the ~!idway he passed for
-48 tou chdowns, ran for five more TDs
anJ kicked 511 points in conversions
and rield goals .
Me was dropped by the Bears and
sat out !ht 1959 season. Then, when the
American Football League was born,
Blanda was reborn -and he hasn't
slowed down since .
Shellshocked
Gamecocks
Tmnble Agai11
By Associated Prei;i;
Two straight defeat:-. at the tai!end
of last 1veek tumbled South Carolina
from second to sixth in The Associated
Press college basketball poll and the
shellsho('ked Gamecocks ha v en' t
recovered yet.
And it all came apart on Super Sunday.
Before it was over , Un1tas, aching ar111
and all, was 1n. fl1orr::tll lv::i.s oul.
Morrall has lived with that for \v.o
year1>. And now he 's reliving it again,
a question hue, a question there when
people finigh talking to Un.Ha!!.
"There's been a big chani;e 111 !his
Learn." Morrall says ... 1'wo years axo
we had a great season up to the la!I
game. Whctht>r we look things for granttd
i.~ hard 10 say, but it's more all business
this year.
"Lust llme ii was 1nore hectic -therf'
\\'as more hustle. bustle, more people
around us. We were t11nstantly on ttie go.
And we had our famil1e.! here. We hid
to do something each nia:ht with our fam-
ille.s. Now we·re keepin2 ri&ht to bus·
1ness.
.. We know what happened in the pagL
\Ve know we'\'e got to go out and play
good footb31t. We can't ltt anything g.o
against us. Y,,'e have to try not lo let 11
get aw;iy from us."
And then Morrall turned il personal -
probabl)' very 1nuch unaware that today,
J;'!rl. !2, 1971. is exactly two years lo !he
d.iv that the blame for the defeat by the
Jeii was laid at his feet.
"There's a lot different feeling for me,'•
he sa id.
(I•• T \l T'onigf1f
ChaHnrl 7 af 7
Still cold from the Maryland frreze
which beat them in College Park Satur·
day. the Gamf'coc ks dropped a 50·~9
shocker lo Virginia Monday night for
their third consecutive set back .
South Carolina . which began last 11·eek
undefeated and rated No. 2 in the nation,
dropped ils second st raight one-point
decision on Barry Parkhill's lf>.foot ju mp
shol with just seven seconds left to
play.
COL T OB JOHNN Y UNITA S TAKES TIME OUT FOR KIDS.
the All·St.ar games ol 196 1. 1964 and
J9'i.
Oscar also has scortd more points
in AJl-St.ar compelllion lhan anyone else
-230 -but the duel for MVP honors
lihapes up brtween New York 's \Villis
Reed and Robert.son 's Milwaukee team·
mate, Lew Alcindor. opposing centers
in the nationally televised game.
Reed won MVP honors last yea r by
scoring 21 poinU and grabbing 11 A:'·
bounds in 30 minutes of action. Alcindor,
pacing NBA scorers 1n his seco nd season,
played 18 minutes of last year's game,
scoring 10 points and matching Herd ·~
rebounding effort.
The East. coal'hed :1gau1 th is _\'tar
by New York's Red !lob.man, \VOfl se1·en
()f the last eight .camcs but this yrar
faces a Y.1est squ::id loaded ~·1\h seven
()f the league's lop 10 S\:Ore1s at lhC'
mid"•ay point of the season .
AJcindor leads ,1·11h a JI 9 ;11·erag1·
through 37 games Filling oul lhc \\'es1 s
starling lineup for ."-1 ilwaukee coach Lar-
ry Co!!Ltllo are for"·ards Connie H~wk1ns
()f Phoenix and Jerry Lucas l)f S;u1
F'rancisc:o and i?u:ird.~ Jerry \\'est 111
Los Angeles and Da\'C' Bing of Dc1rn1t.
The East lineup. besides Reed :ii
cenlC'r, has forwards .l nhn Ha vlicek nl
Boston and Billy Cunningham n f
Philadelphia and guards Walt t'razirr
or New York and Earl Monroe nf
.Baltimore,
UCLA , Troy
Rated One-two
NEW YORK -UCLA and Southc.:·1
California. old rivals tor honors in the
cily of Los Angeles. have now expanded
tbeir baltle lo a national scale.
UCLA Monday remained the nat ion's
No. J team for the ~1x lh straight week .
but hot · on its heels wrre the Trojans
of Southern C81ifomia. The TroJans mOl'·
ed into the: spot vacated by Sou1h
Carolina lo give Los Angele.~ the: two
top college basketball tcan1s in the na·
tJon. according to ballo!ing by the JS..
member United Press International
board of coaches.
Jn the Associated Press sport'! writers
ballot, UCLA was lits!. USC third "'ilh
Marquette be tween the two Southland
powers.
AJO llATIN9S ,, • .., ..,,, JOll. 1'u 111 ..,., JOto,
l, U(Lll IJO• ll·f •J2 II, ll'llllMI• f.J "l
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Celtic Rool.:i.e T11l.:es 11 Fall
R051Qn i·uo kie l)ave ('011cn~ topr>lc!' over \vhile going for the !Jail
during ac·l1on 11·11h Philade!ph 1;i 76f'r.~. l.onk1ng nn arl' Bo.<>!on's Dnn
t ·han('_\' and 76cr.~· .-\rch1e ('lark. J''hitad clp)ll:i \1011, ! 15·10i .
Bears, Stanford Tough,
Say SC, Brui1i Coaclies
LOS ANGELES f AP 1 -On a brisk
Saturday in ~farch 1964, unbeaten, No
J.1·anke<I liCLA v•alked onto lhc cour1
al Harmon Gymnasiutn in Berkeley for
a basketball ga1nc against the Un iversity
or California.
T™' Bruins \\'ere 13-0 and the nigh!
before had thrashed the Golden Bears
87~7. The Paciric-8 title appe.arf'd in
the bag and UCLA players appeared
confident.
Overconfident maybe, because with
25 seconds to play in th e din of Harmon
Gym. Cal had tied the Bruins ~Mi
and had the ball, A missed shot by
11 Cal reserve forw11rd and two fref'
throws seconds later by UCLA guard
Walt Hazzard kept UCLA unbtaten. 58-M.
and the Bruins wound up J6.{I wllh
a national title.
to <.:laude Terry and l)t.nnis O'Neill,
the only ones on the Indian squad \\'ho
a\'Cragccl in double figurtis last ~·ear.
.. And Cal runs an offense that fealvre.s
110 onf' partirular player but ii tends
1..1 J)ron1ote the Iola! le;im offense. Tha1
offensf' features lols of motion and I
think it's good for that type of le.am.
"I lhlnk more shots will produce
lhcinseh·rs with that type of offense
because in past years, lheir shot selection
has been poor,"
The Trojans of Boyd arr 12--0 and
ranked second and third in lhe national
polls. The Bruins are top-rank ed and
J 1.0. Cal, all hough only 8·4, has averaged
80 points per game and scored an im-
pressive 101·100 victory last week over
ho!lt Oregon State. Stanford. last in lhe
Pac.a. is 4-8.
Three other teams ranked among ihe
AP'.s Top Ten lvere morr fortunatr
Yt'rstern Kentucky. No . S, dropptd
~1orehead Stale Q5.6..1. Jacksonville. rated
seventh , "·alloped Oklahonia Cit.v 95·67.
and No. 10 l\entucky deteated Georgia
79-66.
In other g;imci;, r..1aryland whipped
Clemson 56-5'.!, Cincinnati came rrom
behind to take North Illinois 87-86.
Auburn dropped Alabama 8:1-72. Army
trounced Kings Co\lc~e. Pa , 64-32,
Florida Slate routed Manhattan 96-68,
Tennessee turned back Florida 8.1-7;).
and Utah ~la!c topped Montana State
8&.iO
Virainia be at the clock as ,1·eJI as
South"carfl lina. The Cavalier~ \1·ere trail·
in,i? 49.48 but ~rimbled. hvlding lhf' bAI{
for one last shol
Parkhill made it and hrirried S oul h
Carohna called t1vo times out -onf'
,,·Hh (our seconds left. the nther \1•ith
three ~eeo11ds re1naining -to sel up
their last gasp shot. Rick A~·dlrt1 tr ied
i1 but n1issed from the t'flrnt>r.
Bolh teams played for the good shnl
throughou1 tht' gan1e a11d ftn1shrd 11'il:1
l1cttcr than 60 per t <'Ol arcurary from
thr rloor
Parkhil l's two foul llhots folto,v1ng a
three rninute Virgini.1 stall left the
Cavaliers one point back "'i\h 3:09 leil
in lhe garne. SC lried lo hold on to
the hall but Kf'vin Joyce ,,·;:is called
fnr 11·alking with 2: Hl left. setting up
Parkhi11's \Vinning bucket.
P11 rkhill finished v.·ith 15 p<iint~ for
Virginia and Tom O~·ens had 16 for
SC -the on ly men to reach double
figures .
~1orehead St a t e shackled big Jim
r..lcDaniels, holding him to a mere 10
points. but \Vestern Kentucky still
romped. rifcDaniels ~rabbed 14 rebounds
:\nd \Vestern opened a 41-22 halftime
bulge to coasl in.
NFC's Top Coach
NEW YORK (UPI) -Alex \\'ebster,
\vhose job wa!I in danger when the
New York Gianl.!! lost their first three
games. WI! named the United Press
International coach of the year In the
National Football Conference Monday f»r
le11ding the tea m to a remarkable com~
back .
Other Qua1·te1·back
U11itas Greatest QB Ever
Says Cowlloy s' Morto11
fl.11Afl.ll (AP ) -Vince Lotnbardi def1n.
!'d 1t as Love . ('raiJ: Morton calls 1L
Togethe rness. \\'halever \hr c;ilchwnrd,
it's the stuff of \1•hich chan1pionsh1p
football teains are made
"I rl'a!1ze lhRt rogclhernt'S~ 1~ .'in
n1·crl\'orked \\'Ord . but .1 can't think of
a beller one.· !'lforton said today 111
tryi ng to account fnr the turnahn ut t.h;it
has 1hrus1 the Co11·bovs from lhf' brink
of oblivion to St1per Bnv.·I V
"Tlus has aJv.·avs been a clo.~e learn.
but V.'f' nc\'er rea.llv sacririced for each
ol her unt!I this ye.ar. \VP got together
a!'. individuals and \\'e got together as
a te;in1. Nnw. we have a romplete desire
to win.
.. It 11r1uld hC' n1 t'C' 1r you could pu!
thi.~ k111d of thi n~ 1n1n .,..,ords. Lombarcl!
11sed 'love· Tha l s :i grea1 ~·nrd, lflO.
particularly v..t1en ~ nu'rr: v.•innin11, the
way hC' did."
LJJmbardi's 1966 a!'d 191i7 Green R<i v
Packer~ won lhc fir st tv.•n Super Howl
games. each year earning their berlh
in the world championshi p match by
~ating Da llas.
Sunday. it will be the ~owboy~ aga111~l
the Baltimore Colts for the nioncy -
a $15,000 payofr per man to the v.·inncrs
-and fJr the Vince Lon1ba rd i Trophy
symbolic of pro football supremacy.
1'\lorton has been cast in the role
of "the o~r quarlt'rback" for the duct
between the ~surgent Cowboys and the
r~en1ption bent Coll!'<:, led by ageltss
wonder Johnny Unilas.
But Morton, \11hn has niade l1is share
or sacrificts to lhe Dalla!!< cause. 1s
neither awed by the spectre of IJn1lA~
nor perplexed by his own predican1ent
after tt long season !~arked by trial
and tribulation .
"I've al\l'ays respected and <1d1nired
'Johnny Unilas." he said as the Cowboys
bega n the final.week Super Bo \Y 1
C()untdown with a \l•ork-out a\ their F'ort
Lauderdale training hase.
"In my book , he'~ the greate11l
quartr:rback who ever Uved . Bul you've
1ot to be yourself."
~1orton, beset by injuriei;, including
a painful bruise 011 his righ! elbow,
con1 pleted only 11 of 40 passes in th.e
~owbov s' plilyoff victories over Detroil
;ind S~n Francisco thot completed their
o,;\r£'lch dri\'e and nailed lhe National
Foo tball Conference title
And the Dallas signal<:aller has not
called slgn;ils. except for changes, or
t1 11dible~. at the line of scrimmages,
sinrf' last .~01·rn1bcr.
Co;ich To1n Landry hil~ sen1 is all !be
plays. since a huniiliatu1g JR.O loss to
St. 1.ou1s -anrl the Co" boys have
reeled of/ $('\/en eonf:ecu t1ve victories.
"ln no wa,v has it <1 f£cc lecl me,'' Morto11
said, "and ! \\ouldn 'I \1;ant to change
11 no11 . not the 11-ay \1·e'rr going. ·.
"\\'hrn I crime off 1he field. we talk
togethrr on the .sidcl!nc nhf111l \Yhat v.'c
\l'ant lo run on lhe nexl series. rr&
!'O 111doctrina1ed with hi.c; 'YStem t.ha{
11 r n1\lre or lel'is th ink lnjietl1cr anyway,
I !i'.\' lo approarh the ga1nr the same
\\':iy <is he docs.·· ~
"Craig is .:in Pxcellent sign.:ilca!ler.tt
said Landry ·-He can <'a!l them v.·lth
anyone in the lragur. But a change
had to be made. \Ve \vere playing poorly
and we ha d to do snmclhing lo shake
things up. It was either change tht-
quarterback or call the plays.
"Hy calling ttle plays I felt I could
IAkc somr of !he pressure of f him 1 He still has the option to audible anytime
he chooses."
F'or the pasl '\'eek. hov.•ever. Mnrton
has been inaudible. A throat infection
hedded him a v.•eek ago in Dallas and
he is under doctor's orders to do a
minimum of talking.
··This is the fir st day I've talked
all v.·rek," he said. "I still take three
shots a day and all kinds or pllls. My
room looks like a drugstore."
~1orton's errat i c performances In
early-se11son gemes. Coupled 1vllh the
tea1n 's 5-4 getaway, brought the wrath
of D11llae: fam upon his head .
The epis<lde serves John Woodf!.n •·"
a reminder . ne\•tr lake any opponent
lightly, e.speclally Califomi11 and Stan·
ford. teams that ha ven '! done welt 1n
basketball Lhe pa5t few yeitrs bul who
play well against the mighty Brulns. Tar Coa~h to Cerritos
"It's been said often that advefsity
brings ~." he said. "Sure, I've
htt.n booed In Dallas -Md just abou't
rverywhere tlSf'. But lhe fans pay their
way and they con dn \\'hat they wnnt
lo do. lt doe9l'l really bolher me anr
""""· "I'd like 1n complele every pass. B't.it
"'t 're. a bnll·ct1ntrol club rind as tong
"S I don 'l throw the ball up for gr~s,
I'm doing the job I'm supposed to do.''
"It's always tough playing in the Bay
Area," Wooden said Monday. "Cal ~nd
Stanford are fme learns and l hope:
we play Well !his weekend."
University of Southern C11.llfornia (._1l&ch
Boh Boyd also said hi.~ team's trip
norlh this coming wetkcnd would be
difficult.
"1 11nctersh1nd borh tr11m.~ art bt'1ll'r
defensively and we knnw Stanford h11.5
two fint 1uards."' Boyd said, rcferrini
Ernie Johnson will be the new football
coach al Cerritos College. pending official
"ction of that school's board of trustees
tonight. the DAILY PILOT learned today
fonn highly authoritative sources.
Johmon harl rclurned to high sellOOI
m11chlng only a yeAr Ali[o. ~king Ntiwporl
llarbor Hlgh's Sailors lo their firs! varsi-
ly football title In 28 years, sharing
Sunsrt laurels with Anc1hci1n.
And In doing so hr: knocked off
Anaheim, 7-0.
He'll ~pla<:e Newport Beach resident
Smokey Cates, who bolstd Cerrlto.5
!ortunes for six years. Cates ~signed
last month to return to teachin[t.
Johnson wall contacted todav &Dou\
the posslbllty of thP. move Lo ·Cerritos
and lht veteran mentor 11dmltted ht
was one of rive c1ndldt1te:s undtir final
consideration.
Johnson was named Suru;el League
coach of the year after leading Ne1111port
Harbor to 1111 8-! overall mark.
In al!. his <k!fenslve-minded Sailors
shut oul half U1rir foes during the '70
campaign.
Had Johnson sl..iyed 11.I Newport . he
w1s to lulor I.hr South in lhe annual
Nor1 h·South OrAnge County All-Star foOt·
ball game.
I
Bruins Slate JSU
LOS ANGELES ! AP) -UCLA Wiii
open it!I 11173 footb111I 11ea80n playinll
lrt\\'1t State in the Lo~ Angt"'le'I Coli.'ttum.
Thr twn foolbt1ll !ea1n ~ h.'.l ve me~ JtW
(lrn.;e prf'vifliisly, 1n IY26 when tbn
Cyclones beat t!W Bruins 20-0.
---...... If ....... .., ........ ...._ . .;,. ... _ . ~ ....... ·. ' '
Monarchs Tabbed
To Finish Fo·urth
The Angell!! L e a g u c
b11ltetb11l race may be the
latt to &tt under way, but
the parochial circuit gets off
in a blg start with a
doubleheader at Cal Poly (Po--
morui) Friday night.
On di!play will be lhe C<>n-
tenders for the crown.
First it's Mater Dei (11-4)
and Servlte (13·1) al 6:30
followed by Bishop Amat and
SI. Anthony, a pair of teams
with deceiving records.
Here 's now the DAlLY
PILOT rate the quintets in
the order of predicted finish
in the six-team race:
I. Bishop Amat -Coach
Charles Ruffins' Lancers '
record might as well be
. ttirown out the w i n d o w
because of the football team's
use of most or the available
talent during the month of
December.
Guards Pat Haden (~) and
John ~1cKay (5-11) make the
offense click around senior
forward Pat O'Leary, a &-£
all·round star wilh a 21.0 scor-
ing average. He's also a
stellar rebounder.
Ruffin rates O'Leary as a
better all-round player than
UCLA's Keith Wilkes (former-
ly of Santa Barbara High).
"I think he's a better drib-
ber and defensive player. He 's
very fluid,,., claims Ruffin.
It's the best Amat team
ever, according to Ruffin,
Rounding out the starting rive
are Gary Purdom, a 6-5, 200-
pound returning starter at
center and junior Mike Young
(6-3).
Three seniors, 0 ' L e a r y .
Purdom and Haden, were on
the Lancers' CIF' A A A
semifi nalist learn as
JERRY TARDIE
T aam Picked Fourth
sophomores.
%. Se.rvjte -The Friars'
quick, fast breaking unit could
be the team to knock off Amat
behind the scoring antics nf
John Seymour, a commuting
Costa Mesan with a 24.4
average through the first 14
outings -in which Servile
has only one loss.
Coach Larry Walker calls
Seymour bis money player
and relies on the 6-1 senior
as the ce.ntrat point of the
Friars' system.
Seymour is the only return-
ing letterman in Servite's
camp but he's helped out con·
siderably from the Angelus
League championship junior
varsity squad of last year.
Tom Walbrun (5-10 jr.) is
considered underrated by op-
pnsing coaches and forwards
Mark Campanaro (6-2 jr.) and
Anteaters Change
Stru·ting Lineup
There 'll be some changes
made. ll won't be a change
in the weather or a change
in dress bul a switch in the
lineup of the UC Irvine basket-
ball team tonight at UC San
Diego.
"After lnsing three straight,
we have to make some
changes." coach Tim Tift or
the UC Irvine basketball team
said f..1onday.
"\Ve will stnrt Ed Burl-
ingham and Troy Rolph al
the backcourt positions in San
Diego and see if we can"t
break through the win bar-
rier."
Burlingham has been used
as the sixth man on the. team
\his year and mov ing to the
backcourt shows his all-round
versatility. In previous games
he h11.s been used as a replace-
ment for Richard Clark at
<'enler as well !IS to spell
forwards Phil Rhyne and Bill
~1oore.
Rolph was an early season
~tartf'r. giving way to Brad
Baker lhe last two games.
Saddleback
Gridd ers
Finish 7th
Saddlebaek College finished
in a tie for seventh place
i.D the final large divisio n state
j~or colle&e football ratings,
conducted by the JC Athletic
B1i1reau.
Coach George Hartman 's
Saddleback Gauchos (8·1-1)
ffnJshed in a lie with College
ef San Mateo (7-1-1).
He returns to the opening
lineup tonight in the border
city.
UCI w.i\I play two games
away from home this ""'eek .
Saturday night it will be San
Fernando Valley State in
Northridge.
The Anteaters are currently
7-4 for the season after losing
!he last three home games,
l"-'O to Ca l State (F'ullerton)
and one to Colorado by a
matLer of six points.
In the individual scoring
race, Rhyne is the leader wi th
a 21.1 average fnllowed by
Moore with a 16.5 mark.
Jerry Hulbfrl's undefeated
(7-0 ) freshman squad is paced
by former Marina High star.
Rick Mosier with a 15.4
average with Gary Denton
close behind al 15.3. Two other
yearlings are averaging in
double figures . Ch a r 1 e !
Lumpkins 113.7) and Andy
Han!en j 13.01 .
Jn addition to p I a y i n g
preliminary games lo both
varsity contests this v.·eek, the
freshmen will host Ca I
Western in Crawford Hall Fri·
day evening at 7:30.
" l"'IM 11·•1 • .. " .. ... l'MI ~~,..,. " " r, "' '" !1111 MOO''" " " '" \6.1
C.~rv l'o• " " ,. '" ..
R ICll1•d (llf~ " " " " " (d llurllntftArn " " ,. " " r~d II~~., " ~ , " " Trov i:tol"" " " " •• Phll Mo!h•WS • " " .. •• ~Ill Gto•t• • " ' " , ' trrlct larr ' ' • • • i eot> ISIK• ' ' • • • JO"!n Ftrwtll 1 • • • •• To1111 11 ld lM "' 10.l Ot>llOr!tl'" 11 lJt l ,. •• UC I Pnifll"'911 17 I • " " .. ••• ltlct. MOiier ' .. ,. ·~ ll• Gm Otn!on ' ~ " •m ' ·' Chtrl11 L11rn1-ln~ 1 " " ft 13.1 A1'Ch' H1n1.., 1 " " " "' \!•ve •0~1ns ' " " ~ '·' 1rn l uftt , " " ~ u ,_ ~ • " " " ~·I HOWt<tl H1Wkln1 , " • " J1n JOrtl•" , ' • " ,,
Tom Sltl(tlend ' ' ' , , ' t1'1ttr PtrlllnJ , • ' ' " JI"' $Cl'lm111>teh , • • • .. Tlltl• ' lft ,. ~l •• o.-h ' "' "'
Dana Karcher (IHI sr.l team
up wllh 6-7 senior J ohn Horger
to give the Friars good
balance.
Two others, Andy Pren·
dlville (6-1 sr.) and Steve
Trella (fr3Y.! sr.) give Servile
added depth.
"No one's tried to slow us
down yet, but I don 't think
that tactic wlll dfect our kids
because or f)Ur qu ickness,"
says Walker.
J. St. Anthony -Coach Jack
Errion of St. Anthony's Salnt.s
is up to his old tricks again .
His team has a mediocre
preleague record (4-7) and he
says he doesn 't have much
going for him this year -
his standard meS3age .
But the Saints, with their
ball control tactics, figure to
stir up the Angelus circuit
again, especially with
forwards Mike Esposito i6-l
sr.) and Grtg Sanossian (6-5
sr.) in the fold.
His center is 6-2 S(lphomore
Russell Belizaire and he 's ten·
tatively settled on guard!
Steve Caple and Bob Wal ker,
a pair nf jun)ors up from
the JV team.
"We have nnly average re-
bounding which is the area
where we need the most im-
provement," says the veteran
Salnl mentor.
4. Mater Del -It is sup-
posed to be a rebuilding year
for C<lach Jerry Tardie and
his Monarchs, but judging
from their 11-4 preleague
record the Santa Ana·based
Monarchs may well end up
in the CIF playoffs ror the
second straight year.
Tar.die says his team's n1a-
jor problem is shoring up it.s
defense.
"We have to give the other
team one shot and 1.ake the
rebound, We've got to have
the right position, if we don 't
we could go 2.S in this
league," says Tardie.
His front line consists or
Steve Kemper and Rick Knif·
fin . a pair of 6-3 standouts
along with forward St eve Fritz
(6-0 sr.).
The balance of t h e
Monarchs' starting unit con-
sists of Haupert and Dave
Kile y.
Pete Roberts, is the first
player off the bench in critical
situations for 'Dardle. He's
a six-footer.
5. Plus X -The Warriors
were wiped out by ii raduation
Jo.sses with only 6-2 Ernie
Flanagan returning.
Coach Jim Reames is in
his first year at the helm
and he has John Tresnall (6-
2lf.i sr.) at the ot her forward
along with guards John Hop-
kins (6-t '°ph.) and Joe Schra-
der (&.1 jr.).
His center i! Gary Bastis!a.
a 6-3 J\miOr Oltt.h a 14.0 scoring
average.
"We're trying to emphasize
the fa st break bu t in-
experience is the big prC>o
btem." says Rr-ames.
His team has a 7-5 record
with a pair of losses to
Verbum Dti. the CIF AAAA "s
toi;rated quintet.
I. St. Paul T h e
Swordsmen have a I re a d y
demolished last year's season
record . but im pro\•ing on ,.
1·22 record isn't a staggering
task .
Coach Chuck Destro has,
ho\1-·ever, fielded a better unit
than the past and the first
year mentor 's team has com·
plied a 6·9 mark.
Leading the team's .scoring
LI\ junior Jamie Quirk (S-3
forward) with a 13.0 average
whlle Ernie Winniberg. (6-4
sr.) and forward Vem Hough
(6-2 jr.J have chipped the ball
in at 10.3 and 11.4 clips .
The guards consl.lt of Jim
Ortega (S.10 jr.J and Rick
Krigbtlinger (6-l ar.).
Col\ege of tbe Sequoias ( 16-
2),1 which defealed Fullerton
1n· the large schools cham-
pionship game, was named the
state's top team while F JC
flni1bed second.
JV Cage Results
Rio Hondo (9-2) a 17·14 win-
ner. over Saddleb1ck In the
fln:t round of the playoffs.
J)laced slilb in lhe fina l
raijngs. ~ege of the Redwoods (11· o) Was aelec:l.ed as the beet
of the small divi1ion teams.
,Coach of the year honors
went to Bill Bettencou rt ISe·
quolas) and Jim McAuley
1Redwood!i ). l.lfn $c-h ..... (:9119M "~'" 91 S-1•• ~ ~~
l, MIY•lllY & llll<t H...0. ,, ...,,.!~
$.ii" Ml'-
f , "''!~ 10. fl •1"1119 L" Allt*lff CC -.. ..
'. i=t, Jt::w:::-" \ G1vlltl' ..... u.n ti•llCfll:k -'· (oltne Of C1nv""' 4. YICMI' V1ll1v
7, t'tl'iff¥Hl1 •. '''"* f, W"' Hllll
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Lions Banquet
Westminster Hl&h School
wl\I honor its fall sports
•thletes tonl1ht wttb a sport.8
awards banquel In the school
vm.
Festivities get under way
at. 7 o'clock.
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DAILY tl'll.OT Slllt ~Mt.
' -~ ' ' ' ' . -,. .. \ .. ' '
DAILY "LDT J 7
Top Ea g le Player
Orgill Turnabout
S hows on Floor
By PHIL ROSS
01 llWI Diii\' tl'li.1 Sti ll
When Estancia High's cur-
re.nt basketball ace Gary
Orgill nrst set foot on the
Eagle campus In his fre shman
:year he was quiet and in·
troverted .
llowever, Sill Wetiel , who
coached Orgill in his first two
years on the Eagles varsity
cage squad, admits quite a
transformation has occurred
in the sel'lior cager's personal.
Hy
The affable eJ.·mentor """ho
stepped down from the
coaching reins alter la!t
season says, "Gary was quite
Introve rted and quiet when he
first came to school as a
freshman. Bul he's turned into
more or an extrovert since
then ."
Apparently Lhe R r ad u a I
turnabout in Orgil l"s psyche
has also affected his llfe st.vies
in relation to the hardv.•nods.
Actually , though. there·s
never been any introversion
whatsoever in Orgill's desire
1o become a v.'ell·rounded
basketball performer.
The talented seni or 's
present coach, Gary Carr.
claims his ace is a good all-
round athlete but l h e
dedicated teenager has con~
cenlrated on just a single
sport in his stay at Estancia
-and that's been basketba11.
Says Carr. "he does two
thiniis best -he can ha ndle
the ball very well with either
hand and he is a good passer
due to good pe riphera l vision.
"His main success is in his
ability to step around his mnn
while looking up. He rarelv
ever looks down while hand\·
ing: the ball."
A starter since hi s
outside shooting and find Ol't
spot ror himself on the noor,"
Carr continues. "and he could
be a floe college player.
"I think he'd be an awfully
iiood colleae player becau.e
of his good moves and ball
handling anyway."
OrgUl ts rated f>nly an
average defensive player at
this juncture. But when yo11
score 2.1 points per game it
surely lessen! your coach'5
fretting about your defen!IVe
prowess.
MV Bids
For Third
Loop Win
Mission Viejo lligh's Diablos
take another crucial step ln
the torrid Crestview League
basketball race tonight when
coach Pat Roberts' quintet
meets hoat Tustia in a 7 o'clock
venture.
The only other Oraniie Coe&t
area te1m involved I n
Crestview battle S a n
Clemente -is at Foothill
High, seeking to snap a two-
game losing streak in circuit
play .
Roberts' team is under fire
again, despile the Diablos ' z.o
league leading mark -whi ch
is shared by Katella and Villa
Park. the favorites to annex
the championship ,
Mission Viejo edged Orange
(52-51) with a slow · down tem-
po but upped the action con-
siderably against El Modena,
v.·inning easily, 60-44.
EAGLE CAGE HERO -Eslancia's Gary Orgill (23) is near lhe top of area
scoring charts and is a prime reason coach Gary Carr's Eagles are atop the
tight Irvine League basketball race. Al so pictured is Skip \Vil Hams (32), now
a freshman at ('al Poly 1San Luis Obis po ).
sophomore year. O r g i 11
averaged 12 points per contest
<ls a 10th grader and tailed
off lo 9.5 la st season.
His scoring decline as a
junior can be principally al·
tributed to the fact that he
acted mainly as a fe ed man
to 6-6 Skip William s, last
season's DAILY PILOT Irvine
League player or the year
who scored at a 15.9 norm ..
Roberts' team can be. ex·
peeled to employ the same
tactics against Tustin as it did
againsL Orange, slowing the
tempo somewhat to nullify tile
enemy 's fast break potential.
Huntington
8th in CIF
Cage Poll
Huntington Beach rerna1ns
the lone Orange Coast area
team to crack the CIF AAAA
top 10 Hst, picking up 34 points
on the basis of its 10-3 mark,
good for eighth place.
Verbum Oei continues to
hold down the top place with
a 12-1 mark. aht:ad of un-
defeated Com pton and
Crescenta Valley.
W~t Covina and Los Altos,
both undefeated and rated one·
two in AAA circles, collide
tonight at Wesl Covina in a
7 o'clock lilanic
Servile, Orange County'!!
No. l team, is ranked fourth
in AAAA while Troy is sixth.
The taller downed La Habra,
fi6.00. to knock the Highlanders
out (If the rankings.
Mar in a. 11·4 end sharing the
Sunset Le.ague lead with Hun·
tington Besch and Newport
Harbor, garnered eight points. ,.,. ....
tl'll~ THiii tl'.i"h
I. V1<1Nm 0.1 !U·H 111
'· !OtnDl!ln Ill~> H• 3. rncirnl• V•tlt• 11).01 1.\0 •· ervlte !1J·1! !01 '· f l•l• 111-1) 11
'· f(W (11·1) 55 I. Mornl"91ldt 01·11 3) I. Kun11nllOll 8t•U! PO·ll 3• o (Tl•f l.ov~l• 11-lll ?•
PISl(ll""I 110.l\ ,. Otl!fl"I• Mllllk•n (11).Jl 11, W•trtn l\2·d ond Motte Oon'>t' lf·ll lS •1dl. Cent1nnl1I lf.5) 1), Mon<"Vtrll Cll-<1/, I.• Mlbtl !10.U, I.II Wiiton 111· I ' 11th, Marini 111-<1\ I, ltt ll'IO'll !ll·l J I, P-• (ll·J l, err1nc:• 110.JI
S fl(h, SI. FTlntll (11·1) •• AVlll\et!
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tt·ll 11 •tell LI Ml•ld• 1•·'' JO No•thvltw \t-h <.. Ctvln• 10.'/ •· aonllt Ct-I 7, wor•lfl1n (,., ii Kttollo (10-41 •< APel• V•ll•T ll·l '' flml V1tll'f 1 .. tlo ltfMho ,t.l1rn110s I•· J I fl(h, ..
1. On11tlo lt'-1! ,, Mlt1!1111 C11·0
3, Ctnl••I (11·1) J, Y111;1l•1 00•11
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Basketball -'4t1rPI'. NI ... !IJJ tMI 1.1111111111
kMl\14" tfl I' (II ..... ,.,.
tte111111 !21 ~ '1l LM WoOl!lwll'll on c 1u •• ..., c ..... (\fl G C2) !'Ill' .. Loufi.r 171 G IJ) Coltn'lln j(Oflnt ,.,,.; N,..._., Hlrtllr" -
~n 2, L1n1 &, T.,ltl ,, attn' t. "lift!"": N_, M•re.ot '1·1•. W"llllllllttr I•> CM) frt ..... NlrMr
ArMll'IWI (U) t< tit ) t<fllllffl
1'10111.., 401 F (II woeio ... ru Dt<11m111 U) c en t.•oo
H~WI!'! (t) G U! ~0!.11!" AC~ 1171 G fl)) CQlllt
kOt'I'" IVM : Wt'!mlnllo; -,,,,. deo'l(k t N.-i M1•• -5-rt
4. l1r.,, :S. HOln"ll S. Ht!lt!1111.; NtwlllJtl Htrbor ll•JO,
Friars Rated No. 1
Hoop Team in County
With WiUiams' departure
and the Eagles' absence or
anyone over l).Jlh on the entire
roster, Orgill has come into
his own in the current cam-
paign. Selecllng the No. I prep
basketball team in Orange
County has seemed like a mat -
1er of tossing names into a
ha1 and drawing ror !he top
unit -and this week 's selec·
lion further reflects t h c
closeness of the teams in-
volved .
Servile has taken over the
No. I spot \1-•ith its 13-l mark .
jumping ahead of Villa Park,
which remains in seeond place
after a pair of Crestview
League victories over San
Clemenle and Foothill.
La st week 's leader. La
Habra, tumbled to sixth ,
where the Highlanders are
locked in a three-way 11e with
Pacifi ca and Kalella .
Pacifica entered the list
after dumping Santiago in
opening round action in the
Garden Grove League. San ·
tiago, fourth last week , fell
to ninth.
!\1arlna a n d Huntington
Beach. the Sunse1 LeagL1c
powers. ren1aincd fairly s!ab!e
after a pair of circuit wins.
Marina is fourth with Hun-
tington a notch behind.
Servite's lofty ranking will
Artists, Uni
In Ac tion
be tested by l\fater Iki in
Friday's Angelus Le a g u r
lidlifler.
Second place Troy should
have little difficulty agaJnst.
Kennedy and Savanna. But
Villa Park's reputation will
undergo a severe lest against
Orange Friday night.
1. Servile (13·1 ) i5
2 jTJe) Troy IHl-21 44
Villa Park 111).:l) 44
4. f\.tarina fll-i) 3fi
S. Huntington Beach 110-3) 39
6 tTie ) Pacifica (10-3) 15
La Habra {10·2) 15
Kate!la j 10-4) IS
9. Santia go ! 11·21 14
10. !\taler De.i ~ 10-t) 8
Othe rs: Lowell (IG-2) 5,
~1tssion Viejo (8-4) 3, Rancho
Alamitos (9·S) 2
He's leading the squad in
scnring with an even 2.1.0
01veragc, is canning about 40
l"rcenl or his shots from the
field an d is the most accurate
charity shooter on the team
with a better than 80 percent
completion record. The Eagles
are sole leaders in the Irvine
chase with a 2-0 loop mark.
Carr says. "Orgill hes a
problem pushing himself with
his feel and legs but we work
on drills for quickness f>f the
fC!Ct every day in practice.
"Our whole practice ,js
predicated on about an hour
and half of running and gel·
ting everyone into !he best
possible shape. We also have
everybody lifting weights,''
add~ Carr.
"Gary has to v.·ork on his
Area Mat St1n11nari es
Vt"lfl + ~ Ntwt:;,., Htrbe• u(~ !U! ,11n1"9lm 106-Molont Y (W\ <itt Ct oonl IMI
rl;...m"m1\\fc.1n °~).1w ~;:~:;; 1~!.;:,.n • \15-0o111 <WJ 0t< wooii:M> ,,.,
fN1'1l,:.f; erown lN) olnft1a 111ont1 ,,~f . .1-Klt!fr l MI d•c ¥Vitt /WI
l-'! l:OO 1)1'1-T WlllOll !¥VI d« M. Gtluom 12l-.Scnltk !NI tit( Siii !"'\ 10·1 (Mj 1).0. llO-Fllmtr (A) olnntd Wood INl-<I I •i•,-.MYf"("tl (WI oln ntd fllrm-
J ~~. M1r1!no jN) OK. Mlllt r "TH-a.1Mtvuron IW) Din.....:! Srn•~ (A! 9·1 (Ml. l•l-Mlelll vv !Nl plnntd O•~ln• 1#11 !..._.,.,•t~IY !Wl dee Ctart (Ml 1:". ~ Ul-M. I(. ISrown iN J P111,.,.0 llOHO 117 F1ld•~ (Ml 11lnntd St/lllltr 1·· fA) •:». ,,.._ 0.Phlltlo• IWI dtc H•rr ion u1-PoemK11h 1-'l oln....a o M11•t• IM ' .,,_ I'"> (NI :4'. 111-Jennlno• tMl olnntd Mln11lek 161-Cool<t (Al ~ H1tnll!Ofl 101 (WI l 0, 11•-0llvl't• (Wf OK l'tlr!t tMI
tlt-Ptftti"oon !A! CIK JO/ln).Otl 1NI If i . 6-tl. Mv~-ll•1rl (Wl olnfltd L1ur l1 (M), lt....._M. J . ll1own fN ) drew M1rlln11 Wttltfft (41) Ul Mfrllll !Al ol-1. •aytflelll Laguna Beach lfigh, v•ifh Mvv-Mov1y !~ w, 'U.,•orrt••. Wnltr" ~.,~,:~~ M•tl,,.
Ntw"'1 "~~~,._1Jl1"/141 ,l,ftt"'I"' ei&hl wins under I~ belt gets r.'. i._,, w1tr1111 ... 1,.. 1.wi 10 111111 AR• ' -NtwHrt "'rtr:r.: !U U21 ""•"''"' -M••''" <WI Dinned TllllY tJI.). ib fir.It taste Of ()range League Cn!• Mft1 1f1J.'71•1 M"""ll• ~ N
basketball COmpetJtiOD tonight olhr.:'.i'tr !Cl IK bY McN1m1r• jS~O::-i~:;.iort•lt !WI tl"r>H Oo<:d
roi1-S"tr101 ICl 1l11flld llv Fo•ttr llJ....Elklno fW) 11n°'" tl'tckll•m when the Artis~ invade the •M j ''f1· 1,,, '"' 1 l--thin ((! clec b~ l lloutntlY . ' . J t fl f V J · IM! 9 l')-l"tnton lWI Dlnn..O G1rd1 !SI.!. enc en con nes o a enc1a 1 :i--:.~rnbr..-!Cl dtc N•U• 1M1 ,,n ,
High School. 6·~Jc.....l(lno IC) 111...,.0 Crwit !Ml 130-Mt•trttt !WI 1>IMo<I Soto (SA!.
4 ''"· Tipoff is at 7 o'clock. ''1lt.-Sroc•ton ICJ ftt ti~ Artll\o l3'-Noo11 (Wf del Ge•c11 CSA), (Ml 11·1, 1J..•. ln a non league battle, firsl-uJ.~;.towrino ICJ ctww w1111 Wl1h~1• 1t!-G111<1w1v !WI 11"/ltd c1nv1r
1 cOllrmtft fCI GK tlv Corr11 U,t,), S:OCI year University High meets tMit=. 1d-M••'•" cwi 111,,nt<t A"'" 11,.1,
I -Slrolcll ICI •ll'lnlCI 0.ttrkh !Ml 1 ~~:i-ovtfllr0ott !W) f lfll'l9\f Pett.I Neff at Mission Viejo High. 1: · w11111.,.,, <CJ ernMd Seuir., !Ml (SA!. o:~. r · ff r the h t r 1 1·a 111-M1rnnr1 (W! c11•. F1r•••• csAi. 1po or os ree ance 1; ~n 1c1 11ll!fMd ,.~11" !Ml •.O.
Trojart! is at 8. 11-StJn11or ici •lnntd 11 , lll4.1111k 1w111111111(11 i. ... ..,, c;Ai, lllleynoldt Ml $•JI, J:o•. Cnach Jerry Fair'!J Artists H~v-4ol• 1 .. (Cl 11IMld Crtla !Ml lf£-McCroct;~ '"'' •IMM Heutt. J:Ji, !WI, J:n. 'II •-· f ' • • J1wlf{, Y11•1?Y H¥¥-5Ultr !WI 11tt1111'11 M¥1fm IS,t.),
Leading the Dlablo outfit i~
standout Jeff Masterso,n, a M
forward who operates in a
multi-fold mea!ure with deft
passing, shooting aad playmak-
ing.
San Clemente and Foothill
are winless after a pair of
loop outings -making thi1'
a mandatory win for either-
leam to stay in co ntention
for the crown.
Other 7 o'clock enCQunters
are Villa Park at El Modena
and Orange at Katella.
The I at t er confrontation
figures to be a racehorse
affair with both t e a m s
employing the run-and.gun
style or play.
F ullerton's
Ringers Top
Pilot, 86-66
Not at the top of its game.
the un fortunate DAILY PII.CYr
basketbell squad went clo1vn
lo its first 1971 defeat, M-M,
Monday at the hands of the
Fullerton News -Tribune
ringers in a scuffle at Eslan-
da High.
Bespectacled sportswritt:r
Craig Sheff and sports editor
Glenn White peetid the motley
DAILY PILOT crtw with S3
and 23 point effort.! while gun-
ner Pete Donovan (39) and
ringer Mel Frank (31) led
the Fullerton bunch.
After a tight tlme at the
outset, the Tribune cagt rs
pulled out lo • 22-14. nrtt
quarter ad vantage and moved
to a 43-33 ed&e by halftime.
Ji'l!MlfMn Ttllv111 CN l .. "
'"'
1: ~ •• ' . " '
"" :; ! ' . " ' •ur• h 0111rt9r1
1 Ii I .:
•••
w1 ~ using our 1un1ors 1n cn11 Mn1 y:-;> 1'61 M•tMlll 1 01
lhe Slarting lineup in an at• H-I. ~,= C [7fu '::~w !WI w.,lmlm~~ll~ly:::rsMU &M 6~'1,.'11:i'"' r! ~ ~ r::: tempt 111 stop Valencia, .al~~~==~~===~~--~--~~~-----~-~-------"-
team that derailed Corona last
week in non-league play, ~54.
Corona wat ranked fifth in
CJF AAA circles.
Valencia's record !J 6-8 and
Is nn a four-game winning
streak.
Cooch John Drlscoll 1 11
senlorless unit will be trying
lo shake a two-g.1Jme losing
streak when It meet.! Neff
The Trojans have 11 5·10
overall mark.
USHER'S GREEN
STRIPE SCOTCH
START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH BIG $2.QQ SAVINGS
aUIOl:t tcOTtN llll!!lt!-• "ODf -IMIWll'OlllM =iwn CG1P. ~ If.• 1111
1
. .
'•
" ' " '
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..
Bigots Get 'Equal Time' In New Series
'FAMILY' DEBUTS The stars of CBS' new
series ··Alf in lhe Fami ly" are Carroll O'Connor
tse,ated) as bi goted Archie Bunker. Jean Stapleton
'1eftl as his \\life. Sally Struthers as their daughter
an d Rob Reiner as their liberal son·in-law. The
ton1edy premieres toni ght at 9:30 on Channel 2.
By RICK OuflROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Televiewe.rs who wal.ch CBS
tonight will met!l Archie
Bunker, and ii iJ not likely
thal they will soon for get him.
Archie, a fictitio u s
character played by actor
Carroll O'Connor, is lhe focus
of a new, weekly, half-hour
situation . comedy that debuts
tonight , "All in the Family."
And CBS has a lot riding
on it . for it i.s a slluatron
comedy like oo other ever
seen on American television.
In describing Archie, the
network says he is "a middle-
class husband-father who sees
the world and everyortf' in
it only in terms of his own
prejudices." And that is pul-
ling it mildly.
For, in two episodes or the
series previewed for the press,
Archie freely tossed around
such expressions as "spies,"
"spades," ''Hebes." ''pinkos"
and "subversives,"
When a nun comes to the
door for charity, be tells his
wile to give her no more
than 50 cents, adding : ''Most
of what yOll give them. they
buy golden capdlesticks with
it. "
In one of the episodes,
Archie has a comic con·
frontation with a young black
acquaintance who puts him
on. Archie, by the way, feels
that if Negroes have bumper
TV's Rose Marie
stickers that say ''Black is w!lh hls ~l\·laws, but off them. "There was nolhing -to the Paul Newman and Marlon
Beautiful," there's oolttlng Rob Reiner, Carl Reiner's son, wedding nighL" Adds hi! Brando. ~
wrong w 11 h calling the m U the yoW1g man. wife : ''Yeah -and even then Of the two episodes preview·
"black beauties." Archie and his son-in-law " ett · -CBS didn 't know which
Al you can see, "..tJl in are the comic protagonist..!I. The soo-in-law likes to watch would be pul On first -one
the F'amily" is a n e w They disagree on everything te.levbk>n shows aboul pollu· was hllarlous, the other very
dimension in situation com-possible -.-sex, religion, law tion, and admires Jack. Lem-funny. Industry feeling is that
edy. lt is based on a long-run-and orCler, student!, hair. mon. Archie prefers football the series will be either a
ning BriUsh video hit, "Till Speaking of sex, Arch ie and John Wayne. He ls thumbs sensation f.lr bomb out COin·
Death Do Us Part." And CBS recalls cou rting hi s wife · down on liberal actors like pletely.
'President Robert Woo6 says[fii;i;;ii;;;;..~;,;;;;iio;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;i,;..o;;;;ii;;;;i;;;;.,;;i,i;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-;;.-~Oliiiii------.
01 the new entrr •. ·~" NATIONAL GENEI' AL THEATRES "We hope ... it will serve
to ventilate some of the pre-
judices and misconceptions in
American society toda y .
Hopefully, a program llke 'All
in the Family' can contribute
toward gelling vi_tw'ers to
relax a bit and encourage
them to laugh at themselves
as weU as at other people."
There are four m a i n
characters in "All in the
Family": Archie : hi!! long-suf·
fering wHe. portrayed by Jean
Stapleton in a performance
"tha.l is pure gold": his
daughter (Sally Struthers);
and his mustachioed, liberal
son-in-law , who not only lives
·ROSS IURD: -AIR PD RT
IURT -DUii
WCAST£R • llAITlll
JEAll SEIERG
; .IACQUWllE BISSET
. GEORGE IEmY -.
HELEllHAm
,t, UNIVCtrS•t PICTt.lllt • T[C'HNICOl.OR•
"-ucod "' 1000 Ml •
~..u-·-e& ~-
ALSO
"Anne
of the
Tho1,1sand
Days"
• mrrl1tt
: llCMAlD IUITON • : CiENllfYI IUJOLD
' lllNE PAPAS
S•t. & SM•·
o,.. 12:.ti ., .... ,.1 ..
Actress Works to For get ....
. '
TUE S DAY
JANUARY 12
l :DO 8 lit Ntn rt) (60) Jt"' Dun,hy. D aac ._ma <CJ (601
0 TJtt Alltt Shew (C) (90)
m r•n1 ~ tC) (30)
(ID l'ltllfw W LIN1 {30) el l1 Crildl hll Crilda (C) (JO)
9:00 0 fU (I) m "IC TitnilJ MM·
le: (C) "Smet C.~ (drM111)
'63-[liz1btth T1ylor, Robtrt Mitch-
um, Ml1 f1rrow. A WYlthy }'O(lnl
11r1 who is prone to l1nluy 1a:i-
dent1lly mtets In •1in1 lllOdel 1nlll
insltlls tht wom1n in it... llomt Is
her mothtr.
O TM raiitin (60)
By VERNON SCOTI'
HOLLYWOOD !UPI )
Rose Marie, widowed six
years, shares a roomy San
Fernando valley home with
her daughter, Georgiana, 23.
and works steadily in '"'O
television shows.
Her busy schedule is more
than economic.
Rose Marie's relationship
with her late hu sband. musi-
cian Bobby Guy, was so close
that she still has not adjusted
to his death.
Hollywood Squares."
Her work occupies Rose
Marie Jive days a week, often
keeping her at the studio until
7 p.m. or later. But she
usually returns home in time
to fix dinner for Georgiana
"'horn she calls ''Noopy."
Mother and daughter share
kitchen duties. Rose Marie is
expert at Italian d is he s ,
thanks to her late fathe r who
was of Jtalian descent.
The house is virtually rilled
with ribbons, trophies and
silver plate.s won by
Georgiana in shows and com-
petition. She has live horses
of her own and trains them
at a suburban stable.
\Yeekends arc a continuation
of activity for Rose Marie.I
She catches up on mail, does!
some shopping and cleans
hou.se although a cleaning
woman comes in once a week.
Much of the wardrobe she
wears on television is from
" Th11rt., MOfl., T ... -1 & t 11.M. -Frldiry 6:l0 1:20 10:10
Sat. I S•11 .. l :Of J:!iO 4:•0 •:JO 1:20 10:10
15.1.TllAI
111 C.tter
"CATCH THI JOY"
T"t W.rlf Of
'
..
'
Dllftl lvttlet Frff 11 •t
0 S41.-w Fklttr (C) (60) (R)
"f>ortr1it of 1n Unk-n Man."
Clint W1lke1 st111.
Q) 11•1tw; I WUt's r.r .. .,..,.,,r
(Cl (60) Films, p!t)'1 1nd lllMI ·
lure will M u1miMd bJ Bill Bt.11-
r11d and ;uesh: Tom O'Ho111n.
dir1ctor ol "H1lr"; R1lph Nelson,
dueclor cf "Chafiy" ind Art Kun·
~in, publi,htt of ~' LA. Frtt
"We were a little too close,"
she says. "When I lost Bobby
I lost half my own lifl'."
Sharing the early Amei;,ican-
style house is a mutt suilably
named Scruffy_ The pooch was
bought at the pound lor $3.95
and Rose Marie claims he
has cost her another $400 in
veterinarian bills.
her own closets which bu!ge l ... "!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"!"'"'!! with dres:!ts and suits that 1-
reach the knee and are as
tailored as she can find.
G Didi Vn ri,M (30) m nt FllnlMMs (C) llO)
IB@IJ) Stai T1tli: (C) (60) ftl fril!ldly Cleft! (C)
12!1 (J) CIS Mtwt (C) (30)
GI nsa. f••llJ' /JO) ,
@II Netlclm l4 (C) (30) m 111ffft iJi 1ttt SUn (C) (30)
al) LI ltll'1 f1lllitilf ce1 '•tricil
(fJ Nft'I i1 lltt •eW (C) (JOJ
Press.
ED Tbr Adoitc1ltl (C) (60) m t11111entt lC> (30> mu c.ntitlKilll (30) m> "ltacil (60)
1;15 fB CUdit's P1lll 9:l0 1J ta! Cl) NDllllE All Ill !ht
f ;JO O 'C.NW "-"• (30) F1•i1J IC) (JO) This MW, '""°''" m TM n,;.1 •1111 tivt comedy writs rtvoh>ts 11ound
@'@ "" Mttn IC) (lO) a '"idd'-·clts:s hasb111d·flth"· 111ho m .......... lldp IC) (30) sees th• "'1d •Ml IYlt}'O,. in it
~(l)lly r.,.,. Mvtilt (JO) anly i11 terms of JI~ own ,.-eju·
To compensate for the long,
lonely hours al home Rose
Marie co-stars in "Tht? Doris
Day Show" and doubles up
as a semi-regular on "The
Rose ~1arie is proudest of
Georgiana's accomplishments
as an equestrienne.
Tops
Best of '70 , Suy Critics
6il s.dll StelritJ IC) dlCIS. ml\t Dutrt lflP'rt (C) (JO) Q (il)(])E!)AIC .._. ti Ult NEW YORK jAP\ -"M-A-The critics also cited Chief
G)Lts O!Nldti (30) Wiiii: (CJ .. .-...it .. a.. Wl)'llt'" S-H," the. Korean war satire. Dan George, an Indian who a> Alt [11Hi11 News (CJ (30) (suspellM) '70 -Joseph Cotttn, hu been voled best movie played an aged Indian in "Lit-
1:-41' II,;) lllllkale Lloyd HfJMS, 11.eenin Wynn. A of 1970 in tht fifth annual Ile Big Man," and Leis Smith,
de1d!y battle el 'flits t1Jiet pltc1 II f ... N f J Soc. t h h • · · • ,,.. E 7:DOIJCIS l'l'lllin1 111"1 (C) (J ll) 101 control., 111 Americall iu.1tlt•r po o 1.11e a iona 1e Y I e ero s sister in 'rive asy
0 m NIC lflpt!J hn (CJ (J())i submirint. of Film Critics. ll is the firsl Pieces." as the year's outstan-
0 @(J) a> NIA All-$Ur C11111t 0 c..dilll c.-. (30) American-made pict ure lo win ding supporting performers. m (l'h /Ir) The 11mt, h"om the l ii:)..... «" the distinction , The socJ.ety consists of 22
Sin Die10 lnltrn1tlooM Sports nir. Cffcitlftl • AINI (30 ) S ed · I 8 f I ~reni, will milch the l4 oubtind· ., w ens ngmar crgn1on i m critics from Saturda y
'"I h1sketbill pll)'tfl of tilt [1.,i. t :.t5fmhlltr1 .DI* \Vas chosen the year's best Re view, the Washington Post,
Rose Marie has no time
for hobbies, gardening. lenn)s
nr golf . She does try lo swim
in her free-form pool as often
as possible,
Cast and crew members of
both her television shows arc
rrequenl dinner guesls al her
home .
Rose Marie doesn't care for
infonna!ity when she en-
tertains. J\1ost often she in·
vites a dozen f:U~ls lo a sit-
down dinner which is a nine-
course affair formally served.
''l never invite more than
twelve." she says, "because
that'!! as many as I can serve
at the 1ahle."
Mer guests are treated to
Hnsc Marie's unusual array
of dinnerware. She rollecls
china. em Confer111ce'1 At11n\ie inti Ctn· IO:OCI II lNIT a.,.m (CJ (3{1) "Thrn director for his work on ''Th e Esquire, the Nation. Time.
1111 Divisions 111inst th• 14 best ficu ~ Untinployment." Passion of Anna ,'' runner-up Life the Atlanlic. the New 1----
lrom th• Ptcilic 1nd Mid..U Divi· It 1t1 s ..... (C) (60) Ktvin in the besl mo\'ie balloting. Yorker. Commonweal. t h e
11cns of the Wes1.tr11 Cont1r111t1. s1noers. Bttn•Y Morris. Berman won thr. same honor New Republic, H a r p e r ' s ,
B wnt'1 Illy u .. r (C) (Jill B.,.... WM ..._ (C} (60) for "Persona" 1n 1967 anrl NewS'A·eek, the Village Voice. m1 l-Ltc:J (30) GI""" CC> (60) GtoJ11 Pu1n1m. •·Shame'' in 1968. Vogue, the New Leader and!.~~!!!! ID Drlpet (C) • <30l OJ o-t. fir AM11t11r1 !C) (301 QJ (I) T....,. Mlwil: (t) "'flit "Bend With thl Wind_" George C. Scott was selected Pl ayboy.
Y111a: w.rn.ri,'" 1111111 Dniiy. Ql) DEIUT ffiP SdlMb (C) i60) lhe year's ootstanding actor In previws years. the socie-
fD ~ m. & OHie (C) (30) "Problems 1 l'llssibilitles." Or. ror his portrayal of the title ty honored the Frencll-made
Cll(l)TMll w C.••••ca (C) WiHi1m Gl1sser 111d 30 htnd role in "Patton." "Z.'' the Swedish "Shamr:"
IIl) Cllrbt be livlfll W.,tl (C) ()0) pict;ed people trom 111 br111thes Glenda Jackson v.·as nanl· and ''Personna. '' and ''Blow-
fll llmrie {J'O) ol edue11Jon1I lite discuss Ille prob· ed best actress for her Up." produced in England by
Gii> Si•,i...t. *rill (551 l1ms of hi1h school ind POS.5ituli· c h a r a c terization of the an Italian.
7:lO B 9 ()) lfttftf "ltlllilliet CCJ t•es for improvHrient in 1 nut libe rated sister in 1 he lrr.~~~~~~~~~~111 (3DJ J1ne H1th11111y or11n\les tolltge·credit ll-p1ri se11es. dramatization of D H
Df)'ld1le's itCretlfiff to p!Ofnl i,S (J) CIS MIWI ltport (C) (30) . · · !he btnker's dtct its. I d) Altlf\ll M11itfl (30) l.awr~0nCe S novel "\\ro1nen JO
Q m OM lllltb Si-(t) (lilll llI:) r1st~ Me1icaitl (60) Love
Guests ini llofd Brid1es 1od IOns.110:30 1J CIS JlllWI Specill (C) (311) "b (F-~~~~~~~~~~~111
8t1b 11111 Jtifl, H1rq WililGll i nd Mercury 1 Menatt!" 01n11I ScMrr I
Tommy R0t. reparts. ~m 0 llfYl"lt (C) (30) W lill s.t.1 Ntws IC) (30)
0 ·-' ... ., It) ""'. ,,,. 9 f]) ......... ·~ (30) l 0 .............. <COfMlttJ &.s-mt• f••ffi1 (3111 Rt~ H1rrlson. Shirt., Mtd.liM. IDTnatlll .r c... ......... (C) (lO) ll :OOIJ ~(J)el ...... (CL m tt Ta 1 T1tltf CC> (601 o ~@ m """' (C) fD rm..-1 (C) (IO) (R) ''£1tl 0 C.. '" llf Tllil! (C) 130)
Sciuu s: Hit ftmlly 1M rritn!ls," 0 al Nlwl ft) I!) "'°'"'Miit fbl (C) (lD) 0 MM!: "hyrttl'' (mys!try) '1i2 e Mt CM • 1M ........ (311) -Nici11el Cr1i1, Fr1~~ PIW'IOfl
7·SS irr:'I c..ill • _...... I m lt111tl ' Hlf'dJ rM. Flltilll: • ,_ "011" l.nti9u.. tlMI ....,., Dlt
l:tll 8 19 (I) lrt11 Aa• ICI (JOl Wist.~
List DIMIC'ts 1f!WltNI !1!1 1011 al ID hit .. Old: tf.I
• ,.,.,,.. '"'9 • Ille 'fwf!lll' @CI)""' 111 ...
_. el °"""1. I JMI M dudl. m ..... (C)
1---tt)(IO) ..
,. , .. • ,,.. (C) (JO) 11:JO e a(() 1111n '""ft tc1 AndJ
• ,. ...... I . II (Cl Grifflttl. Burt lw1, S111l111 Winttrs
• ._... (C} (30) 1uest.
1:• Ci>~ Un (55) ~~ ~!:.1:e~ = ~~~
I~ hllll Rtdlitld tlll$l
II HEE HAW-Rocer 0 Ii!) .... ·-IC)
*Miller,"'"'' Littlt, OMl'rit: ..,. ....... AIM"
•l'WfOflT tf.t.nl -., • •-
,. .............. --Ot. WlW
lNDI TONIGHT
"DARLING LILI"
••
"ON A CLEAR DAY
YOU CAN SEE
FOREVER "
STAln WlDNl50AT
.... --WWW I& was.a-
•Ml -· ... HM:ll<:llilMJ·.l'Cl.lllUHl • lobby Murcer--WQW!!! (walern) '56--Gle1111 Fonl.
11.fll llJ .. ""ttl iloi .,,. • .... , ......,. -l•t>· BARGAIN MATINEE ~~~...., MlllUI'. t1H1 '-111 t111l '5>-Xtwt Tl)'lof". "ALEX JN EVERY WED., I p.m. "
ea-It) ClO)""""' o1l"'°D -"A -"'... WONDERLAND" ADULTS $1.00
tllit "*·" c..i• SM• rttums lllMI'" {tdwnlvrt) '4S --Cen!ll l~iiiiiii§1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ll W!tll' '* ..... , ..... tfrl1I QUM Wlktt. (wl)oll Klytt. -II
el\IOI 't. Jillllll • _, lnttrruptloils ~ Cil .._.: °'TMlllllf II • ~ "tot°"" 11111 flit J. W1ft'ldor11. .,...,... I: 61J4J61f
•ODDCOUN'S ,., ..... , tC) ""''"'"'"' •·r * TONY M'l°"u a.. Mlt" <•1"'•> ·~dit 111111'· • . ROIER • f"' .,.K phJ. )oan ["tt n.1, Charlts Dutt. " , ,.,.., I "" ... , , ... , w .. ,. e w 'ffl!t. ~ t'CJ c90i a o ..... (C) ~ co•o .... o•l """'"
TOllf...., Mti.-w,.,. !lob· I:JOtD ~ sa.r. ,. 1111 i. 101ic..wyr .. ......,.
lftt f'llct'.-. .. .... likOlniell ,...,..., " "'lh sl I n9 1ni ...... ..... ,.,.
"M-A·S-H,.. is the
best American
wer comedy
since .ound
c.tme in!"
An
lneo P1em inaer
ProcNclioo
'.\ : r •. ! 'i :· :. 1 '-ALSO PLAYl21
The story of ;i beautiful girl's lifelime
between the ages or 19 dnd 22.
~ 11 DE lllll' -
NATIONAi Cl Nf~AL l'ICTURI, 'reen~ ,.. ..... .,,,.,. -(1100' Ct · !'-lo
Opon
6:45 ,.. ........ a.HIM,......
-ENOS TONIGHT -
he ....... , •. _.
PA'l"I'ON
GllOlliGl!C. SCOTI' -Ao0.-°"""" s. -ILULJUUll!li
: . ,
I .._ ,_,.,. -1!1G Oflfy ..... ..._..
.. THE OUT OF
TOWNE RS ..
IYAtn WI DNUDAY
1111 .........
''MOVE ''
I. "SICILIAN CLAN"
•
.. ,. PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
-.lR RECORD WEEK .
ACADEMY MEMBERS,
YOUR CARO AOMllS YOU ANO A
GUE5T lOANY PU!fORMANCf
MONOAY THl!U THURSOP.Y
PREMIERE ENGApEMENT
l!:DWA"OS
PMM1U1 "'1\ll~ llfllllll
Ali lldm. • lyu O'llul
Joha llartty l Ray Millan4
IOlfRT mlCHAfL J.
lfDFOID POLI.AID RATED
!RI
THl!AT"•
~"Wo .. •0"""\ <<»•• "' '"•MO<•t ... ''"' O• '•"00 '""' o•I ""' '°"'" o• ''" 0•100 ·~•
UTTLf FAUSS AOD llG HALSY
Al~. Bortiro S1u1wnd-
JJck Nitho+~ ~ "ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER"
PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
~ SOUTll SM DllGO fW'r,
1N MISSION Vll!!:JO
EDWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
3rd GREAT WEEK
ELLIOTT GOULD
11• A O~VIO L WOlPI:• """"l<O"
"I LOVE MY ••• WIFE"
• ""'l~' "'"'"' no-=o.o.· :Ii-
Redford '" "TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE" '"'
A MIKE NICHOLS FILM
Alan Arkin -Mortin Balsam -Jon Voight ~''"
'CATCH·22'
A 3 UNIT All WALT DISNEY SHOW!
·"
TECHNICOLOR···
A PURR·FECTl Y
WONOERFUl NEW
CARTOON FEATURE
SAM DIEGO f'WY. Al lA l'AZ TUMOfT l)0.6990 -OU>td b1 IUIN• VIST• D•""C""'" Cf ., l•;c • ! l~IO W•" D<<1>!!• ,rodutl>ll"• '--~---'~=='---~-"
lo ''NIOK'' The Orp hon ~!P!llri!ll!~PP.i'!lipiiiiii ... " •h"•"'"-.... iiiiiii
"
-·
... _. ·.: ' --. ' -• •• _ ... -•• '!# ... ,,.,,,,, .... ~ ...... -.......... . ·-. . -. . . . ; . ' ·~ .. ·~ ,.. • _, I ' . ..... ~
DAILY PILOT J9
Everyone Has
Something 1het
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You C•n So ll It, -
Rn d It, Trade It
With e Want ' Ad
The Bigge·st Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
•
1 ~----'"_'_'_"_11~11 HwsforS• 1~1-.. -1~1-.. -I~ I -..... 1~1-.. -l~I -.. -1~1-..... I~
General General General General General Cotta Mei•
-Farr."" W-
2629 Harbor, C.~1.
546-8640
lttookusSyears .
to undo an i~our
industry had worked on for
300years.
oflnJa .!J!J/e
QUIET CUL·DE·SAC
Redl'.'corated in and out. four
Bdrrns., Dining room. family
roon1, tWo bath home 11.'ith
aprarkllng gas kitchen and
loads of c11.hlnets. Double
ga111ge, large 22'x26" cover.
~ rncloaed and WE'il light.
f'd' I for evenlig entertain-
ment) c-uslom patio. Avail-
able wilh fliA.VA TERMS.
a.1 a b.raain price of .only
$34,95() VACANT -l~IMEDJ.
ATE POSSESSION.
C.Q.-Colllng-C.Q.
Bi&: Jot. trult trHa, quiet
st. 3 &: Den, 2 ba, $24,995.
5~ Loan GVFllA OK siooo.
uintard PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES !ti.ALTY
Sine• 1t4' SELLING? 52 Linda Is le Dr. Downt.-.n C ... e M ...
1171
\Ve &ff' so busy v.•r nrrd
rnorc hou~rs. \Vr "'ill
pay you full n111rkr l val-
ue for your hnm<' today
-no gimmicks -no
hiddf'n rh1tr~1·s. Call to-
day for full inforn1a tion.
Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/4 frplcs.,
circular stairway, decorator selected carp.
& drapes. Shown by appt. $215,000 HAll80R 642-2991
List with C.Q. Buy from C.Q.
Dov1n through the years. the sharpies in the land investmenl industry were actually few in
number. But, oh my. how people remember th em.
For compl•t• information on
all homes &. ~ts, plea•• call : Dover Shares
We're in land investment. too. In a big way. Our company is the fastest growing land inves·
tor in the west ; a mult1-rnillion do!!a r, llve year old publicly held corporation. In that short lime
we·ve done our best to live down Iha reputation
or that 1iny band of forbears,
133
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 SELL OR TRADE
GET
Mela Verde
Excellent•
Redl'coratl' this 2RfMI S"J.
ft . 2 story prrs l1!;c hon1r
and sa11f'! Il ha~ a bl>au-
lifuJ 20x40 hralcd And
flllC'l'ed pool wilh 1.100
sq. ft. or decking, lav-
ishly landscaped. All 5
bedrooms are ovPrsizr
plus it fpaturcs a formal
dining room -luxuri-
l)US built-in kitchen '>''ilh
11. 8ide by i;ide refrig.-
frerzrr -3 quern sizr
baths -Locetl.'d in th~
most P:.iCllL~ive arra nf
Costa ~1PS8 (l\1Psa Verd•·
Olrriage E~tatcs l on
SA]e for $54,950. see it!
ACTION
Here It Is l
4 ledrm1. $175 per
mo. PAYS ALL
Located in one of Cosla
Me1>a's best a1·cas, 1hi1;
home h.11s il 111!, 2 i.::nnd
sized bll ths. buil l-i n
kitchl'n. double i::111·a::.r.
forced Air h,,al, ma!"sivr
brick fir1>pl1t cr & sub-
jrrt to P:>.:isting 6 'i an-
nual rarr VA loan. Pay-
menls '>'"ill br ~175.00
mo, total! -llurry on
this one:
FASTER
$150.00 DOWN
4 Bedrm, 2 Bath
General General
One way of doing it was wilh lhe men we hired
lo represent us. They had to understand the
responsibilily that comes with being a land
investment counselor. They learned Iha! 1hey
were counted on lo advise prospec:s on what to
buy. And what not to buy. The men who were
jus1 out to sell some acreage didn't las! very tong.
Right now we're looking for more rnen of thfl
same caliber of those we kept. Land investment
is truly blossoming and we nee::l bright, willing
people to work with us.
How about you? Would you be interested In
launching a new career? It doesn't mailer what
you now do. lf we lhink you 're good, we'll train
you. And if you are good s-ou can live the kind ol
life that you might be dreaming about. Give us a
call, then drop in for a visil. You'll gel an idea
what image is all about.
,;ft ®~~
Loi Angel11 A~•: 213/98e·1770 1rid 872-3620.
S1nt1 An•: 714/835-3233. sacnim.nto: 916/481..J.890.
Sin 011110: 714/279-Mf>O. a.n JOH: 408/241-4745,
General
General
PAY YOURSELF
$1,000
The most outstanding value
on today"s m11rket in a h1x.
ury /nearly 1900 sq. ft.) 3
bt>droom home. Consider
thtse features: large sep-
arate family room Y.'ith \\'e!
bar, formal dining. 21.{
baths nearly nE>W shag Cll.l'"·
pe!, h~avy shllkr rooL PLUS
a huge. 40 x 62 \l"t"IJ land-
llCaped rpar y1n'rl 1\·irh lots
or concrete. And only 10%
down lo lhe nE-1\' n'duced
pr1re. of $31,500. Cali 673-8550
1-0 THE REAL \~ CSTATERS . . .
BOAT LOVERS
WATERFRONT
BARGAIN
* * * * * TAYLOR CO. * REDUCED $1300
Livi'! at onP of the finl'.'st ma-----------1 rinu ln Callf. Hug(' 2 bf'd-
DOVER SHORES room 11nlt ·with dc!u:.ie bu\lt-
Custom built. fwo story NE\V in<;. Dining room. fireplace.
EN G LA N D ARCHITEC Privatr lanai 01·rrlooking
TURE. Only a ro11ple of your 0 11·n boa! £lock . Living
block's from beautiful NE\V. is i,'ood Al Hunting1on fl.la..
PORT HARBOR. You 'll fcrl rina. P11ccd to sell now!
lhr elegance .11.s you driYe up $48.500. Dill.I 962-!'"158.i BUY OF THE CENTURY I
Custom-built 5 bdrm. 41Pi bath. Jge family
home w/VIEW from Santa Ana to the ocean ~
All huge rooms. elegant. rnaster ste. big
closets-even a clothes chute. Top location
w/beach privilege. A steal at ........ $99.500
BAYCRE ST • $73,500
'l'ou'll love this one. so bring your check
book. 1magine ! 5 Bdrms. formal .DR & en·
closed pool. Like new thruout !
"Our 25th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
NOW $21 ,700
\\'h111 a i;:Trilt bargain. Add
\"r ry little down for a double
h;iri:;ain. Sporless 3 Bed.
rf)O ms. sparkling kopper
kt>ltle kitchen. l...argc living
room with v,·hite brick fire-
p1ar,, Quiel ~ighborhood.
Large tree lined grounds. All
rypes linancing available.
E . ..:cellcnt starter home Bet-
ter hurry. ·
645-0303
FOREST E. OLSON
REALTORS
2299 HARBOR
COSTA MESA
•"" """ '"' "'""i;'"' b"'• FOREST E. OLSON \1"0rk a nd derailed y,·ork in
thP front elevation. The elr.
gant fl"ont door opens into Inc. Realtors
.11. large DEL PISO ENTRY 19131 Brookhurst Ave.
with view of stairca.M to Huntington Beach
upstairs rooms. Extra large[;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
living room with marble HARBOR VIEW
mantel fireplace, formitl din-HOMES
ing room, extra hlrge all ~ BEDROOMS
PI u s norn1al f'losin;::
cogts _ /·furry on this 2111 San Joaquin Hills Roed BLUFFS
onr. i1 \110n't la~t -11 NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
electric kitchen including an &! the rirst lo ~e lhig ele·
el~rronic oven and bay gan!, gplit Jrvel horne de-
'>''lnrlow ?reakfasl _a rc a, l'Jlgned for )ull"urious family
large l!'m1ly room with used living. Huge fan1. m1., w/
hnck flf('place. m1u11rr bed-2rul frplc. Bit-ins, 3 ha.,
roon1 \l'ith Joads of clo!lels, bt>1tut. wallf'd garden. $57,500
:~;~k do~:~~~!a~:.ra~;r~·ly I!,=:*====*====*==-==*====*====*= 'I JI you81~! 11~~1~':' f'nlcr-
General en•ra pll.intcd ins1dr -CRl'Pf"'L
1
G I ra1n1n,:t spacr 1athl'.'r 1!111.n
throu.i;hout. Thi.~ 1s 11 II\',;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; sJ('eping spat•e, check into
must see, call nO'>'' 3 BEDRM BEACH this n>omy 2 Bedroom. f1111-
FROM
3 Bedrm, 2 Bath
$163 Mo. Tota l Pmt.
Taki" OVt't ~Ub)<'(.'I l{l f"'l-i~ting_ 6~' .. iinnual '•
ra!r lru~n -lfH·ll.l"cl in
lwst Cos la i\l,,~A 11rf'A.
Qv,nrr Anxir1u~. Citn \;P
no d Ql\"rl VA OT" F"HA.
C11ll ab<lut thl~ on"•
FARROW
HILLSIOE LIVING Hy room fwith "'' bad $19, 950 home. In addir.ion 2~!! ; aths.
Ris.:ht in llles11. Verde ~'l'Ju'll
till<! rh1s allraclivr. 4 Bed·
rm. 1nnrr circle home, Jo-
1•111t•1I w1rh a vivw tn rhr
oce&n. IJutstand1ng I Io or
plan ~·uh family mom &
F'OR,\IAL DIN r;>o>G ROO:\l 11 ·~ all c111'u'!·lrtl bv " 111rgr I
ba•·k ~·11rrl \\'llh 1n~ny fn11t I
trrrs ;ind hOa1 gall'. (';ii\ '
"'~'"' lo ~r" lhis lnvel.v 2 i l'lory hum(' al nnly 5.11;,;;m,
~ co:Ts
FANTASTIC bl'aullful ('asy care kitchen
and a lerrific b!ty a nd green-
belt view. Something ~pee. \\'e :i.lmost didn't belie,.•'.1t
01n~lvrs: Only 6 year.1
yfluni; and Joadf'rl l\'ith
ehan11 ~ lari;:I'.' h<'droomll. 2
ha l l~~ All larrst drluxc huiH.
)11~. Rra1111ful patio Pm-
f•'~~1nn:tlly land~caprd. $1&6
ial for only J;;l,500 Phone
673-8;,jQ_ •
n1i1 flf1>,:,~ all f-"an1a~t1f' year 1 .H----ed~~C---
rnfl h:;n.::111;_ J)qn·i delay~ ousa Ne s ompany
(' !I 'lti2 --18· V.<1 ean1 ,t· !oneson1e for ram-
·roRE"sT E: .OLSON I :~~~ 3a!~. -~~~r~:d 1~aPt~;s~
A L0t of House ·~WALLACE
For $23,000 REALTORS I
Int· 11.1'.'a\lors
'J9!~! B1·onllh11ri;t At'f'.
Hunlini;t1nn Rr11.l'h
h: f R 1\• F"P. GatTlr n ln!ch-
t'n. a stl'al /{1 $26,;,oo, Co!l1n5
& Yl'atti; 962-:l.i23
C&W Yot1 J:et 3 spaclo1111 brcl· --S46.4141-NAME YOUR
rooms. 2 baths. bulll-in 10 E · ) I ki1chrri. fnrrrd air hrat· pen v•n•ngs TERMS
! Ing. be1t1tif11\ patio· I i•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!!!!!!!!!" ThRl'11 how f!P.xlble this -I
'-''a.lk·ln 1mrll ry. totAl NEWPORT bedroom harga1 n truly Ill, no
pmt. '~'ill hP ~J :\~~ prr g1mn11cks. A~ Jow a.~ $126 11 NEWPORT HEIGHTS
mo. suh.!C'l'I '" r'l:i~t111J: HEIGHTS rnonlh or as lo\v as S.llOO FHA loan of 3 -1.',, an-nual ra1 r. HOSPn ALITY 101111 !101\n. so I:"t't off ,your couch and ACJI FAST ~
$24,000,
2 Homes On A CornE>r Lot
A Good lnvtstment At
$29,750 REALTORS
Big Play Room
$24,600
Thill 3 brdroom 2 bA th
homr rrR IUrf'S .II. hul'(e
20x20 n,1mpt1.!! room rl'.'a ·
dy for pool lAllll'.' or
'-''hll1 e\"l'.'r-~n nn clnwn
VA or?~ Owner anxious.
oln the M\Y cnmpany.
Rooms ga>ore in this home
'>'i th a sparkling pool. 5
l>edroonts, family room with
fireplaee Mid barbeque_ De-
lux kitchen \\'itJ1 bu ilt.in
freezer, refrigerator Rn d
blender. Lanai wi th Wt'l·bar.
See thls interesting home.
Ah f{lr $39.5@. Phone
646-7171
\-0 THE REAt;
·~ ESTATERS
Walker &. Lee
RCRl!Ori;
761!2 Edingl'r
8•12-44 a.1 or ~~CJ..5140
Open Daily 1-5
2001 Aliso Ave & 20th
Roy McCardle Realtor
1810 Newport Blvd., C.l\1.
541-7729
BEACH SPECIAL
4 Bdrm.~. 2 ba.ths. Xlnt cond St<'ri~ to ocean. Only S33.900
_ Terms.
CAYWOOD REALTY
Cualom built. rorm!lt dining 6306 \\/. Coast Hwy., NB
room. 3 hrdrm, 2 b11, 11'.'P 541-1290
living rm., fireplace, family I ----------
e are bu11y and WE 11·~=======~rm., elcc bltn11, FA heat;pa-BRAND NEW
REPOSSESSIONS l.io w/ga11 fi red BBQ pit Pool. patio, Yit'W. 4 Ek!drma, E EU SALESMEN.
e're on lhc movl'.' with
tter ldl'.'a11 lo help you
ake more mnnf"y In
1. Training -mJlTTlt.
pJ)flrt11nlty -rounl)'
"''ide or1tanh:11tlon -
lih advert. hudge L For
i'lttnric:w NOW!
"2626 Harbor" Blvd.
540-8640
OPEN EYES.
'TIU 8:30
Spa.rlding clean hOmts, 90mt dblr g11r .• rm for bOftt/ trtr. 3 ba. we! bar, lg din rm, lg
newly pe.inled A carpef«1, 2. Full price only $43,SOO. kit w/ brkfst nook, pan~IJed
3, 4 & a bdrm5. Some with Lachenmyer Rfty fam rm in thl.11 exchWve
pool.I, F1L\-V.A conv. tema, ,_,1 ,,.,, ~"' ,,,., DovE"r Shore.11 home, Roy J,. ....., .._.,.23 Eve1: 548-67°:7 W11rd, Rltr. 1033 Marinen
from $17,00() to $40,000. l "'""";r"":if:~::"::';''"'" 1 -€~"""~~~~0:~= Colllna It Walts Inc.·-I A. Wl.NNERI Dr. ,,...,.Ji'lO, open daily,
88-13 Adama Avr . !Mi2-il2.1 • S.11 or L•ale/option
SHORECLIFFS 13 Bn_. 2 BA , ~auty, Ad ul t 0t:· 4 BR., 21,1 ba., trplc. 2 car
Rustic: 3 BR. 2 bll. Room tor cup1cd al~ ol 1111. 3 yr~. W•l_k gar. 3 Yrs. old, 2200 Sq, Ft,
lo F la.nrl to beach. Don 1 m1u: th11 A-1 Cond. Vacant quick p<»-
f'qw\I n. tt · ~ al only $31,500 Colllna Riii.• C.11.11 todl)'!
Hom• Show Realtors & \Val L~ 962-5623 ' C.all Patrick Wood SU-2300 ··Atmehatr Houiiehunttni;i:" ' · ~ E. Cm.st 11wy •• CdM c & w ~ • Biii Hav11n, Rltr. 675-7225 . Jl %111 E, Cou~ CdM flT.l.3211
EASTSIDE TRl·PLEX
2 Br ea, lg patio, r:nc pr-'11, * OCEANFRONT * 1pl'1, 153 yrty return In in. LIDO ISLE
4 ~room11. Mike offer t:tn
Est&te Sale .. For F.xclu.~1\•t
tnlormalinn • <=:tll . , .
JEAN SMITH Ill TR
4<10 E, J71h St., CM f',46.;U'Xi
DAILY i>unr WANT ADS!
DUPLEX vr11meot.
Con1p. furn1111IW"cl, 3 Br. up, RROKF:R 646-8226
2 BR. r!Ollo'U, $711.500 GARAGES tor rtnt $20 mo.
Georg• William1an I 110MJo: u•l!h lncomt . Xlnl
Re•ltor I E.ul~ide lpc:. Wtt.lk 1.0 11hop1.
673-4350 64S-1564 eves , 1-'orlln Co. 642--5000
mas!er hath 11.nd rx!ra p11w-
drr roon1 rlo1\111s!air.~. The
upstairs roni:;is!s or 11. ren.
trally locaied sittinll" room.
four bedroom!!, anrl r~·o
ha!hs plu1 a Jarge 800 Sq.
f t. all • purpose rumpus
room. Three car garage. 13~700 644-2430
separate serviC"t" porch,,!========== work shop and lan.:e enclos.I
ed rear yard !or play are11 . UDO SANDS
Thr perleet 1tns~·er in a ~r-CHARMER
rect SE>lling !or '1 ja~e fam-
ih• rf"!t\Jinns:; room. PRICED Sh~"l bt'droom wirh panrl. AT YESTERYEARS PR.ICF. led dcn. 0111"' of a kind. Re-
OF ONLY $79,!f.(I. ShO\\'n by dPror111Mi \l'llh new carpP1 ·
Evening.11 Call 646-4579
4 BEDROOMS
$26,0flO
in11, r!rapes and pA in1. All
nl'.'1v k1rchen appliance~. A
corner Joi 1n a planned com-
munity Y.'ith pool privileJO:"<'S·
All this, and the ocran a
block away. For $35,950.
Pho nc &16-7171
1-oTHEREAL
l'ESTATERS ' .
Macnab-Irvine
Rea.lly Company
MILLION DOLLAR
Exreptional valce in 1hi1 ~ VIEW
bedrm, 1%. be.th, 2 irtol")' For $11.0,000. This fabulous
~::>me. Country kitchen and custom home must be seen!
gigantte patio. Convflnient to Fore\•er view ot bay and
freeways &: sehool1. All ocean. 4 Bedroontl!, ~ baths;
tenn11 available. a\r.cond itioriecl. Ell"quisitely
&
WAL LAC!
dt'COT"8ted l< landSC.11.f)Cd,
Macnab-Irvine
•
COATS
REAL TORS 642-1135 675-3210
Open Evening•
• ff2-44S4 • ANXIOUS OWNERI
Moving to San Diego & mu11t
'"!!!!'!"!~~~"!"!~'"'!!!! iiell the 1harpe1t H.idden Z.. HONEYMOON •tol'Y in M.V. 4 Bedrm 3
COTTAGE ba formal din •• cantilevei-ed
You'rr fotfunale Indeed, for ~king w/ rm for pool.
We have the-cONE IO many Alking $44.950. hurry &
dmm &f and J11J few find. call JACK HAMMOND
;. nal cream puff and PAY· Herimge RE ~1151
rtienls of only $170 when you (open r.Yes)
Utwnr 1ubject lo 6% % an· OU
nuil '~ntaa;e nte io.n, CUSTOM F RPLEX
S2'l 65o TOTAL. Ch:>lc. Newport al'f!a, 3 BR ' & L &; 2 BR unill, Ideal owner Walker ee """',,.. ..... ,,. ......... rrtY. $9,U> Income. $12,ID)
"""""' 7682 'Edinger
(714l 842..f455 or 540-51•·
$27,500
--~ 175.IXXI. PER KON 642-1771
$24,750
4 BEDROOMS
3 ID. + DEN Pool 1!Zf'.d dffp yard . ne1Uy
Prime area. 3 twtfl tlttd nwU~. Bullt.in fea.turet
bedroom1, convertible den, includlna dllhwu~r. Pluah
huu fircpll1;ce, doublf pa. ca~tlng + itn1 PH. Owner
11!) with brick BBQ, rrar desperatr., '-''Ill M'.IJ with
Hv ln1t room. No down 1enn11. lease optk>n to buy • $000
MC.'l'l'lO down. !">41)..1720
TARBELL 2'55 Horbor TARBELL 2955 Horbor
TRADE CdM
LOTS •••
. For R·3 or R-4. Owner
net'ds vacant land zoned to
lake 30 to 40 units. Does not
need his rwo beautilur R·l
lots \vith older income house
by the sea in Corona del
Mar. i'~our doors from Oct'an
Boulevard and 11teps down
10 main beach? $65,000, ASK
FOR ANN COATS
Colesworthy
& Co.
Rraltor
Newport Beach OHice
1028 Baysicle Dr.
675-4930
3 Bdrm Modern
Hu9e Notive Trees
Localed on huge rambling
grounds len{'('rl ror privacy.
Tree ]\ncd strcel. Spacious
bertroon1i;, ''Con1pany.sized''
\\'OOd panelli:d living room.
t.1Rgnillcf'nl whiff' bnck fire-
place. Lux\irious :shag car-
petin11:. ClOSf' to shopping &.
schools. Fl IA . VA term~.
Grea! starter home. Ju.o;t
reduCT'd !or quick sale to
S21.JOO. Better .'iCC to ai>-
prl'ciate. Call 171 4) 962-5585
FOREST E. OLSON
Inc. Rcaltors
19111 Brookhur.111 Avt .
Huntington Rt'AC'h
$26,500
2 On The Lot. 2 8"rlroom
House ,fl,, 1 Berironm G;u-11.i;e
Apr. on IRrge F.side lo!. Try
10':h down.
'1!:ven1ngs Ca!! 548-3265
5 HOUSES
On 60x30-t lot. Eastsid!" CM
area. Good money.makers.
Jnrome of $Sal mo. Asking
$69,900.·
11 UNITS
l\'ear Beach, Ell"ctllent year
111"0Und income of $l .S70 mo.
No v.11ca.ncies. 14 g.11.rages.
Sl.l'i,llOO.
CALL e 646·1414 ~4dlle. REALTY N11r Ntwport Petit Offlc:t
BAY FRONT
BALBOA POINT
llY OWNER
DOVER SHORES * UNOB·
STRUCTED VIEW * Spac-
ious 3 rooms + 11ervice
porch + pantry, (4 BR--3~~
BA), 2 frplc.11, wet ba., all
fonnica !carpeted) kitchen .
Will trade down 2 BR & den
in S70.000 range or 1ubmit
for income property.
C.11.U 642-991.5 for 1howina.
located on Pola.ri.11 Driv•
Priced to sell $98,DIXI
Fountain Valley
$15,IOO F .H.A.
Anyone qulllifies 1ubject to
Fl~A Loan v.itti 6% annual
perct>nlage rate. Tot.II.I PBY-
mt>nt f\48 per month. Sharp
3 bedroom home gli!tenini:-
w:lth llAROWOOD FLOORS.
2 Juxurious baths, modern
built·in kitchen. R~ady fur
Just listed. Charming home I immediate occupancy. CI
on 52 ft. lot w/unsurpassed buyer1 welrome. CALL!
view. Lovely yard with trees w I k & L & llowH, .. Shown by •pp't. a er ee
only. $1"79,SOO. Please call
Dick Tryon , for details.
673-7999
675-3000
HJ llA\ ~ llE.\flf
llE.\l:l"f l\f.
, [S! I~ i~ t 1~ lO!:O_J
GOLFERS' SPECIAL
Exeiling large custom Tri.
Level (J30o sq. It.) along
17! h fainvay cl about I block
from pool, tennis & elub.
house ol Mesa Vrrde Coun-
try Ot>b. Call for details.
Rentals
2 BR f"urn. $175
4 BR 1\fE>sa Verde $26.5
4 + pool ~slside S.100
Ul-5110
f nur dNrN t'*"'l
OUEGE REALTY •l!d!Ailrlll llH"'*.CM.
Realtor&
2790 Harbor Blvd. al Ad&ml'i
54s.o46S Oprn 'til 9 PM
Huntington Beach
DIVORCE
Forct'1 sale of thi.11 immacu-
late near-new 3 brdnn. 2
bath, customized Ayres
Built Home. All bltna, dI'PS,
w/w crptg, frplc, 1hakf'
roof. proreuionally land-
11caped, block wall.
HEATED POOL
only one mile from Hunting-
ton State Beach. Assume 7~
Joan .11. steal a1 $32,990! !
CaJI . for APPL. 968--2929 Bkr.
EXISTING
FHA LOAN
Newport Back Bay
:l Bedroom, $192 per mo.
Clean hOUlle lo.r $26.500 . .As·
1'Um.11ble FHA loan. First
T.D. is $19.000. Down PIY-
ment is $6,600 or owner will
take a 2nd. Close to 1ehools
& shoppina:. ••
f1irview
646-8811
(enytlmtl
EUROPEAN
CHARM
f'"'OR Sa.le by owner, t h i s
~-eek only reduced $2000.
Nf''>'' paint, Lovely garden,
Good cpts. 3 BR, 2 ba,
F .R... Dbl frplc, Service
porch. Owner '>'"ili carry 2nd
TD, Immed oc c:upancy,
$32.000. 23CH f'airhill Dr,
~>-18-6683.
I' 111.we Re II hl.ltr -'
'62-4471 ( ::::.J 546-llDJ
A home with 11 very lovinii: Corona del Mar llnd \l"ltm !OU<'h j~ this J .:;;:.:_::;;.::_:::::..;.:c.::;_ __ _
VACANT
Assume 5¥.J•/. GI Lo•n
on 4 bedrm. 2 bath, single
~lory near Dougl11s Aero.
sriace plant. Ell"ceilent con-
dition. Pre!!l!nt monthly pay-
n1ents only fl!ll P.I.T.r.
hedroom. 2 bath hnme in
l'l·le~a Del l\lar. \\lalk ju~r
~tcps fO svhool~. Oranii:e
Coast Col!('gc an{I shoppinit.
1'11anicllr('d yard with rnon1
fnr boat or cnnipr r Call
noll' 10 tnk,, A look. $31.000.
C11ll • .).16-2313
\O ' THE REAL
\~ESTATERS
I• ' •
NEW LISTING larwin Realty, Inc.
Dup!C's, No .. or Hwy_ Good 1 _~9~6~2_-6_9aa_~•-•_y~l_;m_•~-•
IQ!·., walk 10 everything, 2 4 Larg• Bedrooms!
BR. pl us l·BR apt Copper Huge Familv Room
plumbing: newer carp. Gar. Immaculate I 3 BAI
a.gr llif'e!l!ed tor further All ele<:"lrir:, hardwOOrl flNi,
building. Only $•13,Z--;i(l. Sharp as 11 tack. only S.1J,995
MORGAN REALTY HAFFDAL REAL TY
673-6642 675-4459 842-4405
JUST REDUCED WALK TO BEACH
Lovely 3 & clen w/3 bath-Assume 5~ % Loan. 3 BR,
roon19. Only l ~ blkl. to the 2 Ba, hrv•d firs, fflllc, elec
ocean. HdY.·d. firs., lath &. kit, Jg remer Jot. lmmedl-HURRY! HURRY! plaster walls, Reduced to ate po~1esslon, llexible
Call UA aboul 2 new listings $58,500, terms.
in NEWPORT HARBOR Delancy Real Estet• BRASHEAR REAL TY
HIGH SCHOOL DIST. 3 2828 E. Coaiit H11o'Y .. CdM 147-ISOJ
&-dnn ~ laml1Y, bltns, fire. ~===644-=:rn:o~==~ 1 PREST'JGE home 1800 inodel
place, new crp111 &: paint. DECORATOR FRESH Custom pooJ / pa.tlo. 4 BR, ;~~~lf'$~.:~;o;.~.0~0~ HOME·+ INCOME 3 BA;Nlamwity, ittnlh1;..~~~· 2 Bdnn. plus rl en, 2 baths, occ., r ~ J: u.-.i-...-n.
de11t i]11 SolG-1151, open ves. plu~ roomy 1-bdrm. apt. Tip By oY.'Mr. $46.500 F'ffA 8% I
top cone\. Best Joe. assum. loan, 5.11-mo Day1/
$52,;,(IQ 8.J6.6706 f'Vel i: \~lknch.
UNIVERSITY REAL TY EXEC Pool home OI\ 113
3001 E. C11. HW)'. 673-65\0 acre, by owner, 4 BR. din.
GREAT VIEWI rm. ttc rm , 145.900. *'7040.
LIDO WATERFRONT Of harbor&: ocean. Attr. 1pllt
APTS • ..320 LIDO NORD level home on R-3 51DO sci.
$150.000 Price wll.h 7% 111 Jt 101. Ideal for 4 apt, ·unil11. i ----------
T.D. 6 Beaut. tum. unit.; S>J0.000. :001 °"''" Bl"'1., WOODS COVI
6 car c.11.rqn It utU. room. CdM. By app't, only.
30 Ft. on •wlmmlng beach, 8111 Gruncty1 Realtor AltEA
Will con11ider trade for boat -°""~C.,~1:_642;,;, ... ;;;,"':,.,,=--I 12 foot arry p ... · WI.Ill per,
or mulmum $85,(Q) lie, 4 IRVINE TERRACE mil 1'1l0d1 il OC'l!&n view. !
BR. house. 38.500 Bedrooma, 2"' ,blttlil »Mi
8111 Grundy, Rftr. Charmlnc 3.BR. 2 B"A. IQJi'e ·ramtly room. Spadom
833 DOver Dr., N.8. 642-4620 TEO HUBERT A ASSOC built-In kltchi!n wUh cook
REALTORS center Island. nrtplue. SUCH A VIEW! :WTI Via Udo sr..asoo· °"""'';c e1....u.r ... ,,,...
4 BR, 1~n L.R, w/TP, MtiS'I' SELL 3 br, 1 ba ott.COUJ"t)Vd entrY. SHU un-
Roman bath • prden ldtch· Ii. 1 hr, 1 bl. dl.l~X-4!i' dtt Conttrucdon • ti.me wr
en • FIR~ newly painted • k>t. Pvt p(,y, 675-6nt or to awtoml.le. -ST~SOO. CID· ~ Vacant $31.500. O>llint • [=:~:;;;,,====== [ Wat~~
C&W
HOME -t-Tnoomc:. Xlnt
Eutalde loc. \Valk to ~hop11.
Nr. scho0l1, Fortin Co.
54""5000.
Cost• Me ..
GOOD 5 BR Mt on Lo~
don~rry In No. C . M .
ANume exlstlnt ntA lou
of a.pprox S2S; 750 w/\ntererfl
a t only 6ili, S2SOO down
pt.ymnL Chu. C. Martln
kltr. 548.1195
I • •
• • .
I
'
•
•
'
.. ' .... ' . . . ' ~ ' ' ' ~ ' ---
• DAILY PILOT • •
1,Lo=f:.:..,.=..:B;;;e:::•;;;<h;;.. ___ 1 University P•rk Businel• Wanted 210 Houses Furni1hecl 300 House1 Unfurn. 305 Houan Unfurn. 305 Apt1. Furn. 3'0 : Apt1. Furn. 360 Apt1 . Furn. 360
HARD TO FIND
In one of Laguna's better
aft&li • th!& 1amlly tiome 1n
mint condition has l large
bedrooms, 2 barhs, lara:e
dinina: and family room,
rna11>ive comer stone Jlre-
place in living room, at.
tached 2-c.ar garagl'. com·
plete.ly landscaped with Jenc-ro yard, Ready for immed[.
ate occupancy_ Anxious own.
COZY FIREPLACE
Is the local polnt in this cap-
1ivating 3 bdrm., :t bath
hon1e. Walk to shopping,
schools & churches Ownl'r
leaving ,tat'-' take Over hls 51~~{, int, loin "-have quick
occupancy, $33.900.
WANTED: Small bus:ineu in N•wport Beach Cost• M•s• SMo;;(j1.•NEV;eVr~dloru~;;;;;-~J;Go;;;no;;;r;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l ·C·o-1_l•_M_e_••-----1 BE:DR00:0.1 , neU' bch. S\30 !hf' Newport-Cosla Mesa pt>r mo. Tradev.·u!ds Realty,
ares. Prefer niail orde1· SHARP 7 BR/, cmpltly EASTSJDE 2 bedroom home, $2SO NEW 3 BR dup pvt CASA de ORO ~17-S:"lll
flh•f'f!ir: tixlllrfl hn.o;inea& et remodel~!. Steps to oct&JI. walk lo 11th St. shopplna. 1ncd ya.rd elec b!tns' dbl PALM MESA APTS I 1 1~1~'.!5'~1~13~;~.-L"G~E~.-""""'_,.-,-,~,~ .. cc.I
2131598-4969 n I•. rond,·1,.· "· SI~ _, --••· • """' ""'7, '2131 • CASUAL Call!. Llvl11' In a manutacturirli level or akin 17~~~-·~-~--,, I ~ " uu ,,... 247~7 ~,,;n ..,,•arm 1'.fedlrerrt1ne11.n atnios.-nr bch: crprs. drp~. etc.
Jif)(>S <lr open for othe~ pro-1 Br. 2 ba, lge hOU1e oU ~h. No d!Ji!, R.llr. 1 BR F URN. $149.:;Q phere. Spacious color CO· 409 Cal if. 536-42iil, 847-SI~
ducl8. Mail lull df'!'ltriptlOn beach. 7101 See.sht)re. Avail ,;.c;.:=--~~--~ I Bachelor1 J.'urnlshrd ordinal~ apts • designed & DELUXE Bachelor Unita -
10: Rile o· Lite, Box •1642, thnl June 25. $285, 642·7671 3 Br. crpts, frplc, fenced 1 N_e_w~po_rt_B_e_•_ch _____ 1 from $140. furnishrd Joi· style & com-\Valk to Ol.-ean. Ulll pd.
ired hill
•G~l•~™~'•g'•~·~cg•~·d'g'~"'~':,· ===!~~~::=~~:==~~I yard. Kids & pets <lk. Back NEWPORT liland 2 BR 2 BR apts $17~ mo. Jort e Heated pool e Kitch. LI ND BORG CO. ~2579
:: Houses Unfurn. 305 ~i~a nr school. $250. ttrepl. llf'p. fam rm. " ha. mo.Imo. OK en w/ Indirect lighting • LUX 2 Br, 2 Ba . 1 BR~sep Investment
Opportunity
evei. 2 ~m. br. !: gar. $295 Lee.se. • POOL Dl'luxe R/0. Adu.lta only, No shower at 1303 \Valnut. Sel"
AITRAC . .4 BR.. + bonu' 673--0883 e SAUNA pets. t-.tgr, 219 151.h St. HB.
room. near schools & all SJ-lARP 3 BR home The • JACUZZI l BR.-SJ75 turn. er asking INVESTMENTS REALTY $36.000
Riviera Realty
EMERALD BAY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytime 83J.0820
UNIV!:RSITY PARK 1hop'g needs. $235/mo. 336 Shills Yrly leUI' Sris mo 1561 1.1e1a Dr. Costa Mesa UTILTTIES INCLUDED LagUt1• B••ch
\VITH "AAA'' l300 C11.brillo CFl-1. {21.3) 24l-8949 ,,.A~... ' · Phone 546-9160 365 \V. \V ilso11 54~.19n :l BR. 2 Ba's ...... $250-<>Tt"'VVIU URY
TENANTS·LEASEBA CKS l BR. 2'n. Ba's .... $300-$325 VERY Pvt. 2 br home, "BLUFFS" dlx 4 Br, 3 Ba BEAUTlfUL 2 BR apt. $30 WK LUX
OF'FICE 2 Ell'gant 3 bdrm., 21,i hath ;·~tove. <lb! gar, Irr
1
yd. tam rm. lrplc, fn('lj yd, <:... Spacious. Nice furnitutt. g, up. Bachelor,, su1gles. 1
l BR. 3 Ba., sep. Jiv. rrn., COi\li\tERCIAL 1ownhou.S{>s •••·•• $375-$425 1 ~. mo. lst & ast. pool. Nr 1chls. $350. 644-Z730 P ronarty Mana gement carpelerl. Brick snack bar, Bdrn1. steps 10 l><:h. 11U ut il.
'· APT BLD'GS 3 B 2 .... •.. e~~f\ &l:i-1169. r-Paho, Reasonable rf'nt. No din_ nn .. lam. rm $7S,CXXl. "" r, ™· .... m rm ···· ~ -~=~~~-~..,.-S · I' · · h htd pool, linen~. ~c rm. n6 Emerald Bay By App't. R11I E11111, W. R. DUBOIS, INC. EL TORO 3 BR/2 full ba. t/yn:l. San Juan C•piitr•no pecia izing in omes trasr or drpos11 . ChiJrlren-rf'staurant, cocklalls, danc·
Bill Grundy, Realtor Gen er11 1R. E. Brokers) 545-n66 4 B<lnns .. 2 baths ...... $2W $215. & smaller un its. Small Pl'!s \Oo'Plcolllf' i\t1ght ing
6-12 1620 ('ORONA DEL ~1AR Call: &16-~ or 645-0708 l BR, 2\.1 BA Spanish to\\n. ttnc unfurnishr<l. 351 Vic. Village Inn llo!el Aiita
83.1 Dowr Dr .. NR ~ • ·--------· i:M::.:;:.:s.:.;:..;;,;;.:;; __ ~2~40~ 4 B<lnns., 2 baths ...... $325 3 BDR.\t HOUSE: UTL PD. house, bhins, cptg, drps, SfEPH:.~I~ KAYE ror1a, Ap1 No. 2. ·----'="~·~"='~'--~"
100• Vlew of ocean "' i eel N 1 , 121•1 pool, elec garage. many a a • • a a a a a I
C a t a Ii n a . Small but Acreage for sale ISO 1st : ... --r hi·11 '•"'•54s;.3533'**mo. other extras. $28."1 lease. $6 nite up $27.5(1 wk up $9:=... 1'~urn small l.'O?Y plaCf'·,
bl 1 Laguna · :r-7 1~~~~~~~~~~ srUDJO J: 1 BR A near beach. I responsible [· ~~ t~ll 0~ri~~ J..D..,,· ct ~ 2 ~J ACRES in Jo.s~ua Trt'f', -· ·w-v·E-.L-Y-,--.-,.-,-,-m-,-m-. &44.2?6() day. 6 3-l02:8 evl'. IDEAL !or healthy retired e C<llor TV, ~hone ser\~~l ·'=•="="~•=m='="=·='='=l-4=>IO=.==,!
& O.W.C. wl !ow monthly water, elec avail, $2450. 71 ~'i~ ST REALTY rncd, crpts, ctrps, bltns, Gd Senta Ana couple. 2 Br furn apt. Rent e Linens, maid sl'rv av<1.il. ;.
payments. Bia. 493-1153 <lr l Aft S: 546-9390 2nd TD oan Univ. Park Center, lrvine Joe . s235. 546-9CM2. -----------& util 's frv:oe <ln Balboa Social clubroonl·hilHards. etc Newport Beach 4~ eves. Cali Anytime 833.o&2(1 2 BR. 198~ Charle St. New 2 BR house. Adults Island in exchange for some Live 1vhere the lun is! --'--------
BY OWNER - 4 br, 2 ba, Cemet•ry Terms based on equi1y. $140tmo. No pf':ts. l child only, No pets . $160 mo. driving & assista"';e to semi 2316 Nrl'>porr Blvd. ;,.1$-975.l A New Way To Liva
playroom, lene«I Ya rct, Lota/Crypts 156 642-2171 545-0611 WHERE ELSE can )'QU lir11l ok. 642-22a.q, 646-7Cl17. • 646-2542 • sighted ..,,'Oman. Add itional • • • • • • • • • I in Newport Beach
bl I d d'.,, G sala"" ne"""'tiable. 673.2927 * * * * * OAKWOOD GARDEN tns, crp s, rpt, " · GRAVE SITES !2). Beaut, St>rving H11rbor area 21 yrs. a large :! bedrm home \v/2 LAR ,f': clean 2 RR. Crpls, •;r 6 ¥
ocean vlew. $54.000. 494-3412 HilllDp Pacific Memorial s.ttler Mortgage Co. ha1hs, family rm. elec bltnR, ;'~'£"~·~";"~·~·~··~·~1~35~.i:·=·~by~ I U:;;:n~iv;e;';';it;;y;;;;P;a;r;k;;;;;;;;~:I CHATEAU LAPOINTE BEAUT. Bach & I Bi'. apts. APARTMENTS all 4 Park. 673-7774. 336 E 17t h Street dishwasher, newl.Y painted, _OK. Reft. 19-15 Pomona. DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt, $35 1vkly & up. Furn incl On 16th Street b1wn
· big patio with BBQ. large ' B· ., b• bl!n ran•• ~ 2 BR. 1 bath .......... S235 Pool. Close to shops. $150. util. Monthly tr rnis 11 vail. Irvine and Dover Dr. I 1 d -~ J I 1'25 · '' -" "' 9!18 El Camino. 5'16--0451-Lido Isle Commercial Money Wanted 250 cnce y ... -u or on Y ~ oven. fireplace. l"pts & 3 BR. 2 baths .......... $325 Adul!s, no pets. (714) 642-8170
CENTRO Proper ty 158 --~-------1 per rno? VACANT AND dflls. S..'J66. 54&-5793. 3 BR. 2\,!; ba !hs •••.•••. $300 19-11 Pomona Ave. C.tit. l BR. $125. Pool. Spacious. \VTl1. 2 BR. U!il paid. Nr.
ON STRATA CO.\IMERCIAL STABLES I A~A~~1~>1~ NOW, call 3 br house--Newly carpeted. 3 BR. d!n rm, 2 ba ••.. $32;} 1-JOLIDAY P LAZA Adulrs. Id~al ror Bachelors. heh & st.ores. $!45. 300 34111 :
4 Bedrooms, 3%. Baths . Shopping Center Sit• Construe.lion & permatll'n ag · ..,......,_., · S!o•.rl'. $ll5. 2 childttn <lk. 3 BR. plus bu~e bonus room, DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 1993 Church. 548-9633 St. N.B. &e Bert J\terriman !
35 Ft, + Lot 10 ac. C-2 downtown San financing needed. $35,000. 1 BR priv cott utl pd $69.:il &l2-(lSjl. 2 baths · ·· ·· · · · · · · ·· • $350 tum Rpt $135. Heat~ pool. * 2 BR. Furn. $155. o;• tf'L (613-77271 (539-3346)1
Street to Strata Jtian Capistrano . or can bl' Owner 673.2259. l BR priv-cott Balboa $90.00 I ,,.;.;..='------~ 4 BR., fam. rm. 2~ ha • $375 Ample parking. No childttn POOL. Bltm, Cfllts. ctrps, no aft 6. except on \\'~ l.:I
LIDO R:l'~y INC. split for deVf'!opment. Birr. 2 BR, tam rm Jbc upper $55.00 3 Br, lncd yd, gar, nr schls, 7 BR., 4Y.i baths ••.•.•. , $450 • no pe!s. 1965 P<lm<lna, children, no pets. 325-J E. Sun
493-1153 or 493-1706 eves. Mortgages, 3 BR, crps, drps, kids OK $120 no pets. 1988 Pomona. WE HAVE OTilERS Ci\f. 17th Pl, crir. 54S.2738 (
3377 Via Lido 673-7300 Trust Deeds 260 l8'XI sq, ft . 2 story home. 5'40-9001. 1---------OCEANFRONT 3 Br. 2 &,
ond • -'-"'-'-"-'-'.:C.----1 ,., I OK $165 2 BR l b "-t d 2 BR FURN $155 POOL CLEAN. 1 BR; 2 BR, 1n crpts, dfllS, dlx. Winter.; REDUCED $4 500, 215 C omin1ums 1 s pets .......... · a. "'t' s, rpa. B!tn1, -"· d.....,, adlts. No BA. Crpts. drps. lrg closets. $275, Adults only, No ..... ts., II I oil f I 160 $3'.l.000 lst TD on 3 a~~ 3 BR hone ranch 'Yanl. GaragP , $165/mo. Jn ~..-.,.~ .-Ravenna, ..,,.e urn. sm or sa • f'Sl ate. parcel .,..., magn1f1-all / k Sl= pets. (Teen okl. Pool. Adlrs, no pets. UtiJ 673---808.~. l
hlu.se, Jge i;unny lot, S51.9SO, LAZY LIVING rtnt view, 9% in!. 5 yr ,;,!AR'.'L'ET ........... ,.7i;.7330"·'1 ,,.:E~··~l~S•~h~S~t~. 64~2-~'°"~--~ Al80 UNF1JRN $115. 642-9520 ,~pd~.=5478--0~336~·-----OCEANJ.~RONT l Br. Ideal~ 10% down. Owner 675-2&t3. d d 12~ di 1 ''' 1 BR, Util's pd. refrig., stove ,-
1
2 Bednn, 2 bath, single s1ory, ue ate, 1" scoun ·I.,----=-=:"°--"'" $90 mo. Adults 0 n I y . ACAPULCO Apts at:t·acLive, location -painted, carpetPd. ~:. ;~~lylo~-;i;::re~. ~'rg; professionally d ecor a t. Bk r. 493-JljJ or 494-6632 * $ 135 * 54g..3511 .. SINCE 1946.. Balboa Island Pool, Util Jlaid, Garden $130. mo. uHI pd . Yearly .
('ci . Low down payment, 1akf' r vf'S. Lge 2 BR fixer upper ..,,'/frnc-1 BR furn apt yrty, util's incl. 'living. Adul ts, no pt>ls. 2 BR or srasonal 12131 698-3627. I
patio. S?l,SOO. Kl 5-2'jl2 n\•er anv't loan with no qual . 1st Trust Deeds od yW'd ........ Children 2 BR house. l Studio a pt. lst Westem Bank Bldg. Call -· 7 pm, •=7423 & Sal Sil;} -1 BR $l.JJ. 1800 * * 1150 !\10NTH ~ l br · after 6 pm. &-J~J E. 21st Street, Costa UniVt'rsity Park "--'' ,,,.. Wallace Ave c !\l irying. Near -new, (hvner $l J,SOO welcome. Available no11·: tlfl'sa. Days 13~0101 Nights & sun. ·• · · apt, utilities paid. ** 40' lot· Clean 3 hr, 2 1ransrerred . f BLUE BEACON l ~~"=======;I l""======== FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. * 304 !lrd SL +
ba. Newly rt'decorated. Larwin Realty, Inc. II',•;, intrres1 paynhlr al * 645 0111 * :E~a~s~t~B~lu~l~f======i :;;:::::~====='='='=' Balboa Peninsula E xceptiona lly n ice! 3 BR, 'l ha, upstairs. Oflh wsr.!
Large patio. STI.500. 962-6988 anytime S'l:;(J/mo. AJJ due incl year.I ~=~==·~====· ~ Houses Furn. or 1----------2110 Newport Blvd., CM Swidrck. Gas pe.id, Quir1 f l =~Kgl;>-~25~12~at~to~<~6~p~m~:o l ;::::::=;;:::::::::==;~ Value $19,500. MO VlNG-TRANSFERREO... 01vner's home iipt, 3 Br, 3 Unfurn. llO BAYF'RONT-YEARLY ~4-334" r: 166 714/879-14.13 ex! 502 Tired o! fighting w ith Ba. den, trpl. encl dbl gar 1----------Duplex, lower 2 Br, 2 Rn . BAO-I apl, util's pd, beam area .. ' .). '
Me •• Verde Income Property iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I t~nants? Call the problem """" ._ •A<.n/ 67'"~3 Furn or Unfurn. Pvt bcae'h ceilings & frplc, 1 adult <lnly. 36s[ "'""'sq."·#"..,.,, mo. ;>·;n,, Balboa Island Ill' 64~ o·"" Apt. Unfurn. TRADE Equity 24x60 Olym-i;o!vers -South Coast Real &. patio. No pe1s. JlOO per " rno. .....,;i~u
FOR SALE BY O\A/NER plan mobile home, located I~ EstKte, Property Manage. H 1· I B ch FOR lse by owner, bayfron! .mo. 673--0774 * * BACHELOR APT, G-eral C·odom•·n,·"m Sp•o,·•h. u .... ,f,,R-t ..... un ing on ea "'"°-=~°'"====='I 112"/ • C II 646-3"9 .. , "" u " in beautiful Orange County ~-~------·~ l1CJ ment Div. home w/pvt pier on LHuei e .$2;) \\'K-OCEANF'RONT J rnu, a .,., u
wlw carpet,, drape~. bltns. park Jor equity ctuplex, -. l~---~"'~"-~84~24 ___
0
BEAUTftlJJ, 3 bednn, 21,'I Isle. Furn <lr unfurn. :! BR. IPvcly Bachrlor~. 1 _ BR. 675-.17fi7 -----------!
lir!!place. 3 hr, 21.~ ba. triplex, 4-plex, c.r.t area. * $l 60 * ha.. Meredith Gardens home. 673-71.~8 Maid ser;·irr. Pool. Util. QUIET, studios SIJ~. l BR's
Beautihll ground5 &· pool. * 545--8241 * frplc, fam rm., rorm din., • lil:>-8140 e $125. No l'hldm or pr !s.
Low ma.intenMce. Adults. CORONA del ltfar 1 4 int'Ome Housel Fur nished 300 4 BR nice older lamily home. 1111 bhns, call Mr. lloe,Ree, Coron• del Mar 2135 J;td,,n Alie, C:'ll. Sef'
549--0977. 1 Lgr yard. lfurry <ln this! Sou1/1 C<last Re a J tor~ , I ~c:;:.;:;,;:..;::.o;c..:;=----11 BR. furn, U!i!il if'~ fH1 ir1. .'l lgr Apl 6
unitll <ln 2 adj ot.s, -OPf'n Genera l BLUE BEACON 545-8-124 l-IOUSE F URN/UNFURN Sl2.'1/n10. Adult~. :::10 E. ===~~~--~~
Newport Beach !>Pam ceil's, frpl's. un(!er !----------1 * ""':;:;::;:~---~~~? So, of Hiw ay . near bea ch Balboa Blvd, RRlhoa STUDIO ApT. Furn, C.a.~ I.: $60,00l Ownr 8.17·2947 eve I * $90 * * 645-0111 l'-l~IAC. Ex. lrg 3 Br, -water paid. 197J Parl'.<ins.
RENTAL FINDERS
Free To Landlords
645-011 1
-415 W. \ •tti. Colt• M•• 1 ~==~-~---~ Ba. duplex. Crpt, ci rpt, bll· lor lease or rent c .,\\. Call 7 prn &\6-4ID;, Luxurious Livingl On the \Va!rr~ I DR <'OltagP. 3 BUR..\1. + family rm., full ins, Jrg lovely priv. yard. 2 Bednn, 2~~ Balh, Corona del Mar
Fabulous upgraded "Bluffs"' Industrial Property 168 Util raid ~ Ava1J year round. dining rm., built-Ins., hrk. Gar + huge prk'g. $195. !<1.m1ly & dining room DL.."( 1 Br. new. Fri.Ridairc Just for Single Adults
Angelita, 2 BR. model on TRA.ILER l\.Jfg. setup 14,000 Singl•• wolrom•. $390 a month. NO FEE, Respoo. married a dlts . S300 Per l\.1onth Pvt. bach. rm & ba. appliance. Queen s;i; hf'd. SOUTH BAY CLUB I I C I I Nicely furn 'rl . No c I I'd Call '"9278 one eve · us om. pro ci;s. 11q . ft. on l ~~ lenttd Rcres. BLUE BEACON Newport, 54G--1720. 842-3276 Lachenmyer Rlty. rooking. 67J-6~ omp · crp · """" APARTMENTS
decorated ·move in rood. Redlands. $4:=..,ooo. Ca I l ~~ol~l ~646-=~39'8:iE;·~-:~1~85~"IS!\:~::~c:"".:: eves. sumptuOU.9 mstr sui1e. Ideal * 645-0111 * 3 .BDR.:\.f., Family rm., ~k 4 BR, 2 BA pool home, only ves: \ BR, nicely tum, harbor I========== Newport Beach 67&-2654 -==========! hke yard. Costa Mesa. Kids 2 .,..., ...... , c-1• d-880 !-"-Ave Jy situated <lTI comer. Every ~~~------~ • 0 .J•~ '"'"· ... • •••0 • view, no children or pets. Cana Point ....... ·
LL No V .1 WILL build to suit -8.000 OK, brk., $200 a month. N bllns, 3 rar gar .. Call fl.tr. 1 ,------~I~ Sl90. Sll-21123 f'Ves. (Irvine and 16th) extra. CA \ for app · i;q ft. M-1. Production Balboa Island FEE. 5-10-1720. Iloegt!f' South Coast Rltn. 9 1----------(714 ) 645-0550
Asking $42,5t)J • \\'on't las!. Pl NB Ow 673-3315 --;:;:;:-;;::;-;:--::;::-:=:-;=1========== Apartlnlnb: for Rent SINGLE, TV, pool, pl" ts ok , __ _::.:.::...::.:::.::_::.: __ Ask !or Ettr.. J.'rel'man ace, · · ner LITT Bal J.c; a!tr furn hse 545--8424· Costa Mesa $25 .~ up 11klY. Di\NA LC.E., comfortable 2 BR. evf'~. j nr \1·arrr. palio ('OV'<l rencd Balboa Island lc!D~E=:A~L~l-0<-,.,-,,-,.-,-,~,,-,-,-,m-;.ll L;;;;;;;;;;;;; • ...J ___
1
__ -;;::;-;:;;;:-~:-:;--·i i\\arina Jnn J·11J\ c oast r !cl'! kitch. firepl, patio. Nr
Salisbury L t f S I 170 3 hr, 2 ha fml. 673-6267 3 B(trm -2 Ba!h ly • 3 br + den, rondo RE:vJAHKABJ.Y Hwy. nceRn & ba,Y. $195 yrly. 0 s or • • ·1 BR. /urn. A1•all t'rh lsl. • UNF'URN e w/bltn.~. \Valk lo shori'11: & Condominiums UN13~~LJE:VABJ.Y ========== 673-74:,2.
Rr> . .lt1
' 3l;i MARINE AVE. 673-6900 1
OCEAN fronl 10 Coast ll\\'Y $400/mo yr11rly. Gas & w!r • 675-~721 aft 6 PM schools . S2 10 mo . Unfurr'!. 320 EXTRAORDINARILY Huntington Beach S17J Nl.'11• apt. 2 BR. bltns, R-J pro,.,rly, •PP<O>, 12,000 "'I. 646-2130 Re[Pl'Cnr.cs. 962-31131 _..;__....; ______ I B>".AUTl'.llJ, "· d .
BALBOA ISLAND
1 ;"~~~~~~~==:1~~~!..!~~~----1 ,-Sri.tog crpts, rp~. pat ios, sq_ ft Xlnt business or home I i Balboa Coves _l_cv_i_n_e ________ ,Val O'isere Ga rden Apls BF:A UTrru L FUHN. APTS. J!:1r. 156 E. 20th, 01 642-490?')'
possibility. So. Laguna. Balboa Penin1ula .l ~rv~i~n~e'--------Ad Ii , 114"116.,·. ri.11••, p<I··. 1,,,, .. ,
$16,SOO IS THE PRICE
for this Vl'ry livable 2 bt'd·
room horn(' rhat sets on 11
huge ft.2 Jot. Buy nO\\', rent
it out and builrl 1ater. Great
area with othrr lqe unit'
slln'OUnding. Submit do.,..·n
pa.yment and terms !O -
llD 7 \\11\Tl';RFRONT, rlecor. '.I -LEASF. By O\\'ner, 3 BR. ll s, no Pf' s .,. "I' • ,,
$ ,OOO. 1213) 244"119 · ~.\' BA \'FRONT Bat b n a BR. 2 Ba. Mo. to Mo. $350. LEASE OPTION avail Feb. 3 BA. fam rm. dbl ~ar Pu11ing: gTef'n, waler!all & 2 ward1'f1h<>~. [rplr., dN's~1ng
PRIVATE Party wishes to
~t'tl largP Emerald Bay
view lot . 494-9968.
rl"n1n, 5 BR, 4 Bn, /lier, Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 1 • 3 hr, 2]!2 ha, fam rm L,i:e low maintenance yd & strcani. flowers cverywhrre, rn1, locked sep, gar. Pool.
l!oal, 11•inter or yr,erly. mwnhse_ <ln park. S280 mo. pallo. Crpts. drps. frplc, 45' pooJ, rec. room, billiards. Sauna. Rec rn1.
613-~~9 Corona del Mar OWJM>r 4!M-2335 or 645--0880 bl1-lns, Pool.!I. tennls eris, BBQ's, Sauna, fllrn.-unfurn, 17301 Kcelson Ln. (1 bll. \\',
parks, etc. Unive rsity Park. Singles, l BR, \ BR + drn, of Brach Blvrl, on Slatl'rl.
Real Estate Wanted 184 Corona del M•r FRONT House, 2 Bdrms .. Laguna N iguel 833-1145. 2 BR. From S13.'l. s.->e 11! * R·12-71Mll.
___________ , 2 ha., carp., drapes. $200 2000 Parson~ Rd., &12-fl670 DEi. -J_.,\KJo; i\IANOR Le:. l • ----------1 'I th 3 BR, 2 BA, vie1v, <'Pld, 350 4 BR ho _ _, · ' on Duplex es Unfurn. Ber-.vecn l/arhor & Ne11-port, BR, S140, Pool. paho, adults. USC', 1n £•~...., n"ps ir. VIEW -VIEW -VIEW A~'t'nr 67~.2101 ctrpd . Extra pa\•erl parking
Back Bay
VIF:\V Of' THE BAY-2 br,
<'C'p1~. 6111s. bllm; pool & ~unrtrek. Adults · $ 170.
673-36~.
Balboa Island
lor11.trd n r a r S;in Die..,, OJ I I 1. ~ -:--:-:--------1 ~2;B~l~k;N~·-1~9~!h~.~-~~~I 536.671 7 .... r lr Q1:ran rom 111s '"·aur. 2 BR. ,y /[rp]c . .!ilv, rt'lni:~ f"r lrttil"r & ~I . 3 yr:i; .:. -°"~~"'°~""' rr;:way. \\'i!I Pil;"' r~sh ::i BR, 2 Ba. furn. homt'. i:ar 702 Avocado Open Sat I oh1. XI n 1 c<l nd. $280. Costa Mesa SELLrNG Your boat? "Llsl" Turn those \Vhne Ell'phan1.c; COZY 1 Br. ap!, yrly. No
Realtors \\rile Box i\1·24 Daily Pilot. A\·ail. 11011· thni ,!unr \fi1h. l[l.J: 673-7949, 67:1-7299 49.'l-4244. 'vith us .. ~II it fast. D1uly into cash thru a Daily Pilol 1 pr1~. Squares onl.Y Ref's.
Walker & Lee
27~ Harbor Blvd. 111 Adams l10 \\'. BllY. C \l. 1Ct1ll : 673-3663 67a-AA.~ Eve~. , * 2 BR unf DUPLEX-Crflt~l,Op=;J=ol=C~l='="=;i=;'='=·=&l=2=-56=7'=~-=D=U,,='"'=·llne==ad=!=l===o=.:i.=!l=·='=~="="=t'~=6=7l=·=l;xJ=··~l,==I ·~ -91 o · · 9 P'I Ap1 Un it lo -i"'"ation 3 BR. 2 ha, ff'nced )arri. Laguna Beach d c · I· ..,..,,."" pen 111 " ' 11 '"" I Nea beach s2e.r. mo 414 & rps._ aragP. A quiel A t U I J65A U f 365 A U f 11Rnled hy pvt buyer. Cond . r · "'-' · ~uplf'. ~8--0422 p -n urn. pt. n urn. pt. n urn. 365
BALBOA COVES Jl(lt impnrtanT. fil;..~Sll. I f'f'rnlear. 546-2176 l ----------·IJ £;~;,:;;;;~====!i ;;'::;:::;-------~=::::;-------G'.:;:::;::;--------1
WATERFRONT • 4 BR. z B'~A-.~N"o~w.,.-;crp=tcs l FURN OR UNF: 2 BR, ctrn. A F 360 General General General
Prim e toe. l BR, 2 ha . ~ingll" I'll!Nlil!Ui\1 4 BR . 2 BA ,, dflls. 1 blk to bch. Adul ts. Adult!, no pe1s. Emrrald pts. urn.
story. Ne\\·ly deror, 1'·enrrd Din '~ rm ,.. Lidn _ I "'.'.~:";';'_~=====J~ll~2~5.=~67~3-0~2~05~.===== '-=~='=IT='="~·='="'=·=0388=====o yd. 3o r1. boar i;lir. S79,:-(l(l liii•ii"iii'i·'1
1"'iii'"iii' i'i "i"i'i•iii ,. ·• t · Bill Grundy, Realtor Costa Mesa Costa Mesa Mesa Verde
83.1 Dover Dr .. N.B, fi.12-4620
!\lUSf SEL.L BY O\VNER
Brand new, f~ siruple, l
hlk beach. J br, 'l b11 , 2
frpl c. bel!.m ceiling.s, wlw
carpP.I . huge dbl g a r .
~_ ... _,o;,_1 ~'~ RENTING FURNITURE
COSTS LESS XLNT Loc11\ion -nr11r ~hnr· LEASE OR OPTION, ~pe.rk!. BR/\ ND NE\V l\lf:S/\
pini: . 3 hf'rlroom 2 b R 1 h ing 3 Br, 2 story, tri.levrl VERDE !Hln1e !or ll'lli>e.
f':otecutive hnme -bui11-ins, w/rorrna! dining h u I!: e S290. 3 br, 2 ha, all <:om for ts
dlshwa~her, d1!;posaJ $28.1,00 family&. all 1Jbns: $300 MO . lncludr.ci. Comple1e] Bil. t"!1r11 ,
642-7523. Bu1lness
Opportunity
mn. 11'Rter paid . 2 year or assume low interest loon _ _;646--09=.="':...:•~•~54=6-~'1~•~''--8."l low ai; S22 per mo.
lease ..,,·ith oplkm 10 buy w/ minimum do\vn.. Call REAUTIJ.~UL I. n ri s r. pc ct I 00 i'. PURCHASE
Rvailable. No pets. Ref. and 545-3424. South Co as I home in Mesa VPrt!r. 3 Br, OPTION 200
FOR SALE BY OWNER
5 bedrooms or ? l bath&
functional bt-11.ch homP. Pvt.
community, $57,(00 By appt.
Ol'liy 642-i78I; ~.
sec. deposit required. Tel Realtors 2 ba, fncd, dbl gar. frplc. Ind. item selPc!ion
AAA a.45-8609. 1,~.0~R~ll-..,-~83~9~S.~o~li-,go-,-~Rd"', 1st & last. $269. mo I-!lmalJ 24 hr. delv. Month to f,fo.
Candy & Snack Supply f'URN , Bungalow w/ 1 lrg Cilt 4 BR, 1~ BA . cleaning depos, 642-339\. CUSTOM
We Establish All Routes Bdrm. Bltns. Garh. displ., f'in-pla(,~. carpets, drapes, SHARP 3 DH. 2 BA, quir1 Furniture Rental
Newport Heights
(NO .SELLlNG INVOLVEDJ patio, !ncd y&rd. \Ytr ctr. l/\Tlo'.;e fencf"d >'ard, Clean street. Now vacant, S240 per 517 W. 19th, C.M, 5-tS-2481
CASH REQUIRED Adults <lnly. No pet~. $150 &: liveable. Cloi;e to schools. mo. Call LARRY, lleritage An&helm 774.280Q
Plan one ............ $975.00 per mo.~ ~c dep. r.11.tun-Nl't>d refeI"f!nct!I. 54~73.i9 Rf'al E1tate 540-1151. Lalfabra 694-3708
Plan t""'O ..••...•..•• $1625.00 j ~'°~"£P'~'JP~n-~l~'d~.;-~~1~2'~1.,._-I".'.:'.'.'.'.:'.'.~~~~~=:~~~~~=:;'.~~"';~~==:';=:;:~:;=~;:;;"" OCEAN view -4 br, 4 ba.
l~ rumpus rm w/bar. l~e
liv rm, fil>lc. 3,000 sQ ft +
800 sq ft unfini&hect. $49,500.
543-5766 <lr 543-5371.
Plan three .......... i3250.00 Avail l/15, 3 BR, 2 HoUMS Furnished 300Housas Furnished 300HouMs Furnished 300
ExceUent inc'ome fnr a few bit, lease. S22S n10.
hours 1veekly wnrk. (Days 6":;..1622 *
& Evenin&ll), RefiUing and I "===~~-~-~ r.ollect1ng money from coi n C~IARtifTNG 1 Br. house. No
open1tC'd dispense~ within children. $150fmo.
a quaJifird area_ (Handles l ===*=C='="="=~==*==
nRme brand Cllndy and GOLF Coune Home. 2 BR, ,;nacks\, For Pl!rsonal Jn. _L_•~g~un_e_B_e_a_c_h ___ _
2 BA. 2 pat.lol, landM:aped. terview send name, addttsl RENTALS
• $33.~. 492-100.l • 11nd "hone number to Multi-,. l. Chiu-n1. old redwd. housr •· H I-'-Slate Dl!tributlng, Inc., 1681 at Victoria Bc&ch. Ocean vu .. nt• Ana • r•t• \\'est Bmadway, ANlheim, & path lead to beach. Com-
Ca. 92802. <n4) 'TJ8.5060. pletely furnished. J.~lreplace.
OWNER TRANSFERJlED A 1TJ..:NTJON Pcped floor. Lease $m Mo.
$1000 auume• 7~! G 1 Distributors NMded 2. 2 bdrm. fumlshed 11pt. a t
mortaaP S BR. larnil.Y rm. HUNTS new multi-million S \\'oods Cove. 150 yd1. to li:rroo;;;~sq;:=,:;:tt.:=54;;'";;""==· ===I adveMised snack pac: p l'(). beach, l.ge, ll'l'f! shaded pa.
Tustin ctUC'ls NEED NO\V! reliablr Uo. Lease $16:; ~111,
men ()r \\'Offien ln So. Calif. 3. Lee. older 2 bdnn.. Ur\.
10 service tut movina: coin furn. unit. close to do~·n·
1"STIN MEADOWS • By opera1ed products In co. ite· town. F'lrepla~. w/w CllJ'·
·Owner. l.rs 3 BR. l Bath. ~ locations. Ccrnn'lercial i>eta:, Jola of ~ panelln&.
am.al din. ~· Wn l Wtory. Part or flll1 time. Lease $2:iO Mo.
laundry rm. $36.500. 14561 10·12 hrg per Wttk. No sell· 4. l bdnn. unf\lm . hou~. 2
EIMl')'WOOd Rd. &38-Glm tng. CAS H R.EQUJAEti. baths, rlrf'p.lace. Li:P. PAl1o, TlllfE FOR SUKKl-t.1!0), Write for penon. "ralk to beach I.· 1hopping.
"'UICK CASH •I ln "N""', &!vine oam•. Y•orly c.,,,. IJOO Mo . ..,. addttU &r pllOne no. 10 Ola-MISS ION REAL TY THROUGH A tzibutonhlp Dlv. 51, P.O. 9!15 SO. C'ousr 1-fl\'Y .. Lagun& DAILY PILOT "°" 3.15S, Tommce, Calil. Pho"" 4!14~731
i -""°~-;_. ----=~-1 ""'1'~F:O I! I.: l'P.ap"' .. clean WANT AD ANY Day Is the BEST rla_v to oui !hi' tn"11surr!I &. 1r11&h -1 run &n ad! D" n ·I I urn ln l(l r11~h thru A Da lly ___ 64 __ 2_.s_6_1_1 ___ J dl'IB)' •. call today, 642-Sfij8 I f'llol C!a.~~lflr<I nrl . &12-j67S
The Punle wilb tbe Bui/t./n CbucHe
I C L I V
I I I' I
11 HI O IR El' NI ~ Sign on desk In Pentogon,
L. =-=~-==~-=-=~~ "This Job Is so Clouff/ed that ,.. even I don't know -I om
~,..D:;..:.;A;,;Z'-'TRrl;.,W::.-,.,...il-O.·'-im ~-~.~ ... !..~, ' I I I' I I' b;"i:lung ,~";h~~ ~ • • • - -• YoU ct.t.lop frwn attp No. 3 beltiw.
e r11~1.~"''n'° 11 I' I' I' I' I' I' I' r I
J 1 AM I I I I I I
SCRAM-LET$ ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700
HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults
OPllllllG SPECIAl-l llEDROOll FR011 $145!
CASAdel SOL
Nur all beaches • Pri¥1te Temct • Ret Building• Saunas
2 Pools• Billoiil• • Gym• Puttin1 G"'n ind Volloyblll
Built·in Kitchtns • Distnmttm • Dispcsals • Carpeb/Dnll'S
Cl.,. to 111 litop~111 • Privl" P1rli111 ond Sto11ie
llSO: 2 Bed100m •iRlfPl1ce Fm Sl05
%1161 ......... H.tit&tttn --(714) !12.f6SI
HUNTINGTON BEACH-Adult and Family Sections
l-F1tm$1l5-21edrooot,%1111oFJOttt$156
HUNTINGTON GRANADA Print• Tel'Tltl • 3 Pools w/C.btnts • Built·ill Kitthe1t1
Oishwnltois • Cl~ls/011pes • W1lk·in Closeb • O""inc Rooms
CIOM lo Sltof>pinr, All Btocitts Ind Lelsu11 A""
lnll-lltstSl,H•litt1loo-(714) 147-1055
(Just Sootlt OI Wimer)
SANTA ANA-Adutt ind F111tlly Sections
OPEIUllG !IPWAL-1-f1lOll $137!
PARKPIAZA
PriYlt1 P1tios • Rec Bulldinf • Slunas • JICUZZi • Pc;ol
Bullt·in J(Jtdlttts • Disltwaltoo • CllJ!Ob/On""
Nur SOlltll Cotst f'ml• l eisurt Ams• Frtewtys
AlSO: 2 -/2 e.ttt fnt111 $161
lowo-w/l\!-Fr0t0Sl75
--,_, ---(714) su.3214 (2 blocks Ol1l of Bmlol Ind Ml<Artltor)
Managed By:
NAllOI MAllAIEMEllT CD., IJIC. •
. .----· .. -... ··--'··· -~ ..... -... ' • ~ • I " ' . , . . ...
OAJLY m" J
I~ [ -.-.. -l~, ....... u ..... ,~ 1--.. -llt][ __ u ..... ,~11 ,...·-*-*--* -* --'*1 ..._-__ .. I~[. -I~
Trader's Paradise
Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 1'-''--------3'5 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. us I Announcements
B•lbo• Island Co1ta M•sa Costa Meta Huntington Beadi Huntl"!ton Beach lines
times
dollars
l..."if: 2 BR , % Ba unl. Stovt,
rel.rtg, cpts/drp1. Hea1
Acl!ts only. $225.. 675--0486.
VIEW • 3 Br .. cpt11. drps,
t-nc1. gara,Kt>. Yrly $325
\\'inton R!ally ti7:..33Jl
ATTRACT. Lge clpls, 2 br + den beach & shopplna;. Ad!t~. ;10 pl'IS. $190 + util '1.
fi1j..1J72 aft 6 & wk nda.
DELUXE 3 br, 2 ba. Yearl,y .
\\'a!rr virw. Avail t•eb 1.
SJ()() mo. 675--3126 aft 7 pm
Capistrano Beo1ch
FttOM $135
Sl'lanish Gardr:n Apts.
Conveniently Located
I Ii. 2 Bedrooms
BuiJl.in!
Cal'pets & drape&
Enclo.~ed Gara.e;es
Pool &. Recrea1ion Rm.
See: HiO \\'. \Vilson
Realtor~
673-4400
*THE PALISADES* e CORSICAN * New, ocean view Ne\1', large, deluxe 1.2.J BR'g. * Luxurlous I br llf\IS Pn \'ate palio livin a. only 3 * Li:i:t dou ble wardrobes neighbors in your bldg. * Pri1·a1 e patios Bltns, d\\'hr, forced 1ir heat, * Cle-a n all electric shag crpts. drps, _trplc in 3 * Riingcs. 1·efrig, C'abl!" lV Br, gar. j ' ~ mi . E. of South
" Heavy shag carpeting Coa~t PJ 11za; turn ofl Sun-* f:xtra carports, boat sp. fi o1\·cr at Ross,\
1r Ad ults, no pet~. $17j FR0:-01 Sl;)(}
.1:~122 C11n1lno Capistrano, Apt S.10-1973 or 54::..2321 " ,., .. , ... """'" "i ---=FA"l'"'R"'W"'A"'Y~~!l6-149:'i.
Cooona del Moc VILLA APTS.
SPACIOUS k QUIE.T
Spanish style open bt1tn1
eel tings. 0~ story, 2 BR.
D1n'1 rm. Cl('an. La:~ brick.
trplc. Lp patio. 2 car clo!·
ed garage plus. Adlu. No
pels. $200 n10. Gas Ii. wat('r
paid. Nr. OCC. 109 •·A"
Clearbrook Ln.
OPEN HOUSE SAT & SU N
10-2. BRAND NE\V Ea.t!side
1 & 2 BR. J ·" 2 twi1hs.
$15.l to $19:,, Crpl~. dr ps,
dsh1vhr. self clean gas oven ,
.a ll v.·!r &· gas pd. lltrl pool
324 E. 20th St. 646-9148
ofa Quinta .JJermo6a
Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her-
mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree·
lined walk ways to your apt.
ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED * * • • 1 BR. Unf. $150 _ Furn. $180 0\.\·nerwtUtradeZ5Mequi1y
2 BR. Unf. $l ]S _ Furn. $210 ln 65M E:..:ee.utive 3 BR. 2 2 Laauna Brai:h virw Jots.
BA hon1e in Arcadia for Tr.i!.dl' !or ??
3 Spac. fir. plans. decor. furnishings: live t:it:aeh or Orange Co, un!l s. Cal l i'ilr. lloeg€'C
within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. 2 13-J.'il.7~72 collect. ~11s.g;12.1
Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ 2 n....i lots, San CIC"niente.
seculded seating compl. w/Rt.mada & Foun· Cornrncri·ial lot, Dana Point. CHOICE larac in1111'0ved
Wn lur. :'>itllon Clly. \\'ant latr
. \\'ant incomt>, TD's, or ~ Ti"a\'!'l Tl'ailrr pl..:li-up
WANTED
OVERWEIGHT /LADIES
For weight reducing program to establish
statistics for rapid permanent weight loss,
conducted by qualified physical culturists.
Must be a minimum of 20 1>0unds ovel""
weight have transportation and not current-
ly under doctor's care. All inquirie s complete-
ly confidential.
ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537·5410
TIIE GABLES . * Color co-ord. kit w/ indir•ct lightin g. Thf" Ooylr Compan.' -I & I h h 11-uck or 1rade on )tobUe
THF: SEVILLE * De ui.:e reng• ov•ns * P us s ag crptg. Evr~: 1138.63-11 1 "''°-l'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii
* B I t, C I )Qrne. • .... ~..., 11 2 Br, 11, Ba.'~'/ gar. Ad lts, onus s ora9• sp•c• ov. c•rpor Fully equipped nun 8, rold
~ ------------
500
crpts, drps, n.nae. tncd yd. * Sculptured marbl• pu lm•n & til• b•ths la un{lry, e~t 12 yts, \'aluc CAPISTl~AJ'l;O C-ZONEO II &I
patio. 636-4120 * El•ga nt recraation room. SI0.000; ~uit couple. t:x. 4 !-;\l'J'e~. free & clear, Rentil• ~ WHAT IS YOGA?
2437·0 Orange A''l' $1:'5 FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY change niobue ·or n10tor $1:l0.000. TRADE FOR In· '--------Dt.monstration & talk Wed.
2lil9-E Santa Ana A11e i 15::; Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego hon1e or sni house. ~8.$-to ron1f! or??! nile at 11 pm. Clasaes starl
2 BR Duplex. al t garage. F'rwy .. Gol denwest Colleli!e. REA LTOR 54i-7711 Thun. at 7 pm. Yoga Cent-
Cleilil, vacant on quiet SL San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on G Jot~. 1.2 acre~. !ref' ,t Office Rentel 440 er, 445 E. 17th S1 .• CM.
Sl2'5. small child k /IX snil Beach 3 blks. to Holt·, W. on 1-lolt to . . . clrar. R·2. llu ntu1gton lla.r. \\'hat do you have to trade!I----------646-S:28l.
dog ok. &l&.8362; 5-1t-4969; I bour arf'a . \V11n! inl'Onlc Lis t lt here --: in Oran1e SU PER·DELUXE QUALITY _:,,;,_::,:,.:;,.,,~~===--·I
64z_o791. Also 2 BR house s LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847·5'441 proPf!rly. Subrn1t all ullcrs, County's la!'iett read trad. 1_2_3 rooni, up to 3,0CIO sq. A1TENTION ARTISTS, w•
furn & unlurn. =====:==:=::==:~===='='='='=='=IBkr, 536-4~ in.: post.fi4l..56Tll ft. olfice suites. Immtd. OC• have the rallery. It you ::. have any art work t1r any
LRG. modct•n 2 Br. Bltns, Apt. Unfurn. 365 Ap~. Unfurn. 365 .. + * * * * cupancy. Orange County. art objects 10 geJI. pleut:
crp!s, drp11, Near K-r.1ar1, ~---------/.irporl Jrv!ne Con1merc· call 675-3767, 646-3589.
&. Harbor Shop'.:. Closed Huntington B•ach Newport a •• ch Con1plex. adj . Alrporter liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I gar. + park'g. Adu!I~ only. l101el & Restaurant, banks,
2210 Rutgers Dr. 646-6919 PARK NEWPORT • clll"! San Di rgo & N'pt Fwys.
Announeement1
LRG 1 Br. ar t. All new 2 BdrmS. ~ 2 Bath tree livg o~rlkg the water. [ A?4irtment1tor'lint JI") [ Riniats )[;Aj UNCRO\VDP.:D PARKING
crpis, drps. Tile i.· pa inl. 1 pools, 7 tennis els $7SQ,000,1,_._ ______ ..J. . . LO\\'EST RATES
2 I. 3 BR', Bltns. $1~5/mo. 546--0451. S\50 r.!ONTH . POOL Spa. From $175 to $450-'--------Ov.·n~r/m gr. 2172 DuPont Dr.
1.....--''"'_"'1' ~'~
998 El C · CM <pts/dr ps1blt .ins, patio Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Al.so 2 Rm. 8, Newport Beach Priv a1e patio, pool . indiv. ~°"c_,~'""~-'".;..c0• c...,' =·---833 3223 C rt t B k .,,,.~ laundry lac. NE\V Unfurn l nr. apt. Kid~ & pets OK. lrg rooms sr~ Towni:us•"· Elec. kkt. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Room• 400 . ou esy o ro ers Auto tr•ntport•tlon 525 ~ •-• Near Oranie Co. A1......,rt & v:/bltns, crpL~. d r ps, 2620 Dclawa i·e, H.B. pr1.pat.dor l.1 Sub lrdn p11r1 ~. . . DESK SPACE • • ·~ . 1 64Z.22Zl: afler 3 p.n1. 536-1816 opt n111.1 ser cpls. rps · Usl We•fc!;ff R00111 \\'/bath u1 Univ Park WANTED: Very mature and ucr. Adults onl y, dshv.·hr, .all ut 1I in c . . 1 1 J 222 F t " -·· N. of Fashion !'i a! 11111· ror v.·on1an or sludent. ores venue responsible 21 ~ar ..,. or
ON Tl:N ACRES 20122 Sant.a Ana A\'e. $150/mo. In11. 307 Avocado, 2 BR. $155 Up .• 3 BR boree & San Joaquin lhll!'i p l le ni b kl he l B h older female to share drlv·
1 It 2 BR. Furn It Unturn 1\lgr. 1'1rs. Joach.im, Apt 3·A Apt 9. 645--0984. ~~~dn-_~P,ok.Pa~;ciR/\po~~i I cR=d=·~ ... ~=·=l!KIO:=.='°='~l=••=•~in~·~·=·"='°c·1 s:~~. ~!~· z~~t~~~~~tn~ k ~:~nd~ sp~~~~·e~es.1 cCal~ aguna eac Ing and ps in VW bus.
Fireplaces I priv. patlcs /l oc-c'77'=:14=6=.6=2~1J==~=l $150 . LRG 2 Br, 11: Ba Apts. 1113811\lora Kai Lane, SEACLlFF ?.lanor Arts. l -ts. 61'2-2jl•I , airer 5, 83.1-17~17 4!K-9468 Good drivins: record! Am -·-Tr-•-.~-tnt'IBW• • MARTINIQUE. "1" 1"· lmma<. '0 "''" • 2 B 1" n -lll"ll"" ,. TO DESK SPACE golnru '""°"""'"""'' ........... Alu:'! .....,., ....... ...,,,,, ···1 'z blk E. or Beach off ... r, ,. °"'· . ,,. ""· HUNTING N Bt'ach -f>IU· 9o0 Sea La."le, CdM '"'-~ r-.tgr <o<>< No. I La~ e. 130 · llo + d 1 d ,. h & D'Alene, Idaho. Am Jeavtna;
(Mac.Arthur rt=-c.oast HwvJ Park·Like Surrounding• 54!}.:l7121 -c=·="~'=''="=·=""="="'=----~· I m,ove int 'c "1'anc~.... Apt•., bent P~ .e1"" 1'.15 enl6' 305 No. El C•mino Real a.pprolt Jan. 15th. Q::lr1tact
-J DELUXE 1-2 & 3 BR APTS. 1 BR h I re;::-. iscoun . rp s. • .,~. F U I 370 lllh privt elf's, ;iJ • ' So• Cl•m••lo 54 •-$16J LGE. d11t . 2 Br. 11,'J . near beac, nev.:y patio. pool, in lanl ok. 152j urn. or n urn. Furn, utll paid. 6~2-Sa20. ..4~,.20 .. Jackat567-4982or J..=<1U
DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba. bltn11, Also FURN. BACHELOR ba. Quiet adl ts. G E. Kit. decor&trrl \\'/pool .$140 per Pl•orn11, ·11~25S'' "~ '"ANTED·. R1'd•,/drivec to
P · H p Al 2 b hi • .. ·' ~ Co5ta Mt1• SLPING Roon1, $60 /mo . ., ~ d'li•thc, new sh•• '''''· rv patios * td ools Storage. 2~rt E. 16th Pl mo. so. r ., tn~ ,..-'>tV_ fl -·• n •h·-,, .. ,,.,to Nub·""•, • AT rRACT. Tll'nhsr J br 1v/ P riv. ('n!r. ·. hnt h. Adulrs MN sq. grouuu oor. ""'" viu frpl, la undry rn1, rncd patio Nr shop'g • Adults only 548-6432. I reins. crpls · dlT/S. $1 j{) liii!i!iiiijiiiiiijjilijjliiiijiliiiiiiii 1· "' I 1·11 o p t Tt.nn on or about 1/23. & s21· 6l-I SJO? J777 Santa Ana Ave, Cl\t incl util's. frplc, a ll elr(· bltn~. n'"l''l l no pi"ls. '2135 Elden, C~I . ru·rs 111'.'-... es c 1 r. v
gar. · .1. -• 2 1 BR, crpts. drps, i,:11rbage T 1 . d R alt !W7 8J ll criit, drps, p i•1 pat , pool VILLA CORDOVA $Pe Mgr Apt 6. entrance. UHi paid, Park· l="=2-="='='=· =======I 2 BR, f>·rplc. Stove/Refrig. r-.tgr. Apt ll3 • 64&..SS.1 disposal & range . $1 15. CaU r;i( f'win s r y, · & rec. area. l.sc onl y. No • ing , $85 mo. 1741 \\'e11cl!U
l'\iew shg C'rpt , encl g11 r. HARBOR GREENS eves 4M-2i92 WALK TO OCEAN 2 1 ,., s l 90 * St:i PEn "·eek · up Dr &15-3033. Per1onels 530
SI './ N " 67'1l09 I BR c •· •· / pets, c 1 u t'('n · V.'/kit chC'11s . 127.:10 1wr weekl.,Cc'-' "-,..'-'"----~-1 -c...,---------I
J mo. o pc .. ~. .,... . · GARDEN & STUDIO APTS $135 • LRG 2 Br. crpts, . rp.,,, UJ·ps, sonie \V 96 ·=.2-~"'='='~· ----~~-I NEW NEW NEW ~up AptJ:. t.IOTl~L. fl.\~97:\.i AIR Cond, crpts, fa r.ing NEARLY New 2 br, 1 ba, drps, bl1n11, patio, no pets. frplc & patios. $130-$150 per J BR . 2 Ba lo>1rr du plex EWach Blvd Reas. Call FR EE >hag ocpl, bllns & drps Bach,1,2,3BR's.trom$110. 'Vkdaysalt 5:30.548-l86T ino. Adulls. NF.:\VLY furn 11Kllll, SI8 per 842-2?!25 'or owner 2700 Peterson Way CM 1~=-'-"-'c-""-"='-'c-'-""-t IN'DBORG CO "'"25-9 nr be;,,ch, cor. frplc. hltns, Lu•u•y 40 Un1·1 Adult k & I' I I ·1 1\'/frpl c. $200 mo. 675-5724. • · · 2 BR d•IW<, Cl••n. Q•'••I, • · """" j .. \\'l'I' · up. v en r ava1 · 21 3/394--001 5. B11.sic &ating Course off-546-0310 ... crpls . drps. S2ij /n10. ·rear· Apa•lment Complex Pl "I" 0 .. 1 :; BR 2 ba, newly decor. Cpts/d111s. bl1ns, ~am ~ii-BEACHBLUFF Apts ly. Call 213: 3.ss-5255 or · ionr '~ o-t,.,;-i VERY nice office in Laguna tortd to the public by the
$300 'mo. 609 Poi nsettia, DELUXE ing , Adil~. no pets. $150 New 2 BR, 2 Ba, dishwa~h· 213: 622-f!1!l3 N.B .. pvt lo11·c.r level \\'/vie1v, Beach, v.•/w cpt, drps, Balboa Power Squadron.
Cd:\1. 67~>-Q.1:>4 TOWNHOUSES nio. 1974 \\'al!ce, ::i.1s-:i386. er~. pool, pa1io. i;:2:;1 Ellis. :'; BR's, 2 BA, uni. Crp!~. lF~~N~~~:go~~ ~:tin, rch·ig$ioom~5-Q!l~k. 4M-9633 or 4~-7447. Aak tor Ma il •s "'•IJ as pov.·er
LG uniq ue brand new 3 br. ON NEYlPORT BAQ{ BAY NR new 2 Br, 1 1~ Bit, I z"'=2-&1=77=o='="='·="="='=== drps, l:ilk to ~ach. Yrd. : atu re gr n1 . . , . 1..::';'"~· ~B~'~"~'~·~=..-=""'" I boating taught. Stai1inr
211 ba, hn1 ceil , frpl, all cpt/drri". !h•/dsh1vhr . g11r. yr a r I y 32j(I. No pets. UNFURN. :I< FURN roont in pr\v. CORONA DEL MAR 7 pm Mon. J an. Ill. E11c ry
hl1ns besl 31.,.a 673-691).1 3 ,(, 4 BR·3 Ba . Fr-nil·. !am Avl now. 766 \\', \\'i!son. Irvine 6il--SOF!ll home, Costa i\lf'sa. K,.ch. 2 R . "-1 Monday nite !or 13 weeks. · · .,.. "'2-79'o I ---------le Spa riou Aparln1r·u <> pri\'il. +. Nr. OCC. 54~1061 m 5Ullf'!, Pii l u., pv.t en r . At Newport Harbor Yacht e 2 BR apt ..,·/garage. Pvt ruom, dou ble garage. Beaut. '" "" LARGF: '.? br. l'~ l:iri. i·rpts, • S la.I 5 b 1 ~ · ·. ·r. 11 kl . 1 Prkg, <:rpl/drp, . I pd
f'nlrance $200 n10. 70rt lounie. Pool. Billiards. *NE\\' LUXURY I & 2 Br. NOW LEASING! r1 rns bltns. nr. Ho111: llo~p. 'pee ca inr s al'e )Bal~· .. :~ ~=le. ~i;\·o&r ~ g:~·. S\45/mo. Owner. 613·6757 · Club, 720 \V , Bay Ave.,
•
,·,,0 ,•< .. ".•. 61.·~187• Adult & Childrens art'a d11•hr, shAg crpt, i:arages. $1!1'>00'1) l'.42-4387 6~2-1 17 1 •Lock gar.agcs iv/ l~ sror """ Ne11•Jl0rt Beach. Bring
" .. ~ u ,----, ' ' • • e Bm ce il• Lruh-...• • P11tios r I •"-"/mo & p 6_5.-,"Il nolebook & -ncU first 1 --------~=-l 12'""'/ &12-0300 "O ·147 Pool & Rf'r. Quiet adult N .. w. family and adults unit;; P "· ,,...:. u · j. ·"'' Bu••"n••• Renl•I ••5 ~ 2 Blk• fro m ""t an. 2 BR, "" mo. · '" ·;;i • D"·hc/dt'•ol • c,, ''"''' ~ ,,·1 An qo••';oo• oall ...... living ~2-4470. V.'\th Iota! recreaUon club Newport H•lght s " FURN rm, cnok'1 priv, Pvt1__________ e. Y "
2 ba, lrple, bl lns, cpts, drps, au· Ad I L. a.nd Pn!'·School. 1, 2, lt. 3 • SpeciJIJ soundp roolini::-r ntrance, 275 Broadway, __ ..,_,_1"5-='·==-==;;-----1
SZ':iO. 548-798.~. iet U t 1v ing V.0 \\'k-1 per. w/kit $35. bdrmi Jrom $150. Nr. shop. NICE 2 BR. pool, bltn~. cpts, e Shai carpe ts, drapes C.l\l. STORE or Shop a v a i I . FREE
1 BR. apt. un rurn. lor adult . 1 & 2 BR. Shea-cpts, bltn~. r.aid ser, linf'n!, TV k tele. hool d•n•. !';l!lldeck. Arll•~. no """"'========! cl o "" n town San Juan hoa"I 1-'••pd I'~ & 1170 "'-• " k I 2'"l N I pinJ;, golf, sc s. Jusl -.,l!ll mo. includes ulll, call " '"' ~ · ""' · _,,.,.a._r J\1ote .;v P Jlf'tS, $150. 642 -8001 , GAS & WATER PAID C&.pi.atrano for sma ll
7 ~ 1 incl aU uw. Adults only no Blvd . 646-7445. soutb of San Die&0 Fwy. 011 &l2 ,11116 Newport Beach tiusin,,~s or off ice. $75/ITTJ.
2 BR. So. of lhvy. No ri;~~· Avocado St. &J6-a979 * DELUXF: I f, 2 BR. PARK W!ST LOVE LY 2 Br. lrpl, cp!s, CM PRO~·ESSIONAL v:llman or ~::_!__l:~l or 49z..i 706 e\·tos.
83 . .,,.t rve~. Cu1\'er Dr., Irv ine. 8J3.J733. " · 2323 Eldin Ave, 6 ----------1 Huntington Beach. Powu
Squadron'5 basic boatin&
coun;e ror &ail or power. childrcn or pe!s. SJSj, Garden Apl~. Blt-1n1, priv. APARTMENTS drp!<. pal LO, lndry, rte. sludenl, near !.'ith & Irvi ne. YACHT Broker s eek•
Sr{uaff!!'i only. s.i2_7898 VILLA MESA APTS. patio, ht"a1ed PflOI~ lrplc. Arll l~. 110 pr!.~. Sl70. 6•16.1912 646-0032 or 642·1121 ,... S80. mo. 548-73Rfi Nr1vport Bch Joe at ion 1~"7=--~7".,'""'""""' 2 BR, Priv pa!io. Htd pool. Arl ull s. Sl·!j nio. 546-~163. Ov.·ned and t.-lana~ed by • \v/dock ac«11. 213 : C!a1sta start: Monday, Jan. BRAND new 2 &. '.I Br apts. TI1e Irvin• Company
So or hwy. 322 Ma1·guer1te. 2 car encl'd gar. Children • • BIGGER th&n a home. ~~~~~~~~~~'I ;s;;•;;n;•;•;A;::n:;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IBAY MEADOWS APTS. Rento1ls to Share 130 379-171.'i e11e.o;, uary 1111\ IH·l-1 3~2 or 67~2222. v.'el come, no pets please! ;: Br. 21 ~ ba s 1 u d i o . 7 \\'ANT -~,,,,n&I• ''' .. , COMMERCIAL Bid'& Inclds: Tin11 : T:OO P.M. Slti.l mo. 719 \\'. \\;ilson. $195/nio. No pelg, :>-lrr.5270, L•nuna B•ach • '"" "• P Ofncei ware h Guie A: At: ttuntlni!.011 Beach lil&h
616-l :Dl 833--3540 -~·~-------VILLA MARSEILLES BRA ND NE\V UNTT!;; all v.·ith :JD·3;1 for 2 BR, Oak:"·ood 1 di·_. . CM A ·" School, Room 121
Cost• M•s• FOR ren l or lease year round BRANO NEW hPllnt crilini:s, pH nr.Jin~. P\'I Garden apl. Dnyl\ -e1n.ce c·"11" ·49'~5508·• • v-.u For info11T1allon telephone:
LA COSTA SHARP Lg. I b1·. crp!/drp5, l yr old 2 bdrm apt , kf1Ch<'n SPACIOUS par io~. frplc, all rec facU.1 ~'~1~~~90~38~. ~·~1J~;.c_!i&1~2~-'~1~7.~5 _J:~":::C"o"'~'~'':'.~~c::::;::·_7:':: 536·4133.
Ew hl1ins. Quiet hld'r:. Infant l & 2 Bd A itJes. Adults, no pets. S lro c t ---.=='"'""'"'"'"--S175 BRANO N NE\V 1 & 2 br, Bltns. swim· oi.-. $!30, 5-I0-9722 0 r furn., o('rRn \'1!>1\·, ,1·1w rp1, rm. pta. ~1.ATURE Employed \\'Oman, EAST 171l.1 I. ntage , .l\ · ADVENTURE
2 t:ir, c.rp1.o;. drps, i;:ai·aae niinio; pool & J!;aragc. All ~7 2&i2 undefET{}untl pkg. close 10 Adult Living e Bach. from $lOO e no ,.n1o king I rl t'lnk in1. S1nrc·Off1ce, S80 !1-fonth. SAILING CRUISE
.35.1-C Woodland Pl11.cc util1t1es pRid. $1$0 ro S170 ~·=· ===· ======= \·ery nice beach, 494-9633 or furn. & Unfurn. • 1 BR frnni $l.1:; • Aslinrnr> 1z rrnl. r.lrlin de! Realonomlcs Corp. 675-6700 -• 2 Br-t from SJtij • 150 ft. 3 rnut Squ1.re Riger. 675-5772 or 6'12.:'i:~:,o mo . Adults, no pets. 3~ East Bluff 494-7447. Ask for ~tr. Brack. DilihWUher. co.lor coordlna!. i\!<tr. ~l!l-fH2l, 6-~~ _ S!orr.-826 W. 19th St., Of ~aving 3/15/71 f 0 r l
BRANO NEW J..PLEX j ;'~'~""";;;,'~tloi;;;S~1 ,~Ci;'~'~· ~6'~2~-;}.W;;;iif;;;;;; OCEAN VIEW • Lrg 1 & ed. appliance~ • plush shag 387 \\I. B;iy S1 ' htl\'n Harbor l\IID ag(' r n1p. i1·on1a11. share SI 15/mo. * 646-7414 months. Jl,len & wom en want. z BR. Garage. Estr R-">. _: BR unfurn i1 p1 s, Crpts, carpet • choice of 2 color ,t, Nr11·pur1 Blvd, !... mi N. my )H"aut. !i;r. 2 Br. 11 pt.I=========== ed w/desire for adventure
I left. $\7:1. &l:>.J:M NE\V atlracli w. 2 br, sound 1;;';:1n~u~;.plc~ ~n~i ~~i :.~: drps. l:il t·1ns. palio~. \Ya1k-schemes · 2 .b!lth.~ ·sta ll ol 19th St•. ;>.;o drink or smo k e. Industrial Rental 450 & travel&: ability to share
proof duplex. Fr,ilc, t"rpt~. ini: d i~la nce to rov.·n. 100 shuv.ers • Mlrro.~cd ""·.arrl. Ct\LL '"·OOil 548-&ll!3~2.'-------1.:.:.:::.:c:.:_c:.::c_:::.;;c_:;:_-:.:::.;;I ,x.-nse•. For infornu1tlon
l I " "-d ·I -T.•2 ,\nilgos \\'ay. f!'i:i-.'J0~.3. r 1·11 0 ' -b be d I " I I hi ~ SMALL UNITS ~ $11.). 7 BR. Jliew c rp.!<, crp s, rirps, ut:arne c e 1 1 n g s , ~ r r, ... ~na Beac ro ooni . nn 1re_r• 11 · SllARI:: nl)' v.·1trrrlmnl l10me call Pam Reynol~, CllJl
SIOYI'. AihJHs. no pets, call b!t ns. pralio. Adu lts. only. I SPACIOUS 2 Br. crpls, <lrp~. 4'.1+.:i·l~LS in~ In kitchen . brrakfas!'I----------\\'~ dock:. ·~~~n. :10·60 )'Cars. COSTA MESA 378-2605 .
. &42--5848 no pets. Rrfs . $1 ~9 :.O_ 2.'.l:H /'lv.·hr. patio k pool, $240. ========== bar • huge pri\•a!e fenC1!d Bf'aur •ful l & 2 BR furn Sl.ll/mo. 61:H.1.3l .
Sanla Ana A\11!. 67:;.-039.l. * 644-5298 I Newport B1o1ch patio . plush lanrlscaplng . or unfum apts. Of>~FER!NG: GIRL 1\ V . $9J & Sll:'i mo. Jmmed OCCU· 1'1.D.S.
The
DAILi
PILOT
ORANGE
4
'OAST'S
ft v.
~eading
i\ ,,,
1 filrketplace
••• -
tr I DI \\' I' ' ~hare icioria pancy, 61i0-775 sq fr . HAPPY BIRTHDAY
NEARLY NEW LOVELY l Br. Lr~ entry 2 2 brick Bar·B·Q's -lars:e heal. ~(' ,. c11 n. o\·ens . in Beach houS(', 2 frpl.~. ocn * NEW BUILDING * ~l d d ·h 1 II"~ 4 BR, ba. porches, retnR. er1 ......... !, & l•riai. 'l llrl. disp!s, shag crpls, DARLING
I llR 1 b. C'pl d If '-' ... " rps \\ r poo "" d ........ \'\\·, hean1 ell. 4!M-46~1. 280 f I u· I========== I · · i . rpi;, se · · ' · f'rp t~ & rps. near beach 3101 So. Bristol St. drri~. J 11r11lzi i.· Sauna l'la1h. . . . J sq I un 11; o ice, rest.
rlean\ng, gas overi, enrl * 644-52!!8 I S'275. (Iii !\Ii. N. of ~. Coas Plaza) lfui;" Pool. FOR ADULTS ~ ~.!\I A L}_ Roonima !r !o room. 110·220 Po"'er, pl enty Per1on•ls
<>31._ Patios. 548-360j, l7? \V. :,.\6·21i6 I •h.11re tlf'w 2 BR 11Pt \\'/frplc of p~•kin"'. 18U1 k \Vh1'1ti·,, '-'-'--------·I \,11~un trounta in Vall•y ----PH'OSN'"e'·.·5A57n_•8200 M~·RRIMAC WOODS 1\•1th .-~mr. 9AA-02~. Ave .... Cos~a Mesa. FULLY LICENSED *
GOLD MEDALLION * BA YFRONT * 12 :\I . \r C, n OIW'rt Nattnas, Riealtor Rl'!nowned Hindu Spir!tu&li&t
1 ALL NF.:\V l!tgh·risr: 2 BR·., from S.2%. 'i~::::~~~::~;:;:::1 c~~· ."i~C· ,:. ',~~,:~;i ay Garages for R•nt 435 Co~!a Mesa M2·1485 Advice Of\ al! matlen:. lllodrrn 2 Br. 1 ~Ba. crp1~. VALLEY PARK .1 sid" tic slips avallablt', • " Love, hlarrlage, Buslnetis rlqi~. CE ku. Encl. ~11.r. APARTMENTS &17.22Jl2 CAN'T BE BEAT '2 F\11 . Crpl <. 1l1·r -.. pap.-. STOflr\GF. (;anli:es, 500 SQ. FT. BLOG. Readiflis given 7 days •
l\!a11y lltxury ex 1 r11~. 1\r s1:,o 11111 Sllill roru. Zf·~lll I ~:..!.\ r"'r monlh. Jo:, 17th s1, Costa .!\tesa \\-'eek, 10 am· 10 pm .
hus. $lj:i. Adul!s. 120 f:. 2fHh • • .opens nc1v doors for ATTR 2 BR aril, un lurn, (J"r11 11or• r\vr, C.\J, ~..i: ... 1r;:,7 Phnnf' fi42--ti.1!11 unt il 6 pnl. 312 N. El Camino Real.
YOUNG FAMI LI Es l hlk from ~An, ve~ lg SINGLE STORY 241 Elcrtril·aJ Pov.·cr.
NEW DUPLEXES • • • f 1 ,.,..,., '" i31·:Lux~1~:-2-nr:-111 i:n $100 r.to. 675-6700. Broker SanOement~
2 BR A 1160 L. R. w/ rp c. $~"' mo. South Sea A tmo~rhcrc Off' R 1 I 440 4929136 49•-1& J.2.J BR. Wa&hPr/dryer hook· · pts 67~22:-.7 2 BR .• 2 BATH !..· unlurn. $1 30·116:1 Pl)O!, 1ee en ii __ .....;.::..·:;:.=·~~~""c0---1
BR G d •-$175 -6•2 NF:W bldg, lm.2300 sq. ft. up. encl gar, patio, r.-d air. 2 • ar en '"""t' ca...-...ts & drns 177 E. 22nil ~!. C!\t ·1 -36-1:1 ~;o SQ FT 1 bl 1 k • F · · WILL PAY 3 B' , ba On Bl .. fl w/"t.•w .,... · •· 1. •u ta e or N, ' "· •c otN•w, 1 ~1Ps11 Verrlr area. 546-1034 2 BR. Townhou1es $185 01 b·,, •. -•on." 1330."74.; Air Cortdltloncd oo. N-• n·da dai'ly 10 • h'om o.: ..... ~ B ch ~ni::!nrrring de~i11:n ofl\Cf'. yr lsc. Sullivan, 540-4429. ~ ""
LRG 2 BR. 11!i BA. 2 J)omingo Dr. Pool privil. Privale Patlo11 Huntington ea F.quipped with desks, draf· work. Live In Laguna. work
r·hlldrcn ok , no pe. l 1 , Pre·schoo l Cf'nter. Adu i1 pool. Call fi.45-1260. liEATED POOL lin't" boards, tic-, Dowf'ltown R•ntals Wo1nt•d 4'0 in Costa Mesa. }four1 8 to
s1::io/mo. :W.)..2486 Childrt'n's pool. Pr1v p1l!011. T'lenly of la~'Tl c C.~I. $1:-io, 642-4'P.AJ 5 CaJI 642-4321 xt :no·
Elec kilchens. \\'all 10 wall 2 BR. c;,,rpeted. draped. near C1rport & S!or111" ON BEA Hf HELPI 11 · ' e ' 2 RR. upst;r11rs, crpts. drps, I 2 I he;ich Sund,.ck. garage, l!IDDEN VILLAGE • 350 Sq. ft . SlfiO mo. Di x . -""°="":.:::,~·~,._,c-'-7=39~·---~-' hltns. r/o & ttfrig. No pets. c OM\& & carpel~. P ay. v.·ash in~ faeil. Ye a r I y . prof bldg , air cond , good Needed at once, proximity to SWJNGF;ft. Oran~ C o .
S140. fl&S-14:;:) or 5-11-7729 rrounds. C.arpnrrs F. ~!or. 6~2--l!li& eve:ri &: ""·knda . GARDEN APTS. e Bachtlor Apt1 from $715 pck,. l5Q E. 17th. Of. Bar-LA. fnt'l. Airport, by sin· oc•r p
•••. 2::.00 Sou!h Sal lA • 2 BR ont .. -m 122' d l I 3 Gu.Ide. Ftte Info .,.... .
I 2 B .-•v .,,. ~II RJty ~2--4353. rere. eserv nr coop•. yr. Bo 2W •--" Im DELUX, c ean ' r, 114 b11. LARGF: l hr, strps !o Bay Santa Ana Q 546-1525 • 7 BR t"uni, From S28.i old boy I. 6 mos. baby. 7-3 0 . x • tw-•• •
i<!udio , Cpls, drp~. pool , 17256 S. Euclitl St. &· Sch. Adlls. m pets. an-OF~,ICE Or Rhov.·rm llJl8a!, pl 92804. ~~9081. adlls. l ch ild ok. MG-0496. nu al, $14:'1. 67l-71S.. C11.J'l>f'ls-drape1.dishwai;her aUOlis Balboa &y Club. BR:_~ouu, apft....,°!:, du exXlnln 'A!1Xlff~=~o~u~~2S.,--:Ano="Y"""'=:-~. (jUJt 110uth of \\'1rner in heated pooJ.11aunas·tennis ren ..... l'AJlge o .....,.. mo. t REDECORATED lge 2 br. F 1 1 V 11 rrc room -0eean viev.·s Beau! decor., Sl51l mo. tenants who Catt for prem. Phone 54):.nt7 or wrtlt to New drps crpts, bltns $150. oun "n 8 cyl Apt. Unfurn. 365Apt. Unfurn. 365 IH5-0030. P. 0. Box 1223 Colla Meu.. Child llk . ·s-12_731 j Phone {714) S40-471S put1011-ample parking .:,.:,.:~=-~----1 i1e1 as the ir own! Pleue
Fountain Velley fountain V•ll•y St-curity ~1rd11. NEWPORT olficea, c P 11, call: ~2-3589 After 6 PM. NICE younc man 24, wanta
LRG 3 Br. 2 Ba. Ne\v shaa-HUNTINGTON drps, oCean view, from $65 ftEFINED carter woman non-speaklnr tri•ndl. Box
crpts, newly dee. Nr. OCC _H_u_n_t_l"11..::._lon __ Bo_•_c_h__ C IC PE',!' mo. Onr Aft 6 pm : want• Jtudlo apt. Co. mov· -=;;:·:;San=:,:;;°';::""';::::;";:"'::· ;;:::::~I
CarporL $175/mo. 557~151 WALK TO IEACHll PA IF 67:;..464·1 in& to N.8 . Call eves, aft ~
LRG 2 BR. Crpl11, drp1, 1 LOVELY.NE W l & 2 BR's. JJ~ ill OCEAN AV}~ .. H.B. * XLNT OFl>'ICE Space 6pm wkdys, (213) 381-1475.
child ok. $13.'i + dp. 2214 Crpti1, drPll, rllllhwaahers, 17141 536-1487 Now Aval!. LIDO BLDG, 3 BR hOUse unrurn. Harbor
Collea:e Ave No. 2, 646-0627 709 Palm. 847-39i'\T e Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Daily 3355 Via Lido, NB. 673-4501 Jl.S. d.litrict, fimll)r Gf S Ir: SINGL.ES Club now ~onrilr\I.
1170. l BR, llS ba 1tod1o, I ~=~~~~~~~-WTU..!AM WALTERS co. 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB •m-'I "-r . 'pp-x ·-. Dattnr. Socl&J. .m .... NEW 2 BR, 2 ba, f'rplc, <lJ "" "' • ., .,.,.,., For &PPl!e1tkMI • write Pto-redec. cpVdnis, adj shop'1. aha& cpt•, drpi, B!tns, ON 'nlE BAY month. 6fi.7070 rr-mmlna, Bmc Ul, Daaa
s.18-8.101. 213/592-5221 gaMlge, nr bch, S l ?S. ~ t I. ! 8R'1. FROM S13.i __ _!67'-~2~46'~0":'~'4~1""'32~:..._-11:::======'=====
t · Overlooking beaut K&-rden Polnl, Ca,, 921529.
2 Br. Crpts, dl"P/I, 1613 San-&t&--0841 or 6'16-3528. •· pailo & htd flOOI , .\dulta. 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM Mite. Rentals 465 ••ii••••••
111. An11. Ave, Ctit. $150/rno. CfiEZ ORO APTS oun atnJ' 103.i 12th St, aCT'Olls from 35c aq . foot
54.2-7219, eves 543-8.172. 82.14 Atlanta, 1·2 BR, pl, Lakti Park. 5.'6-2692 6~2464 or 541·~32 Coron• del M•r jfm
l • 2 BR unf\lm. util paid, privare gar11.ge. W11.1hen, Mediurranffn Styl• Lu~ury • * NEW 1 BR. SLl!i-$150. EXEctmV.E SuUe of of.* COROLIDO AltTS * Lost_.,._.. c:1J
pool, no Pf'IS, $145. rlryen. 5a6-80.33: 536-znT Fum/Unfurn. 1 Block to fl('(!s, l34:i Newport Blvd, 2 Br. ,rudlos &; street l1vel1, '
ft.12-2149 ATMlAC, 2 Br. from Ser.>. 1 & % Bedrooms -S Bat.bl BEACH Prlv. pntJo. 202-A H.B. &ls-tMS, $1~ &: \IP. Ptnlhoule1i $220. A'~V7Al~L-:F=•7b-. ~\'°'·Ui,...,-~\~B~,·.1 All extras. Pool. Kld1 I. Ala.II Uvlng 141h, HB. 5.1G-8367 * NEWPORT BEACJI Civic Olhwhr, frl)J, db! carpert. l'ound {frM Msl SJO
Crp!s, drp3, bltns, enc;:J 1ar, iie,.r.~~~· .,!!4471510Kulaon-D. J'\IJ'UW a U1fanllW ~~: •. ".· ;'f!J_,'1'."l•ol. '61°'?'\6Cl11j Pool. 613-3.m ----------1 adult. no pets. J140. M&-1112 _,, .....,... L•aun• Beo1ch " " ~· ""'' .,. GIU:f, blll: I: wtlite temUe
? UNfUR.N 2 Br:. Studio apt. a ,.., 1865 Parle Ave. CM. 1,000 dos. Appears' to haw ,_.
NEW 2 BEOR..'f $l 5· Sha& encl 1ar. AdultJ: on I y . e '""-W STlJDlOS • l UR. utD tncl. ft. 4 Rm1. Alr-cond. Phone [ 11.-1 had • Utter. Mixed hrMd. '•'"·.e~! ~:!: bale. J chUd Slj()/mo, l4M~9 • A4 c.,.., Quiet, plea11a.n1. Clll collttt 833-39Zl eve. Ctgy to Biers. ~· Irvine arta, IJS...W38. o . '""'""' ,., • .._, _ _._ r.u.. Dwyer Clt3l 437~;in.t 1 BR MHlaJUon Co~: All .. .--J00.60().U)o "'· fl, !MAU. filk Poodle purT *" • UNUSUALLY spae 2 1 hlt lru r-frl1 encl/p•Mo e 0..-0-.,.: 0Ff1CES. SOO-S»S180, Back Bay att•. ~113 1
hr I ba f&m ~liie ~ ~rud lo. pool. Quiet. St3o. 17~~ • ...... c.1-.,. S•n Clement• Costa Mesa. '41-2l30 A I CypN1a Santa AM Hf~ht..
No pet1. $1:i<I. 54>~2'1'0; _,, nneunc•me• 1 JO( t M.'h35«1 • NF.W deluxe 2 br • dtn. 1685 llat.r anaa 2 Brt., 2 BA., bl tin rangt, TIRED of lhat Gld tunutun7 • Y 0 R KS Rl RE T .
I Flrelatt. pra11:1. Ne1 r ~'Shi..:...-. 'I-~ dshw•hr, laundry fa t. Rec. lt'a really not that hard ACCEPTING Ntw p\ino Harbor Shopplns Cir, J111
* 2 nn. •lf'r bltnl!, IOl'k, bfl11.ch, C11.ll 968-4544_. __ ii.t :ti• rm, Tal\lrfully d9'cnr11ted, to ~plact. Ju.Ill watch the student& to learn l'hi!Ol')', 1 ="~h~·rll4~:>-0c"i11~1~·.-.=,..,==I
i"r. Ml'~fl Vtr<le 1rrt«1 , Bia 1 en. .ArlJ.llf. No pe!J. "" "" ·-.. Adttl!~ Only -$180 furnllut9 4 mlscella~.11 sight rtadinr, etc. C.U DIAL direct iflJJi'Ji. Qup
flmf'l!'i. Jl~l/mo. No pct11.I S1 %>/n1n. Clolil: lo llm;pltal. 6 214 Clll!e PA!rlr.13. column• In IM ClaasUled BM.lee (U.C.J. mu1lc your ad, tMTI Ill back &n(I
:..\7-MOO G•~ & \\'tr pd. A~2-$J.'l8l, Cll5a Contcn111 , 492·72,'f.l Section. bk111rnrtl ~478. ' llsten to~ p~ NICI
530
Socio! Clubs
·-.. ··---·--· ... -.
••
.I
'
-··
DAILY PILOT
·············································································••1~[-.--.~--~~.-----,~jrCl This variety of fine schools . -·-·~· ~ Schools and could introduce · you to a new tomorrow. ~•iling•
Fer furlh•r inform •tion r•g•rd ing the D•ily Pilot PAINT Act'OUSlical Ceiling¥,
Schools end Instruction Directory $10 ea or lradl'. 531-69:.'7, or 636-3110
CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325 Cement, Concrete
Instructions
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Block '\la.Us -Slde\\·alks-
Patios -Planters.
549-3173 MoJ'n or Eve.
Real Estate School
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
IN 4 WEEKS
Licensing Preparation for :
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers
' • Building Contractors
• Insurance
e Day & Evening Classes
California Department of Education
Approved-f\.·laster Charge and
BankAmericard Accepted.
For Information-Brochure-
FREE GUEST LECTURE
Phone 646-3229
ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF
NEWPORT BEACH
325 North Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach • 646-3229
Edmond F. Jackson
AIRLINE & TRA YEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
e Travel Agent
e Ticket Sales
• Reservations
e Air freight Cargo
e Operations Agent e Communications
Day and night classes
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Santa Ana 543-6596
610 East 17th Street
Accred ited :
National Association Trade & Technical
Schools
Approved for Veterans I
Eligible institution under the Federally in·
sured Student Loan Program I
14.im ~~~il
Enjoy Success in Life
through Modern Cosmetology
COLLEGE of BEAUTY
offers only the most advanced, updated
Courses and Techniques. Your skills
\Vil! be only as good as the training you
have been given.
New Classes Start Each Tuesday
Re9ister -NOW
646-2919
o,_.. l• P•bllc -T...-, Thn Sehrckry
H• App.ti•-..t Ntc-..y -W..t hM ly 5'"-'itl
I 89S Newport Blvd., Cost• Mew
2117 S. Bristol, $11nt11 An.I S40-0667
CALIFORNIA'S FINEST
PRESCHOOL CHILD • PRESCHOOL
DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAMS
• KINDERGARTEN
• AFTER SCHOOL
•WEEKENDS
"WE CARE MORE FOR · YOUR CHILD"
OPEN 6:30 TO 6:30 7 DAYS A WEEK
,;
' •
FOR INFORMATION
CALL (714) 5-40--4750
EARLY ACHIEVEMENT , CENTER • 2515 W. Sunflower Avenue i,.
Santa Ana, Callfomla 92704 . , .. ·~, ~-I }
NEWPORT -MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
140 E. 22nd ST., COSTA MESA
645-2323
6: 15 A.M. -5:30 P.M.
Kindergarten Readiness
Arts & Crafts
J\·Iu sic & Rhythn1
Physical Fitness
Phonics
Colors & Numbers
Educational Field Trips
Hot Lunches
Basic Bible Stories
TOTAL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
Anna's
Pre • School -2nd _ Grade
ANNOUNCES
Facililies for Enlarged Enrollment
Register Your Little Ones Now For:
Kindergarten & 1st Grade
e A Full
e Music
(fun) Learning Program
e Art
• Dancing
e Creative Activities
e Hot Lunches & Snacks
• Ages 2 through 1st grade
2110 Thurin Ave., Costa MIN Ph: 646-1444
SEW-KNITS
SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNI T FABRICS
.m nd LINGERIE
All Brands Stretch Patterns
Vogue & Butterick Pattern5
WE HAVE THE FINEST SELECTION
0' KNIT FABRICS ON THE ORANGE COAST.
2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD
COSTA MESA 540°3268
S-T-R-E-T-C-H
. & SEW (T.M.)
8
CLASSES
2 hr.
Lnsons
Morning -Afternoon
and Evening
Newport Air Anociales
Flile School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
lfh111t1ch19 AyeHollleJ
Compl•+• Coun• lncludei:
40 Hours flight t ime in Cessn• I SO's w ith
20 hrs. du.ml instruction, Club membership.
2 Month's free dues, lndividu.ml instruction,
t.milored t o YOUR ability.
10 OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE
11 LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
Learn to fly now - -iind hive fun I
* Fly Mexico & Canad• * Special Rates for Commercial or
lnstrum.,,t Students.
For Complete Details Call NOW
673-0313
• • • • • • • •
1•
1: • • • • • '• 1.
I:
• • • • • • • •
®
WHAT IS YOGA?
Vilality? P eace of Mind? Concentratio n?
Beauty? Success? Friendship?
Strength? A Good Night's Sleep?
\Viii Power? Youthfulness?
••• PARnY
SEE FOR YOURSELF WHY YOGA IS
SO GOOD FOR YOU
FREE CLASS
• Wednesday J\1orning At 10 A.M.
(Women Only)
• \Vednesday Night At 8 P.J\ol.
(Men & Women)
EIGHT WEEK CLASSES START e Thursday Night Al 7 P.M.
(l\1en & Women )
• Wednesday Morning At 10 A.M.
(Special Series For Wo1nen Only Jan. 20)
YOGA CENTER
44S E. 17th St., Cost• Mesa
646.8281
Do ).'ou Have 22 Friends?
We Have Special Group Classes.
WE WISH YOU YOGA!
Far 6 Weeks Course on the
HAMMOND ORGAN
You do not have to O\Vn an instrument.
Free prac tice time available. Register
' no\v. Beginners register Tuesday night,
Jan. 12, at 7 P.M. Teacher, LoRayne
Jav;ston.
Also classes for secondary & intermedi-
ate organ stud ents, register same time.
Sign up now & avoid the rush!
FUN ·ENTERTAINING · KNOWLEDGEABLE
Rent Organs
Available
During Term
of Course.
Register NOW! Inquire for details
Hammond Organ Studios
28S4 E. Coast
644·1fJD
Highway, Coron• def Mar
Op.,. Mo11chrr &: Frld"Y IYet.
I • I • I I I I I • • I • I • I •
COSTA MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
1797 Monrovia Avenue
(Corne r of 18th Street & Monrovia\
Costa Me~a
642-4050 or 838-5237
Open 6:30 AM 'tH 6,oo PM
$18 A WEEK -COMPARE!
Full & Half Oaf Sessions
Ages 2 to 6 Years
**Hot Lunches & Snacks
**Creative Activities
**Music, Stories, Spanish
CEi\.lENT \\'ORK, oo job too
sn1all. reasonable. Fr e r
Eslint. II. Stufiick, 5-18-8615.
ee CONCRETE, Floors,
patios. Any size job. Reas.
Call Dou &12-$51 •1. I
Child Care
TENDER Loving Cure !01·
you!" 3 yr old & up. Rea.,,
Nr Pomona Sehl . &12-1327.
Child Care My Home
Da:;/nitl' ~S.24}1
Contractor
'\'ALKIF\G DECK
C01\TINGS
Of all types. Lee Roofin1
Co., Ci\1. 642--7212 tor frcl'
l'St.
:0.1 \' \Va y, quality hon1e
repair. \\'alls. Cl'iling, floor~
e1 c:'. No job too sn1all.
5-13-149-1, 2·1 hr ans. io;eN.
ROOi>.1 Additions. L. T.
Construction. Single slory or
2. Estiin., plans & la~u\,
847-1511.
LIC'D · Contr. Remodeling,
add-ons, roofing, painting &
repairs_ 540-78:vt, 540-7664.
Remodeling * Add itions .
1
KARL E. KENDALL
Licensed-Bonded 5'18-1537
GEN'L CONTRACTOR I
Remodeling-Room Additions
l.ic'd /ins 645-0!111, 67.H809 I
Fencing
REDWOOD FENCE:£
Patios· Decking
64:;.{19!11 or 673· :
Gardening
AL'S GARDENING
for Gardening & small lancl.'
scaping services call 540.5198
Serving NeWpOrt, CdM, Cos.
ta ri·resa, Dover ShorP.s,
WesrcliU.
NE\V L<l1~·ns. rt'-S{'cd. Comp!
lawn care. Clean up by job
or n10. Fret' est. For inro
897-7·117 or 846-0932. * A-1 CLEANUPS
Srorm repair, n1inor lndscp,
lall'n J'('novaling, 7 Yrs In
area. 962-4914.
AL'S Landscaping. T r I! e
remo\·al. Yard remodeling.
Trash hauling, lot cleanup,
Repair sprinkleni 673-1166.
EUROPEAN LAN DSCAPER
Clean Up • TJ'!'C SUf'J;'Cry
Reasonable. Eve!I. 400.33&.1
* ResidenUal -Ap!s * * Commercial •
Complete Care 6·16-9835
GEN Cleanup, tree & sprnklr
.serv. Rototil. Handyman,
odd jobs. Reas. 6'16-58-18
• EXPER. Ha1111iian Gardener
• Cornple1eGardenin g
• Servic:'e. Kamalani, 646-4676.
EXPERT La\\•n care
• l\1aintenance only, Ca 1 /
• anytime. 536-67jl.
•Complete Yard Carel
• J[\! 5110-4837
• General Services •1~~~~~~~~-1
•RAI:'J Gut!l:rs l n s lall~d .
• Quality work. Hcasonable.
Free est. 96S-221)8. •l=============:::ol
•Hauling
• YARD, Garage rl('<inups,
• f)'('es dirt i\'y re11111\·at, ~kip
• loader. ba rkho(•, 9fi2 -f17-lj,
• TRASJ·I & Garagr clean.up.
dAy~. SJO a load. Frcr
• Anytime, 548-}(]31. •i===============I • Housecleaning
• HOUSE o~· CLF.AN
• Cotnp!ett' House Clean1 n1
• 612.682<1
• i\fcsa Cleaning S<>r\'ice
C<1l'p<>Cs. Windo1••s. Floors rtf'
•Res & Commc'l. 5 1S-41ll
•·Exper. lady 0"1'n transp. -B.r
• dayorhrly. '*'-
• ;).\8-711.0l
**Spiinish • Housecleaning
.. I I I • I • I I I I • I • I • I • .. HOUSEO.EANING ,
• 8JG.<l6<R I
By Day. °'''n Transportation
.___'""_..,_'""'__,l[g] lc.__....,_.,•_""""~lal lc.__to.•_..,_""""~lal ~I _'M_
1 ..,_'""'_,]a] ~I _'"'_'.,._'"""__,]a] I ....., .,. • ._ I ~ , .._ .,. • ._ J~ I s..a. '"" •-1~1-lro-:-nin_g ---
Ironing: $1.50 per hr,
SSS General SSS Lost Bring 0Y.'fl H&nger.1
Call 645-3092 • Found (frH ids) SSO Found (frH ads) -SSO Lost SSS Lost 1 -~~~~~~~~ Babysitting Ciirpenter
BLACK & tile bro\\'n male FOUND Black puppy fTOO REWARD for return er IRJSH SETTER Pu~IA8t! FEMALE, Border Collie!'.' Spec, &>N. for elderly tor LOTS or Laue. my home, CARPENTRY
pUp, Pt. German Shepherd. wlcha.in collar, Ca11 e t ef. lnfo leading 10 rclurn °1 Fem, 5\l mo, \\·hite 11tar U,vnble dl~pcsllion. White Any needs. Shopping, bank. ,6 days ·wk, hot lunches, lrg MINOR REPAmS. No J ob
IRONING WANTED
546.7462
Vic. Step & Go Market al f\ee Colonial Mete!. 1977 Whlle/ Apricot Toy Poodle, ""-N B REWARD chest & neck, Inn fa!'e roe. Ing or spec\ ommds, 536-2979 1~ d ~-h hi\ T i============I , feml, lost Chrb1bna1 eve Vic on Co•:&l. . , had pups, Phone ~14-1393 ,.._.., y • ......., r per c d. 00 Small Cab!Mt In gar. L nd •
6060 Coast Hwy, N. ll. Newpcrt Blvd, C.M. 16th &. Ora.ngt>, CM. Owner ='='"""'=~'=·~--~--'I or she 11·!11 be given a\\'ay. Rca11 fee11. Xln't ref'11, E. 22nd St.. ages & QI h e r cabinets. a scap1n9
1,;;MJ.-0362;;.c.""''-' ,.-=,-,=cc--,, !MATURE Gl't'y male eel very grieved. 646--9516. FEMALE Sillmese kitten, 3 I •••••••Ill-C.M. 548-1281. 545-8175 U no answer leave LANDSCAP ING :
FOUND Lad~ watch in v•earing black leather collar I "'""°'E""'=id"l"d"'l ,,_=,,ch~ mo'1 old, Tan .t: gn.y. ·v ie I' &.by1ltting BABYSl1'TING my home, 6 msg at &IG-2372. H. 0. pati<>s, rlecklng: lnclud\ng ..,
& fencing. Hubor ah0pp1na center w/bell To claim ca JI \\'HIT Go 8 es ,,.,.al · 62nd & ~anfrOnt, N.B. ~ mo to 4 """ old. Levin< A"""'°n n ..... 837_9'"!. puidng let Jan. 9. Owner · &lleved lost in ICT\I. sta· l ~ ~·-· ""
can claim by ca 111 n g 968-870l, 8 lo 12 a .m. tl<>n. (213l 949-5101 or ~"~>-0'11~~'~· ~~~~~~·I lmtruction ,....... Bahyslttina: my home. day or care, gd ref's, fncd yd, K· REJRE>MIDOOOEELLiiiNiCGi&&-RitoO...,;;;;;,l~;;:;;~~;;;;~====I
LONG Haired Ute tan cal f ,........ -. ,.._,1....... MALE Yorkshire Terrier vie ~-----~-M&rt area C.l\1 . &l3-1473. Speclol'·t. Comm'!, -Id'"· Maintenance 6*-3C2ti u~ .....,. ..... , CdM H' night. any age, lned yd, Hot uo ~~" ..
FOUND '111 female Iri!ti \l'/Oea. collar found vie-RE w AR o. Siiky TetTler. igh School, 3 IQ!. I .. •••••••-meals 646-3738 HIGH School girl wants lial. Paneling, cabin ets 1----------1
.,.__ -x 14 to 2-\ Atlantic .l Bushard. H.B. small black & .,...v, a1UWers Family grieving. Reward. 1 • Babysitting !rom n:ion UI marUle, formiea. 644-Ta98. • HUSBAND Busy' ~ ..,,
.-iitt a_... 968-3182 ., . ...., 644·M2S Schools & BABYSlTT'ER, all ages, 24 6Pl\.l daUy. 642-0022 '-
IDClft(hs, E. 17th St,, C.M. ' kl Pepe, Vk , Tustin Ave ===~-----·I instructions 575 blurs) \\'arm mew, big Ne"'-HghUt af'ea ALTERATIONS & repairs. l\.loose R~p;ilr-Build-Maint. &car Otl rl&ht t I an k . FEl\1ALE, part o.lmatian & Boy's aub. 548-1732 GERMAN Shepherd, female. ba k t ard &u.-lS92 "'1' -c='=='""'-""°--,· 1 Uc. & 1 .... __ .. _ l -mm. Most Anylhing 5-15-0820 lt'\'H .,. -w.,·---........ L---<· approx 8 mo, moctly 'lk, c >' • ' '-11 • -aABYSl1TING E & ·-~ '° ~ -blk "v-1 ·-0-,• • ~~ .. ,~~~~ LOSl' Slame11e Kiilen. Nr: ''Cindy.'· Vk : Jta SJ6.-182.i ves Door hanging _ dl")'\\·aU YOUNG lmlale Siamelll! cat . c. na .-vi ... ~ Balboa Blvd & G St. PIANO LESSONS NOW'S THE wkn<h. My home. 6r.:>-1283 Paneling. &f2..58i2. ·Masonry
found vk 18th St. I: BROWN framed eyegluaes. Reward Call: 675--1276. REWARD FOR RETURN er Bt'glMer~ int,,rmcd latc11. TIME FOR dayii, Eves. 54&4tl7. -I ==========1:=:::-"'.".---~--1
Raymond, C.M. Ca1J before Vk Balboa Penn Pk . BLACK & gre:y cocke.r, blind, Sharp Portable Cok>r TV, Learn theory. sight reading QUICK CASH EX'PER. Chlld ca~. >Lln't BRfCK, block, ", ''' t•. g ...-io 673-3180 k f Parlcer ser No. 03178. 673-7142 tc Call Brue <UC 1 ref's my home Ar\) Ciirpet S. le pm, · aJ or · + 105t vie OrchAl'd Or, Santa ~=~~-~~...,-· 1 e · e · · · mus. • · age. rv e carpentry, ll(rusc ]e\'el!n1:,
1WND ID eo11ep p&J'\ a.tt• Fem&le S1amtlll! ltlnen found AM Hgls. 546-9078. BLACK LAbrador Re t r ., le bkgrndl 5·16 .. 478. Me~ THROUGH A Call 673-9003, CdM area. r---------·I all lype s rrnvidrllns:. No
Black and wbt cit with vie ol 18th & Newport. Call STRAYED: Yellow femaJe female. Please cl\JI Verde. Ciirpenter Diamond Carpet Ocaning JOh too small. Lie, Conti·.
nd ccUar 1xllt tralnM. U te klenlify. 6'2-4TI.1. l.tlb., E....f!ide CM. "Loba". 962-2!Xl ''P"'t"A"'N"'o-,.1..,-,-.,-.,.-Y-,-,....,ho-me DAILY PILOT New Year Special! !'162--69.Jj, ._.,_aft 11 AM. SAT N1te 11t So. Cca:.91 Plat.a, Lie No. 41770. 548-5643. RE\''A.RD Lo&! Fem Golden certified lt>achers. '-fu~ic WANT AD Add!Uon11 * Remodeling Free Minor Repahing BRICK & 81.0CJ.: WOR K
DIE 1U1f Nl.'VDl IEl'S on pup, looks pl huiilde:. Well For &11 ad to sell around ~triever. Vic: Brls!ol & Sy~lf'mt1. M.r. llathcock, 642•5678 Gerwick & Son Lie \Vllh Oeaning 400' $20. ;\lASONRY OF' ALL TVP•'.S
PDot 0..lfted mA.Ml'n-d , 673-8939. th~ dock. dial 64J..$11. Baker. 546-0010 646-l368 • __________ ,673-61Ml • ' f>.1~<1170 Free est, 64:.-1317 F()I' e!tlmate, 5.11·2lru
est.
"""' Chuc
PRO.P
ct'ilin
Inter
~11-69:
VoUs
$10 pe
P)(p. ,, .. ,
~
Apts
.wrvi ,....,,
PAINT
tred .,...
Call
PA1NT
in 1-1
"'""' PAINT
rxper.
Accou
!NT/E
rst.
646--02
3 • Steve
INTER
Lic'd,
be un *p
& PA
Plaste
• PA
All ty
Sewi
• Dres
c
Alter
Neal, a
Tile
* V• Cust,
No jo
pal chi
repair .
CER
est,
53&-1"2
Tree
TREES
"''· 642-40
Tutori
TEENA
co u n.
tr e r1
j.IZ-S~l
& 7:30
TEACH
kH .
~92-:iO
•
,...,,.,
,Wi%81"d
!NG
• Sign
l'Tbi1
' . .... • .. --. -........... . -
DAILY PILOT ~-_____ .-;m .... iiiiiiiiiiiiili
_ ... _ ~,I~ _-_-~ILill ! ~........ ILill [ ._ ....
~----~
ILfIJ ._I _ ....... _ ..... _,J LfIJ l ___ ...... .-_,JLfIJI ___ ............ _. __,J~ __ I _ .......... _. _,J~ ---
•lntlnt & Job W•ni.d, F•m•I• 101 Holp W•nlod, MI F 71 0 Holp Wan!M, MI F 710 Halp Wanlod, M & F 710 H•lp W•nlod, MI F 71 0 M lscella_,.1
p. perh•nglnt 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Ill
1--~--~~----AIDES-ror convalesce~. • SERVICE Estt.b'd, Fuller
PROt"'ESSJONAL Palntlna:. elderly Cl.ft or family ca.re. COOK • Ottk, 75' ~•Chi . I Rectptlonf1 t/P8X Brush rtr., S~Sl75 v.·k tQ
Exter. 1 •I.Ory, low at UOO l{o1nemllken, ~T-1. P.r rm an en I job--Mt:iucan
1
Cord board. Typ\fll ~. Nol If., alAO pt. time 546-5745,
w/gd palnr. AVi rm . Sl!. trip . Feb-May. State f'x-a hvy bot.rd or preullre sil-I START JO&
Acrota. ceillnaa aprayed 2-H•lp Want.cf, M & F 710 Pf' r 1 f' n c" -•a I a r Y rf'.. uatlon. coats 115. Roy, 347-l:W: quirement. Write, cla.ssUled 'MISS EXEC AGENCY Typing 40 \\'.p,~. shOn_ work
$1100 ACCOUNTING ad No. 10, Dally Pilot. P. I 410 w. Co&st Hw NB <'xv. Ca li l..ora.Jne, &l;>-Z770,
No Wasting SUPERVISOR O. 8o:c 15«1. Cos!a Mesa , Me-3S39 Y. Wertcl!fl PersoMeJ Alf'!nCy, * WALLPAPER * F' p l Calif 9l626 2CH3 \\leslcl!lf Dr., N.B.
When )'OU caJJ. "Mac" ee ad by Co, Local. Dt--1•••. --·-----• ! #l 646-lm gree Ace ti ng. Promotable 1· 'ROUTE SaleJ-Sl.30 wk to st. * SUPERVISOR. 11 -7 : 3 0
CO~IPLETE Dnpery "'"Ork
room equipment ftir 1&ll',
heavy-duty sewlnc
machine1, ntavy wooden
tables, llutomatic tablrr
(meuutts draperle1 It ap-
pJ\eS butkrooml. Oddi &:
end....U must go at once!
2%7 Randolph CM ~.
*AUCTION* 548-l man. Call Ann 645.mo, Con•tructlon , rmnNE PERSO I Take ov estab Fuller Brush a.m. relief shift, wk ends.
rNT/Exter painting_ Frte Wes!chll Pertnn~el Agency, A/P Clark $550 11";.V I NNEL rte in Laguna. Xlnt pt time P11.rk Lido Oonvalesctnt Fine Furniture
est. Local ref',;_ Llc'd I< ins. We•lcllft Dr, NB, (allO • I SER\J1CES•AGENCY wk also avail 542--1513. Cen1rr 642-8044 & Appllancca
Accoustical CeUlnas. C&ll fee jobs!. Girl Friday $400 . S AL.E'SWOMEN , f.x-** WAITRESS-Muat have Auctions Friday, 1:00 ri.m.
Chuc k, 645-0809. ACCOUNTING CLERk For Privale Club 488 I::, 171h (at Jrv1ne; C.M, pl"rienced, retail food stON'. locaJ rererencea. 1-"llll or Windy's Auction Barn
PRO.PAINTING. Accoustic i,s If' pair! b Co Good r.1 th N•wport '42-1470 J Also need woman cook. ex-p11n. cirnc. Apply in person 20751,1 Newpo11, CM 646.8686
Cf'il1ngs SID completP, A~M>. eaii" Lorain: 645.n70 w:11~ Par •onMI Ag•ncy J'>"rienef'd, for preparation onl y, 5930 \V . Coast Hwy, Behind Tony'B Bldg. r.1arL
tn!l.'r (lt extl"t'1' S!IO + pain!. I'll p • 1 A · 2CM3 133 Oovar Dr., N. B. LOOKING !or more !han just (J! foods & counter work. ~N~-~·~· ;Su~'~l~&'.."_S"~lo~io~---~1 HOYERCiic;!ri.i;-;i«f.ru:im 531~ or 636-3110 ~V~atcl~:-rs~~ N.J."~Zso Je 642-3170 another job ? J oin I.he ''New Give detail& & ba tkground. \\'AITRESS. lull time. Ca!! H~~r:~~:t~~ingp~~c/~~a.'.
YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT . '-) • ' BeautiruJ ldtBs" Div. of Transporation neCt"ssary. rnr appl, 613-4ll0. The l"~ GENERAL <'OQDS 11 l · ? Bohn contl'Xt calculator. Pal. $10 per rm, patnlerl. Yn · COUPLE to maraar JG-unit r • · t' P C.r.t area. WrLI" Box ?11-.5, Galley Cafe, 829 Bayside
f'Xp . ~~ree l'SI. 557-8638, ACCOUNTING Cll'rk • Req: apt. house for ff'l'e apt. others to enhance I.heir Daily Pilot, 330 W, Bay, Dr. N.B. omar microscope. RCA ~•6-7046. 115 grad, !Ome colleg" help-Muat be able ta do garden-P"f'SOnai beauty while en. C.M. ====--~-~~ B/\V TV & l\fisc pov•er tools. '~~===--,,---.,--,'"7-...-,·I t · · r· bl b · -c==--------\\'AITRESS. exp'd. Apply Goi· Q ,. M" 1 •·11• ,, u!. 001 nee . Typing 50 wpm, ing & minor repairs . Write ,t0y1ng a pro 1ta e us1ness . ..;5., "S ne v ··st'U .. s ,,.,.. · PAINTING : Con\m'I & resid. ..,., •1~ k N = 2052 Newpo"I, C.M. Brunch Da o•o ~,, aC{'\ir&tl'ly, l{) adding mach., vtper. to Box M-2087 The _. ~ w up. 0 vtp nee. STOP!!! II•"••. '~=''~'~' ~~~·-,~~-"""'=-co.---Apls our specialty. l day N d 1 doo 842-2664 u .,._ 1 · servir.e. Free est. Rel'.11. by touch. 'Villlngness lo Daily Pilot, 330 W . .Bay, o oor 0 r. LARGE color TV $1?5 : Blue
968-l330 or 64;...1845 learn. Good opportunity \.\'ith Cosla Mesa. e LEGAL SECRETARY LOOKING & ACT YOUl"G \\'OmBJ"I, part time . ~Ivel tuxedo mfa $150; 1--==~~----·I growing firm. Cali for inter-C t d• I H I Some exper. desired 1 \Vilt tra in. ARPHY 'S COF-Kin&" size headboard $50;
PAINTING : Honm:;t, guaran-vie11.•. 492-1153 Mn:. Gonza.lcr US 0 IG e per N.B. * llh3672 Sales minded Pf'l'SOn, liee ar FEE SHOP 3021B, Harbor Frost-frtt relriaer&.lor S125.
tred ~~Tioic~. ~al reJ's. A RESUME puts your ap-..... _ V . . MARINE Engine Installer ~~~~:~.a ;l~~l ~~=: ~:' ICl.IMI......... 686 Center St., Apt C, C.!\I.
Call,,,_,., f •· plicallon on TOP! We cam-vt.~an lf'W School ~istrtct wanted. Experie nced right man, Earnings C'Om· 642-428D
PAINTIN G/papering, 18 yrs pose & print 100 copits -'2·31 per hr .• pa:t time ~ 2 only/apply LUtfR'S BOAT meoce immediately should 1~ r.fOVING Sale: \Vestinghst!
rn Harbor arf'a. Ltc & only $15. Ca.II ~ for hrs: each At\1. Lite cleaning CO. 1181 Placentia, C.M. be in excf'ss of $2JO. per wk , , __ M_M_'"_'_"'_''_' _ _, ~ 22 refrig. $300. Dine!le set bonded . Ref's !urn. 642.-2356. appointmenl. dutie-g at elemf'ntary school. MECHANIC, Full •time. Xlo! N . 1 .. 1. . SlOO, bdrm set S125, lounge
G-E I Wor-k exper In cleaning-rle. r. canvassing or so !cl ing. chr $25, davenport $25, PAINTIN xi-nt. 18 yn. ARTWORK Designers want-. ....,, A 1.-1 .. _ wages & benel!ts J(lr right Interviews by appointmf'nt
I L• ". 1 • llh<;U, pp 1cat ons must ,,.. R. hr· Id .,n chandelier S25, filing cab I exper. ns . le. r 1 ec. cs · r.cl !or freel11nce products & 1.1 •• p C Of man. le 1e , ...... th. &. only 9-3 weekdays. 835-2771 , , '' Ceiling 968 9126 1 "'' ersonncJ omm. c., N CM A · BOO .$25, crptng & rugs. Misc. 11ccau . s. -. new . Idea& of professional 1972 Warner H.B b 1/21 . ewport, . . SALESMAN \\'an!t-d. Exp. nt1qu•s 644-0016 "'
[NT/Exler Painting. Free quality: suitable lor Greet-' · y MEDICAL Assistanr, back pref'rl. Must he ~elf-AT T ENTTON Decorators: r~!. Rcl's. Tmmf'd. &!rvice. ing Card· Ceramic & Gilt· * DEJ\'TAL * office, for busy G.P. Must .·t••le•. •, • '''anrial. ' Secre'" ... '/R.,,eptionisl ·' °" • ... ' ... Loui~ Phillipe canape (sofa) &lf.Hl210. 6A2-3014. war!.' Dt'pts: to be manufac. ""J a46-S6l3 know EKG , X·ray, draw Carpets, tile, d r aperies. gold rlamask, a !teal. $1250.
3 BR. EXT. $125. lured in Japan. \\'ill pur-RE blood, give injections. Sal-Comm. only, highest in 646-8576. ~ BR. EXT. S140. chase outrigh• or royalty DENTAL ASSISTANT · · ary open. r.1ission Viejo field. NO pmne calls. Hrs I ==========
S!'ve 548-45-19 basis. 496-1881 or Daily Pilot CEPI'fONJST. Exp'd., ma-area. Call 8.11-75211 l0am·5pm. 209 No. 1 Ocean I" H B h " 9235 Appl ianc•s INTER/Exler. Specialists Box M-50. ture. unt. c . 8 . . . MEDICAL OFFICE Ave. Laguna Beach. 802
Lic'd, bonded. Ins. Won'l A11•mbly Trainus DEN_TAL ASST., chatrside. Need 2; Front Ofc, exp, gd SALES CLERK-Stationery.
be underbid~ 548-1674. 5 Immed. openings !or girls exp d. only. Undr 3 0 • . 40 hr wk, 5 days a wk.
PAPERHANGING w/gOOd eyesight & finger 9am-~2. Mon, Tues, Thurs typl!I. ~ck Ole, exp. know. incl Sat. Apply in person. * & F'ri exceyt Summer. Hun-lf'dge in all p~u~s. do not call Costa Mesa
& PAINTING, * 96R-2425 ~;x:~?·i:l~~Y~urTY, call tingtan Harbor. 846-0611. \\'rite. Classiflf'd ad •15, Stati ners zio E l1th St
GE Elec dryer $40, Kenmore
elec dryer $40. Westinghouse
elec dryer $30. All xlnt cond,
gu.11.r. & df'JiV. 847-8115,
546-8612. ORANGE COAST DRIVER -KENNELr.tAN Daily Pilot, P.O._ Box l560, I Cost: t.fesa . . .
Plaster, Patch, Ropalr Costa Meu Caltr 92626 w E o GE woo D w h · E~fPL0Yl\1ENT AGENCY Penn. position. Good oppty. • · ' SALES W OM EN, ex-I t e
* PATCH PLASTERING 124 Broad1vay C.M. 64~3111 for right mature man. Must NEW OR EXPERIENCED I perienced, career minded to apartment-size stove. good
All types. Free estimates ,. ' have goorl driving record. SALES1\1EN. LA R W JN \\'Ork into asst. mgr of fine condition S50 54&-2995 alter
Call 54G-6825 ASSISTANT. house . mother Apply at 20612 Laguna Can-COMPANY Resale Division ladies clothing chain. Please 6 pm.
"===========I for women 1 alcohohc rehab yon Rd. Lagun11.. · needs sevf'ra! genere.1 real a pp! y in person REFRIGERATORS \V/LG II· home. Som" knowledge 2, Plumbing alcoholism. Room. board, ELDERLY woman needed as estare agents. New office BACKSTREET No. .., FREEZERS. S3;)...$4;)...$j5.
l l----~------l 181ary. 5-day week. WrHe babystr Mostly dya, poss opening in Huntington Fashion Island, N.B. ** fi.1&-1820 **
PLUMBING REPAffi 2790 Harbor Blvd., Suite 301, niles CdJ\1 Mea 615-S553 Beach approx Feb. fst. * SALES CLERKS RCA Whirlpool dishwasher.
No job too small C t M 92626 I Listing learls, ma Jo r Like new/white portable. 11===~·~64~2-~31~28~·~==1~~0~'~'::y,-"o;:'";r:;;f{1"~J~I Expeir Mttdlca R•c•pt medical insurance paid by SlOO or bf'fit. 645-0765 1I AUTO POL JS HJ NG &. for busy G.P. 's oliice, good com pany, incentive contests Full and part time
DETAIL positions. Exp'd typist. 646-3903 and bonug plan. Get in on -APPLY-30" 4 burner gas 1;tove, good Roofing
DESK and dralting table
c ombi nat io n , locking
dra\.\·ers on both sides. Ad-
justabif' tilt top. All metal,
good condition with adj.
chair $85. 549-0530
SACRIFICE Tv."O Goodyear
Polyglass G 10 x 14 wide
ovals. l\1ounted on new
chrome reverse r ims. Only
300 miles v! wf'ar. Excellent
condition~ Must sell, no""'
only $86, 89J.-6460.
\\'ROUGHT Iron & 1\'ood
dinette set i 100. Schick floor
n1odel hairdryer .$15. 2 Jge
n1ilk c&.ns $10 ea. Some an-
tiques&: col lf'ctable&.
642-9929 aft 4,
BICYCLES
3 & 5 Speed Stingray Type
2-i & 26" Boys &: Girl!.
Also. have 10 spd.
642·9867 engine cleaning & paint-but-Exp ERIE NC ED MTST the ground fi001" and grow The Tobacconist Inc. c:ondil1011. $17.
LEE ROOFING CO; Roofing fing. Salary open. Growth operator for part time with us. Call Larwin Realty. Huntington Center. H.B. ~=*=C~o~ll~64~2-<15Jll=, =~*== GOLD Wool rug, 12x19' $200.
of a.11 l'yPf"S, re cover. en. METRO CAR WASH night'! near Airport. Call Inc. 962-6988 ar 827·2221. SARAH Coventry Inc., full -Selmer trumpet. K.mod!fled,
L 29~ H bo Blvd c M Furniture 810 248 n so. Wet suit, 150 lb9, repairs. roof coatings. le "" ar r · · · ~7-9900 bf'tween 1 & 3. confidencf' kept. or pt-time help nreded, no
1 5'4", S20, r.tetroname $5.
& bonded sln<:i! 19 4 . BABYSTTIER-Litc h s e k p . FLOOR WAXER lS-25 Men wan!cd. full & part investmf'nl. ~1-6483. Custom Draftairles 613-0740.
S,0'""' Good• Dll.,_~_.... _____ 114_1
SURFllOARDS
6'10·· "Crttk" low railer.
clean ahaJ)l', $60. 1'0"
"G~ek" pintail $25. 64+1.742
M'CHANS, AKC, Femal9 6
male. Wbt w/blk mull, Top
blood line Qwmp •tock.
Goad w/dilldiu, Jbbtkn-
~165&.
TV, Radio, HIFI,
St•r"
GREAT Dane puppil-s A.KC.
836 1l weeks old 1 fawn l
---------brindle, both ·female. Ew. LARGE portable "Silvercane" only 54&3708 after 6:00 pm.
stereo t'l'COrd player. 4 spttd
turntable, re mole speakl'1'1. MUST SAC. Ault SbeJt pops,
Ju1t recond!tionC'd, Idea.I Re&". Blue Mt'rltt, abots.
gift. $40.00 or best ofter. Al-Come stt I: make oft'.
so a Muntz. 4 tnick stereo 64.2--MOO, 1-6 pm. 64+-IHO
tape player. 4 sets output SMALL Black toy poodle
terminals including s!ereu puppiea. 1 male, 1 female.
phone jack _ includ<'s as-646-0142 or ~1022 ll3 E.
."Wried tapes. $30. Phone cl~1~lh:..::Sl~.cCM=·~-~~-.
642·7491 between 8 am and 4 Silky puppie1, l fem1Li1:
3 pm. ~lalte&e, 11 mos. Go1"ieollS
TV REPAIR SERVICE 1 646--0142 o' M>-1"2 333 E .
RCA Zenith f.1otorola Ad. 11th St., C.M. mlr~I fipec1~.llsl3. 21 "
0
color e DALMATIANS
picture tube S79.95 i.!Stallet:. AKC e
Antenna1 Installed. Radio '** 642-1931 **
Dis patrhed trucks. 1 bour e BOXER PUPS AKC e
service. Call 636-431.:. 6 Wks old. Pvt Pty:
CURTIS-r.tATHES TV-Stt>reo $42-4212 or 962-2331
combin., cherrywood Fr. 2 COCKAPOO Pupplea for·
Pro v. $100. 833-2722 Aft 6 sale $5. each· i
Pl\·! * 54S.-2TI6 * ;
21 " COLOR TV i 150 • SHERRY'S POODLES *I 17" Portable TV S25, Yr end puppy sale, rroom-. *. 548-6529 • * . ing. Free pk-up. 546-2M8. '
AKC BLK MINIA'ruRE I
POODLES, 3 MO'S OLD
NEED Gd home for lovable S75 '* 613-0139'
male poodle and wire hair IRISH SETTER.. puppie1.;
terrier m!x-, good com· AKC reg. Champion blood{'
panion, 539--8466; 539-1181 lines. Ca.LI 846-3994. ,
,,,.-,o--.,,-.,.-,c-;,..,-1-,;il,-2; 1e !RISH SEITER Pups, AKC~
FREE TO YOU
41.; J\Io.. French Poodle/ Re&. Champion Llneaa:ti. I
Dachshund, blk & **892-0258**
beige, "Prince," Vrry good ST BERNARD Puppies, AKC•J
health, acUve, 64&-3763, 2l3 Reg. $150.
Costa l\1esa St., C.~t. l/t4 * Call: 962-7537 + !
NEED home for 1~ yr old '* SCHNAUZER pups. Male:
Cock-a-Poo female puppy G •-· at stud. ,,r;:''f!'I,,::...,.· I w/9 mo old pup. Ha.a ghots ~
& license. 362 E. 20th, c.r.t. ···I 1114 Llva1tock -PRISSY needs a home, lo\'e
• Box sta.11 n a day •
Orange Co. Fatrxroundl
• 532-l374 .
.___-_ ... _~_ .... _..,,Jl\f I
& affe ction, Beaut Bluepoint
Sian1ese cat, female, 6 mo.
o!d. Loves kids & other
animals. 833-10'l9 1/14
BEAUTIFUL Sllkie blond pt
poodle and porn. male sm.
breed needs loving home,
loves child. 539-71&1:
548--0813 l/U
YNG Adlt klt!eng, 5 mo-2
yrs, some neutered. some Gan•r•I 900
non-neutered, some long ~t-Os~me short. ~7i2 FREE
&12-7222, Own tran~. 5-day wk. No. time. $1200 for 12 wks work. SEAJ\ISTRESS F'or part lime r-BEFORE Yau buy, call T. Cl\! Day3 631-7952; Afl 6. E.xper only. 546.5388 appl. 2131 4J8..99U. v.·ork in Huntingt on Bf'ach. Decorator drapery workroom 10 Spd blcycl" $40-$j() r.tis c FREE "Cindy" need1 a good Ba.sic Boatlnr Coune: ott-
G Roof. c R 54frl716 FULL Or pt time no exp ~=====-==~ o•o ,221 closing OUl 2500 yards of 1-3 spcis. Gd cond. Reas. homt and family. Beautiful ered lo the public by tho uy ing o. e~ver · -•. . OPERS·SINGLE NEEDLE 0-.o-t • spec i a J 1st , 6 4 5-2780. BABYSllTER, Mon.Fri, 8 to necf'saary, ~" tni1n, grea! * SEAMSTRESS * draPf'ry fabric and made.up Heavy h a nd truck S25. collie color. sheltie and long Balboa Power Squadron.
548--959(). C. Jt housework. children opp or~ u n 1 t y. Kos c o t Spec. mach. Exp'd only, draperies. Materials trom &12-1272 hair G. Shep/mix. 1 mo Sail as well a,s powl'r
EASTERN' Q l't -W 1 aged 1 & 4 C94-l381 Jnerplan1tary Joe. 54S-9S40; sportgwrar, id. pay. N.B. Full time or part 1ime. Goorl 75c a yard and drape.ries lL~G=.-=a=RA"'"'m=E=o---71-.-u~gc l lemllle. 833-1029 1/12 boating taught. Startlnl
. ua 1 Y Roo"fiern · 646--2919. 642-3472. pay. Call CLO\VN CLEA.~-ll'om $5 pa ir. 3&53 Birch St.. (d<oll<dl, •"".Va nity bench 4 MONTHS old part Cocker. 7 pm Mon. Jan. 18. Every Pnce!~ All IYP"s ng. Bab,.itter!Hskpr, live in,•--~~~=~~~-ERS, ~113 after 2 PM. N e h °'61431 d. -1 · •-Lyle, 673-7980. childrf'n 5 "1. Some Eng'-GIRL FRIDAY ORDERLIES-Days. ti. lime. ==~=~---oe7.-I cwport cac ""· a J w/pad S3.50. 642--05.58. terrier. father had "coyote ~ondayn1teforl3weel\:J.
S•wing/ Alt•ratlon1
pref'd Ref's 893-7S9Z Part tim" hf'lp needed to as-Exp pt'l'l'd but will train. SEC'Y, Pt-time, nr Balboa I ,,''=O="'~""='=C~•~"-"~"~AU-po~~'~"~ ll N-E~W-M-.,....--1-,-.~1,-m-o-od~,~1-n<-I bloorl.'. Small, cutey a.n&, At Newport Harbor Yacht
iist act. rltr. na exp. nee. Penmnnel Dept Hoeg Hoqi Isle, 12 hrs "''erk. $2/hr EVERYTHING . Goes. Sale, &: wedding band. Must Sac-to "Peaches" 84&-1680 1/12 Oub, 72.0 W. Bay Ave .• 1---~-------1Ban~ng e Dressmaking -AltenlloM * COMMERCIAL
Special On Hems TELLER
Cal Jo * 646-6446
Alt•r ation• -'42-5845
Neat, accurate, 20 years exp,
Exp'di Apply i n person
Nawport National
Bank
Apply in person only. Jeann" N.B . start. Typing, fillni:, radio pv1 i>arly. All !urn, etc, % Price. 545-3689, 544-9384. BEAUTIFUL loving German Ne~~ :each. _1B~~
Edwards. Wed 13th 11 AJ\f . Privet• Sacr•tary 1cript revise wr iting . CHEAP 19922 Potomac Ln, ,,., ... She~ronie mix, 8 mo's noe penci rs
67, =, 1 ASH Blonde, natun.I • ~ nite An que1tio~· call .2 PM Greenbrook Rec Club To Prasid•nt -""""""· 1.B. nr Adam! & Bushard, wii, $20. frmale. Need~ 1 o v l n g S73-is55. Y '"'
Magnolia btwn Ellis & Tal. Ver')' confidential, Mu~t be 1-SE_CR __ ET_AR_Y_>_-,-,-,-m-,,.-,-,,-1 Glenm11.r tract. Anytime Call 645--0955 ~o~h~ild~":;';;"~-~-~~35~1~2-~~1/~1;4 /----;;;i;;;;:-,;;;;;;;;----/
bert, FV. incelligent, young, attractive management divi1ion of ~h~lw;";:.::N~O~W:,!&~S~"~""~'~Y-c..._7 1 ========== SAMOYED Huaky male 11 FREE
GIRLS, be your own boss. woman able to travel. Fu. established real estate com -SOFA and matching loveM"a! Muilcal lnitrum•nts 822 mos. To tamlly w/lg yard.
Superior & Placentia, N.B. Sell quality brand name lure unl!ml!ed for right per-pany . Typing, shorthanfl, i10 for both. F1oral print Older chUdtt"n, experirnce
Til• BEAUTY Adv I so r kl cosmetics. Highest rom· sen. Former secretary pro--llte bookkeeping. & abUlty malt-ri11.I, iood condition 1-----------1 w/lg dogs. 67;)...1518 1/12
11-------. ----1 demoMtrafe exciting new mission. Work your own moted to executive position. to work with publ ic re· fi44--ll 40. 120 BASS Brilllllllfe RC-BEAUTIFt.n. Coille AKC reg.
*Verne, The Tile Man .* producbi. No door to door. hours. No door to door. Written resume & any hf'ip-quired. $500 + bencf!I!. l1V1N niattrcs.~ & box rordlon w/case. Very iood i5te~d. Ff'l'e to good home
Huntinften Beach Power
Squadron's ba1ic boating
course for Wl or power.
Cust. work. Install & repairs. Selling required new cam-54S..3T;i(). ful !!Creenlng information to Send resume & !alary re-!lprings $15. \Vhite French cond, $115. SCS-3.576 before with lge ,~•d & ,hild""n. No i·ob too sml Plaster ' J-... Daises start: Monday, Jan-. pany-ll'ls grow togethu. A.T.1., P.O. Box 186S, Costa quln!mentK to Box t-1-27. Provincial double canopy noon 492-3Zl2 1114 ps!ching. Leaklna: 11nawer C&.ll 841~24 . e GIRL FRIDAY e f.t Ca 92626 Daily Pilot, 330 Vi. Bay, hed S2S S44-5S87 ua:ry 11th repair. 841-19571846-0206. 0 T C RP~~ERS Desire re«ponsib!e, expcr-esa, · · · FOR Sale, Sacrltlce! New BEAUTIFUL Youna adult Tiffit-: 7:00 P.M.
B A A "'" • , BOme . d { 25-4") PART Or full Ume ambitious CM . END TABLES, one oc-buUet tenor AX with new fl-male cat, silky halred At: HunUncton Beach Hla:h CERAMIC Tilf' work. F'rf'e l'XJI. Apply: LUHR'S BOAT ~nee . l~mai;.f a~e ty .;-, · people. Let us! Sbow you 111.gonal maple $12, one cue. $400. Ca.LI Mf-8359 or ~2-l~o job too &mall . CO 1181 PIA~ntia, C.M. 60n~~ ~~~~~e~." v..'::~~ 21'0,•·,,~~39make mo n e Y S:::6~~'T s:;:;~~~ o~~: ~':-~~. Provincial S 15, ~LASSIC GIBSON ~~';°30: fluffy iilver-~~ F~~~fo:'a~o~ielephone:
11===========IFULL charge bookkeeper, ex-duties, beautiful new oHlccs I "" · Apply in person, 4618 Cam-Fret Pupp~ Crms Poddle, 53&-4138.
periencl.' in payroll reports , Newport Center. c a 11 PERM. Part time (J\f.W.Fl, pu!i Dr., Ne1••pt Sch. * CUSTOM FURNITURE GUITAR W/CASE S75 Terrier &: Cockf'r. 9 wkll. 1 1~,-~IT~~C-,..,-cl<~.,~ .... --.-~h~l-
acrl reconciliation, journaJs 644-1801 '''· l)'P'"• wlU~•-abil. t f ht RENTAL. See ad class • 673-217~ • 864 Sonora. Rd, Mesa Del powered, small block, Chev
B . ..~... SHEET l\lr:la I\ a c n e 4000. Call 548-3481 / ========== TREES. lledgf's, Top, Trim, & t'IC. A~k for ~rs. rant, GIRL Fri. wanted tor l>·p;og. lte SH, diet roach. Exp'd, .-......rator. ~1ust h ll v e l ;;-;o===.-,.-,-.,~--t.iar. Biter 4:30 1/14 V-8 inboard w/traller. SH
d h t d I J h • So" Lmroln Mer "'"" BE•UTIFUL h ., ., Offic• Furnftur•/ cut. rem(lve . au e · n~. 0 nson · SWINGING OFFICE MUST sAIBry open . Boll' r.1-Z0811 The pttss-brakr f'Xp . Apl)ly in " c est . .,...rawer 'IWO short haif'l'd Persians at 32852 Calle San l'tlarco!, llC64:.C:.2-4ll.::C30C-'B~i=•-'~"-"-"----I cury. 2626 Harbor Blvd .. BE YOUNG &. attract. P. I Daily Pilot , 330 \\'. Bay, pers. 849 \V. 16th sr. N.B. Fttnch Provincial, Antique Equip. 824 _ frmail!I 9 mo old. Lovable San Juan C8pl1ln.no or call
Costa Mesa. 54().5630. o. B:>x 143 San Clemente. Costa ?ties•. wh flc. $100. 673-3312 a nd we 11 tr a In e d , 493-4TI6 or 493-4166 $425
Tutoring B001'"KEEPER thru TB.* GIRL WANTED * I REAL ESTATE SALES s~:p~~~~tt~~1calA~t=;t~;~: 1 'u=PH=o~LST=E~R~E=o-,c~H"""'A~l~R"°". Refin'd 34x60 wood desks, 54~910. 1112 1 ==========~1
TEENAGE tu Io r i ng &: needed immed. TY PI n g to V.'Ork small unit collection I Join a goin1t organiration & Days. FOUNTAIN VALLEY bl uf'. low barrel shape $20. $69.50 • Re!ln'd wood a.rm LONES0l\1E Geora:e Is my Bo•tt/Marlne
c nu nselin1t. Experienced , req 'd. Perm, ~ day v.·k, rle9k. Exp, not nee. but .o;tart the new year right! TEXACO, Brookhurst &. 641-1140. rolary chain, S29.:SO • We name & find ing a loving Equip. 904
r r I'! rl c n t i 11. l f' d rea~l'r 11.a !11.ry open. Exp. nee. help!ul. r.fust ~ able to Bonus comml55!on p I&. n Garfield 8' Couch S25: Bed divan $35; have the lar&est selection owner is m~ game. How 542-S~lt. Csll bf'lwn 6:30 642-3432 N.B. convrnr with people. lte . I Only 2 openings. Call for in: .. J\fAKE. Room For D11.d-l!R~Y cbatr SS. 1675 Tustin of used office furn ln !hill about you~ 646-8226 1/12 INBOARD 1to1 velvet drive
& 7:30 CATALOGUER/INDEXER typing & !Ui ng. $1.85. hr. tervlc\\', Bud Corbin -Paul dy' · ... c l ean out the Ave, C.:'11, &l;)...1703 area. FREE to qua! home silky Irani. 2•23 aaJ gu tankl.
TEACH liquid pa ln!ing. Frtt For technical rf'ports & to start.. Contact Mr. Gibbs, Martin. garage .. ~·our tr11.sh is CASH l·A'°'N~T~l~QoiU~E~.-.v•;~,~1~0~,~.~,ccn Mc Mahan Desk type, very sm11.ll doa:. encl ~~c~~m;:':;. 0w~";1:~:~~
kit. l...11ura 531-9978. Al!Ct' englneerini drawings. Will 642-7960 C.l\1. CORBIN-MARTIN with a Daily Pilot Clas!l!!ed love~l'rt1, S\J(). Blu,.. Chcr11lc l8CX! Newport Blvd. yard, 548-()1113. 8364493. 1114 Mercury props, controls, ~!12-fi021 use BUSHIPS Tht!511.uru~ f_or GROOVY fl.1~el-t~ nl!'eded REALTORS 644-7662 ad. sol11, .i:'il 646--9148 642-84SO DAY Bed & 10' t..'Ouch, fajr cables. wind1hield1, !i:eall
descriptors. Salary plusc:n· for cassettf' Illms. HllITison BOOKCASE headboa rd , 13 F'f lrshaped executivl' cond, tree to you . $275 Cash for all. Sl,000 ·----
Job Wantad, Mal• 700
"
SCRAM-LETS
'·ANSWERS
Twinge: -Civil -Heron -
Wizard -WHAT I am D()..
ING
, Sign on desk in Pe.nlaiOn:
l"lbia Job is so Classified
Iha! even I don't know WHAT tam OOING.''
cr.ntive. Serid resull\f' to oux Cori 213/462--.'1830. H•lp Want•d, M & F 710 H•lp W•nt•d, M & F 710 hobby dt-1k, 12 drawers. "~'"I009. 1/14 ••rth or •tock. uo ~-
0 D 1l p·i 330 w ' springs &. mattres~. double .,.,..,.... v '"""""""" ~1~4 ,..~18'.1 1 at, · HAIR s1Yli~1 and/or man1-b!!d size. Siil 642.-1742 v.•ide document stor&.ge. r.ost 3 Darlin• black C.ock-a-Poo e>«Y ~ "ei;a. · r h · , • $27:), ,.w, \\'ill !Ake $95, ' CtJr1s1 or 5 op in ..... gunA puppies . One lem!i.le, two CARRIER Beach. Rf'nt spaCl', 497.1315 R•1taur1nt Hous•hold Goods 814 S46-5077 675-3670· ma.lei. 6 wka. 645-0653 1/l2 ELECTRIC A.B. Dick HOUSEKEEPER & child C HER OLDER Male. Co<'ker Spaniel Boys ANNOUN ING ANOT DBL bax springs-mattrrsii printer mimeograph & llP-
c:are, 5 day wef'k, llve-in, Exciting $20. 5"! 4 TV table! SlO, prox $50 iupplies, i l50. &ood with childrt!n to a good
a.lru·y open. Spanish spelLk:-c 3-<lr&Y•er commode sa. Club I ~64>-3433~~~ .................. , I j~hofimii·~ ..... ~~'r.'i'1o:-;:<ii1~11;'i• WANTED Ing OK. 962-9960 •her 1 chair, ottoman. off wht I ~ FREE puppies to 1d tnme
PM. ' vinyl S40. 67H184 8 am-7 Pianos/Organs 126 20311 C,ypreu. Santa Ana Housewl~s OCO .1 pm. Heiiht!. 1/14
Retired People M lscell•·-·1 Ill Beglnn•rs Organ Cless BEAUTIFUL l\lanx cal told Students-..nyone over 1B AND ......... 0 aood home. 1 year o
FULL.PART TIME ENR LL NOW ftmale, 6Th-1666 Cr!~ 1/14
"" lhe DAILY PILOT
Bo•t1, Rant/Chert'r 90I
ANNOUNCING Ca.prn Eds
Sa.ilin& Club. 29' Diesel
Sloop. tow rates. Cal 25
,\SS 40' alAo •vail. MS-2244.
E\-el 96s.-4840.
LOCAL Sport fllhln&: f/6
paS!. charttt boat.I winter
rate11 646-SOOJ
Boats, S.11 Dana Point, SUI Ju.an
C.piltrano and
Capl1trano Be1ch.
Contad Mr. St1y f'f
DAILY PILOT
17 SQ. YARDS n y Ion Oaaa starting Tues., Jan.
No exp. nee. We train ~ t 12 1 6 '·-_ ... 2 Yr. M.lniatW"t • t l v tr COLUMBIA 21', ·-, ~o.75() carpeting. Blue with green . p.m. wee,.. cou,,... ilJllll:I' •• lnterviews Daily 10-8 pm fleek~. Good condition $40. SJ2. HAMMOND ORGAN Poodle, AKC regls. Loaded I ncl: PWS. TAX CO 'A 549--0674 STUDIOS, 2854 E. COBst 846-4625 1114 v.· /show tr . D y a :
N __ , I T eu en :J Hwy., Corona del Mar. FREE puppirs. Cocker and 213/636-0757 Evet : San Cl@mente off.Ice ~s ncome AX CHELSEA 8-day US Navy Collie 6 weelU alt 6 call 714164&-Srn.
305 N, El Ct.mlno Rtal Preparers Now Ill f deck clocks, $15 ea. Mln-1 _644-89JO ___ ·~~~----821-13~7 1/14 · -...... 31966 Camino Caplitnoo We w accept application• or -""'Y'• 2537 w "-••' Hwy "INAL CAL 20, lmmaculata cond, .,__ e !TRESSES "'' ' ' """ · r BLACK poppy, female, 7 wits APT-:MOTEL f.IGRS, well C SHIER F fi 1 d' San Juan Capl!llraoo WA N.B. 54g......jJ92. YEAR ENO old. Good l'llth k i ds . L.oe.ded w~extru, 1tDF. i~~f!~ ~~tuc!l.ldrv~U: :;· ~othlng •to~. ~-~:~1-..,.--c•93=·11~"~r~0'='"'~'-~-e BUS BOYS FOR SALE CLEAR OUT 541-9830 1112 ~~tra ull•, e te · 'p~ beach area. Please No phoM> calls. Back&trHt. * INHALATION * e DISHWASHERS Used double titr !ocktn. Fair of Plenos & Or91ns BLACK Mnle Cockapoo pup. NEW 16, Glau Catamaran
;call M/M 114 : l73-l373. No. 25 Fa11hlon II.land N.B. -THERAPIST-condition. Mr. Laney, Dally Many at wholeaale prices PY'· g wks old he to sci and trail Jot "85 Ph 800 CASHIERS-Car Wash fUU Graduate ot Inhalation Ther-• HOSTESSES Pilot. WARD'S BALDWIN sruDIO home. 842-6811 1/14 er · .: ~EEPER • 20 yean Ume a, part time. cau'-•PY 1chool. or minimum 1* e COOKS FOR &ale: Used 4• tluore&-1819 Newport Blvtl, 642-8484 FREE Shorl haired pupple•l'='"'"=2400=o;'======'I
, expenence. ~1•11 stor,. or * 644--t(50 * yn. ¥i'Orklfll' exP"rltnce, cent tlxture1, $5 each, aa ls. Hammond, St• In way, pt Dschabund and Terrier Boats, Sll-/Doekt 910
1 otrt~, PmnaMnt. Ph : Pum., foll Ume 11 pm to • BARTENDERS Contact f.fr. Laney or Mn. Yam&.118. New .l used pianos 8~511 1/U r-~. COOK 2ND 7:30 a.m. • WESTMINSTER Greenman. Dally Pilot, 330 o: moil makei. Best buy1 In
GEN, t.1ainl, Ship. Receive, • CX>MMUNITY HOSPITAL • • COCKTAIL WAITRESSES We11t Bay, Coate Meaa So. Ca.JU:. at Schmidt Music
Ml.il,J:lt-rk. 11 yr w/same S34R Mo. Well e1tab. convaJ· App 1 y Pe.r.onnel, 17712 Mal Sa Urm. Ex. Reis 642-2066. el!.Cf:nt hOme needa exptr. Beach Blvd., Hunllnston Starting D~•mber 29 CARPET Layers havti llhag ~~ 1fm N. n, nta
1::::;:::::::::::::;:::'1 lady 2nd cook on d1y lhltt, 'Beach, or call (7141 841.1301. 9 :00-4:00 Deily .t oomm'l lwttd crpla, Deal I• e h direct, Exper !1U1talll"r. Cal'l ·-e&.c area. HSKPllS E I f fi o-o,~ 8Zl ~40 Jc6Want.d, f'•rTMll• 702 mp yr pay1 e-e. Apply In Person "' nance . ......,_,..,, ...,,,
George Allen Bylahd Aancy 24001 Aventda de la Carlota FOR Sale Ulumlnated platll! •
~LEANING. C.D.M., m-=n~ Bal., arta $3 per
CALL ZENA
(714) 95'-IDDD 106--8 E. 16th, S.A. 547-0395. Lagun•. Hiiis gla.u display cues, ~.
UOUSECLEANER For home :S,e&. Call 962--5551.
hr., IC1..J637 betwet!n 6-7. CAL·l'AIR ol teachen, l:IXI to 4:30 pm Santa Ana or San Diego Frwy. to BABY\'§" comtna:. Must 1ell
Mon thru Fri. 548-2112. El Toro Rd. -Corner of El Toro StAul.ter t•ble. Excellent!
Rd. and A venida de Ja Carlota. Best offer! 549-0674
NEWPORT Bch Tennia Club Owned by Far West Services, Inc. full lam!ly membtl'!hip M50
Operators of Snack Shops, Coco's or bett offer. 614-'>484
Reuben's, Reuben E. Lee, The Whaler, Isadore's INTERNATIONAL p&.rts, ·51
BOOKKEEPING SERVlCE EMPLOYMENT fAR1' TI~IE. FUU. TlME AGENCY LADY for 1'f!11tau"'nt Wtlrk
' • 646-1869 * 525 so Euclid SUl!e c exp de1'd. Please c&IJ
lut u-Sell It· mat' II ... Anahel~ ~1686
-·lfflr tt • II'• all available , NO matter wba1 It la. you I
~ Dally PUot ClaaU'-d .,_'hank you for reldlnl ourl ca11 tell It with • DAILY -i.ds .• t~• Place your • d clault1ed ads, hopll! we have DAil.Y Pll.OT WANT AO.
now .• Call dl.rrct ~2{lli7A the future. Call S12-561A A.-ehat;f' It, 1 .................... .
radiator i25, trammi11\on
$45. motor SSCI. 962-8745
' • I •
Sewing Machln•s 121
1970 Sinrer Zla:--Zai Au to,
bc:llutllu.I walnut conaole.
Make1 butto nh o les ,
overca.sts seams, b I t n d
hem1 de11lgn1 etc. Guar.
So14.4i cuh, or 1mall pymta.
s.ls.-8238. -* R=E=PA-1=R=s-*~
Cle11.n, oil &: Adju1t your ma-
chine In }'(lur hOml.'. Spec-
ial S3.!15, all work 111aran-
teed. 545-8238.
•
PT terrier .I: poodle pups, YAOIT Br o k 11 r tMk:a alJTlOlt 2 zoo old, wry tiny,
3 male, 1 fem, 548·2932 1/12 Newport Ekb 1 o cat Io n w/dock acc e11, GORGEOUS Slack & white 213/379-8n5.
JongtJalred male cat. 1 moa. 1-----------1
546-1l'.l8 1/12 15'.JO' aliPt 1vaU ior JIOWft
boats. Bayside VWap. 300 Biby wh.ltti miee 60-4926 E. COUt Hwy, N.a
GIRL'S )l" btke, Old, but SUPS AVAILABLE, zs• to
uaa.ble. -....951 l/U fO'
PUPPY to iood home. 6T.1-ll!llS 8~7-1298 1/14 1 ---.-eo=A-T~SLIPS=~.--I
2 r.1ALE rabblta Incl. cag:e. Ava.Ilable Newport ee.cb.
U·Plck·Up. 831·1935 1/1<& Call: 548-53S3.
FREF.: I brown toolllt'r 4 I ,,7,o,W~H7'CI T=E-""ELtPllAN,,,..,""=~TS'='I
month! old 64S-2169 1/14 ove.rrunnlng )'Our houtlf
TAME Blue Dutch ratihit: "C11.1h" .. aell them thN
Lovablr. 644-46$8 1/14 Dally P1bt Cl11•ffl&d
I I
. . ' -. .... -·~---..... . . . . ····-······~-t•· .. -
'
. • ' l
.
1
I
DAil y l!ILOT
_,,,. ... l§JI· ---l§J I -"'-1§11· _,,,._ 1§1 ! -"'-1§1 1 ---l§l I ---l§l r ---
990 Autos, ·UMCI 990 Autos, UMCI
LINCOLN
970 Autos, lmportod loett, Spe9d & Ski 911T !.:.:ruc=:k:;s ____ _.;962;::._T;.;r:..:u:.:c;::ks;;_ ____ ..:9.:.:62 Autos, Imported 970 Autoa, lmport.d 970 Autos, UMCI
YOLicSWAGEN CONTIN~NTAL 'GT CiLASSPAR P'lying-Z;
l'"°''; Wb, o/b. Lllre Ne"' $2950 . ..,_,..,
Campen1 Sal•/_Rent 920
'64 Ford camper Yan
G.M.C. TRUCK CENTER
"THEY'RE HERE"
'71 GMC CAMPER SPECIAL
Power brakes, H.D. springs, 8 $3295 ply tires, re•dy for big c1mptr.
(11 0557) !Stk. #1005)
CALL 546·6750
24 hr. Phone
SALES e SERVICE
FIAT PORSCHE
• '69 FIAT SPYDER. -'66 PORSCHE
eond. $300 &. Tak~ over Cou 9U 5 lpeed brown
pymnts. Call 847.1358 w1!: blac'k interior'. Brand
HONDA
* * Honda SS convertihle,
1966. Xlnt cond. Lo ml. $750.
53&-9TI8.
JAGUAR
new Perrelli tires. XYJ474
$3299
CHICK IYERSON
YW
549-3031 Ext fi6 or tr.
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
CADILLAC
'M VW Fae. air, FM & CAD. '69 EL OORAOO '66 CONTINENTAL 4 dr, full
tape 1~, ear~~r. MU!! Vinvt tcp, full Jeal.Mr i.nte--pwr, air cond. 1 1575.
tell A.m. pref'd ca 11 ior, stereo AM-FM radio, =64>-==m:=•:;at:;•:':.•::;m:·=== ~"48. powtr door locb, lilt L'lleet·
'64 YW SUNROOF ing. ruu pow" ,qu1pmoot 1 __ C..:...:O:..;R.:.Y:..;E_l_l...cE_
BEST BUY plus f.acttn-y air condition-1 •
ing. <xwssoo1. '67 vmE
Artie """'· with contruting $4999 red leatherette lnll'rior, ra· ih Fastback . "427", 4-speed,
dkl, beater. Lie. YWZ886 ~ e.A_., AM/FM radio. New poly-
$899 &at glass tires .. Excellent con.
CADILLAC itition Driven eB.ll)'.
1969 LINCOLN
IF YOU ARE TUs.!Y
4 Door Sedan. Lusclo111,
new, leather interior, t
wheel. 24,000 aetua1 mil
one owner, see this go
car. YCL-848. Johruion It
2626 Harbor, Coeta Me 1
'4C>56.10. j I
MERCURY
Compl•t'1y oqulpP<d wHb UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
pop top, ice box, i;tove, d\r. 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa RENAULT
CHICK IYERSON AUTHO"ZED °'"" . $21SO VW 2600 HARBOR BL., Ask for Mr, Grannis 546-8640 1969 Mercury M•rquia JAGUAR
Radial tires. i o-•· !UED· HEADQUARTERS -------
UH> Will take r:ar in trade iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-;7==:=~:=:==;;==:;:: I ~ only authorized JAGUAR '63 Re~ult w/'~ motor, 4
COSfA MESA MU ST o~it h 1966 2 Or. H.T. 5"9-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 540-9100 O-n Sunday ~ 8 arp LARGE & LUXURJOUS ~ "'" 1 1970 HARBOR BLVD ... ~ Corvette ronv w/rem H.T,
or finance. 546-8736 or Auto Service, Parts 966 dea.ltt lD the entire Harbor new nres. Runs. P75 C&ll 4~1. llil Area. eves 494-2792.
COSTA MESA • 1965 a 11 black Cadillac 427. 4-sprl .. lmmac rond. Thi:<: beautiful top of the Mel'.,
, . Chupe de Ville. Uits of 646--0968. cury line, reflects good care !
68 BUG, Zeruth blue, AM / miles but beautiful cond. ,64 CORVETTE CONV. throughout and is equip~ .-I
'50 Ford Sehl Bus Cam~r, ' __ r"""'°' __ i_•_tio_•_~ rill '63 Karmann Ghia, rolled. Complett.
New mtr &. traru;, brks. _ . Running cond. Eng, trans, SALES TOYOTA
S4&-2233. accessories xlnt. t SOO. SERVICE
FM, excellent oond. $1350./ All xlra•. 11750_ ow-r. with all the luxury fea ·. -· ·; -••23 .... auto. Best ca.sh otter 673--0338 offer. Eves . .f.::r~ . * 644-6218 * Jack Automatic l.ransmisslon, AM·
·66 Fstbck, R/H, ".'Int cotld, CAD. l!l66 CPE DE VILLE FM stereo radio, heater,':;~ ... IMPERIAL CAMPER G7'-S75I PARTS 1971 TOYOTAS (S~') WITH TRUCK Mobile Homes 935 4 AP Sprlng mags, 14x7 BAUER ARE HERE! Wht exter w/blk mter, Pvt Factory air conditioning all COUGAR power steering, po1>.<er brak-1 1
pty, $1045. 644-6316. Power extras. Tilt wheel. . es, power windows, 6 way · 1
$UOO. * * 64&-2233 w/tires, $180. 4 '68 -·n BUICK :u:1?111l?!:l•I•llrf.-J vw 10 cb"Y ''"10" 125. Mark II Corollas
1----------1 power seat, factory air corl-.~ 1
'63 VW, engine rebuilt, very Stately black exterior color 149 COUGAR ditioning. cruise control, tllt -i Cys~!:t.~~kes, 925 64&-4127. IN C p· k
S"rr'"•d•d by COSTA MESA' oronas 1c ups
good condition. Pri. party. with red Jeather interior. LUXURY SPORT ' wheel plus Michelin X rs.;: •· •
$li00. 642--5425 (SBTI.f.l. Beautiful Arctic white finish dial tires & style stttl
nn.n.l"U1
THINK
HONDA -"FRIEDLANDER"
U7• •PCM (HWY, •l
537-6824 • 893-7566
NEW-USED-SE RV.
1970 TC 90 Honcho Suzuki.
5-speed. Many extras. Ideal
for trail or street. Must
sell, moving. $32J or will
trade for ? 548.4098
WANTED
" Autos Wonted 968 "'""' Ocaog"' 234 E. 17th S.,...t 1970 TOYOTA 1951 KARMANN GHIA $1888 with black landau roof wi th wheels. See &: drive today.
Real rural living yet close WE PAY TOP 548-1765 CORONA SEDAN
lo °"'~~~:,";;::~'"< & CASH '67 J8guor XKE cp. °""''"· $ SAYE $303.00
$550 *•* 968-1189 ib matching inferior, automatic XTP478. Johnson & Son, :)626 .. I
'66 vw SEDAN, Reblt Eng. «iWAI e~ transmission, power steer-Harbor, C.N.:. 540-5630. I
ding cond. Lo mi's, 4 spd, Quick Sale $875. ..a.. ~CAD1LLAC ing_ air conditioning, radio, 1953 Mercury Conv, , :
ALL ELECTRIC '''"'°· 13500 ........ 197. I ~=="=-=-==~==I From window sticker price
'"' """' oars & lruck5 '"'' KARMANN GHIA • ":'"'Demo. R&H, '"""
* 213/592--5039 * i\UTHOAIZEO OEALEFI .heater, completely serviced transportation. $150 or Belit
Ca ~-HARBOR BL & ready tor deUvery. Bat ~· * 1968 VW mper"-New "'"" -. offer. 547-!l(Qj, , ,. 1 engine, new tires. COSTA MESA ance of warranty available.
Choose from
105 floor plans,
you name it!
Adults-Pets O.K .
Private Club-$300,000
Recreation Center
14 BEAUTIFULLY
FURNISHED
MODELS
(Dir. TR193)
14851 Jeffrey Rd.
In Irvine
5 ml. South of Tustin. and
l,4 mi. S. of Santa Ana Frwy,
(2 mi. N. of San Diego Frwy)
832-8585
calJ Us for free estimate. mat1c. $1995. 830--2570 can 540-9100 Open Sunday $2550. Lie, xws 707 Johnson MUSTANG •
& Son, 2626 Harbor Blvd., GROTH CHEVROLET
"
nA .. Ln·•· '65 vw Squareback. Sunroof CADILLAC '69 DeVilJe 2 dr. C.M. 54().5630. -----------UllL UlllO &. luggage rack. Owner will $500 undet retail. By owner: ,,.C--"'-'-'-"-'=----1967 Mustang Coupe ' ,
Ask for Sales Manager sacrifice. 644-1370. Dys 642-6667 Eves: 646-2746. '68 Cougar, auto, p/s, p/b, SPORTY ECONOMY
'"""' Be h B vd. TOYOTA vinyl top, low mileage. Im· ·
'~ KARMANN GHIA like
new condition, 26,000 actual
miles, $1300. 492-3878
....,.._._. ac I '67 YW 162 CPE de Ville, beaut. mac! * Call 494-21'.ln. Beautiful hi·tone blue metal.-I
Huntington Beach MERCEDES BENZ maroon metallic, like nu. ~~~~;;;:,~~= lie exterior with two tone 'I
847.£087 Kl "1331 ---------1:1~966~H~arbo~r:,_. '.::c._,,,Mc_. __...,..~·"::9~303 StjlUAREBACK ""'·rec .. 1698 SC 49"-9706. DODGE matcbiog lnt<rioc. a"to
WE PAY CASH '68 Toyota Corona Vadora ...... Radio. h•ator. "'"'·· radlo, b""" pow -. transportation special, Lie. CAMARO steering, air cond., console'-' 1 Local owner, new ~r trade UOHS77, '68 Dodge Monaco 500, fl pwr. new tires. Economical 1J·
FOR YOUR CAR in. 18,(Q'.I orig. miles, auto-$1599 37.000 mi's. Take over pymts purchaS<', economical to 1
matic trans., radio, heater. ·59 Camaro 350 SS, All pwr, Pvt pty, Call aftr 5:30 pm. dri~. XEL 316. $1450. Jo~ i /
Lie, \VAR052, CHICK JVERSON air cone!, auto tran:s, major 347.5105 son & Son, 2626 Harbor', ·
CONNELL $1399 YW '""i'"' & Goody•u =·59~oo=oc~E~C~A~M~PE~R~V~AN~ C.M. 54<J.563-0.
CHEVROLET Po yglass tires W/in ]BJit 8-Cyl stick shift. I ~=~=~~~~=-,1 1
CHICK IYERSON 549 3031 Ext 66 67 3000 .. M t ll 12500 MACH 1970. M"" S.11! Xlo\
2828 Harbor Blvd. 19'7~ HARBciR B~~. 64!">-24~~.s, us ge ' , $2450 * * 642"6189 (;ond . 15.000 mi, 351 Eng. j
Co•ia M•"' S4M200 MG YW ==:.<:c~osr~A;_:M~ES~A'---=J==~C~H~EY~E~L:';LE~= FALCON s Yr:'~%,,, ** -"
PAYMENTS -crerli! pro----------1 549-303t Ext. 66 or 67 MUST se l l '66 VW ~
blem? Will take over MG 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Squareback. Lo mi. ,;unroor., ----------1 '68 Falcon. VS, 4-<lr, Stick '65 Mustang convt. Aulo., V8.
I bl COSTA MESA AM/FM A•k for J ,. 1-Good cond. Moving. i100 N' , paymens on aecepta e, Sales, Service, Parts 64" """". eu, 19_69 CHEVELL. E SS 546-~hit~ ..... t.o mi 's, $1100. ofter. 642--4_ 993. ~'
late model, lo mileage, fully 1mm-•· 0e1· '69 CORONA ~ -. <:1..11ate ivery, Radio, bester, atr, IT'S I=========' I MUSTANG '66 """V " auto equipped car, wagon or All Modela '71 VW Camper w/Pop Top. GREAT" N·w car trad Io • _., --o, ' 1
ranchero type. Call Sally, Hardtop. Vinyl roof, 4 spe~. Fact. tent. Red, 8500 mi's, .. $2•099 ' . FORD air, p/s, r/h. Sharp $lCOO. I
wkdys 8-5, 549--2283 immacu1ate, Sky BlUe, Sae-Z3699-Gennany lie. ""<:M. 830-6251. rifice. Will take trade or ~ I =========::;I 7o:~6PTgr.:~~'tsR ~~~",'..'~!,;:,· 01;"'..._'i;! ~: ;,:;;~ ~. Xlot •"'"· CHICK v!!ERSON 70 FORD LTD OLDSMOBILE ••
U your car is extra clean, 10 a.m. XTS 343. $1395. See at 1808 W, Ocean-* !964 OLDS * _ ,
T · I W'd C II see us first. t Ne btwn 2 • < 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ripe 1 e orne 1966 TOYOTA Corona; 4 dr, ront, · • "' PRIVATE PARTY Continental e Paramount BAUER BUICK 3100 W Coast Hwy NB -• lb ired ti pm 1970 HARBOR BLVD, CUTLASS. Bucket seats new 1
234 E. 17th St. • ·• · · r...u, r · overs res. -:~V\\':O;;;;j;;<?<-FM"-1===co~sr;gA~M~E~S~A== paint, good tires. Mwrt'Sen! ' &rrington •Universal Costa Mesa fttS-TIS::i 642-9405 540-1764 $695, *** 64.2--05.~ '69 VW Camper AM-FM Blue with black Landau top, $58S, Pvt, Pty. S48-8778
F1amingo • General • ------------'71 COROLLA New Adventure Camper. CHEVROLET air cond, am/frn stereo ra-=o--=ic---~--7'~-I E.roadmoor e Star U.1PORTS WANTED ..--------,.. unit .,_.,,.,. &&-1666. d' < · ltiOOO il 1964 Olds con vert l ble Ca Oran Co r _,.,.., to, new tires, , m es,
MOBILE HOMES BILL MAXEY TOYOTA factory air. low, Jow miles! Clean. $6'J5, Call-CHEV. 1970 MONTE CARLO ~ ~9; aft 6, 673--5719.
Hillc:reC•HtA•PMAmNbridge gf! un tea • THINK '63 VW Bug. In good cond.1 -----~---custom interior, p/s, p/b, Dynamic 88. PslPb, new . TOP $ BUYER ''~G'' Radio, heater, disc brakes, <><>n ,0 .,.0,_ tires & batrery. Sac $385:
1206 N. Harbor, S.A. 18Ml Beach Blvd. Take older car or gmall 644-0007 S.S. 454 W/ONLY ll,fiOO MlL-$3,100 '63 Old! ss. 4 dodt, auto.
Any year 250 or 305 Honda * U4/531-8105 * H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 down. Under fact. warranty. '65 VW Sedan-Dk i;reen. ES. Hydramatic. power trans, air, ps/b, 646.7755.
Soiunbler, not running. "'FRIEDLANDER''' Call Maury d1r , aft 10 am Clean. New tires &: engine. llteering -disc brake, -673-1176 davt, 548--1686 eves. 549.1690 12'x60' Mobile home, carport, · Pvt ccAc n~ wlndo'ws AM/FM multi-r.... Jq . "'~' T I -.~... Autos, Imported 970 54().310() or 4%-7506. 037327. $150 firm. pty . ............,.. · l"'<"'. '67 OLDS eu••·-' dr. H.T. '70 HONDA Trail 70, like awnings, s .... ._.ng . 00 Suo:u 121Sf •aACM OIWY. ttl S4 VW Extras trtrato bucket seats, full ...._
. ty _, ->l••d.•,.piog iocl,d•d. AUSTIN AMERICA 893-"'6 • 537-6824 BIIL MAXEY . campor. . ••-.tilt w""'· •·-l9"Fon!Galaxio,<doo,, va. V-8. 31.000 mi. U!U. new, in warran · orny "~" Reduced to $6950. 1750 Whit· NEW USE SE l1'50 -·-• Tn. Al 646--8068 mi's. Immac cond, street • D-RV. · 675-3348 * air rood., chrome fPOrl Auto. ni., r Cond., =========:! !er:~. $280. 545--05.il tier Ave., C.M. 642-1350. AUSTIN AMERICA -------------.. ITIOfYIOITIAI --~*,....::.:..:=;Ra-.~,.--1 wheels, wide track belted Radio, Heater. GGod trt.n1· ,70 Am. Eagle 250 8x36 1 BR mob ile home, ~ 1968 VW Bug. wu. reu tires. auto Joad Jeveler, etc:., portation car. S20o or best ~ b F , L" sn•ce avail. Awnina New Sales, Service, Parta • --seal gpe:aken. $1375. pr!. pty. •IC Bala-• of '-·to-w•"' otter. Call 549-0214 .
PLYMOUTH
.,., p. ast. 1kt IlflW ,,.. "'• . * MG-TO * l""l BEACH BLVD. ,,. ,_ a · '"" ...... •;r .... -$600. 673-6998 alt 5 hot wtr heater & roof. Immediate Delivery Will se-1! all arts -~.after pm. ranty_ Gorgeous. (944BEM). !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 1968 PLYMOUTI-1 ROA
1970 HONDA 350CB 64&-951li. All Modela 54&-5837 or ~2· Hunt. Be.ch 147-ISSJ • 2 vw· .. -'64 Bug $800, $3777 1969 FORD Fa.irlane, P/S, RUNNER 426 Hem I, ~~~~= :r~:~~ :~:::: :::~ all st:;
1 c~"";.ci-M"':oGc.,~".,"'1~,_"co:.._::i-J36". _11_;._~-nn~· '1 :1i TOYOTA PicKUP :~l":.,!~!·~~3'. ~1>.!:!i l~=~:~~i! ~~ ,_-;~~;=].
.. ~., 1500 mil••· ~ooo welded cons!nlctioo. ,, " "'68 MG M'd I 8 000 -· w· I 30•· Full new tires, Must sell $l200. AUTHORIZED OEALElll 1--------...,.1 W"-"' .,_._ " ' 1 ge . actucu 1th de uxe camper, 673--547-0 Wag, air, low mil. $1160. L kl I
Firm. 64&-2384 Deck plaHng. 545-43fil or m.i' .. like new. $1195. Call price $2251. Take 11mall _:::::..:=--~----1 260o HARBOR BL., Call orig. owner. 64Z-4441 00 ng or a car? I
.70 HONDA SL100. Like new, 642-5845, Will trade on P!ck 3lOO W. Cou:t Hwy., N.B. eves 54S-60ll. down or trade, dlr. 494-7503-'58 VW Van • Needs little COS'I\A MESA about many extras! EASY !
xt.8', MOO or make offer.1 ;U~p;.;;;;;;;; &12-941:6 / 540-l764 540-3100. #03448. work. $300 or best offer. Call 540-9100 Open Sunday Call Auto Referral free 'f
MG. Call eves 557-4953 '63 Sta-wgn near new motor bar w h seJ
833-15.59 DATSUN l---------l '69 CORONA, dark blue, 4 ='==========I ·66 CHEVY 396. Stick, Hurst & Trans. Good :rubber & c ge. e ave I~ 1970 HONDA SLlOO: Like dr, 4 spd. Mini cond, 4 4-spd, slicks, Holly +barrel brakes. Tlfust sell $299 cuh. waiting. AU types & pi·
New 150 mi. $350 or ofr. §] ---------'69 · MGB-GT, Like ru!W Jo ne'v whitewall tires. 24 VOLVO carburetor, air 1!1ts, $1000. 673--0209. Sellers Also welcome,
673-6809 Autoifot'Sale I ,-:.. DOT DATSUN mi's, wht w/blk intt'r,' All mi. p<>r gal, A good buy Pvt pty. 545--0340 11 am --"~"'-~=-~-= 642-4431 1.---';irn>w>l'l/ThiN-,;W,;;: IL _____ _J_ cpm;» OPEN DAILY extras. $2250. at$~. Firm 673--3388. • VOLVO to 6 pm only. '70 COUNTRY Squire-429. l=-A,,"',,o,,R..=f'-""=lc-S.="",_·"-.,.'1 * 1910 350 HONDA Tl1otor "''"'~*_'6~7~>-:_l17rot~;·~~7l'f;;-T(rfi5fA.!:~'fOi) I=~-',-.,,-~-~~--t Loaded, air, all xtra.s. SS865 .69 F'irebird 400 HO Sport. 1400 miie5, Xlnt cond. AND ;; '69 TOYOTA~1 100 All 71 ,1 Aro Horo SHARP e CLEAN New-S4300 Now. 532-2548, $625. 642-5751 SUNDAYS r-.1GB-GT '68. 17,000 mL 536--7880 alter 5 '66 Impala Sedan. VS, auto, 5#-1393. Auto trar..s, fact air, Pl '
General IJ50 l8835 Beach Blvd. A.1.1/FM, Air-cond, Ne w'-========= Savings Up To r/h, 52,000 Iocal ml. $975.1 ~~::::;:_-==""'o----1 p/b. posi-t.raction rear ~ ,
1967 TRlliMPH Bonn. T. T. 1----------Huntington Beach radials. $2350, 64&--386l aft I' $466 644-0S32. '66 Fairlane GTA. 3ro, mags, mag "'his, tilt strng wti,
Ne'>\' top end. Best oUer, '61 CHEVROLET Sportsvan 842•7781 or ~0-0«2 l pm. TRIUMPH Stereo tape. New tires & am/frn multiplex sterdo
548-8542 alter 5:30. 8 pas, 6 cyl, aulo tTans, r/h, ---------;i.C7.i.63i";M;;Go;B-G;c;::ood:;cro::;:::nd:;.-;N;;c,::w:I--_.::=::::.:::::..:.:_ __ o~~~i~~gri~. (:PS~) 1966 CHEVY Be! Aire 68,000 brakes. Call 673--2642. wl.f·special speakeNt. $2600.
BULTACO head, expan . 1 ov.•nr, priv ply, ;1250, lfl6S DATSUN 2000 Roadster. tires & paint $500 Call TR 3 '59. Very good. con-mi. Power steering &:l.,'69=C~O~U~N~T~R=Y7"Sq0--"-~-,.-A-ir 646-8560. '·!
cam. new knobbys. Broken 4-92-7465 Hardtop, !}.spd, after 4 575--0764 ' ditlon. }lardtop & con-"OA• lllu~I brakes, new tire.!" $650. cond. R&H. luggage rack. '68 Pontiac GTO Conv, 'ifY
leg must SE'!!. 675--0662 eve , I ~========= $1850 * 847·0452 ' · verlihle. $575 or best otter. UUL UllW 544-8506 Loaded. $2200. 833-1467 Owner. Low mileage. tUiJ
1967 Honda 160cr. Antiques/Classics 953 OPEL 548-6654. * '67 Chevelle SS 39frSilver power. xlnt Cl)(Jj_ ;ri$.
1250 0, ""'off". FERRARI '68 TH 250 Tri,mph . VOLVO f<''Y. M,.o. Tape d""k· LINCOLN 494-1<919 "
Call 545--0006 1939 PACKARD 4--0r se<lan. \----------1·---------1 overdrive. Must sell. T.O.P. 962--ti{]3l. '61 Pontiac 2 -dr Catllll\ll.
'JO y AMAHA-LO Ml Reblt engine; almost fully FERRARI * 1968 Opel Ra lly * 548-5358 aft 3 pm. 1966 Harbor, C.M, 64&-9303 '62 Chevy Van. RJH, AM/FM 1970 CONTINENT AL Good cond . $300 or ~t
$40G, • 548_9884 c":=":=°':='=d.=64='-=11::4::5·=== Newport Imports Ltd. Or-102 lLP. engine. 22,500 miles. ·r.o TR-3. Rebuilt engine & ::..:.:...:,::6=-8=ycccO~L~Y~0:,::.=:1 Gd. cond. PVT. Pty, 2 DR. H.T. oUer. 962--6392.
-Mge County's only author· Many extras, •n tags. Low transmission. Xlnt cond. 64(i..0796 LIKE SHOWROOM NEW 1964 CATALINA Stn W_gn.
lzed dealer. Blue Book, $1350. Must See Best ofter. 644--0498. Local o~r, )ow. ~lleage, ·52 CHEV ll, V-8 Convert. 1400 MILES Loaded Gd. cond $500 ~ 935 Dune Buggies 956 Mobile Homes
FOR Sale or trade, Dune
Buggy frame &: engine.
Straight axe!, 401 cu in
Olds, $150. 642-8026.
SALES.SERVICE-PARTS 1oAppreciate. Pri>/ate Party *'57 TR 3 Good cond ttd a utomatic transmUSlon, ra-Needs floor shlft, $100. Ph: Thi1 beautiful automobile is Bst O!r. 673-3622. 1
3100 w, Coast Hwy. 64:u643 CM. convt, ne'w brakes, 'p75, dio, heater. white skle wall 642--9214 like new ln every f'E'spect. '62 PONTIAC Catalina. Bfla:t
Triple Wide Cornell
Hillcrest • Flamingo
Paramount e Un1versal
Barrington • Broadmoor
Contilll!'ntal • Star
General e Hillcrest
Newport Beach OPEL 1968 Kadett Rally 646-S807, tires, etc, Chick's tpeclal atl,,.:68::.:CH=EVY'--.-. ---,-d-Attractive medium brown & battered but runs -...., MONTIO 11C1.yne r. al t •-642-9405 540-1764 Sport: 4 Spd, air, vinyl top, SWAGEN $l999 250 Cy 3 speed. Nu tires. met le inish with ginger First $200. takes. ~79'Qt
'70 MEYERS Tow'd, gd
cond. VW power. $1200.
54()...5990 day!, 540-9251 eves.
Authorized Femu1 Dealer $1195. 54&-3294. VOLK S995. offer. 675-1045. leather Interior, white Jan-
CHICK IYERSON '60 2 DR. Ch•vy tor •al•. d'" rool A•lomatie "'""• T ·BIRD
FIAT
CHAPMAN
MOBILE HOMES Trucks 962
""!, e.71,a~ .. ~,!:! .• G.G. '51 Ford 1" Ton Pickup n.ftllUl.lt '-·~ B'O"'t ,,.IJ. Chevy 3 "THINK" Want To Live In spet'd. Chevy V8 Chevy rear
COSTA MESA • ·~n'-d"'.-'-M~•~"-Y,,-_,•_x_t-,r ,_a-,•0•1 ~DBfl Local gpace1 avallable now! ;42-8593-64i-5920.
U you are eeriaus about buy. '67 Chevrolet ~ ton 8 ft
t,. a mol>Ue home ... Now's t>ed. lJil. ton rear suspension, NEW 124 CPE. DEMO
tbt time to ~ step bumper, 6 cyl, big 6 $2795
BAY HARBOR -ply tires $1300 or tiest C1Uer. s..
MOBIL-E HOMES 557-7315. ''FRIEDLAND-' 1425 Baker St. <at Harbor) in
Cotta Mesa 540--9470 Auto LeasJft9 964 1J7l0 llACH ILVD. (Hwy. J:t1
equity 1970 2tX60 '71 n-.1.. ... v 893-7566 • 537-68:24 ot)'l'nPian. locattd Jn ,.,_.... an NEW-USEO..SERV. be&otitul Orange County 6 cyJ, auto. ll'T" wheel baae.
Park tlf equity duplex, 8.000 miles. Cs.t009F) $2900 &l'lift.rl.rl.I
trtpla, 4-pkox, C.lif. Area. or leruJe $90 moG. T * 56mt * '69 Must•ng Option '68 FIAT 850
J--C::cOS=T:cA:-:M7E=SA-,.---I Air eond. Vinyl top, Jmmac.
"lat•. 12.000 mil<•. CXSK· SPYDER
CUral Mobile Bate Llv'g 884) $2700, RDSTR. Red Wllh b1-ck In.
Ne l1. 2ID It M Wide Models 169 F lrebJrd 400 tttior. Like riew, YQYSM
Now-on d!IPlaY tn 5 Slar ConverUhle. Air cond, rally $999
GREEiNLIAF PARK w""~ & 11uo 1ie1tt!c1 tltttt. CHICK IYERSON 1?50 WIUUMr AftnUe 6.f.2..U50 S I 18 000 I'· , port f'q\l PJ)M, , m u;:S.
Udl 1 BR si>ortcratt. Pvt (YCN 54()) $2,350. YW
:'~1D~rm .,.. CORT FOX :o=~n66a;'1~
NJCX bit None trailer, tn '1 COSTA MF.SA
o<!Ults pol1t, "' pels. $23Xl. WSING Fo. RESULTS you "" 0..
-Harbor, CM No. 19. pend on, Call the Super-
'll"NEW lllooft ma, 2 BR. 2586 NEWPORT BLVD.. ~a l esman .. Dally Pilot
t.ai ·a §. l>rpl/cpts, • .,,... Costa Mesa, c.ur. 92627 Clusified ~ • pi.ce
lzllJ.tldrla. shed. sn,...&507 (ll4) 645-3661 (213) 622-QU yoor ad A charre Ill -'-----~---
I
PORSCHE Large Selection
------IOf YW Campers, YW
$150. radio & stereo taPe system, I --------:'"..-I
, ___ cccall=---'-..,.."-'9705=---heater, power steering, pow-T Bird 2 Poor HT / ,. er brakes, power windows CLEARANCE PRICE
'70 911S/5 2.2 Liter Silver y K b• 549-3031 Ext 66 nr 67 ·59 EJ Camini>V8 auto. Good
coupe, black in 1eri 0 r GftS, om IS, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. tires, ndio. Needs minor
AM/FM. air, close. ratio Buses New & Used COSTA MESA repair. Make orr. 646-3055
gears. Perl. condition, 1 oc1'i 1 . D II 1-u-=e-=p=e=-p=a=--=p=a-=rl=""'=======o:
lS900 557-9159 mm • • 0 ""'Y CHRYSLER
'68 Pw.cb• ~, L<>arlro. CHICK IVERSON THINI •
23,000 mi . Sil"'· R"'"' YW ~ 'Yl!_Va seats. Asking s 4 9 5 O . 549-3031 Ext. as or ST
6t2--:lll3. li7Q HARBOR BLVD.
1968 Porsc~ 912. Irish green. OOSTA MESA ''rnlfftl IUD£R"
'68 CHRYSLER Town It
Cntry. 1tation Wq;On; air,
etc. Take O\'er pyta. $1ll
Mo. 64S.1792.
& ~nts. 6 way power seat, Medium Blue metallc dnbh
power door iocl<s, cruise con. With matching intenor;• b-
trol. le factory climate con-dio. heater, power itfftiha,
trot air conditioning. One power brakes, Auto ti'MU,
owner trade on •n Mark Ill etc. Runs good. NB~ f~~;
003ASL, Johnson It Son, 2626 $700. Johnson. • Son, "f"i
Harbor, C.M. 540-5630. Harbor, C.M. 5of0.5aQ I"
'I1iE Futest draw in the * '67 T·Blttl Landau. 411 ,eX·
We!"t ••• a Daily Pilot tru. $1950. •i.·
Oassilled Ad. 642-5678 CaU after 5, 1
AM/FM. 39.000 ml 1 ownor.1--.,-w=A"N"=n=Dc----1 r111U1um
$3965. Pvt pty. ,,,. llAtll CMWY. •> Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autot; New 637-0029 or SJS.-0251 fU pay top dolla~ for your 893-198&. • 537-1824 1-----------..:_ ________ ..:._ ___ .....,4::_1
I .SH="A,;;RP;;...:::;.;,66,:;...:P""'or;::o=:cc,h-,,-,I VOLKSWAGEN lod&>'. CaD NEW-USED.sERV.
Am/Fm ghor!Wave, chrome and Mk for Rnn Pincbot. ------------=-=
rim•, new eng/S apd . $3100. ~ Ext, e&-6":. f13.(l900. ~
or iak• 0"1' pymta. 673r5853· '69 VW BUG '59 VOLVO 11.16
'64 PORSCHE SUru1, gd ln-* &45-2819 *
ter. Runs perfect. $2900. RadkJ, heater, rruRl24) dlr. ;::=========I
8"42-5003. Must sac! WlU taM older Autol, Uted 990
·57 9ll, 5 _ 1pd, Wcbers. nu car or financ, 546-8736 or BUICK
tires, 48,000 mi's, $3950. 4M-6811, •
543-8105 days, uk ror Greg. '69 VW Camper. Pop-top, '61 BUICK GS 400
'67 9U. Air, AM/FM stereo. r.lh. factory trint. OWner ' --.1, v1bruonlc -'"'· Red w/blk. Many extru:. wanU action $2150. No ~ S3600. 644--0516 trades. f>44.-683l. brand IWlW tl:fts, bucket 11eat, speclaJ ~l ttvers. 1968 POR.SOIE 912-5, Must l968 VW Bus, 7-pu1. Radio, Uc, X:Ezs28.
see this one before consid· Xlnt concl, New tlrts. $2150. $1699
e.rlng. 41M·2514 or 548·5479. Days 494--85n; ews 646-4780 AT
* 'SO Pom:ho. Minor body 1965 VW-Da~. Motor & CHICK IYERSON •~""· 11150. 12\l\i 391b St. tramo ok. 1375. Newport Bch. 64&-5639; &ft 6, 673-5719 VW
196S PORSCHE-C '69 vw BUq 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
Xlnt cond. IA ml. 549-:.J.17 Xtrat.llCJnt oond rn~ OJSl'A MESA
I -
~------~======""'"''"--. ---,
THANK YOU!
For BUFfltfl 61 Cara and rruclra ..................
rltere muat .. a reaao11 •••
NOW TRY OUR SERVICE
• • (
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