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1971-01-14 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 -- • • • IXOD n . s ~·1s1 · on _.oas • DAILY PILOT Nine • ID llena-e lor Aged * * * '10' * * * . :THURSDAY AFTERNOON, ~ANUARY ~-4, '.197( • ... ing Inferno· " 'tOL. 64' JIO. 1L I ltCl'tofQ. M PA ... I • • • • • • • • • • • • LAFC Delays Irvine City D·ecision Ex-GI Testifies Medina Ordered Viet Boy .Slain By Wire Servlce11 F'T. BENNING, Ga. -Capt. Emesl L. Medina personally ordered the killing of a young boy at My Lai, a former infantryman testified today at the murder court-martial of Isl Lt. William L. Calley Jr. J\.1edina commanded Charlie Company in the American infantry sweep of 1>1y Lai and v.·as the immediate superior Ski Masked Ba11dits Rob Beach Bank By RUDI MEDZIEI..SKI 01 l!lt 0111'1' Pllll St1H The Ski Mask Gang pulled a ca rbon copy of thei r December holdup at a Huntington Beach bank Wednesday af- ternoon and escaped with $2,681 in cash. Hiding their races behind red-white- and blue ski masks, the four men exe- cuted the robbery by holding tellers of the Security Pacifk: National Bank, 7777 Edinger Ave., at bay with a revolver while they emptied the drawers. A female bank employe said 1he heard a rustling sound near lhe entrance of the bank around t:lo p.m., followed by the entry of three men, ooe of whom was waving a small black revolver over his head. She said two of the men vaulted the counter and emptied the tills while the third man was standing guard. A fourth bandit was waiting outskle ln 1 getaway car. Detectives, who conceded that I.be men did ... neat job," bell't!ve that the rob- ber.J are the same ones who got away wlth $5LOOO from the Five Points Branch of Ute tsank o( America lot month. Dutui1 both boldu~ the bandits dis- guised 1 themMllves with 1kt masks and u!ed 81 stolen automobUe as their 1et- 1way car. Wednesd ay's getaway ca r was recriv- e:red by police in a nearby shopping cen. tet shortly after the incldent. It had been hotwired, officers said. Witnesses to lhe holdup sa,id the four men 11ppeared to be wearing white gar- dening gloves and were all in ihe.ir '20'1. One of them WU lald to have dark, shoulder-length hair whUe another had a pot belly. Police sala the l&ni used a .pecuJiar method of operation during both hold- UJ>! but declined to release further de- tails. of Calley, a platoon leader In the com- pany. Medina is charged with cverall responsibility of al least 175 civilian killings in the alleged My Lai massacre which took place March 16, 1968. He has not been formally charged or ordered to stand court-martial. Calley, 'l1 . is being tried on charges of premeditated murder of 102 civilians during the My Lai operation. James Errol Flynn, 22. of Rochester, Minn., testified that sometime after the My Lai sweep "Capt. Medina got us together and told up t h e y were in- vestigating and we were to tell ~ple we did not see anything and he would do all the talking." The inci dent with the young boy, Flynn said, occurred only four or rive yards from a group of 15 to 20 bodies at a trail intersection on the south side of the village . The government's star witness. Paul David Mead\o , has testified he helped Calley slaughter that group with automatic rifle fire. The defense has tried to show that Calley killed women, children, and old men asa result of direct orders Medi- na issued at a briefing the night belort My Lai. Flynn was the lath witness to say Medina ordered everything In the village killed and the second to say someone in the company asked him If they were supposed to ltlll women and children. "He replied to kill everything that moved." F1ynn testified. Flynn !aid that at the trail he suddenly heard Medina "holler •get hJm'I" Ht (let CALLl!Y, P ... Z) President Ends Vi.sit to Coast; Nebrmka Next Pre.sidenl Nizon waved .an end to h1s nioe-da,y Oraop County v1e1Uon lllll morning llld new toward hla -"' In University al Nebrukl 1-. •Alda have called it· important. In !Jncoln, two -enllf -t leaders who ace<pl<d on--In Iha,.. the pla~orm wltll Nia<o Aid they would wear black arm bands ln the ':hope that our .........,. wtn not be · construed u suppcrt for the Prettdent." Steve 11wald, pr<lident ol the -I body, and Ken Wald. head of a campua honorary group called the mioc.nu Society, said I• a slaltment they did not endone the Presldent'a policies. They did not· elaborate. They urged students to rtifraln from lloo NIXON, Pqe I) Baker Changes Resiclen~e CARRYING SUITCASE WITH CUFPID HANDS, IOBBY &AKER GOES OFF TO PRISON For,,,.r S.n•te Aide, Onell""' LIJ Prot ... , WlU 11o Ellglbl• for Porole Dec. 21 Nursing Home Inferno Oaims ' Nine Victims LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) . -F~e roared through the kttcben and chapel of a chlD'cb-operated home for old penona here today, aiid clouds of black smoke that billowed through .the building klDed nine penoos. Filty.elgbt otben were bolpltallzed, Incllldhla ave tn crltlcol condition. Moot of the ·M residenta al the four- year-old, modern home were atile to tNke tbetr way to the balconies of the~ •iwt-•ta llDd """ -by flr<men· wbo readied the """'° three mtnutes after the alarm w11 IOUnded. "When we got there, there were people all over lhe balconies," said Chief Catland Miller of the aubW"ban Beuchel Yoluateer Fire Department. Two of the dead were "monitors" appointed to tab! charge in emergency 11tuati0111 such as fires. "We believe they lost their lives trying to arouse the people,"~ 11id the Rev . Jack T. Goodykuntz, executive director (let BLAZE, PIP II Bobby Baker in Prison As Last Appeal Fizzles LEWISBURG, Pa. (UPI) -Robert , G. (Boi)by) Baker wu lod haQdcuf!ed into a federal prllon today' after geUlng lost on bla way to surrender to federal mmhata. The one-Ume, Senate pige wbo becam~ 1 P"Otel' ,of Lyndoo B. J...._ llDd 1 millionlln -.n -red. lbe Alle.,woqd Prtlon· Finn of Lewisburg Fedtrll penitenUary to aerve a one-t.e- three year tmn for fraud, theft and tncomelUevulon. U. wu -.led by three U.S. manhalf 11 he entered the pr1DI,' WW'· Ing ha1Kfcuf11, "'"II-delplte lbe ratny wellher, and 1 black overcoat. Baker showed up In Lewf1butg In IUl'- render, u agreed to earlier, shortly ll'ter 8:30 1.m. About 10 newsmen fOllowed hbn 11 he tried to enter 1 bank bulldinl lctOA the street from the fedf!ral bulldinc where lhe tnarshal't off1cu are located. He noUced a Chriatmu club algn on the bank door , realized he w~ -~,the " J wrong building and walked away. Then he sought directions from the newsmen, who directed him acrosa the atreet. lt took only a few rninuf.elJ for the marahab: to bring hlm to a c•r for the trip ta the pdlon. At no lime ,jjd be have a conversation with newsmen . Tbl prlaon tuued 1 ltatement 100n ofter hit orrlvlli notlnl tbal be bu been designated_ 1 mlnlmmn -'lrtty prjlooer and wlll be leftt to the hooor lann ,afttr a week of pf'OCellinc ln lbe Dllln prllon. . ' Baker wtn bl elJllble for porole nelll Dec, 21, llld If DOI ll'lllled porolo win be relwed April ·io, Im. The w1 render procedure w I 1 nsgol11ied wllh the (ederll judp wbo senteoced Baker on bla 1917 convtction for fraud, thoft llld federol locOme tu evasion. · , Baker lost hit last appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court Dec. JO, Slnce U,.w!n, "he has turne<\ over, to 1WOClates the IS.. BAKER, P11e I) Four Weeks Q_f~~~tq~lL§. To Follow By JACK BROBACK 01 1111 '"llY f'llol 1!11f The shouling over the proposed new City of Irvine ended Wednesday night and the Local Agency Formation Com- mission members gave themselves four weeks to come up with a decision. At the conclusion of a second four-hour hearing, in which few new voice:s were heard on either side, the commlssioo voted to defer a decision until Feb. 10 at 2 p.m. New developments since last week's hearing include: -The Citizens Direction Finding Com- mission, an organization created to ad· vise on the county's General Plan Program. called current plans to in- corporate the 17 , 52 0-acre area "premature." Further study was urged "for at least a year." -The Orange Cou nty League of Wom en Voters also asked for delay In Incorporation. 'They said a moratorium should be declared on annexations into the proposed city 's area until further studies ould be made. -Commission counsel W 111 I a m McCourt said the commission could not legally declare a mora torium on an- nexation into the area. "You must hear every case which comes before you. You cannot make a decision now that would bind you three, six, or nine montha from now," the attorney warned. -McCourt also ruled that the LAFC could not require devel0pment of low co.st housing in the new city. He said the act creating LAFC does not allow zoning as a consideration for lppnrfll for incorporation. This latter potnt has been SJtnla Ana._ (See IRVINE, Pqe I) ,, ....... 'Ille mercury'tl move back up tnln lllo llOs lloni the c:oaJt Fri- day, with sunny ak1u prevaillnl through lll• blcll ........ INSmi: TODAY Th4 mlg~t~· KMm , Dom, which hu proven to be RUdo't kq .. t•• llldtatt, fl /mfllltd. It wilt cr1a~ h1a<1ac1'1i ai 10etl ., ..., II.ope for Atobt. Storv Poge IS. ....... :,. .. --" ,..,... ....... ...._C..... II ~ """" ,. ---· ... ___ ...... ==-.. :: ..,_ . .... ...... , .. ,. --.. -- I I DAJL V P1LOT s ThurSd11, J1nu ary 14, 1971 Polling P lace President Visits Concordia Kids By JOHN VALTERZA Of !fie D•IJJ' •11tt '"" The kJrahlp between Prealdent Nixon end his polling place in San Clemente -Concordia Elementary School -con- tinued Wednesday afterllOOll when the chief executive made a surprise visit to lhe delight of hundreds of children. One of the happiest was Naomi Gonzales, II, who stepped forth when the President asked a class if anyone had a birthday last Saturday. He became SS on that day. r-.'aomi is the daughter of Mr. ·and f\.1rs. Leonard Goniales, of 129 Calle Victoria. After that visit -including a pause for pictures made by White House P hotographer Ollie Atkins -Mr. Nixon dropped by at room U for a chat with 11 fourth graders. As he handed out pre s iden ti al keychalm to boys and bow pins to the girls, he asked quesUons or the pupils' knowledge of the environment and if IRVINE ... biggest contention In opposing the Tiew city. City manqe.r Carl Thornton reputed Wednesday that proponents have given no ·sound assurance that low coat bOWJing would be provided. He again pleaded for time saying Santa Ana felt safer with the immediate development of the area under county jurisdiction. He repeated that his city has 85 percent of the black population and 35 percent of the Mexican American residents in the county. Supporters of the incorporation were again led by John Burton, chairman cf the Council of Communities of Irvine (CCI). He argued that his group had shown that the proposed city would be able to support itself, Burton responded to Santa Ana's attack with, "We are concerned with the pro- blems. but we are being asked to take on tasks not assigned to any other new community, We are willing lo continue our studies leading to a solution or th e problems with the county and with UCL" The incorporation leader again read a resolution of CCI favoring low irn:ome housing areas within the new city. How the five commission members wlll vote Feb. 10 is anybody's guess. The commission could deny in· corporation "without prejudice " as recommended by their executive officer Richard Turner. This could all ow a cool· Jng of! period in which some of th e problems might be resolved. The "without prejudice" terminology allows proponents to come back at any time with the same proposal whereal!I an outrJght denial would block any further incorporation attempts for one year. Commisl!lloner Stanley Northrup, San Clemente city councilman, indicated he may lean tow ard incorporation. "There is no argument on the viability ()f the proposed city. The proponentl!I have done an outstanding job of research and their cali ber belies any argument that they are controlled by the Irvine Company." One of the few new voices Wednesday, that of Dr. Erwin A1ber, charged jusl the opposite. Alber, an Irvine resident, sa id the company had exerted undue influence on the incorporation supporters. Commissioner Northrup said he was concerned about one thing -boundaries of the new city. He pointed to the requested inclusion of some 600 acres on the southern boundary requested by UCI and the fig ht between Santa Ana and the new city over 900 acres of in dustrial land south of the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facillty. "I would also like to have the sur· rounding citiel!I define their future 1pheres of influence," Northrup 5aid. DAILY PILOT "..,... ... . l4-• ... di c ...... ... " .............. P.n tel1 ..... ... ._ ... <llAMGll! CO.\ST P'Ul l l5HIMO COM,.AJllY Ro'oert N. Wet~ .......... , .... """'"'*' J1dc R. Curl1y Viet P',_IClft'lt Ar.Cl Glnlor•I M11W1 .... Thom11 Ke.vii £•119r 1'110111•1 A. MurphiR1 Mtn•&lfll ECl!lor tl.id11rd P. H1I IDV!li Or•...., c-•r E4111r" -Coll• M-: UCI W"I lllY s1r .. 1 Hewpor1 h .cl\: mi w"' .. ._, .,.,.~ L .. -1 .. e11~ tt2 l"orlot A-tiUf!ll""°" '"die 1117' llMCll a.uw,,,,.. ,,_n Cll,,,..,M! 3QI No.tll El Cimino -. .. 1 ) • they had ever traveled out of the state or country. Many rai!ed their bands. Durlng the conversations in Mrs. Loralee Zink'l!I fifth grade class, he discussed his best subjects in elementary school -history and geogrephy. "They were my best, because the teacher wu so good," be said. Mrs. Zink said the children ha ve been studying the environment in soclal studies clasi:. Plea.sed, Mr. Nixon said he hoped this generation would see clean air and pure water, "We are working very hard on that," he said. The official reason for the 2:45 p.m. vi.sit was a chance to give thanks to the studenl.s and st.ff who .sent doUns of birthday greeting• to the Watern White House lal!ll weekend. The same puplla received an ornate cake baked for the Nlxons by a master pastry chef from a Los Angeles Hotel !sat week. F rom Page 1 NIXON •.. ''loud and perlistent heckILna:" and uid they would not applaud the Presidenl The President, Mn:. Nllon, daughter, Tricia, and domeatlc a.Idell left La C.sa Pacifica in San Clemente on foot at 9: 15 a.m., strolllnc toward their waiting Army helicopter lD a bright, but chilly morning. lt1r . Nixon carried a leather binder as he waved to a small group or well wishers. The First Family waved , smiled, but said nothing as they swiftly boarded the chopper for the IS.minute fl ight to Air Firce One at the El Toro MCAS. Momentl!I after sitting down at hi! place in the helicopter th e chief executive drew out papers and began 1tudylng documenl.s as the helicopter began warm- ing up. Before the departure, his valet. Manolo Sanchez, spoke to a friend in the military .!laying the next trip by his boss would probably be an Easler vis it to the Key Biscayne residence in Florida . An aide guessed the President might not return to the Western White House In San Clemente again until summer. Beofre boarding Air Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station , the President ac~pted a crocheted portrait of himself from Mr. and Mn. Philip Bielat ol Los Angeles. He chatted briefly with them and polled for picture!. Nixon spent much of his San Clemente :iitint preparing today's speech -"Youth In Our Society" -and hi& State of The Union addresl!I. It will be delivered before a joint session of Congress Jan. 22. Sen. and Mrs. Roman Hru ska of Nebraska flew with the presidential party aboard Air Force One today. From Page J CALLEY ... looked up, he said. and saw a :OOY about four or five years old approaching. "[ beard Cap l Medina holler again," Flynn continued. "There were two shots and I looked up and 1 was facing where the boy wu coming from and I l!leen him fall down.·• "Was he armed. to your knowledge?" asked Maj. Kenneth A. Raby, a defense attorney. .. No," replied Flynn. The defense Wednesday tried to show that army high brass in the area knew "what was happening" ffhll e Cherlie Company was sweeping lhe village in what the government charges wall a ms"acre. Meanwhlle, In a related trial. an Army prosecutor told the court-martial of Sgt. Olarles Hutto today at Fort McPherson. Ga., that Hutto's own l!ltatement should convict him of auauJL with intent to kill My Lai villagers. Capt. Franklin Wurtzel, in hl:ii closing statement, said that Hutto had admitted firing his "f.116 rifle at point-blank range'' into men, women and children "with the intent to commit murder." He rererred to 1 staement taken from Hutto by the Army's C r I m i n a I Investigation Division and p I aced in evidence earlier In the tMat. Col. Kenneth Howard, the military judge. planned to charge the jury later in the day. The six-member court-martial panel would then begin deliberations. Dirty Film Rap Jails Man in SA A supttted major diltrlbutor of nllhy films to Southern Callfoml1 smut !oven waa arTUted outllde 1 Santa Ana adult.s- only book"°"' Wl!dneaday, police said. Ronald A. Larob, 15, of Los Angeleo, was booked on suspicion of uJg of obo<ont !llms, A,000 wor1ll of which pollct said were confllClted N evklence. Vice offictra delcrtbed the ISIOrted reels u contalnln, whit they called hard-<>ore pomocr•J>hY. Larob'• '""st wound up •n ln--vettl1auon lnto hll Sinta Ana.area ac- UvtUe• rel•tina: to the stag film market, police l&ld. He wu Uilc.en Into custody al First Street and Harbor Boulevard. T raffic S1aarled Heavy Snowfalls Blanket 2 States By Unlttd Pre11 10tern1tlon1 I Slate officials had to rescue Nev ada Gov. Mike O'Callaghan from hia IMW· bounde Carson City maMion Wednesday as the worst snowstorm ln 19 years smothered parts of two states. Traffic accidenls were legion in the midwest and east as a glaze of freezing bitter cold grasped the nor theast. Truckee. C.:ilif., in the Jligh Sierra. ha d 98 inches of snow nn the ground, including twn feet fron1 the current storm. The total snowfall was the most since the winter of 1951-52. when the city had 200 inches or snow. A spokesman rnr the California Division of Highways said Interstate 80. a main transcontinental route, probably would not be reopened until late today. As much as 130 inches or sno w was on the ground where the road crossed the Sierra at Donner Sun1mH. Four-hundred persons were isola ted in Ca lifornia Alpine Conuty when the last access route, Luther Pass, was clnsed. A Reno, Nev , to Sacramento, Calif., bus was sluck for several hou rs in snov.'drifts on Californ ia 70 . Reno itself \Vas closed lo highway traffir as vis ibility dropped to near zero. the upper Miss issippi Valley during much of Wednesday and into toda y. Between 60 81ld 75 vehicle~ were involv ed In accidents on Interstate 80 in Lake Coun- ty , Indiana. Chlcago trarflc snarled badly on the ice. An 18-car chai n·reactlon crash on Lake Shore Drive spread nver two blockll end another crash nn the Dan Ryan Expresswa y involved more than 20 vehicles. Othe r vchicl~ were unable tn negotiate ramps leading to the city '~ expressways, stranding thtise behind them. Prosec ution Bring s Growl From Manson Policemen Wounded All schoo ls in California 's Tahoe basin \\'ere closed for the second straight day. As far nort h as Oregon, Jnterstate S was closed most of Wednesday morning and a Westtrn Hockey League game at Port land was postponed because tif snow and ice. LOS ANGELF.S IUP!l -Depul.y District ALtorney Vincent Bugliosi was describing Charles Manson to the Tale murder trial jury as a diabolical, cold- blooded murderer. Suddenly a sinister snarl was heard. Patrolman Robert Martinez. 23, (top) wa s shot twice in the arm and Patrolman Dennis Jacobsen, 23 , \11as hit once in the leg late Wednesday in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district. P olice said lhe offi~ers were ambushed while awaiting radio indentification of a possible stolen car. Five black men are being sought in connection \vith the shootings. See story, Page 8. A freez ing rain and dri:nle fell across "Grrrr,'' said Charles Manson, in mock menace. The growl came through a fool-square wire mesh panel in a heavy door separating the courtroom from the holding t a n k where the 3&-year-old defendant heard the proceedings via loudspeaker. From Page 1 Fish Eaters Have Ex cess BLAZE ... lt ·was one of the highlig hts Wednesday In a storn1y day nearing the end of the seven-month trial that saw Bugliosi launching Into a blistering personal at- tack on each of !he four defense lawyers. nf the \Vestmlnster Terrace Residence home for senior ci ti1.cns, Of Mercury Chemist Say s BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (UPI) _ i of the sopposed le>ic l<'el -100 All of the nint.' vic tims apparently diNI nr smoke inha lation. The four-s tory brick building had been considered fireproof, and hours after the blaze was under control firemen had not been able to determine the cause , nor exactly \\'here it started. Bugliosi said lhal Manson's attor~ey, Trving Kanarek, had sought to t'Q~v1nce the jury that the sta!e was lry1ng to •·frame an innocent man" v.·ith perjured witnesses and planted evidence. state university chemist who discovered mercury contamination of tuna and swordfish says new research shows peo- ple who eat a lot of fish contain fi ve time:ii the amount of mercury of regular eaters. While not finding any dangerous mercury levels. Dr. Bruce McDuffie call- ed Wednesday for more Intensive re.search into the effect of mercury ac- cumulations in humans. McDuffie, a chemistry professor at the State University at Binghamton, said he took hair, blood and urine samples from 42 members o( Weightwatchcr Clubs, who had been dining on fish five times a week for 16 months. McDuffie said a "control group" of 20 non-dieters studied had mercury level:ii substantially below the dieterl!I. ''We found an averqe mercury level of one microgram of mercury per 100 milliliters of blood" in the diet group, whic h was in the range of theoretic blood mercury values:, he said. "Nevertheless," he continued , "the level was five times higher than that of the control group, wh ich averaged out of 2/lOtb Of a microgram per 100 milliliters of blood:' McDuffie said four .members of the diet group had blood levell!I of more than 10 timell the control group average but that was still only I/25th to l/SOlh F rom Pafle 1 BAKER .•. management of his business interests, il"l:luding the luxury Carousel Motel, in Ocean Ci ty. He has told fr iend:ii he is prepared to serve his tum "w!th dignity." At the main Lewisburg Peniten tiary, prisoner number 33298 is another former powerful W11shington figure. ,James Hof- fa, one-time Teamsters Union preside nt. ill midwa y through a sentence for jury tampering . Lewisburg and Allenwood ha ve been called "institutions about as plush a~ man hiu cruted sin~ he started sending fellow:ii to .pril!IOn." AU prisoners work at jobs in "profit sharing industries.'' Hoffa is a mattress nuffer in a furniture workshop. Prison life includes rout beef dinner\ and an infirmary with an individual fadio set for each patient. Baker, born in Pickens, S.C., b<!came a Senate page in 1942 when he was 14. Nine yean later he went to work for Johnson, then a Texal!I Senator, and in 195$ when John.son wall elected ma- jority leader Baker wu mad e Secretary of the Senat.e. Workinc: 18 hour days, and torming frlendahlps with many i n r I u e n t I a I Senators, Baker wu a key agent aB Johnaon established himself as the most powerful majority leader in modern times. In 1963, a vending machine company charged Baker with lnOuence peddling. He ruiined hls Senate po:iit under fire in 1954 and turned to his bu.slne.ss affaln full time. But ln 1966, he WIS indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of larcen)'., ftaud and lncome tax evasion. Tht government contended De h•d pocketed $131,000 from • group or CaJlfornla aavings and loan officials. He was found gully on all seven counts ()f the indictment, but his 1·3 year sen- tence was far le !ll!I than the 47 yoars he could have received. ' I micrograms per 100 milliliters, "However, one may well question whether a safely factor of 25 to SO is adequa te for mercury," he added. "None of the levels found in the weight watcherl!I group was known to be dange rous to those tested," he said. ''But the effect of small dosages of me rcury, particularly methyl mercury, over long periods of time should be studied extensively if foods containing significant amounts of mercury are to be continued in the human diet ." McDuffie's findings of mercury in tuna and swordfish samples above the 0.5 parts per million acceptable level sel by federal standards led lo the f ood and Drug Administration ordering certain brands off supermarket shelves . Murde1·cr Recaptured MEXICO CIT Y (UPI) -An escaped murderer wall captured when his car stopped for a red light in front of police headquarters, police said today. The de ad incl uded two men rind seven \11umcn, one of the later not Iden tifi ed, ran lj ing in age from 77 to 92. The Cflroncr's off ice identi fied the others as Frank Shobe. 79. and the following Louisville residents : U.-on E. <:rubbs. 00. f\1r s. John W. Ebbcrl. 86. Nora Lee Strong. 92, Mrs. Willlam T. Rates. 78. ,.,_!rs. David Johnson, 77. Mrs. f\lary Presley Smith. 82. and Alma Swan, 80 Goodykunl z said Miss Swan and Shobe. \\'ere the "1nonitors" believed to have dire! while trying to alert other residents. The. first alarm was sounded about 2:30 a.n1. F.ST and Garland said that ns he left his home a few blocks aw ay "I could src flames shooting up over thC' building." :'1'1iller said one won1an was overcome :ind dierl bcfnrr. she could set out of rt first·flf\Or in firmary from whic h 1.l other p:i tients sare!y fl ed. The other eight ''ittims were overcome by smoke befnre they rould get to balconies at- tached to each apartment. That Jed Manson to another shouted objection. "Are you trying Irving Kanarek - he's not my lawyer." ,.,,anson yellt.d through Lhe screen . Bugliosi told the jury he would talk Into F'riday when the case finally may be submitted for a verdict. The evidence against Manson and three women codefendants is so great, Bugliosi said, that the defense attorneys were tr~·ing to obscure the facts like a giant octopus letting out a "great inky murk." "Their cl ients are guilty as sin and they can 't do anylhing about it,'' Rugliosi sa id. "The late. great Clarence Darrow couldn•t have done anything for them." The prosecutor, attacki ng repeatedly, said sarcastically that Manson 's lawyer never referred to the victims as having been murdered or killed . "Irving just says they passed away," BugliQsi said. ''The defense hasn"I. put on any evi- dence of insaiity or diminished mental capacity.'' he sa id . "They were not suf- fering from diminished mental capacity. They were suffering from a dim inished heart a diminished soul." lu xu riou s spring down so fas Thi1 hand1ame Sofa w11 designed to give you the ultim1te in seating comfort with dacron and down b1 ck pillows, deep spring down Hat cushions e nveloped in down .and feathers in two foam·filled arm pillows. Choose from • wide s•lection of fine fabric s. 8' length, reg . $599 NOW 399. ~~~~~~~~~~ALso ~-=~=='"-~~~~-, Many, Many FLOOR SAMPLES $400 and $500 Values On• Of A Kind SOFAS COME EARLY FOR BI ST SELECTIONS NOW Your favo rite d~siginer wi II be happ~ to oasi$t vou s299 H.J. GARREIT fURNITLJ~~ HARBOR BLVD. PROFESSIONAL 0 ••• Mon .. Thu.,. & f'rl. bes. COSTA MESA. CALIF. INTER IOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGE 646-0275 646.0276 ,,, ' " .. I Buniington Beae· ·-----' EDITI O N ---·· ,........,_ ------~ VOL 1>4, NO. 12, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA THURSDA Y, JANUARY 14, 1q1 1 it In Huntington Schools Battle Funding Crisis Administrators of lhe Huntington Beacb City (elementary) School District claim to be battling a financial crisis. S c h o o I districls cannot legally go bakrupt, but Huntington Beach could DAii. Y P'ILOT Shff ,....,_ Citizen Steven • Graham Stevens, 5 months, was on hand Wednesday when his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Stevens of Huntington Beach, took the oath or allegiance to the U.S. There were 72 Orange Coast residents who became naturalized citizens in cere- monies at the Orange County Courthouse. See story, Page 11 . Miss Huntington Seeks Ne\v Cro\vn Title of 'Mrs.' Jayme Boyd, the reigning Miss Hun· t.ington Beach, will seek a new cro~'n next June . She plan:"> to join the rush of June brides picking up the queenly title of ''Mrs." Her new, solo, audiencP. will be David Armstrong. Miss Boyd, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Boyd, Weslminster, elso holds the title of Miss Orange County Press Club. A new Miss Huntington Beach Pageant Is already scheduled for May, so the CWTent queen won't be forfeiting her cro~TI. give it a good try if changes aren't made, according to Deputy Superin- tendent Charles Palmer. Current eslimates show the district starting the 1971·72 budget year with only $13,000 in reserve. "We must face sharp chltnges in the program offered or find new SOurCf:s of revenue," Palmer l\'arned. Three sources of new revenue are possible : more federal funds, more slale aid, or raise Jocal laxes. Palmer's concern was sparked by the slowness of expected stale funds coming into the district. "Our budget shows an ending reserve of $165,000," he explained. "But right now we only have $12,000 in reserve and I think lhafs all we 'll have at the end of the yea r." Huntington Beach isn"t receiving nearly as much in state funds as expected, because it doesn't have as many children as expected. "We're not receiving students as fast as we thought ," Palmer said. "That makes us lose state money." If a large surge of children comes into the district next year, it could bring in sufficient 1tate money, but Palmu ltn1 ..iytog on that · "We may lace some cutback! in thl school program. If so, the board of education will decide what goes and bow.'' He listed six possible areas for pro- gram cuts, not necessarily in any order: -Transportation. drop 8Chool buses. --Curtail custodial services, clean rooms less. -Stop caring lor school grounds. -Stop maintenance on buildings and equipment. -Slow down the purchase of educa- tional supplies. -Cut out such speci al education items as music. speech. reading specialists, nurses, psychologists, assistant prin- cipals. Another alternative. of course , is to call a tax tlection and raise local taxes. The current total tax rate for the City School District is $2.80 per $100 as.!lessed valuation. "That \\'ould not help us immediately." Palmer added. "But It would ce rtainly help over the long run." Huntington Beach City School District has the eighth lowes t tax rate out ol 18 Orange County elementary school dis!r icts. The district also has an assessed va!ua· lion of $151,039,000, which is fifth highest in the coun ty and second highest per-child valuation. "If our assessed valualion was reassessed. that might also help,'' Palmer added. The district in 1969-70 spent $640 per student on education which was fourth highest in the county. "That figure Is high," Palmer ex- plained, "because our ~xpense on teachers' salaries Is also high. It ranks fourth in the county." The recent she percent pay raise (See SCHOOLS, Pase J:) P resident As ks College Students 'Try the System' LINCOLN, Neb . (AP) -President Nixon. appearing before a campus au- dience, said today ''.There can be no generation gap in America" and, citing the 18-year-old vote in the federal elec· lions, called on young people to try out "'lhe system." Nixon flew here from a nine-day stay at the Western White House in San Clemente to address a faculty-student convocation at the University o f Nebraska. In a prepared address, Nixon said that his administration "has no higher priority than to end the war " in Vietnam. But his emphasis ?.·as on lhe role of youth in achieving what he termed "great goals" in dealing with problems or the environment , decay of the cities, overpopulation, rural ill s and "the pro- blems of prosperity itself -the problems of poverty in a land of plenty." Nixon made but one announcement of a new administration aim in his remarks aimed at the 21 .000-students at the university. He said he will send a special message to the 1971 Congress proposing a new agency that would bring together the Peace Corps, VISTA and related federal efforts to utilize volunteer service. Nixon said his new agency. yet to be named , would "give young Americans an e'lpanded op~::nity for the services (See SPEECH, Pace Z) llAIL Y P'1LOT lllff , ..... • . .. Presi.dent Leaves Coast For University S peech President Nixon waved an end to his nine-day Orange County vacation this morning and Oew toward his speech to University of Nebraska students. Aides have call ed It important. In Lincoln, two university student leaders who accepted an invitation to share the platform with Nixon said lhey would wear black arm bands in the "hope that our presence will not be construed as support for the President." Steve Tiwald, president of the stud ent body, aud Ken Wald, head of a campus honora ry group called the Innocents Society, said i11 a slalement they did not endorse the President's policies. They did not elaborate. They urged students Ul refrain from "loud and persistent heckling" and said tiJey would not applaud the President The Presi dent, Mrs. Nixon, daughter. Tricia, and domes tic aides left La Casa Pacifica In San Clemenle on foot at 9;15 a.m., strolling to\\ard their waiting Army helicopte r In a bright. but chilly morning. Mr. Nixon carried a leather binder as he waved to a small group of well wishers. The First Family waved, smiled, but said nothing a:i 'they swiftly txiarded the chopper for the 15-minute flight to Air Force One at the El Toro MCAS. Moment.I after sitting down al his place in the helicopter the chief executive drew out papers and began studying documents as the helicopter began warm· ing up. Before the departure, his valet, Manolo Sanchez. spoke to a friend In the military saying the next trip by his boss would probably be an Easter visit to the Key Biscayne residence in Florida. An aide guessed the President might not relum to the \Veslern White House in San Clemente again until summer. Beofre boarding Air Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, the President accepted a crocheted portrait of himself from t.1r. and Mrs. Philip Bielat of Los Angeles. He chatted briefly v."ith them and posed for piclures. Nixon spent mu ch of his Sa" Clemente stint preparing today's speech -"Youth In Our Society'' -and his State of The Union address . It will be delivered before a joint session of Congre.ss Jan. 22. Sen. and Mrs. Roman Jlruska of Nebraska new wllh the presidential party aboard Air Force One today. Miss Boyd, a 1969 graduate of Fountain Valley High School, is currently a pro. fessional model and dancer. She heads a Tahitian dance group which performs throughout the county. Huntington · to Evict Dogs Court Dismisses Kidnap Charges On Photogr~pher Little Leag uers Deadline Ne ar I Boys 8-12 years of age who want to play iHu1eball with the Ocean View Little League must a:tve 1tielr names to the league this weekend or next weekend. Returning p\ayera may 1ign up from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday, or noon lo 4 p.m., Sunday, at the league field on Hell Avenue between Graham Street and Bolsa Chica Road . Bo1s new to the league must bring a birth certificate and one of their parents to the field at the same boors Jan. 23 or 24. The registration fee ill $15 for Cn! boy, *9 for the second boy in a f1m.lly and ·s.s for a thlrd. lf It Is r11inlng, slgnups will be held at Me11dow Vlow School , 5702 Clark Dr .• •lunUnglon Beach. For-further ln- f_ormaUon phone Gene Vila, Jea,ue pres!· den~ •I 1117-4973. • Order Bannirig Fido From Beacli to Be Enforced By ALAN D!RKIN Of ... DI&.., , .... ,... city limit.I Meyer said. "Bolsa Chica Is unfenced and we don't lave Fido"' at home 1f YJAI are 1olng have a rfteins to control or enforce to spend a day Dl1 the sand In Huntln1ton the tow there," be s;.Jd. Beach. He't banned. ..... f •-H Un Stitt parka rangera and llfeguanU Meyer told mtmlOll;:n o tnoe un gton will enforce a new order this yearJr~ Beach· Safety Council of the new order h'b"ti clop ~-... t ll Wed:naday. The decision to ban dog1 1 1 ng u vm "'JI!! wo-m e un--was made by ~let headquarters in lington Beach Sf.tte Parlt. San Diego and allo applies to the San Previously they •ere allowed on the beacb on a alx-foot leub but u of Clemtnte and Doheny state beaches. Jan. t they will not be allowed on He said that the decltion was m1de the sand 1t all Lou Meytt aupervialng becl&lle of complalnll over the number ranger ' for the' HUntlngtoi 1 Beacb Stae of \toe bites. ''Tbite baye been several Park and Bolsa Ollt1 be.m,;1 NR]aloed at· Slp Oemeate and Doheny where this morninC. : t 1 ' , • ,Oler have ovtrnlcht park!.,.," he er- Dop hive' been buntd from 'tht ctlr 'Plained. ''P::ven if they are on a leuh be1cb for about 10 years and the city at a campsite kids tend to want to ordl...,.. bu aloo been 111fO«Od on pet th<m and 90m.U-get nipped." the Huntlqtoo Pldl'ic bea<h north of Meyer agreed that thera ~od been the pier. few problems with dog l)!tea on the Dop will 1Ull be allowed on a le.uh Hwitington Beach State Park. I.eat year on the Bolla Oiica beach outside the there was only one incident • althouab • ' ha estimated about 1% million persons visited the beach. "We have had problems with dogs running around loose," he went on. "We could have cited aboot 150 viol1Uotis but we &eldom did except in rare cases beca\Jle people became downright Ir· ritated about it." City ,Llfe..,.nl Capt llouglH D' Arnell sa id he bellevtd the city Md a leash law in the 1950'• tMit went to 1 total ban about 10 yMrS .. 10. "It'1 mainly •nRlry, people Just don't like la find their towel ta lold on dog mess.'' he said. "We hlve actvlled people In the put that they could tako the dog to the stale beach If It wu put on a leash, bul now we won't 'have anywhere \0 send them,'' the captain 11dded. Dogs can be walked In city parks In Huntington Beach so lone as they are on a leash. ( Kidnaping and dru g charges have been dropped against a Fountain Valley photographer with the defendant'• filing in Orange County Superior Court of a plea or guilty to charges of sex; perverslo~. J~dae Byron K. McMUlan ordered tw~ psycllfatrLtts to rule on the mental con- dition or Robert Charles Albrlaht Jr., 32, of 111982 A'rbutus' St. He will ~ Feb., 1 on Ajbrlght'11 ,el~blllty 11 . a possible mentally dllordered an of- fender. . Albrighf wao · .,,..sled· 1ut Sept. II And accused of kldnapbtg a 11.year-otd Coota Mesa ,irr end fo~n& her la join.him 1h ictl of geMI pervmlon. Judie McMill111 dlmlaood ll!e kldnop Count and other charges of possession ~f marlJuana and dangerous ~-· Amitllng 0 f f I c e r I 11!1:1 the ph<tographer for<ed the 11rl Into 'hto cir Ind compelled her to participate In unlawful stxual act! at tnifepotnt. Albright WU 1rrelled 1fter be.in& pursued by patrol c•fl· at high ~ throuah FountaJn VaUay and Coala Me11. T oday's F lnal N.Y. Sioekl!I TEN CENTS an Holdup Men Make 0££ With $2,681 By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 ~ 0111'1 P'llM Sti ff The Ski Mask Gang pulled a carbon copy of their December holdup at • • Huntington Beach bank WednWay af· ternoon and escaped with $2,881 in cash. Hiding their fa ces behind red·whlte- and blue ski ma sks, lhe four men exe· cuted the robbery by 'holding tellers of the Security Pacific National Bank, '17Tl Edinger Ave., at bay wllh a revolver while they emptied the drawers. A female bank employe aaid abe heard a rustling sound near the entrance of the bank around 1:10 p.m., followed by the entry of three men, one of whom was waving a small black revolver over his head. She said two of the men vaulted the counter and emptied the Ull! while the th ird man was standing guard. A fourth bandit was walling out!ide in a getaway car. Detectives,' who conceded that the men did "a neat job," believe that the rob- bers are the same ones who got away with $5,000 from the Five Point!: Branch of the Bank of America last month. During both holdups the bandits dis- guised themselves with ski masks and used a ato\en automobile as their get~ •way car. Wedneaday's getaway car wu recov· ered by poU~ ln a nearby Mopping cen- ter shortly after the incident It had bem botwired, offken: II.Id. WJtnesses t:o the hoJdup said the. four (See HOLDUP, Pqe t) P oli ce Discover Prints, Ring I n Phoenix Car Evidence which allegedly Jinks Gary Harold PhoeniJ: to a series of rapes and kidnaps in six Orange County tom- munities was produced today in Orange County Superior Court as the prosecution closed its case against the tall Costa P.1e.'8 bachelor. Criminologists le!tified that a ring, found in the white Thunderbird driven by Phoenix and identified by several victims u the vehlcle In which they were abducted and raped. came from the purse of a Huntington Beach woman. Fingerprints foillld in the battered aut& are also alleged to have been placed there by women who have idenU()ed Phoenix. 29. as the man who raped them and forced them to participate in acts of sexual perversion. Phoenix is accused of rape:. assault with intent to commit rape, kidnap, robbery and sex pervtrslon. Deputy District Attorney Michael Capir.zl will ask for the death penalty If Phoenix is round guilty of the major rape-kidnap charges. The former a!sistant manager of a Huntington Beach health spa was arrest. ed last July 25 and named in a compl1lnt wh.ich contains 33 felony char1ea. He ls accused of attackl11g nine women In a 28-day crime spree whlch began late last JW10 and ended In. July when he walked into • Huntlngton Beach pollce 1tation and surmidered to detectives. Weadaer The mercury11 move back up lhla the 60s •Joni the cout Fri· day, with. sunny sklet prevaillng through the hllh cloudo. INSmE TODAY 'l'M mighty Amm Dani, which Ml J)rovm to bt·Ri&aio'• k"J lo the Mf<Ua.i,: It ff'Alt~ It wfU Cttal< htadaclia GI WU GI ntW hopt Joi A"!1>1, .SfMv Pagc-l&. 1 • l. I DAil Y PILOT " ThMrM.IQ, J411".,' 14, l•n - Reward for Sa-ely Teacher Has Discounts for Good Drivers Ill' •111!1 NIEDZIEUIO ... ..., ........ Reward -In addllion to punishment by traffic Ucket -has been advanced as a method of reducing highway carnage by a Fountain Valley High School -· David Feyk, a young English instructor with a passion for safe driving, says he has already begun to tackle the problem by giving drivers di1COunt cards ror merchandise for keeping their traffic records clean. "More Americans are killed on our highwaya in one year than in ten years of Vietnam," be said "Thb tragedy has · to be reduced and I believe my Idea will help." Already, Feyi has found 50 local merchants who are wi lting to reduce the statistics by giving discount cards to safe drivers. Because each of the merchants deal in different products and services, the card can be used for a wide variety of purchases, not only by aaults, but also ·by teenagers. "In order to earn such a card. I.he drlYWI m\W PIN • wrltteD uamlna1'on ed poy a unall membmlhlp llO."' "Y• explll!J10Cf. And although he admits that si mpl y passing a test does not lnsure that a person is a safe driver, he is hoping that their attitudes will change once they earn a card. "J'm sure that once they enjoy all these discounts for a year, they won't want to lose the card by driving hazardously," be added. Card holders are suspended from renewlng for OM year if they a.re found guilty of just one movlng violation during the year they hold the card. They are suspended for three yea rs if the violation is driving under the influence of alcohol. "Because proper attitude is the key to s.are driving, th is incen ti\'e plan should improve these attitudes. They 'll not only be driving safely lo avoid accidents .and citation!, but also to uve money,'' he claims. The discounts. according to Feyk, range from 10 pes-cent all the way up lo ~ctn~ dtpendin( upon Ille (Ype of. • ,.,,,. • '.. 1111 llave 1!een elll<mely responatve to my Idea bectuu lt cloean't aist them anything other titan the dJ.s.. count," he added. "Only a few of them were negati ve .about it and these were merchanta who are already giving discounts." '"If a Jot of people were to take advantage of this card system, they could save hundreds of dollars each year," Feyk predicted. Every legal license holder , regardless of age .or past record, is eligible to take the test and earn a card. That gives the teenagers a break too. "Sometimes," Feylt said , "you ng ~ pie are judged guilty without a t r i a I , Driving is a personal thing. Why should teenagers. or any age group for that matter, be discrimminated against for other people's mistakes?" Those interested in obtalning a discount cai-d may call 53&-0321 or write to Safe Driver DiSC1>unts, Box 759, Huntington Beach, 92648. Bobby Baker in Pruon As Last Appeal Fizzles From Pflff" 1 SPEECH •.. they want to give -and that will give them what is not now offered, a chance to transfer between service abroad and at home." LEWISBURG, Pa. (UPJ) -Robert G. "Bobby" Baker was led h8l!dcUffed into a federaJ prison today after getting lost on his way to surttnder to federal marshals. The one-lime Senate p.1 ge who became a protege cf Lyndon B. Johruion and a millionaire busines!man entered the Allenwood Prison Fann cf Lewisburg Federal penitentiary to serve a one-to... three year tenn for fraud, theft and income tax evasion. He was escorted by three U.S. marshals as he entered the prison, wear. Ing ha ndcuffs, sunglasses despite the rainy weather, and a black overcoat. Balcer showed up in Lewisburg to sur- render, as agreed to earlier, shortly afttr 8:30 a.m. Navy Adhering To Plan to Shut Air Base July 1 '1'>e Navy presently la sticking to Its decision to pbaae out the Los Alamito1 Naval Air Station by July l. Navy Secretary John Cbafee told U.S. Rep. Richard T. Hanna (0-Anaheim) as much 1t a IW>Cheon Wednesday. "Mr. Hanna got the definite impression that Chafee believes the Navy is satisfied with the decision that was made and is not going to change it," commented Howard Adler, Hanna's legislative alde this morning. "Mr-HaMa also got th e impression however, that the Senate Anned Service Committee will hold hearings on the entire question of nationa l reserves." Speculation that the Navy might not go ahead with Its plan, announced last Mar.ch. to phase out the station was touched cff recefltJy by a call for a freeze on reserve base closures by Sen. Slfllm T1lurmond (R.SOuth CaroUna). He told the Senate bearing Jan. 2 that be would call for a review of the decision to close Loa Alamitos and four other air atationa: and urged a freeze on the closures until the in· vestigation is completed. The Navy has anoounced that it intends to build 2,800 housing units for 10.000 military men and their dependan ts after flight operationa aN! dlSC1>ntinued at ~ Alamitos. 'lbe city of Los Alamitos is opposed to this proposal and Is pushing for a regiona l park, Industrial e-0mplex, shop. Pin& center and housing for the area. DAILY PILOT OAANG£ COAST PU tl..Jllo11MG COM,.Allff Rolitrt H. WtH ,,...., .............. J1clr: .. c .rley \llc.e ,,.,ld.,t ... ~t ~ Th•m•• Kee'l'll lr•IW i\•1t1•• A Mllf'lllllM ~ ............. Al1ft Dfrll• Wal OrlllOI CillrltY' 1111- >.!bert W, 1111, A~tf £tttor Hntl .. tt1ta..11~ 17175 111.tl .. ult~1rd M1Jli111 Addreu1 P.O. l •ll" 790, f2 Mt °'"'°""" L"""" 1 .. ttu m ~-' •-"'" ,._., U1 W.1 tay s1 .. 1 "..,...! 9lldl1 2'11 W•I l1!bo1 .... ,..,.,.. &111 (;IM'llldl: w Horii! II '6rllllll htil • About 10 newsmen followed him as he tried to enter a bank building across the street from the federal build.lng where the marshal's offtce.s are located. He noticed a Christmas club sign on the bank door, realized be was at the wrong building and walked away. Then he sought directions from the newsmen, who directed· him across the strttt. It took on1y a few minutes for the marshals to bring him to a car for the trip to the prison. At no time did he have a conversation with newsmen. The prison issued a statement soon after his arriva1 noting that he has been designated a mi nimum security prisoner and will be sent to the honor farm after a week of proCessing in the main prison. Baker will be eligible for parole next Dec. 28, and if not granted parole will be released April 20, 1973. The surrender procedure w a s negotiated with the federal judge who sentenced Baker on his 1967 conviction for fraud, theft and federal inco me tax evasion. Baker lost his last appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court Dec. 20. Since then, he ~aa turned aver to lllodatu the management of his business interest.s. including the luxury Carousel Motel, in Ocean City. He has told friends he is prepared to serve hls tenn "with dignity." Valley Chamber Installation Slated at Club This year's installation banquet for the Fountain Valley Chamber of C-Om· meroe will be a repeal performance of the one held last year. The same four leaders will be reinst.tlJ. ed during ceremonies at Mile Square Country Club Saturday night. The new -but old - off icials are: Dr, Marvin Adler. president; Don Blake- ly, vice president ; Dr. Paul Berger, secretary, an d Don Edwards. treasurer. Entertainment will be provided by t.he Troubadours. a local group. Cocktail hour st.arts at 7:30 p.m. with dinner at 8 p.m. New officers in the chamber women·s division will also be honored Saturday, Leaders for 1971 are: Mr s. Jan Wilhelm, president: Mrs. Florence Blake- ly, lirst vice president; Mrs. Leah Fonda, second vice president: Mrs. Ma rilyn Empting, secretary, and Mrs. Mary His, treasurer. The public ii invited. Tickets are $11. For information phone 962-2424. In reciting the multiple problems fac· lng the e-0untry, the President declared : "We must meet them together. There can be no geoeraUon gap in America. The destlny of this nation Is not divided into yours and ours -it ls one destiny. We share it together. We are responsible for it together." The chief executive, in his broadest appeal yet to the young pe-Ople who will be voting for the first time In 1972, said: "Let us forge an alliance between generations." Citing 1970 legislation that gives voting rights in federal elections to those 18 years of age or older, N:ixon said : "So much is in your hands now. To those who have believed the system could not be move d I urge you try it. To those who have th ought the system was impenetrable. I say there Is no longer a need to penetrate -the door is open." Nixon added: ''You have now the op- portunity and the obligation to mold the world you live in, and you cann ot escape th is obligation.'' In a television-ra dio interv.iew las! week with four broadcast journalists, Nixon cited a Lile magazine poU that , he conceded, would indicate the younger voters at this time would not vote the way he might prefer. But he expressed the view that the youth vote will be up for grabs in 1972 and indicated he would be ma k.ing a pitch for it. Hls appearance before 11: student- f aculty convocation here apparently marked the beginning of his personal effort to solicit the allegiance of the newly enfranchised young voters. From Page 1 SCHOOLS ... granted teachers l ook $129,000 out of reserves which would have put the district reserve estimate over $300,000, according to Palmer. "The teacher pay raise. combined with our loi;s of state revenue ha s taken away all of our reserve," P.a!mer said. The total district budget is about $4.7 million, but all of it will be spent. \Vitti no reserve funds available, the district cannot expand programs or meet emergencies. The rising cos t of programs will also outgrow the budget. "The essence of it is tha t our district must face a basic re-evaluation of the program we offer, or we have to come up with more money," Palmer concluded. Fish Eaters Have Excess Of Mercury, Chemist Says BINGHAMTON, N.Y. <UPI) -Tho ttate university chemist who discovered mercury contamination of tuna and swordfilh says new research 1bows peo- ple who eat a lot of fish contain five tlme.11 the amount of mercury of regular eaters. While not fln ding any dangerous mercury levels, Dr. Bruce McDuffie call- ed Wedlleaday for more Intensive resurch Into the effect of mercury 10- cumulallona ln bumans. McDuffie, a chemistry profeasor 1t the State University at Blnahamtm, ••id he toot halr, blood and urlne um pies from 42 memben of We\ghtw1tcher Clubo, wbo bad been dlninc on f~h five timet: a w!et rw 11 months. McDuffie aatd ·a "conlttll group" of 20 non~eter1 studied hid mercury level1 tub8tant1ally be.low Lhe dieters. "We found an 1vtr11e mercury levt"l of one microgram of mercury p@r 100 mtlllllters of blood" In the diet group, Whl.cb Wiii in the ranp Of theoretic blood mercury values, he u ld. "NtverLheleas," he continued, "the • level was five times higher than that of the control group. which averaged out of 2/lOth of a microgram per 100 milliliters of blood." McDuffie said four members of the diet group had blood levels of more than 10 times the control group average but that was still only lt2St.h to 1150th of the 11tPposed toxic level -100 micrograms per 100 millil iters. "Howe\!i!r, one may well question whether a safety factor of 25 to ~ 1' adequate for mercury," he added . ''None of the levels found In the wel&ht watchers group was known to be dangerous to those tesied ," he said. "But the: effect of small dosaies of mercury. particularly methyl mercury. over long periods of time should be studied extensively lf food& containing algnUicant am ounts of mercury are to be canUnued in the human diet." MeOuffie's flnd inga of mercury In tuna and swordrish aemplcs above the 0.5 parts per million acceptable leve l :tel by fedual standards led to the Food and Drug Admlnlslratlon ordering cerLlln brands off 1upermarket shelves. OAllY l'llOT Stefl l'htft; PO LICE DISCOVER GETAWAY CAR USED BY BANDITS Bink Robbers Switch Autos; Still at Large Nine Die in l(entucky Retirement Home Blaze LOUISVILLE , Ky. (UPI) -Fire roared through the kitchen and chapel of a church-operated home for old persons here today, and clouds of .bl~ck smoke that billowed through the building killed nine persons. Fifty-eight others were hospitalized, including five in critical condition. Most of the 94 residents of the four· year-0ld, modern home were a?!e to make their way to the ba!con1es or their apartments and were rescued by firemen who reached the scene three minutes after the alarm was sounded. "When we got there. there were people all over the balconies." said Chief Garland P.1iller of the suburban Beuchel Volunteer Fire Department. Two of the dead were •·monitors" appointed to take charge in emergency situations such as fires . ''We believe they lost thetr lives trying tn arouse the people." said the Rev. Jack T. Goodykuntz, executive director Judges Approve Plau SACRAMENTO (UPI\ -The Sacra· mento County Su perior Court judges have approved a proposal to release criminal suspects withou t bail pending their trials. The program, similar lo the San Fran· cisco bail project. was sponsored by the Sacramento County Bar Association of the Westminst er TerraCf: Residence home for senior citizens. All or the nine victims apparently died or smo ke inhalation . The four-story brick building had been considered fireproof. and hours after the blaze was under control firemen had nol been able lo determine the cause, nor exactly where It starte d. The dead included two men and seven women , one of the later not identified, ranging in age from 77 to 92. The coroner's office identified the others as F'rank Shobe , 79, and the fotlnwing Louisville residents: Leon E. Grubbs, 80, Mrs. John W. Ebbert, 86, Nora Lee Strong, 92, 1'-1rs. William T. Bates, 78, Mrs. David Johnson, n, Mrs. tilary Pi-esley Smith, 82, and Alina Swan, 80. Goodykuntz said P.tiss Swan and Shobe were !lie "monitors" believed to have died while trying to alert olher residents. The first alarm was sounded about 2:30 a.m. EST and Garland said that as he left his home a few blocks away "I could see flames shooting up over the building." Mille r said one woman was overcome and died before she could "et out. of a first-floor infirmary from which 13 other patients sa fely fled. The oth er eight victims wrre ovrrcome by smoke before 1hey r~•·' ·1 balconies at- tached to each apartment •:q From P111Je J HOLDJJ P ••• .. men appeared to be wearing whitt pr· dening gloves and were all 1n their 'ar1. One of them was 11ld to have dark, ahoulder·length hair while another had a pot belly. Police said the gang used a peculi ar method of operation during both hold· ups bllt declined to release furth.er dt· tails, ' Wednesday's holdup was lhe third Hun- tington Be<ich banks have suffered in two months. In December FBI agent.I were successful in capturing a BelUlower laborer whom they accused of laking $1,000 from the Springdale and Edlnaer Branch of the Bank of Amtrica. Policeman , Fir1ns Sued ByBeachMan A Huntington Beach man has named one of that city's policemen and a group of construction firms as defendant.s in Orange County Superior Court suits which allege that he was framed on robbery charges. Franc.is William Herrera, 515 12th St., wants more than $1 million in damages from defendants listed in the two com· plainls. He particularly identifies Proper· ty Research Fina11ciat Corp. and PRC Development Corp. of Santa Ana and officer Ed M. Williams of the Huntington Beach force in his lawsuits. Herrera's actions state that he was wrongly tab bed last April 6 for the theft of swi m pool equipment from a Santa Ana construction site. He iden tifies PRC employes Homer A. McAllister and John MacPhersson as principally responsible for the filing of charges that led to his tr ial ln Santa Ana municipal court. Herrera alleges that night watchman' Ernest Verdugo was persuaded to Iden. tify him in connection with the theft and he further alleges that Williams was persuaded to pick out his "mug shots" from the Huntington Beach police files and hand them to MacPhersson, Herrera was acquitted by a jury last June 17 after a trial in which, he states, McAllister sat among the courtroom spectators and repeatedly signalled to prosecution witness Verdugo. Herrera notes that Judge Paul Mast admonished, McAllister for his actions. Both McAllister and MacPhersson,' Herrera alleges, coached Verdugo on identif ication procedures prior to the trial. Two Santa Ana policemen and. the cily of Santa Ana are named 85' ro-defendant.s in the second complaint. Ameri can Jumbo J et Slides Off Runway NEW YORK (UPI) -An American Airlines 747 jumbo jet from Safi Fran- cisco skidded off the end of a snow-slick runway at Kennedy Airport while landing early today. No one was hurt. The 48 passengers an d 11 crewmen left the plane by way of stairs and were tak· en to lhe terminal area ill vehicles. The plane was American's flight IB. luxuriou s spring down sof as Thia hand10m• Sof1 was designed to give you the ultimete In sea ting comfort with decron and down beck pillows, deep spring down ~t cush lo~s envel,oped in down and feather• In two foam-flll ed arm pillows. Choo1e from & Wide selection of fine fabrics. 8' le ngth, reg . $599 NOW 399. .----------Also-- Many, Many FLOOR SAMPLES Ont Of A Kind COME EARLY $400 and $500 VolUH ,OR BEST s 0 F A s SELECTIONS NOW Y ovr fo.voritr de1ignf'r \Oi U bf happv to 1U1!it vou H.J.GARRETT fURNl11J~~HARBOR BLVD. PROFESSIONAL Op,. MDO., "'""· I l'rf. r.... COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGE 6~6-0275 6-1 6-0l76 ( • ' Peopl e Who Need People Not Reall y the Luckiest By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ,,,. D•IJY fl llff •i.1t IF YOU OON'T believe that people need people as it !ays in the song, consider the case. ()f Old Daddy Washingtoo and Sweetpea Perez. ThC'y were unforgettable characters in Ward 3 at Atascadero Slate Hospital. The time I \l'orked there was unforgettablt. with a wealth of material for short stories and the novel that never 11eems to get 11•rilten. · Daddy and S"·eetpea were confined to a ward that the<>retically didn't exist. in a hospital for the criminally insane. It is doubtful they were criminals. IT. IS OOUBTFUL they would ever leave the bleak care and custody ward ()f a facility designated for tn:at· ment and rehabilitation, ucept feet firsl Daddy got his nickname -the surnames are chang· ed -as a foster parent. He believed Sweetpea wa11 his little boy Jimmy and looked after him, buttoning his pants and tying his shoes. Sweetpea hung around the husky old black man who seemed to care. 1'TllAT LITTLE Jimmy sho' is a bother," Daddy ·would say, taking his afternoon case in the February sun that never could warm the cold, C<>n· crete courtyard. Sweelpea -who didn 't smell like one -would have untied his heavy, state-issue brogans again. . . . . . Daddy v.·as in his 60s, brain drained away by syph1hllc paresis and his reasoning gone. He 1vas friendly, irascible and stout. He said he was 17 years old and 11 feet tall. And if he didn't get his way, the v.·hite-uniformed tec~nician responsi~le \1•as instantly condemned as one of a clan that long ago did Old Daddy dirt. .. He's one o' them dirty old Lewises," he'd thunder, OLD DADDY Washington must be dead by no1v. S1veetpea was 35, a spidery little Mongoloid with hands strong enough to tear thick seclusion j>ads into shreds like paper. 1-lis life expectancy too was brief. Daddy and Sweetpea aren't representative of the ~ation's .350,000 men- tal patienls, but I thought about them the other day while readmg the Wall Slreet Journa l. The story dealt with a campaign by reforming doctors and. l_a~yers, for better and more just care in U.S. public mental health care fac1hties . -ITEM: One doctor at a Florida state hospital has 1,000 patients as- signed to him, while 150 is the recommended load. -ITEM: Adequate private hospitalization cost $60 per da y, while tl-1issis- sippi spends $5.40 per patient. -ITE!\.f: The enlightened authorities of Dela\vare forbid any person who has ever been a mental patient from marrying, Condition."! in many hospitals are deplorable, but improving with the long-range drive ror reforms and greater public understanding. . Despite what one sometimes saw at Atascadero, other observations and a continuing interest indict1te that California is a pretty progressive leader in these matters. And communities have people like the Oista f\.fesa and Estancia high school girls playing Powder Puff football Saturday night, to benefit Fairview State Hospital patient programs. DADDY WASHINGTON end S\\·eetpea Perez couldn't compffilend the abstract human meaning of such a gesture, C<>mpared to the simple need for tied shoelaces and buttoned pants. But that melodic tune titled 1'People" has a terribly erroneous line. People who need people are not always the luckiest people in the world. Supreme Court Rules 'Small' Vote Changes Must Have U.S. Okay \\'ASH INGTON (UPI) -The Supreme Court ruled today that supposedly small changes in local voting procedure in the South, such as switches in poll ing places must first gel fede ra l clearance. The 'c.'1)u rt made the ruling in a case involving an enlargement in the bo.un- daries of the tow n or Canton. l\l1ss. To\vn offici als subsequent ly changed sites or some poll ing places and decided to conduct cleclion of cily alde rmen on an at-large ba~is rather than hy "'ards. The ci1y proceeded v.:ith the. cha.nges v;ithout first cle aring them v.·1!h e11her th e Justice Depart!nent or a federal court. The Supreme Court. in a spli t ruling, held that the 1965 V:oli~g _Rig~1ts Act aimed at wiping out d1scnm1nal1on against Negro voters in Southern states, applied to the Canton changes. Ousted Deputy Loses County Boa rd Appeal A sheriff's deputy who lost his job because he refused to take a lie detector test in questioning abciul a Mission Viejo burglary has lost the ap~I he filed v.·ith Orange County superv190rs. Ex-deputy John E. Bearden of Santa Ana v•as !urned down S to 0 by the OOard when he protested actions by Sheriff James A. Musick which led to his resignation -submitted just hours before Musick intended to fire him. Bearden 32, was one of a number or deputie1s questioned in the wake of arrest of Deputy Fred lrvine of La llabra, the officer accused of burglariz· ing the Mission Viejo Country Clu~ l~sl November while on duty as a Mm1on Viejo C<lmpany security guard. Bearden ~id the questioning •mounted to persecution becall."le Mu.'lick knew he and Irvine were good friends. Musick said Bearden was one of a number of his deputies questioned beca use they had taken on similar "moonlighting" duties In the area. A number of burglartes ccimmitted In the months prior to Irvine's arrest 11re still being Investigated by the Sher- iff's office . A lo\\·er cciurt had thrown out a suit brought by two Negro voters and ~ix defeated Negro candidates for political office in Canton. The case now goc11 back to a special three-judge panel in Jackson. Miss .. for further proceedings. Under the 1965 voting law , no change."! may be made in affected Soulhern states in voling procedures without a finding by the attorney general or the U.S. District Court in \\lashington, O.C., that Negro voting rights had 11ot been abridged. The th ree-judge federa l court in Jackson found that Canton had not violated the provision, particularly since the majority of the city's electorate is black. The dec ision wa! reversed in an opinion by Justice William J. Brennan J•. The lower court was instructed to bar rurther enforcement or changes in voting procedure pending compliance with federal law. The Canton election was delayed for • while because of the Jaw suit but was eventually held in October, 1969. All five winners were white: Canton expanded the city limits in 196S, 1966 and 1968 to bring In a tot al of 32: black V<ller1 and 176 white voters. B<lth before •nd after the •nnexations, the majority of the Canton electorate was black. Dirty Film Rap Jails Man in SA A supeded major dlstribulo• of m1t1y films to S<luthem Callfoml• smut lovers wa11 arrested outside a S.nta An1 adults. only book store Wednesday, police sakl. Ronald A. Larob, 35, of Im Angeles, was booked on inuplckm of sale of obscene films, $5,000 worth of which police said were conflsc8ted •s evidence. Vice ofOcen described the auorted reels as containing what thty called hard-eore pornography . berob's arrest wound up an In· vestigatlon into his Sanlll Ana-area I t· livities relating to the stag film market. police said. • He l'&S taken into custody at First Street and Harbor Boulevard. ' . '\ Police1nen Wo11nded Patrolman Robert Martinez, 23, (top) \va s shot t'vice tn the arm and Patrolman Dennis Jacobsen, 23. was hit once in the leg late Wednesday in San Francisco's Haight-Ashburv district. Police said the officers \vere ambushed while -awaiting radio indentification of a possible stolen car. Five black men are being sought in connection with the shootings. See story, Page 8. 400 Isolated i11 Alpine; Mo st of Nation Snowed In By Uni ted Press J11ter11atlo11al State ()fficia ls had to rescue Nevada Gov. Mike O'CaJlaghan from his snow- bounde Carson City ma nsion Wednesday as the worst snowstorm in 19 years smothered parts of two states. Traffic accidents were legion in the midwest and east as a glaze of freezing bitter cold grasped the oortheasL Truckee, Calif., in the High Sierra, had 98 inches of snow on the ground , including two feet from lhe current .storm. The total snowfall was the most sij:l« the winter of 1951-52, when the tlly had 200 inches of snow. A spokesman for the Californi a Division of Highways sa..id lntcrstate 80, a main transcontinental route, probably would not be reopened until late toda y. As much as 130 inches of sno w was on the ground where the road crossed the Sie rra al !)()nner Summit f our-hundred persons were isolated in California Alpine Conuty when the last access route, Luther Pass. was closed. A Reno, Nev.. to Sacramento, Calif., bus was stuck for several hours in snowdrifts on California 70, Reno itseH "'as closed to highway traffic as visi bilily dropped lo near zero. All schools in California's Tahoe basin were closed for the second straight d8".· As far north as Oregon, Interstate S was clo~ed most of Wednesday morn ing and a Western Hoc key League game at Portland was postponed because of snow and ice. A freezing rain and drizzle felt across 1he upper 1'.l ississippi Valley during much of Wednesday and into today. Between 60 and 75 vehicles were invo lved in accidents on Interstate 80 in Lake Coun- ty. Indiana. Chicago traffic snarled badly on the ICC'. An 18-car chain-reaction crash on Lake Shore Drive spread over tw o blocks end another crash on the Dan Ryan Holiday Air lines Drops Request For Cotmty T rips Holiday Airlines said today It has v.·ithdra\\'n its application for service at Orange County Airport. Expressway inv olved more than 20 vehicles. Other vehicles were unable lo negotiate ramps leading to the city's expressways, stranding those behind them. A woman was killed and seven other persons were injured when a Greyhound bus skidded and plunged over an em- bankment near Newco merstown, Ohio, Wednesday. At leasl 100 accidents were reported in the Cleveland area alter a freezing rain. Thursdt)', Januar7 14, 1971 H DAIL V PILOT .t T w o Law# Scrappe d Court Prohibits Mail ·'Censoring' \VASlllNGTON (AP) -111c Supre 111c Court unan imously stripped post off1c·c orficials tod;iy or the power to block or detain n1.iil lo dealers In "obscene"' materia l11. The court's opinion, by Justice Willlam J. Brennan Jr., said the authority, dating back to 1800, ls a form of censorship forbidden by !he First An1endment to the U.S. Constitution. Agrct>1ng "'1ti1 federal district courl.~ in California and Georgia the high court invalidated lwo law s. Under one, dating back to 1800, the Postrnastcr General could have lel\ers stamped "unlaw.ful" and returned Lo the senders lf an administrative officer decided the intended recipient v.·as ob- tainin g n1oney through the ma 11 for obscene or Indecent a r l i c I e s or devices. Under the second law. enacted in 1960, the Postn1aster (~cncral had the power to obtain a court order pcrn1itling him to detain n1ail to a dea ler the government decided traffics in obscenity. A spokesman for the Postal Service sa id although the court's decision affects adminislrative procedures in dealing with obscene mailing, "we still ha ve criminal statutes that we can and will continue to enforce with vigor." Among those statutes is a Jaw making it a criminal orfense. punishable by up lo five years in prison and fines of S5,000, lo mail any "obscene, lewd, lascivious, Indecent, filthy or vile article, n1atter, thing, device or substant·e.'' Thl' Postal Service spokesman said lhe court ruling apparently does not affect the cu rrent antipandcring law "'hich allows a ci tizen to refuse to accept v.·hat he considers to be offensi ve ad- vertisements fr oni a particular mailer or the nc1v anlipandcring law, which becomes effective in February. That law requires mailers or sexually oriented ads to purp;e their mailing list of names of citizens who have told the Post Office they do not want to receive such advertising. Quoting Oliver Wendell Holmes, the late justice who was one of the most eloquent civil libertarians in the nation's his tory, Brennan v•rote: "The Un ited States may give up the Post office v•hen It sees fit, but while it carries it on the use of the malls la almost as much a part of free .speech as lh~ right to use our tongues .•. " Pros ec ution Brings Grow l From Ma nson LOS ANG ELES /UPI) -Deputy District Attorney Vincent Bug\losl wa s describing Charles Manson lo the Tate murder trial jury as a diabcilical, cold· blouded murderer. Suddenly a sinister snarl was heard. "G rrrr," said Charles l\lanson, in mock menace. The growl came thr ough a fool-square wire mesh panel in a hea vy door separating the courtroom from the holding t a n k whC"re the 36-year-old defendant heard the proceedings via loudspeaker. It was one of the highlights Wednesday In a stormy day nearing the end or the seven-month trial that saw Bugllosi launching into a blistering personal at- ta ck ~n each of the four defense laW}'ers. Bugliosi said that Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek. had sought to convince lhe jury that the state was trying to ''frame an innocenl man" with perjured witnesses and planted evidence. That led Manson to another shouted objection. "Arc you trying Irving Kanarek - he's not my lawyer," Pt1anson yelled through th e screen. Bugliosi told the jury he would talk into Friday when the case finally may be submitted for a verdict. The evidence against Manson and three v.·omen codefendants is so great, Buglioe:i said. that the defense attorneys were trying to obscure the facts like a gtant octopus letting out a "great inky murk ." "Their clients are guilty as sin and they can't do anything about it," Bugliosi said. "The late, great Clarence Darrow couldn't have done anything for them." The prosecutor, attacking repeatedly, said sarcastically that Manson'."! lawyer never referred to the victims as having been murdered or killed. ' The LA-based carrier had S()Ught Public Utilities Commi ssion sanction of a stopover route at the local airfield on fligt.h s between San Diego and South Lake Tahoe. Newport Beach orticials had protested !he applica tion at a pre-hearing con· lcrencc conducted by the PU C in October. SMALL INVENTORIES -BIG CLEARANCES Dennis O'Neil. assistant city manager, 11ald at the time he had asked the airlines to produce proof it had a com- mitmwt for facilities at Orang..: County Airport. "It failed to do this in its filings," O'Neil said, and following the airline'.!' pleadJngs. he said he requested Robert J. Bresnahan, Orange C<lunty director of aviation, to inform the PUC of the county's posJUon. He said Bresnahan subsequently wrote the com.mW.ion describing the limited facilities available at Orange C<>Unty Airport and saying, the Board of Supervisors has pasaed r e s o I u t i o n s "staUng lhat because of tenninal building congestion, they will not grant additional airline service from the airport.'' In It., letter to the PUC, Holiday Airline! made it clear they will pursue their appllcation for direct service between San Diego and South Lake Tahoe. • • • • ID short, limited quantities--big values! AnythimJ you toke we don't need to add up. You save money -we save time. Visit all 60 stores at Fashion Island for January values or special sprln9 purchases. All stores open Friday and Monday nl9hts It STORES 1NCLUDINC BROAllWAT, BUFFUMS, M:NNET'S AND llOBJNSOft FASHION ISLAND lfllWPOaT OllMT IJa 4 DAILY PILOT llTurJll•y, i.rw.y 14, 1'911 'Says he'a from Marlboro Country!' 1 Democrat Skips Race By DICK WEST WASmNGTON -I had a 2 a.m. telephone call this week and ror once Jt wami't from 1tfartha Mitchell. It was from an anonymous informant. "Here's a hot tip for you ,'' a voice uid when J picked up the receiver. "One of the 54 Democrats in the Senate tsn 't going to run for President next year." At first, J wa.s inclined to dismiS!'I the tip as just another wild rumor. My journalistic instinct told me, however, that I had belier check it out, no matter how implausible it sounded. So 1 began making a few discreet inquiries and pretty soon I hit llOmething IOlid. I learned that there was Indeed a rion·presidential candJdate among the Senate Democrats. Furthermore, I managed to narrow it down to Sen. Walter Mondale of Minnesota . Usually, whe n a senator takes such a drastic and extremely unorthodox !tep as not running fo r President, he will play il for maiimum dramaLic impact. In the: beginning he will be coy about his intentions, gradu.tly building up suspense and then anftOWlcing his decisioo at a televised news conference that lea ves the natiOfl miolionally drain· od. I was prepared for 110me 1uch routine when I contacted one of Mondale's aides. Hoping that subtle interrogation would cauae him to tip hill hand I 1tarted out with an irrelevant qu estion. "How's the weather In Minnesota?'• l asked. "The senator is not running for Presi- dent, if that's what you 're getting at," the: aide replied. Nevertheless, I wu determined to pin him down. "Whal are Mondale's plans for 1972?'' 1 said. "He plans to 11eek re-election to the Senate," the aide 1aid. Bul 1 didn 't let that throw me off the: track. "How about Mondale's future political ambltiorm?" "He just wants lo be 1 good .senator,"' the aide said. As I wu saying, you expect evasive 1111.swers when you are dealing with non-- presidentia1 candidates. Reading between the lines. howe ver. 1 could tell that Mondale had written hlmi!ltlf out ()f the Presidential race. Which may be bad for his senatorial career. Henceforth, he'll be known as a "looer." -UPT Reds Overrun Yank B52s Join Cambodia Attack PHNOM PENH (UP!l -South Viet- namese troop1 and armOr aided by U.S. &2 bombers flying their first combat mjssions in Cambodia in months overran one Communist-held mounlain pllSI on vital north-south Highway 4 today a n d close-d In on anotner, military sources reported. Little Communis t res istance to the drive by 5,000 Vietnamese and 8.CXXl Cambodiam was reported. but in a sharp clash Wednesda y South Vietnamese Rangers reported killing 31 Communists four miles sout h of lhe Stung Chhay pass without suffering a casualty. Following thal baltle military sources said the South Vietnamese Rangers and tankborne cavalry troops swept through the Stung Chhay pass at noon toda y -without meeting resistance. The Com· munisls were thought to have withdrawn into the Kirirom plateau where the B52s dropped their toads . From the Stung Chhay Pass the Rangers were sweeping north to\vard the second pass, the Pich Nil, which js about 60 miles soulhwest of Phnom Penh. Tiiose two passes control the 138- mile route 4 from Phnom Penh to the seaport ()f Kompong Som, Cambodia's only port and site of its only oil refinery. Wonned sources in Saigon said the United States was underwriting the cost of the Sooth Vietnamese operation - estimated at $.$ million. South Viel· namese Economics Minister Pham Kim Ngoc told newsmen that amount was requested from Defense Secretary Melvin Laird during hi! recent visit. Four regiments of Cambodian soldiers and a reserve force or South Vietnamese marines, engineers 21nd infantry troops were operating north of Pich Nil in hopes or cloaing a vise on Communist.!! in the area. There was Jittle contact between the Vietnamese and Cambodian troops. but free Janee photographer-journalist Fran- cis Bailly, working with the southbound column, 3aid some of the South Viet· namese troopll were selling their American-made Mt rifles to the Cam· bodians for as much as $100 apiece. Military sources said B52s on Wed· nesday dropped around 200 ton!'I or high explosives on the Kirirom plateau wh ich Howard Hughes Must Appear Or LOse Suit LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Billionaire: recluse Howard Hughes has 2G days to aru;wer a summons in a $50 million law suit or poasibly lose the case by default. ·• Documents filed with dis trict court Wednesday showed Hughes technically was served with a summon.'l in the mu!Umtllion dollar suit filed by his f()t - mer Nevada chieftain. Robert Maheu. Maheu, fired by Hughell Tool Co. as head of the Hughes Nevada empire, charged in the suit against the company and Hugheii that hill character had been defamed and that his dismissal from the $500,000 • year job ruined his earning ability. Hughes was asked in the summons to reply by contacting Maheu·s lawyer, ~forton Ga1ane. "If you fail to do so. judgment by default will be taken against. you for the relief demanded in the cou n· terclaim.'' the summons said. Hughe!! has IO!il bigger sums than $50 million because he re fused to ma ke a personal appeHrance. In 1969 he railed to appear in a suit against him by Trans World Airlines, He was rule 1n default and the airline was awarded $137 million in damages. is midway between the two mountain pases -the first use of the bomber1 Ja direct support d the South Vietnamese in Cambodia and the first time llince the joint U.S .• Vietnamese. drive in Cambodia last spring. The U.S. command in Saigon said today 'lT Amertcans were killed and 83 wowldecl in the war last week. It was the lowest weekly combined toll of U.S. dead and injured in more than five years. The death toll was down from the 33 killed the previous week and brought to -M,268 the total Americans killed in the war 1inct: Jan. 1, 1961. Dayan Warns Egypt; Don't Break Truce By United Press lalernaUonal Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan "'as quoted today as saying Israel 's military might has grown so powerful i!'I it the Egyptians who must fear an end of the cease-fire on Feb. 5. His statement leaked out in Tel Aviv as Egypt and the Soviet Union began crucial talks in Cairo. Cairo officials have warned repeatedly that the Middle East cease·rire may not be extended past Feb. 5 if there is no major progress in the New York talks under auspices of U.N. meditator Gunnar V . .Jarring. France announced Wednesday it had begun a diplomatic campaign to extend the truce. Dayan spoke lo a closed meeting of th e right.wing Gaha l parliamentary group Wednesday night on C<lndition no word would be leaked of the proceedings but the afternoon newspaper Maariv car· ried the remarks today in a front page exclusive report. "Zahal (the Israel defense forces1 has grown in strength in the mosl impressive way in recent weeks,'' Dayan told the meeting . It is Egypt. not Israel. who musl fear a possible resumption of flre 'along the Suez Canal) Feb. 5." He made the statement in reply lo a question l r om Gahal e:.:eculive chairman Maj. Gen, {ret.) Ezer Weizman, former No. 2 man in the lsraeli military command who wa s .Rrchilttl of Israel'll air force . Weizman led a Gahal walkout from the cabinet last August in protest against the American-sponsored peace bid in the Mideast. A Cairo dispatch .said Soviet Presidenl Nikolai V. Podgomy and Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat began their crucial Mideiist talks at the Kubbeh Republican Palace in Cairo today with high-ranking Soviet and Egyptian officials present. Cameroon Spares Life of Bisl1op YAOUNDE. Cameroon (AP) -Presi· den t Ahmadou Ahidjo commuted to ltfe imprisonment today the death sentence pronounced against Msgr. Albert Ndong- mo, Roman Catholic bishop of Nkong- .o;amba, Rad io Cameroo• announced. The bishop had been found guilty or ploting a coup d'etat in 1968 aga inst Ahid- jo's-governmenl. The broadcast said Ahidjo also l'On1· rnuted to hfe imprisonment the· death sentenc-es against Celestin Taka la and 1\-lalhi eu Njassep. who had been convictl'd of plotting against the government and rebellion as a member of the banned l 1niOl'I of Cameroonian Pevp\es: -UPC. Great Lakes Storm Center From Minnesota to Rockies, It's Freezing CoUl I r U"'IT•D Pltllll IHT•ll"'ATtOHAL lclutl'ttrn C11ltomi1 ""'' mo.111 c!,t)ullJ fod.6r wT!h • !tow -·" I,. t~t mornlnw. 01r1lm1 ltmP41••1'11•u w1r1 • lllt!e \0'1rmff .. +Ill .. 1ne1 11 11...U !11 l~I dtlt<l ''"I, $prlnkl11 continued oYt • l/\t L., Anweitl ArM !!I thtl '"'1'1111111, •Jy(n1 Wtl' 10 111rtlr Clou!fY ll(le1 In "'••II••· flt(IZING -· Ttf'\ller1111r11 Wirt I bl! ""''"''' -....~"\,0.j~ ... 1111 t111 l'!'tdk teo:J covlc c1n11r hlth s•. "" fouf tr"'" Wtdnnd1r'1 U . 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Lltlll v1rl1bll ""!M1 11Jt.ht 1nll mo111l111 l'louro Neomi"" """""11 I to 11 -"°'' 111 ti!•-• 1_..l' 11\d Frid•¥. Mith tDd1r J2, '°"''"' ... _."' .. ·-,,..,. ... 19 SJ, lnltrMll ,..,,_•'11r11 ''"" tl'Ol'I U IO ~. Wlltr 1-Mfl tvrl U. Sun, /tloen, Thies ,,Ir.I ~+1~ '°''" lew S--.1 lo., tHUIUDA.T' 11.•. .... 4 0 1:11, ...... '41 10 .., ...... 4' ·~-. ... , ' •·a., .... IJ JI/It IUtft • H t m, ltll J.06 I I'!. 1NKm II.IN• 1·1· 1 . ..,. Im l:~l 1.m. V.S. Summary LOS .t.NGIE LllS IUPll -A 1t&<m ,.,.,t.f!I UftltrM ove< I~• Gr111 L.i<t1 Dt'-M NvffM WN 1Ptlr IOC141¥ IJ'Ol'n "" norl!IN1ttr11 oor•lon of '"' 111tlotl 1111 llW to., ~,n,..nd!t, Tl lril•l Wl f!llflll ...,,, hi t'llKI ........ MleMo•n IO H• .. En1ltllil ..... r. tl'llA .,.,, • ~1,..1;.,. ol drlu lt 11111 lrHI ... ~1111, DrlWlfltl CelWlllM1 wtrt Ill..,...,,,, M le!'I lwnlPw•""n. ......... ft9"' Mi-ti _11 .. t rd II tt.. ,_,!Ptlrll ltKJllft """" WJI (Orlll11<1l"9 (IYtt 1N11 DI 1119 _,l\.,.111t•11 111!11. Me!'t ltun -,..If lt&f c""'1rlld ,,,...., o• INt 111tt1 01 Or-11111 W1illl•1•""· TM MllllllN" COf'll"UM l1lr t!lflouth '""•• w•• -l!Mltllllll io.. Dt¥llpt141 '""'"'1tvr11 w••• In '"'-ll'I•. Thi Pt cillC ~Mii Wll 1'9•11• clouod• Willl IOMt K t!te<lll l"°""trl O•tt ~t!lttll C.1lllor11l1. Temperature• ... V"'IT•D Pllltt INT•1tNATIDHAt. 1 &..,Dt••hlrl' ·~ prKl•ltt!oon ·~ Ill• ?•·llour ,..rloO tncllnt 11 • • "' "l<ttl L'"" Prirc. ,11i11,..,w " " ·" />lllu<1"t r<1u• " " .. ll~M• .. " •ncNI'••• .. .. 9•'•"'1e•!f ,. " ·" llO•lon m " ·" Aull•~ " " " C~ltlOlll u " (~lc•oo " " .. Cinclnn•tl " .. ... CIWoland " ,. ·" 0•11•• " .. O.nv,r .. " t»lroiT ,. " ... ,-1lrt.M• ... ·• Hllf>Alulu " " " ln.dllnffOI!• .. "' .n J1<kt&1TYllW " " JUMIU .. " ior:: ....... C.ll°f' ·" .. L•• v ... , ,, " Lo•,.,,..,.. " .. ~ l.ou!tv lllt ,. •• 1 " M ll l'l'I " " Mll.,.1!,1¥ff' ,. " Ml~"'-•llOI •• " " " N-Orl-91111 " " N-YOt\ " ~ Dl<l•~• e1.., ~ " ...... " " 1'1l.., St•IM 1 .. " l'tlll1d<lllll\i. " " " l"!lotnf• tj • Pl!h hu ..... " " " f>o<!lor>CI, o. '' " " J1111ld ''"' " " ' Jltd ll~lf .. • ·~ " " " S.cr•"''"'~ " " .. SI l OUI\ " " N $•11 L1k• C••r •• .. ,, 51n O•-" •• SMl!I• ,. ,, .N .SIM'l0:1M " " W11h•n11001 " " ... ARRIVAL OF EXILES AWAITED IN CHILE (TOP) Br•1il Priaoner1 Give Red S•lute (Bottom) Brazil Priso11ers Freed; E11voy Release Expected RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI) -Photographs of the arrival 1n Chile of 70 Brazilian political prisoners, \\'hose freedom was demanded as ransom for k.idnaped Swiss Ambassador Giovanni Enrico Bucher, were published in Rio newspapers today, Bucher'e release was thought imminent. The kidnapers had promised to release Bucher, held since last Dec. 7, as soon as photographs we re published here as proof the prisoner!! had reach- ed safety. The prisoners posed for ptmtographs holding a Chilean flag alongside the plane that new them from Rio into e1ile. Two afternoon newspapers delayed publication to carry the UPI. radiophotos transmitted from Santiago. A local television station also carried the photographs. Bucher's release was not expected, ho\\·ever, for several hours. Jt was noted that in three previous kidnapings of diplomats they were freed afte:r nightfall, obviously to avoid police detection. Bucher was kidnaped 38 days ago by terrorist me mbers of lhe anli- government popular revolutionary vanguard who demanded the release of the 70 prisoners as the largest ransom yet paid in the wave of political kidnap- ings that have swept Latin America for more than a year. The prisoners. who included 12 women. were greeted with clenched risl s.:'llutes and V-for-viclory signs from a cro1vd of 250 "'hen !hey arrived at Sanliago's airport at 4:22 a.m. aboard 11 special Varig Airlines Boeing 707 flight.· Gen. I-.;m1lio Cheyre. head of Chilc·s police force. 1\'arned the exiles: ''During your stay in Chile. you will not make political stat ements nor any other statements "''hich <:Ould damage the good relations between Otile and other co un tries." Wealthy Runa·way Heir Found by Detectives r-.fETHU EN, Mass. <UPI ) -An em~ tiona lly troubled youth using a false name voJunta rlly committed himself to 111 rehabilitation cente r for drug user s about 10 months agu. He disappeared two weeks ago, then was reunit ed with h1s mother Wedne sday and authorities found out his name. ~-l 1ch11el Grace Ill. 15, heir to a bi1lion- dollar shipping fortune, has a person al fortune <lf $10 million . ing . He said Mrs. Grace told him ttichael had al~·ays ~·an1ed to .see Cambridge anrt Greeny,·1ch Village 1n New York C11y, but "might head lo a warmer clin1alc. lie was founrt 1n Cambridge \Ved· nesday. Police said the youth must ha\•e been discovered by pri\'ate detectives beca use Cambridg• records had nq indication he had been found. Russ Office lnNewYork Hit by Rock NEW YORK (AP) -Brick and mor tar wrapped in brown paper crasht<! through the window of the Soviet Uniot airline and tourist office in mldtow• Manhattan early today and a short whih later an anonymous caller announce( ~ deed and said "never again." '·Never again" is the slogan of th1 militant Jewish Defense League. The thrown rock, hurled from a ca1 "''hen a root-patroling policeman was ur the block from the Aeroflol office. wa~ the latest in a series of vandalisms di reeled at offices of the Soviet Union. Hours earlier, it was reported that J Manhattan grand jury was planning ll question Jewish militants concerninJ three anti-Soviet incidents here over th1 past nine months. The rock at the airline office was com posed of two uneven pieces of brick mor tared together and it left a ragged hoh about two feet In diameter in the di:!!' play window. Police llaid there was nt message on the paper wrapping. A male telephone caller told the Ne" York Daily News moments after th• \Vindow shattered : "I'll tell it to yoo once. We just knocked out the fronl plate.glass window of the Aeroflot Air lines "·ith a rock. Never again." The incidents being invesligated by • Manhattan grand jury include the pipt bombing of the Aeroflot office, on Ealll '19th Street, last November. The investigation scheduled lo begiJ Friday will also Inc Jude quesLiom about an aJleged attack last May on M. T. Mehdi, secretary-general of the Ac- tion Committee on American-Arab Re· lations, Asst. Dist. Atty. Frank Rogen sa id Wednesday. The grand jury plcins were ftrst di!'I· closed by Bertram Zweibon, attorney for the league, which has been carryinJ out a campaign of harassment again.11 Soviet dij>lomatic personnel in New Yor~ and other cities. Zweibon said the district attorney'• office had informed him of the irivestiga· lion. The JDL announced that Zweibon had been named its national chairman to succeed Rabbi Meir Kahane, who ha1 said he intends to move to I s r a e I in August and head an organization called the \Vorld Jewish Defense League. Bethlehem Steel Sticks to Hikes BETHLEHE~-f. Pa. (AP ) - The Beth- lehem Steel Company says il will go ahead with plans to boost prices of 1teel used i1 c-onstruction work and shipbuild- ing despite an indication from President Nixon that he might raise quotas on im- ported steel if the increases are imple· mented. A statement rel eased Wednesday .a lsft said the Nixon Admin.istraLion knew or the proposed increases in adva11ce. Ths company sa id the administration gave no lndlcal ion ii "would rea c! as strongly as ii did.'' The rate changes on lour major t}'Pt':'I or i:.teel. announced Monday, amount fD boos ts of II !o ll percent. They are Ill take effect J\1 arch I. Bethlehem is the J11ation's second largest :steel producer. The ii.ems involved ac-count. for onwlxth of the industry 's total output. The youth enrolled in the Challenge House Cent er under the name or Michael Gray Grayson and was desc-ribed by a forme r cmploye as a youth with emo- llonal problerns bul not deeply involved with dru gs. Last Defendant Dies The center. in whi<.:h 1nd1 vidual1i are free lo come and go a~ they please, 1~ rlln bv Roma n Ca1ho!1<' seminari ans, "''ho declined comment on the episode. An intro ve rted an d nervous yout h describer! as "very bright." Grace held ;i coord inator 's position as pa rl of hi~ tre11t.ment. James Alonzi. the center's director, said the boy might ha ve lert because of a discussion ol so me mistakes he had made in his job. Police Capl. EugeM Devaney said Grace disappeared Jan. 4 and shortly after his mother, Mn. Susan Grace, ctlled police and reported her son mW- Terror Bombing Crackdown Set 1'o Take Effect WASHINGTON fUPI ) -A new law de!'ligned to crack doY(n on terrorisl bombings will ha ve it5 fir'st impact about one month from now. Among other things, even the casu1l buyer of ex- plo11ive.s will hav~ to Identify himself to lihe government. The law , however, will not apply to anyone buying explosives within the: slate where he resides for use in that st.le, or poS!lbly even buying Utem in an adjoining 1tate. SUch purchases are left to state regulation, and most Males have no IB\\'s regulating e1ploaives purchaus. Regulations to implemenl the Organiz.. erl Crime Control Act of 1970 will be published in the federal register Friday. As of Feb. 16 they ""Ill affect everyone from !he manufacturer d0'11'n to the. stump-blaJ;Ung farmer. false st11temcnts would hr pt1n\shable by a maxi mum of 10 years in pri.$On and a il0,000 fine • Mute Ruit1 s Tell Horro1· Of Nazi Mass Slaugl1te1· ORAOOUR SUR GLANE, J"ranet (AP\ -For 25 years lhe to rn . burned and tortured ruins that once were the village of Oradour waited for a murder trial that now will never take place. The defendant, former SS Gen. Heinrich Lammerding. died at 65 Wednesday in West Germany. Bul the ruin!'l-ravaged building!, 1 tr e e t c 1 r tracks running nowhere. 1 handful of unclaimed wedding rings -testify to the terror of June JO, IH-4 . On that date. in an hour and a half, the Fuehrer Regiment of the Das Reich SS Division maSllacred 642 of Orackmr's men. women and children. This was a reprisal for the deaths or 40 German .soldier! killed by the Resistance, Aime Renaud. a ~year-old garage owner remember! seeln1 the SS column roll into Ora dour. "They were so well organized," he said . "They brought out all the men and began marching them to the village green. Mo.'!t of the m wt11l along because they figured their papers wen in order and that the Germans were looking for Resistance people. I w.u worried that a check ()f papers wouk:I have let them llend me to a labor camp in Germany so I m1na[t:ed to allp betwetn !!Orne ol the houses and into a garden. Then I began lo htar lhtt shooting. It went terribly fast. These SS men were llpttlalisl.ll." While the men were being shot. lht women end childro were herded into lhe. church . There they were beaten. m9chine gunned and bla,ted with in- cendiary grenades. Renaud's S-ye11r-old daughter d i e. d in her grandmother's arm.~. Af ter lhc war a new village_ was built about 200 yards from tilt ru.ins. The ( carcass of the old village was left a~ the Gennans left it, MOS.'i and ivy have grown over the ragged edges or· the buildings. softening them a bit, bot a sign nailed to the skeleton of the church exhorts those who come · "You v.·ho pass by here, meditate nn this. "You who believe, pray for the \i ctims and their families." Jn l!S2, a French c o u rt ~ntenced t"·o m~ to death and 18 other• tn lesser terms for their part in the massacre. Most of those sentenced were French Alsatians who claimed they had been forced into the German army. Lammerding. who commanded the: Dall Re.ich division. was among th<lse who \\'ent underground . A French eourl sentenced hi mto death in abse:ntia in 1953 . Soon after, prolested by two I e g 1 t technicalities, Lammerding 11urfaced as the head of a prosperow construction company in Duea.seldorf. He could not be eztradited because the We11t German C(IMtitution bans eitradltk>n of ciliuns, Negotiations for n f: w statule wertt reeenUy completed. and It ii eipecled to be signed by urly February. Lam. merding's trial could have followed in Germ1ny. "'I'm 1l1d they aay he's deJd. but l would have liked to have seen ju!!tic~ done." said Renaud. "He was really hit. by lighting. wa~n ·1 he. jual when they' ire roovlng to brinl these people to trial fln•lly. I reall want proof k wa1' hlm. Those Nazil have been able to camoufl111e the.mselvr1 and d!Nppear with the help of peoplt in high places. TT!e.y remember e11d othtr. you know .•. "For "'bat good ii OQes. wt rrmcmbr1 them." Renaud added as an alterthou&hL • t "~1 I , 1 ·o "_, ~~ ' ..,_-., - • Fo11ntain Valley VOL 64, NO. 12, 3 S6CTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971 s it In Huntington Schools Battle Funding Crisis Administralors of the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District claim to be battling a financial crisis. Sc h·o o I district.! cannot legally go bakrupt, but Huntington Beach could DAILV Pl&.OT Staff l"M" Citizen Stet>ent Graham Stevens, 5 months, was on hand Wednesday when his parents, J\fr_ and Mrs. Brian Stevens of Huntington Beach, took the oath of allegiance to the U.S. T9ere were 72 Orange Coast residents who became naturalized citizens in cere- monies at the Orange County Courthouse. See story, Page 11 . Miss Huntington Seeks New Cro\m Title of 'Mrs.' Jayme Boyd , the reigning Miss Hun- tington Beach , will seek a new crown next June. She plans lo join the rush of June brides picking up the queenly title of ''Mt&.'' Her ne w. solo, iiudience will be David Arm.strong. Miss Boyd, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Boyd, Westminster . also holds the title of Miss Orange C-Ounty Press Club. A new Miss Huntington Beach Pageant ls already scheduled for May, so the current queen won 't be forfeiting ber crown. give it a good try if changes aren't made, according to Deputy Superin- tendent Charles Palmer. Current estimates show the district starting the 1971-72 budget year with only $13,000 in re.serve. "We must face sharp changes in the program offered or find new sources of revenue," Palmer warned. Three sources of new revenue are possible: more federal funds, more state aid, or raise local taxes. Palmer's concern was sparked by the slowness of expected state funds coming into the district. "Our budget shows an ending reserve 1Jf $165,000," he explained. "But right now we on ly h.ave $12,000 in reserve and I think that's all we'll have at the end of the year." Huntington Beach isn't receivi ng nea rly as much in stale funds as expected, because it doesn't have as many children as expected. "We 're not receiving students as fast as we thought," Palmer said. "Thal makes us lose state money." If a large surge of children come:1 into the district next. year, it couJd brine in ,IUfficipt· date money, bdt Palmer isn 't relying on that. ''We may face some cutbacks In the school program. If IO, the board of education will decide what goes and bow." · He listed six poulble areas for pro- gram cuts. not necessarily in any order: -Transpoortation, drop school buses. -Curtail custodial services. clean rooms less. -Stop caring for school grounds;. -Stop maintenance on bulldtngs and equipment. -Slow down the purchase of edu ca- tional &upplies. -Cut out such special education items as music. speech, read.Jng .11pecia\lsl!. nurses, psychologists. assistant prin- cipals. Another alternative. of course, is to call a tax-election and raise local taxes. The current total tax-rate for the City School District is $2.80 per SIOO assessed valuation. "That would not help us immediately ," Palmer added. ''But it would certainly help over the long run.'' Huntington Beach City School District has the eighth lowest tax-rate out of 18 Orange County elementary school districts. The district also has an assessed VAl UR· Lion of $151,039,000, which Is fifth highest in the county and second highest per-child valuation. "If ou r assessed va luation w as reassessed. that might also help," Palmer Pddcd. The district ln 11169-70 spent $640 per student on education which was fourth highest tn the county. "That figure !.! blgh," Palmer ex· plained, "because our expense on teachers' salaries is also high. Il rankJ fourth in the county.·• The recent six percent pay raise (See SCHOOLS, Pip ZJ President Asks College Students 'Try the System' LINCOLN, Neb. (AP ) -President Nixon, appearing before a campus au- dience, said today "There can be no generation gap in America" and, citing the l8-year-0ld vote in the federal elec- tions, called on young people to try out "the system ." Nixon flew here from a nine-day stay at the Western White House in San Clemente to address a facu1ty·student convocation at the University of Nebraska. In a prepared address, Nixon said that his administration ,;has no higher priority than to end the war" in Vietnam. But his emphasis was on the role of youth in achieving what he termed ··great goals" in dealing with problems of the environment, decay of the cit.ies. overpopulalion. rural ills and "the pro- blems of prosperity itself -the problems of poverty in a land of plenty .'' Nixon made but one announcement of a new administration aim in his remarks aimed at the 21,000.studenls at the university. He said he wlll send a special message to the 1971 Congress proposing a new ageocy that would bring lQSether the Peace Corps, VISTA and rel ated feder al efforts to utilize volunteer serv ice. Nixon said his new agency, yet to be named, would "give young American• .an expanded opportunity for the 1ervices (See SPEECH, P1ge Z) DAllY •1LOT ltlH ..... <r.)'-1 '. Preswent Leaves Coast For University Speech President Nixon waved an end to his nine-day Orange County vacation this morning an d flew toward his: speech to University of Nebraska students. Aides have called It important. In Lincoln , two un iversity student leaders who accepted an invitation to share the plaUorm with Nixon said they would wear black arm bands in the "hope that our presence will not be construed as support for the President." Steve Tiwa ld, president of the sb.Ident body, and Ken Wald, head of a campus honorary group called the Innocents Society, said in a statement they did not endorse the President's policies. They did not elaborate. They urged student! to refrain from "loud and persistent hec kling" and sai d they would not applaud I.he President. The President, Mrs. Nixon, daughter, Tricia, and domestic aides left La Casa ·Pacifica In San Clemente on foot at 9: 15 a.m., strGlllng toward their waiting Army helicopter In a bright , but chill y morning. Mr. Ni1on carried a leather binder as he waved to a small group of well wishers. The First Family waved , smiled, but said nothing u they swiflly boarded the chopper for the l~minute night to Alr Foree One at the El Toro MCAS. Moments after sitting down at hill place in the heli copter the chief executive drew out papers and begsn studying documents as the helicopter began warm- ing up. Before the depart ure, his valet, Manolo Sanchez. spoke to a friend in the military saying lhe next trip by hi!_ boss would probably be an Easter visit to the Key Biscayne residence in Florida. An aide guessed the President might not ret urn to the Western White House In San Clemente again until summer. Beofre boarding Air Force One at El Toro fl.1arine Corps Air Station, the President accepted a crocheted portrait of himself from t.1r. and Mrs. Philip Bielat of Los Angeles. He chatted briefly \\·Ith them and posed for pictures. Nixon spent much or his San Clemente stint prepari ng today's speech -"Youth In Our Society" -and his State of The Union addres!I. 1t will be delivered before a jotnt session of Congress Jan. 22. Sen. and Mrs. Roman Hruska or Nebraska flew with the presidential party aboard Air Force One today. Mi.w Boyd, 1 1969 graduate of Fountain Valley High School, b currently a p~ feasional model and dancer. She heads a Tahitian dance group which performs throughout the couoty. Huntington to Evict Dogs Court Dismisses Kidnap Charges On Photographer Little Leaguers Deadline Near • Boy1 8-12 years of age who want tO 'play WseblD wtth the Ocean View LlttM! League mU!t give their names to the leigue this wffkend or nexl ~end. Returning playen may algn up from to .i.m. to 4 p.m., Salurd•1. or noon to, 4 p.m.. SundlJ, •t the' league field nn Heil Afenue between Graham Street Ind BolM Chi<• Road. Boys new to the league mmt brin' a birth certUic1te and one or their perenb to the rteld at the aame houri Jan. 23 or 24. 'nte registration fee is $1$ for one boy1 '8 for the secQnd boy in a family and S6 for a third. U· It is r1tnlng. slgnups wfll be held '"Meadow Vint School , 5702 Clark Or .. Huntington Be1ch. For further In· fonnallon phone Gene Vila , lt1111gue presi- dent, at 847-4m. ·~ Order Banning Fido From Beach to Be Enforced By AUN DIRKIN Of ""' IMllfl' ......... Leave Fido at home lf you· are &Ging to spend a day oo the ~ in Huntlncton Beach. He's banned. Sllte parka rqers and lifeguards will enforce a new order thl1 yur pr1>- ' hibitlog dop from, the two-mili Hun-- tlngton Bodi State Pork. Previously they were 1Uowed on the beach on 1 al.I-foot 5eash bJt . 11 of Jan. I Ibey will not be .Uowed on the sand at all, Lou Meyer, supervlslng mlll'T for the "Huntlngtoo Beod> Siie Park ud Bob& t'blcl beocb. explained In~ momlll(. Dogs bavie been banned from the city beach for about 10 yea111 and the city ordinance hu also beln enforced on the llllntlll(ton PadOc beach north of the pter. Dogs win slin be .allowed on A lea11h nn the Bolla Chica beach outside the L. city llmits Meyer said. "Bolsa Q\ica is unfenced and we don't have a means to .. control or einforce I.he law thtte. 1' he said. .Meyer told .mtmbers·Gf lhe Hun(ington Btacb Saf<ty Council of the new' .,..,.,. Wednesday. The <if:ision to ban doa:•· ,.... lnade by dlattlct headquarter. in San Diego and a11o· appll" to the San Clemente and Dobtny 1111< lltacbes. He Mild that ~ decision w13 made because Gf complainta OYU the number of dog bites. "There hive been several at San Clemente and Doheny where they have overnight p11klng," he e1· pl1lned. "Even if tt.ey •rt on a leuh at a c.-rlpslte kick tend to want to pet them ud so-aet llippfef ... Meyer agreed lba{ there had been few problems with dog bite.! on the Huntlnaton Beach State Park. La.st year there was only one incident allhouah he estimated about 1 % million-person1 vlalted tile beach. "We have had problems with dog1 running 4J'OUnd loo8e," he went on. "We <OUld hav,. cited a boot Ir.ii violllloba blft 1•e .ttklom · did .ncept· ln rare CllfJI bo<at!"" ....,,.., becllJDO ·~ tr. rlt.Mtd ~ 1t:... • • . r1 · City ·LileiuaJ:d Capt. llclaP.I D'.4rn.U llkf he~ tbe'<ity•bi.t. -law !n the llll'a but treot ·to' a tOtal ~· 1boot 10.,..,..qa; . "11'1 .,.inty 11nltary; peaple·just don't llkad o ftod· tbetr towef.lr laid Oii • dot mtSI," he Mkl.. "We hove· odv~ people lo the poet lhat· Ibey could ... the "" in tho 1tato beoch If, tt -·put "'" a leMb; ~ ... WM't• U... lll)'lrbeN to them." the ~In ldlltd. s can be wall&ild .tn.. elty parks In untlngton Be.act11 IO loat.~ u tbeJ are on 1 ltillh. Kldnaplng and drug charges have been dropped against a Fountain Valley pbo~opher ,wiln the ddend1nt'a fiilng Jn orange . County Superio_r Court of a plea of guilty to charges oC Ml perversion. , Judge Byron K. McMiilan ordered tW? P9chlatriats to ,rul~ on the mental COtl:' dtllon of Robert Chories Albtiaht Jr., 3%; of tSMi Arbutulf S~. 'He wW rule F•b. I Oil • Albright'• eRglblUty 11 1 poailble intntlUy dts61<ftr"! ,.. ·of,· fender. , A1l>rlghl wu amsted 1111 )!opt. 11 ind -of lddiiaillna • 17·yUN>ld ea.ta Meo lirl and 1 torctnc' htr to jol~ )!Im ·In ICll of ..xu.i:pe..vtnloo. · J-McMiiian i!llmhiied the lddnop ctXllt •nd other charies of ptistealon of morij-ud Wigeroul dnlp. ' AliWtirc off I e er a aaid· Ow: """1olnpflor -. . the 11r1. lrito blll cor Ind· -polled her •tn (ifT\ldpatn in· unllfrful 1Uull actl •t knifepolnt'. Albright WU arrfated after btlnC puriued by polr<>I cart. Of hlg!I l]>ffd lhrou&b Founlotn Valley and Costa Mesa. f' 1 • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CEITTS an Holdup Men Make Off With$2,681 By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 the Olltr Pll•ll 51tlf The Ski Mask Gang pulled a carbon copy of -their December holdup at a Huntington Beach bank Wednesday af. ternoon and escaped with $2,881 in cash. Hiding their faces behind red-white-. and blue ski masks, the four men exe-. cuted the robbery by holding tellers of the Security Pacific National Bank, TlT1 Edinge r Ave., at bay with a revolver while they emptied the drawers. A female bank employe said she beaTd a rustling sound near the entrance of the bank around I: ID p.m.. followed by the entry of three men, one of whom was waving a small black revolver over his head. She said two of the men vaulted the counter and emptied lbe tills while the third man was standing guard. A, fourth bandit was waiting outside in a get.away car. Detectives, who conceded that the men did "a neat job," believe that the rob. hers are the same ones who got away with $5,0l'X> from t.he Five Points Branch of the Bank of America last month. During both holdups the bandits di!!· guised themse.tves with ski masks; and used . a stolen automobile u their get· away car. Wednesday's getaway car was recov· ~ by police in a nearby shopping cen- ter ahortly after the incident. It had been botwired, ollicer1 aajd. Wi~ to the holdup aald the fw.r (Set HOLDUP, P.,. I) Police Discover Prints, Ring In Phoenix Car Evidence which allegeQly ttnks Gary Harold Phoenix to a series of rapes and kidnaps in sla: Orange County com- munities was produced today in Oran ge County Superior Court as the prosecution closed its case against the tall Costa Mesa bachelor. Criminologists testified th at a ring, found in the whit!! Thunderbird driven by Phoenix and identified by several victims as the vehicle in which they were abducted and raped, came from the purse of a Huntington Beach woman. Fingerprints found tn the battered auto are also alleged to have been placed. there by women who ha ve identified Phoenix. 29, as the man who raped them and forced them to participate in acts of sexual perversion. Phoenix is accused of rape, assault wilh intent to commit rape, kidnap, robbery and sex perversion. Deputy District Attorney Michael Capizzi will ask for the death penalty if PhoenlK is found guil ty of the major rape-kidnap charges. The former assistant manager or 1 Huntington Beach health spa was arrest. ed last July 25 and named in a complaint which contains 33 felony cl\lrgea. He is accused of attacking nine women 1n .a 28-day crime 1pree which began Jate last June and euded tn July when he walked into a Huntington Beach pol.ice station and surrendered to detectives. We•tller 'The mercury'll move back up into the 60a along the cout Fri· day, with suany· ak.le.a prevallln( throogh the bJ&I> cloods. os..-E~PAY TM 10i ghty '..i• ·Do!m, whkh Ms prown to bf R.uada'• Ju~ to th• Mi<lcGlt, ii flnl:M:d. ·It will crtate Juoodacher as weU cu MID hopt for .A.robs. Stor¥ Paa• 18. ---1P.lt --M .................. Of .... ~ II .............. :::::.-. = -" ~ 1'-1' ....... ., . 4 .._... ...... , .. ,. --... • , 2 DAILY PllOr H Thunday, J.lniWY 14, 1971 - Reward_ for Safety Teacher Has Discounts for Good Drivers Ill' IWDI NIZllZIE1.alJ ... °"""" ..... Reward -In addition to punishment by traffic ticket -has bttn advanced as a method of reducing highway carnage by a Fountain Valley High School teacher. David Feyk. a young English instructor with a passion for safe driving, says he has already begun to tackle the problem by giving drivers discount cards for merc}landi.se for keeping their traffic records clean. "More Americana are ldlled on our highw1)'1 in one year than ln ten yean of Vietnam,·· be said. ··nus tragedy has to be reduced and I believe my Idea will help." Already. Feyk has found 50 local merchants who are willing to reduce the statistics by giving discount cards to safe drivers. Bec.ause each ol the merchan~ deal in different products and services, the card can be used for a wide variety of purchases, not only by adults, but also ·by teenagers. "Jn order to earn such a card, the driven mUlf. pill a wrtueo a:amlnaUon and pay a small ~benlilp '"·" Feyk explalnad. And although he admlb that 11Imply passing 11 test does not in!ure that a person Is a safe driver. he is hoping Lhat their attitudes will change once they earn a card. "I'm sure that once they enjoy all these discounts for a year. they won't want to lose the card by driving haiardously," he added. Card holders are suspended from renewing for one year if they are found guilty of just one moving violation during the year they hold the card. They are suspended for three years if the violation is driving under the influence of alcohol. "Because proper allitude is the key to safe driving , this incentive plan should impro ve these attitudes. They'll not only be driving safely to avoid accidents and citations. but also to save money," he claims. The disco unts, according lo Feyk, range from 10 percent all the way up ~ :C· dependJnc upon the type 1'Thl m.rchutl bin been extremely naponalve to my Idea tM!cauae ll doesn't cost them anything other than the di5- count," he added . "Only a few of them were negative about il and these were mer chants who are already giving discounts." •·If a lot of people were to take advantage of this card system. they could save hundreds of dollars each )'ear ." Feyk predicted. Every legal license holder. regardless of age or past. re<:ord. is eligible to take the test and earn a card. That gives the teenagers a break too. ''Sometimes." Feyk said, ··young pro. pie are judged guilty without a t r i a I , Driving is a personal thing. Why should teenagers. or any age group for that matter, be discrimminated against for other people's mistakes?" Those interested in obtaining a discount card may call 536--0321 or write to Safe Driver Discounts, Box 759, Huntington Beach, 92648. Bobby Baker in Prison As Last Appeal Fizzles From Pqe I SPEECH. • • they want to give -and that will give them what is not now offered. a chance to transfer between 1ervice abroad and at home." LEWISBURG, Pa. (UPI) -Robert G. "Bobby" Baker was led handcuffed into a federal prilon today after getting Ia.t on his way to surrender to federal manhah. The one-Ume Senate page who became a protege of Lyndon B. J ohnson and a mllllanaire businessman entered the Allenwood Prison Farm of Lewisburg Federal penitentiary to serve a one--to- three year term for fraud, theft and income taz evasion. He W&ll escorted by three U.S. marshlla as he entered the prison, wear. lng handcuffs, sunglasses despite the rainy weather, and a black overcoat. Baker showed up in !Alwlaburg to sur- render, as agreed to earlier, shorUy after a :~ 1.m. Navy Adhering To Plan to Shut Air Base July 1 The Navy presently ls sticking to il.:s dedakln to pbaae out lhe Los Alamitos Naval Air staUoo by July 1. Navy Secretary John Chafee told U.S. Rep. Richard T. Hanna (0-Anabeim) a! much at a lunchton Wednesday. "Mr. Hanna got the definite impression that Chafee believes the Navy is satisfied with tbe decision that was made and is not going to change it," commented Howard Adler, Hanna 's legislative aide this morning. "Mr. Hanna also got the impression however, that the Senate Armed Service CommlUee will hold bearings on the entire question of national reserves." Specu1ation that the Navy might not IO ahead with its plan. announced last March, to phase out the station was touched off re<:ently by a call for a freei:e on reserve base closures by Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-SOuth Carolina). He told the Sfonate hearing Jan. 2 that be wou ld call for a review of the decision to close Los Alamitos and four other air stations and urged a freeze on the closures until the ln· ve!tigation is completed. The Navy has announced that lt inte ncls to build 2,600 h<lusing units for 10,000 military men and their dependants after flight operations are discontinued at Los Alamit.o&. The city of Los Alamitos ls opposed to this proposal and is pushing for a regional park, Industrial complex , sho~ ping center and housing for the area. DAILY PILOl 0.UMG~ CO.UT PUlllSHIJ4G COMPANY ~obort H, WoM , ... 1c1 .. 1 •nd hlll.,.,.. Jo,k R. Curl,,. Vk9 Pmlfftit ol"lll 0-•I ~ Tho111 11 Koo .. il EdllOI' n.011111 A. M11,,.hi110 Mlllltlfll llfl:tr Alo11 Dirl:!11 W•I Or11111'1 C-ty lf'11w Albor! W. lole• AH«.1'1• Edller Hlllttl.,.._ .... OMc. I 717S .. ,th l oul1 .. •NI Mollrng Aidr1111 P.O. loll JtO, •2'41 0t•-u,.,,.. I Mdlt IZ2 P"-1 .A- Cllalt ~: ut Wo.t llY Slrwl 1i1....-1 •••di! 2211 Woll .. ""' t&ulovffC .... Q9nlllato: *' Nwlll &I c.11111111 hit About 10 newsmen followed him u be tried to enter a bank building across the street from the federal building where the marshal's ofl'tces are located. He noticed a Christmas club sign on the bank door, realized be waa at the wrong building and walked away. Then be sought directions from the newsmen, who dire<:ted him acrosa the street. It took only a few minutes for the marshals to bring him to a car for the trip to the prison . At no time did be have a conversation with newsmen. The priso n issued a atatement soon after his arrival noting that he has been designated a minimum security prisoner and will be sent to the honor farm after a week of processing in the main prison. Baker wUJ be eligible for parole nezt Dec. 28, and if not granted parole will be released April 20, 1973. The surrender procedure w a s negotiated with the federal judge who sentenced Baker on his 1967 conviction for fraud, theft and federal income tu evasion. Baker lost his last appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court Dec. 20. Since then, he has turned over to auociates the management of his business interests. iocluding the luxury Carousel Motel, in Ocean City. He has told friends he is prepattd to serve his tenn "with dignity." Valley Chamber I nstmlation Slated at Club This year'a Installation banquet for the Fountain Valley Chamber of Com. merce. will be a repeat performance of I.he one held last year. The same four leaders will be reinslall· ed during ceremonies at Mile Square Country Club Saturday night . The new -but old -officials are : Dr. Marvin Adler. president; Don Blake- ly. vice president ; Dr. Paul Berger, secretary, and Don Edwards, lreasurer. Entertainment will be provided by the Troubadours. a local group. Cocktail hour starts at 1:30 p.m. with dinner at 8 p.m. New officers in the cham);)er women's di vision will also be honored Saturday. Leaders for 1971 are : Mrs. Jan \V i!helm, president; Mrs. Florence Blake- ly, first vice president ; Mrs. Leah Fonda, second vice presiden t; Mrs. Marl\yn Empting, secretary, and Mrs . Mary His, treasurer. The public is Invited. Tickets are Sll. For information phone 962·2t24. In reciting the multiple problems fac- ing th!! country, the President dttlared: "We must meet them together. The re can be no generation gap In America. The destiny of this nation ls not divided into yours and ours -it is one destiny. We share it together. We are responsible for it together." The chief e1ecutive, in his broadest appeal yet to the young people who will be voting for the first time Jn 1972, said: "Let us forge an alliance between generations.'' Citing 1970 legislation that gives voting rights in federal elections to those 18 years of age or older, Nixon said : "So much is in your hands now. T• those who have believed the system could not be moved I urge you try lt. To those who have thought the syRtem was impenetrable. I say there is no longer 1 need to penetrate -the door is open." Nixon added : •·vou have now the op- portunity and the obligation ttt mold the world you live in. and you cannot escape this obligation." In a television·ra~o interview last week with tour broadcast journalists, Nlxon cited a Life magazine poll that. he conceded, would indicate the younger voters at this time would not vote the way he might prefer. But he expressed the view tha t the youth vote. will be up for grabs in 1972 and indicated he would be making a pitch for it. His appearance before • student· fa culty · convocation here apparently marked the beginn ing of his personal effort to solicit the allegiance <1[ the newly enfranchised young voters. From POIJe 1 SCHOOLS ... granted teachers lo o It 1129.000 out of reserves which would have put the district reserve estimate over $300,000, according to Palmer. "The teacher pay raise. combined with our l°"s of state revenue has taken away all of our reserve," Palmer said. The total district budget is about $4.7 million. but all of it will be spent. With no reserve funds available, the district cannot expand programs or mee t emergencies. The risin g cost of programs will also outgrow the budget "The essence of it is that our district must fact a ba sic re-evaluation of the program we offer, or we have to come up with more money," Palmer concluded. Fish Eaters Have Excess Of Mercury, Chemist Says BINGHAMTON, N. Y. (UPI) -The state university chemist who discovertd mercury contamination of tuna and swordfish says new research shows peo- ple who ut 1 lot of fish conta in five times the amount of mercury of regula r eaters. While not finding any dangerous mercury level a, Dr. Bruce McDuffie call- ed Wednesday for more lntenalve rtttarch into the effect of mtrcury ~ cumulations in tiuTM.ns. McDuffie, a chemistry profellOr at the State University at Btngh1mton , It.id he took hair, blood and urine um plea from 42 members of Weightwalchtr CJubl, who hid been dinln1 on illh five t.imf.s 1 week for 18 months. McDuffie &aid a "control group" of 20 non-dlettta studied Md mercury levell subltantJally below the d!etera. "We found an averaae mercut)' level of one microgram of mercury per 100 mlllJUters of blood" In the diet group. which was in the range of theoretic blood mercury values, he u ld. "Nevertheltas.'' he continued, ''the level was five times higher than that of the. control group, which averaged out of VIOth of a microgram per 100 milliliters of blood." McDuffie said four membe rs of the diet group had blood levels of more than 10 times the control group average but Jhat was still only I/25th to l/50th of Ule supposed toxic level -100 micrograms pe.r 100 milliliters. "However, one may well question whether a safety f1ctor of ts to 50 is adequate for mercury," he: added. "None of the levels found In the welaht watchers group was known lo be dangerous to UlolJt tested ," ht said. "But the eUed of small doslgea of mercury, partlc:ularly methyl merrury, over long periods of time should be studied extensively If foods: containing 11ig:nlficant amounts of mereury Ir! to be continued in the human diet." McDuffie'" findings of mercury in htn• and awordfish samples 1bov~ the O.S parts per million acctptable \evtl Nit by federal standards lad to the Food Md Drug Administration ordering certain brands off supermarket tihelves. D"IL Y P ILDT Sti ff Phtltl POLICE DISCOVER GETAWAY CAR USED BY BANDITS Bank Robbers Sw itch Autos; Sti ll •t Large Nine Dw in J(entucky Retirement Home Blaze LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) -Fire roared through the kitchen and chapel o( a church-ope.rated home for old persons here today, and clouds of ~J~ck smoke th.at billowed through the building killed nine persons. Fifty-eight others were hospitalized , including five in critical condition. MMt of the 94 residents of the four· year-old . modern home were able to make their way to the balconies of their apartments and were re5cued by firemen who reached the scene three minutes after the alarm was sounded. "When we got there, there were prop!e ail over the b.a\conies," said Chief Garland Miller of the suburban Beuchel Voluntttr Fire Department. ~Two of the dead were ''monitors" appointed to take charge in emergency situations such as fires. ''We believe they lost their lives trying to ::irouse the people," said the Rev . Jack T. Goodykuntz, e:tecuti\>e director Judges Approve Pla n SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Sacra· mento County Superior Court. judges have approved a proposal to release criminal suspects without bail pending their trials. The program, simila r to the San Fran· cisco bail project. was spoitsored by the Sacramento COtJnty Bar Association of the W~stmlnster Terrace Residence home for senior citizens. All of the nine victims apparently died of smoke inhalation. The four·slory brick building had been considered fir eproof. and hours alter the blaze was under control firemen had nnt been able to determine the cause, nor exactly where it started. The dead Included two men and seven women. one of the later not Identified, rang ing in age from 77 to 92. The coroner'5 ofrice identified th~ others as Frank Shobe. 79, and the following Louisville residents : Leon E. Grubbs, BO. Mrs. John W. Ebbert , 86, Nora Lee Strong, 92, Mrs. William T. Bates, 78, Mr s. David Johnson, 71, Mrs. Mary Presley Smith, 82, and Alma Swan, 80. ' Goody kuntz said Miss Swan and Shobe were the "monitors" believed to have died while trying to alert other residents. The first alarm was sounded about 2:30 a.m. EST and Garland said that as he le ft his home a few blocks away "! could see flames shooting up over the building.'' Miller said one woman was ove rcome and died before she could !iCt out of a first.floor infirmary from which 13 other patients safely ned. The other eight victims were overcome by smoke before they ""'''" .. ' balconies al· tached to each apartment ). F rom Pqe 1 HOIDUP ••• ... men appeared tll be wearing white gar- dening glovu and were all in their •20·1. Ont of them was said Ui have dark. lhoulder-lenath halt while another bad I pot belly. Police said the gang used a peculiar method of operation during both hold· ups but decJined to release further de- tails. Wednesday's holdup was the third Hun- tington Beach banks have suffered in two months. Jn December FBI agents were succes5ful in capturing a Be.Uflower laborer whom they accused of taking $1 ,000 from lhe Springdale .and Edlnger Branch or the Bank of America. Policeman , Firms Sued ByBeachMan A Huntington Beach UlD.ll has named one of that city's policemen and a rroup of construction firm5 as defendants in Orange County Superior Court suits which allege that he was framed on robbery charges . F'rancis William Herrera. 515 12th St., wants more than $1 million in damages from defendants listed in the two com-· plaints. He particularly identifies Proper- ty Research Finan cial Corp . .and PRC Development C-Orp. of Sant.a Ana and officer Ed M. \Villiam5 of the Huntington Beach force in his lawsuits. Herrera's actions st.ate that he was wrongly tabbed la st April 6 for tht theft of swim pool equipment from a Santa Ana construction site. He identifies PRC employes Homer A. McAllister and John MacPher5son as principally responsible for the filing of charges that led to his trial in Sa nta Ana municipal court. llerrera alleges that night watchman Ernest Verdugo was persuaded to iden- tify him in connection with the theft and be furthe r alleges that William1 was persuaded to pick out bis "mug shots" from the Huntington Beach pollct files and hand them 'to MacPhersson. Herrera was acquitted by a jury lad June 17 aft.er a trial in which, he states, McAl!isier sat among the courtroom spectators and repeatedly slgna\led to prosecution witness Verdugo. Herrera notes that Judge Paul Mast admonished McAllister for his .actions. Both McAllister and MacPheruon, Herrera alleges, coached Verdugo on identification procedures prior to the trial. Two Santa Ana policemen and the city of San ta Ana are namtd u ccrdefendanls in the second e<>mplainl A1nerican Jwnbo J et Slid es Off R unway NEW YORK (UPI\ -An American Airlines 747 jumbo jet from Sa11 Fran- cisco skidded off the end of a snow·s lick runway at Kennedy Airport while landing early today. No one was hurt, The 48 passengers and 11 crewmen left the plane by way of stairs and were tak· en to the terminal area ill vehicles. Th e plane was Amer ican's flight 18. lu xuriou s down sof as This handsom• Sof• was designed to give you the ultim1t1 in M•ting comfort with d1(ron •nd down b.(k pillows, deep 'Pring down 1e~t cust-lions anv•l.oP9d in .down ind feather1 In fWO fo.m·fill ed arm p ilJOWS. Chooae from I Wldl M\e(fl On Of f1nl fabrlCI. 0 ' 8' leng th, reg. $599 NOW 399. Your favorite dttfgner IDi U bf ham to a.a1i.tt vou $400 and $500 Values s299 H .JI GARRETT f u RNrJU ~~HARBOR BLVD. PROFESSIONAL Op .. M .... Tloun. & Fri. ..... COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGN~•S TRY OUR REVOLVING CHARGE 6.6.02 75 • 6•6·02 7' " ----------..... --- Ne Today's F lnal N.Y. Stoeb . .. ' ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFOR NIA THURSDAY, :JANUARY 14, 197 1 TEN CENTS VO L. M, NO. 12, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES Suit for Newport Freeway Blocking Delayed By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lfle D•llY l"UOI Sllft A suit to block the Newport Beach free way election has been delayed becaUSf of "ambiguous" wording in the ballot proposition, itself, the lawyer for the gr(lup seeking to stop the vote said today. Angelo Palmieri, altorney representing three former Newport ci ty officials, said he nevertheless expects to seek a writ of mandamus "early next week" to halt the initiative election. The Initiative proponents are seeking votes on two questions. The first ostensibly would rescind an existing agreement between the city and the state on a portion of the route of the Pacific Coast Freeway through Ne'NJ)Ort Beach. The second is a charter am endment requiring future referendums before a city council could lidopt a free way agree· ment. "The issues on the second ilem are clear ," Palmieri said, "it is the com· plexities involving the first that are causing difficulty." Palmieri said that while the ti tle of the initiative -"Initiative Petition to enact an ordinance to rescind a portion of City Council Resolution No. 6980 (adopted Oct. 28, 1968) and a portion of that freeway agreement made and entered into on Oct. 11, 11168, by and betwttn the State of California and the City or Newport Beach." The question to be placed on the ballot, however, is confusing, Pahrlleri maintains. It says, ·ishall an ordinance be adopted rescinding that portion of City Council resolution No. 8980 (adopted Oct. 28, 1968) and that portion of the freeay agreement made and entered into on Oct. 30, 1968, by ~d between the State or California and the city (If Newpor:t Beach pertainlng to Route 1 (Paclllc OAIL.Y ll'IL.OT lt•ff ll'M .. PRESIDENTIAL PARTY ENDS LATEST SOJOURN IN SAN CLEMENTE VILLA It Was On To Nebr11k1 Where The President Spok• To University Students Nixon Appeals to Youth To 'Try Out the.Sys tem' Doreen ~arshall Na ntes County Jury Office rs LINCOLN. Neb. (AP) -President Nixon. appearing before a campus au· dience. said today ··rhere can be: no generation gap in America'' and. citing the 18·year-old vote in the federal elec· lions. called on young peo ple to try out "the system." Nixon flew here fro m a nine-day slay al the Western White l{ouse in San Clemente to addre ss a faculty.student convoc11tion at lhe University of Nebraska . In a prepared address, Nixon said that his administration "has no higher priority than to end the war" in Vietnam. But his emphasis was on the role nf youth in achieving what he termed "great goals" in dealing with problems of the environment, decay of the cities, overpopul ation, n.iral ills and "the pro- blems of prosperity itself -the problems of poverty in a land of plenty." Nixon made bl.It one annooncemeat of a new administration aim in his remarks aimed at the 21,000-students ' C.ast Weather The mercury 'll move back up into the 60s along the cout Fri· day, with sunny akJes prevailing through lhe high cloudl. INSmE TODAY The mightv .A.twan Dam. which has provtn to be RJLSsia'' ke~ to the Mi!Ua.tt, U finUMd. I t will create ht adache.s OJ well cs new hQJX for Arabs. Stor11 Page JB. <••'*""" • CIMdlllll U• 1 ClettlftM 1"-M ,_ . ,_ . DMftl '"""" ti -" .~ ...... l..t9'19'MMl!f 1f·1t . ..._ .... -" """ UMtn 1J Mhlfot 11-lt Mw ..... """" M .......... ,..... ... °'" ..... C:-ty ,, lrt¥111 hrtw M s-tt n .n 1• ~ M-U T•lnll*I 11 "'-"" 11·1t .......... . ._ ....... 1 .. 11 ..... .....,, .. s at the u•iverSJty, He said he will send a special message to the 1971 Congress proposlng a new agency that would bring together the Peace Corps, VISTA and related federal efforts to utilize volunteer service. Nixon sa id his new agency, yet to be named, Y.'OU\d "give young Americans an expanded opportunity for the se rvices they want to give -and that will give them what is not now offered , a chance to transfer between service abroad and at home." In reci~ the multiple problems lac· ing the coOntry, the President declared : "We mqrt meet µtern tos;ether. There can be no geoeratlon gap In Amer ica. The. destiny of th.ls nation is not ,divided into youn and ours -it ls one destiny. We share It together. We are responsible (See SPEECH, P .. e 1) Doreen Marshall, foreman of the 1971 Orange County Grand Jury and former mayor of Newport Beach, today an- nounced selection of pennanent jury of· ficers . Appointed we re Laurence R. Hen- derson. Anaheim. foreman pro tern ; Mrs. Fred Dunn, Garden Grove, secretary; Mrs. R. George Mawhinney, Tustin, assistant secrelar}' and John Kamalani, Costa Mesa, sergeant at arms. Henderson is a retired lumber man and served on the Anaheim · arter committee. Mrs. Dunn is president of the Garden Grove Beeutifica 'on Associa· tion and ol the ciD''s United Clusade. Mrs. M1whi.rmey is a fonn8r member of the executive board of the Santa Ana Ebell Society and a retired legal secretary and office manager. Business License Fee Due Now in Newport Try as It might, the dust kicked up by the controversy over the Newport Beach business licente fee jurt can't seem to .etUe. The furor over the recent hike, ltltlf, wa,, at least down to a dull roar when the. city tent out the. new bills refTectlng the 100 pet'Ceflt ~·ae in 1ictn1t fees approved last molilb by the City Council. Tht new fees were due as of Jin. l. and must be paid by Feb. 1 to avoid penalty, 1ccordlng to the ordinance. The probttm? BecJUSe of 1 shortage or Ume end mlndM ol the caot, th< License Department didn't prln,t ntw biUs, Instead U!ing lhe reterVe of thousands already exl~ln.g. And these bills show a due dale of July I, becoming pul clue Auaust 1. Licenae Commissioner stan Hirschberg said he hes received some calls about the dates , but said be does not expecl ,·; major problems to be created. The bills clearly 11y the license period ts from Jan. 1, It'll to Pee. 31, 1171, he 111Jd, ... obvtouslt"llln ore <No mw. lie said lbe publldty lllliroondlnc the license fee tncreue "bas alao belpld peo~le become 1ware ol lbe clwlp ln <IU& date&." . . BU!lnc of the Itel wu pootponed for ... the. six montha while the councll con- sldeTed the CO!ltrovenill boost, from W to $50 In most cues. lllncbberg slild collectlom "" pro- ceeding norm.Uy for Ille middle of the due month. . ' '"l"bert were a.ODO buslnea In the city last year," he uld, "aod we would expect about 5,000 of tbele to renew their lictn&el. T(I dai.e, Vf.e have received about 2,500 renewal ~orma. "lbls ls normal," he uld, "there II always 1 last-minute rush." Coast) Freeway between New~ Beach city limits near Buck Gully and Bayside Drive." Palmieri said "this is no mandate: it doesn't seem to require anybody to do anything." He $4id the problem he must ffilOJve is whether to speak to the apparent intent of the question, or that actual meaning of it. "It says, "Shall an. . .," Palmieri explained, "It doesn't say, 'the council iihall.' ,. Palmieri said he will probably have to "a!!ume t.be title haa significance, although that ls different from whst they are actually doing." The charter amendment question, although far more clear, Palmieri said, is at least somewhat clouded. ''It pres upposes there will be future freeways," he says, and notlng the stated purpose or the fi rst initiative ''to prevent the building of the Pacific Coast Freeway,'' he said, "well , if we are to vote on futu re freeway s that are going to be prevented, that just doesn't make any sense." Nevertheless, he said, "I am sure they dG mean to prevent construction of the freeway. something has just gone awry between here and there. Nixon Ends ''That is why It is hard to deal .with, it puts the burden on me to de-fire wha t we've got, then tell the cour1 what to do.'' Palmieri said he will not seek whal is though t of as a temporary iniUnclior or restraining order, an action that woul~ halt the election process pending a cour1 hearing. "We will ask for an 'alternative' wrl: of mandate rather than a 'peremptory' writ of mandate," he said, "thus allowinR the opponenlS an opportunity, probabl) 10 days, to file an answer before a hearing and before a judgment by th!! court." Stay President Jets Out to Nebraska President Nixon waved an end to his Tricia, and domestic aides left La Casa nirie-day Orange County vacation this Pacifica in San Clemente on foot 1t morning and flew toward his speech 9: 15 a.m., stroll ing toward their waiting to University of Nebraska students. Aides Army helicopter in a bright, but chilly have called It important. morning. In Lincoln , two university student Mr. Nixon carried a leather binder leaders who accepted an invitation to as he waved to a small group of well share the platform with Nixon said they wishers. would wear black arm bands in the The First Family waved, smiled. but "hope that our presence will not be said nothing as they ·swiftly boarded cons trued as support for the Presidenl." the chopper for the IS.minute flight to Steve Tiwald, president of the student Air Force One at the El Toro MCAS. body, and Ken Wald. head of a campus Moments after sitting down at his hooorary group called the Innocents place in the helicopter the chief eiecuUve Society, said i• a statement they did drew out papers and began studying not endorse the President's policies. They documents u the helicopter began warm- did not elaborate. lng up. They urged students to refrain from Before the departure , his valet, Manolo "loud and persistent heckling" and said Sanchez, ~ke to • frleod in the military . · . • :~w.-·~~L~~· Citation Nixell New port Drops Car Victim Tick et "The citation was rescinded in the lntereell tf justice_" That was the word today f r o m the Newport Beach police deparlment after they cancelled a ticket written Tuesday to a gas 1tttlon attendent who was res- cued from hiii flaming auto. Sgt. Richard Miller saved tbe life of William F. Gillard , 20, of Anaheim when he draggl!d the sleeping Gillard f r o m his burning ~ar. . Miller then ciled the gas station em· ploye under a city ordinance against sleeping in autoe. "We·ve found people from the g a s station :'.:leeping in their cars before,'' the officer explained, "and I've warned them about It ." Gillard's car caught fire when a coat he was using as a blanket fell o v e r an electric 11 o o r heater and ignited. Neither he nor Miller were injured in the incident. A department spokesman noted that Gillard wa!I sleeping in a car I o c k e d in the garage of die Dougla1 Gas station, 2.10l Newport Boulevard and that he was allegedly sleeping there to protect the station from burglars. The city ord inance prohibits sleeping in autoi parked on public streets. "We di dn't fee! the Interests of justice would ha ve been served by prosecuting this cilation," lhe spokesman said. LA FC Delay s Decision On Irvine City 4 W ee ks By JACK BROBACK Of "" DellY 11'1191 l llff • The shouting over the proposed new City of Ir.ii.ne ended Wednesday night and the Local Aj:ency Fonnation Com- mission memben gave lbemaelves four weeks to come up with a deciskln. At the concluskm of a second four-hour hearing, in which few new voices were heard on either side, the commiaion voted to defer a decl.slon lDltil Feb. 10 at 2 p.m. New developments since last week·s hearing include: -The. CIUzem Direction Finding Co~· mission. an organl.tation created to ad- vise on the county's General Plan Progr1m, called current plans to in- corporate the 17.52 0 -acre area "premature." Further study was urged "for at leat1t a year.'' -The Orange County League of Women Voters also asked for delay in incorporation. They said a moratorium ~ should be declared on 1nnexaUona into the proposed city's area until furtber studie1 could be made. -Commission counsel W 111 11 m McCourt said the commluian could not legally declare a moratorium on an- nexation Into the area. "You must bear every case which comes betore you. You cannot make a decision now that would bind you three. six, or nine months from now," the attorney warned, -McCourt also ruled that the t..AFC CQU.ld not require develop ment of low (!lee IRYINE, 1'111' I) ' 2133 OTY OF NEWPORT IEA:CH IUSIN£SS LICENSE-RENEWAL NOTICE NUM&EI ,_, ........ ..._ ... , .. ...._ .......... ..,.. ... ,.,,.,.1 . .-<4 .......... ,_.,., ... 11,,..,,,,,"' ........ "· • ........., .. u ,.ilkl-wdl b.-"IM• .... 1 .. ~ ......... ,, ............... u,....., ................. --Jt!P ""Iii """'" -• PAY THIS AMOUHf -t --" .. ~-... -" 1'01'•1. .... ivr u- 0100 ' oi. )'L i7Ll l2j3°lf,71 , , I I 50j t> I 50 j OO CO•_.,,_, ___ _._ --~·· 6.llCI tlr&ily Pilot 2211 v. klbo& ~lvd. ~--.. Jtt:wpon Jeaeh, eaUt ~-fHll MUST 11 l lfUI NtD •.. ,. "''"-•a£>"""'""""* '19< ur:C11W_....,cmor-•1.101 --,_ .. -..... 4 -·~"""'~· ... -......... ' DON'T READ TH I PINI PRINT CARI FULL Y; IT'S WRONG New D•t•• In En.ct For Old Newport LlcenM Porma Biscayne residence lo Florida. An aide gues,,ed the President mlgh~ not return to the Western White House in San Clemente again until summer. Beofre boarding Air Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, the President accepted a crocheted portrait of himself from Mr. and Mrs. Philip Bielat of Los Angeles. He chatted briefly '1'ith them and posed for pictures. Nixon spent much of his Sao Clemente stint preparing today's speech -"Youth In Our Society'' -and his Stale of The Union address. It will be delivered before a joint session of Congress Jan. 22. Sen. and Mrs. Roman Hruska o{ Nebraaka new with the presidential party •board Air Force One today. New port B each City Manager Hires A ss istant Newport Beach City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt annoonced thb morning he has hired Judy Lynn Kelsey, 26, of Loa Angeles, as his new admJni&tratlve as- sistant. MW Kelsey, who holds bachelor's aod master's degreea in public adminis- tration from USC, currenUy Is a senior aide with the LA Police Department. She was selected from a field of appll~ cants that numbered more than 140 and was the unanimous' Choice of the three-- member review puel that interviewed the top 10 candidates, Hurlburt said. Miss Kelsey. •hose work blckground la ltrong in ·data processina:, budgetint and grantt-ln-ald PfOP'lnuJ, w'IU begin her dulies Jan. 25. She will •rn •11,0« per year, S120 more than her l'ftMlll 1nnu1l JAJ•ry. "The dty Is V"Y rortun11e to obtain the aervlceo o1 1 penon o1 this -Po- tency, edl.ICIUon ud experte.nce,'' Hurl- burt WI. "She has dem0nltr1ted IZ><iepth 1blUty In many (itldl rel1ted lo this jOb end bu particur'1 11ron1 uui. 1n c1o1o -.... •lnl. sront .. dmlniltratlon, bodltllnl ml !)'l1emt 1na1Ytb.'' he 11ld. <>rtplllly from Santa Mana; Mtaa Ke\. .. y 1w betn wllh the LAPD ilnc< 1"7, ttartin& there u a junior ldmJnlltraUvt asdstant. She has perfonned admlnlltrallYI i. tern work wllh both !he dtlos ol Soll u1 .. KELSEY, Pap ll I ), ' 2 IWlY PILOT ' College District Plans Environment Center Committing IWlf to "eovlroruntntal conoent.$," Coast CommUft.lty c.oueae Dillri<t bu hecllll p~ or an .,.. vtronmeatal center wb1cb may. be built wjlh p&rtlat help from the federal government The center, anticipated to be con- 1tructed in a maMer similar to the M00,000 1drnln11t.ratlve building on Baker Sine~ would be located nur the lcience hill and lecllocloo buildlq on the -• aided )be~ Coast - -wen told Wed1111u( 111p1, !bat ·•u i. --tlll; Wil.w be a "1ocatablo llruclure tlmllar la many respects to the district offices. of ap- pro1dmate.Jy the aame 1ize, to be com- Growth Predi~ted New port Building P icking Up? The slackened pace of building in Newport Beach may pick up the last half of tl'tt!: fiscal year p e r h a p s signifi cantly enough to perk up sagging building fee revenues, a building depart- ment official said today. Eugene Cich, &W!tant building direc- tor. made his commenL!I as it was repor\ed Wedi:JeMay that d e c 1 i n i n g revenues may be placing the city in • (inanclal bind. Finance Director George Pappas said Wednesday Ulat building excise tu: and building permit revenues, combined. are projected to be about $135,000 below what had been anticipated in lhe current city budget Cich did not say the revenues would necessarily climb to the point where they would meet budget projections. bul did uy, ''tbe large volume of buildings that are 1n the process of being designed for this area indicates that the final valuaUon of this year could well approach that of last yea r." He said valuation for the first six months of the flscal year totals $47,655,000, about $10.6 million below fiscal 1969-70. He did point out. however, that lhe valuation of pe.rmlta issued during December "wu almost double that of the November valuation." During December, $6,190,768 in permit., were issued, compared with only $3,1156,841 in November . He said the largest perm.it for a com- mercial building was issued to the Irvine Company for a parking structure to accommodate the new Irvine Tower III. The valuation of this structure, alone, he said was S3 million. The largest residential permit was for the Irvine Company's 168-unil Harbor View Apartments valued at $2 ,580,00CI. If major projects such as these con- tinue to pour in, there is reason to believe a growth in revenues can be expected. Nine Die in Kentucky Retirement Home Blaze LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) -Fice roared through the kitchen and chapel of a churc~perat.ed home for old perlOlls here today, and clouds of black l!lmoke that billowed through the building killed nine persona. Fifty~igbt others \r.'t.re hospitalized, including five in attical coodltloo. Most of the M residents of the fo\ll'o year-old, modem home were able to make tbelr way to the balconies of From PGfle I KELSEY ... DJefO Qd San Dimll and WIS Id~ f!tratJve auiltant with the UrUversJty of Maryland Ew-opeu Divillon in Heidel- berg. Germany for aLr monlhs. She worked as a computer specialist fOf' the city of Coventry, England for six months and w111 an aide to the Air Pollu- tlon Control Institute o( USC while at- tending 1ebool there. "Working with the Los Angeles Police Department," Hurlburt uld, "Miss Kel- sey most rece1tly has been in charge of the enUre department's grants unit, co- ordinating the entire program for state and (eden I graols." Previously, he sald, she ha; Worked in data processing, communications and budget planning capacltln. Hurlburt said that h1 addition to reee iv- tng the top recommendation of the review panel, Miss Kelsey placed first in all testing. including the Minnesota Multi- phase pertonallty and ps-ychological ex· amlllation adminil!ltertd to the finali!ts for the job. Hurlburt said he baa not fully decided flfl the division of respomibililies he win make with Miss Kebey and the man she guceeedl, Philip F. Bettencourt, who is now assistant city manager. Certain areas, in which she has demon- strated experience, wlll obvioos!y be made her responsibility, however, lie said, DAILY PILOT • Ou.HG• COAST l"Ull!SttlMG COMPANY Rebert H. Weed f'r-io.M ... l"ullllt.her Jeck l. C1.1rl1v TM1111• A. M.,,,hi111 MMe;"-llllfeir L '•t.r IC1 l19 M....aion a..oi Ctty lllllot' ---2211 W11f 1111•0• lo1,1l1 .. 1nl M1lltrtt Md,1111 P.0 .1111 1•1S, 92 661 --ce.t. M-r 1M W..1 .. V Strttt ~ tMcfl; in f'01'81l ,..,.._,,,. ...... lft9IOll hlctl: 11111 aHdl &eulrn,. S.11 C"""'"t.! as Hor1fl •1 C1on1N 1t .. 1 their apartment.a and were rescued by firemen who reached the scene three minutes after the alarm was sounded. "When we 11ot there, there were people all over the balconies," said Chief Garland Miller of the suburban Beuchel Volunteer Fire Department Two of the dead were "monitors'' l!lppointed to take charge in emergency 11ituatloru such as fires. "We believe they lost their lives trying to arouse the people,'' said the Rev. Jack T. Goodykuntz, executive director of the Westminster Terrace Residence home for aen1or cillwls. All of the nine victims apparently died of smoke inhalation. The lour-14«Y brick buildin1 bad been considered fireproof, and hour! afier the blaze wu under control firemen had not been able to determine the cause, nor exactly where il started. The dead included two men and seven women, one of the later not identified, ranging in age from 77 to 92. The coroner's offi ce identified the others as Frank Shobe, 79, and the following Louisville residents : Leon E. Grubbs, 80, Mrs. John W. Ebbert. BS. Nora Lee Strong, 92, Mrs. William T. Bate.s, 78, Mrs. David Johnson, n. Mrs . 1-tary Presley Smith, 82, and Alma. Swan, 80. Goodykuntt said Miss Swan and Shobe were the "monitors" believed to have died while trying to alert other residents . 'The first alarm was sounded about 2:30 a.m. EST 11nd Garland said that as he left his llome a few blocks away "I could see flames shooting up over the building." Miller said one woman was overcome and died before she could get out of a first-floor infirmary from Yl'hich 13 other patients safrly fled . The other eight victims were overcome by smoke before they could get to balconies at- tached to each apartmenl Newport Police Probing $22,130 Cash, Gem The f t NewPort Beach police today are con- tinuing their Investigation of the armed robbery last Saturday of a couple in their home in the Shorecl.iffs section of Corona de.I Mar. The lone cunm.an made off with an estimated $22,130 in cash and jewelry from the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Irving Jaloff, 130 Shoreclilfs Rd .. after holding the couple al gunpoint. No description of the suspect was available today, but invesllgators said he was wearing a motorcycle htlmet with a fact ~Id to hide his fe.atures_ The robber apparently entered the home through an open garage door and confr'OJlted Jaloff at about 2 a.m. a11 he was watching television. His wife , Fae, was a.sleep at the Ume. While the gunman held a gun on Jaloft. the victim turned over a small amount of casb, a diamond pendant valued at $6,800 and three rings valued be.tween '4.000 alld fl,IOO. Seraunt Ken· Thompson ul d today detectJvea •re following up le1ds picked up from the Jalaff house after the rob- bery. Murderer Recaptured MEXICO CITY (UPI) -An es<:1ped murderer wa1 captured when his ca r stopped for a red light In front of police he1dquartert, pollce aald tod•Y· milted campJetely . to environmental education, lnctuding trainina, retarinln& and other envtroamental conctrm." '""-aood Jor 111Cb a fJdl!IY b .,. i!oino!l -U Wt ~ lo fulllll our obYc•UOll ln lh1I iMpar\.ul new atea of ectuatlon. "At the present time we are utilizing former barns, storage areas and cbsolete King Porlrait This painting of the late Dr. Martin Luther King will be given to his widow Friday in Atlanta. Ga ., by the A. W. Mel· Ion Foundation. Ceremony at Ebenezer Baptist Ch urch will be part of nationwide observ- ance of King's birthday planned by Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference. F rom Pagel IRVINE ... cost housi ng in the new ci ty. He said the act creating LAFC does not allow zoning as a consideration for approval for incorporation. This latter point has been Santa Ana'11 biggest content:ion in opposing the new city. City manager Carl Thornton repea ted Wednesday that proponents have given no sound assurance that low cost housing would be provided. He again pleaded for time saying Santa Ana felt safer with the Immediate development of the area under county jurisdiction. He repeated that his city has 85 percent of the black population and 35 percent of the Mexican Amerlcan residen ts in the county. Supporters of the incorporation were again led by John Burton, chairman of the Council of Communllies of Irvine !CCI). He argued that his group bad shown that the proposed city would be able to support itself. Burton responded to Santa Ana's attack with, "We are concerned with the pro- blems, but we are being asked to take on lasks not assigned to any other new community . We are willing to conlinu e our studies leading to a solu1ion of !he problems with the county and with UCI " 1l1e incorpnralinn leader aga in read ll re solution of CCI favoring low income housing area s within the new city. How the five commission members v.·i ll vole Feb. 10 Is anybody 's guess. The commission could deny in- corporation •;without prejudice·• as recommended by their ezecutive officer Richard Turner. 1bls could all ow 11 cool- ing off period in which some of the problems might be resolved. The "without prejudice" terminolOKY allows proponents t.o come back at any time with the same proposal whereu an outright denial would block any further Incorporation attempt! for one. year. Ccimmiuioner Stanley Northrup, San OemenLe city councilman, Indicated he may lean toward incorporation. Library Survey Set in Newp ort Newport Be11ch library patrons will nave a chance to voice their opinions about their library system this week whlle a library survey or community use Ui: being taken. The Friends of the Library will post volunteers at the doors of the three Jibrarie. to hand out questionnaires. Dorothea Sheely, city librarian, said ''the responses will enable the Library Board to evaluate the nec<b of the li- brary •nd project for the level of &erv· Ice desired for present and future re· quire.ment.11 of the Newport Beach Lu· payer. "All comm~nt& will be kept confiden- tial. It is hoped that. bttauu of the Importance of the decisions to be m&de: on the basis of the return , !he public will welcome this opportunity to vl!lt the library." ' aic baM bulldlop lo bowie IPW o< tbeM eovlronmQlll p r o I r a m 1 , ' • <llancellor N..,... lt'a._ told lrulleu. One l'tMOQ ' Ule center ror tn· • ........,taJ e<l\icatloa Is needed, Dr. Wai.on Aid, _"ls dW many nf thtse PfOll'P\I operate an 1i.J: to eight hour blocb of time which prohibit! the use of exi1th1g cl11trOOrns." Wat.on lOld lbe Ward the di.strict Is btln1 consldertd u I.ht site for the r•Ven nlnt -c.lifom11, Nevadl, Hawall and Ari.zofta -wutl Wl&tr trulmenl Environmeotaf Center. Planning for the new center will allow for exp1n1ion to howie: a museum, library and meetillg rooms. The board veled for comntitment to Lbe project, but tabled College Retraining designation af an architect until il.s next meeting, in other matt.er1, lruatea approved. the April zo dltt for the election ot boird member1 . Threti ternu expire lhis. year including tho9e ol Dona ld G. Hof( of t.1 idway Cily, Robert L. Humptlreys , clerk rrom Cos ta i\1esa, and William E. , Kettler of Huntington Beach. Aerospace Hopes Flicker Hope for 1111 many as 700 unemployed -aerospace engineers may be forthcoming from a joint effort of the State Depart- ment of Human Reeources Development and Orange. Coast College. Coast Community College District bu four proposals in Sacramento which, if funded , will provide retraining for unemployed aeroapace workers in at least tour technical fields including two 1n the ecology field . Orange Coast already offers three pro- grams that train students for jobs in environmental specialities: ecological re!IOUl'ces, environmental quality control and pure water supply studies. If approved, the four new areas to be added would speclfically provide retraining of aerospace worker! in fields of color televi!ion repair, waste water techno1ogy, air sampling and deltttion and career development and retraining, an OCC spokesman said. The community college di3lrict Is working closely witb a Santa Ana organization called E i p er I e n c t- Unlimited, .a 3,000 member, non-profit organization made up of f o r m e r aerospace industry emp\oye!. The group recently received federal funds for Its program of developing and finding jobs for former technicians put out of work by recent trends ln ttlf: industry . Part of the money awarded to the organization will be uaed to pay for prograrrui at OCC. EJtperience Unlimited is housed in the state employment service offices. JU president, f . 0. Crysler, said as mu ch as $2 million !n Manpower Development Trainlng Act funding is expected to pr~ Newport Police Hunt 4 Who Robbed Hitchhiker Four men who abducted and robbed a hitchhiker btfore releuing him In San Diego County are being sought today by the Newport Beach police. Ross E. Thompson, 22, of IOU W. Bal- boa Boulevard, Wednesday reported his night-long ordeal whlch began at mid- night Monday. Thompson uid he was hitchhiking eastbound on Balboa Boulevard at 10th Street when he was picked up by the four suspects who were r l d I n g in a foreign compact station wagon. Police said the car had been stolen earlier in Corona del Mar. The men drove a few blocks. and the driver told ThomP50n to give up his wal- let. When the victim made an attempt to jump out of the car, one of the 3us- pects told him, "I have a gun." Thompson told police he was driven to Sin Diego where he was locktd in a bathroom in 311 apartment apparently belonging to one of the 1uspecl'I'. After an undetermined amount of time. the llUspects put Thompson back in their car and started t.o drive northbound on the San Diego Freeway . The victim said they traveled a short distance, when they pulled off the free- way and he was told to drive. As the car slowed , Thompson told police he jump- ed out and attempted to run away, but was captured in a brief struggle with his abductors. At Encinitas, the 1uspects ordered Thompson to stop , get out and then told him "to get rid of the car." He drove a few miles further, then left the car and hitchhiked into Carls- bad, where he reported the incident to police. Thompson said he was given back hi! wallet before being left by the suspects, tmli:lhty had removed '2() and his drt v-Ua· license. F r0nt Pqe I SPEECH ... for it together." . The chief eiecutive. In his broadest appeal yet l<i the young ~pie who will be voting ior the first time in 1972, said: "Let ua forge an alliance between generations." Citing 1970 legislation that gives voting rights in federal elections to those 18 years of age O( older, Nixon said : "So much ls in your hands now. 'fo those who have believed t~e system could not be moved I urge you try it. To those who have thought the system was impenetrable, I say there is no longer a need to penetrate -the door Is open ." vide as many as 700 openings for retraining unemployed aero s p .11 e e workers. Some will receive institutional' training, such as the M enrolled at UC Irvine in a one-year course or those who may be retrained at OCC, and some will receive on the job training, Crysler said. John Owens, vice chancellor for voca- tional education for the Coast Community College District. said the colleges will work closely with Experience Unlimited areas . ''lt will be the college's job to quickly train technicians to fill them," Owens· said . "Courses will not be traditional two- yea r programs, but accelerated courses specifically tailored to the needs of. the student." "If he's had a lot of mathematics, for example ," Owens said , ''it would be &illy to make him take more. We'll give him• only lhe courses he needs to get the job." Crysler concurred in the need for 8hort- ened courses. "If a man has been out of work for five or sii months, it doesn't help him much to ask him to study an- other year or two before he's rea.dy for , a new job." Most aerospace engineers have five or more years o( college under' their belts a11d need only studies In the new area to make the transition to a new line of work. Owens cautioned that "while all or the proposal have been submitted to the proper agencies in Sacramento. the dis· trict has no assurance that any or all, will receive the needed funds. ' "We don't want to raise people's hopes prematurely," he said. "At this point we just don•t know if we 'll get the money to offer I.he programs." Owens noted that Orange County had received about $4 million in federal furx!s to combat the unemployment problem. The county was-designated as an impac. ted area for uaemployment because ltJJ rate exceeded the nation al average or six percent. In December, unemployment in the county reached seven percent. "If we can get it going," Owens said, "we'll go out, locale jobs, train the peo- _.ple to fill them as fast as possible and get them back to work, Nobody want_, tn. be out of a job. These people want IOi work a11d we want to help them." he said. Experiences Unlimited which fed stu· dents into the recently laun ched UC I pr~ gram to retra in unemployed engineers, exoects to serve a similar role with OCC. When funds are approved, two cl asses of 24 students each at OCC could begin immediately. Crysler said . Additional classes would be added later depending on funding approval. With the grant for the UCI program, Orange County beeame the first in the state to have approved a program to con- serve wa sted engineering tale nt lu xu rio us spring do w n so fas Thi• handtom• Sofa wa1 d•1ign9d t o giv• you th• ultlm•t• in M•ting comfort with d•cron and down back pill ows, dMp spring down ... , cu11'tlon1 enveloped In down ind feath1rs In two foam-filltd 1rm plllow1. ChooM from a .Ade Mlectlon of fin• fabrics. 8' length, reg. $599 NOW 399 . .--~~~~~~~~ALso ~..;:;:;;;=====:c=c..---------. Many, Many FLOOR SAMPLES $400 and $500 Valws SoOotf AdS ::?.=,:av Now '299 Yo"r favorite df1fgftcr \Dfll bf Mm to catLtt ~ou 'ROFESSION~ .J. GARREfT f U RNll1J ~~ HARIOR !LVO • o, .. 111 .... non. I flrt. ..... COST A MESA. CALIF. INTERIOR DESlidNE•S TRY OUR R!VOLVINO CHAROI 646·0275 646°0276 ,. I l ( r • l I y I d Y. ' ' e r y " ~~ r , ' ,, e ' 5· JI, • ' "' d ' c- " or t d, d to lo d. U• .. '· • " el g ' •· ;r ........ ·------· _,,,_. w .. ' --....... . ---_..,. ~· ·-' ·t;osia Mesa j. : • VOL:. 6-4, NO. 12, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES OlANGE COUN'rY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, "1971 TEN CENTS ; Nixon Ends Stay President Jets Out to Nebraska OAll.Y 'IL.OT Sl•ff r 11ti. President Nixon waved an end to his nine-day Orange County vacation this morni'!g and new toward his speech to University of Nebraska students. Aides have "alled it important. In Lincoln, two university student leaders who accepted an ln\iltaUon to share the platform with Nixon said they would wear black arm bw* in the "hope that our presence will n ot be construc:a as support for the President." Steve Tiwal d, president of the student body, and Ken Wald, head of a campus hooorary group called the Innocents Society, said ill a· statement they did not endorse the President's poUcles. They Nursing Home Blaze Kills 9 in Kentucky PRESIDENTIAL PARTY ENDS LATEST SOJOURN IN SAN CLEMENTE VILLA It Wis On To Nebr•ska Where The Pr11id1nt Spoke To Un iversity Students LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI l -Fire rGared through the kitchen and chapel of a church-<>perated home for old persons here today, and cloud!! of black smoke that billowed through the buildlng killed nine persons. Fifty-eight others wer,. hospitalized, including fi\ie in critical condition. Police Discover Prints , Ring In Phoenix Car Evidence which alleiedJY links Gary Harold Phoenit to a .eriea of rapes and kidnaps in six Orange County com· munit.ies was produced ~ay in Orange C.ounty Superior Court u the prosecution clased its case agalmt the tall Costa Mesa bachelor, Criminologists testified thal a ring, found in the white Thunderbird driven by Phoenix and identified by several victims as the vehicle in which they were abducted and raped, came from the purse of a Huntington Beach woman. Fin@:erprints found in the batte red auto are also alleged to have been placed there by women who have identified Phoenix. 29, as the man who raped them and forced them to participate in acts of sexual perversion. Phoenix is accused of ra pe, assault with intent to commit rape, kidnap, robbery and sex perversion. Deputy District Attorney Michael Capizzi will esk fo r the death penalty if Phoenix i!I found guilty of the major rape-kidnap charges. The former assistant manager of a Hun tington Beach health spa was arrest- ed last July 25 and named in a complaint wh ich contains 33 felony charges. He is accused or attacking nine women tn a 28-day crime spree which began late last June and ended in July when he walked into a Huntington Beach police gtation and surrende red to detectives. j Four-day Week I Study Results Due in Mesa Statistics on an experimental four-daJ work week btlng tried out on witformed offlcen in the c.osta Meaa F!olice Deparlmt.nt will 900n be forthcom.. Ing. ' aut it's too early to tell -13 days after the program went Into effect - how well it Is succeedtng now. Surprisingly, not every man now work· Ing IO.hour days in return for the t:ltra- long weekend apparently likta . the system, which will remain in effect at least through March. "'l'here are !Klme mixed emolions. •• says' City Manager Fred Soraabal. "'fie are getUng people out on the strttt.s and that was the Intent," he ..ids. 1( the four-day , 10-hour schedule works out u hoped, h may bre extended to other munl<lpol depm'lmeob ond thus provide more• efficient service to the pubUc. , New ~enlng hours are about to. go Into <Ir.ct ln the Buildinl llepartmenl lo benefit people who m\111 take time from rnular I to $ jobs to obtain permits for borne additions and the Uke. U.C Control Asked SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Democratic aSSftnblyma n Is propo!tng legislat!on to matt the Untvm1ty or California more responsive to the state legii;laturt without taki!Jg over all authority from the UC Board of Regents. Nixon Appeals to Youth Most of the 94 residents of the four - year-old, modern home were able to make their way to the balconies of their apartment.! and were rescued by firemen who reached the scene three minutes after the alarm was sounded. To 'Try Out the System' "'When we got the.rt:, there were peo•l• all over: the balconies,'..' aaJd Qilef l!ljl. sai4: ''14~ an .1111 ,,..,......,., ... ...,,.., ..,,,.. ... ·1111'1. LINCOLN, Neb, (Af) -Pr~i•t Nixon. appearing before a campus au- dience, said today "There can be no gtaeratiou gap in America'' and, citing the 18-year-old vote In the federa l elec- tions. called on young people to try oul "the system." Nixon flew here fro m a nine-day stay at the Western White l-louse in San Clemente to address a faculty-student convocation at the University o f Nebraska. In a prepared address, Nixon said that his administration "has no higher priority than to end the war" in Vietnam. But his emphasis was on the role of youth in achieving what he termed "great goals" in dealing wi th problems of the environment, decay of the cities, overpopulation, rural ills and "the pro- blems of prosperity it.self -the problems of poverty in a land of plenty," Nixon made but one announcement of a new administration aim in his remarks aimed at the ~1.000-studenls at the Uftiversity. He said he will send a special message lO the 1971 Congress proposing a new agency that would bring together the Peace Corps. VISTA and related federal efforts to utilize volunteer service. Nixon said his new agency, yet to be named, would "give young Americans an expanded opportunity for the services they want to give -and that will give them what Is not now offered , a chance to transfer between service abroad and at home." In reciting the multiple problems fac- ing the country, the President declared : "We must meet them together. There can be no generation gap in America. 1be destiny of this nation is not divided into yours and ours - it is ooe destiny. We share it together. We are responsible for n together." The chief executive. In his broadest appeal yet to the Yoana: people who will be voling for tbe f111t time In betweeO genera\ions." · · \lOlunt'.eer Firt Department. Citing 1970 leaislatlon that glva VOUna Two of the dead · were "monitors" rights in federal electiom to tho9I: 18 appalnted to tab charge 1D ~cy years of age or older, Nixon said: si tuations such u fires. '"So much ii In f<M:lr bands now. To "We believe they lost their Jives trying those who have believed the 1ystem to arouse the people." said the Rev. (See SPEECH, P1ge ZJ Jack T. Goodykuntz. rxecutive director of the Westminster Terrace Residence High-rise Tower Project Slated To Begin Soon A long-stalled project. for a high-rise bot.el tower in tbe heart of Costa Mesa 's fastest-developing area may be about lo begin. with two more stories added. City officials confirmed today that backers of a Holiday Inn on Bristol Street at the San Diego Freeway are interested in making it nine stories. Discussions initiated 21/2 years ago in- volved a seven-story structure. No plans could be presented to the Planning Department nor he a r i n g s scheduled beforr. March, City Manager Fred Sorsabal said today . Certain changes in design are also involved, along with a slight southerly relocation of the intended site compared to original plans. Sorsabal said lhe Holiday Inn project is not to be confused with a Marriott Inn plan for adjacent C. J . Segerstrom & Sons property that fell through. Tbe project planned on a 6,5 acre site valued at $5 million two years ago was snarled when a death within ttle'family owning the bot.el chain caused irreconcilable cooflict. A total of six · stories anc.i 250 rooms was planned for that complex. but the nearby Holiday Inn which now appears to have been revived will be larger. home for senior ciliiens. All of the nine victims apparently died of smoke inhalaHon. Th e four-ttory brick building had been considered fireproof, and hours after the blaze was under control firemen had not been able to determine the cause, nor exoictly where it started. The dead included two men and seven women , one of the later not identified. ranglr:r: In age from T1 to 92. The roroner·s office identified the others <is Frank Shobe, 79. and the following Louisville residenL~: Leon E. Grubbs. 80, Mrs. John W. Ebbert. 86, Nora Lee Strong. 92, Mrs. William T. Rates, 7!, Mrs. David Johnson. 77. Mrs. Mary Presley Smith, 82, and Alma Sy,·an, 80, Goody kuntz said Miss Swan and Shobe were the "monitors " believed to have (See BLAZE , Page !l Burg lar Finds Hi s Wo rk Easier A real estate firm left the welcome mat out at a Costa Mesa home now on the market Wednesday -a lock box containing the key, which was discovered by a burglar. Mrs. Mary A. Macy of 1828 Samar Drive told police she returned home from work to find $.100 worth of household ltems stolen, along with the key. The loss Included a television set, movie camera and projector. 'Wording' Delays Suit Newport Beach Freeway Ekctio1i Block Postponed By L. PETl!R KRIEG or ...,. Dell'r """ ,..,, A IUll lo block lhe Newport Beach freeway electiou ha1 been delayed becau.U of "amblguouJ" wordin& ln •tbe ballot prop6siUan, lttelr, the ln)'er" for the group ,..IHng lo stOp the vole 1&ld today , Angelo Palmieri, attorney repre.entlng llfte lormer Newport <lly olllclalt, llld be .....nbtleol opecta lo ...t< a wrll of mandamua "e.,-ly next wee.k" to halt lhe lnlllau .. el«:&ii. The inl.tlaUve Pf'OPOfltl\la are seeking votes on two questions. The ftnt ostensibly would rescind an existing qreement between the city and the state on a p>rtlon ot the route of the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport .Beacb. The second is 1 ' cbarter 'amendment 1r,equlrtnf future r~-· ..,_, • •!IY cnancil could ..... ,,.....,,, ...... meol. · I '"!'be .... ,,.a.. ..,.,.,.,.j tt.m are clelr." ~tmUtf ~sald, "It ls the com- plex!U., lnwlvili( lbe flrsl that are causing' dHfk:ulty." Palmieri said that while the title Of the 1niti1ttve -:•iruuauve PetlUon to enact an ordinaoc8 to retCi.nd a portkxl of Clly Cooncll RftOlullon No, - {adopltd Ocl. 21, ltll) and a portJon of that freeway agreement made and enlered into on Oct. 30, -i•, by and between the State of Calllomla and the City of Newport "'.each." The question to be placed on the ballot, however, is confusing, Palmieri maintains. It .. y1, "Shall an ordinance be ado~ ~·.~I ""11nn'"'' ai,. '1ollicil --~. -(~ Oct. .. 11111 ) al>! that porUon ol the lriiely agreement mrtde end entered ·tnt.o on Oct. !O, 11111, by and between the Slate or catlfornla tnd the clly of Newport Beadi perlalnlng lo Route I (Pacific Coall) F'""'' between Newport ·Beach c111 llmlla near Buck Gully ond Baysjde Drtve." Palmieri saJd "thlll la no ma.Ddate: ll doe11t1'I 11<t1n lo r<quln aoybocfy, lo do anything:" He aald tbe problem he mua:t ruolve Is whether to speak to the appa.i:ent Intent of the quest.ion. or tha t actual meaning of It. "It say,, "Shall an. • .,•• Palmieri (See FREEWAY, P11e I) did not elaborate. They urged students to refrain from '"loud and persistent h~lding" and said lhey would not applaud the President. The President, Mrs. Ni10n, daughter, Tricia , and domestic aides left La Casa Pacifica in San Clemente on foot 1t 9:15 a.m., strolling toward their waiting Army helicopter in a bright, but chill)' morning. - Mr. Nixon carried 2 leather binder as he waved lo a small group of well wishers. The First Family waved. smiled, but said nothing as Lhey swift_ly · 60.rded the chopper for the 15-minute OJghi k. ' ' Cltfz.,.. Stetien• Graham Stevens, 5 months, was on hand Wednesday when his: parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Stevens or Huntington Beach, took the oath or allegiance to the U.S. There were 72 Orange Coast residents who became naturalized citizens in cere· monies at the Orange County Courthouse. See story, Page 11 . Ski Mask Gan g Holds Up Bank In H unting ton The Ski htask Gang pulled a carbon copy of their December holdup at a l{untington Beach bank \Vednesday af~ tern oon and esc aped with $2,681 in cash. Hiding their faces behind red-while· and blue ski masks. the four men exe- cuted lhe robbery by holding tellers of the Security Pacific National Bank, m1 Edinger Ave., at bay wilh a revolver while they emptied the drawers. A female bank employe said she heard a rustling sound near the entrance of the bank around 1:10 p.m., followed by the entry of three men. one of whom was waving a small black revolver ove r his head. She said two of the men vaulted the counter and emptied the Ulls while the third man was standing· guard. A fourth bandit was waiting outside in a get.away car. Detectives, who conceded tha t the men did "a neat job," believe that the rab- bets are the same ones who got away with $5,cm from the Five Points Branch of the Bank or America last month. During both holdups the bandits dis- guised themselves with ski masks and used a etolen automobile as their get- away car. Van Driver Hurt In Rear•ender A sausage company employe wu In- jured Wednesday afternoon In Colt& Mesa when his van slammed into the rear of another truck stopped at an intersection. James M. Labato, 21 , of Los Angeles, waa treated at Colt• Meta Memortai J\Olpltal for facial lacerations, plul chesi aftd knee pilM and ttleaoed. ·He told polite he tried to change lanes on Harbor Boulevard at F a i r Drive. but was unable to do $0 before hltung the vehicle driven by Frank R. Lopez, 56, of 118 N. JackAOO St., Sant.a An11. ' •• Air Force One at the El Toro MCAS. Moments after sitting down at hi& place in the helicopter the chief erecuUve drew out papers and began stud.yin& documents as the helicopter began warm- ing up . Before the departure, hls valet, ManoJo Sanchez. spoke to a friend in the military saying the next trip by his boss would probablf be an Easter villit to the Key_ Biscayne residence in Florida. An aide guessed the President might not return to the Western White House in San Clemente again until summer. Beofre boarding Air Force One 1t (See NIXON, Page I) ArmedMesan Flees Police, Hits Tree A pistol-armed mechanic who allesed· ly ran three stop signs at high zpee'· wound up in jail today following a Costa Mesa police chase ln which bis car flnal· ly slid into a tree. Billie F. Rutherford, 22. of 2454 Santa Ana Ave., was booked on suspicion ef carrying a concealed weapon and reek· less driving, police said. Investigation also turned up a warrant cha rging him with failure to appear be- fore Judge Calvin Schmidt ln Harbor Judicial District Coort for driving with • SUlpellded U..OS., Police Lt. ~rge LJrton said be aaw Rutherford run a ztop sign at Pomona Avenue and l'1Ut Street at 4:15 a.m. ud turned ll'OWld to fatue a citation. He estimated Rutherford's speed at SO to 60 miles per hour. saying be ran two more and then tried lo escape when he saw flashing red lights behind. The car allegedly attempted a turn from 17th Street onto Orangl!!I Avenue but was traveling M> fast it went Into a skid, Jumped the curb and hit a tree. Lt. Lorton said he ordered Rutherford out of the car and then claimed he dis- covered a loaded .32 callber pistol under the front seat. A registration check led to the owner, who sakl the weapon had been llolen earlier on Wednesday, but refused to file a formal report. Theft Suspect Nabbed in Mesa A Venice canvasmaker wanted on a variety of Los Angeles County the ft charges was arrested early loday in a Costa Mesa bowling alley when spotted by a policeman. Richard R. Smith, 21 , was named in a warrant Issued by Los Angelea County Superior Court Judp· Mario Clineo, without ball set He is accused of failure to appesr for arraigrune.nt la!t November after being charged with grand l h e ft , possession of stolen property and 1111- theft. Officer Owen Kreza picked up SmJtlri a.t 2699 Harbor Blvd., and booked him into Costa Mesa City Jal.I, peodtna • transfer to Los Angeles. The mercury 'U. move blck up Into Ule IOI alooa Ule coall Fri- day, wllh lllMY US.. prevallliic through Ule hlP ~- INSIDE TODAY Th< mighlJI A,_ Dom, which hca J)'r'OOR to bf lluuio'i k<11 lo th< Jlid<QI~ " /lfllllicd. It wiU creou ~M• ai w U rui """ hop< for Anib1, Storv Page 11. • = ........ ,,.: --.. "-~ 11 --.. --.... .... Mlf'tlMt ...,. ,........ 1r """" 11'1t -. ........... ,.u ..,. .......... •' Ii ' •' f OA.JL Y PILOT c Thul"'SdaJ, Jan1.1ary 14, 1~71 LAFCHolds Irvine City Decision By JACK BROBACK Ot 1119 D•I" P'lllt 1!1H Tbe 6boulini: over the .proposed new City of .Irvine ended Wednesday night and the Local Agency Formation Com- mission members gave themselves four weeks lo come up with a decision . At lhe coDclusion of a second four-hour hearing, lh which few new voices were beard oo either side, the commission voted to defer I decision until Feb. 10 at 2 p.m. New developmeDtS since lasl week's llearing include: -The Citizens Oirecti.OD Finding Com- mi.ssjon, an organization cruted to ad- vise· on the CQunty's General Plan Program. called current plans to in- corpora~ the 17 ,520-acr e area ''pre.mature." Fwther study was urged ''for at ltut a year." -The Orqe County League of Women Voters also asked for delay in incorporation. 1bey said a moratorium should be declared on aMexalions into the proposed city 's area until furthu studies Could be made. -Commilsion counsel W i 11 i a m McCourt said the commilllon could not legallr declare a moratorium on an- nexauon Into the area. "You must hear every case wbicb comes ~ore you. You cannot make a decision now that would bind you three, ail:, or nine months from now," the attorney warned. -McCourt also ruled that the I.AFC could not require development of low cost housing in the new city. He said the act creating LAFC doe~ not allow zoning as a consideration fo r approval for incorporation. This latter point has been Santa Ana's blggesl contention in opposing the new city. City manager Carl Thornton repeated Wednesday that proponents have given no sound assurance that low cos t housing would be provided. He again pleaded for time saying Santa Ana felt safer with the immediate developi;nent of the area under county jurisdiction. He repeated that his city has as percent or the black population and 35 percent of the Mexican American residen~ In the county. Supporters of the incorporation were again led by Jobn Burton, chairman ()f the Council of Communities of Irvine (CCI). He argued that bis group had shown that the proposed city would be able to support itseU. Burton responded to Santa Ana's attack with, "We are concerned wUh the pr~ bleim, but we are being asked to take on taeU not Uligned to any other new cornmamity. We are wDllng to continue our Jtudles leading to a solution of the problem& with the county and with UCJ." The lncorporatlon leader again read a resolution of CCI favoring low income bou.sing aru.s within the new city. How the five commWlon memben will vote Feb. 10 is anybody's guess. The commission could deny in- corporation "without prejudice" a5 recommended by their executive officer Richard Turner. This could allow a cool- ing oil puiod in which some of the problems mi&ht be resolved. Talk Scheduled On Environment Responsibilities of all c i t I z en! , governmental agencies and the induslrial world to cooperate in assuring en- vironmental survival will be diJCUSSed Friday in Cosla Mesa. "Education : Option for Survival."' is the title of the luncheon talk by Dr. Lewi& A. Follansbee, director of the Orange Coast College Environmental Center. The address at the Colony Kllchen restaurant is spcnsored by lhe Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce Industrial Committee. DAILY PILOT OUNOa CO.Ul l'Ua&.llHLMQ COMl'.t.HY •ab..t N. W..4 l'r ....... I Miii ..... llM'*' Jtc. .. It. Curl.-, Vial l'rnw.r.1 4ni1L ~•I ,,.._,,.,. l1ioPn•• K....,;t ...... l'l-1•• ~ M..,,tii•• M ..... "--etltor C-.. M-.. OfPlcti )JO 'W•1t loy Sb1ot Mtif111t Atld r1111 P.O. In 1160, '2l?' --ti .... , toKtl: ................... ,. ~9-f!l lD ....... _ """" .... 9tldll1 ,,..,. Midi .... llY•nl Siii CllfMlllll .. Nwtll t:I C:.m1M ltNI Ul'I Tti.Mi. Ex..GI Testilie• 1 , Medina Ordered Viet Boy Slain By Wirt Services FT. BENNING, Ga. -Capt. Ernest L. f\.1edina personally ordered the ltilling of a young boy at My Lal, I former infantryman t.estified loday at the murder court-martial ef 151 Lt. William L. Calley Jr. Medina commanded Charlie Company in the American infantry sweep af My La i and was the immediate IUperior o( Calley, a platoon leader in the com· pany. Medina is charged with everall re sponsibility of at least 175 civilian killings in the alleged My Lai ma.w1cre which toqk p1aae. March 16, lMI. He has not been formally charged er ordered to stand court-martial. Calley, 27, is being tried Ml charges ef premeditated murder of 102 civilians during the My Lai operation . The defense has tried lo show that Calley killed women. children, and old men asa result of direct arder1 Medi· na issued al a briefing the ni1ht befere My WiL Engineers May Receive Retraining Hope for as many as 700 unemployed aerospace engineers may be forthcoming from a joint effort of the State Depart- ment of Human Resources Development' and Orange Coast College. CARRYING SUITCASE WITH CUFFED HANDS, BOBBY BAKER GOES OFF TO PRISON Form•r S.nata Aide, Onetime LBJ Prottge, Will Be Elltlbla for P1rol• Dec. 28 James: Errol Flynn, 22, of Rochester , Minn., testified that sometime after the My Lai sweep "Capt. Medina got us together and· told up t h e y were in- vestigating and we were to tell people we did not see anything and he would do all the talking." The incident with tbe young boy, Flynn !laid, occurred enly fo ur or five yards from a group of 15 lo 20 bodies at a trail intenecUon en the south side of the vUlage. The government's star witness, Paul David Meadlo. has testified he helped Calley slaughter that grit.Ip with automatic rifle fire . Coast Community College District has four proposals in Sacramento which, if funded. will provide retraining for, unemployed aerospace workers in at lea11t four technical fields including two in the ecology field. City Manager Aide Selected For Costa Mesa A young specialist in municipa l ad· ministration is returning to Orange Coun· ty to fill the vacant post of Costa Mesa assist.ant city manager. Robert K. Duggan, 30. now ad. minl!trative assistant in Lodi, will go on duty Feb. I, following his selection from among 60 applicants. "He will be an added asset to the management team in the city," remark- ed City Manager Fred Sorsabal. A stroke forced former City Manager Arthur R. McKenzie to retire la.st year and councilmen chose to promote Sorsabal and seek a new man to be secood in command. Duggan is a graduate o( Garden Grove High School and previowily worked in the Orange County cities o( Brea and Placentia, as well as Davis. The newest city employe has an AA degree from Orange Coast College, a BA de&ree froro Cal St.ate Fullerton and ii now flniahini his MA degree in public administration at Cal State Sacramento. Sorsabal said today that Duggan will be responsible for two key areas ia city management. as well as aiding him in the routine. day-to-day functions of government. Duggan will head the entire personnel department operation as well es the city's management information systems. During the next two weeks. Duggan will be moving his wife and ttu-ee children to Costa Mesa before beginning the new job. He is ()fie of 10 among the 6'l men who applied to be called in for an oral interview prior to selection. From POJle l FREEWAY ••• explained, "it docsn·t say. 'the council shall.' ·· Palmieri said he v.1ill probab ly have to .. assume the title has .!iignificance, although that is different fro m what they are actually doing ... The charter amendment questi on, although far more clear. Palmieri said, is at least some~·hat cl ouded. "It presupposes there will he future freeways," he says. and noting the stated purpose of the first iniLiative "Lo prevent the building of the Pacific Coast Freeway," he said, ·'well. if we are to vote on future freeway!i that are going to be prevented , that just doesn't make any sense." Nevertheless, he said, "l am sure they do mean to prevent construction of the ireeway, something has just gone awry between here and there . "That is why it is hard to deal with, It puts tbe burden ()n me to define what we've got, then teU lhe court what to do." Palmieri said he will not seek what is thought oi as a temporary injunction or restraining order. an action that would halt tlie election process pending a court hearing. "We will ask for an 'alternative' writ of mandate rather than a 'peremptory' writ of mandate," he said, "thus allowing the opponents an opportunity, probably 10 days, to file an answer before a hearing and before a judgment by the court." Fro11t Pqe l NIXON ... El Toro Marine Corps Air Statton, I.he President acotpted a crochet~ portrait of himself from Mr. and Mrs. Phillp Bielat " Los AnceJes. Ht chatted briefly with thtm and posed for picturM. Nixon spent much of hla San C1emente stint prepaMna today's speech -"Youth Jn OUr Soclety" -and hi& State of 1'ht Union lddreu. It will be delivered before a joint tesslon of COn&ress Jan. 22. Sen. and Mrs. &man Hru ska of Nebraska flew with lhe presldenUal party aboard Air Foroe One today. Bobby Baker in Prison As Last Appeal Fizzles Youthful Artist Orange Coast already offers three pro- grams that train students for jobl in environmental specialities: ecological resources, environmental quality contror· and pure water supply studies. · If approved , the four new areas to ' be added would specifically provide retraining of aerospace workers In fields ()f color television repair, waste water : technology, air sampling and detection and career development and retraining, an OCC spokesman said . LEWISBURG, Pa. (UPI) -Robert G. "Bobby" Baker was led handcuff~ inl.O a federal prison today after getting Jost on his way to surrender to federal marshals. The one-time Senate page who became a protege of Lyndon B. Johnson and • millionaire businessman entered the Allenwood Prison Fann of Lewisburg Federal penitentiary to serve a one-to- three year term for fraud, theft and income tax evasion. He was escorted by three U.S. marshal.5 as he entered the prison. wear- ing handcuffs, sunglasses despite the rainy weather, and a black overcoat. Building Safety Department Sets Evening Hours New hours will be Jn effect beginning Feb. 1 for Costa Mesans who want to do business with the city Building Safety Department. Monday nights the department will remain open until 8 p.m . in 1ddition to normal operating hours. Mayor Robert M. Wilson said the new service will be strictly limited to building permits, consultation on design and other related matters. No actual building inspection will take place during the added three-hour shift. Noting that an experimental four-way v;ork u·eek of JO-hour shifts is now in progress among the uniformed division Clf the police department. Mayor Wil.5on said it could be expanded. ff proved successful, other departmenta may initiate extended hours of operation to improve service to citizens. SPEECH. • • co uld not be moved 1 urge you lry it. To those wbo have thought the system was impe netrable, I S'BY thtre is no longer a need to penetrate -the door is open." Nixon added : "You have now the op- portunity and the obligation to mold the world you live in, and you cannot escape this obligation." In a television-radio interview last week with four broadcast joumaliSt!, Ni1on cited a Life magazine poll that. he conceded, would indicate the younger voters at ttiis time v.·ould not vote the way he might prefer. But he eX'pre.ssed the view that the youth vote wUl be ul) !or grabs in 1m and indicated he would be making a pitch for it. His appearance before a student- f acuity convocation here apparenlly marked Ole beginning of his personal effort to sollctt tbe allegiance of the newly enfranchised young voters. E,..,... Pllfle l BLAZE ... died while trying to alert other reatdenta. The first alarm wu 80Ul1ded about 2:30 a.m. EST and Garland aaid th.at 81 ht left his home I (ew blocks IWIY "I could aee names sbooUng up over the building." Miller said one woman wu overcome 11nd died before she could 1et out of a flrst-floor infirmary from which 13 other patient.! safely fleet Tiit other <'lght victims were overcome by smoke hefor' they could get to balconies at- tached to each 11partmenl Baker ahowed up in ~wisburg to sur- render, 11 agreed to earlier, shortly after 1:30 a.m. About 10 newsmen followed him as he tried to enter a bank building across the r1treet from the federal building where the marshal's offices are loc.11.ted. He noticed a Christmas club sign on lhe bank doo r, realized he was at the wrong building and walked away. Then he sought directions from the newsmen, who directed him across the street It took only a few minutes for the marshals to bring tiim to a car for the trip to the prison. At no time did he have a conversation with newsmen . The prison issued a statement soo n after his arrival noting that he has been designated a minimum security prisoner and will be sent to the honor farm after a week of processing in the main prison. Baker will be eligible for parole ne1t Dec. 28, and if not granted parole will be released April 20, 1913, The surrender procedure w a s negotiated with the federal judge who senten~d Baker on his 1967 conviction for fraud , theft and federal ineome tax evasion. Baker lost his last appeal lo the U.S. Supreme Court Dec. 20. Since then, he has turned over to a!sociates the management of his business interests, iocluding the luxury Carousel Motel, in Ocean City. He has told friend s he is prepared to serv@ his term "with dignity." Wins Front Door Contest in Mesa A 21-year-old commercial artist has won the $500 first prize for designing an emblem that will mark seven major highway entries to the ci ty of Co!!la Mesa. Mike Cole, 281 Del Mar Ave., will receive his check for the best among 55 entries in the Front Door Con te.st, judged Monday , al next week's city coun- cil meeting. All entrie.s will be displayed this week at the lobby of the Co!!la Mesa Civic Center, 71 Fair Drive. Second place winner was Gwen Conway , 20ll Amherst Place, while third prize ended in a tie, with Jerry W. Downs. 2700 Petersnn Way. and Mark Leysen , 2005 Anaheim Ave., sharing honors. Judges Werner Escher. Pat caner and Vice Mayor Willard T. Jord an aald they were impressed with the overall quality or the designs 5ubmitted. Prize money was contributed by more than 25 local service clubs and bus.iness firms who wanted lo make the purse fat enough to attract the interest of top artistic talent. Cole is employed by Ultra Systems Inc .. a Newport Beach engineering firm . Runr1erup conter1tanls will receive smaller sums o{ money. The community college district la working closely with a Santa Ana organization called E 1 per i t n c e Unlimited, a 3.000 member, non-profit organization made up of f o r m e r . aerospace industry em ployes. The group recently received federal funds for its program of developing and finding jobs for former technicians put out of work by recent trends In the industry. Future Farmers Memorial Award A scholarship contribulion in memory ol a dedicated member bas; been made to lhe Future Farmers of America cbapler at Costa Mesa ltigh School by Lhe Orange Coast Lions Club. Preside nt John Leonhardt said the $150 will be a memorial lo Lion Donald Slevens. a building contractor who took special interest in FFA <1ctivilies. Mr. Stevens died recenlly . afte r living in Costa Mesa for many years. The schola rship will be used to further the education of a graduating senior' plann ing a career in farming. Orange Coast Lions have raised the money through boosting Orange Coast College football and purchasing cattle at the Orange County Fair, then aelling dressed beef to clu b members. r luxurious down sofas Thia handsome Sofa w11 designed to give you tM ultim1te in aeating comfort with dacron ind down beck plllow1, dHp spring down seat cushions •nv•loped In down end feath.ra In two foam·filled arm plllowa. ChooM from a wide Mlectlon of fin• fabrica. 0 8' length, reg . $599 NOW 399. ,...---------ALSO- Many, Many FLOOR SAMPLES $400 and $500 Values One Of A Kind SOFAS c·OME EARLY POR lllST HLICTIONS NOW Your favorite dt•lOner tci II be hoppv lo ouUt vou '299 "'""'~ ,J' GARRETI f URN lllJ ~~ ""ro"'" o, .. Mon •• n. ... & r.t. be. COSTA MESA, CALIF. INT!RIOR OESIGNtKS TRY OUR RIVOLVINO CHARGE 646-0275 646.027' - ' ' I I r , I d t e, " I I Saddlebaek N. Y. St.oekt . \10~. "4, NO. 12, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY .. CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, :JANUARY 14, 19il TEN CENTS • IXOll an emente eaves South Coast Area Sewage Treating Plant to Expand Si1 million more gallons of secondary. treated effluent per day from Mi.!lsi01: Viejo, Laguna Niguel and San Juan Capistrario will be discharged into the ocean when the expansion of Capistrano's sewage treatment plant is completed. The contract ror the design of the plant by Lowry Engineering-Science was Down. the Mission Trail Residents AJ>ply For Clerk Post SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -la it tmemployment, the job er the city? Whatever it is San Juan Capistrano bu found itself suddenly very popular. Acting administrator Bob J o h n s rePorted to the city council Monday that fr] formal applications had been received for the. vacant position of city administrator-clerk. . . "More than 200 v.·ere taken out and they have until Friday to turn them in,'' said Johns. e Dinner Slated SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Ticket,, are now on sale for the annual San Juan Capistrano Chambe r of Commerce installation dinner dance . Th~ event will take place Jan. 211 starting at 7 p.m. at the El Adobe restaurant. Officers installed with a large group of directors will be Mike Darnold, presi· dent: Pat Toner. vice presiden : and Maggie Olsen. secretary. Rulh Winton will be installing officer. Music will be provided by the Al Manfrieidi Trio Tickets at $15 a couple are available at Goddie's Boutique and Somb rero. e Will Discussion MISS ION VIEJO -A legal discussion ol wills will be held at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 19 at the Montanoso Recreation Center. Attorney Bill Hickey will answe_r qu~s· lions on the legalities an~. techn1.cal!~1es of will composition, physical dectd~uon and the rights of surviving mt.nors The meeting is open to the public. e Shelter Site 1 MISSION VIEJO -While considering adoption of a Civil Defense guide , Sad· dleback Community College trustees uk· ed their architect if there were any Jllace on campus that would serve as a fall out shelter. Board president Hans Vogel was told the ' temporary buildinga would not be •«~uate shelter. but that "tilkrp" wii'ehouses being placed on campus would provide some shelter. Othtrwiae Un111 permanent buildlnp are built at Saddleback. there is little protection from nuclear attack. The board adopted the Civil Defense guide anyway, noting nuclear atlack Was not the only disaster that might strite in the interim. ... • , Chambers It• fJae "SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -'Ille city eoomcil chambers will. be blrned Into a ci.ssroom starting 1n February. · The city council voted to allow the California Highway Patrol to oonduct 1 c!tass in d(tnr trnprovemertt on klur S.tlirclay mornings. VOting against the use was coundhnan Eld""rd Chermak who obJecl<d to Otttalders us1ng 1 city facility. "YW'rt ulttng my local tax dollar and letting Ot1if people wear out the furniture and tb<l 't'ugs," he aaid. ~ncilm•n Jim Thorpe argued that Oit city hall abculd have maximum '\lie by group~ whtch quallly undtr the law to be sure Uu1t the tarpayers are "ge.ttlnl thetr money'11 worth ." -- approved by the Capistrano City council this week. The facility, located off Del Obispo Road at Coast Highway, currently discharges one million ga1Ions daily. The cost of expanding the facility is estimated to be $2,212,000, 80 percent of which will be paid by the Moulton·Niguel Water District. Paying 10 percent each will be the Santa Margarita Water District which serves the largely uninhabited part of Mission Viejo, and the city of San Juan Capistrano. The participants in the joint agreement will be paying according to the amount of sewage treated, according to Ray Woodside, coo.suiting engineer for Orange County Water Works District No. 4 which is administered by the city. Woodside said the Moulton Niguel and Santa Margarita districts will finance their share of the cost through bonds Which have already been approved. San Juan Capistrano has funds for its share available. The facility is e~ted to be completed bl' Ap<ll ol Im, 11'"""81do oaid the effii&nt from Mission Viejo and Laguna Nigutl wtll continue to be circulated throogh their own trea,ment plant. WJ.lil full capacity is reached. The ucess will then be diverted through lntercepter sewers to the Capistrano facility. Moulton Niguel currently treats its sewage and rec laims water for Irrigation of the Mission Viejo golf course and to fill a manmade Jake in Sulphur Creek. The lake was recently purchased by the county for a recreation area. "The Moulton Niguel Water District will continue to reclaim as much water as is pos.gible," said Woodside, "the rest will have to be sent to the ocean. Concordia Kids Receive Surprise Visit From Nixon The kinship between President Nixon and his polling place in San Clemente -Concordia Elementary School -con· tinued Wednesday afternoon when the chief executive made a surprise visit to the delight of hundreds of children. One of the happiest was Naomi Gonzales, 11. who stepped forth when the President asked a class if anyone had a birthday last Saturday. He became 58 on that day. Naomi is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Gonzales, of 129 Ca.Ile Victoria . After that visit -including a pause for pictures made by White House Photographer Ollie Atkins -Mr. Nixon dropped by at room 13 for a chat with 11 fourth graders, M he handed out preaidentla l keychains to boys and bow pins to the girla, he asked quesUons of the pupils' knowledge of the environment and if they bad ever traveled out of the at.ate or country. Many raised lhelr hands. During the converutiona in Mrs. Lcralee Zink'• fifth P'lcfe ctaaa, he diacu>aed bis best subjecta In elemenl8'y achoo! -history·and seosraphy. "They were my best, because the teacher was IO good," he aald. Mrs. Zlnk said the children have been studying the environment in social studies class. Pleased, Mr. Nll<on oald be hoped this generaUoo, would aee clean alr and pure water. "We art worJdn& very hard on that," he oald. DAILY l'ILOT tltff l'lltl9 IT ONCE SERVED AS THE FIRST HOME OF SAN CLEMENTE CITY GOVERNMENT Councilmen Eye .Old Municfpo1I Prop9rty·V•lued •t $200,000 With Ey. an IMrk•t Pl•ce $5.7MillionSet .3 San Clemente Parcels :~:=.a!;~ ... :~PJ!J;(li§~{l 9~ $~Q~QOO . ' . · Tbree ~ of San et_,te c;ty delll1erattng .., tht-.t •ftaelt .,_., Officials of San Dtqo,G'\' and ,Eleclrlc land -the oriJloal cily ball and public btJdgtl In lludy sesalona. , Company &aid lftiS Week 1t6e atillty plans safety departmentr included _ are 'Tbt reM'IUl·gamed frdrn ·the ctly~wn· to spe nd more than $5.7 million this . ed real ,estate hi rJOW only a nominal year as its 21}.per.cent sb.an of the initial valued on the marXet at about $200,000 amount for the lease of the old city costs to develop the proposed twin an appraisal committee rect>ntly told hall to the paiU business. nuclear reactors at San Onofre. city councilmen. That arrangement is on a short.term The initial expenditures by the utility The panel, representing a board of basis. will be made for site preparation and the San Clemente-Capistrano Board of Members of the appraisal corrunittee initial construction work on the twln were Realtors Craig , Strickland, Steve Realtors. relessed findings to councilmen Mich 1 nd Ra M "-generating stations which will cost a B ec B y ati.iu. hslf·billion dollars by the time they are last week on value of the City hall, finished. city yards directly behind that buildlng Southern California Edison Company and city-owned property ln an Industrial will bear 80 percent of the co11t for zone along Avenida de la Estrella. the entire project. The yard parcel was judied the most The two reactors, which 11till need expensive at $120,000 fair market value. approval by the state Public Utilities The city hall, an aging, Spanillh-designed Commission and the U.S. Atomic Energy relic now in use as an auto parts house, Comrriission, are earmarked fOr opera· was valued 8t $43,000 -illl based on tion in 1976 and 1977. the land value . Two other major expenses by the .utili· The building, which was the city's ty th is year are directly related ·to first home , was judged "obsolescent .. the huge San Onofre project -con-and basically valueless on the market. struction of new fos.!il fuel generating Councilmen have not indicated if they units at The Encina and South Bay will place the property on the market, power complexes. but the idea figur~ in long·range plans The Sl2·mi!lion projects will absn rh to 'f'elocate the city yard. the crush for electrical power until the The ya rd now serves as public works ~~o~,O~~~~~d~~let~r J~i~~~ ~~:S~~~ra-and parks and recreation headquarters. but is cramped, and buildings a\M were Approval for the twin reactor pro ject judged val ueless on the market, ac· is expected soon from the State Public cording to the committee. Utilities Commission. City Manager Ken Carr expb1ined to Scheduling for the Atomic Energy councilmen that ultimately the yards Commission hearings still has not yet are planned for transfer to a site at been announced. the new city Water reclamation pl ant The hearings will be held somewhere wh"""'.! acres of vacant land exist. along the South Coast, perhaps early The commi ttee also examined the this year. pOtential va lue of the city's 20,000 square Nursing Home Inferno Claims Nine Victims councilmen that ultimately the yards foot land -one-third of which would be marketable at a price og $30,825. The Estrella parcel would require 20 feet of new front.age to make it more 1ultable for sale. 'Ibe appraisal might come up again this next spring as councilmen begin Rock Guitarist Faces Hearing On Drug Charges SAN DIEGO (AP) -Rock guitarist Steve Stills and a young •om an friend fa ce trial on charges of posseesion of narcotics and dangerous drugs. Stills, 24, is a me mbe r of the rock group Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. He listened quietly as a police officer told a preliminary hearing Wednesday he was called to a motel in La Jolla last Aug. 14 by the manager and found Stills lying on "his bed. The officer, Eric N. Dixon, said the slightly built musicia n "told .me that he bad taken a number of 'downers.' '' Dixon said he saw several capsules later determined to be barbiturates near the bed and that more barbiturate capsules and about two grams of cocaine were found in a· suitcase in the room. Municipal Court Judge Charles M. Snell ordered Stilts and Joanna Babb, 12, both of Los Angeles, bound over for trial. They will be arraigned Feb. 3 In San Diego supe:rk>r court. Battle Over Bags Free Ads Spark Chamber FitrQr LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!) -F~e roared through the kitchen and chapel of a church-operated home for old persons here today. and clouds of black smoke that billowed through the building killed nine peraona. Flfty .. ight others were ho!pitallzed, including ftve in critical concUUon. • The Western White. Haute edition of for product -bear the< firtn'• name. Moot o1 the 94 reatdtntl · of the four-the SOUth Col3t telephone dJnclMy . will . Several direclora COl\lf>lal""!I> Iba! tbe •ar-"' ......_ home -·'le lo be dellver..r lo thoUaandl of doorltOpo "free" advertising oU.rod by ' the bal· l" --. .. .....,,.. .. .. -c!realed an unfair adv......, lo , Ibo make !heir .,.Y lo th< balct>lji .. of bY Cir! SCout'llOOpl ~an. 311-"Ille~ mll'ket. Other -.•tlioUkl'T.t1;"ul1iof their 1porlmentll llld w.re . ..-ld.by , IO~,_.wjll be1 wrll!l!Oll. In~-~ todonaleaacu.uweD,tlieyodde4.,"'." fll'nnen wt>o -tbo ~tine , caultd conolderable'\llacuaion.lhll .. woet .. :·u l();l'.i wbat 'yoq wllli, ·l'I do·t~ Bulky Trash Pickup m1!"""' •""'the illl'll\wa=/'~ i. -~..,i.ior-~ -tn1t..~: • ~ iortt.11.;~~ .. -··~·we~~~~7=, .~~:. ~ :J.J ,., ~:.1 \ i°'~ ', SMIJa ftw.'JucD,tJY·~:QPI '~ Set ' in' San · Oetii~iit~ ·. ~,:T.i~i.I~ ~~~ &u.te1 1 ~=-~°T.'.':;'~ · '= ~;~;~~~; Voluni.er Fir< ~ -the. ~ ,llld ...,. Clm_;;_~.!f!iior. lli!ld tbo (IJoiJp, buy olamiilcod ~ Sin CleQH!l'Jte cltit.tnl, wUl hive the ·Two of the dead ,._,;:•moaar1" fl bet•, priMld ,leqiilj\thlt Wat. ..... 1 • toniacL , · · • l. 1 ) ' cbanct1 to get 11d of rubblab nomially appointed to taU ~ii' e~·I llul\'>ils -PP••" .. -u.;;~.. Wben the .dllnJ.tmipeat· I • n d ~"': not hondled by lrlih pickup ....,.. next 1ltuallona audl 11 fir · .,, · '" dellV!ll' clay sparlli\l the -~ members ·agnod_ to aak Evlnl to - -k trf the first of two city cleanup "We believe they · ' vea'lr)olnci the ,lioord .• , , . mo,. "'"'1!butlou fnNn other fOO<\ weekl lo be held this year. to ''°""' th< ~· ,_. the Rav... l!;\111111. loldolell°" ~:,lll ·ooder lfi>m ID lhe-clly. . • · City aides aaJd that on the normal Jack T. Goodykunls, • • J F ·"!lllWi '" aolldji~ <.,,..i 'Ill .. , l8r J"O Giber liall' have -ptcnp_c1aya ..ruse C!'fWI w111 p1ct up or the we.tm1noner II' _ , . ••.I ;~lu!l!: ~1'!"'1··• , • .....,,.. offtlM. • • largt. or bulky Items. II they are plaeed home for senior dtlu " · ' ' · -~ rain) :froai . the· .llP.ba ·-And the slrl ....U wilt deliver the at curbtide durlnc the normal time ihe All of the nine • I afket, rree of ctiarae. . . directories wrapped ln supermarket tr•~ truck f>ll3S by. died of amoke lnhal1tion. But the plastic bags .-UJed normally plnp 1fter all. ( t ,. ~---·· President Sets Speech In Nebraska President Nixon waved an end to his nine-day Orange County vacation this morning and flew toward hi.! apeech to University of Nebraska students. Aides have called it Important. In Lincoln, two uni•1ersity .tlldent leaders who accepted an invitation to share the platfonn with Nixon aaid they would wear black arm banda In the "hope that OW' presence will noC be construed as support for the President." Steve Tiwald, president of the atudent body, and Ken Wald, head of a campus honorary group called the Irmocenta Society, said in a statement they did not endorse the President's policies. They did not elaborate. They urged lludento to rehln from "loud ind persistent heckling" and Aid they would not applaud the President. The President, Mn. Nix.on. daughter\ Tricia, and domestic aldes left W·Cua Pacifica in San Clemente on foot at 9:1S a.m., !It.rolling toward their walling Army helicopter in a bright, but chilly morning. Mr. Nixon carried a leather binder as he waved to a !mall group of well wishers. The First Family waved, ~ but aald ' nothing u Ibey swi!Uy':tfoirded the chopper for tho !~minute !UOI to Air F1n!o Oat at tbo El 'Coro MCAI. Moments after sitting down at hJI pt.« Jn lhe helipopter the chief ezecutive drew ouf papen and began studying documents as the helicopter began warm· Ing up. Before the departure, his valet, Manolo Sanchez, spoke to a friend in the military saying the next trip by his boss would probably be an Easter visit to the Key Biscayne residence In Florida. An aide guessed the President might not return to the Western White House In San Clemente again until summer. Beofre boarding Air Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Staflon, the President accepted a crocheted portrait of himsell from Mr. and Mn, Phllfp Bielat of Los Angeles. He chatted brtefiy with them and posed for pictures. Nixon spent much of hi.s San Clemente stint preparing today's speech -"Youth In Our Society" -and his State ol The Union address. It will be delivered before a joint session of Congreu Jan. 22. Sen. and Mrs. Roman Hruska o( Nebraska new with the presidential party aboard Air Force One today. Murphy to Take Lobbyist's Joh . LOS ANGELES (AP) -~rge. Murphy, who lost his U.S. Senate re-elec· lion bid last November, baa been hired to work for 1 public relations firm as a Washington, D.C.. lobbyist and special counselor. Robert Keith Gray, prealdenl of HU Washington consultants, said iD an an- nouncement Wednesday that Murphy "will work on any account lb.at bu 1 Wa.!lbington probiem.." H&K is an a(. llliate of the public relations firm Hill & Knowlton, Inc., of New York and Washington. -. 'Weadter ........ ,,.,, --.. ::=-.. CMlifr II --.. = ,, ... ,.,.,,.. ....... "'ff n....' 11olt. .... 4 ._.. ..... ,.,,. --.. ·--......... ""' .. --- • • SC N~ Viets Nix List Of POWs PARIS (AP) -The United States attempted today to hand the Communist aide at the Vietnam peace talks a list of l,M4 American• mlu ing or held prisoner in Southeast A.sia . The ComniUnists rehaed to accept the JI.st, so U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce read the names of the 1at'5l missing and tlken prisoners into the conference record. 1be lilt he nad iJl.. eluded 1M names. American offlcl.ala clalmtd the Com- munist attitude 1n not accepting the list "shockin g and cynical." Bruce himself reft.rred to the "sorry record" of the C(>mmuniJta on the prisoner illSUe. Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh , head of the Viet Cong delegation, accused Bruce of attempting a maneuver in presenting the list, and said he should get back to issues holding up pea ce. The entire full Bruce presented includes all ol the Americans Washington beUeves are mlssltig or held prisoner ln South and North Vietnam and Laos. It wat updated as of Dec. 31, 1970, and 1ub!tltutes for a llB t made Dec. 30, 1989. The Communist. accepted the first list. The North Vietnaml!se and Viet Cong devoted their 1tatements to chargea that the United States ls planning new air raJda on North Vietnam and bas no lntentlcn of wtthdrawlna all combat forees from South Vietnam. Suit to Block Freeway Voting Gets Delayed By L. PETER KRIEG CK flw o.llJ' •li.t lleff A suit to block the Newport_ Beach freeway election has been delayed beca111e of "'amblgucua" wordinC in the ballot proposition, Jtatlf, the lawyer for the group •kin& to atop the vote u id today. An&elo Palmlert, attorney representing three fonner Newport city officl al1, said he nevertbeleas exptcb to aetk a writ of mandamus .. early next wee.It" to halt the Initiative election. The inlUaUve proponents art aeeting votes on two question.a. The. first Oltenslbly would rl!9Cind an alllln& aveement belWM!l the city and the state on a porUon of the route of the Pac:lf.ic Cout Freeway t.hrouab Nowp>rt Beach. The aecood ii a charter amendment requlrlnC future referendums before a city coundl could adopt a freewa y agree. menL "1be laue1 on the second item are clear," Palmlerl said, "it is the com- plel.ltlea tnvolvin1 the flnt that are canstng dlllicully." Palmieri aid that while the title of the iniUaUve -"Initiative Petition to enact an ordinance to reaclnd a portion of City Council Re901uUon No. 8980 (adopted Oct. :is. lit8) and a portion or that freeway agreement made and enterad into on Ocl 30, 1968, by and between the St.lte of California and the City of Newport Beach." The question to be placed on the ballot. however, 1.t confusing, Palmieri maintains. ll says, "Shall an ordinance be adopted rescinding that portion of City Council resoluUon No. 89llJ (adopted Oct. 28, 1968) and that porUon of th e freeay agreement made and entered into on Oct. 30, 1988, by and between the Slate of California and the city of Newport Beach pertaining to Route I <Pacific Coast) Freeway betv.·c11n Newr>rir' R,. ..... f.i city limits near Buck Gully and Bayside Drive." Palmieri said It doesn't seem do anyt.hln&." ''this la no mmclate; lo require anybody to i DAILY PILOT ..,_ .... It If et• ... "9tue....... ........ • .., c-. w... .. = 2 21 CMHH IXIAIT l'UIUIHIN~ CO#.,NK't t.Mn N. w •• , ---Jet\: a, c.tey Vke l'rltllliW .......... , ........... th-•• 1e...,11 1.iter f\eMes A. Mvrphi~• .._ ........ tticfls,, P. ffel """" on.. c_,,. ... -c..-"'-1 • W.t ..., llf'W .. ..,..., ... di, Im w.t ....... ~ • t.eturoe ...... ,.,.., ·-H•il ... IM .._,., 0111 '-"' ... ~ W °"'*"'I .. Nltftl II CMl'llll9 IMI . ·- Nixon Scoffs at ap' Ex-soldier Says Medina Killed Boy Vrges Studenu to Try Out 'the Syst.em' l.INOOLN. Nob. (AP) -.... ldonl NIJoa, appearlo& bolm a ...,._ &1> d.llnce, 11ld today ''Tbtre can be no generation gap in America" and, citing the 18-year<>ld vote In the federal elec- tio ns, called on young people to try out "the sy stem.'' Nixon new here from a nine-day stay at the Western White House in San Clemente to address a fa culty-student convocation at the University e f NtbtW&. II • .,,,.. .. .,........ a•tii. Nixon aald that h1I admlnlltraUen 11au no hlaber priority than to end lbt war" in Vietnam. But hi! emphasi! was on the role cf youth in achieving what be termed ''gru t goals" in dealing wllh problems of the environtnent, decay of the cities, overpopulation, rural ills and "the pro- blems of prosperity itself -the problems of poverty in a land of plenty." Bobby Baker in Prison As Last Appeal Fizzles LEWISBURG. Pa. (UPI) -Robert G. "Bobby" Baker was led handcuffed into a federal prl90n today after getting Ion an h1a way to 1urrender to federal marshal!. The one-time Senate page who became a protege of Lyndon B. Johnson and a millionaire buainealfll\an entered the Allenwood Prison Farm cf Lewisburg Federal penitentiary to serve a one-to- lhree year term for fraud, theft and income tu evaaion. He wu escorted by three U.S. marahah as he entered the prillon , wear. ing bandcuff!, sunglauea derplte the rainy weather, and a black overeoat. Baker showed up ln Lewisburg to 1ur- nnder, as agreed to earlier, shortly •fter 8:30 Lm. About 10 new1men followed him as be lrled to enter a bank building acrou the street from the federal building where the marshal'.1 offkes art located. He noticed • Christmas club sign on the bank door, realized he waa at the wrong building and walked away. Then he aou1ht dlrectlona from the newsmen, who directed him acrosa the street. It took only a few minutes for the marshals to bring him t.o a car for the trip to the prison. At oo time did he ha ve a con ver.i:atlon with new!!lmen. The prison issued a statement 500n Trailer Office For Hospital Site Approved 1be Chapman Mana1ement Corpor1- tion Wednw:lay won permiaalon to inttall a trailer office as construction and In- formation headquarters for the new San Clemente General Hospital and a bO\l.!ling development nearby. Planning commisaioners quickly ap- proved the requut for the trailer office and two signs to call attention to the developme nt -a hospital complex which will become the area's first acute.(: art facility. Groundbrukmg for the major project is expected to be set within the nei:l few weeks. Richard Hallmark cf San Clemente, the real estate representativ e for the Chapman firm based in Orq e. made the request before c c mm t 1 sIo n er 1 Wedneiday, The hospital dev elopment 1.5 expected to optn ill tiloors to the first patients before the ena of this year, he said . The commission approval marked the last municipal act:!on -save tor routine checU of working plans -for the hospital comple:r, whlcb initi ally wlll in· elude a convalescent hospital. boafd-and- care facll!ty and an acute care hospital with fully staffed emergency rooms. Other project.a have been planned for future years. State hea lth officials are scanning the specific plans for the development which will have a Mcdlterranean style exterior. Members of the medical fra ternity fn tbe South C.0.st area also art assisting in the planntna: phaus, Chapman spokesmen aa.ld. after his arrival noting that he haa been designated. a minimum aecurlty pri&oner and will be sent to the honor farm after a week of processing in the main pri.son. Baker wilt be eligible for parole next Dec. ZS, and If not granted parole will be rtleued AprU 20, 1973. The surrender procedure w a 1 negotiated with the federal judge who aentenced Baker on his 1967 conviction for fraud, theft and federal Income tu evulon. Baker lost his last appeal to the U.S. Supreme Cowt Dec. 20. Since then, he baa turned over to assoclates the management of his busineas irlterests, i:cluding the lu:rury Carou!el Motel, ln Ocean City. He has told friends he is prepared to serve hls term "with dignity." At the main Lewi.sburg Penitentiary, prlaoner number 332118 l!I another fonner powerful Washington figure. Jamu Hof- fa, one-time Teamsters Union president, la midway through a aentt.nce fur jury tampering. Lewlaburg and Allenwood havt been called "institutions about as plush as man has created since he started sending fellows to prison." AU prisoners work at joba in "profit sharing industries.,. Hoffa is a m11ttresa fluf fer in a furniture workshop. Prison life includes roast beef dinne rs and an infirmary with an individual radio set for each patient. Baker. born in Pickens. S.C., became a Senate page in 194.1: when he was 14. Nine years later he went to work for Joh nson, then a Texas Senator, and in 1955 when Johnson waa elected ma- jority leader Baker was made Secretary cf the Senate. Two Brothers Set For Court Date On Burglary Rap Two brothers accused Clf conducting what Orange County sh er i f f 's In- vestigators allege was a highly organized houae-breaklg business in the El Toro area wili be arraigned today in South Orange County Mun)clpal Court on burglary cbar1ea. Walter Stille Jr., 30. and Steven Ray SUlle. 23, both of Torrance, were arrested by sheriff's deputies after invesUgation into a wave of burglaries culminating Tuesday with breakins in al least eight El Toro area homes. Deputies allege the Stille brothers carried out the burglaries "gar baa:e style'' by breaking into the homes , stacking the furnishings and valuables removed in fro nt of the house and then collecllng I.he mer chandise In t~\r pickup truck. A homeowner who allegedly watched Tuesday's operation claimed the accused pair cruised leisurely around his block, picking up a wide variety of household articles from the sidewalk and stacking the m In thelr well -filted truck. Sheriff's officers are t o d a y In- vestigating earlier burglaries In the area in the belief that the two Torrance men may have been Involved in those break·IM • LAFC Delays Decision On Irvine City 4 Weeks II)' JACK BROBACK Of .. Oelff' ..... llefl Tbe shouting over the proposed nt:w City of Irvi ne ended Wednesday nlght and the Local A,ency Formation Com· mission members 1avt themselves four weeks to come up with a deci!lon . At Ute conclullon of a iecond foor-hour hearlftl, tn wbltb few new voices •er• beard on either aide, lbe comrniulon •otecl to dtf'er a declalao until Feb. 10 at t p.m. New deve1opmenla llace lut week's bearinl Include: -Tho Cit-. Dlroc\loa Flndln1 Com- mission. an orsaniUtloa CNated to ld- vlM on the caanty'a General Plan Proer1m, caUld current plan• to ln- corpor1te the 17 ,520 -acre area "premature.'' Further study was ur1ed 0 for It leut 1 year." -The Orance County Le1gue of Women Voters also asked ror del1y in lncorporeUon. 'Ibey u ld a moratorium 11hould be declared on 1nnex1tions Into the propoeed city'• area until further I ltud:I• could be made. -Commiaion coun"' W 11111 m McC.ourt said the commission could not h:gally declare a moratorium on an · nexat.lon into the area. "You mus\ hear every case which Cilmes btfore you. You cannot make a decision now that would bind you lhree. six, or nin e months from now," tbe attorney warned. -McCourt allo ruled that the LAFC could not requirt development of low cost boualng In the new city. He said the act crtating LAFC doe! not allow ionlng u a eonalderation for approval for Incorporation. 1llil latter point haa been Santa An•'• biggest contention In opposing th6 new city. C\ty manqer Carl Thornton "'J>O&l..t Wedn<lday that proponenlJ hive 1lven no sound anurance that low cost housln1 would be provided. He qaln pleaded for tlmt u ylng Santa Ana felt safer with the Immediate dtvelopment of the area under county jurisd iction. He. N!ptated that bit city ha.1 85 percent of the black population and S5 percent of the Me1lc1n Amertcen residents In tbe county. ( Nlun mada but one announcement or a .,, adm,lniltration aim in hi• remarb elmld at the 21,000-studenll at the unlverslly. He said he will send a special meaaage to the 1971 Cuncress proposing· a new agency th1l would bring lO((ether the Peace Corp!, VIS'J' A and related feder11J efforts to ut ilil.e volunteer servi~. Nixon sald his new agency, yet to be named, would "glve young American! an expanded opportunity for the services they want lo give -and lhat will give them wh at l! not now offen d, a chance to tra111fer between service abroad and at home." In reciting the multiple problems faC'- lng the country, the President declared: .. Wt must meet them together. There can be ne gener1tion gap in America. The de stiny of lhig nation is not divided into yours and curs -it is one destiny. We share It together. We are responsible for it together." The chief e:iecuUve, In his broadest apptal yet to the young people who will be voting for the first time in 1972, sald: "Let 1111 forge an alli ance between generatlorui." Citing 1970 legl1lation that gives voting right. In federal elections to thos e 18 years cf a1e or older, Nilxon said: "So much la in your hands now. To those who have believed the aystem could not be moved I urge you try tt. To those wbo have thought the system was lmpenetrable, I say there is no !oncer a need to penetrate -the door J1 open." Nls:on added: ''You have now the op- portunity and the obligation to mold the world you live in, and you cannot escape this obligation.'' Jn a televl!lion-radic interview last week with four broadcast journalists, Nixon cited a Life magazine poll that, he conceded , would indicate the younger vote.rs at this lime would not vote the way he might prerer, But he expreued the view that the youth vote wlll be up for grabs in 1972 and indicated he wou ld be making a pitch for lt. His appear1nce before a student- faculty convocation here apparently marked the beginning of his persona l effort lo solicit the allegiance ef the newly enlranchi1ed young voters. Trial of Chief's Son to Continue More testimony in the continued preliminary hearing oo burglary charges agalrut ·Steven Murray, 23, is scheduled Jan. 23 ln South Orange County Municipal Court. The ~year-old Costa Mesa resident. aon of San Clemente 's police C'hief, facts charges he allegedly stole a rolor televiaion set from a San Clemente apa rt- ment. The date for t.he resumption for the hearing also Is the time for another action agalru:t Murray. wbo faces action in an all eged attempt to enter 1 Dana Point re.siden~ late hut year. A codefenda!Tl in that aetio11. Robe.r1 Robeson. 19, of Dana Point, also will appear in court on that date. King Porl ralt This paintin g of the lale Dr. Marlin Luther King will be given to his v.1idow r~riday in Atlanta, Ga., by the A. \V. Mel- lon Founda tion . Ceremony at Ebenezer Baptist Church will be part of nationwide observ· ance of King's bi rthday planned by Southern Christian Leader· ship Conference. Deputy Loses Plea to County On Joh Firing A sheriff's deputy who lost his job because he refused to take a He detector test in questioning about 11 Mission Viejo burg lary has lost the appeal he filed with Orange County supervisors. Ex-rlepuly John E. Bearden or Santa Ana was turned dov.·n 5 lo 0 by the board when he protested actions by Sheriff James A. Musick which led to hl5 resignation -submitted just hours before Musick Intended lo fire him. Bearden . 32. was one of a number of deputies questioned in the wake of arrest ol Deputy Fred lrvine of La Habra, tile officer accused of burg\ari:i:4 ing the Mission Viejo Country Club last November while on duly as a Mission Viejo Company security guard . Bearden eaid the questioning amounted to persecuti on because Musick knew he and Irv ine were good friends. Musick said Bearden was one of a number of his deputies questioned because they had taken on similar "moonlighling" duties in the area. A number of burglar ies committed in the months prior lo 1rv\ne 's arrest are still being investigated by the Sher- iff 's office. By Wire Services . FT. 'BENN ING, Ga. -Capt. Eme$1 1.. Medina personally ordered the kUli~ of a young boy at My Lai, a former infantryman testified toda y al the murder court-martial of 1st Lt. William L. Calley Jr. Medina commanded Charlie Compan~ In the American infantry sweep of My Lai and wu the inunedla1' superior of Calley, a platoon leader in the com· pany. Med ina i~ charged with everall responsibility of al !east 175 civilia~ killings in the alleged My Lai massacre ·which took place A-larch 16. 11168. HI has not been formally charged er orde red to .stand court·martia1. ; Calley, 27, is being t ried on charges &f premeditated murder of 102 civilians during the My Lai operation. James Errol Flynn, 22, of R&ebesler; 11inn ., testified that someti me. after the A-ly Lai sweep "Capt. Medi na 1ot us together and told up t hey were in, vestigating and we v.·ere lo tell people v.'e did not see any thing and he wou!~ do all the 1alking ." 1 The inC'ide nt with the young boy, Flynn said, occurred only four or five yards from a group of 15 te 20 bodies al a trail intersection on the south side of the village. The government's star witness, Paul David Meadlo, bas testified he helped Calley slaughter that 1rouP wit h automatic rifle fire. ~ The defen!e has tried to show that Calley killed women, children, and eld men asa result of direct orders Medi- na issued at a briefing the night befere My Lai. ' Flynn was the 18th Ydtness ltt say Medina ordered everything in the village kill ed and the second lo say someone in the company asked him if they were' supposed to kill women and children. ' Winter Festival Books Available At CofC Office Business firms or individuals who wish a supply of 1971 Laguna Beach Winter Festival brochures to send away to custome rs and frien ds may obtain them now at the Chamber of Commer~. 2811 Park Avt . A printing of 30,000 of the color ful programs, which list all the daily events for the Feb. 19-March 7 Festival, is off the press and re ady for distribution. The brochures are being sent to groups and individuals who have written i; from throughout the United States an• Canada to inquire about the winier event, and supplied to Chambers of Commerce and travel information booths in wes tern st.ates. The Auto Club of Southern California is supplying 10,000 copies t.o its 50 branch flffices and the city of West Covina, which v.·111 send Its 55-piece sym phony orchestra to the Winter Festival for a C'Oncert. has asked for 3,000 brochurca to help pllbliclze tht: event. luxurious spring down sofas Thia handlOf'M Sofa WIS design.cl tc give you the ultimate In •••ti ng comfort •ith d1cron 1.,d down b.Kk plllows, dHp tpring dcwn a.it cu1t-.lont •nveloped in down and featl-t•r1 In two f01m·fllled arm plllow1. Ct-.oos• from a wid• Hl•ction of fine f1brics. 81 length, reg. $599 NOW 399. .---------Aiso- Many, Many FLOOR SAMPLES $400 and $500 Values Ont Of A Kind SOFAS COM! IARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS NOW Yoxr fa.11oritc dtiignn .. will N happu to aililt vou '299 _ .. , .. ~ .J. GAl\l\FfT f Uf\NllU ~~ ""W"'" Opfft Mon., T1Mn. & Fri. l•ts. COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESl&NEoS T~Y OUR RIVOLVINO CHARO! 6-46.0171 6-46-0176 ' ·-' ---~-,, Lag1111a Beaeh EDITI ON VOL M, NO. 12, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES Off t o Nefwatrka Waves, ~miles End Nixon Visit President Nixon waved an end to his nine-day Orange Coonty vacation this morning and flew toward his speech to Universily of Nebraska students. Aides have called it important. In Lincoln, two university student leaders who accepted an invitation to share the platform with Nixon said they would wear black arm bands in the "hope that our presence will not be construed as support for the President." Steve Tiwald , president of the student body. and Ken Wald, head of a campw: honorary group called the Innocents Society, said in a statement they did not endorse the President's policies. They did not elaborate. They urged studehts to refrain from ''loud and persistent heckling" and said lhey would not applaud the President. The President, Mrs. Nixon, daughter, Tricia, and domesti c aides left La Casa Pacifica in San Clemente on foot al 9:15 a.m., strolling towa rd their wailing Army helicopter In a bright, but chilly morning. Mr. Nixon carried a leather binder as he waved to a small group of well wishers. The Fint :Family waved, ltlliled, but uld nothing u they swlltly boarded District Feud ~ the chopper for the 15-minutt. flight to Air Firce One at the El Toro MCAS. Moments after sitting down at his place in the helicopter the chief executive drew out papers and began studying documents as lhe helicopter began warm- ing up. Before the departure, his valet, Manolo Sanchez, spoke to a friend in tbe military saying the next trip by his boas would probably be an Easter visit to 1.he Key Biscayne residence in Florida. An aide guessed the President might not return to the Western White House in San Clemente again until summer. Beofre boarding Air Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, the President accepted a crocheted portrait of himself from Mr. and Mrs. Philip Bielat or Los Angeles. He chatted briefly with them and pose4 for pictures. Nixon spent much of his San Clemenl.e stint preparing today's speedl -"You!Jt In Our Society" -and his State of The Union address. It will be delivered before a joint JeSSion of Congress Jan. 2'. Sen. and Mrs. Ron)an Hruska of N.Wub n.w Willl tlll Pl•ldootlal party 1board Alr For<0 One !<Idly. S outh Coast P etitions In Water R ecall Near Petitions seeking an election to recall four directors of the South Coast County Water District will be ready for filing Friday. a spokesman for the recall move- ment said today. Angw Smith, vice president of the Thunderbird Homeowners Association in Dana Point said the petitions to be delivered to the County Clerk for certification will carry almost 1,000 .signa tures. representing some 30 percent of the district's registered voters. Verified signatures of 10 percent of th e estimated 3,200 voters would be suf- ficient to initiate a recall election. The recall movement, aimed at all members of the water board except Dr. Anthony Orlandella, was launched .in September with a "Notice of ltent to Recall" directed to board members Thomas fl. Brooks. Gerald S. Pell, Robert B. Malone and Ted J. O'C.Onnell. Principal complaint of lhe rec.all ba ckers was a 50 percent increue in water rates in the district servlng the area south of the Laguna .Beach city limits. In a strongly worded response to the recall action, board memberl c.aUtd the move "unwarranted, unnecesaary and Jil«mceived action (by) a relatively small group of dissidents'' and branded reasons given for the recall as "false, misleading and without any foundation in fact.·· The 50 percent hike in v•ater rales was decided on by the board afler an examination of district linances and pro- jected needs by Diehl. Evans and Com- pany had resulted in recommendation of a 100 per~nl Incre ase . The County Clerk will have 10 days in whi ch to verify signatures on the petitions and, if they are found sulficienl, will certify the m and submit them to the secretary of the water board . The board then is required to call an election in not less than so nor more than 125 days. Four candidates would be required to run In the electiOl'I and Smith !!laid It is hoped they would be representative of all areas of the district. tn any event. the board faces a regular elecUon ln November, when the current four.year terms of three of the recall targets, Pell, Malone and O'Connell, will expire. If a recall election lhould be held, aucceaful candidates would llft'Ve oul the terms ol dlrecOn rt!<llled, then face electJon qain in November. ORANGE COUl'lTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1971 iot us ects DlllL.Y 'l'ILOT Sti ff P-.... -.,I <\.I Charter City Studied Laguna Beac h W ill Re rnain General Law Se tu p By BARBARA KREmtCH ot 1119 O.lrr Ps..t ll•ff Laguna Beach city co(mcilmen Wednes- day turned their attention to a study of relative advantages of charter versus general Jaw city governments and ap- peared to conclude that Laguna can solve most of her legislative problems y,·hile remaining a general law citv. The study session was requested by Vice-mayor Charlton Boyd. v.·hu took the chair in the ab.sen~ of Mayor -Richard Goldberg. He replaced Boyd al an Orange County Sanitation District meeting. The city Is faced with a massive task in updating archaic and overlapping la ws. Boyd said, and in getting new laws inlO the Municipal Code more speedil y. One method of approach v.·ould be the adoption of a charter which would, in effect, create an entirely fresh body of municipal law. ft also would perm.it, said Boyd, direct election 0£ the Mayor by the people; participation of the electorate in drawing up laws and determlrdn'g the desired form of local government and increasing the number of city councilmen . A charter city bas the a.uthority to levy specific taxes, create its own assess- ment procedW"ft and take over many legislative fwx:UoM now pre-empted by the l!!ltate. A ,..liltkal report from the Leal)lO of California Cities revealed that about four-flfths of the cities in California, mostly ulKler ~.000 Jn population, now function as general law citi es. Of a total of 3115 cities, 74 now 11re chartered. Most of the charters were adopted in the 19209 . Only 25 have been adopted since 1930. In the Orange County area, charter cities include Santa Ana , Newport Beach, Huntington Beach and Seal Beach. Such large neighboring ciUes as Lllng Beach, Los Angeles and San Diego also are charter cities. While agreeing that I.he need for up- dati ng and streamlining Laguna 's laws is very real. councilmen eicpressed doubt about some aspec!.s of Lhe charter system. Councilman Roy lfolm said, '·I feel we can re vise the laws as well with a general law city as with a charter. The thing that disturbs me most is the elected mayor. California leads all states for good municipal government and one reason Js that we don't have 'bossism' here as in Chicago or New York." He noted that Newport Beach, while a charter city. does not have. an elected mayor. City Manager Lawrence Rose said this would be up to the electora te. He noted furt her that it is possible for a general la, city to elect a mayor directly a1 well u to enlarge the sire of the city cowicil. Rock Guitarist Holm said he fell Increased taxes would result from a charter •11:iecause it would be diUicull not to take advantage of new sources of revenue when we wsnt things like greenbelts and a new sewer plant.'' Councilman Edward Lorr agreed with Holm, both as to the "strong mayor" concept and the danger of burdening citizens wit h assorted new local taxes. "Coming from Chicago, I don 't like government by machine." said Lorr. He said updating of laws could be accomplished through codifying con- sultants and no ted that general law cities have an advantage in that mo.st of their Jaws already have been tested in courl. City attorney Jack Rimel said the bulk of Laguna's laws, with the exception of zoning ordinance 209, now undergoing revision, have been codified and are updated annually. Rose said he would urge that updating be done on a !JO.day basis to streamJine government operation and the council unanimously agreed that thU would be an advantage. Boyd. who had initiated the study, said he agreed on the basi3 of the information brought out that the goals could be accomplished under the present form of government, but would hope the problem would not be "brushed under the rug." -tr * * Marijuanµ T ax Firebomb Found By Laguna Ma n Behind Home Nine Dre in Kentucky Faces Hearing On Drug Charges , · SAN DIEGO (AP) -Rock guitvlal Steve ·Stilll and a young woman friend face trial on charges of possession of narcotlca and dangeroos drup .. Char t,e r Virtue Olle advantage I.aguna Be:a~h miaht en- joy as a charter ,city, artllt Andy Wln& suggetted to city CQUndlmen Wtdneadly night, would be I.he authority td Impose a loCal tax on marljaana. Laguna Beach police and firemen I.rt Investigating the discovery WednesdA}I eveninC of a burninc Molotov cocktail ia an alley behind a LaJUn.1 Beach home. The incendiary device was found by a Calliope Street homeowner at about 11:15 p.m. and he immediaiely called pollc<. The bomb was eltingui&hed by a pol~ man uslna: a fire ut.lnguisher, OrtrQftl aald. tire Chief James LaOmer uid lhe bomb con.slstod ol 1 IOI& drlok bolt1'! filled with what appeartd to be paollnt. A rag had been stuffed Into Uie botUe and igniled, bot the bomb failed to o.- plode. Latimer did not spe<111ate 1•hether the bomb hid be<n plac«I with 1111lldou6 iJ1. tent or aa a prank, but he did note that I& was a vuy dangerous "toy'' to play with. He also noted thlt the act eom:U- tuttd a felony under California law. '• Retirement Home B..,aze SWlt, 24, b a member of Iba rock Jl""'P Crolby, Slilla, Nub Ind · Y-. LOUISVILIZ, tty. (UPI) -Flu roued lhnlup the kitchen and chapel or a cln.ln:b-opsated home for old -b«-e todly, and clouds of bl.ct smol<• lbal billo-nd lbnJugb the bofldlng kllled nine penobt. Fllty-dJbt otbm -~ .......... ·lh>e In altl<AI-· MOii of .U. M ...icienta of 'Ibo f.U.. yur.<>ld, lllOdml home wm Ible to malre their way to the baloonlea of their aponmenta and ...... .........i by rimnen who reached the ICenfl three rnmutes •ft.er tbe a1ann wu euuoded. "When "' IOI there, Ihm ,...,.. peoplo all .,.... Iba halooolea," Aid Cblel Gorlllld Mill« ol the IUbur1Ju Beucbel Volunteer Fire lleparbnent. ·Tl{o ofr tb6 deed were "mmttors" He lllt.ined quietly u a poUce officer :t:l:: to tUo cbarp In emergency IA>ld •. ptellmlnory bearing Woclneldty ..... ~:;,, flm-_ -. ht wu called to • motfl lo La ~•11• ~ar:.~~:ij =.~~:r~~nlpr aod.r- . of ·u.e • · , N'imi' · " :~ '11"ia(fi.+t, l:J.;. ll\>oo, .,1c1 a.t ~-'I ~ . "I . bWlt, "fold""'~ •M1.e or · - ' , , ' h-· taken I aum~f Of ·downerL·>~ AU of a,. '1ctlms •ppar•nl ·. Dm>n Aid be in ~ clfl!lli]a II~ died of -. determined to be bar~ ..... Iba The lour• _ bulldfl!I bad been lied' uil Iba( more b1rblli&11A1 capeuteo CONldered ftreproot, and 60urs alter ind 1bQut t~ grama or coca1ne were the blue was ~ control firemen found ln a .ult.Caae in tbe Nam. bad not been ~~-lo cietormlne Iba . Munklp,11 Court Jlidlfe, Owlea M. Sntll ca~. ~}uc11y>1nc1udldtU,~· ~ ~!'_!_nd Jpanna Jllbb, 21, bolb •uc ~ .... .even fl·Uf/3 -.ru.-=:11, .baltnd. over tor trill. women • ..,. of U.,W...ill...,.M, They wm be unlined Feb. I In San rangJJ!f In •t• from Tl tol!-Diego ouperi<M' court. After Uatening ·to • lencthY a~ tecltni- cat dlscuaai_on of the relaUv41 vi.rtuel of ebarter versus seMral law, CJUes, WIJll commented. · "Laguna · Beacli, unfortu- nately, Is known to be a 4n1g~ed community: It-occurw to> me that·tht cUy might take advan~ <Ii>' &lilt irioeidve ~lualion ir ii dlarWi<YcMy bf.YmPWni • local t.al "" -· ~ •P«lml.'Go9' eum\<(11 i.• .. tai<. llllin\lrUllllll• • "Our police r-,.fll Ole ·_ ... or briflllng lhete people' lo jolllce, ·conflo. cateti large quanUties ar··drup. U a per. &0n convicted of pollielslon cbUJd· be taxed on the amount wlth whlth he was caul!bt II might odd up lo quit. a blc ta• -and on an tlemtnt whlch I feel does not ,now.eontrlbute to the community." Start.ltd councilmen thaftked tbe arUst for hiJ proposal ind returned to the law book•. Today'• F lwal N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS ree 4th of July Melee Raps To ss ed Out Charges against seven peraona police had said were involved in a mlnJ·riat last Fourtn of July in Woodland Drive, Laguna Beach. were dismiued Wed· nesday in South Orange County Municipal Court. After dismissal of the misdemeanor counts of failure to disperse, their lawyer vowed to launch a false arrest suit against the city seeking •100,000 ln damages for each. Judge Frank Domenichlni diamJased the charges on motlon of A.sat, Dist. Atty. Gene Linton. Later , a spokesman for the district attorney's office aaid the charges were dropped because a key police witness had left the state. ;'After the court granted fi\le con- tinuances ln a fairly simple cue, dtlay· lng the trial seven months," an aSli.st.ant district attorney said, "you're bound to come up with someone m1ssing." The former Laguna Beach policeman, Michael Louisiana, wbo arrested the seven. i.1 going to school ln Utah. His testimony was vital to the case, officlal1 said, and In his absence the defendants are eligible for dWnl.ual. 'The Stven bad malnt.atned from the out.tel that lboy were m-...t. Dfsmlued were charges of failure to dilperae from an unlawful assembly qalnal' 'TM!sa Flemming, 12, of JJ!l -elt Lane, Laguna Beach; Thomas Olmwall, 26, of 1198 Victory Walk, Laguna Beach ; Peter Ff>lkmann, 22, Of Jl!Ja Victory Walk, Laguna Beach; Gary Allen, 23 of 250 Woodland Drive, Lguna Beach; Gary Lewis, 22. of 150 Woodland Drive, Laguna Beach; Ronald Mason, 25, addreaa unknown. and Charles Beckers, 21, formerly of Montebello. Two others involved in the case pleaded no contest July 13 and were sentenced to six months summary probation. They were : Arnold Henry Katz and J. Michad Cashdan , both of Brooklyn, N.Y. James Riddett , partner in the George Chula law firm, represented the seven and said "we 'll probably represent all seven in a claim against the City of Laguna Beach seeking $100,000 for each for false arrest." Two other defendants, Lyle German an d Patti Yirka fa~ similar chargea in Central Orange County Municipal Court, Santa Ana. Riddett said a ctt.nge of venue for the pair was granted due lo "unfavorable publicity" in the case. They are due for trial early in February. Classes Forming In Folk Guita r Beginning and lntermedlate cla&Sea tn folk guitar are being formed by the Laguna Beach Recreation Department. Classes are scheduled for Thursday evenings beginning Jan. 21 in the Rec-- reaUon building, 175 N. Coast HighW•Y· Melanie Panush wiU teacti both groups with the beginrlin11: class at 11:30 p.m. and Che intermediate at 7:30 p.m. Students -m u 1 t • provt~ I.heir own guitars and reg.,tr•Uon for the six-week course is $5. Call <MU24, extension 41 for registration tlmet. w .. tlter The mttCUt"J'll move back up lnlo the 11111 'alone Iba cout Fri- day, with -Mleo prevalllaf lllroll&b lhe bJtb clolido. . INSIDE TODAY Th< mlg~lp A~ Dom, which hal PJ'OQm to be Ruiria'• k•u to th< Mld(arl, ii flnli/Md. II 101ll cridW M~ U ~'11nf'&apo /i>t''Alii&o~ PrJg< l8. ' • ' • ....... .,,,, ............. ,. --.. .... (.-ey 11 --.. -'"a .............. T........... lt • -,,.,, -. ........... 1,,,, --.. )· . , . 2 w.JL. Y l'ILOT SC N. Viet.s Nix L~t Of POWs PARIS fA.P ) -The United States 1ttempted today to hand the communist !Ide 1t the Vietnam peace talks 1 list of 1,SM Americans missing or held prlso~r in Southeast Asia. The Comrriunists refused to accept the list, so U.S. Ambassador David K. E . Bruce read the names of the late!l mi11lDg and t.ken prlloners into the confertnce record. The lbit he rt.ad in- cluded 15& names. American official! claimed the Com- munlst attitude in not accepting tbe list "shocking and cynical." Bruce "himself referred to the ''sorry record" of the Communists on the prisoner issue. Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh. head of the Viet Cong delegation. aceused Bruce of atlemptlng a maneuver in presenting the Hat, and said he should get back to issues holding up peace. The e.nUre li!t Bruce presented includes all of the Americans Washington believes are ml!slng or held prisoner in South and North Vietnam and Laos. It Was updated aa of bee. 31, 1970, and substitutes for a list made Dec. 30,. 1969. The Communials accepted the first list. The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong devoted their statemenUi to charges that the United States ta plaMing new air raids en North Vietnam and hu nc> intentlc>n of withdrawing all combat forces from South Vietnam. Suit to Block Freeway Voting Gets Delayed By L. PE."fER KRIEG Of ~ IMllJ' P119t ll11f A suit to block the Newport Beach freeway election has been delayed because of "ambleuous" wording in the ballot propoaltion. it.self, the lawyer for the group aeeking to stop the vote said today. Ana:elo Palmieri, attorney representing tbree former Newport city officials, said he ne9ertheless expects to seek a writ of mandamus "u.rly next week '' to halt the lnlUaUve elect.Ion. The Initiative proponent& are seeking votes on two questions. The first oatensibly would rescind an exilUng agreement between the city and the state on a pert.ion of the route of the Pacific Cout Freeway tbroo&b N""P(J<t Bead!. Tbe ncond ii a charter amendment req\Jfrinf future referendums before a city council could adopt a fttt.,,·1y agree- ment. "Tite Issues on the second item are clear,'' Palmieri said, "It is the com· ple.z:lties involving the first that are C8Wllng difficulty." Palmieri aa.id that while the title of the initiative -"Initiative Petition to enact an ordinance to rescind a portion of City Council ftuoluUon No. 6'380 (adopted Oct. 28. 1968) and a portion of that freeway agreement made and entered into on Oct. 30, 1968, by and between the Slate cf California and the City of Newport Beach." The question to be placed an the ballot. however, ta confusffi&. Palmieri maint.ains. It says, "Shall an ordina nce be adopted f'e!Cinding that portion of City Council resolution No. 6980 (adopted Oct. 1.8, 1968) and that porUon of the freea y agreement made and entered into on Oct. 30, 1968. by and between the State of California and the city of Newport Beach pertaining to Route 1 <Pacific Coast) Free w;iy betwe"n Newn.,.-• R"""li city limits near Buck. Gully and Bayside Drive." Palmieri said It doesn't seem do anything." "this is no mandate; to requtte anybody to I DAILY PILOT "..,.,, ............... .... ....--· -·-c.... "--.. Q1 ,., 01Wot01! c:o.tlT "19LtDUNG COMPAMY 11:1'"'9 N. W"' ,.,_.....,INI,.... Jack It. ~.:I' VIOi,....,..... ~ Tli1M1• KM'l'fl ..... Tho"''' A. M•,,S.111• M.,.Jril MIHf> tU•h•td P. tf•W lmW'lll Ot....-~" ..,,.,. Otl'- C.la M-: • W•I a.y SI,.., ,...,..., -....:11: 1111 'WVt .... , ... ~ • U,0.-loelefl: 111 ""-1 A-Hvlll ...... -..O.r )mt ilKl'I 9'ullv9NI S.ri Cltf'MMl1 • Nlf1ll al Cl'"N -•I ' I ·---- Nixon Scoffs at 'Gap' Ex-soldier Says Medina Killed Boy Urges Stwhnu to Try Out 'the Sysrem' LINCOl.I'. Neb.-(AP) -Pruldellt Nlion, appearlfta before a caatP •• dience, aald today "Thert Clft be no generatian gap in America" and. citing the IS.year-old vote Jn tbe federal elec· tions, called on young people to try out ''the system." Ni1 on flew bere from a nine-da y stay at the Western White House in San Clemente to address a facul ty.student convocation at the University o f N1l!rllU-lli I~,......, Nbloo qld 11111 ltll ldmlnlltrallon "1111 no bliher priority than to end the war" tn Vietnam. But hill empbasls waa en the rolt of youth in achievtni what he termed "gru.t 1oals" in dealing with problems of the environment, decay of the ci ties, overpopulaUon, rural ills and "Lhe pr~ blems or prosperity itself -the problems of pOve.rty in a land tt! plenty." Bobby Baker in Pr~on As Last Appeal Fizzles LEWISBURG, Pa. (UPI) -Robert G. "Bobby" Baker wu led handcuffed into a federal prl110n today after getting lost on hla way to surrender to federal mara!Ws. The ane.tlme Senate pare who became a protege of Lyndon B. Johnson and a millionaire buslnenman entered the Allenwood Prison Farm ot Lewisburg Federal penitentiary to serve a one-to.. three year term for fraud , theft and income tu evasion. He was eacorted by three U.S. marshals as he entered the prison, wear. ing handcuffs, sunglasses despite the rainy weather, and a black overcaat. Balter ahowed up in Lewisbur1 to IW'~ render, as agreed to earller, shortly after 8:30 a.m. About 10 new1n1en followed him u he tried to enter a bank building across the street from the federal bulldinC where the marshal'• offlces are located. He noticed a Christmas club sign en the bank door, realized he was at the wrong building and walked away. Then he sought direetion1 from the newsmen, who directed him acrou the street. It took only a few minutes for the ma.rshals to bring him to a car for the trip to the prison. At no time did he have a convenation with newsmen. The prison imled a statement soon Trailer Office For Hospital Site Approved The Cllapman Management Corpora· tion Wednesday won permisaian lo install a trailer office as construction and in- formation headquarters for the new San Clemente General Hospital and a bousing development nearby. Planning commissioners quickly ap-- proved the request for the trailer office and two signs to call attention to the development -a hospital complex which will become the area 's first 1cule.care facility. Groundbreaking for the major projeet is expected to be set within tbe next few weeks. Richard Hallmark af San Clemen te, the real estate representative for the Olapman firm bued in Orange, made the request before c o mm is s Ione r s Wednesday. The hospital development Is expecttd to open its doors to the fi rst pabents before the end of this year. he said. The commission approval marked the last mun icipal action -save for routine checks of worki ng plans -for the hospital complex, which initially will in-- elude a convaleacent hospital, board·and· care facility and an acute care hG!Jpltal with fully staff ed emergency rooms. Other project! have been pla nned for future years. State health ofrici als are scanni ng the specific plans for the development wh.ich will have a Mediterranean style exterior. Members of lhe medical fraternity In the South Cout area also are a&sistlng in the planning phases. Chapman sp0ke11men said. after his arrival noting that he has been designated a minimum aecurlty prisoner and will be sent to the honor fann after a week of proce.!!!lng In the main prison. Baker will be eligible for parole next Dee. 28, and If not eranted parole will be releued April 20, 1973. The surrender procedure w 1 1 negotiated with the federal Judge who sentenced Balter on his 1987 conviction for fraud, theft and federal income tax evaalon. Baker lost his last appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court Dec. 20. Sin~ then, he hu turned over to associates the manacement of hia bU!lness Interests, in::luding the lu.z:ury Carouael Mot.el, In Ocean City. He has told friends he is prepared to serve his term "with dJinlty." At the mlin Lewiaburg PenltenUary, prilontr number 33298 is another fonner powerful Wuhin&ton ficure. Jamea Hof. fa, one-time Teamsters Union pte3ldent, is midway through a aentence for jury tampering. Lewisburg and Allenwood have been called "Institutions about as plush 11 man has created since he started sending fellows to prison." All prisoners work at jobs in "pront aharing industries." Hoffa is a mattress fluffer ln 1 furniture workshop. Prison life includes roast beef dinners and an infirmary with 1n individual radio 1et for each patient. Baker, born in Piclterui, S.C., became a Senate page ln 1942 when he wu 14. Nine years later be went to work for Johnson, then a Te.tu Senator, 1nd In 1955 when Johnson was elected ma· jority leader Baier was made. Seeretary af the Senate. Two Brothers Set For Court Date On Burglary Rap Two brothers accused of conducting what Orange County s h e r i f f • s in· vesliga l.Ors allege was a highly organlted bouse-brtakig business in the El Toro area will be arraigned today in South Orange County Municipal Court on burglary charges. Walter Stille J r., 30, and Sttven Ray Stille. 23. both of Torrance, were arrested by sheriff's deputies after invesUgatlon into a wave of burglaries culmln1 ting Tuesday with break.ins in at luat eight El Toro area homes. Deputies allege the Sti lle brothers carried out the burglaries "garbage style., by breaking into the h o mes , stacking the furnishings and valuables removed in front of the house and then collec tislg the merchandise in their pickup truck. A homeo wner who allegedly watched Tuesday's operation claimed the accused pair cruised leisurely around his bl ock, picking up a wide variety of household articles from the sidewalk. and stacking them In their well-filled truck. She.riff's officers are t o d a y In· vestigsUng e.arlier burglaries in the area in the belief that the two Torrance men may have been involved in tho!e bresk·lns. LAFC Delays Dec~wn On Irvine City 4 Weeks By JACK BROBACK Cf "'-IMllY P li.t IMff The ihoutini over the proposed ne~ City of Irvine ended Wednesday night and the Local At:ency Formation Com· misalon members save themselvu four weeks to come up with a decl.llon. At the cooclullon of a lttOt'ld four·haur hearlna, lo which few new voices were burd on either side, the commlulon voted to defer 1 declJJ.on unW Feb. 10 It I p.m. New development.I since Jut week't be•rinl Include : -The Cltlzenl DlrecUon Flndl"I Com- mlakm. an ora:1ni11Uoo cruttd to ad+ vbe on the county'• Genera! Plan Program, cllled current plam to In· corport\e the 1 7, 6 2 0 • 1 c re IJ'!I "premature ... Further 1tudy was urced "for at leilt a JUr." -The Oranae County lAague at Women Voten also asked for delay Jn lncorporatlon. They 1ald a moratorium ahould be declared on annex1tlons Into the proposed city's •rea until turtber studies could be made. -Commission counsel W i 11 i 1 m McCourt aaid the commission could not Je1ally declare a maratorium an an· nexaUon Into the area. "You must hea r every case which comes before you. You cannot make a decision naw that would bind you three, six, or nine months from now," the aUorney w:med. -McCourt also ruled that the LAFC could not require development of low coat bouainc In the new clty. He said the 1ct crtaling LAFC doea not 1ll01r zoning as a consideraUon far approval for locorporaUan. This latt.tr polnt bu bMn Santa Ana'1 biggest contenUon Jn oppoalna: tM new ctty. City manacer Carl Thornton repeated Wednesday that propontnll have elven no aound assuranct lbat low cost h®Jln1 would be ~rovlded. He •lain pleaded for time uylq Sant.a An1 felt safer with the Immediate development 'of the area under county jurlsdic.llon. He reptated that his city ha1 15 percent af the black populaUon and 35 percent of the Mexican American rell.deDta In t.bt county. I Ntun m1dt bat ane announcement of a new admln1ttralion aim in his remarb atmecl at the 21.000-student! at the u.Uveralty. He sa id he will send a lptcial meaaqe to the 1971 Congress propoalna a new agency th.at would bring together the Peaee Ccrpa, VISTA alld related federal efforla to utilize volunteer aervict. Nixon said his new agency, yet to ~ named. would "give young Americarui 1n expanded opportunity for the Je.rvices they want to &Ive -and that will give them what is not now affered. a chance to transfer between aerv ice abroad and at borne." In reciting the multiple problems fac- ing the country, the President declared: "We must meet them together. There can be no generation gap In America . The destiny of thi!i nation is not divided Into yours ind ours -it is one destin y. We share It together. We are responsible for It together." The chief executive. in his broadest appeal yet to the young peOple who will be voUng for the first time in 1972, 11ald: "Let us forge an alliance between generations." Citing 1070 le1islation that gives voting rfabts In federal elections to those 18 years of age or older, Nixon said: "So much is in your hands now. To those who have believed the system could not be moved I urge you try It. To those wbo have thnught the system was impenetrable, I 1ay there is no longer a need to penetrate -the door is open." Nixon added : "You have now the op- portunity and the obligation to mold the world you live ln, 1nd you cannot escape this oblig1tion." In a televllion-radlo interview last week with four broadcast joumali.!l!:, Nixon cited a Life magazine poll that, be conceded, would indicate the younger votera at this tlmt would not vote the way he might prefer. But he expressed the view that the youth vote will be up for grabs in 1972 and Indicated ht would be mak.ing a pitch for it. His appearance before a student- faculty convocation here apparently marked the beginning of bis personal effort to salicit the allegiance of the newly e.nfranchlaed young voters. Trial of Chief's Son to Continue Mort te1Umony In the continued preli minary hearing on burglary charges against Steven Murray, 23, is scheduled Jan. 23 ln Scuth Orange County Municipal Cow-t. The 2J-.year..al d Costa Mesa resident. son o! San Clemente's police chief, faces charges he allegedly stole a color television set from a San Clemente apart- ment. The ,dale for the resumption for the hearing also is the time for another action aga inst Murray, who fa ces action in an alleged attempt to enter a Dana Point residence late last year. A codefendant in tha t actio11, Robert Robeson. 19. of Dana Point, al so will appear in court on thst date. King Portrait This pai nting of th e late Dr. Martin Luther King wi!l be gi ven to his widow Friday in Atlanta, Ga., by the A. W. Mel· Ion Foundation. Ceremony at Ebenezer Baptist Church will be part of nati onwide obsenr· ance of King's birthday planned by Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference. Deputy Loses Plea to County On Job Firing A sheriff 's deputy who lost his job because he refused lo take a lie. detector test in questioning about a Mission Viejo burglary has lost the appeal he filed "''ith Orange County supervisors. Ex·de puty John E. Bearden of Santa Ana was turned down 5 to 0 by the board when he protested actions by Sheriff J ames A. Musick which led to his resignation - submitted jusl hours before Musick intended to fire him. Bearden, 32. was one of a number of deputies questioned in the wake of arrest of Deputy Fred lrvine of La Habra, the officer accused of burglariz· ing the Mission Viejo Country Club last November while on duty as a Mission Viejo Company set.:urity guard . Bearden said the questioning amounted to persecution because Musick knew he and Irvine were good friends. r.1usick sald Bearden was one of a number or his deputies questioned because they had taken on &imilar "moonlighling" duties in the area. A number or bur glaries committed in the months prior to Irvine 's arrest are st ill being investigated by the Sher· iff's offic e. By Wire Services FT. BENNING. Ga. -Capt. Ernesl L. _Medina personally ordered the killing of a young boy at My Lai. a former infant ryman testified today at the murder cou rt-ma rtial 11f !st Lt. William L. Calley Jr. Medina commanded Charlie Company in the American infantry sweep of My Lal and was the immediate superlor o( Calley, a platoon leade r in the corri- pany. f.!edina is charged with flY~rall responsibilily of al least 175 civilian killings in the alleged My Lai massacre l/o'hith took place fo,1arch 16, 19118. Ht has not been formally charged nr ordered to stand court-martial. Calle.y, 27. is being tried en charges of premeditated murder or 102 civilians during the My Lai opera tion. James Errol Flynn, 22, of Rochester, _f\.1inn .. testified that sometfme after the My Lai sweep "Capt. Medina g&t us together and told up l h e y were iry· vestigating and we were to lell people we did not see anything and he would do all the talking." The incident wit h the young boy, Flynn sa'id, occurred only four or five yards from a group of 15 te 20 bodies ~t a trail intersection on !he south side of the village. The government's star witness. Paul David Meadlo, has testified he helped Calley slaughttr that group with automatic rllle fire. The defense has tried to show that Calley killed women. children, ind eld men asa result of direct erders Medi· na issued at a briefi ng the night befere My Lai. Flynn was the 18th witness tit say Medina ordered everything in the vilieg11 killed and the second to say someone in the company asked him if they were supposed to kill women and children. Winter Festival Books Available At CofC Office Business firms or indi viduals who wish a supply of 1971 Laguna Beach Winter Festival brochures to send awa y to customers and friends may obtain them now al the Chamber of Commerce, 280 Park Ave. A printing of 30.000 cf the colorful progra ms, which list all the daily events for the Feb. 19-March 1 Festival, is off the press and rea dy for dis tribution. The brochures are being sent to groups and indi\·iduals who have written in from throughout the United Stales and Canada to inqui re about the winter event. and supplied to Cha mbers of Commerce and travel information booths in western slates. The Auto Club of Southern California is supplying 10,000 co pies to its 50 branch offi ces and the city of West Covina, "'hich will send its 55--piec:e symphony orchestra lo the Wlnter Festival for a concert. has asked for 3,000 brochures to help publicize the e\'enl. luxurious • down sofas spring Thi1 hancltomt Sofa w1s d•1lgntcl to give you th• ultimate In Mating comfort with dacron and clown b.ck pillows, dHp spring down ae1t cushion• anv•lop.d In down and faathar1 in two fo1m-fllled arm plll owa. ChooM from a wide aeltctlon of flni f1br ic1. 81 length, reg . $599 NOW 399. .---------ALso-====.:..::.;.:;::.::.;.:;~::.:.:.:.... Many, Many FLOOR SAMPLES $400 and $500 Values One Of A Kind SOFAS COMI EARLY FOR BEST SILECTIONS NOW Your ftivoritt dei'Qfter wi U be happ~ to isuist ~ou. s299 ,ROFUSION~ .J. GA~~ETT f u RNll1J ~~HARBOR BLVD. Op" Moo., Tio.., & frL l•IL COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTU.IOR DESl$NEKS TRY OUR ~EVOLVING CHARGI 646-0271 6'16-027' ' \ I i' S~n Cleme·nie Capisll'ano: EDITION .VOL. M, NO. 12. 3 SE.CTIONS. 36 PAGES • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . THURSDAY, JAP'IUARY 14, 197.1 • IXOD _eaves an. South Coast Area Sewage Treating Plant to Expand Six million more gallons of seconciary- treated effluent per day from Mission Viejo, Laguna Niguel and San Juan Capistrano will be discharged into the ocean when the expansion of capistrano's aewage treatment plant is completed. The contract for the design of the plant by l.owr3 Engineering-Science was Dmvn the Mission Trail Residents Af>ply For Clerk Post SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -ls it ._Joymen~ ·the jail or Ille clty? Whatever it is San Juan Capistrano has found itself sudden1y very popular. Acting administrator Bob J o h n s reported to the city council Monday that 87 formal applications had betn received for the vacant position of city administrator-clerk. . . "More than 1.00 were taken out and they have until Friday tQ turn them in ," said Johns. e Dinner Slated SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Tickets are now on sale for the annual San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce installation dinner dance. The event will take place Jan. 29 starting at 7 p.m. at the El Adobe restaurant. Officers installed with a large group of directors will be Mike Darnold, presi· dent; Pat Toner. vice presiden; and Maggie Olsen, secretary. Ruth Winton will be installing officer. t.1usic will be provided by the Al Manfrieidi Trio Tickets at $15 ~ couple are available at Goddie 's Boutique and Sombrero. e Wiii Dlsc11••lon t.f!SS ION VIEJO -A legal discussion of wills will be held at 7:30 p.m. Jan, '' at the Montanoso Recreation Center. Attorney Bill Hickey will answer ques· tions on the legalities and technicalitie.s ot will CQmposition, physical decidation- and the rights of surviving minors The meeting is open to I.he public. • Shelter Site MISSION VIFJO -While considering adoption of a Civil Defense guide, Sad· d!tback Commtmlty College trustees aak- ed their architect If there were any place on campus that wOUild serve e a 'fallout shelter, Board president Hans Vogel wa,11 told the temporary buildings would not be adequate shelter, but that "tilt-up .. warehouses being placed on campus 'WOUid provide some shelter. Otherwise until permanent buildings are built at Saddleback, I.here is little protection from nuclear attack. The board adopted the Civil Defense guide anyway, noting noclear attack was not the only di.laster that might strike ln the interim. e C,..ml»er• In V•e SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -The city cOuncn cbamben wiit be turned inlD ictassroom starttng in February. The city council voted lD allow tht C.-flfomla Highway Patrol to conduct atclass in arJver lmJ>rovement on four Slturday rnornlhga. !voting against the me was councilman Ec!Ward Chermak who objeeted lo oOtildtrs using a city faelJlty. "You're 1lliing my local ta• do01r ond letting other people wear out tile f'°!'lture and ll>O"rug1;• he said. '(l)uncllman Jim Thorpe argued that tbe" city haD should have maitmum wte b)' groups whtch qualify under the law tO be sure that the tupayers are "getting theli money'• worth ."' r . .. approved by the Capistrano City council this week. The facility , located off Del Obispo Road at Co8.st Highway, currently discharges one million gallons daily. The cost of expanding the facility is estimated to be $2,212,000, 80 percent of which will be paid by the Moulton·Niguel Watf!r District. Paying 10 percent each will be the Santa Margarita Water District which serves the largely uninhabited part of Mission Viejo. and the city of San Juan Capistrano. The participants in the joint agreement will be paying according to the amount of sewage treated, according to Ray Woodside, consulting engineer for Orange County Witer Works District No. 4 which is administered by the city. Woodside said the Moulton Niguel and Santa Margarita dlsLricts will finance their share of the cost through b<lnds which have already been approved. San J uan Capistraoo has funds for it! share available. The facility is expected to be completed by April of 1972. Woodside aaid the effluent from Miastoft· Viejo and Laguna Niguel will,~~ to be <;irculated mn,ugh lbefr own treatment P1Ants until full capacity ls reach4d. nie excess will then be diverted ~ lnter<epter aewen: to the Capistrano ficflity. Moulton Niguel currentJy. treats Its sewage and reclaims water for irrigation of the Mission Viejo golf course and to fill a manmade Jake in Sulphur Creek. The lake was recently purchased by the county for a recreation area . "The Moulton Niguel Water Distri ct will continue to reclaim as much water as is possible ," said Woodside, "lhe rest will have t.o be sent to the ocean. Concordia Kids .. Receive Surprise Visit From Nixon The kinship between President Nixon and his polling place in San Clemente -Concordia Elementary School -con- tinued Wednesday afternoon when the chief executive made a surprise visit to the delight of hundreds of children . One of the happiest wcis Naomi Gonzales, 11 , who stepped forth when the President asked a class if anyone had a birthday last Saturday. He became SS on that day. Naomi is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Gonzales, of 129 Calle Victoria. After that visit -including a pause for pictures made by White House Photographer Ollie Alkins -Mr. Nixon dropped by at room 13 for a chat with 11 fourth graders. As he handed out presidential keycbains to boys and bow pins. to the girls, be asked questions of the pupils' knowledge of the environment and if they had ever traveled out of the state or country. Many raiaed their hands. Durlng the conversaUons in Mrs. Loralee Zink's fifth grade claa, he ditcussed his belt subjects iD elementary school -h~tory and geography. "They were my belt, because the teacher WU 80 gOOd," he said. Mn. Zink aald the children have been studylng the environment in social ltudles claS9. Pleased, Mr. Nixon said be hoped this generation would aee clean air and pure water. "We are working very hard on that,·• he said: Bulky Trash Pickup Set in San·· Clemente . . . San Clemenlo cillzem wllt ba.. tlle chance lo gel rid or rubblll> norm11ly not handled by lmh pickup crews nut Wttk bt. tbe flnt of two city cleanup weeks lo be held tblo year . Ctty aidel aakl that on the normal pickup days refute cnw1 wlll pick up large, or bulky llems, li ·111ey are ploced At curbside during the normal Ume the truck pasS by. • ' DAILY PILOT St1N Pll9NI IT ONCE SER\IED AS THE FIRST HOME OF SAN CLEMENTE CITY GOVERNMENT Councilmen Eye Old Municipal Property V1lu.d at $200,000 With Ey. on Ml'rket Place ' $5.7MillionSet 3 San Clemente Parcels BySDG&Efor Nuclear. riant . . . . Officlll! of San'Dl~ 1~i1C Company Aid thll M!iek the uUllty plans to sPend mere than $5. 7 million this year as Jts 20-percent share of the· initial costs to · develop the proposed twin nuclear reactors at San Onofre. The initial expenditures by the utility will be made for site preparation and initial construction work on the' twin generating stations which will cost a half-billion dollars by the time they are finished. Southern California Edison Company will bear 80 percent of the cost for the entire project. The two reactors, which still need approval by the State Public Utilities Commission and the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, are earmarked for opera- tion in 1976 and 1977. TWo other major expenses by the utili · ty this year are directly related to the huge San Onofre project -con- struction nf new fossil fuel generating units at The Encina and South Bay power complexes. The $12-million projects will absorb the crush for electrical power until the San Onofre nuclear plants become opera- tion, according to utility spokesmen. App roval for the twin reactor project is expected soon from the State Public Ulilllies Commission. Scheduling for the Atomic Energy Commission hearings still has not yet been announced. The hearings wiJI be held somewhere along the South Coast, perhaps early this year. Nursing Home Inferno Claims Nine Victims LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) -Fire roared through the kitchen · and cb1pel of a. church-Operated home for old persOns here today, and clouds of blact smoke that billowed through the bulldlna killed nine persons. Flfty..etcht others were bospll.allzed, lnclud!nc five in critical condition. Moll of. the M r..identl,or the four· year-old, modern · homt were able \0 make their Way to the 'balconlea of their apartmenll .ond -. raCued by llmnen wbo .-bed the ocerle three minutes -tbe ,oalarrn• ............. "When we got thert,.tbp •...O pei>plo all over the balcanlel.''· tald Olitlf Gatland '"llor ol 'ti limbon lleOdlol vo.......,trire~ 1 • TWO Of' the ~ ~~ _ f'monltOn" 1ppolnled lo .... ,......, .. emorpn<f oltualiontl -.. J!rOI. . . . "We bellove lboy "°!,lhelf Uveo try~ lo ........ the ~" oOJd the R.V. Jack T. Gooclyiditl.~~;dlrt!dor or thew .. ~,-.-... homt ftJr Hl'Jkr .cirileril. " ' I All or U>e ~--.-lllllt died of smoke lnl:ltlaUon. · Apprail;ed at $200,000 ., • ..!:. ·-·;' ... ., \ .. :·~ ;ni.... ~!f. or San Clenleale city dellbnllAll .;,. tbe..~.JioCel..,.-, land -·tlle orlillW city )>oll ind publlC l>!idiet' In lll1ltly ,.....,t; safely ~. •· loclµcjed -: 1,0 'rbt.,.vmue galned·frpii!,lhe«lfyoown. tel' rt41 iatate is now ori1y : •. nominal valutd on the market at about $200,000 amoµnt ,for t.be lea~. of ~ .old city an apprais.tl committee recently told hall to the part! bullnea. city councilmen. That arraniement is· on a short.term The panel, reprPMnling a board of basis. Members of lhe appralul committee the San Clemente.C.plstrano Board of were Realtors Q>aig Strickland, Steve Realtors, released findings to councilmen Michalec and Ray Marlin. last week on value of the City hall, city yard! dlre(tly behind that building and clty~wned property In an industrial zone along Avenida de la Estrella. The yard parcel was judged the most expensive at a120,ooo fair market value. The city ban, an aglI}g, Spanish-designed relic now in uae as an auto parts house, was value<( et $43,000 -all based on the land value. The building, which was the city's first home. was judged "obsolescent" and basically valueless on the market. Counc ilmen have not indicated if they will place the property on the market, but the idea figures in long·range plans to rel ocate the city yar d. The yard now serves as public works and parks and recreation headquarte rs , but is cramped, and buildings also were judged valueless on the market, ac- cording to the committee. City Manager Ken Carr eiplained to councilmen that ultimately the yards are planned for transfer to a site at the new city water reclamation plant where acres of vacant land exist. Tbe cOmmlttee also examined the potential value of the city's 20,000 &quare couocilmen that ultimately ihe y a r d s foot land -one-third of which would be marketable at a prl~ og PJ,325. The Eldrella parcel woufd require flO feet of new frontage to make it more suitable for sale. The appraisal Jlllght come up again lhll n"'I oprlJ1i u councilmen begln Rock Guitarist Faces Hearing On Drug Charges SAN DIEGO (AP) -Rock guitarist Steve Stills and a young woman friend face trial on charges of possession of narcotics and dangerous drugs. Stills, 24, is a member of the rock group Crosby, St.Ills, Nash and Young. He listened quietly as a Police officer told a prellminary hearing Wednesday he was called to a motel ln La J olla last Aug. 14 by the manager and. found Stills lying on his bed. The officer, Eric N. Dixon, said the slightly built musician "told me that he had taken a number of 'downers.''' Dixon said he saw several capsules later determined to be barbitut.ates near the bed and that more barbiturate capsules and about two ,grams of cocaine were found in a suitcase In tbe room: Municipal Court Judge tbarles M. Snell ordered Stills and Joanna Babb, -22, both of Los Angeles, bowid over for trial. They will be arraigned. Feb. 3 lo San Diego superio~ court. Free ~ds Spark Chamber Furor .,. .... for ,produce -bear the finn'• rwne. Sev<rol' directo'rs complalnocl ·!hat the "'free'! 1actvettlsing orter&d· bY ·the ·bai created an ·unfair :advantage , ti>· the .marke\ .. Qtl)lr _.-tores, ~ be aaktd to donate aacJu:. u well, tbJY .added: ·:u that'• ,what YO!' riti(' rrr. dci 1~ but being 1 • lblt(ly oorl, I ' llgund lo save a Jew -bucis by, plCilQa . up~aome ·f"° ~:: &!" rs~J!e4 . ., . . . · . Chanibet' ..,..,1pr R,qbojj,,E.?.1"· 1111&'.· '= lhe,-~;J>u~ ~ ........ ~· :~ :;.J~·~ .. ,!~~~ n>Of!'.,. cootrlbull9111. ~ '; tlll>d ltA>]U ·ln tl1e city. . . 'Ill••· ta;' ,no otf10r bAP . ..,... been offtred. + ' · ' .\nil the lirl ICOiJll WtlJ dol)ver the dJtOciorfes •r'!Jlped In .,,P.nnarkel• trop. plnp tilter 1U. . Today's Final -- TEN CENTS President Sets Speech In Nebraska President Nixon waved an end to bis nine-day Orange County vacation this morning and flew toward his speech to University of Nebraska students. Aides have called it. important. In Lincoln, two university student leaders who accepted an invitation to share the plaUorm with Nixon aaid they would wear bl8ck arm bands in the "hope that our presence will not be construed as support for the President." Steve Tiwald, president of the 1tudent body, and Ken Wald, head of a campus honorary group called the Imocents Society. said i1t a statement they did not endorse the President's policies. They did not elaborate. They urged students to refrain from "loud and persistent heckling" and laid they would not applaud the Prel!lldent. The President, Mrs. Nixon, d8.ughter, Tricia, and domestic aides left La Casa Pacifica ln San Clemente on foot at 9:15 a.m., strolling toward their waiting Army helicopter in a brl&ht, but chilly morning. Mr. Nixon carried a leather binder as he waved to a small group of well wishers. The First Family waved, smiled. but oald nolhlng u they owilUy boarded the chopper for ~-1~m1nu1e fllaht to Air Flrce Ooe al ~TaroJllli;AS. ~ lltir ' dC\wn 11 Illa pllce in the beUcopter the. chief ezecuUve drew· out .papers ·and beg111 1ludylng documents u the helicopter began warm- ing up. Before the departure, his valet, Manolo Sanchez, spoke to • friend in the mllltary aaying the next. trip by his bots would probably be an Easter v~it to the Key Biscayne residence In Florida. An atde guesaed 1111 Presldent mlgbt not return to the Western White House in San Clemente again until swnmer. Beofre boarding Air Force One at El Toro Marine Corps Air Statton, the President accepted a crocheted portrait of himself from Mr, a.od Mrs. Philip Bielat ol Los Angeles. He chatted briefly with them and posed for pictures. · Nixon spent much of his San Clemente stint preparing today's speech -''Youth In Our Society" -aild his State ot The Union address. ft will be delivered before a joint session of Congress Jan. 22. Sen. and Mrs. Roman Hruska (lf Nebraska flew with the eresldenUal party aboard Air Force One today. Murphy to Take Lobbyist's Joh LOS ANGELES (AP) -George Murphy, who lost his U.S. Senate re-elec-- tlon bid last November, bas been hired to work for a public relations firm as a Washington, O.C., lobbyist and special counselor. Robert Keith Gray, president of H&K W&shington consultants, said in an. att· nouncement WednwitY that Murpby "will work on any account thal bu a Washington problem." H&K ls an af. flUate of the public relations firm HUI &: Knowlton, Inc., of New York aud Washington. Oruie Wutlier The meratrY'll move back up Into the IOo o!on* tlle cout Frl· day, wltll .....,. -prevllllng through the hlgll 'ckttitll. . INSmB TODAY . ( ·1 Z l)o\J\.V PIL.OT SC N. Viet,s Nix List Of POWs PARIS CAP) -The United Stites attempted today to hand the Communist aide 1t the Vletnam peace talks a list CJf 1,534 Americans mi!Sing CJr held priaoner In Southeast Asia. The Coml'QJ.lflislll refu.sed lo acctpt the list, so U.S. AmbassadCJr David K. E . Bruce read the names of the latest missing and taken prisoners into the conlertnoe record. The lllt he -ce1d in- cluded 156 names. American CJfficials claimed the Com- munist attitude in not accepting the list "shCJCking and cynical.'' Bruce himself referred to the "sorry record'' CJ! the Communists on the prisoner issue. Mrs. Nguyen Thi Bin h, head of the Viet Cong delegation, a~ Bruce of attempting a maneu ver in presenting the list. and said he should get back to issues holding up peace. The entirt list Bruce presented includt3 all of the Americans Washington bc.lieve!l are missing or held prisoner in South and NOrth Vietnam and Laos. It waa updated as of Dec. 31, 1970, and substitutes for a ll!lt made Dec. 30. 1969. The Communists accepted the first list. The North Vietnamtse and Viet Cong devoted their statements to charges that the United Stales ls plaMing new air raids on North Vietnam and bis no Intention CJf wfthdr1wing Ill combat forces from SOuth Vlet!llm. Suit to Block Freeway Voting Gets Delayed By L. PETER KRIEG Of .... tMdlY ...... ll•tf A suit to block the Newport Beach freeway ele<:tlon has been delayed because of "ambiguous'' wording in the ballot proposition, Itself, tbe lawyer for the group seeking to stop the vote said today. Angelo Palmieri. attorney representing three former Newport city officials, said be nevertheless expects to seek a writ CJf mandamus ''early next week" to halt the initiative eledk>n. The iniUative proponents are seeking votes on two questions. The. first Ollensibly would n11Cind an eti!llng ap-eement be1-n the city and the state on 1 portion of the route of the Pacific Cout Freeway through Newport Buch. Tbe aecood Js a charter amendment requiring futUtt referendums before a city council could adopt a freeway agree- ment. '"Ibe iauea on the second ite m are clear," Palmieri said, "it Is the com- plerltles involving the flrst th.It are causing difficulty.'' Palmle:rl said that while the Utle of the Initiative -"lnltiatlve Petition to enact an ordln1noe to rescind a portion of City Council Resolution No. 6980 (adopted Oct. 28. 1958) and a portion of that freeway agreement made and entered into on Ocl 30, 1958, by and between the State of California and the City of Newport Beach." Tbe question to be placed on the ballot. however, Is confusing, Palmieri mairlt.ains. It uys, "Shall ~n ordinance be adopted rescinding that portion of Cily Council resolution No. 6980 (adopted Oct. 29, 1968) and that portion of I.he freeay agreement made: and entered into on Oct. 30. 1968, by and between the State CJf California and the city of Newport Beach pertaining to Route I (Pacific Coalt) Fr~ay betwcPn N!!.WT'l'"lr' R,,~.i, city limits near Buck Gully and Bayside Drive ." Palmieri said It doesn't seem do anything." "this i5 no mandate; to require anybody lO I • DAllY PllOl N..,,.., 1... ti• ... • ._. Lal•-'"" ......... .., c.... ..... S..C' 9 OMNGI toAIT l'UtUSMIMO COMl'MY bb•rf N. W.H ,.,...., .. ~ J •• ~ l. 'f:"!J Vk'f '""9*111 ... M.....- Th•M•• IC"'il ld!t.r J\0111•• A. M,,,h!H M-lll:t l •lltr IUcl..rd P. H•M '°'1~ Or-.. C-'Y ...,,., -Ce1 .. M-: m W..I hy $tr.t """°'"' •-.di' #11 Wl9t ..... , llWlrnlli11 • i....,... MKflr m l'wwtt A-H1111""9*! ._,., IJllS •M<fl tou1 ... m $M '*"-"'" -~ ll c.mir. ... , Nixon Scoffs at 'Gap' / Ex-soldie1· Says Medina l{illed Boy Urges Students t.o Try Out 'the System' LlNOOLN, Neb. (AP) -,,_,,, Nhon, appetrinc. Ware a carnpua au· dleDOI, aatd today 0Tbere c1n be no generation gap In Amerlca" and. citing the 18-year-old VCJle in the federal elec- tions, called on young people to try out "the system." Nixon fiew here from a nine-day stay at the Western Wblte .HOU&e in San Clemente to address a fa culty-student convocation at the University • I Nllll'..a.·· . . .la I .......... .....,_, W-111111 that bil 1dmJnlatr1Uon "bu no hfaber- priority than to end tbe war" in Vietnam. But hl!l emphasis was on the role of youth in achieving what he termed "great goats" In dealing with problems or the envirOnment, decay of the clUes, overpopulation, rural ills and "the pro- blems ol prosperity it.self -the problems of poverty in a land of plenty.'' Bobby Baker in Prison As Last Appeal Fizzles LEWISBURG, Pa. (UPI) -Robt(! C, "Bobby" Baker was led handcuffed in.to a federll prison today after getting lost on hil way to .surrender to federal marshals. The one-time Senate page who became a protege CJf Lyndon B. Johnson and a millionaire bll!inessman entered the Allenwood Prison Farm (If Lewisburg Federal penitentiary to serve a one.to- three year term for fraud , theft and income tu evasion. He wu escorted by thrtt U.S. marshals as he entered the prison, wear4 ing handcuffs, sunglasses despite the rainy weather, and a black overcoat. Bater ahowed up in Lewltburg to 11.lt· render, as aJ?ted to earlier, shortly after 8:30 a.m. About 10 newsmen followed him u be tried to enter a bank building aero&! the atrtet from the federal building where the marshal's CJ!flces a.re located. He noticed a Christmas club sign on the bank door, realized he wu at the wrong building and walked away. Then he sought directions from the newamen, who directed him across the street. It took only a few minutes for the marshals to bring him to a car fer the trip to the prlJcln. At no time did .be have a converution with newsmen. The prison issued a statement soon Trailer Office For Hospital Site Approved The Olapman Management Corpora· tlon Wednesday won pcrmiulon to install a trailer office as construction and in- formation headquarters for •the new San Clemente General Hospital and a housing develop ment nearby. Planning commissioners qulckly ap- proved the request for the trailer o!flce and two sign! to call attention to the development -a hospital complex which will ~me the area's first acute-<:are facility. Groundbreaking for the major project is expected to be set within the next few weeks. Richard Hallmark or San Clemente, the real estate representative for the Chapman firm based in Orange, made the request before co mm Is s I on er s Wednesday. The hospital development is expected to open Its dooni to the first patienlll before the elld of this year, he said . The commission ap proval marked the last municipal action -save for routine checks of working plans -for the hospiLal complex, which initially will in· elude a convalescent hospital, board·and· care facility and an acute care hospital with full y staffed emergency rooms, Other projects have been planned for future years. State heal th offi cials are scanning the specific plans for the development which will h11ve a Mediterranean slyle e1terior. Members of the medical fraterni ty fn the South Coast area also are a~slsting tn the planning phases, Chapman spokesmen said. 1fter his arrival noting that he hu been designated 1 minimum security prisoner and will be sent tc the honor farm after a week of processing In the main prison. Baker will be eligible for parole next Dec. 28, and If not gr1nted parole will be rtleased April 20, 1973. The surrender procedure w 1 s negotiated with the federal judae who sentenced Baker on his 1967 conviction for fraud, theft and federal Income ta1 ev1slon. Baker lost his last appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court Dec. 20. Since then, he has turned over to asaocilWI the m1nagement of his busineu interests, bcluding the luxury Carousel Motel, in Ocean City. He bu told friends he js prtpared to serve bis tenn "with dignity." At the main Lewisburg Penl.tenUary, prtaoner number 33298 is another fonner powerful Wa.shington fiiure. JlmCS Hof- fa , one·tlme Team.sters Union president, ls midway through a 1CI1tence for jury tampering. Lewlsburg and Allenwood have been called ''institutions about as plush as man has created since he started sendin& fellows to pMson." All prisoners work 1t jobs in °profit sharing industries." Hoffa is a mattre.111s nuffer in a furniture worksh<lp. Prison life include11 roast beef dinners and an infirmary with an individual radio RI for each patient. Baker, born in Pickens, S.C., became a Senate page in 1942: when he was 14. Nine years later he went to work for Johnson, then a Teias Senator, and in 1955 when Johnson was elected ma· jority leader Baker was made Secretary of the Senate. Two Brothers Set For Court Date On Burglary Rap Two brothers accused of conducUng what Orange. County she r i r f 's in- vestiga tors allege was a highl y organized hCJuse-breakig business in the El Toro area will be arraigned today in South Orange CCJunty Municipal Court (In burglary charges. Walter Stille Jr .. 30, and Steven Ray Stille, 23. bot.ti of Torrance, were arrested by sheriff '!! deputies after investigation into a wave (If burglaries culminating Tuesday with breaklns in at least eight El Toro area hCJmes. Deputies al lege the Stille brothers carried out the burglaries •·garbage style" by breaking into the homes , stacking the furnishings and valuables removed in front of the house and then collecling the merchandise in their pickup truck. A homeCJwner who allegedly watched Tuesday's operation claimed the acCW1ed pair cruised lelsw-ely around his block, picking up a wide variety of household articles from the sidewalk and stacking them in their well·fllted truck. -.. Sheriff's officers are today ln- ve.stigatlng earlier burglaries in the area in the belief that the two Torrance men may have been involved in those break·ina. LAFC Delays Decision On Irvine City 4 Weeks By JACK &ROBACK Of 1'lt o.llY .. llM '"" The shouting over the proposed new City of Irvine ended Wednesday nlgbt and the LOc1t Agency Form1Uan CCJm- mipion membert gave themselves four weeks to come up with a decision. At the conclusion or 1 second four·b<>ur hearln&. la wbkb few new voices were belrd on either tide, lhe commlalon voted to defer 1 declllon until Feb. 10 at 2 p.m. New developmenll since Ja!t v.oeek 'a burifll Include : -The Cltlztno Dlrodloo Flndln1 Com- million. an Oflllllutloa cn:1ted to ad· vile on the county's Generll P1ln Pfocram, called current plans to ln- corporlte the 1 7 , S 2 0 • • c r e atta "premature.'' Further atudy was ur1td •1or 1t lust a year." -The Orange County League of Women Voten also 11ked ror delay In Incorporation. They i1ld a moratorium 5hould be declared on annexations into the proposed city 's area until further I 1tudle1 could be made. ~mmlMion couo~l W I 1111 m McCourt said the commission could not legally declare a moratorium on an· nexaLlon into the 1rea. "You mwt hear every case which comes before you. You cannot make a decision now th1t would bind you three, ai", or nine months from now,'' the attorMy warned. -McCou(I lbo ruled that tho LAFC could not require develOpment of low cost housing in the new city. Re s&Jd the act creating LAFC dots not allow ioning a! a consideration for approval for lncorporaUon . This latter Poin t hU been Santa Ana01 bi&&est contenUon i.a oppmlnc the new city. t1ty manager Clrl Thornton reput<d Wtdneld~ that proponenu have civen no sound 1111W"anc:e. th1t low eo1t houslna would be provided. He a1aln pleaded for Ume aaylng Santa An1 felt s1fe r wltb the Immediate development of the are1 under l:ounty Jurisdiction. He repeated that his city hu 15 percent of the black population and 3.5 percent of tht MexJcan AmeriCln resident. in the county . Nixon mlde but ont anoouncerm:nl of a MW adm1Diatr1tio n aim in bis relblrb almtd ti the 21,000-studenta at the u11iver&Jt7. He sald he will aend a tpeclal mesute to tbe 1971 Congress propo.s.lng a new agency that would bring tGgether the Pe11.ce Corps, VIS'I'A and related federal effort! to utilize volunteer urvice. Nl1on said his new agency, yet to be. named, would "give young Americans an ei:panded opportunJty for' th e service! they want to give -and that will give them what is not now offered. a chance to transfer between service abroad and at home .'' In reciting the multiple problem:oi: fac· Ing the country, the President de<"lared: "We must meet them together. There can be no generation gap in America. The destiny of this nation is not divided Into yours IJld eurs -it ls one destiny. We share it together. We are responsible for it together." The chief executive, in his broadest appeal yet to the young peciple who will be voting for the first time in 1972, aaid : "Let us forge an alliance between generations." Citing 1970 legislation that gives volinJO:" rights in federal elections to those 18 years of age or older, Nixon taid: "So much ls in your hands now. To those who have believed the .system could not be moved I urge you try It. To those who have thought the system was impenetrable, I say there is no longer a need to penetrate -the door is open." Ni1on added: "You have now the op- portunity and tbe obligation to mold the world you live in. and you cannot escape th!! obligation." In a television-radio interview la st week with four . broedtast journali!ts, Ni1on cited a Life magazine poll that. he conceded, would Indicate the yoonger voters at this time would not vot~ the way he might prefer. But he expressed the view that the youth vote will be up for grabs in 1972 and indicated he would be mak.ing a pitch for It. His appearance before a student- faculty convocatio n here apparently marked the begin!!ing of his personal effort to solicit the allegiance ef the newly enfracchised young voters. Trial of Chief's Son to Continue M(l"e testimony in the continued preliminary hearing on burglary charges ag1ln.st Steven Murray, 23, ii scheduled Jan. 23 ln South Orange County Municipal Court The 23-year-<>ld Cost.a Mesa resident, son of San Clemente'! police chief, faces charges he allegedly stole a e<>lor television set from a San Clemente apart· ment. The date for the resumption for the hearing also is the time for another action against Murray, who faces action in an alleged attempt to enter a Dana Point residence late last year. A codefelldant Jn that actioR, Robert Robeson , 19, of Dana Point, also will appear Jn court on that da te. King Porlrolt This painling of the late Dr. Marlin Luther King will be give n to his widow Friday in. AUanla, Ga., by the A. W. Mel- lon Foundation. Ceremony at Ebenezer Baptist Ch urch will be part of nationwide observ· ance of King's birthday planned by Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference. Deputy Loses Plea to County On Joh Firing A sheriff's deputy y,'ho \osl his job because he refused to lake a lie detector test in que!tioning about a Mission Viejo burglary has lost !he appeal he filed with Orange Counly supervisors. Ex-deputy John E. Bearden of Santa Ana was turned down 5 to 0 by the board when he protested actions by Sheriff James A. Musick "'•hich led to his resignation -submitted just hours before Musick intended lo fire him . Bearden. 32. was one of a number of deputies questioned in the v•ake of arrest of Deputy Fred lfvine of La Habra, the officer accused of bw-glariz... ing the Mission Viejo Country Club last November wh.ile on duty as a Mission Viejo CCJmpany security gua rd. Bearden said the questioning amounted to persecution because Musick knew he and Irvine were good friends. Musick said Bearden was one of a number of his deputies questioned becatlse lhl'y had taken on similar "moonlighting" duties in the area. A number of burglaries committed in the months prior to Irvine 's arrest are still being investigated by the Sher- iffs office. By Wirt Services .fl. BENNING, Ga. -Capt. !:rnest L. Medina personally ordered the klllin~ of a young boy al My Lai. a forme1 infantryman testified today al th! murder courl·martiial of 1st LI. W!Ulam L, Calley Jr. Medina commanded Charlie Company in the American infantry sweep of My Lai and was the immediate superior of Calley. a plaloon leader in the com· pany . Medina is cha rged with everall responsibility of at least 175 civilian killings in !he alleged f\.iy Lai massacrt which took plat'e March 18, 1988. He has not been formally charged er ordered to stand court·martial. Calley, 27, i! being tried on cbarge! er premeditated murder of 102 civili1n! during the !\ly Lai operation. James Errol F'lynn, 22, of R&ebest er, Minn., testified thal sometlme afte r thP. My Lai sweep "Capt. Medina got u1 together and told up they were in· vestigating and we were to tell people we did not see anything and he w&uld do all the talking." ! The incident with the young boy, Flyn n said, occurred only four or five yardi; fr om a group of 15 to 20 bodie s at a trail intersection t1n the south side of the village. The government's 15tar witnes!. Paul David 1t1eadlo, has testified be helped Calley slaughter that group with automatic rifle fire . The defen!e has tried to sbow thal Calley killed women , children, and rild men asa result of direct orders Medi4 na issued at a briefing the night befor' My Lai. Flynn was the 18lh witness te 1a'J Medina ordered everything in the village killed and the second to say somet1ne in the company asked him if they were supposed to kill women and children. Winter Festivcil Books Available At CofC Office Business firms or individ uals who wish a supply of 1971 Laguna Beach Wintei- Festival brochures to send away tG customers and friends may obtain lhe:n'I now at the Chamber of Commerce, 230 Park Ave. A printing of 30,000 of the CCJ1orfuI programs, which list all the daily events for the Feb. 19-March 7 Festival, Is off the press and ready for distribution. , The brochures are being sent to grou ps and individuals who have written in from throughout the United States and Canada to inquire about the winter event, and supplied to Chambers of Commerce and travel information booths in we!lem st.ales. The Auto Club of Southern California is supplying 10,000 copies lo its 50 branch offices and the city of West Covina, which will send its f>a..piece symphony orchestra to the Winter Festival for a concert, has asked for 3,000 brochure.s to help publicize the event luxurious spring down sofas Thl1 h1nd10m• Sofa w11 d••igned to g ive you tlie ultimate In seating comfort with d1cron and down b.ck pillows, dffp spring down iMI cushions 1nv1loFMd in down and f11ther1 In two f<N1rn-fllled arm pillows. ChooH from a wide 1alection of fine fabrics. 81 length, reg. $599 NOW 399. .-----------AtSo--===="-""'------. Many, Many FLOOR SAMPLES $400 and $500 Values SoO oiF Ad S :E~~~y Now s299 Your Jaooriu dtsion~r aol U N hoppu to oarist ~ou ,ROFESSION~.J. GA~~EJT f U RNfJU ~~HARBOR BLVD. Op" M .... ,,, ... & Fri. -COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DISIGNE•S TRY OUR RIVOLVING CHAROE 6-46.0276 6-46-0276 • ' ' ' ' I ~ r • y y II 0 • • • • ,, r. • ' le i: ' f • r d p l d ;. ~ y • • • r • ul " Is • ;n d i• h '· y r • Cdltl on Top Gadf1·y! Anothe1· 011e-point Game By ROGER CAR450N 01 tllt DlllY l'llel i .. lf It'• getting to I.he point v.•here perhaps e v e r y o n e should flle in and sit down when one minute rema ins in games involvine Irvine League basketball teams. Anything prior lo the one- minute mar k s e e m s an- ticlimaclic with the sensational finishes at every turn. Corona del f\.1ar '"'as in- volved in its third straight ooe·point verdict \Vednesday night as coach Tandy Gillis' Sea Kings prevailed, 41-40, over Fountain Va lley, which receipted for its second one.- point loss. Jn the end it boiled down to a single play - one which d isplayed both team's major strength and the result was indicative of the entire night. Coach Dave Bro\\'n's f'oun- tain Valley crew had battled from a IO.point deficit wi th 4:26 lefl in the game to trail by one. And when Baron K e n Shibata took the rebound ¥.'ith 14 seconds left on a missed Sea King gratis shot. the Baro ns had their last chance. Forward Dave Lynch, a 6-3 senior, maneuvered around the right side of the Corona del Mar defense an d then shot in toward the basket for \\'hat appe ared to be a pictu re layup. But it \\'BS here that 6-4 Mark Sevie r. Corona de! Mar's junior center stepped in and batted the ball cleanly out Bucs, GWC E11ter Meet of bounds with three seconds left. The Barons tossed the ba 11 in but George Gerber's desper. atlon 22-footer missed, giving the winRers a po rtion ot the Irvine League lead, along with three other rivals. c ....... 11 ... M•r {41) 11 II " .. ICll~fer ' ' ' ' ,_ ' ' ' • S<im ner • ' ' " Com1nn ' ' ' ' Snl•r ' ' • ' G•'9•Dv • ' • " lol•I• IS H " " 1'1o11nl1!11 V11ltJ !'Ml G. Gubtr ' ' ' • Foole ' ' • ' Shlbt!1 ' • ' • Pow~r ' ' ' • Rtldt r ' ' ' ' l(rlsl!n.I ' ' ' • • Lvn'h ' ' ' • Tot•li " " " ~ SCO<"t ~1 Out tlt" CorCW\8 Ott Mir " • • ·~· Founi.in VtlW.v " ' ' ,,__., Lion Grid ' Aces Feted ~ \Valt f.1 addocks was named most valuable playe r o n Westminster High School's varsity football team Tuesday night at the school's annual fall sports awards banquet. Mark Kenworthy (water polo) and Kevir1 Coleman (cross country ) \Vere named most valuable in their sports. Special aY:ard winners: Football Varsity -Captain: Mike Dodd ; MVP: Walt Maddocks ; J unior varsity -Ca ptain: Jeff Noon ; MVP : George Hart. Sophomore -Ca ptain: Walt Sinner; MVP : Chuck Carlson; ., Most Inspirational : Dave Wu; ~ Most Improved : Tony Dom-r inguez. Freshman -Captain: Rick Rosen ; MVP : Ton y AC· comondo: l\'aler Polo Varsity Captain: Art Lill is; MV: Mark Kenwo rthy. KEY REBOUNDER-Corona de! ~!ar1s Mike Sevi er (33) is shown operating among Fountain Vall ey players Bill Kristinat (behind Sevier) and Ken ·1 l DAILY l'ILOT l'llt19' •v LM ''Jntl Shibata (35) \Vhile George Gerber (22) and Mike .Foote (34) look on. Corona del JI.far won, 41-40. " Thursday, January 14, 1971 DAILY PILOT Q • To Gritfin• Mesa Goes Cold In 64-53 Loss By HOWARD L. HANDY Of "" DallY ,Ill! SI ... Coach Emil Neeme's Costa Mesa Mustang s couldn't find the basket in the second quarter Wednesday nighl and as a result fell behind the host Los Alamitos Griffins early and never recovered as they dropped a 64-53 decision In Irvine League play. They may never unscramble the Irvine flag ch ase Ibis season as the eigbt com· batant.s take turns belting each olher around. To date the team with the hot hand bas been the winner and aner three games. four of the teams are Ued for first place wilh 2•1 records while-the other four are a step behind with 1·2 marks. It can't get much tighter than that. Neeme's . charges .opened play by turning tbe ball over to the Griffin:t , on seven oc· casions in the fifst period to fa!! back, 20·13. The Mustangs made a run at the taller Griffs in the second stama to close the Cage Scores C1I SI. fLSJ IOI, C•l SI. !LAI ,. Whlttl..-U , PomoNI 4 ' !.DU1ht rn C.I Collevt .,, Cl!!l'Ch •1 VIUl l\U\lt "' Def't ut Jt Columbll ICI, Gellnl-n {0.C.) 61 C>Jq,,...,,. 111, St. Frllld1 IP1.I n Piii 11. D1¥1d...,, •7 """" ,,, 51. J""'°"'' CP•.l H l'h YY 76, Wt•hlMIOl'l .. Ltt U J•c .. •o•wlll• ,,, M•Mlft1n <IC Vlrolnl1 M, W•kt ForO!'St 11 Tull nt U, l'lorlcl1 SI. 6' North C1rolll\I $1. n, Dul<• It Rlc t '3, Te~•• {ArllM l11n) "1 Hou11on l!Wo, Ltm.1rT-ch U Ml1ml (Ohio) ,I, Wn!•rnMldllpen ST LDUl1vlllt 7J, DtYIOn .. Ev1n.1vlllt l(M, Sou!llt1n llllr>0ls ti Olilo SI. U, Wnl Vlr9inl1 14 BrM!ltV II, Dr•Kt lS To\..io 11 , M1r•l'>lll a.t gap to 22-11 and appeared to have the sh1p on cornpua. Unfortunately, it wu an 01· wind that blew to anolber direction and the Mustangs could connect on only three field goals out of ll~aUempts in the period for a •mi.suable 18.8 percentage fl~ and Los Alamitos left the Ooor at haJftlme with a subslantial 33- 24 edge. . Rick Quinn. a 1-3 ' forward, and Steve Gall at, ·6-5. con- trolled the boards ror' the Gr if· fin s with Qulnn also scoring well to lead both te.ims with !L For the game tJie Grifrl'I hit 42.4 percent ~ile the Mustangs were linU~d to Zll.I percent. : 1 In addition to shool!ng poor· ly, the Mustangs ''foun d themselves in troub(e with a front court pressing" defense several times when Lo a Alam itos moved the 'ball past the front men and haa a three· on-one situation gOiri'g to the baske t. Costa Mesa will j6urney · t,, Fountain Valley Friday night in an effort to break' the log· jam for the runnerap'posilion. Both teams are cun't:htly 1-2. 0111,..,, 81·~•r G•ll Miiier Foer11er Ru•11•ull' Rotl•nc:I Trom11<1i.r J1ckM1n Tol•I• " Oran ge Coast and Golden West College launch the 1971 track and field season Satur. day night 'vith both schools entering the junior college mile relay at the Sunkist 1nvitational indoor meet at the LA Sports Arena . J unior varsity -Captain: Mark Downey: t.1 V: Jeff Phill ips. Prep, JC For Preps, JC Saddlehack INSTALLED Running for Orange Coast's Bucs will be Dare! Blood , Matt Peasley, Kevin Butler and Bill Van Note. The Golde n West foursome consists of W a I t Ankerman, Ron D i c k s o n , Bryan Strough and Dennis Maas. Sophomore-Freshman Captain: Dave !·!ill ; MV : Doug Brandt man. Cross Country Varsity -Captain: Dave Miller; MY: Kevin Coleman . J unior varsity -Captain: J\1 ike Keough; MV: John Alvarez. '71's ARE HERE!! * NOW READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ALL 1970 MG -AUSTIN SPORT CARS and SEDANS MUST GO! New ll's lttlt .. "" """'· lltt .. tllt losWt. 1970 Austin America $169 5 a~o l: .. :: ::;::t; ·~ -Hi lnchu sNll, MUTO wlilch 1111ku 11 •Mvt _.. -1 1111 sht1ttr 1!11n Aft.Un• 1 l1lk1•1oc11. fet Jl"s W191t tft !tie i~1lilt tllM 1tn ~ii ~li"it e1rs. $1 ,., u~ 11,.ttk tUI wlill• )ti ~I 1•1• Mtti119 lpi<t1 lllfl ""' tltler little (lfl h1" It pill ... lfl Mn"I Jail Ide ti# wli 111 II, C.1111 11 1114 slrelt~ NI !tr ,.ijrHll. Austin America The bi9 little car Wrestli11g Cage Standings Banquet Set Saddteback College's foot· ball and cross country teams will be honored at an awards banque t Monday night at 6:45 at the San ta Ana Elks Club. CHAIN-LINK FENCING V1r.i11 L•k--Ill) C1f) C•1t1 M•'• 91 -Jont1 CCMl dtc N19lt !LI ••• R l~~•ro1on ~~\·~~01. !CMl "'"-' br 113 -II.. Lf9tll>I !LI won DY lorten. 113 -Embrer 4CM) 1>lnnt d by M. Lf9UO! ILi 1.10 130 -G. l(ln9 CCM) pinned G1yh1rd Il l ?:II. !J6 -Sl<>ekton lCM) d~ by M•~oows 4L! ~~ UI -80WllM ((Ml dtC Focd (Ll 6-l. ua -Mc011rman !CMI d~ bv fl l1>nl"9 rLl 6·l 111 -S!•OIC<I [(MJ pinned b~ P~rtcfr lL> s·11 IQ -w111111m' iCMI M t )~"""" Ill 7·7. !7t -(009~n (CMI .,1....,e<1 bv F r,,.,fdt~ (LI '05 It• -~cfla.ltler IC M! 111nnt>d bv Tv•nr v (L ) l ll. Hvv -Mllltl itM) pln"ed G••mln (LI J:Ck!. Jun,.r v .. ,n. Cypr"o !111 (1•) Geld.ii WHI 111-l'lttil•v (GWI dtc. JOh,_,,, ((), 11-S. 116-Lelni1>Qtr (Cl otc. Fo" CGWl, •·• ll+-WO"'MIC~ !GW) °"''· Floo4<. [(), ••• 141-Ml lO<ltY (Cl dK. M<tl•nnold (GW!, 11·'1. 110-Dori•thln !CJ won Dr <1t111111 or•• L11uk IGWl. Ut-ICurt> (GWI dr1w wllh Ht r oer (CJ, .... \61-Sw1ot1on IC.I ......., Dy rortei!. 117-N~ !GWI dtl<. S.wvtl ((l, l ·O. ll'C>-Hllll•rd IGWI doc, 5Ptck ICJ, .... Hwv-Ylurrtld• IC! ._. bY fotft ll. lltVINE LIACUI!" Edi1<>n LOI Al1ml!o1 cos11 Meu F11un11in V1ller M1gnoli• ~1011 Ant Vtlltv W L I'!" l'A 1 I 11• Ill ? !JS IJ4 1 ,,, 110 I l•I 70l I !I• 151 I 109 199 l IQ !&I Wtc11>ndt r'' Scort1 C.dM •1. Fouo!l!n Vtllr~ olO Edl"'n ~1, SA VtlltV 5.1 M~or>0ll• n, E1t1ncr1 SI Los A.l&m lto• ,,., Co1!1 Mru SJ Co1!• Mrs• 11 FC>Unt•ln Vt lltr SI.. V1llev e! E1lent l1 Los Al1mlto1 u Eal1on M•QnOll• 11 Coron• d•I Mi r SUNSIET LlACUE W L l'F l'A H11n!i""!Of> 8t8<h Ntwl><lrT H•rl>or Merlna Wetlminsler An•helm Wester" lMll S1n11 _.,,, J 0 ?l.S 16? J ~ 1t1 11a t I ?OS 131 1 I 110 '" 1 1 111 u• I 1 131 US 0 1 l:k 10• o J 1n , .. Hunl<nglon 8~•<~ •1. s.tln1• NfW<>Orl fol•rbor 6(1, M~•1n1 Westmin11tr .u. Aneht om ., We1.ttn l"I. Lo.o•• 7S An1 U " ,rl,IY'• Gtmt' Westminsrer •t Hunt111111on An11<1elm 11 Mt•l~e Newoott H1rllo<" 11 Lot•• S1nl1 An• '! We11..-n SOUTHIEllN CAL CONF ilU!NCll Gold~n Wu! RI~ Honoo (yore)• LA 1-i••ll(>r Et11 LA LA SO<J!hwe1t ~" W L l'I' l'A 1 11 1113 14 1 1 1:11136 1 I 116 1~9 1 1 ., 91 1 lit ~Tl • ' ' 1/"J 191 ' l~ i.J WrtdntfftJ'1 Scort• Goldt" Wnt IU. LA SouThWIJI 100 CVl>'<'ll •1, LA l-U11>ar JS lllo HondO I!, E11! LA 9CI l"rltl11'f G1m11 LA South .... 11 •I Cyprtsi IE11sl LA •I LACC 11.io Hondl> 11 LA H1rbof" Golden Wn t, b7e SKIERS INVESTORS BUY IN MAMMOTH LAKES NEW RESIDENTIAL LOT Subdivision openi111, all improvements in, on wooded view lots. Also new condominium com- plex. MAMMOTH SLOPES R,LTY. For Further Info Write P.O. Box 5lS M•mmoth L•ke1 CA. 93546. C•ll 714 934.2221 or 934.2134 MISSION CON,lltl!NCI! C~1lley Cl!ruo 111 ....... d. S1ddltto.t~ OroHmonl P11I""""' Son B•ro,.r0>n11 w L "" J o "/ST ' 1 1.51 l 1 :nt ' ' , •• '" "' "' W•dMld•Y'I 5c••n 5addlt C1ck It. S11ulhw,,.t1rn 4! Ch•lfey 91, Cltru1 95 (0Tl Stn Be•nt •dlno ~3. G•ostmont 11 lllvtr1lat n, P11...,.,1r i• S1h1rdtW'I G1mt 1 c~aue ... 11 S1ddle1>aci< Gros1mont •I Cit1u• Pal""'•' 1t Soultlwr 1te•n ll.lve11ldt 11 Si n aer"•rdlno '0UTH COAST COHl't,.tl!NCIE .. "' "' "' "' "' "' m W L l"I' l'A C1"1to1 Fullerton 0•1n9e Co.o!I 51" OletQ MUI S•n!f An• Ml. s~n An!1>11io S1n 011'1> l II ?7! 114 l 11 '11 710 I 1 1161?6 ' ' 1 1Sl 161 t 1•l 154 ' ,,, 144 1 Ill UI WrtdnttdlJ'I ScertJ 0•1nt e C0•>1 1'. S.nl• A"t '9 (011 l'ullt rlon l l, Stn 01f90 11 c er,,101 oo. Si n 0 1090 MH• 4" s.n urd•V'• Ct"''' Ml. San An•on"i •! Fullerton li•n Ol«PG 1! S•n!1 Ana Ct rdto. •I Orl nilf Cc•il Sin Olt~o MtM, brt Fil med highlights of the 1970 root.hall season will be shown and individual and team awards will be presented. Tickets, priced at $6 each. arc available at the student affairs office. USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS SKl·SNOW REPORTS 547.7545 UP TO 6 1 OF SNOW IN OUR LOCAL MOUNTAINS • SNOW TIME! FUN TIME! SAHU AHA-219 !, 411t ST.-ICI 7.5723 #27 FASHION ISIANO-H!WPORT C!HHR-#1·2121 FULUITOH-601 S. IUCUD-Ul-5911 SPECIAL SNOW BUNNY BEGINNERS PACKAGE $109.35 VAWE • Llmlnmd A& T Skis ONLY$9)45 • 1971 Nordic• S Buckle loots • Step.in lindint • Strong Alu. Ski Poles PLUS FREE SKI LESSON CUSTOM IOOT FOAMING HOW /Ml{'{ TIMES HA VE YOUR BOOTS R\JINED YOUR SKI TRIP?- fOlll IOOH Ill Tiii lllSWlll SHOP WITH THE PROS Glh (lf1tftc1tn ltftkAm1rkenl • Mister Olal"tf DllWIN. Clult • CMf• lltMftt ' . fUI TlllltS POii SllOW INOW IAUCIRI TOIOOOANI KIDI IK1 ICATll SPECIALS • SKI PACKAGIS SJIP IN BINDINGS, POLIS REGULAR T•mpest , , ••.••.•.••• $ 70.85 Sun Volley-fiberglo11 •. $105.85 .4tu-Steel .....•••••••• $125.85 •SKI llOOTS tFIVf BUC KLE> MEN'S SIZES 9.9 Yz SA VE TO 600/o flCA#U SASlt'A .. , ........ '"" SAU $54.!5 sst.ts ,.,;,, •SKI PANTS . ' ' (Over and In the loo., : SAU s23t1 •••• $4S.bo ' . • NOW IN STOCK LOMG UHDllWtAI. OLOVU. loOnlNS, WAnl ,toOllHO, CHAINS, OOOOlR, •• TUIRI NICl IHltts. WINO SHltTS, CAI SKI CAll lftS, STOCllHa "'''· soa:~~ Ol'IN ....... -AT TltlU !llilT 'nL 9 P.M.:,. FASMIOll llWll;' SlllllAT -.S , •. 1 • I ~vmar , WHAT IS A "WANT IOOK 7 _., TUIY 6l.Ufl', LPll Did you ever wonder how ~ p~acy ls able to keep up wtth the thousands of dlftt'l'tnt lteme ll must keep pn hand for it.s customers" We hao,;e a spe1:!al book eallect the warn book and lll'IY }ime somwne sells a product and sees that the 4t.Q4: of that product la run "nin1 low they enter It in the 'daUY want book At !east once ll d11.v \\C contact lht' drug \vholesaler and h11ve thr produc~ we need 4l'hV1'red Immediately 11sually on lhal same day Jn this way \le are rArely out of stock of any item wheth t't ll be 11 prt>Scriptlon drug or one of lhe many other health lllds we carry YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US \\hen vou nttd a delivery We ~111 de II~ promptly "'lthout ex tra chari:e A great many f!e'Ofl1e rely on us for their health need&. \Ve '11.elcome requ~ls ft1r del!vt.'ry 5ervlC1! and chari-e aocount.5. PAU llDO l"MAIMACf JSI H..,.,.. ..._. "....,, IMd '41 llH ,_......., SC Thunder January 14 1971 W !1 1m H flurt!H 0 0 MC(l&lllMll Altl'l. 11Ja IM<• IMll Hvlll 111tp luc:~ Pubt moc1 o 111111 coe,t J1nu•r'I' 1~ 1tn LEGAL NOTICE dou hl• ~nit trous•rs li•11ka"'.,'''"' e ..,,,,.., chart• ' • • • 7 falhT•11 hlari4 ,._,.,, c.a11tat 644 11110 USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS 1 HI'S OP OIL PAINTINM WHOLDALI WA•IHOUSI OPllf TO THI PUIUC 30°/o off 1tlt L IDIN••• SAlllTA AU -·-DULlll WAMTID If YH -Mt ... ,.,.,...._ •• __.,.. s.mc. Y•• .. "°' tlttltlf ALL .t ,_., c .. la. TILIPHONI ANIWl•INO IUltlAU • 1014 + 'l'o ~ + •• ,;ii 1 . "" . '. ' ~:: t .. • ' ~.... ll ~ -> .... I ,. " ' " l~S6 • • • " "' ' " ' " ' " 'i "' ' " ' " .. . -N- SC DAIL V PILOT ... l) Th1irsday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange Li st ~. •• " ' -" 61•• -•• ,6 . -" . . " ,.,_ " . -,, ' -+ 13. -' " " • .. I •• ' • ' ,, " .. .. " " • '" • •• :a 1~• ,9 ' " ,..n '' 1~ 70 • I Ill II ' ' II• 1 o 1 2 n ~ ' . . ' . 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" .. • • ' " '" '" • , .1 Market Mixed 111 Active Tra{le NE\V \ORK iUPI\ -A mid afternoon rally turned the stock market higher in heavy turnover Thursdav 1\d van1.:es were leading declines by more than 150 issues near the r1n al IHll Th e 00\V Jones Indus trial Avcragt' \1as a head 2 20 al 843 31 and Stand ard & Poor s 500 stock index sho11ed a gain of 0 15 al 92 71 A volun1e or around 17 000 000 shares ro rnva r ed with 19 07 0 000 ~ha1es traded Wednesday Closing prLtes in c.luded Al\1 r&T 51 y.., up V.. Beth St 231/ii up \4 Chrvsler 25 111 up 14 DuPont 133 off 1s Ford 5531! up Jf.c Gen l\1olors 78% off l1 and IBM 314 1f off t •,), Analysts lrac.ed the gain to hopes for e(ono1nll: 1 ccoverv and ::;peculation that another cut 1n the bank prime interest rate may be 1n the orr1ng ' " "' • • " 1100 ' " •• " 1610 ' " ,. • ' " ' • " • ' .. .. ~ ' " ' " " " "' • " '" " , ' '" M , " ' . • " • • '" " • ~ .. " '" ' . " .. Ii .. 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'"' Cl JI 1 Jla o 3toll 6 ' 6 • 1 IP'I t _... • • l 1• • ... J • • ' ,,,, 1o i~1.,,,111 ... ' .. ,.: n~ ' ' I ' • • ' .. . ' . " , " , .. '! .. " . ,. 1!0 , ..... . " it JJ ~ )J , 0 . " . ' . 'I 1i~ 1l ' • 'l '" .. " . Jt J9 • t '\~§§~§~§§§~§~~~~§~ ,__ ._ .. t .lo I ~~ ~\:. '>I .s J \1 -1• I"-': :: ,, • ". ~ \ Mori Populer ~."' '" '" -J 'r"• 'U; l ': RMder ~urvey1 prove D11J ""' ' • -' ..., I V PILOT comics 11)d t"" 1' 1 ' I lh "" :Jlt. 1 '• umn Ms •re n moat DOBa ,f" ,~~ .!. lar 1n the nation .. ~ • •! ""' ~~~ '' SI ,._ .... '"' 't I 10 ~. • • 1) ~ •• - %1 DAI LY PILOT Thur~d.iy, Januar1 14, JC/71 By Chnter Gould Ll'L AINER :AH 5WEARS r>'f TH'MDST RESPECTED ~ECKIN DOGPATCH- t..lAMEL'/, ~ MAMM'i"$ U'L HAID--- SALLY BANANAS TUMBLEWEEDS FATHEf!, WE R<.ALLY l10N'T NEtD A CHAl'ffiON FOR 1\IE DANCE! I LIT-11!1; M'Dfl\R! YQU"IW JUST fNJ()'( IOURSELVES A/ID FORGET ALL AIJOOT 1"C !'ACK HERE! By Tom K. Ryan ITT GO OF HER HAND, JUNIOR, OR 11.L 0REAK YER ARM! --~~c_u·---•l'< • M'o"l;::. ~-::. !-,; ' -. . . .,. JUDGE PARKER I 'M WOli:IZIED AWi.iT SAM, JiJDUE ~ SUPPOSING HE 1s1rr : ·•THIS APAR TMENT. niEW WHEli'E WOU LD WE , -LOOI( i:OR HIM ? __ PLAIN JANE TMAT A.PARTMENT 8ll1LPING ~ THE RICJHT 15 WHERE HE LIVES'. 1 SEE A IALL,OiA'ICK, HA.NOsoto\E. fo\AN COMlNG lt{Jo )OUR FUTURE! ·,,' "~. :JD.AIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ,_ A. POWER I • ACROSS ,1:l Rts or1 ~l ~l s ·_s J.11.n's nickname IJ Ru•1 • ~w ay ~Type l5 "Sh akr .· .•·-'" 2 wcrds ;U_ln sol 1t11dt ~S urr ounding -19 Fr. e~plor tr •.' "ln Na. l\mt ric a ~-ao s 11 .n~ :"?1 f o,m ol moistur , l3 "Jean --·- Lacoste: ~ Tt nn1s ~~9rt a\ 2_. Shar otsl ·"2':1 Nu merical -_ l)lffi ~ ~11d iv 1 d u al , .... par! ~J)Scc1al '• affa irs -~U ni! cf prtSSUft : ~;Abbi. -•)J Prec1pita!100 • " form -)9 Permissicn ~to bt ' • absent -,-UI Ftt •2 Highl and _ .. reg iment , _.,;; gar111ents "'"'"'l4 Plant ~5.-St c1tl or • business ----• -......... , " )•""! Uf···· • 49 Blu'- blac ~ or lnd 11 50 D1 1vt crazy 52K indot ~ltC lllC•IY 5~ Ft l•nt ltalu't Sit Holdln11 and hous1rg ol goods S'f Mr. -··-. F 1ct1onal dt lf Cl!V f b2 Can1nr · Famil•ar &4 Part of an t !t c.t11c al machine oS "Tht Lady " 2 wo1ds h7 Ac t cl 1enting lr om another rtn!tr JO Symbol of hardness 71 Lam b'i ncm de plurnt 72 Man's name 73 Drin k 74 C.ost-ol- llving-itt m 75 Notch OOWN 1 Convers t 2 -·-nt z 3 Ctrtllitd ~ Salty S T ~t --, Manitoba 0 H1oh Pf les t In °lht 61b lt 7 Pay a!lt nlio11 8 Proddtd 'J AlgcnQuin 10 lnslrum t nl 11 Garmtnl 12 Soon : Arc haic 13 Mtasurt out 18 us playwr ight 22 Calendar 1bbtt vlation ZS ll an cl !ht Sta 2b Laytrs 28 Stilt; Abbr. 30 Vtg,tablts )2 Lud icrous copy 33 Eq ual J~ look fer 35 Saby carriage Jb Kind of story l/1~17 1 JB Teases (} "i! laid " - J word s ~l Ptw 4b Afternoon -- 48 Bus ines s es tablish- ment 51 Quality ol some chttStS SJ Did a ho useho ld chore 55 Ont who is skunk ed ~I cribb19t 57 lvor -- 58 On one's fttl S'f Atmosphtrlc cond ition &O Preposlllon bl Wallred Ii) Bt1st ol bUtdt n lilt Afl lc an ru1tr &8 Container &'I Tit for --- 11 11 1 "1Al'W{}'Of' ~eq 11 ~ lmOI\ 'AoM ' .. By Al Smith GORDO ) Harold Le Douir MOON MUUINS !=Ol A LAWYER, YOU'RE NAIVE, PR'IVEJI?~ PON'T YOO HAVE NO tt:>E.t. ~ Ml?.T I DON'T !(HOW WMY! TMA.T'S WMAT I 'M A.Str:ING YOU ! WA.5 SENDING ME TO &UT MEXICO CITV? ME WHV ? WAS 60HNA HAVE ME R'U&l5ED OIJT ~ PERKINS • MISS PEACH 0 :-, ':'.: ~ .... ~~ ~l' ., . -~; c _, < '" • tC.f£l""' 'S0100L- l>~AJNIT1C $0<1,fY I 'M GLAD 70 l-IEA£ >PLJ~E DOING A Sf~IOUS PL.AV 1-lGi~ FOR A I CHANGE'.! - - ·--·--··· STEVE ROPER ,,_ ' ' l-5TARTED GOIMG Wl'TH ~_:;~l"'~ ~ = Olltl< CMMt.IEMOR AT DADDY HAO BEEM i STATE U., Mil.ROPER.' ··AT TACKING HIM/ ... I DIDJ.l'T KWOW•-A90lJT HIS FATHE HE>.!! ' ' ., ANIMAL CRACKERS O~ YE5, /\~IC'. GR'l/\"115. /T"!!i A TICAGE:VY ABOUT A CHILD AL.ONE IN THE C~LJE.L.. ~VoRLO, GOfNG Fli:OM BAO TO mx5£ IN THC S~ WITH NO 5 HOE5 O~ FOOO- • AU.. OF A-6UDDl!IJ1 'rlll! UIJI! ~D M>D ~ Bli1'11-E. !IJ~5 CM'R I " By John Miles By Mell OKAY/ D ... NCERS ON STAGE ~OR THE OPENING 1, NUM&ER .. By Saunders and Over'i!Ord 'llOWDOES IKE FEEL. ABOUT THIS A80UT ft'~ IT RE-RI.nil OF 'ROMEO ~D UPSET HIM Atl)JUl.lfi,OOl.LY~ TiRRlllY/ SO --'Mll ')('.lJ-N)T titfNTJOt,ltT -N>OO SEE 1'4/M ~ ly Al Capp By Chartes Barsotti .----~~~~---, ~ By Ferd Johnson AHPl>oltr' <l,Zl//{ffoME!r11'5ll • !!Qt;" :I S\llEAll: HI! llJl.S O/elt srf. R'e1" l..OIJ6' AJJD /.'l)S( HA\!e I llll!M;llW :IOO RXl'JDS • -I' MR.MUM DENNIS THE MENACE <::CT;-\ ' MY ~ WAS /!161/T! llE SAID '\WO mot UP Ol¥i 5'11 l'«lflO Oil MIEM ~!" I I • People Who Need People Not Really the Luckiest By ARTHUR R. VINSEL . IF YOU OON'T believe that people need people as it says in the song, consider the case of Old Daddy Washington and Sweetpea Perez. They were unforgettable characters in Ward 8 at Atascadero Slate liospital. The time 1 \\'orked there \\'as unforgettable, \Vith a "'eallh 0£ material for short stories and the novel that never seems to get \l'ritten. Daddy and Sweetpea were confined to a ward that theoretically didn't exist, in a hospital for the criminally insane. 11 is doubtful they "'ere criminals. IT JS OOUBTFUL they would ever leave lhe bleak care and custody ward of a facility designated for treat- men t and rehabilitation, except feet first. Daddy got his nickname -the surnames are chang- ed -as a foster parent. He believed Sweetpea was his little boy Jimmy and IOoked after him, buttoning his pants and tying his shoes. Sweetpea hung around the husky old black man who seemed to care. "TllAT LITTLB Jimmy sho' is a bother," Daddy would say, taking his afternoon ease in the February sun that never could warm the cold, con- crete courtyard. Sweetpea -\l'ho didn't smell like one -would have untied his heavy, state-issue brogans again. . Daddy "'as in his 60s, brain drained away by syphilitic pares is and hi s rec<;0ning gone. He was friendly. irascible and stout. He said he was 17 years old and 11 feet tall. And if he didn't get his way, the white-uniformed technician responsi ble was instantly condemned as one or a clan that long ago did Old Daddy dirt. "He's one o' them dirty old Lewises," he'd thunder. OLD DADDY \Vashington must be dead by now. Sweetpea was 35, a spidery little Mongoloid with hands strong enough to tear thick seclusion pads into shreds like paper. His life expectancy too was brief. Daddy and Sweetpea aren't representative or lhe naton 's 350,000 men- tal patienls, but I thought about them the other day while reading the \Val l Street Journal. The story dealt V.'ith a campaign by reforming doctors and lawyers, for better and more just care in U.S. public mental health care facilities. -IT E:\-1: One doctor at a Florida state hospital has 1,000 palients as- .signed lo him , while 150 is the recommended load. -ITEM: Adequate private hospitalization cost $60 per day, while r.1issis- sippi spends $5.40 per palienl -ITEM: The enlightened authorities of Delaware forbid any person v.•ho has ever been a mental patient from marrying_ Conditions in many hospitals are deplorable. but improving ..,.,,ilh the long-range drive for reforms and grealer public understanding. Despite what one sometimes saw at Atascadero. other observations and a rontinuing interest indicate that California is a pretty progressive leader in these matters. And communilies have people like the Cost.a f\.1esa and Esta,acia high !Choo! girls playing Poy,·der Puff football Saturt:lay night, to benefit r airview Slate Hospital patient programs. DADDY WASIIINGTON and S\veetpea Perei couldn't comprehend the abstract human mcanlng of such a gesture, compared to the simple need for tied shoe:aees and bultoned pants. But that melodic tune tilled "People" has a terribly erroneous Hne. People \\'ho need people are not the luckiest people In the world. [, outh Laguna Dirt Pile Studied by Supervisors There is 11 :JOO.foot Jong pile of dirt Intruding onto county.owned sands .in South Laguna and, although the county Page ant Play Bill Ne arl y Co1npl ete, R ea.d y Jan. 26 The program for tltl' 197l Pageant of the Masters is 9f> percent complete, producer Oo n \Villiamson told the Festiva l of Arts board ol directors this "'eek and .will be ready for unveiling to the press Jan. 26. Roundup of 400 volu nteer mOOels will be launched with the Lraditional casting parties on the weekend of Jan. 30 and 31. MOOels of all sizes shapes and ages "''iii be catalogued and photographed dur- ing the two easting sessions, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sa turday, Jan. 30 and from 2 p.m. to S p.m. Sunday, Jan. 31. Photographs and prints of the 29 art works to be re.produced with living models on the Irvine Bow l stage will be on display during the casting partiell. Two complete casts ..are needed for the six-week run of the Pageant, this year from J uly 16 through Aug. 29. Each casts works three weeks, on a lternate weeks during the run. Volunteers for backstage jobs, in- cluding make-up, costume, runners and the like also are Invited to sign up at the casting sessions. Abbi e Denied Entry By Canada Officials BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPll -Chicago Seven defendant Abbie Hol'fma• was de- riled entrance Into Canada Wednetday when Immigration authorities invoked a rarely-used law barring persons convicted of crimes "involving moral turpitude." "I don't know my pl ans and I will talk to my lawyers," lloffmftn1. who had l>een Invited to appear Of'I a university of Western Ontario televhdon !'how, ~aid when he returned here. "I will deflnltelJ try to get into Canada." ' Board of Supervisors took aclion about it Tuesday it will probably remain there for a lo ng time. The dirt \\'BS placed on the beach ten years ago when lhe Laguna Royale condominium apartments \\'ere built al ::11423 Coast Jligh\\·ay. The pile became the chief support for the aparlment com- plex S\\'imming pool although county building of[icials had ordered the con- struction of a sea wall. The beach which the dirt pile partit11ly covers can be reached by one priv;ite and three public walkways. but is not heavily used. Supervisor David L. Baker called at- tention to the trespass of the Laguna Roya1e dirt. New Fifth D ist r i ct Supervisor Ronald Caspers said Qt is a "difficult problem" which should not be resolved by "overkill". 11e did not explain the use •f the term. He may have been referring to the fact that the swimming pool would have to be removed -to comply wilh rounty orders supported by a 1967 court decision. Caspers said there has been a "series of mistalte,s" in connection with the ap_artmenl .project and that the county tn1ght p<m1bly negotiate for public drtss- ing n;oms on the beach to be maintained at the apartment owners' expense. ~ of tOOay the problem i11 In the hands or the county counsel's offi ce. New Courses Set By Recreation Classes In piano, guitar and dog train- ing now ere btlng offered by the Miasion Viejo Recreation Department. Bob Preston of Laguna B ea c h will teach guitar to beginning, intermediate and advanced students for a fee or SIO for eight half-hour classes for recre1tlon center members and $20 for non-mem- ben. Trainer John Martin will conduct dog obedience classes from 7:30 to 1:30 on Monday evenings, Fee for the coutl'e is $20 per dog and handler musl be en adult or youth over 13 approved by the trainer. Dogs must be at least sll months old. Information regarding piano Instruc- tion ls available at the Recreation Ce nter, 2S800 Montall-080, &'J7-6050, E1t. 207. Pre-registration is required. •, The Chanips Thur!tda~, January_l•~·-1_•_1_1 ___ __,S:__ ____ D~A~l~L~V~P~l~L0~''-'3"- Two La1v s Sc..'t'opped Court Prohibits Mail 'Censoring' \VASHI NGTON (A P\ -The St1pre1ne Cou rt unanimously stripper! post oHice officials today of the power to block or detain mail lo dealers in "obscene" materials. The court's opinion. by Justice William J . Brennan Jr., said the authority, daling back to 1890, is a form of censorship forbidden by the first Amendment to 1he U.S. Constitution. Agreeing with federal district courts In California and Georgia the high court invalidated two la11.1s. Under one. dat1n~ back lo 1890. the Postmaster (iencral could have letters stamped .. unlawful" and returned to th!?. Sl'ndcrs If an adminis!rative officer (tecided the intended recipient W!IS ob- taining 1noney lhrough the n1 a i l for obscene or indecent a r ti c I e s or devices. Und er the second law. enacted in 196(1. the Postmaster General had lhc power to obtain a court order pern1illing h int to detain niail 10 a dealer the govemn1ent decided traffics in ubsccni1 y. or the new antipandering law, which becomes ef(ective in February. Thal law requires mailers of sexually oriented ads to purge their mailing list of names of citizens whn have told the Post Office they do not want tG receive such advertising . Quoling Oliver \Ventlell Hol mes, the late justice who was one of the most t'loqucnt civil libertarians in the nation's history, Brennan wrote: "The United Slates may give ~1p the Post office \vhen it sees fit . bul \\•hile il carries it on the use of the mails is almost as much a part of free speech as the right to use our tongues ..• " Lag una Ni g uel Recreation Plan Set for l-lea1ing Eric C. Ber~an , l~ft, and Nicolai B. \Vood b ury, both of Laguna Beach, hold ch'3mp1onsh1p trophy of intra1nural volleyball competition at Saddleback College. The two out played the 15 other teams in elimina- tion _contest~ and had an eight-gan1c perfect record. Bet1nan is a pre- 1ned1cal n1aJor and \Voodbury is a biology major . A spokes1nan for the Postal Service siud although the court's decision affects administrative procedures in dealing with obscene mailing, "we still have cr iniinal statutes thal we c:in and \\'ill ront!nue to enforce with vigor." Among those statutes is a law 1naking IL a cri111inal offense. punishable by up to five years in prison and fines of $5,000. to mail any "obscene, lewd. lasci11ious, indecent. filthy or vile article, matt.er, thing, device or substance." A public hearing for rcsidenls in the Lagunq Niguel co mmunities will be held tonight in Crown Valley School to ex- -amfnc the second phase of a recreation improvement plan v.·hich might come before county supervisors soon. The plan, proposed by lhe Laguna Niguel Homeowners and Community ·Association, would include $12,000 or public improven1ents at Crown Valley School's playground. New Law Protects Wives The Postal Service sµokesman said the court ruling apparenlly docs not affect the current antipandering la\v \\•hich allows a citizen lo refuse to accept \1•hal he C'Onsiders to be offensive ad- vertisements from a particular 1na ilcr The proposal calls for fencing off the public play area, installing a sewer line. ronstruc.ting new entrances, drink.log fountains and wa ler lines. President Nixon has signed a bill lo protect the innocent wives of men y,•ho fraudulently hide income from the tax collector. Under previously existing la"', a spouse who signed a joinl tax r elurn was liable for taxes and fraud penalties subse- quently assessed because of omitted in· come -even if she v.·erc a wife who had no knowledge or her husband's wrongdoing. Proponents of the bill , passed by Congress late in the session without opposition, said the former rule rould be particularly harsh in cases where 17 at Thurston Give11 Award s 111 Fit11ess 'T es t The President's Physical fitness a11·ard h11s been presented lo 17 girls at Thurston Jr1lermediate School for scoring high on the bi-annual fi tness test. In order lo compete for the award, a girl must score at lenst 85 percent nn each of the five categories of the regular test. \\'hich includes sit-ups, push· ups, soft-ball throw, 00.yard dash and t1tanding broad jump. lf the 85 percent score is achieved, the gir l rnay elect lo take furthur tests for the President's a\\•ard. Of the 25 \1'ho tried during the fall semester, 17 v.·on the a"·ard. including two ~iris 11·ho had "'Oil befnre, Eva Toth and Debbie Carles. The other \1•inners \\'ere Donnie Brimble, r-.tary Jane Blackecer, Lynn Buhlig, Mary Boyd, Valerie Conway, Lest! Ford. Lisa Hallock .. Jan<'t Janz, Janet Johnson. Jill Kn owlton, D11maris f\leyers, Stephanie Pa\lisnn. Gail Penney , Terry Taylor and Susan Tyler. County Rej ec ts Ne'v Tractors Orange County Road Commissioner Al Koch lost a batWe Tuesday in his request for the purchase of six new tractors for trash dump operations. Supervisors approved only two al $6.1 .800 each and :old him to have the other four he wanted lo trade in repaired. Koch warned th;;t operating cosls would increase as much as 10 percent on the old machines. The move to cut the purchase of new equipment was led by Supervisor David L. Baker who warned fellow board members that the county's reserve funds will be SC\'<!rely depleted before the current fiscal year ends in June. Although Koch's request was cut by $~.200 he did get permission to purchase a $101,<XX> scraper, a $16,000 11weeper and a $36,000 loadC!r. 'Anything Goes' Seeking Dancers With the cast of the Laguna Moull.On Playhouse product.Ion of "Anything.Coes" nearing completion In Laguna Beach, choreographer Alice Lomas has put out an urgent call for more boy and girl tap dancers. Young men are especially needed, 11he 1aid, and the.re also are openings for singers. both tor solo and chorus roles. Applicanls may report to rehearsal~ which are under way nightly st 7:30 In the School of Art and Design, next door to the Plttyhouse. 11 wife tiad been deserted, or where !hr.re had been a separation or divorce. The . law required the government to proceed against ll'hatcver property she n1ight have . 1·hey cited cases in which a man embezzled funds -taxable under Ilic lnw -and understandably did not list the criminal proceeds on the joinl tax return his wife signed with him. 1'hc nc\v act prov ides that a spouse who is not a party to fraudulent omission or income fron1 a tax return shall no l he liable. However. the provision v.·ill not apply unless the amount omitted is mO'l'e than 25 percent of the total incorne reported. t ' Lag una ~c ulptor Se ts Display in El Centro Lagun a Beach sculptor Pcterpnul Ott "'ill journey to El Centro Jnn. 19 to pre- sent a program and sculpture demonstra- tion for U1e E'.1 Centro Art Association. Ott will displa y his technique in model· Ing the human nnure in clay and present a lecture. illustrated with color slides o{ C'lassic and n1od ern sculpt ure in Europe. A discussion period will follow the pres· cntation. ., . .,.,' .~ The parcel lllready contains Little . League baseball fields and Dthcr facilities built under an initial joint· pu1vers agreement with the Capistrano Unified School District. The 7:30 p.m. hearing, in the cafetorium, will be held to assess rom- munity support of lhe plan to seek an allotment of the construction fW"ld! fron1 a county special service area. Specific allocation of the money would come after authorization by county SMALL INVENTORIES -BIG CLEARANCES . •• in short, limited quantities --big values! Anything you lake we don't need to add up. You save money -we save time. Visit all 60 stores at Fashion Island for Jonuary values or 51>9clal spring purchases. AU stores open Friday and Monday nights •STORES INCUJDINC BROADWAY, JJUf'FUMS, 1'V.Nlf'RY'S AND R091NSON'9 FASHION ISLAND JfUWPOaT OIJKTIJB. 4 DAILY PILOT 'Says he '• from Marlboro Country!' lDemocrat S kips R ace By DICK WEST WASHINGTON -l had a 2 .11 .m. telephone call this week and for once it wasn't from Ma rtha Mitchell. It was from an anonymous informanl. "Here's a hot tip for you," a voice said when I picked up the r eceiver. "One. of the 54 Democrats in the Senate isn't going to run for President next year." At first, I was inclined to dis miss the tip as just another wild rumor, My journalistic instinct told me, however, t hat I had better check it out, no matter how implausible it sounded. So T began making a few discreet Inquiries and pretty soon I hit something iiOJid. I learned that there was indeed a non-presidential candidate among the Senate Democrats. F urthermore, I managed to narrow it down to Sen. Walter MondaJe of Minnesota. Usually, when a senator takes such • drastic and extremely unorthodox .step iis not running for President, he will play it for maximum dramatic irnpacl In the beginning he will be coy a bout his intenlion.s, gradually building up suspense and then annom'lcing bis decision a t a televised news confe rence that leaves the nation emotionally drain- ed. I was prepared for some such routine when I contacted one of Mondale's aides. Hoping that subtle interrogation would cause him to tip his hand l started out with an irrelevant question. "How's the weather in Minnesota?'' J asked. ''The senator is not running for Presi- dent, if that's v.•hat you 're getting at,'' the aide replied. Nevertheles!, I was determined to pin him down. "'Whal are Mondale's plans for 1972"'.'" ) said. "He plans to seek rMle<"tion lo the Senate," the aide said. But J didn't Jet that throw me off th~ trac.k. .. How .about ?.1ondale's future political .ambitions?" "He just wanls lo be a good senator, .. the aide said. As I was saying, you expect evasi\'e MSwers when you are dealing with non. presidential candidates. Reading between the lines, however, J co uld tell that Mondale had writ~n himself out of the Presidential race. Which may be bad for his senatorial career. Henceforth, he'll be known as a "loner." -UPI Reds O verruta Yank B52s Join Cambodia Attack PHNOM PENH (UPI) -South Viel· namese troops af\c;:I armor aided by U.S . B52 bombers flying their first combat missions in Cambodia in months overran one Communist-held mountain pasa on vitaJ north-south l~ighway 4 today and closed in on anolller, military sources reported. Litt.le Communist resistance to the drive by 5,000 Vietnamese and 8,000 Cambodians was reported, but in a sharp clash Wednesday Soulh Vietnamese Rangers reported killing 31 CommunisU four miles south of the Stung Chhay pass v>'ithout suffering a casualty. Following that battle m ilitary sources said the South Vietnamese Ranger• and tankhorne cavalry troops swept through the Stung Chhay pass at noon today without meeting resistance. The Com- munist& were thought to have withdrawn into the Kirirom plateau whe re the B52s dropped their loads. From the Stung Chhay Pass the Rangers were sweeping north toward the second pass, the Pich Nil, ~·hich is about 60 miles southwest of Phnom Penh. Those two passes control the 138- mi\e route 4 from Phnom Penh to the seaport of Kompong Som, Cambodia's only port and site of its only oil refinery. Informed sources in Sa igon said the United States was underwriting the cost of the South Vietnamese operation - estimated at $3S million. South Viel· namese Economics Minister Pham Kim Ngoc told newsmen that amount was requested from Defense Secretary Melvin Laird during his recent visit. Four regiments of Cambodian soldiers and a reserve force of South Vietnamese marines. engineers and infantry troops were operating north of Pich Nil in hopes of closing a vise on Communist.s in the area. There was little contact between the Vietnamese and Cambodian troops, but free lance photographer-journalist Fran- cis Bailly, working with the southbound column, said some of the South Viet· namese troops were selling their American·made Mt rifles to the Cam- bodians for as much as $100 apiece. Military sources said B52s on Wed- nesday dropped around 200 tons of high explosives on the Kiri.com plateau which Howard Hughes Must Appear Or Lose Suit LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI ) -Billionaire recluse. Howard l~ughes has 20 days to answer a summons in a $50 million Jaw suit or possibly lost the case by default. Documents filed with district court Wednesday showed Hughes technically was served with a summons in the multimillion dollar !uit flied by his for· mer Nevada chieftain, Robert Maheu. Maheu, fired by Hughes Tool Co. as head of the Hughes Nevada empitt', charged in the suit against the company and Hughes that his character had been defamed and that his dismissal from the SS00,000 a year job ruined his earning a bility • Hughes was .111sked in the iummons to reply by contacting lt1abeu's lawyer, ltforton Galane. "if you fail lo do so, judgment by default wilJ be taken against you for the relief demanded in the coun- terclaim,'' the summons said. Hughes has lost bigger sums than $50 million bm:ause he refused to make a personal appearance. In 1969 he failed to appear in a suit against him by Trans World Airlines. He was rule in default and the airline was awarded $137 million In damages. is midway between the two mountain pue1 -the first uae of the bombers i• direct support ol the South Vietnamese in Cambodia and the first time since the joint U.S.-Vietnamese drive in Cambodia last spring. The U.S. command in Saigon said today 'rt Americans were killed and 83 wounded in the war last week. It "'as the lowest weekly combined toll of U.S. dud and injured in more than five years. The death toll wu down from the 33 k.il~ the pttvious week and brought to «.:z&a lbe tota1 Amt ricans killed in lbe war since Jan. 1, 1961. Dayan Warns Egypt; Don 't Break Truce By United P ress lnteni:aUonal Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan was quoted today as saying l!rael's military might has grown so powerful is it the Egyptians who must fear an end of the cease-fire on Feb. 5. His statement leaked out in Tel Aviv as Egypt and the Soviet Union began crucial talks in Cairo. Cairo officials have warned repeatedly that the Middle Easl cease-fire may not be extended past Feb. 5 if there is oo major progress in the New York talks under a uspices of U.N. meditator Gunnar V. J arring. F rance announctd Wednesday it had begun a diplomatic campaign to extend the truce. Dayan spoke to a closed meeting or the right-wing Gahal parllamentary group Wednesday night on condition no word would be leaked of the proceedings but the afternoon newspaper Maariv car- ried the rem•rk.s today in a front page exclusive report. "Zahal (the Israel defense forces) has grown in strength in lhe most impressive way in recent wttks," Dayan told the meeting. It is Egypt, not Israel, who must fear a possible re!umplion of fire (along the Suez Canal) Feb. S." He made the statement in reply lo a question f r o m Gaha.l executive chairman Maj. Gen. (ret.) Ezer WeJzrnan, former No. 2 man in U>e Jsraeli military command who was architect of Israel's air for~. Weimlan led a Gahal walkout from the cabinet last August in protest against the American-sponsored peace bid in the Mideast. A Cairo d ispatch said Soviet Pre11ident Nikolai V. Podgorny and Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat began their c rucial Mideast talks at the Kubbeh Republican Palace in Cairo today with hlgh-ranklng Soviet and Egyptian officials present. Cameroon Spares Life of Bishop YAOUNDE, Cameroo11 (AP) -Pre!i· dent Ahmadou Ahidjo commuted to life imprisonment today lhe death sentence pronounced against Msgr, Albert Ndong· mo, Roman Catholic bishop of Nkoog· samba, Radio Camen>Oll announced. The bishop had been found gu ilty of plotlng a coup d'etat in 1968 against Ahid - 1o's government. The broadcast :1aid Ahidjo also com· muted to life imprisonment the death sentences against Cele.stin Takala and Mathieu Nja.ssep, who had been convkted of plotting against the governmenl and rebellion as • member of the banned Union of Cameroonian Peoples -UPC. Great Lakes Storm Center Front Minnesota to Rockies, I t's Freezing Co l.d Cal lfort1 la I Y t.INITIO ,.ltflS INTllMAT IGNAL !>et!IMrn Ct lllOl"llll ...... m•l!Y elol/d'f ..,,,.., ,..1111 1 f.w illowt n ht 1119 n-nl1111. D1~rlm1t ltmttr1•11r11 wtrt .t 111111 w•rmtr .,,,11~ wind• .tt t\ma In !he dtHrt ••l•I. S.rll'llllM <on!ll'...... ,.,.... IM L ... 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KtnN• CITY " " Lts v"•~ " ., LO'I A .... i.1 " " •• Loul1vlllt " • "' Mlt"'I " " ,,u1we\lk" " " Mln.,.t POtl1 " ~ .01 MW 0rlHl\l " ~ N""' Yorti " ~ ()lolo"""'t Cl!Y ~ " ...... " " ... 1 ... $1•1 .... " " ""11.CS.1.,,lt " " .w ""°""I~ " ,. .. l!Ui>O•Vll " • •• l'or!lt "ll· o .. u " ·" a11Jd Cl"' " ., ' ~""' lllutf .. • .. ~ " " ·" S•c••m~"'' ,, " . .. SI. LOUI• " " .. Stl! Ll~t City ~ " ·" S1n DI ... " • S~ottlt " " ... '"'*'-,. " w,,,.1!'] " .. ... ARRIVAL OF EXILE S AWA ITE D IN CHILE (TOPI Br•1il Prisoners Give Red Salute {Bottom) Br azil Pr iso11ers Freed; En voy Release Expected RIO DE JANEIRO (UPl) -Photographs of the arrival in Chile of '10 Brazi lia n political prisoners. whose freedom wal'i demanded as r ansom for kidnaped Swiss Ambassador Giovanni Enrico Bucher, were published in Rio newspapers today. Bucher'! release .was thought imminent. The kidnapers had promised to release Bucher, held since last Dec. 7, a s soon as photographs were published here as proof the prisoners had reach- ed safety. The prisoners posed for photographs holding a Chilean nag alongside the plane that flew them from Rio into exile. Two afternoon newspapers delayed publication to carry the UPl radiophotos transmitted from Santiago. A local television station also carried the photographs. Bucher's release v.•as not expected, ho,vever. for several hour.~. II was noted that in three previous kidnapings of diplomats they v.·ere freed after nightfall, obviously to avoid police detection. Bucher was kidnapecl 38 days ago hy terrorist members of the anli- govemment popular r evolutionary vanguard who demanded the release of the '10 prisoners as the largest ransom yet paid in the wave of political kidnap- ings that have sv.·ept Latin America for more than a year. The prisoners. who included 12 women. were greeted \.\'ilh clenched fist S<}lutes and V·for-victory signs from a crowd of 250 when they arrived at Santiago's airport al 4:22 a.m. aboard a special Varig Airlines Boeing 707 flight. .. Gen, Emilio Cheyre. head of <.:bile's police force, \vamed the exiles: "During your .stay in Chile, you will not make political statements nor any other statement~ ·which could damage the good relations between Chile and other countries." Wealt h y R unaway Hei r Fo und by Detectives METHUEN. Mass. IUP!l -An emo- tiOflally troubled youth using a false name voluntarily committed himself to a rehabilitation center for drug users about 10 months ago. He disappeared two ~·eeks ago, then "·as reunited with his mother Wednesday and aulhoritles found oul his name. Michael Grace Ill, 15, heir to a billion- rlollar shipping fortune, has a personal fortune of $10 million, ing. He said Mrs. Grace told him ~11chael had alway:. "'anted In see Ca mbridge and Greenwich Village 1n New York City, bul "might head lo a warmer cllmate. He wa s found in Ca.tnbridge \Ycd- nesday. Police said the youth mu st have been discol'ered by private detectives because Cambridge records had no indication he had been found. Ru ss Office In New Yorli NEW YORK I AP I -Brick and mor tar "'rapped in brown paper crashec through the v.·indow of the Soviet Unio1 airline and tourist office in 1nidtow1 f.1anhattan early today and a short whill later an anony111ous caller announce( the deed and :;aid "never again.'' ··Never again" is the slogan o[ lh~ militant Jev.·ish Defense League, The U1roy,·n rock, hurled from 11. ca1 y,·hen a foot-patroting JXlliceman was u1 the block from thr-Aeroflot office, \l.'a: the latest ;n a series of vandalisms di reeled at offices of the Soviet Union. Hours earlier, it was reported that i ~1anhattan grand jury v.·as plaMing fj question Jewish militants concernin1 three anti-Soviet incidents here ove r UH past nine months. The rock at the airline office was com posed of tv.·o uneven pieces of brick mor tared together and it left a ragged }Joh about two feel in diameter in the di!I' play window. Police said !.here was n1 n1essage on Lhe paper v.•rapping. A male telephone caller told the Nc11 York Daily News momcnls af!er th~ window shattered· "l"IJ !ell it to yot once. We just knocked out lhe fronl plate-glass window of !he Aeroflot Ail' lines with a rock. Never again.'' The incidents being investigated by 1 ?.fanhaltan grand jury include the pipt bombing of the AeroOot offi ce, on Easl 49th Street. last November. The investigation scheduled In begir Friday will also inc I u de question! about an alleged attack last May on M T. Mehdi. secretary-general of the Ao tion Committee on American-Arab Re- lations. Asst. Dist. Atty. Frank. Roger~ said Wednesday. The grand jury p!iUls \verc first dis. closed by Bertram Zweibon, attorne~ for lhe league, which has been carryin~ out a campaign of harassment agains1 Soviet diplomatic personnel in New Yor~ and other cilies. Zv.'eibon said the district .attorney·~ office had informed him of the in11cstiga· lion. The JDL announced thal Zweibon had been named its national chairman ta succeed Rabbi ~1eir Kahane, who bas said he intends to move to I s r a e I in August and head an organization called the \Vorld Jev.·ish Defense League. Betltlehem Steel Stick~ to Hikes BETHLEHEr-.f, Pa. (AP) -The Beth- lehem Steel Company says it v.·111 go ahead with plans to boost prices of steel used i11 construct.ion work and shipbuilrl· ins despite an ind ication from President Nixon that he might raise quol.as 011 im· ported steel if the increases are imple· mented. A stateml':nt released \Ycdncsrlay .alsn said the Nixon Adnunistration kne w of I.he proposed increases in adva11ce. The company said the administration gave net ind1calion jt .. would react as strongly .111s it dld." The rate changes on four major types of steel. announced J.londay. amount to boosts of II to 13 percent. They are tn 1ake: effect t.larch I. Be1h lehem Is the 11auon·s second larRrSI sl eel produr,r. The items involved acrounl for l)ne-sixtl'! rtf the industry's tota l output. The youth enrolled in the Challenge House Center under the name of Michael Gray Graysori and was described by a former employe as a youth with emo- tional problems but noL deeply involved "'i th drugs. Last Defe1ada1at Dies The center, in "'hir h individuals are free to come and .:o as they please, is run by Roman Catholic seminarians, who declined comment on the episode. An introverted anrl nervous youth described as •·very brigh!.'' Grace held .a coordinator's position as part of his trealment. James Alonzi, the center':-; director, said the boy mighl have lefl because of a discussion of some mistakes he had made in his job. Police Capt. Eugene Devaney said Grace disappeared Jan. 4 and shortly a rt.er his mother, Jl.1rs. Susan Grace, called police and reported her son miss- Terror Bombing Crackdown Set To Take Effect WASHINGTON <UPI ) -A new law design!d ti> crack dO\\!,n on terrorist bombings will ha\le its fir's! impact .about one month from now. Among olher things, even 1 he cuual buyer of ex- plosives will have to identify himself to the government. The law, however, wiU not apply lo anyone buying e~plosives within the state where he re11lde:s for use In that st1te, or pmsibly even buyina them 1n an 1djoinlng state. Such purchaau ar~ left to state regulation, and most sta\H have no laws regulating explosives purcliuts. Regulatloni1 to implement the OrganJz. ed Crlmt Control Act of 1970 will be p11bli1he.d 1n the federal register Friday. A11 of Feb. 16 they will afrect e¥eryone from lht?: manufacturer dow n to the stun1p-bl1st\ng fanner. false stntement11 would be punlshllblP. hy a maximum of .JO years in prison and • $101~ rinc • Mute Ruins Tell Horror Of Nazi Mas s Slaugl1te1· ORAOOUR SUR GLANE, France (AP I -For ZS years the torn, burned and tortured ruins that once were the village of Oradour waited for a. murder trial that now will ne\•er lake place. The defendant. former SS Gen . Heinrich Lammerding, died at 6.~ \Vednesday in West Germany. But the r uins-ravaged buildlrtgs, s l re etc a r tracks running nowhere, 1 handful of unclaimed wedcling rings -lesUfy lo the terror of June 10, 1944 . On that date, in an hour and a half, the Fuehrer Regiment of the Das Reich SS Division massacred 642 of Oradour's men. womt!:n and childl"!n. This was a reprisal for the deaths tif 40 German soldiers killed by the Resistance. Aime Re.n11ud, a 5&-ycar-old garage owner remembers seeing the SS column roll into Oradour. "They were so well organized:' he seid. "They brought oul 3\1 the men and began marching ~ to the. village grttn. Most U them went along because ~y figurt!:d their papers were In order and that the Gmn1M were kJoklng for Resistance people. 1 was worried that • check of paper& woukt have let them send me to a labor camp ~ Germany to I managed to slip between aome ct Lhe hou.su and Into a sardtn. Then 1 began to hear the shooting. It wenl lelTlbly fast. These SS mt n were spec:\all!ts.'' While the mrn were M ing shot. the women and children were herded Into the church. There they were beaten. machine gunned and blasted with in- cendiary Jiren11des. Rtnaud', S.year--0\d daughter d I e d in h ~ r grandmot.her·s Rrms. After U1r. "'.ir a new vi1lagc was built a.bout. 200 yards from the: ruins. The carcass of the old village was left a.• lhe Gennans left ii. f'.10!i.~ and ivy have grown over the ragged edges i:ir the buildings, softening them a bit, but a sign nailed 111 lhe skclelon of the church exhorts those Y:ho come: "You who pass by here, Jned 1\ale: nn this. .. You who believe, pray for the victims and their families.'' In 1952, a French co u rl ~e:nlcncf'd two men to death and 18 others tn lesser terms for their part in the massacre. f\1ost of those sentenced were French Alsatians who claimed they had been forced into the Germ11n army. t.ammerding, who commanded the Das Reich division, w11s among those who went underground, A French court senlenced hi mto death in absentia in 1953. Soon after, protetol.ed by 11''o le ga I technicalities, Lammerding surfaced a3 the: head of a prosperous <.'Onslructlon company in Duesseldorr. lie could not be extradited because I.he West German con11tituUon bans exl.tadltlon or ciUzerm. Negot.iatiora for new statute we.re recently completed, and it is expected to be signed by early February. LRm· merdlng's trial could have followtd in Germany. "l'm gJad they say he's dead, hut I \11oul d have liked to ha\le: seen Justlct done." said Renaud. "He ~·as really hit by lighling. wasn·1 he. just when they are moving to brin• these people to trial nnatly. I realli want proof It Wl!i him. T~c Nazit have been abl e to camouflaRc lhen1selvrt Jnd dlsappttar with the ht lp of poopl1 In high places. l!1ey remcn1ber ucJ ol.ht>r .. vou know .•• -• "for· what .Rood it does, 11't. re1nemhet ,-lhem." Renaud added as en after~~L Thundi:Y, January 14, 1971 DAil V PILOT f Priest Denies Kidnaping Conspiracy; Cites Nazis By U1lted Prn1 lnter:aatloaal The Rev. Philip Btrrigan, named u • mastermind in an alleged plot to kidnap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger, says the federal charges against him are reminiscent ot tactics used by Adolph Hiller to crush e~ position In Germany. Berrigan, one of six persons Indicted In the alleged coa. spirat'y, and his brother, the Rev. Daniel Berrigan, one of seven named as coconspirators, denied t he charge! from the jail in Dan· bury, Conn., where the brothers are serving terms for destroying draft records. The grand jury w h I c h re!urned the Jndictments in Harrisburg, Pa., also accused the conspirators af trying to blow up tte healing system • l'lf five governmeat buildings In w l!hinglon. More witnesses were called today, and a special federal proaecutor said It w a s "~rfecUy obvious" I he testimony could lead lo more lndictmenlS. Three Roman Catholic priests, lncluding Berrigan ; a former priest, a nun and a Paltlstani graduate 1tudent were Indicted Tuesday. In a statement l s s a e d through their attorney, William M. Kunstler in New York, the Berrigan brothers, said the objective of the in· dictments "is a simple but deadly ane -to destroy lhe peace movement by creating caricatures af those who op· pased the war in Asia." Jeweled M11mmies Rt vealed ANN A!lBOR, Mich. (UPJ) -A team af University af Michiga~ scientists s a 1 d Wednesday X-ray photos they had taken rectnUy In the Cairo Museum revealed priceless artifacts and jewelry hidden in the bodies al mum-. mies or ancient Egyptian royalty. Some af the artifacts were discovered on the murnmlfied bodies hidden by a thick, resinous pule but olheni were embedded under the akin - a technique used by ancient Egyptian priests pogslbly to avoid the depredations o( grave robbers. Ul'IT........,. Awalt• Fate Hippies Lose Out On Stamps Rebel 'Cookbook' Hot Off Presses NEW YORK (UPI) -Ly!• Stuart Inc. bu publbhed WASHINGTON (UPI) -1'Tbt Anachlat Cookbook" which student author William Acting tmder a llttle-nollred Powell says he wrote to educate the allent majority about amendment which emerged lethal garroting and cooking with marijuana. from Congress last manth, lhe "JI the peaple of the United States do not protect them· Agriculture Department may selves against fascia~. t::apllallsts and Communists, they, will not be around much looger," Powell, a student at Wind· cut aff some Hippie Co~ ham College in Putney, Va., said in the foreword. munes from government food The book, which sells for $12 in hard cover and $5.95 1n stamps. paperback, give instructions an surveillance, elfllosives, The action is poss I b I e lethal girroting and boobytrapping. It Is illustrated with because of a new food slamp photographs and diagrams. A lengthy sectkm on drugs gives law. signed by President Nix· formulas ror making LSD and CX10king with marljuana and < an Monday, which includes a hashish. · new definition of "households " Lyle Stuart, president or the publishing finn, aald his eligible far the stamps. The "stockholders were In a state of shock" when he ann<>Une- coupans currently help feed ed he would publish the book. Some of hls llaff members so~ 9.3 million needy ''were appalled" at the decis ion and thought the book should Americans, including a n not be publimed bec:ause they considered it dangerouJ. unknown number residing in ~ Hippie rommunes. , "But I am I.he one who made the final de<:ision,'' Stuart Dr. James F. Harris, •ho headed the scie11.Ufic team which conducted the ex- periment.s in December, said the X·ray! showed historically priceless jewelry -possibly gold -and semiprecious stones and beads. He called it a "positively invaluable find." Bolivian painter Ben· jamin Y Amor, would· be assassin of Pope Paul, sits with eyes closed in Manila court· room. I-lis trial was postponed because of public transportation strike. In the past , the food stamp said. "I th ink (Peter M.) Bergman's prefatory note puts law and the Ag r i c u It u re the whole issue inlo perspeciive. People like the Weather~ o e par tmenrs regulations man have called me and aaid they were apposed to the book define an eligible low-income -that the general public shouldn't know these things. "household" as a single person "Well, all I can say is tha~ if those yaung Weatherman with cooking facilities, or a making bombs in the town house in Greenwich Village had group of ••re I ate d or known what was In this book," Stuart said, "They wouldn't unrelated" people li ving in a have blown themselves up." single household group. •---------'-------------- ., '-'i:t!"j ii~t:ll 1 lnd1V1Su11 teller •11•1 erovlde Sil ·DOWN BANKING Privacy and 'ase are yoDrs, •• Ythen you do yo11r b1nkini at Newport National Bank. You can rel a..; in a comfortable arm chair while a friendly, cheerful teller transacts your business quicklY and elficitnUy. It's a moment ol 1e.sl and personal attentian that you un look farward ta in yaur busy day. Calfee and deliciaus caakie.s are available ta help yau relax while we provida you with oulstandin& service. Enjoy our extraordinary unique services. ' 11 unique 9 CONVIMllNT O"ICtS SERVING ORANGI COUNTY A!r)Ort otrlu MichtllOn 11 Mar.Mhur !JJ.Jlll • la,.W1 Offla 9e't'1id1 1t J1mbortt 642·1141 C:,,11111 1'1tk Olllc.t Nutwood 1! COlllmonwtlilh 171-2900 • SunllJ Hi111 Offiet H1rbor 11 Bru 171·7290 Superior Olfi ce Suptrior It Pltunti1 6'2-9511 • Uldwtflltr Offlu East Ch1pm1n 11 State Coll11t l179·4MO W..witf Office W1stdtft If Ocwtr 642·ll J 1 IHI kid! Otlk.1 Uisurt World, SUI Bud1 596-2711 • Lacun1 HNIS Otllce Llllun: Worlcl, l..11111111 Hilll&JO.J200 ( ( It was the fin:t discovery of royal Egyptian artifacts---------- since the . tomb or King Tuta11kha'll!-n, who died at 19 in 1352 ll.C., was opened In 1922, Harris said. Jury Names Senate Aide WASHINGTON (UPI) - A federal grand jury has charg- ed that Robert T. CarJOn, a top aide to Sen. Hiram Fong CR-Hawaii), offered a '100,000 political contributian to a deputy attorney general in an unsuccf'ssful attempt to fix a securities fraud case in· volving a New York Mafia boss. Foog suspended Carson, 64. without pay pending th e out- come of the case, and his offjce issued a statement say- ing Fong knew nothing of the events leading to the in· dictmenl Premarital Sex 'Rising For Women' LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The number of wcrnen who engage ln premarital sex has risen in both conservative and liberal regions of the nation but not In the Deep South, an authority on s e x u a I behavior said Wednesday. Dr. Carlfred B. Broderick, professor of sociology at Pennsylvania State University, told a University of Southern California group that men have not changed their at· titudes markedly but women have become more liberal when it come to premarital "'· Two Young Friends Hang Side by Side HOUSTON (AP} -Two young boys with their hands tied, hanging by the neck from opposite ends of 1 rope over a tree limb, were found dead in a suburban back yard Wed· nesday night. They were Travis Ronald Stuckey, 12 ,and James Roland Mlles, 11. Police said a nylon rope with a noose In each end had been thrown over a limb seven feet from the ground in the Stuckey bay's yard. Police Lt. Charles Holt said young Stuckey·s bands were tied behind him and he was aJmost lying down . The Miles boy·s hands were tied in front of him and he was on his feet but slumped aver. Holt said there were no object_, around from which the boys could have jumped. It appeared to bt an accident, he said. but added, "We just don't know. We h1ven't been able to round up a single v.·itness.·' Noah Sanders, stepfather of the Miles boy. said he felt It \.\'as an accident. "I think one boy fell and when he did It raised the other off the ground,'' Sanders said. ''They hed been playing with that ro~ for the last couple of day.s, tying each other up with it." CHARGE m USE YOUR BANKAMERICARO, MASTER CHARGE OR C.H. BAKER CHARGE AT 30 CONVENIENT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 1.0CATIONS South Coast Plaza, Coste Mesa Broadway's Anaheim Center, Anaheim Bullocks Fashion Square, Senta Ana \ \ Under the new 1 a w , h oweve r , the term "household" was redefined to exclude groups of youths and 1dults, unrelated by family or marital ties, who live In a "Hippie family." Officials said the new definition ap- parently would also b a n stamps to groups of unrelated college students whG share apartments. Mailman Saves Dog; In Trouble LA PUENTE (AP ) -Two years agCJi a tay poodle named Brigette became frlendly with a mailman, Lawson Heacock. The friendship has proved a lifesaver for the poodle, which lives wllh a family on Heacock's route, but It may be Heacock's undoing . The «-year-aid mailman has been an:lered to a PO!lt Of{lce Department h e a r In 1 on grounds he: -lnterfered twice with a pound officer. -Delayed delivering the mail. -Displayed t:= on duct un- becoming a pastal employe. Specifically, affictrs say, Heacock twice stuffed the dog Into his maU pouch just as the dog catcher was about ta nab the pooch for runnin1 I~ -following Heacock - in the s!Ieet.s. RND OF THE WEEK lllW"ROGERS* ••••••••••• It won't be just plilin pepper end .. it when yo.u serve it in these elogent silverpllted ahekon by Williem Rogers. 14.95 the aet. c~.,... -'"-"' hlWrttd A-1<1111 ...... 1 IMlkA!MflClnl 11111 M11lw Clllrte. -. Jew.,leni Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644-lllO Open Mond1y & Friday Until 9:30 p.m. I DID IT I BOUGHT SOME THINGS THAT DIDN 'T SELL ••• I ALSO BOUGHT TOO MUCH OF SOME THINGS THAT DID. A GOOD BUYER IS HARD TO FIND, BUT I GUARANTEI! YOU'LL BE THE BEST BUYl!R IN TOWN IFYOU BUY AT .• , THE STOREKEEPER SALE THURSDAY, JANUARY 14TH ••• AND YOU'LL Bf\ILPING THIS BUYER LOOK GOOD. FROM ONE BUYER TO ANOTHER, IT'S ALWAYS FUN TO FIND A PANTS 10.00-15.00 A BUY 4.99-6.99 JACKETS . 45.00-90.00 A BUY 29.99 ' SHIRTS 12.00-14.00 A BUY 5.99 • MASTER CHARGI .WUTcLlff PLAZA 1028 lrvlne, Newport Beach, Callfornla 92ee0. Phone 842-7091 ' ,, ' • ' " . . • DAILY P ILOT EDl'.J'ORIAL P AGE • Unanswered Questions Gov. RonaJd Reagan, facing a gap of possibly $700 million between stat.e .income J.nd outgo, called for cut- backs in welfare and Medl-cat in his annual State' of the State message to the Legislature Tuesday. The governor Is right ln callin~ again for lax re· fo rro. including withholding. He is nght in striking out at Y.'aste and inefficiency in all state services and inequi· ties in the welfare system. And he is especi.aUy right in calling for bipartisan cooperation in management of state affairs. But two vital questions remain unansw ered: -Specirically bow can services be cut enough to balance the budget without raising taxes? -I-low can state welfare expenditures be cut with- out throwing the burden back onto the counties, which means the property laxpeyer? Only three weeks ago. Orange County supervison faced up to a cut by tbe state of $941,000 in its share of the mental health budget. The county will provide $795,· 000 to keep essential services going despite the state's cut. Adding welfare costs would send property taxes farther into the confiscatory range -an intolerable situation. E1tli g btened Lawyers California's Public Utility Commission (PUC) has d rawn objections from an unexpected source as a result of it.s new requirement that all participant! in hearings be represented by legal counsel. however, that its listening time mlJht be reduced or better used if all participants were required to.be repre· sen!-ed by legal counsel. The california Trial Lawyers Association {CTLAl might have been expected io go along with the PUC position, representing as it does added bu'siness for CTLA members. Instead, CTLA officially opposes the PUC requirement CTLA President Thomas Anderson of Indio explain· ed the attitude of the 3,200 trial lawyers in his group's membership: "Th"ere is no lock on the expertise required in many ot the PUC areas. We welcome lbe support of intelligent lay representatives. . "This is a \fttally important area and a restriction of this tfpe i:!estroys the eCfectiveneu of the many lf:gi· t!mate c!aims of abUR, of both a consumer and an en-- vironmental nature. that these l1y groupa =tJiing· to the PUC's attention. Many small consuIQ:ei' g?OUJ>t!I · do not have legal representation and cannot afford. to bite it." CTLA's position reflects 1 vlew)M)iol shared by many co1nmissions and congressional committees in W14hington -that knowledgeable., attJCulate laymen are often much more effective advocates than the leglllly trained (and more inhibited). The PUC requirement should be con'signed to the wastebasket. . Rubella Roundup Da y Forty special rubella ("German measles'') immuni· zation clinics at city school sites will be available free to boys and girls ages l through 12 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. • • Laymen appearing before public bodies, including PUC. are not always supplicants who ask submissively for attention to their problems and points of view. They often enough allow their emotions to submerge reason, and they may ramble. Jan. 31. · While symptoms are mild and duration short, ru· bella can have serious resulto;. Phone the county health department (834-3131) for the location nearest your home -and volunteer to help ,if you can. 'As far n I'm concerned, son,. that driver's license i: only good in Washington.' But so do some lawyers. The PUC seemed to think, ltacompeteracy atad ltaeffieiency Blue Cross Costs Explode WASHINGTON -When a fa mily ii hit by a $10,000 ;ttu-ee-month bill, aa the cheery com mercla1s suggest, Blue Cross is the next best thing to a Daddy Warbucks check. Blue Cross, for all i1s institutional incompetencies. cao be counted on lo pay a share of the bill But lately, its costa have exploded to the point that the individual policyholders can hardly afford the premium. The disastrous prem.luma, up 100 per· cent in the last few years, have also hit buainess finru and rovemment aieO- cles wh.Jch he.Ip fj. nance their employ· es" health insurance. The higher pay. ment.s merely have been passed on \o the public in the form of high.er prices and laxes. 1n this way, ~ Blue Cross rises have hit everyone. LAST YEAR AWNE. Blue Cross premiums went up 3S percent in some areas. The increases were caused largely by administrative fouJ·Up8 . Our own in- vestigation uncovered incompetency and Inefficiency in Blue Cross operat ioru; in "'ashinglon. D.C., and Richmond. Va. Our findings are all loo typical, \\"e un- One welfare patient, a badly burned man near de.iith. from his hidl':QUS in· juries, was under constant care for th.ree days, his bill was more than ,2,500. ~ only $114 of which was covered by the Welfare Oeparbnent. The re!t of the bill was -simply added to the charges against Blue Cross and the others. derstand, of the way most Blue Cross plans are administered across the coun· try. We found hospitals charging for drugs, upensive treatments and special care. which patients never received. The costs ""'ere paid, invariably without 21 murmur from Blue Cross. Other hospi~J cost.!, incredibly high for non.profit lnstitutioM, also push up prena.lurrui. Example: At the Washington Hospital Cer'lter. certainly not the most expensive hospital in the country, the ten anesthkllogists were Paid $842,810 in ·1969, an average of $84,281 eac h. The seven radiologists got '479,907 or $68.568 each. The pathologists averaged $67,857 apiece. NOT ONLY DOES Blue Cross pay these fancy fees for its own members, but the policyholders' premiums are also used to help cover welfare costs. \Vashington's Welfare Department, for example. has been paying $38 a day for its hospjtal patients. But the c~ts to the hospital have bee.n runn ing Sfl. The difference of S54 a day for every v.'elfare patient was paid by Blue Cross. other insurance firms and the paying patients. '1'he problem in most states is that there's no real control over Blue Cross premiums. Some slates explicity ex~pt Blue Cross from control. Hospital rates are also unregulated and. therefore. unsupervised. Result: hospital rates soar, Blue Cross pays them without a squawk. and the premiums go up and up. FOOTNOTE: A fuD-<lress investigation of Blue Cross, long overdue on Capitol Hill. has been scheduled after this month by Michigan Sen. Phil Hart's Anli·Tru3t Subcomn1ittee. Red-haired subcommittee attorney Dorothy Goodwin has been in IUld out of hospitals like a chronic hypochondriac for more than a year, But she has been diagnosing the hospitals instead or the other way around . The subcommittee has also subpoenaed records from national Blue Cross head- quarters in Chicago and from Blue Cross groups in California, Florida, Michigan, Texas. Virginia and Washington, D.C. . At least 12 Blue Cross witneSBes ha ve been summoned to appear al hearings beginning January 26. It Won't Be All Fun in '71 What lies ahead In 1971 1 Well, it won't all be fUn. A glance: lnto the old crystal ball suggests thal what this ye.llr may well need most is a good cheerleader. On the econorn ic front, lhe picture Is somewhat cloudy. Look ror these lhing11 to happen : The. rich wlll look gloomy and make their yachts last another year in order not lo naunl their wealth. The poor will look less hope- tul and be c ome more gropeful. And the middJe class, the: baetbone of the na- Uoa, will go through the wringer even inore., although for · r I yean It has felt as I aqueezed as a fat lady in a phone booth. PEOPLE WHO GET a pay hike will ftnd Jt wiped out as the price or steak and love oest.a goes up. 'Those who cton't get a raise will get healthier and JD1Je weta:ht as they find themaelves Jeu ibJe to afford to eat ·so high oa lht ' lloc. • ----- Thursday, January It, 1971 I'll< ldltorial -of ti.. Dour ""°' serkf to '""'°"" and Jti,.,... olOk ,....i.,., 1>r ,,.., ... ung thu _._,.., opltdoru """ CO!"' tnento:r.p °" topkl Of inUrcfC """ iignlfUxmCI, "' pnn>fdi!lg • tonw for tM •'I"•"'°" of .. , rndMr' ~ """ "' pr.,•tllittglM-...W. poinU of Ill~ -'°'" ""4 ipolraiin .. toplct of U.. .dov. i ~ llobolt N. ·Weld,· l'alllllber I, • \ ,,_,,._ -,,,_ More popcorn \\'ill be popped In the home as folks watch clean old movies on television because they can't ante up the dough to see naughty new movies in the film houses. The government will promisa to live within a miniskirt budget but wlll wind up with a maxiskirt one, as usual. On the lnt.emational political front: FROM INOONF.SIA mon: and more U.S. soldiers will be sent home suffering from drug addiction and fewer and fewer with battle wounds. Russia and America "'ill agree In continue to disagree, but less violently. They will also gign a }oint pact to keep penguins from extinction, a pact which will be. hailed by American diplomats as one holding vast potential in initiating joint J1ction in other fields. Soviet diplomali ~·ill promptly deny this. Red China wlll announce It has a secret weapon so terrible that It maket all war impractical and Obsolete. 1'he U.S. Defense Department will promptly reply that it ha.I had I.he wes~ all along but has heJitated to UR It becAule the cost or repairing a destroyed China is more than U.S. t1J:payer1 could 11.11- taln. IN PARIS, Ole French Academy, com· plabainc that thelr naUve tongue is in denier of becoming c om p I e t e I y Americonlud. win odd -.....i •nd two-to the Frnch ...... , •. Ill ~Inola, 'll>o p......,.nt will :.Qu.-tes ' . ' -'llapo.0, S.F. ---'"1)11 molutJon will nol happen and (tho lllliilOf.'""'"' .... lotln& houri, -th• .,id .,e..n of their liYfll thlt ahouJd be Ulld for JeamJn&." announce it has foiled an Amer ican CIA plot to train \\'erewolves to prey on Comm unist leaders there. In Washington, the CIA will break its traditional silence by denying there even is a country called Transylvania and expressing doubt that even trained werev.•olves make trustworthy agents. "Vampires, yes,·• said a spokesman, "Werewolves, no." FUR111ER FORECASTS: Sports: In pro football , the: Super Bowl score: Baltimore Colt& 2tl, Dallas Cowboys 17. Science: A silent but crunchy new breakfast food will appear on the market. Tl will be rejected by husbMds who prtfer 1 noisy breakfast food so they can~t hear their wives. Pol\uUon : the program again!t it will falter. because. the more old pollull.nts are discarded, lhe more new pollutanta are: devised to Lake their place. The women 's liberation front will taln a signUicant victory against 1 e x discrimination by forcing Rll comp.antes holdlng government contracl..s to put both '"His" and ''Her" 1igns on thtlr washrooms. Sure looks like an interesting year, doesn't it? Dea r Gloon1y Gus: The circw at the Oranp County Bovd cl Supe;vl!ors opened up jmt the way tt bod been ballyhoc>«I -with a three-man Oown Show! -0. M. M. Tiii• liliMlfflt """""" ,.....,... ....... ...\ ......... --............ ... nw "' -" " •11M111 .... Dtllr P4191 • I I . ' Angela Davis: Cornmunists Raising Funds WA SHlNGTON -Tht Communist Party·USA and lhe Marxist-revolutionary Black Panther Party are vigorously pressing nationwide drives lo raise large ''defe~" funds for t.wo of their leading personalities -both black. They are Angela Davis, avowed Com· munisl and Black Panlh~ partisan fac- ing trial in Alarin County, Calif., on charges of murder, kidnapping and co~ spiracy: and Huey Newton. supreme commander, of the Black Panther Party, \\'hose retrial for ' ' v o I u n t a r y manslaughter" Involving the killing of a policeman was scheduled to open in Alameda County, Calif.,' January It. Spearheading the money campaign for Miss Davis is Franklin Alexander, direc· 1or of Negro affairs of the Southern California Communist District. Al~t OF THE so-called "Dollars for Angela Drive" is lo raise $250.000 for ball purposes. The court effort to gain her release will be vigorously resisted by the district attorney, Jf the bond maneuver sw:ceeds, it i.s expected to be at least $250,000-hence the Communists· goal. To obtain funds for Huey Newton's large battery of attorneys and olher legal c08ts. the Black Panther Party is 7.eroing in on leading universities. BPP chapters and support.er s throughout the country ha ve been directed to pressure educational in· !'ltitutlon!I to set up lecture engagements for Newton at a minimum fee of $2,500 plus expenses. In 1967, the Panther chlef was con· victed in the slaying of an Oakland, CalU., policeman. He was sentenced to • long prl!on term which he was serving wh"i!n the verdict was reversed on technical grounds and a rel.rial ordered He was releued on bond with no travel re1trlclions. JllBJ DD\ECTOR J. Edgar Hoover. in le3tlfying before a House Appropriation! subctlmmlttee. asserted that "top Blade Panther Party leaders almost without e1ttplion have been involved in crimes of violence." Ne\ltiOn was cited as 1 Caphic Instance. "Panthers have been dittct.ly responsi· ble for killing 11 police officers and wounding 64 others," Hoover told the legislators. "l!I the past several years, the Black Panther Party has been In- volved In gun batUes with local police on a number or occalk>ns. Since August nf this year. there have been fol.Ir such instances in Philadelphia, Toledo. New Orleans and Detroit." The FBl Dl.rtctor al!o stre5'td IS highly significant tha t the Black Panthers now have ''substantial connections-with host lie foreign elements." TllESE WERE pinpointed as the . "f.ommunist regime ln .N1¥'th Koce• and Arab turorlall 111 AJacria." Elucldalln& further In ........ to ~ . .., n.p. John Rooney, O.N.Y.. :Mlboom.mlttee chairman, Hoover l&ld : "Arab peni]lu and other Arab elementJ rtportedly are heavily tubsldlz. tng the Pantblra and a new •tntetnaUonal offlct' of the Black Panther Party hss lust been opened in Al.Ciera under the c~dcrshlp Qf Eldridge Cl~ver, another ,Black P.intl*r-tulkfYa." .,_ s. Alk• ud JoU A. Goldsmlllt Common Faults In Our Driving One of my sons Is going to start driving lhis year, so the other day 1 pi cked up a copy of "The Safe Driving Handbook," which is based on the trainini program developed for the U.S. Air Force. Looking through the book before I gave it to him, J w.U surprised (and more than a little disconcerted) at the things I didn't know. or hadn't thought about, evtn though I've been driving a car for 35 years. For instance, turn- ing at random t{) page S2, I glimpsed the heading: "'l'wo Common Errors in Stopping for a Light:• showing two mistakes you can n1ake while standing still! "WHEN STOPPING for a light," the book reminds us. "it is potentially dangerous to have your wheels turned to the left. If hit from behind, you coold be pushed into Qncom ing traffic. You ma y want to turn left \vhen the light changes, but It is poor policy to start with anything but straight wheels.·· Another error that had not occurred to me is explained th.is "'ay· "A much more common accident occur!! lo the man who stops al a light, decides he is over the \\"hitc line. and backs up a litt le. Th.en he forgets tbot his gearshitl ii; now in revene. The light change!'>, he stens on the gas. and plows into lhe car behind him. It happens every day.'" MANY DRIVERS (even •·experienced" ones) don't know that gelling on to a freeway is qu ite dtfferent from gelling on to an ordinary busy roadway. On the ordinary roadway, you slow down as you get on to it -but on a freeway, you are supposed to do just the opposite. \Vhen you cnler the access lane. you should speed up until your speed malche~ lhe freeway traffic speed. Another common fault on freeway~ Is the fa ilure lo recognize that going slow is fully All dangerous as going too fasL As the handbook points ou1, "nol many persons realize that you In~ crease your chances of· having an ar.· <"ident if you are going 20 percent 1lo•·er than the rest of the traffic ." AND, WHILE 1'10ST drivers know enou~:1 to lurn down their "brighls" when they 11re ;1pproaching you at night, onlv a su1all percentage remembers to do· the same when they are Following vou on a crowded freeway. Dazzling 'lights in your rear-view mirro r are a ml'f1ace lo safe driving, and only the overland truck drive rs seem to handle their lights properly. On SIX'Ond thought I'm going to keep d1e hook for a while and go through ii m_y~c\f. No man drives as well as h(' thinks he does, just as no man reall y pla l'S poker as well <is he thinks hf' dots. Before I try lo turn my son into a ci vilized and competent driver. J"rl be "'iscr to provide him with a model rather than with a book. My ths About Forests Myths die hard. Sometimes they can do a great deal or harm in the dying process. An official of 11. major timbe r company has described how widely-held myths about forests in the United States threaten both efficiet1l conservation anti util ization of the nation's m a fo r renewable ttSOUrce. Among the myths blasted by this timber official is the belief that when a small section of the forest ls harvested each year by Ulan instead of nature, it is iost forever , Actually , "Uie harvested. stagnant sec- tion of mature timber quickly becomes a green and growing new forest,'' pro- viding food ror w!ldllfe that a dying wildernes.111 ~lea. 1 ANOTllEll MYTH ls that tike!t forever hf p-ow •·new ltllf:. TM tlml>tr company t &fnclal aaya that mot.lern romilry CM now grow two forests in a man's llfetlme, while nature. without help, requ.lru two or three Lifetimu.. "We already are approachb1g,the.140-ye1or cycle. for merchantable timber," he "'YI· ' J. third popular myth Is the notion that old-growth limber ha., been tivina almost 1ince time bcg11.n. Thi.ii I~. perhap:'!, the most erroneous of all, Mut h "old-growth" limb« wasn "t yet in ex· lstence. wtlen ear1y pioneers br~ved the wildemess. Still another myth Is thpt trees - mature trMS -dn Ool tleed to be. U8l!d Mrcauae home" can be built of at.eel, 11lu1nlnum, plal\lir or Ct1ncrelc . However, unlike trees, the latter are nonrenewable reM>uttts and will aorne- day come lo an end·. THE m1BER company e:J:ecutive also pointed out just because forests are. "managed" lo altain greatest pro- ductivity. it does not mean they become. mere farms. Present-day timber con· servation offers the g r e a t e s t op- portunities for recreation and the regeneration or wildlife. Much is said about the. necessity &f keeping an open mind wilh respect to the far-reaching changes going on1 all around us. Nowhe.re is an open Mind mote imperative than in reachlni an undentandlng of modem for-! 1 I management, muftlple-me ind Con- servation . ~..;...-811 George --- Dur Goorge: • Don't you think It's a ahlmt wbat happened to the srut .rd of Amertcan11 c a I t e d u; cowpuncher? HISTOlllA(f . Dear' Historl&n: I didn't read abou~ it. However, rrn nol 'mt. all 10fthearted ·~ people who gO around punchlOJ lhose. p()Ot cow• and 1 hive .. idea it w11s jUstiOed. .... g ' g g I, n- c-.. w !, to g g a ,, p h ., n ,, n r. a .. so e 0- e p-• l y l'hn lnterlandi ""I wu hoping you weren't in I didn't want you to aee me like !is .. , " I ' CH.ECKi NG •UP• Washington Never Shook-He Bowed ONLY ONE out of every 52 new products turned out each year brings back a profit. You'll note the slot machine odds in Las Vegas are con- siderably better , . • DID I TELL YO U George Washington never shook hands with anybody during his eight years as President~ He bowed, instead W H E N POU.STERS in J a p a n recently asked numerous men there 'where they'd like to go, if anywhere, they chose the United States, Brazil and Red China, in thal order. "'HAT'S HARD lo figure out is how some popular phrases get turned inside out. For instance, "I could care Jess." that's common now, but all wrong. It started out, ''I CQUJdn't care less," and go it still should read, rightly. Another is. "Just like Grant took Richmond." an easy time of it. so to say. But history shows Grant took Richmond on!y wi th great difficulty , and originally that phrase described what was tedious. slow, costly. Den.ens cf these inside~ut e1pressioM around. Our Language man is collecting them. lT WAS NONE OTHER than old Lard Rosebery v.·ho said, "Nn man ever knows what true happiness is until he has got a complete set of false teeth and has lost all interest in the opposite sex." . . . JUST BECAUSE he"s got a red nose, you ought not accuse the old boy of drinking too much. Thal condition, known as acne rosacea, is sometimes brought on by nervous in- digestion, too. Or so say the medical fellows. CUSTOMER SERVICE "How many towns in this country ai'e called Pittsburg?'' A. Eight. plus Pittsburgh "'ilh an h in Pennsylvania ••. Q. "How many defendants, released on their recognizance, skip wt?" One in 50 fails to the trial. YOUNG MOTHERS i n miniskirts rarely develop back pains. Such is the contention of a British doctor. In picking up their offspring, h2 says, these mothers are forced by the short short sldrUi to bend at the knees., why they ought, instead of at the waist, whkh they ought ft9l. NATURE' OF YOUR EY~ 'I i3 such you tend to see a green light more quickly than • red light. Unfortunately, the origina1ors f>t the traffic signals weren't onto this. So they set it up just backwards. 'foo late now. Still, the eyesight specialists insist we'd have far fewer car wrecks if green stood for stop and red meant go. AS FAR AS art goes, it's un- known who originated music. poetry, painting. Who orig- inated the art of pan- tomime, however, is a matter of record. The old Roman Andronicus Livius. an actor. He turned up about 300 yea rs after Chrisl. Jn the middle of his highly promising career, he came down 'vith chronic laryngitis, so improvis~d. Your QUestlom and com- ments art' welcomed and will be USt'd in CHECKING UP wherever possiblt'. Please addressf01tr letters to L. M. Boy , P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif, Go Fieslat;oach 1971 DELUXE AIR CONDITIONED COACHES Charter '11als Bus To McDonnell Douttlas Area Code 213 678-3735 679-2591 1 HOO S.. PNlrlo An., Hew-Coif. HZH I ltaursdit, J•nuary 14, 1971 DAILY PILOT ,, Men Volunteer to Repla~e U.S. POWs SAN ·DIEGO (AP) A Oight ins,tructoc, a busin.man :aQd two ltacher1 say they have volunteered lo ~Jact U.S. tervlce men held by North Vletnam and that 63 other Americans have agreed to join the project. "If North Vietnam .agrees,'' J . Paul .Adkirui said Monday In an interview. "it might be willing to do this on an annual basis, letUng more aod more American civilians volunteer, and even,tually let everybod y go free ." Adkins, a teacher in a Roman Catholic School at Sa n Luis Rey, Calif., first broach- ed the idea shortly belore Christmas: Since then, he say! tht others have volunteered froin throughout So u t h e. r n California. Many are (Jlarried, he says, and their war at- titudes range from hawkish to dove. As many as 50,000 men throughout the United States would do lhe same . to sho1v they are still capable of self- sacrifice Adkins believes. The group calls i t s e I f Replacements , for POWs and maintain:! a headquarters in Oceanside. Calif., w h e r e 2666 HARBOR BLVD. ' 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS -9 to 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 to 6 ~,,#"'ilillCIMI Em"AlllMllT Cllllll -~ ------. • GARAGE DOOR BOnOM O Stop th• d r•ft, prolt d th• coold wit on yo111 fu•I bitl1. 0 Now you c;•n put !lot pcol ttbl. in lh• 9ttt9• 01" wh•!•••r. 199 FELT DOOR BOnOM (,~O .I DON 'T \ WANT NONE 0 Som•th1nq lnr th• f<ont don• 1110. Iv th• limt w~ fiftith vovr hnu1e .,.;11 be l!9ht •••drum. 0 We hop• th1t do.,"·1 tpplv lo the m•n of th • hou•• loo. FOAM AND WOOD DOOR KIT 0 '. 0 r~;, you -lon't , •• tht 11ripp;"9 fl !ht wood i1 fo•m b1co•ed. O A latlt 1n1uier ift.t1tl1tion for vnu fol~• .. ho ju1I 9ofl1 bt d!fftr•nl. Full ~;1 for ••tft9• door. 0 Now c11I off ju1t wh1f you "'" for '"• 1id• cf th• door or ptrl tf t wi.,dow. Or to ptd •Omt lhi"9 •O it doo111'! 1l1m 10 leu-4. I 'ut 1ome '" your 1hoo1 111d 1prin9 off to wor• i" tho "'or11i119,) CLAMP • un U11 it"°"' to 1pel 1ir l11k1 1r1und doers olHI th ... "'' it it1 .... '""""' Mt-• little cookollt llptl119, lo"t cOf'i •"" ll{Ullll cl1mp hold• 1llf!o1t '"ywhlf"•, ; AdklM and two of his thret "l tboughl II I'm ool dilldren Jtve. rerpomible, wbc is'" He met Suoday in San Diego "When l first told my wife now she actepts lhe idea." Adldm uya ht thinks North Vietnam ~lfl agree beca use so m1ny priJOOers have ~ COQ!tned1 for many yean aid' "suecellfully. lnd octrin•ted. •· with three other volunteers about volunteering,'' she e1· ------~-----~-~------- -Bud Boyles, a businessman; ploded, said Van Saanen. ''Bui Vic Van Saanen, a flight in-- s tru c tor fot Pacific Southwest Airlines, an d Harold Mosu, a teacher al Carlsbad, Calif. ;'Slnce I had been teaching kids for ye4rs Lo be unselfish, I decided to volunteer)" ex- plains Moses. who senied in lhe ~nny Medical Corps dur- ing Wocld War II. ''l have always believed in the brotherhood of man," said Boyles. More Security With FALSE TEETH CREDIT COURSE for ben~eri, reteitetl\ medical, en~ etl credit office penonnel. ' l'lllDAT, J~NUART 15, 1•71-7. P·'"· ,. 10 p.m. H_,eltM I•, N_,.rt ........ c.atfe .... ...; SI0.00 ,... penu IJK1""9 M....i. Please r99ilter at doctr -6:30-7:00 p.m. 3 EASY PIECES •. MANZANITA LOG SET 0 Thi1 i1 • .. ••utv. lif.ttimt loqi 11•v•t but" out. A11d the problem of mtu •ftd 11h~1 will e"ly bt t memory. 0 Got th• 1e"d t.1v to 111 th, 111"''' ,,.,, lhru 11lc1 ind ort"9Y· 3411 7 Pc. BLACK & BRASS Fl RESET 0 A lov11y 11!. The pul·o·lftt !lc curl1in, lhe flltlcohin9 pok1f, 1ho•tl, bru1h, ind ..... d. 0 The fro"t in bl1c:I with brt lf tri .... D The hock ynu ••V· 2488 CAULKING GUN ••• ... 'fo., ·-~--..:.; 0 Squir t tho1• !.,.,,, 1poh 1rnu11d the firop!1c•, l\.1 chi m11ty, 1h1 po•ch. 1nvwh••• wtler "' w;11d tom•• in. O Htndl., ,n th • 1l111d1rd c1rtrid9e• inc ludi119 P•"eli"9 well boflcl, CAULKING TUBE 0 And 1ptt ki"9 ef t+io11 1tond1rd c1rtrid911, thit tub• of 9oop m•ko1 up the •••· 0 Threw1w1y tube, 110 refill 111011 o"4 ih cli11p '""uth loo • 1.9c APPLIANCE ROi.LIRS -··. I CJ 'Th• .. , t• ..... k. it ...... kr .,.., "l'lf• te rill tb• ff14fl .rut. 0 lfyH're ... _h'"ffrlfh TV tk 1111y ,.t • 11t •"'" ... owl .. .., •. '"· 111 3 PC. BLACK & BRASS FIRE SET 0 Ou" i1 , lit!lt bil btll•• 1h11t t+.1if\. !Now 1vervo111 will wortd er w~o lh1y .,,.1 0 Gol lhe cl,,,.. pull c;u.+1i111, tht nice fili9r1od l1 onl, '"" iht tr11lthi"t po~•• •11d b<u ....... F11e 1l111di119, 10 you c1n pul 1wty tht drill. Joo. 88 SATIN BLACK LOG BASKET D Uttle.fttl to held tho 109• up off th• floor. I Would.,'! win! !hem to 91! cl irtw, ~ou k .. ow. 0 Holcl1 quii• • lo1cl, j111f 1;~ ..... u .. cl• wh111 he left th• 11100" Ir• th1m th e•• d1y1. 411 FURNACE FILTERS .. [j Fit11r9l1u bndv. t ••ng 1 of 111 tho popult r 1i1••· 0 A"cl m•~ wit!. th • unpopul1r 1i11 , I"• II Ft. 111"1 • sk in"Y h1u1t, •o I 901 • 1ki11nv f ...... , •. 1 lA. PORTABLE HEATER 0 T 1kl ii 1ny,..h1••. bvt if vou'•• 11 the b11ch. don't qi•• "' th 1t 'wf11t h1ppen1d' look. Mtny coil1 '"d • p•wo•ful f,., lo 91f It 1tou11d . Now 11.e do9flou11 won't be 10 b11d, J im. 1288 OR MORE RDWQOO : - OCTA~OJJ. ;!,""I W1'm1cl1 f hit h~r•. ,A.JI t~e 11•1 i" tlocl. 1uch Ii"'!"•· If you buv pl111t( 111d wlio do11"'I, thl1 ' 1poc1'1I m1y itl•••• If yoe 4,.,'1 IU11-h 9•'"'"· yo11"•• ml11 iftt 10-tl1i"t · ~ . 10•· ... Price t.75; ........... _: ........ .:.._ ...... .l.JI IZ" ......... lU .. -... ····--·-··-----'-'AI 14"11 ... Prtce 1:tS.~ .. :_ ................................ _ .. 1.t1 16" .... Prtco 4.U .. :,.: .... : ................ ,_ ....... _ .. .ZAt 1r ......... 1.14 •. :-............. ····------...... J.u ZO" .... ""le• 1:14 ... -........................ ---... 4.JI Z4' •-l'rtf• 11.ts ........ : .. _____ ....... -. I A .. ~ ' ' -'.' , I' .f I -.. ,"' -i-·. --.. v 1 ' '{ ti " '• :• I ...... --' -........ ~,·- I Jobless Pa y lncreoses Requested . SACRAMENTO (UPI) Assembly Speaker Bob 1.1orel· ti, noting the changing com· plex1on of the jobless, has proposed a "substantial'' in- crease in une mploymenl in- surnnec benefits 1'he Dcn1ocratic legislator \\'edncsday pointed out a "new class" of unemployed persons has developed in California, many highly skilled aerospace wor kers who earfled $25,000 to $35.000 before losing their jobs "People who have been working for the last lO years and have leamed to Jive on a certain income are now knocked do\\'n to $65 a week," he said ... ! couldn't live on that and neither can they." '-1oretti declined to list a specific l,oost in d o I I a r amounts. But he s a I d "substantial" increases are needed in unemployment in- surance. disability insurance and v.·orkn1en's compensation programs. Me said such legis- lation will be introduced. River-saving Bill Presen led ThundlJ, .hnulr'J 14, 1971 •Poor Policlf Reagan Reported Lottery Opponent SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan was reported opposed today to the relaxalioo of antigambling Jaws as a method of raising state revenue but un- committed on legalizaUon of off-track betting. "We just are not in favor of that kind of revenue," said State Fina nce Director Verne Orr of legislation Ui establish a slatt-regol.ated lottery t1 help finance educaliOI!. A spokesman for Reagan said the governor viewed a lottery or other liberalization of legalized gambling such as horse racing "e.1tremely poor tai: policy." The one po!Sible exception, reported Associate P r e. s ! Secretary Edwin Gray, would be adoption of off-track wagering on horses. He said the governor "has taken no CTA Chief Levels Blast At Governor Negro Gang Opens Fire On Officers SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A group of five Negroes open- ed fire without warning Wed· nesday night in the Haight- AJhbury DW.rict, wounding two policemen who w e r e BURLINGAJ\tE (UPI) -checking for stolen automo- Gov. Ronald Reagan deserves biles. a n ' ' F ' ' g r a d e f o r Both patrolmen were listed •·respouibility," the Pre!ident u being in satisfactory condi- ()f the Califomia Teachers Uon at San Francisco General Association declares. Ho.spit.al, but an hours-Jong Margaret L. Lemmer of search failed to capture any Lemon Grove, the president, of the suspects. called on the go vernor HGl!lpltallzedPatrolman Wednesday to document his Robert Martinez, 23, said: assertion that "tenure has they "were walking down the become a haven for In-street and all of a sudden competent teac hers.•• one started toward the car ''No competent teacher or I h h d " . . . saw e a a gun. professor in California's public "All or a sudden, he wa s schools or colleges would shooting. We started looking pennit a student to make such from side to side. We didn't sweeping allegations in a com-know what to do. My partner poslticn or reseerch papU •• d ,._ " SACRAMENTO (UPl )-Sen. without some kind of docu--;;;';;;,..;;;ppe=;;;°"="=~;;;gu=. ==;;;;;,! Peter ll Behr IR-Mlll Valley ) mentation," Mrs. Lemmer IP today proposed legislation to said. THINK SALE preserve three northern Cali-The governor made his rornia Yiild rivers -the Eel, assertion in Thursday's slale- • Trinity and Klamath. of-the-state message. The bill, the first measure Maki11g the assert Ion · presented by the freshman without documentation rate11 lawmaker. came in the wake an "F" in responsibility, Mrs. of a state water resources de-Lemmer contended. THINK '.J ,• Jt41n tntd partmenl report 'A'hich said ''Mr. Reagan should ht. ad· last week that the state wat-monlshing school officials to er project can produce enough •.• get rid of a re w in· walet' to mt.oet Cali(omiB's competents instead of giviJlg needs for the next two decades a whole profession a "black WllTCLIP!f PLAZA dd 1111t a '".....,.--' 1 .. ~~ without new north coast dam~s:·_:•'.'.Y'..'.':_· "~sh:'e~a~:'.:e<l~·----~=========='I t a antage sale days. ls129aa SAVE S45 01 Fer-•" !he Singer SeMng raw .-.sl)OU,SOOv.!lilePages u.-s1NGEA COMPANY. . _,~-~ COSTA MBA • ' . HUNTIN•TON llACM ·~J.:u'• r ... ~ ..... It n• ............. .,.,., ... .._. (Htt Ptlu "' ..... Ctillttr ..... "'2:j.,. ..... 'lllo--~Qd-..... ,.. __ _ ... .... r5ll' budgrll. SINGER I OU••• 6AlDDC •IOYI '"""-""' '"".ie:t ••• ..,.~..,.. O••llH C-ty P .. tt c ...... ~ Ecuador Seizes San Diego-liased Fishing Vessel SAVE LAKEWOOD 4433 C1ndl1wo9d Avenue c.-....... (aetou from Llktwood c.nt1r) . Pllono: 1134-41:14 America's western coast on several occasions. Both Seizure •nd fining of U.S. countries claim 200-mile coast· fishing boat! by Ecuador and al limits. The United States Peru bas atrained their rela· and mosl other nations honor tions with the United States a 12-mile limit. • Aeldcf'eat no-Iron King or Queen size top sheet • Fleldcrest no-Iron King or Queen size 11!\ed bot!om shaet • 2 King or Queen siza bolster pillows -2 pillow cases • King or Queen size mattress pad • King or Queen size metal lrame on easy-rolling c11s1ers. DOUBLE . BONUS · -_-· King or Queen: headboard plu' quilted bedspread Twin Of Full: piastic headboard and metal frame on easy-rolling casters 95 SAVE FREE IMMEDIATE !>!UVEllY ORTH IC 1WIN OR FUU. 1111 ........... _.. Rog,S1118'1of.h ___ .!9 __ ........... ., .... '.'.' .... ,.. -.. -.,.., quellty ....... oflll IHl:hf~ OeNo, .. untcp. .,..., .. 0!1ho'• own Cfvwn RM Oll"IWr 90pport ...._ ""'':.~=:;'.~= =~ .... -of Mattress Specialists SANTA ANA and FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. ANAHEIM 1811 Wast Lincoln Avenue Between Euclld and Brookhur1t Av1nufs Just Easl of F1d Mert {corn1r of Edinger') Next to Zody'• Phone : 939.4570 Phone: 77~2590 Image Changing Private Eye Lile Not All Glitters FRESNO IAP) -The to change the public image of California Association of a private detective. Licensed lnYestigators wants They no longer go sleuthing around in a trencll coat, peek- ing through key holes and kicking in doors ~ if they eYer did such things. Aub(ey Carter, chairman of the slate association, said Tuesday. The life of today's private eye. says Aubrey . is subdued . often even dull. Carter, o"·ner of a f'resno investigation firm, says the st.ate organization he head:i1 is n1ounling an educational campaign designed to put a bullet through lhe profe!'ision's f'A.JtJJL\' CJRClTS by Bii Keane --- "Close that doo r Bo~l We're no~ tryin ' to ' -'-ood 'kn " heat the whol e neig born 1 y <:TW. cloak·and-dagger image. ---------------------Sam Spade, lhe king of the - DAIL V PILCYT 9 One Who Came Ba~k Donte Deserter Found Hypoc ris y in Cauada; Wuuts 2nd Tr y BALTIMORE /AP) -"Tht· Jn an in'.erview granted hung all flVer. and a ha !(-Pulriloll :ii.id. "I really put guy! up~there in Canada. lhc before he re-turned to the base, dozen guy! and Wet-girls. :cl-On'e seriou.s thou&hl.. lo my draft evaders and deserter!'i, Polston, 19, gestured toward f could smell lhe pol and tuture. dldn't believe I'd come back," h I 1 his Canadian·born \v1fe or one the place wal'I litttf':red "''ilh· "Tht-IJr!I! drafl Of I e e te:r "Their atlitude ls it's not Year. "She. h11d a lol to empty winr bottles," Polston I sent lO the President wa., their war and they swear tJH!y'll never come home. do wilh my ('tHllin~ bllck," said. written then," "l doubt it. Why? Because he said. In December 1009. Polston The l'olstons left Toront11 in the next breath they point Polston said his desertion married Lorrairie P rovost. a and muvcd 10 with ~1r~. out that a general amnesty from the Marine Air Facility waitress. l'olston's par<:nts in Niagara, \Vas granted guys Ii k e in Memphis. Tenn., in 1968 After the marriage hP Ont. themselves after the Korean was a spur-of·l.he--momenl became eligible to .seek ··1 had a hard t101t· forcing \\'ar" concludes Marine Pfc, decision. after he half-jokingly employment in Canada and 1nyself to make the fin al Virgil Ray Polston, who turn-requested a weekend pass that w11.s hired as a stock cl£>rk derision." he admitted. ed himself in to aulhoritie:i: was granted. and later as a tie salesman t-.irs Polston S<lid sht never al the Marine base in Quan-··1 hilchhiked to Wa~ington. Last August, his application disagreed w1th hi s wish to tico, Va. last week. talked to my mother and for vocational training in an return. becauSe "his peace or On Dec. 17, the Baltimorl' boughl an airline ticket to electronics school "·as ap-mind, if he could get ii by Evening Sun published a letter Toronto, he satd proved and h~ entered thr returning, would be mine ... from Polston to President Nix-Several wnks later ti.-next monlh. ~~lnally. they purchased bu'\ on. asking for a second chance said. he made contact with "It was about that time." tickets 10 Baltimore. "'ilh the military, The plea. lht Toronto Anti -Draft Com-•------------- which Polston said took thrtt mitlec, also headquarters for AM ERICA'S LARGEST r'AM I LV CLOTHING CHAIN months to complete, would be an undergrounrl organL~ation sent from the White House called the U11ion of An1erican radio detectives in the 1940s. and today 's passel o f television gumshoes would hardly qualify under today·s professional standards, he to the Pentagon and Marine Exiles. M • Ch T k Corps, 1 Nixon spokesman •'Tile office consists of three exico anges UC __:_"_;d_. ________ ,_r _fo_u_r room s. P"" s;gns 6u11 ttlai1nge·r John G. Barry has been named regional sales manager for the New York based Ithaca Gun Company for the we st· ern regio:i. Barry and his wife, Elaine. reside in Newport Beach. says. Carter said the s l a t e association, numbering 15,000 Concerning Draftees members, is working lo ,·ns•-·ctJ·on and devote 204 upgrade I i c en s i n g re· MEXICO CITY (A P) -The ., u quiremen\s of investigators government is making a hours to sports. civic in· struction and social work. and private security person-radical change in the training I In large cities the training ne · of Mexico·~ draftees, to ... ,-11 focus 00 spo<ls. ··we would like to make .. he Is . emphasize sports as well as "From tbis mass sports pro--t requiremen more slr1n- gent." he said in an in· military matters. gram will come many cham- lerviev;. •·we would like to All 18 year fllds have had pion s , •' sa ys Ge n . have a law on the books to attend 26 hours of military Hermanegild CUenca Diaz, wherein it would be a crime classes without pay. This was minister of defense. to operate as an investigator usually done by attending five-The country's ph ys i c a I or private guard without a hour meetings one day • y,·cel;. education instructor.!<' 'A'ill bt state license. for a year. 1nobiliied on Sundays to help ··The back g round 1 Under !he nev.• syslem, tile draftees. All available * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * MERCURY SAVINGS and loan association ~~~ ...... BUENA PARK Mercury Savings Bid(., Valley View 11 lincoln HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savinp Bldr., Edinger 11 Beach TUSTIN Mercury Savinrs Bldf .. Irvine Blvd. 1t Newport Ave. Chrysler Date Se t * * * * * ~ * * * * * * * * * * * * * personally like to see is heavy !'ilarling in htarch, the draftee aporl:i: fields iwll be at the emphasis on Eng Ii s h , will rece ive 52 hours' military military's disposition. ___ _ sociology, psychology, and li-•iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliittm•••lliiiliiiiii•••llliil•ii DETROIT (APl -, The United Auto \\lorkers union has issued a deadline lo the Chrysler Corp. giving the third largest automaker until 10 a .m. Jan. 19 to sign a new t:ontract or face a slrike. Th e UAW represents some 120.000 hourly rated a n d salaried v.·orkers at Chrysler. Leonard \Voodcock. UAW president also said Monday thal ··H they for ce a str ike no w s irnply for the pu rpose of reducing invenlory. when lhey y,•ant production, then lhis union will want to turn lhe tables." John Leary, Chrysler vice- president for adminislrallon. said the company is "not in- terested in haYutg a slrike" and denied thal the 80-day ~tockpile is a bargaining fac- tor. r SUITS formerly G.ntry Ltd. criminology." Hurting the private eye and his profession the most, said Carter, are the mail order schools sending out !jn badges and tertificates on a near assembly line basis. "'There are no schools wh ich can teach practical ap-- p!ication," he said firmly. "It is only through experience lhat one can leam. And it lakes a lot of that."' Carter said the super sleuth image of private eyes which has been cultivated b y television and radio i!'i h ard to crack, especially the popularized idea that the detective is always one step ahead of the police. In real life. said Carter, the investigator is another set of eyes and ears for law en· forcement -or should be. J"hon• 540-1500 THURSDAY -FRIDAY· SATURDAY ONLY DOUBLE BREASTED MEN'S SUITS Values to $140 559 Sln9le 8reastetl • • •• • • $39 .~ u,. You r 81n~Amerie1rd -Ma ster Cherg• ()PIN DAILY t :JO ..... • i p.m. MOft., Tlluri., Prf, 'tll 9 HARBOR SHOPPIN~ CENTER MALL Harbor Blvd. at Wilton St. Costa M9H - ' HOURS: Monday-Friday-9 o.m.-9 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m.·6 p.m. Sunday-10 a.m.-4 p.m. ~-1199 36-CUP PARTY PERK Automatically brews 12 to 36 cu ps of coffee. lights signal w~en re1dy and keeps it hot! DEOURA 69~ SPRAY ENAMEL TouRh. durable protect ion ... indoors or out. All <01,,,, 57:. Flberrlas AIR FILTERS Cort<M 1dht1ivt catcl'lts and holds more dust HtgchJoro- phent additivt. In five siles. 39c &-FOOT TAPE RULE While flnbhod •llel blt<lt cl""1 mkod for ..., '1od· tn1. Dml>ll, plnllc cne. llilLltlng 997 FAN·FORCED HEATER 4500 BTU electric heater has automatic thermostat & tip- over safety S'Nilch. 1320 w, 99c Commander Flnhliabt Triple-plate, chrome finiih metal me. Red ufety alow lens rinr. With 2 batteries. 188 LEATHER GLOVES . -· ---Wtl l ~ t ""'Olltt Bucktan split cowhide l"tl!tr with tun red fleece linina. Gunn cut; ball/bpe f1St!ner. Sll\Nll Y 16' PDW1111Ck' RULE Has -"'""'-l4" yollow bllde locks for """"'llt<I m11SU1i~ Wiffl belt clip. • STEAM anu DRY /ROI REGULAR 1.19 & 1.49 PLASTIC WASTEBASKETS Noiselree, dentproof! Choose the 28-Qt. utility size that holds 1 Rrocery-bar as a liner: or an embossed style in H & G colors: lJYz. qt "leather-look" square, IS·Qt round or rectanRul;i r. 999 %" ELECTRIC DRILL H1nd!es too(her jobs! Double reduction cur system. 1000 RPM , 1/7 H.P., 2 amp. motor. .. 3.77 PLASTIC BATH SEAT Solid plntic whita 1111rb!t ... won't peel off, dent or chip. Full cover; conce1/ed hinges. • -A~. 1188 WORK SHOP LIGHT Completely wired ••• just plug in! IJ x 48'1 White refleclor. fluorescent bulbs ertra. HEMCO 399 Wall DIMMER SWITCH Dial •rrt ltvel of mood lithtinr you want! Repl1ces orifiMry switch in minutes. LA-&oo l LOOKfOR 1HESPECIAL TAGS! MEN'S QUALITY TAILORED SUITS dacron ® & worsteds 36 reg. 37.95 all wool worsteds 96 and up regul,arly 49.95 and up ' ' Year-round Dacron polyester and wool worsteds ••• pure virgin wool wOr$teds in this outstanding !Jclection! Two and three button single-breasted models; sizes for regulars, shorts, longs. Hurry in, snap up the savings! OUI LOW NICIS IHCUIOI COM~UTI AL111ATIOHS ' ' j • II OPIN SUNDAY 11 . 5 ••• .' COSTA MESA-1601 Newport Blvd. at 16tli l GARDEN GROVE -1237i· Gorden Grovo llv~. ' ' " JO DAILY PllOI i' I ' ' SEE lOUR SIU HERl? 12' x 10' 12'x 11' 12' x 12' 12'x13' 12' x 13'6'' 12'x15' i" . ' -. • t . , ENJOY BETTER LIVING WITH GRANTS CREDIT s.;c, SPllilfK. •smw• 111 RITUllD WALllUT FllllSH ''<; ,, • 9-clrow ... triple dr-.tMr bo1e ,'i ' • Mirror • Qu .. Mn panel Vll ! Madboanl • 2 ioommodr; Sale Tltur~ay, Januar1 14, 1971 Special Purchase . ' BLAST OFF TO BIG SAVINGS ON HOME FURNISHINGS NOW!! Sale •nd our delivery man will take your old r~ frlgerator to yovr uti14 ity ar"I SALE $294 BUY llOW! SAVE $60 16-CU. FT. FROST ·FREE REFRIGEUTOR • WlllM • Copperton• • Avocado • Harve1t Gold Two-door refrigerator/free?.er with automatic ice maker! Shop anytime, 11lore more frozen meat and vegetables. Organize food storage for efficiency. 6-PUSH aunoN ELEaRIC DRYER SALE$163 Has 6-minut.e cool down for Penn11- nent Press, 3 automatic 10'tting1, 100 minute timer for heavier item11. G•• dryer Reg $204 .... IA.LI $193 Wllite • Coppertone • AYoclllt • Mll"ftsl &old DELUXE 4-CYCLE WASHER SALE$203 Finger touch fabrio selection (JOal, delicate, regular and Perm11nent Prelll!I cycles). Power drain and 1u- pcr·eftic1ent rinse system. Large tub! SALE s397 7 PIECE DINETTE SET llCHLT 11X1UHD WHITt UPMOl.S1llT OfP5I! IS SMOOTH MCI FIAMIS AND "MAUUllDD" OCTA!iON TAIU TOI' $78 BIGGEST PlaURE MADE GIAIT 25" ultra·brite SClla The color T\1' witluiow brighLn..., ,,.,,..,Jor ••• - larger aize! 25" diagonallylDeaauted sc:reeDwithaquared co men ••• so you ll!6 AU the picture. Lawmaker Seeking Hitchhiking Ban SACRAfl.tEI\'TO (UPI) -Sen. John A. Nejedly Tuesday introduced a bill banning hitchhiking in California, which he said has become a major contributor to rape and assault crimes. "J'm not saying I'm against hitchhikers," said the Wal- nut Creek Republican, y.•bo admitted to doing so me thumb- ing in his day. "But we have a problem," He took a "wild guess" saying there are now between 50,000 and 60,000 persons who use hitchhiking as their regular mode of transportation. The measure, however, would permit hitchhiking at specifically designated places. The lawmaker said such places now exist at some military installations. Hitchhiking is now legal as long as it is not done on freeways or their approaches. S1nooth Sailing Navigatio1i Aids Hailed PALO ALTO (AP) -The navigator or 1,000 years ago and most of his cou nterparts today -would be staggered by a system or super-naviga- tion being used ily a relative handful of ships today. Based on orbiting Transit satellites, the new breed of navigator steps up to a slick- 1ooking machine, as his ship pitches and rolls somewhere on 11 dark sea, and read in· stantly whe re he is-within 150 feet. The navigator of old , with his astrolabe and magnetic compass, might be able to find where he was within 100 miles. And most navigators today w~uld consider a ~ile quite good enough on the high seas. According to lhe Hewlett- Packard Co., more than 60 ship-board nagivalion systems, built and programmed by r..1agnnvox and most of them oontrolled by Hewlett.-Packard " min.icomputers," are now In use. "About half the systems are aboard oceanographic research or su pport ships," said H e w lett-Packard spokesman. "The oth er half are used by navigators of oil exploration ships commercial transports1 passenger ships, cable laying ships and Navy and Coast Guard sh.ips." LET'S BE FRIENDLY It you ha\·e 11cw neighbors or know of anyone moving to our area, please 1cll us so that v.·e may ext~·nd a friendly welcome and ht'lll them to be-come acquaint<.>d in their new surroundings, So. Coast Visitor 494-057' 494-93'1 Harbor Visitor 646-0174 A combination o r in- struments that can determine location with 600-foot accuracy costs about $30,000 per vessel, the company said ; for 15(1..foot accuracy the cost is more than double. The automatic s y s t e m employs live orbiting Transit satellites at an altitude or some 600 miles. Ground sta- tions track the satellites, send the infcnnatiion to computer centers which predict where a given satellite would be in, say, 12 hours. The predicted information is transmitted via injection stations to t h e satellite where data is sklred in memory units. The sate I Ji t e thereafter automatically transmits to ships at sea the exact path of the satellite in space, translated by the shipboard computer into latitude and longitude. Today, the yachtsman trying to squint a sun sight from his heavily rolling boat, or the ship's navigator on a freighter, must meas u r c angles. check the ti m e precisely, consult tables, then come up with a fix. If there's a solid overcast, he must wait for a sight. Near land. oig ships will use the LOR.i\N navigation system to get a fix; small boats, close to a coast, use the radio direction finder in their efforts to find out where they are. The company said the Coast Guard cutter Acushnet: whose mission is to take data and service five bouys between Japan and Alaska, has found the automatic n a v i g at io n system ''inrlispensible." Ens. P h i l l i p 1-lawkins, na vigator of th e oceanographic support ship, was quoted as saying: "Most of the lime we UM the satellite navigation system since it's necessary to be with- in a half mile of a bouy to find it. We've never missed one. FABRICS FOR CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERIES BROUGHT TO YOUR HOME FOR SELECTION ... NO OILl!iATION TO IUT! 25°/o off on two best·•lln9 pattems In ANTl§>UE SATIN FABRICS SALE $189 TD. 'STU.THMOIE' $,199 TD. 'CARLTON ' Over • hundred colon to choo1e from! lu1trou1 en· tique satin of rayon/acetate. One greet choice after the other ••• encl they'll be mee1ured, made end in· 1telttd•• by ellpert1 . Celt today -encl 1eve! ••Optlonel Phone 968 .. 2863 GRANT PLAZA • BROOKHURST AT ADAMS • HUNTINGTON BEACH I ' • ' • " Coa tR id en ts Become Citizens For the DISSOLUTION 01' MAltlllAGE l•<o """•011 • "' J!JI' R Aldrkh, JGN\ Wllllarn tl\d Oo111 A'\fx l"t C•maorn. Rolltrt l•nt •NI Mt rurel E ltU1bt!lh Thur~ay, January 14 1971 OAILV PILOT ]J ---~·~-----~~~...;;;;..;;-- • • • • • • Vital Sta ti ti~ Mvu•t.rH• Vir\lluU• N ••Id Ji,,h" N f't 1ttt~#tt, Ct~n<v \ ~• •nd 8twrrv O•ftnitr EvtlY" &f\d ftern•td C '"""· llnd• O~r•-•no "'"•" O.••n "-II~""""· JH Mette l •"41 Peur O V11\C#nl J•N>I M .ild Eow••d L Jame.on, Ct rol Jun• •"'1 Jame. 14•0• KMMdv "Mrv LO<ll-. •"<I Ot vro Andrew,, Th(or-M •r>d llrtrv J l'llM J•ftllt l"I I Ow,.., P!Mrn•ml>vCO. Ellubo!lll Jvne •nd Gusltlli1, Fr•n<lnf G eno 8tr,.ottJ V S1rno<1> Judo Fav•..,., •n<I r •Mer1c1t "'""" Wllll•m Hoo E llrn •no F r•nkhn D••ld WolleroWf'ber. Cllttlll Edwero tnd JOfn S<hutl. Uovd ~ tnd T.,tt L lion\Qn Orlano E tnd &111fltv ltulll Merle Ot H .. I Sherry Au<lffn •lld Jonn WtObcr. Su...a11 l•• tncl AOO.rt H IHl"ILOCUTOllY DECREE\ •~lf'M J e11111ry 6 Orrver. Wwrr~• R NICI Mttllvn l •M. AIYlnt MA~ el'd Gto ... A!Mfl M.lllMI. Allrt M6tlt An4 0-ld E $u lew, 8onn11 I . •fld M.llftltl O Bonu._ lllllen llovd end Rlchero Ft-IC~ if C.•"'"· ,.,.., .. '" and Ee•J • Klt ln. ~rtn Lor-ralne t"4 Thonlet N1cnoi.1 8ullla, I>•••• ON and JIM*I I! 01vl&, Helen Vlrtlnl• end Jame• I•'•" C.roo, Eol111 Fronc.n and Arft..,.. L •wftfl<t lemto•o. Al<ll••d Allen •r>O Sh.,,.. Lanll, Ootorrs A. •ncJ Vl•o W l\aat Ill Jr SANTA ANA -Seventy-two k1argar1'La. s an Clemente·. Ann ~~·· E<llM M ano RlchMd Ii, Co•bon, JOl#pllln• I •no H.rrv E. "••lion Poull M Frenc-. •nd Wiiiiam 1' Davi•. lletty Jayce oM J C l ltOt", l!IVln• W M\O Rnti. rl II l!l,hatd Ed~. llerbotre Lvnn afld Mervin s Co•h••n Vrrv•t •ncl Wellt r l"tl~t. tl•llv I ~ James w Eomoom. lltartlor ! •r>d !•'1 110.1 Gtorot w •~d Mtrl• L. L •Otlo, J°"n~ M enc:I Howtrd l Merc•OO. $n11~v '"" ROO.rt !con residents of 12 Orange Coast Marie Dorothy and Ronald 'Tl!Pn"n· Oolt9lu LvM )r, •00 Ehltbtlll Ktnwaro, Lindt E. •rid Rober! R. Klr-. Edw•111 Allen ••)cl 11Mll'M J Tt1.,..mme>, Alen ' ••Id M••••••I " Yberr•, RelU91o ~Thomas Ntl.on. Bruce Kurt •lld Evel~n ~· M. F•tt>tr. Gor(lon Ron •lld Jlidllh l vntl Onnot'<I. ICtlhl~n Morie •rid Don.aid Hut1~ln1. Lind• Kay •lld Gt ,..,., communities became u . s. Lorne Budgen, both o( 9561 Sulltr. P•lrld1 l . •nd (l\erln J. Kutlll, RoOen •r>d l/lrvrnl• M. Vonrwt JOl>nson. M••llY'1 J. al'CI V1rl0<' o. Toucan Ave. Fountain Valley: -----------------------Merion Mlch•el citizens Wednesday in the first Orange County Superior Court naturalization ceremonies of 1971. They formed 11 part of a record conltngent of l 8 6 former aliens who look the pledge of ;illegiance for Lhe first lime m Santa Ana ceremonies presided over by three Superior Court Judges -acting Presiding Judge Samuel Dreizen and Judges Raymond Thompson a n d Lester Van Tatenhove. Costa Mesa residents topped the Orange Coast poll with 25 former aliens. one more than Huntington B e a c h . Westmi nster sent eight new citizens. Fountain Valley con- tributed three and Newport Beach, San Clemente, El Toro and Los Alamitos had two each. Four communities each had one resident at the colorful ceremony: Laguna Beach, Irvine. San Juan Capistriffio and South Laguna. Heading the parade of con- tributing nations was Great Britajn with 16 former sub- jects of Queen Elizabeth 11 . Canada sent 12 of her subjects south of the border while Ireland. West Germany and The N e t h e r I a n d s were represented with five each. Representatives of t h e American L e g i on , the American Legion Auxiliary. the Elks Club and the League of Women Voters addressed I he new citizens a fl er Judge<, Van Tatenhove Jed the crowd- ed courtroom in the pledge of allegiance. Each new citizen received a miniature U.S. flag from members of the Daughters of the American Revolution. A photo session for the group in the newly opened Plaza of the Flags on the south ·side of the county courthouse was marred by rain squalls and chilly winds. New citizens sworn i n Wednesday.' in order of con- tributing nations. were· ADEN -Mohamed Abdulla Abubaker. 887 Center St.. Apt. I. and Mohsan Omar Moham· ed. 1846 Placentia. Apt. K, both of Cosla Mesa ARGENTINA -Elena Rosa and Jose Carlos Edgardo Pronzato, both of 1094 Mission Drive. Costa Mesa CANADA -Loyde George and Margaret Joycr F'lorence Davidson. 322 Avenida Santa D eath Notices MEAD lt•IPll s Mt8d Age Sl. or 1079& l(.nwic~ lenL HunHnolon 8t&Ch Surv1Yed bv mOlher, Ell11 MH Mead: brolhl"r. Wllll•m M<!ed, 1IJters, Mr> W I r ur)nlnonem 8nd Mrt l tnorr H.,rl>on 111 of Onio Strv1cu . Frldav. I PM. SmllM Ch•aet F t mllv sugoHls thou wl1hlno lo mekt m•morltl onlrlbullon>, PIHH conlrlbutt to the Veteret1s Adm•nl,1r1tlnn Hosoll•I b\11 .. n1 •o Smlftis Mortua,,.. 1.77 M•I" S• HunllnQIOn Beach Tiit direc•or w oll rl!(ord lhe-n.arr~s find tt,e ltmi•v ¥1111 m•k• lht ort\entorlon 10 lht hO>Pll•I Sm 1lh01 Mt)thJ8rV Olrtttor" OHLHAVEll Jovme Ohlnovt• "'9• 11 of )?9 Maqnnll• St Cost& Mua Dall" of deeth. JAnu•rv 1l Survlvttd bv 1>eret1h, Mr •nd M,., Wlll••m G Ohln•ver brol"t,., Wlllo•m, C~n~ And Gr•o. \t!tler,, Jiii. Bo""''· O•ot1# and Behv. •II of lllt home Rud· lno 01 lh• Scroo1uru ton10111 1 JO PM. l!eau em M•U· Frio4v, o ,.,M, bOth ol SI JMchom• Ctlhollr Churrh ln•.-mtnl H~lv Sf1>ulcher Ctmetrrv. W•••cllf! (Mo- el Morlu&rv, i.o ... au. O•rtrior• lAll MAOG• Mylrs P l •llmadtt. 3109• l'lylnq Ctnud Drive. L•vun1 N iouel O~•e ol dP•lll, Jan111rv 1?, Survlvlld bv wllP. Pull\; son. llo~rl. ot Denver: end rive orondchol· dr•n ServlcH. F riday, Jenuarv 15, 10 AM, Stlefftr l AtUnt ~ach (MQtl, with Or Oallu Turner olllcJallno lnttrmen1, Loma Visit Mtmorlal Ptrk. Fulltrlon Shelter L1oun1 llttch Morluorv, Olrtc· tor~ A 'RBUCKLE & SON Westcllff Mortuary 4%7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa ~ • BALTZ MORTUARI~ Corona del Mar . OR 3.tf5t Costa Mesa . , . ml 6-tm • BELL BROADWA V MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa u S-3433 • • McCORMICK LAGUNA Bl!:ACR MORTUARf 1'7'$ Laguna Canyon Rod. "'-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAIJ,K Oemt tery Mortuary Cbaptl 3SOO PacJftc Vlew Drive Newport Beach, C.Urornla ~711 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 710l Bolsa Ave. WtJtmlatttt . llJ.-W$ • SMITRS' MORTUARY tr7 Maht St. RanUq!Gft ~ ssum Vivian Marguerite Akright, I 6071 Larchwood Drive, Hun-f lington Beach; Ii er b e rt ' Hermann Schwamm, 14862 ' Booncy St . . Westminster ; Alfred Kenneth McNeil!. 3251 Ru th Elaine Drive, L o s Alamitos Also from Canada: Victor Philip Walsh. 176 Cecil Place. Apt C. Costa Mesa: Roberta Wilson and Charles Maitland Hunter. 5021 Bluejay Circle. Huntington Beach; Catherine Amelia Sienkiewicz. 5 6 3 1 Rogers D r i v e . Hunlington Beach and Muriel R u t h Nicholes. 30691 Calle Chueca. San .Juan Capistrano. ClllLE -Clarisa Ana Espinoza. 16341 A r I i n g l o n Lane. Huntington Beach. CUBA -Germana Zorrilla. 16341 Normandy Lane. Hun- tington Beach; Maria Rosa and Fernando A n t o n i o Hernandez, both or 14852 Vanguard Lane. Huntington Reach and Alina Gabriel. 4167 Farquhar A v e n u e , Los Alamitos. COLOMBIA -Be a t r i c e Caicedo, 2 2 2 3 Anniversary Lane. Newport Beach. DENMARK -Svendaage Daugaard and Jane Susanne Daugaard Hansen, both oC 6891 Marilyn Dr.ive. Huntington Beach ECUADOR -Raul Galeas. 2700 Peterson Way, Costa Mesa. EGYP'I' -Sarnia Salem and Ramzy Guindy Mankarious. 2728 Canary Drive. Costa Mesa. ~~RANCE -Betty Miller. 9181 Orc h i d D rive , Westminster and J ea n - Bernard Henri Kolla r, 740 W. James St., Apt. D, Costa Mesa. GREAT B RI TAI N - Carolyn Virginia Richardson, 401 Atlanta. Apt. 27, Hun - tington Beach : Eliasine Kerr and Rodger Drysdale. both of 711 Ocean Ave.. Huntington Beach: Elizabeth Maxwell and James Brabender Meldrum, 1001 1 Whispenlng Pine Circle, Westminster: Mary. Frances and Brian Stevens. 6331 Bell- inger Drive. Huntington Beach and Rose and A I be r l Dunsmore. 24241 Grass St., El Toro. Other former Britons in· eluded: Jean An n Adamson. 7667 T r a s k . Apt. B. Westminster; Charles a nd Ellen Sharp Loughery, 950 Victoria St.. Costa Mesa: Mary Walker Wile and Susan Snelling, both of 1118 Victoria St.. Costa Mesa. Also from Britain : Jane Aniko Kovacs, 1594l Puritan Circle. Huntington Beach and Jacqueline Churchill. 5 4 9 Bernard. Costa Mesa. GUATEMALA -Sylvia Odelle Korbonski, 2 1 3 9 I Augusta Circle. Huntington Beach. HUNGARY -Laszlo Barna. 10188 Cardinal. F' o u n I a 1 n Valley IRAN -Malak Behbood Lane. 23 N La Senda, South Lnguna IRELAND -Ma ry Kate .JosephinP Cowley. :121 Santa lsabcl Ave .. Newport Beach; i"ranris. Bridget and Miliosa Ann McAweeney. 270 Palmer St , Costa Mesa and Mary Rryson, 14142 S. 0 I i v e . Westminster. MEXICO An to n i o Hernandez Garcia, 6 4 3 2 I larmon)' Circle, Huntington Beach : Mar.ia Isabel Martinez. 190 Lexington Lane, Costa Mesa and Francisco Guzman, 231Q Fk>rlda. Apl. A, Huo- tington Beach. THE NETHERLANDS - J acob Johanlle3 Piel Eerllgh. 6732 Vista Del Sol Drive, Hun- tington Beach : Jessy Oscarine and Sjoerd Johannes Harte, both of 1199 Bismark Way, Costa Mesa: Caro l i n a Petronella Van Kasteren, 669 .Joann St.. Costa Mesa and Piel Reinier Waller. 316 Se- cond St .. Huntington Beach. SOUTH ARABIA -Awadh Saleh Abdulla. 820 Center St., Apt. 9, Costa Mesa. SOUTH KOREA -SUk Cha Van Dyke, 3135 Mountain View Drive, Laguna Beach. U K RA I N E Jurlj Pawlenko, 20022 Beaumont Olrcle, HuntingU>n Beach. WEST GERMANY -Gisela White, 20292 Ravenwood Lane, Huntington Beach; E r l k a May. 17714 Acacia Tree Lane, Irvine: Monika Newmann. 881 W. 17th St., Cost.a Mesa; Roland Schoell, IJ032 Zuni Piece, Westminster and Man- fred Floth , 6842 Retherford Drive, Huntington Beach. WESTERN SAMOA -Irene Wilson, 9.152 Coronet Ave., WHtminster and L a u t a s I Gasu, 167 E. %3rd St.. Costa Mesa. YEMEN -Mohamed All Himein, 327 Ogle SL C.011ta Mesa. EST. 1924 llttcommendtd by ROAD TEST MAGAZINE YOUR CHOICE 5.20xl3-5.60xt3 6.00x15-6.85x t 5 5.60x15 -5.90x 15 95 (Jct. <)I mt SI Uf!I (J..111 m•NllON COIDCu1,1ulbtm ft 6.S Oxll (878/13) s1995 8.75114 (G7Bn4l 7.00~1 J 8.2S i1 S • (C78,l 3)(G78/IS) 8.8S. l 4 (17 8 14) 8 85rlS (J78 I Sl 0 17.95 6.9Sx14 (078.'14) 1'1 7.JSxl 41(7811 4: 7.7Sx14 (f7S/14 • 7.7Sx1S (f 78tlS) S.SSrl 4 (H78xl 4 ) 8.SSxl s (H78s1 SI 9.00/ 9.lSxl S (L78/15) \ 1.12 lo \J.011•4. h . Tn lo. D1,•o<l1•t u,,. Sou . WMlflWAIU U .tS lrlrt nEI A PRECISION JOB •••• REG. S7.95 PRECISION JOB ••• • WHICH CAN COST MORE ELSEWHERE \Weet -MiT ,NCLUOES: Correcting easier, camber, toe-in including w -cond1t1oned cars, plus inspection of steenng & suspension system. WITH ANY 2 TIRES PURC HASE D ON U.S. CARS AT All STORES Brand New Full 4-Ply BRAND NEW FULL 4 PLY Uniroyal TUBELESS 7.75x1 4 7.75x15 7.00xlJ 8.2Sx14 8.2Sx1 S (F78/1 4) (F78/15) 7.3Sxl4 (G78/14) (G78{1 S) 95 NYLON COQ • 't1rt1U 111,k All Toru h eh.• S1.71 It U.11 h L l1<in Tu ... flhlto wollt U.U h ire 95 Super Chrome Wheels ••• VWs MOST CARS ••• $29.95 • 1•11 RIPLACIMINT GUARANTEE ••• 1f LINING tf it Wurs Out Bel ore 20.000 Miles Plus Service Ch~ree MOST CARS rvw;i ~ T 3005 HARBOR BLVD • CORNER OF IAKER AND HARBOR COSTA MESA · NEWPORT BEACH AREA 557-8000 OPEN DAILY 8:30·9 ••• SUN. 9·6 ., GARDEN GROVE -14040 Brookhurat -S30.3200 ANAHEIM · BU&NA PARK 6962 Lincoln Blvd. -826-5550 FULLERTON -132 1 Euclid St. -870.0100 Open Daily 8:30·9 Sun. 9-6 .· .· " .· • l ?.'JJ DAILY PILOT ft11.1r.M1.t~. January 14, 1971 ~·~~------;;;;;;;;;-. ______________________________________________ ...,. • . • ' STORE-WIDE MEN'S GIGANTIC MEN'S QUILTED BEDSPREADS CURITY TOWNCRAFT SUITS FLORAL PRINT NEWPORT BEACH FASHION ISLAND STORE HOURS MON. AND FRI. 10·9:30 TUES., WED., THURS. 10·9:00 SAT. 10-6:00 SUN. 12·5:00 BOYS' WESTERN JEANS SWEATER CLEARANCE Year around weights. Singl• breasted TWIN OR •ULL SIZE $1288 DISPOSABLE DIAPERS Sturdy 75°/o Polyester, 25°/o cotton blend, ORIG. S 11 ro $20 NOW 6 Colors to Choose From. model. Special buy. Vests, pullovers, cardigans $588 NOW $3488 Regular & X-Lar9f! Sizet so~ Permanent Press NOW 2/$500 Asst. Styles & Colors 'Most all Sizes, QUIEN Olt klNG SIZE $1988 Ddg. $8.98·$11.98 NOW OllG. $21 to SlO N.OW Prefolded to fit. Orig. $1.59 NOW Si1e16-l8. Slim, Reg., Orig. $75·$8S.OO Huoky. Orig. $3.98·$4.49 GIRLS' FAMILY BOYS TOWNCRAFT SAVE ON MEN'S TOWNCRAFT MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS SPORT COATS DRESS CLEARANCE SUPPER CLEARANCE SPORT SHIRTS Big & little girls styies, holiday and spring 8.1sic slippers, fuuy styles •nd dressy dresses. Priced for clearance. Short slffve plaids, Reg. or button.down styles for at home entertaining. Ivy & reg. color NOW $188 106 lo Choo•• From $2988 Group I Now3.88•S.88 GROUP II $288_$588 ~ollars. Easy care 4/$5 00 Short Sleeve, Orig. $4S.00·$SO.OO Orig. s.oo-a.oo Orig. Penn Prest®. Means Plaids & Solids Orig. $3.98 Good Patterns & Colors NOW Group II .88-2.88 Orig. 4.00-6.00 NOW $S.99 lo $10.99 NOW no Ironing. $2.98 L., __ M_A_IN_F_Loo_R _ __..l .... I __ u_PP_E_R_L_Ev_E_L _ __..l .... I __ L_o_w_ER_L_EV_E_L _ __.l .... I __ A_UT_o_cE_N_T_ER _ ____.I MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS REDUCED Ivy & r99ular. Long 11..v• .... ~ ....................... Orig. 5.00 MEN'S CARTOON T·SHIRTS A11t. 1tylH. Brok1n 1lze1 .......... --······ ... Orig. 1.91·2.91 MEN'S BETTER SPORT SHIRTS NOW 2.88 NOW 099 F•shio"•bl• lettov1r1. 3 88•5 88 S, M, L, XL. Orig. 6.91-9.91 NOW ' 1 MEN'S LONG SLEEVE GROOVY SHIRTS Sh.1rp 1tyle1. 7 88 Men'1 11111 .. -------·"····Orig. 9.91·11 .91 NOW 1 MENS DRESS SHIRTS A11t. 1tyles & colors. Broken 11111. --·-··· Orig, 3.91-7.91 NOW 1.88-3.81 MISSES ANKLE PANTS For every occ11ion. Drffly & c•1ual. S 88 8 88 .. . ...• Odg. I0.00-15.00 NOW • • o MISSES SKIRTS Solid color 1tyle1 In fashlon1bl1 4 88 S 88 length1 ..... Orig. 7.00-8.00 NOW • • 1 JUNIOR VINYL VEST Snak•skin vinyl with 1he11rling trim •.. PLAID ANKLE PANTS .• Orig. 9.00 M i1111 & junior 1i111. Bonded acrylic. _ ............. ~ .. Orlg. 1.00 JUNIOR SKIRTS NOW 4.88 NOW s.aa Plaids & solids In •••orfed 2 88 6 88 lengths ..... Ori9. 6.00-10.00 NOW • • • HOMESPUN ANKLE PANTS ~,':rh• fl~~I~~-.~~~~~··--····-········ Orl9. 7.00 NOW 4.88 KNIT TOPS AND SWEATERS v11riety of 1tyle1 -long and 1hort 2 88 S 88 1leev•. .. .. Orig. 5.00-9.00 NOW • • • WOMENS PANT TOPS Junior & ml11e1 1tyl•1. Solidi & 2 88 S 88 p.rint1. . ·-·· Orig. 5.00-9.00 NOW • • • MENS' TOWNCRAFT PLUS SUITS 73 oiily Utter qu11llty 1uits. 64 88 Good 1i1e1. . . --· Orig. to.00-100.00 NOW • MENS' DOUBLE BREASTED JACKETS ouallty t•ilorl'd corduroy. · 29 88 51111 36 to 42 ... __ Orig. 42.50 NOW • MENS' NYLON JACKET Grffn only-solJl'd. Werm-up 1tyle. -· ,,. Orig. 4.91 MENS' DRESS SLACKS Good color 1alectlon. Si1e1 30 to 34. Orig. 15.00 MENS' CASUAL SLACKS R-tul•r or je11n 1tyl••· Sm•ll 1i1e1 only. , Orig. 4.91 MENS' VEST SUITS Sa111on'1 style item. Broken 1i1e1. _ Orig. 16.91-29.91 MENS' VEST SUITS NOW NOW NOW NOW 2.99 7.88 1.88 9.88 Better quality. knit or valvet. . Orig, 75.00 NOW 44.88 MENS' "MOD" VESTS Many 1tyla1 & f1bric1. Some 3 88• 14 88 leather. Orig. 7.91-24.00 NOW • • WOMENS UNIFORMS Solllld •nd DIKontlnulld. Whit• •nd colors. M11chln• w111h11bla ... _ ..... Orl9. 1.11-2.U WOMENS COATS NOW o99• 1 o88 All we•ther we•r. Aitorted styling, w1ter repell•nt. 6 88 14 99 ......... _ .. Orig. 12.11-20.u NOW • • • BRIDAL WEAR Wedtll"f go_.nu. D11continutd 1tyles. Voll """ f.,.m•I. 8 88 42 88 ............ Orig. 24.11-69.11 NOW • • • COATS, JACKETS AND VESTS Plies, knlb, wools & laather1. lrekan 1l1••i .s~=s~!:.seoutNow 2.88•27 .88 ......... ··--.Or g WOMEN'S LONG COAT Cut plle acrylic. Doubl• br111sted style. 35 88 Mlasy 1l1K. ...... -..... . Orig. 59.11 NOW -• CASUAL AND DRESSY DRESSES '"· miNr & hall '''°'· Soa .. • 6 88• 1 2 88 n ..... t. Orig. 11.oo.;.1aoo NOW • • CULOTTE LOUNGE WEAR Fashlen colors. Slnt "1 .. 11. ·-······ .. ·-··--····-· Orl9. 14.00 PANTIHOSE NOW 7.88 :=~~:; , ........... ·--·· __ , ........... _ ......... " .... ··-·-.88 WOMEN'S ROBES & LOUNGEWEAR ,,.. ... ,,_ $ne<ol •fYl.oo. 7 88 12 99 .... -.. •-·· Orlt. 11 .00..11.DCI NOW • • • WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR ..... lty ... a fabric.s. tNt .. , ....._ •... ,. ... "-·-··· Orlt. 4.00...S.OO LAROll Sl!LECTION FOUNDATIONS NOW 2.81 _., otyW '"' <olon. 3.81 to 4.88 y_,-<htilc:it. ·-·-.•. ,. .• ·-·-·····" -l!N'S SCARVES Aat. 9'yl• & colors. y_, c:htlu. ••.•.. Orlt. 1.J.S-2..SO 6 FT. NOVEL TY SCARF NOw.50-.99 t•% ..:ryllc knit. Muttl col ..... ··---............. _ Orlf. J.OI NOW BOXED PIN & E~RRING SETS A..t-c_,.,,_ y..,. ch9'c;a. ·-·-····-·--· ···-Ori• 2.• NOW 3.88 1.44 ACETATE SATIN OR TAFFETA F•1hion colors. 45" wld1 ....... _ .............. --.... Orig. 79c PRINTED FLANNEL Juvenllla p•tt•rn. 45" wide. .. .. ....... Orig. 79c ELECTRIC SCISSORS Completely 1o.1f1. 4 only.. ....... ·-· .. --·----Orig. 6.99 FASHION TRIMMINGS NOW NOW NOW .2Syd. soc 3.22 Br1lds and l11c11. Som• solltd. __ Orig. 25c to tic. NOW .12 to o49yd. DECORATIVE BATH SOAPS In 1poth•cary j.1r1 or b111ll•ta ... .,--___ , Orig. 2.50 NOW .99 BOXED SHEET SETS 3.88 Olin Rlyer perc•I•. Doubla 1i1e. .. ... , . Orig. I.DO NOW BATHROOM HAMPER Vinyl cov•red. Wicker dHign ........ ·-·-·--···· Orig. 15.91 NOW 7.88 WOODEN POLES Unp•inted or decor•tlva. 4 to 12 ft. SO 2 SO lengths. Orig. 1.49 to 6.91. NOW • to • WINDOW SHADES 46" widths. Pink or gre•n. 10 only. . Orig. 3.99 WROUGHT IRON AND GLASS Fruit and chffl• urver. 3 only. ________ ... -. ·---. Orig. 19.95. CERAMIC CANDLE HOLDERS Avocado color. 10" hl9h. S pr. only .................... _ .... Orl9. 7.00. NOW 1.22 NOW 9.88 NOW 2.aa CERAMIC HANGING LAMP Modern pe.1r de1ign. 1 only. . .. Orig. 49.91. NOW 19.88 NURSERY LAMPS. FOR GIRLS Poodle 1tyl1, Pink only. I only. . ·--· .. ----------__ Ori9. t .98. NOW INFANTS & TODDLERS SLEEPWEAR Auorted winter 1tyl11. Broken 1i1n .... ---------·· Orig. 2.91-3.50. NOW THERMAL PAJAMAS Gripper or boser webt. 51111 1-1. . . Orig. 2.59-2.19. NOW INFANTS & TODDLERS SHIRTS 3.88 1.44 1.88 Polo1, turtlenecks. f•nci11. A11orted 1tyles end colors .. ·-· .. Orig. 1.39-2.00. BIG GIRLS SKIRTS NOW 099 51111 7-16. In aol/ds, prints ind pl•lds. ···-Orig. 3.59-6.00. NOW GIRLS ROBES long •nd short 1tyles. Quilts •nd plles ... Orig. 6.91-1.91. NOW RIB KNIT TOPS Stripe with solid collar. 100-;. cotton. . .. Orig. 4.00. FRINGED PONCHOS 100'% Orlon acrylic. F•ncy p1ttern1. . . .. _ ....... Orig. 7.00. 1·16 SKIRT SETS Vinyl and bond~ knit styles. Skirt •nd vHt top. ... Orig, 1.00-9.00 LITTLE GIRLS SKIRTS 1.88-3.88 S.44-6.44 NOW NOW NOW 3.22 4.88 s.aa 51111 3-6x. In sollda, prlnt1 •nd 1 88 2 88 ploida ..... 0•19. 3.00 ... 00. NOW o • o INFANTS (BOYS ) STRAP OXFORDS NOW 3.88 leathar upper1, Composition 1011. . Ori~. S.99. INFANTS WESTERN BOOTS Black le•ther up'per. New square toe ... -.. . Orl1. 6.9'. GIRLS BROWN OXFORDS Durebla con1tructlon. Light wel9ht. . .. Orig. 7.9t. GIRLS BROWN T·STRAP All IMther upper1. CornPotltlon sole.,, .. --...... Orig. 7.9'. GIRLS KILTIE TIE SLIPON Combination lest. BOYS WELLINGTON BOOT All l1ather uppers. Composition sofa. ,_ ... _ _ Orll>_ I .ff. LADIES RED LEATHER PUMP Composition sol•. ----~ _ . Orig. 12.9'. LADIES SUEDE PUMP Ll9ht wel9ht. Flexible. , NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW N.,. 1quan toe. I tA[r:E:S1f'RAP --FLAT051~· 15 ·"· ~-r~~ i!WS:iONE\''SAgi . ~·"· NOW Lac:• odord. Compo1ltlon sol•. .. ... Orl9. 12.tt. NOW MEN'S SLIPPER SOX AuortM colors. ~~~Sr s~EATE.R .. c-1..e:~J:Ji~· NOW 4.88 4.88 4.88 4.88 6.88 6.88 9.88 s.aa a.a a 2.88 Auertment of colorful, stylish cerdlgens, V-necks, pullovars or 1IHY1ln1. 1 88 S 88 Sl1ft t-11. Orl_J. l .9' .... tl. NOW '-' • • "BOYS JACKET CLEARANCE Variaty el wlntennlght styln. Choot11 from n,letn. wool, er ....... ..., Ja<kotL Maoy otyloo. 9 99 1 2 99 Sl111 12~20. Orig. 13,,...17.91. HOW • • • . BOYS SUITS AND SPORT COATS l'ield1, 1olfd1. Verlat, of 1tyl ... 11"911 or doubl1 S 88 bnatted. 511 .. 10-11. Orlt_. lJ.91-17.tS. NOW • BOYS ACCESSORl~S CLEARANCE Laatfter 9ood1, rtdl-1n•p tin, IMltl, travel 1 0 SO ecc"sorl", noveltitL Orig, 1.00-3.50. NOW • •• GIGANTIC BOYS ' PANTS CLEARANCE lar91 Mle<tlon of J .. nt and sleek• In solkfa or plalds. Av•llable In sllm1 and regulars. Some 99 2 99 hu1kln, Orlt-:S.91-5.91. NOW • • • " • SWAG LIGHT FIXTURES 15 foot ch•in1. In-line 1wltche1. 5 difftr•nt modals ..................... -.. --------.. Ori9. 9.99 HOW a.a a GARRY VACUUM CLEANERS Compl1t1 with adepter and brush. 24 99 6 o•ir. . . .. 0•19. 29.H NOW • WALNUT SHELVING 1l"x36"x36". 4 1h1lve1. 15 only. ............ .. ...... Orig. 11 .tl NOW a.as 7/8 H.P. ROOTER 23,000 R.P.M. 115 volt, AC-DC. 2 only ............................. Orl9. 49.99 NOW 36.99 4x24 BELT STANDER 9 amp. 115 volt AC·DC. Cloth du1t catcher. 69.99 1 only. .... .. .............. Orig. 79.99 NOW DISCONTINUED LIGHT FIXTURES ~h:"tu~·1::';::"y!.rr~~--.1-~:~.-~~. 1~~=· 25°/o off J/8" HEAVY DUTY DRILL '/3 H.P. 115 volt AC-DC. 1000 R.P.M .. 2 st•gie !l••r. lndu1trlally r•ted ..... Orig. 11 .9' NOW 7 PC. SCREW DRIVER SET He11vy duty. Wooden h•ndlH. 9 only. . _______ Orig. 3.69 NOW 9.99 2.99 PENNCREST REFRIGERATOR 24 CU. FT. Side by 1id1. With •utomatlc le• 499 00 m•ker. Ori9. 599.95 NOW • PENNCREST ELEC. DRYER Four he•t 1attlng1. P'erm11nent prff1 Httlng, 99 00 1 only. _ -----· ..... Orig. 139.95 NOW • PENNCREST J PC . STEREO COMPONENT 75 wen peak power ampllfler. 229 00 1 only. . -·-... Orl9. 199.00 NOW • PENNCREST STEREO CONSOLE i 1puker, Gerrard turntable. 249 00 I o•ly. .. .. ..... ........ Orig. 449.00 NOW o PENNCREST 23" COLOR CONSOLE TV Quick Pie for fist picture •nd 3S9 00 sound. ···-·-.. . ....... _ Orig. 449.95 NOW • PENNCREST 23" COLOR CONSOLE TV Autom1tlc fin• tuning. M•pl1 c•bln1t with 418 00 door1. . __ . Orig. 599.00 NOW • TRADITIONAL SWIVEL ROCKER Light green valv1t. Reverslbla cushion. 1 only._ ······---Orig. 169.00 NOW SOFA· 8' BLACK PLASTIC Tuxedo •rm. Raver1ibl1 cushion•. 1 only. -Orl9. 299.00 NOW MAN'S LOUNGE CHAIR 149.00 2sa.oo Black pl11tic. with ca1ter1. 68 00 1 only. . Orig. 179.00 NOW • CONTEMPORARY COFFEE TABLE With marble in11rt .. 20•66x16. I Oflly.. ____ Orig. 129.95 NOW 108.00 TWIN.SIZE HEADBOARDS Red or blt1e. V1lv1t f11bric. 1 ••ch .. _ ....... Orig. 32.91 QUEEN SIZE HEADBOARD Medit. ttyle. NOW 1 only. Orig. 84.00 NOW PENNEYS HOME MOVIE OUTFIT Includes cam•r•, projector. light. Everything for mcvi11. _, , .. Orig. 119.95 NOW PENNCREST SUPER 8 PROJECTOR 13.00 68.00 99.88 Forward, 1till and revarM oper•tion. Auto. 39.88 threading. . ... . Orlt-49.lt NOW YASHICA ELECTRO 35 CAMERA =~~c~Y~~~'rr,~h'u·tt~r. t~--1-~~~ .. •econd. L,lgh~~:d 39.88 SCOPE · GLENFIELD-RIFLE 4x32 Precl1ion optlc•I. 13 88 10 only. _ ..... _. . Orig. 11.00 NOW • SCOPE MOUNT· MARLIN Complata w ith 1" rlnp -for baM 444, 136, 4 88 62, 36 tt. I only .... _ ........... Orl9. 10.00 NOW • BIG MAC WORK PANTS • 50o/, POLYESTER !~~.c~~~-n .... ~~~'. .. 1.~~.~·._lr~~~; 4.2' NOW 2.88 BIG MAC WORK SHIRTS 50% POLYESTER !~~. ~ol~-~-~~~-r~ .. ~.~--~-ott~~Q~,~~k3~;. NOW 1 .88 BIG MAC WORK HATS Gr•y and 1rev1rNn. ~·R~~ktis'::JR: c:iiiiiE ~i'l1olN'is NOW 4' end 4'6". 20 pair only ............ ..,.. ..... Orig. I .II NOW MATTEL TALKING BARBIE DOLLS Fun for little mothers. ... .... ...... OrllJ. 4.44 REGULAR BARBIE DOLLS Movable arms and ~Ri:s ei:tci'Ric 1ko~'"· .... lren alonv with morn ............ _ .. _ ...... --··-.. -----···Orig. t .44 COFFEE BAKE SET lnfermal '" partlu. Educattonal iAAl'ttf sf>eiii<1Nockg~l1r'. Talklnt 1tory - ~~eRLociCiiia :scocts"' .... '°" pre-1chool chlldran. lducatlenal Item, .. _ ........................ ____ ,. ......... Or ... 1.2' OUIJA GAME PNdlch your futuni If you IMliav• It ........................... Orlt· JM BAG.0.LAUGHS Tffrlflc fw partl ... Gl'fft fun. -·-___ ., .. ___ ......... _ Orl9. J ,44 CHILDRENS ROLLER SKATES Gr .. t exercise and much ~H·1TTY BANG··-PAiNT ~r~rl ... fer younf Ramb1•MtL Many dnltnL .. _.. .. ........... Orte. Uc . ' NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW .77 4.88 2.44 1.88 .as .25 2.44 .44 1.44 1.44 1.88 .25 EL TIGRE TIRE CLOSE OUTS 695x14 9lu1 Nlted deluxe. All 1l1as reduced. 23 00 Orig. 30.95. PIYS Fed. T•x and exchange. NOW • GOLDEN PINTO MINI CYCLES Priced to clear. Demo1. J only. ···--·-----· ___ --· Orig. 159.95 NOW 129.00 POPULAR HURST SHIFTING Kito '°' 3 '"" 4 ·-· Aloo 1 0 00 39 9S ad•pter kits •. __ ----... NOW • to • BONNILLE 50« DYNO CYCLES Priced to cl••r. Real b•rg•ln. ,._ .... _ -·--... Orig. 299.00 NOW V.W. MUFFLER One only, While it la1ts •.... ·-·----· .. ··---.-·-· ....... Orig. 16.95 CARTRIDGE OIL FILTERS Many popul11r 111111. Out thay 2SO.OO NOW 2.00 . 90 ...... -.......................... Orig. 1.29 NOW .OS .... HEAD REST SLIP ON Blue, red, black, bona color •.. ·····------·-·· ................. Orl9. 6.95 V.W. WHEELS MAGS NOW 3.88 2 pl.ct style mad• by Empl. 2 only. _____ .... --· Orig. 42.00 NOW 3.00 E0<h SPECIAL CAR BATTERY 40 month 9uarentn. El Tlgre sl1e1 22-24-27. ······--·----------___ .... .. ... . NOW 18.88 "" CLOSE OUT DELUXE MAG WHEELS Full 7" solid aluminum. Ford1, Chevys, 24 7S Olds ..... , .............. Orig. 37.75 NOW • E11chi P.C.Y. VALVES Whil• tMy la1t. For most Amerlc•n c•ra. ·-·-····-······················· Orig. 1.50 NOW CHROME COVERS & ACCESSORIES Whlle tfley .2S .... .2S .... l111t .... -............. -........ ·--·-__________________ .. NOW RETREAD TIRES 15" RIM SIZE Priced to cl•ar. 115 and 145x15 ......... Orig. 17.11 NOW MAGNETIC ASH TRAYS For your car. H•ndy .. .. .... Orig. 1.59 GAS CAP LOCKS Chrome flnl1h. 2 key1. ·-________ ----......... _ ......... Orig. 1.99 BIG CLEARANCE TABLE 6.00 .... NOW .as NOW .so MANY ITEMS ···-···· .. .. PRICED TO CLEAR l.__ __ G_A_RD_E_N_SH_O_P _ __.I SELF.STARTING CHARCOAL No need for lightar flu Id. .. -.......................... NOW .S9 • TIKI FUEL·TORCH FUEL Buy now, off 1aa1':ln •nd save for summer. 1 gallon. ... . Orig. lie NOW .44 ELECTRIC LAWN VACUUM I H.P. P•r•mount. All purpo1• vacuum. 99 99 1 only. . ... " ..... .. .. ,,. NOW • 22" ELECTRIC MOWER Black •nd Dec ker. Wfth attachments. 1 only. NOW 109.00 LAWN VACUUM Super-Rake and att•chrnents. 1 only, .............. ---··· Orl9, 216.97 NOW 1S9.00 ROTOTILLER 5 H.P. lrl9g1 and Stratt1n. Pow1r ravers•. 3 only ................................. , NOW 119.00 McCULLOCH CHAIN SAW Power Mac 6. 1r bar and ch1ln. 1 only ....... -Ori9. 179.95 NOW 133.00 McCULLOCH CHAIN SAW M•c 10-lOA. 16" bar •ncl ch•ln. 1 only. ................... Orio. 1f9.9S NOW 166.00 McCULLOCH CHAIN SAW Mac 250. 15" b.lr and chain. 1 only ........................ Orig. 159.95 NOW 133.00 McCULLOCH CHAIN SAW Mac 15. 15" b.lr •nd chain. 1 only.,.·---···--·--······· .. ···-Orif, 119.95 McCULLOCH CHAIN SAW NOW 88.00 Power Mac 6.. Automatic. 16" kr •nd chain. 1 only ......... Orl9. 1f9.95 HOW 166.00 McCULLOCH CHAIN SAW Power MaC 6. Automatic, 12" b.lr and 178 88 <hal•· I only. ........ Orl9. 1tt.f5 NOW o LONG HANDLED GRASS SHEARS Trim your lawn wltheut .. ntl!f!t· ........... _ ......... --.. ·----Orig . .S.99 60" FIVE FAN TRELLIS '11tervlau cot1structlon. ........... -..................................... Orig. J.9' 72" SEVEN FAN TRELLIS flbergla11 conrtructlon. Orl9. S.f9 LAWN DYE NOW NOW NOW 1.88 1.44 2.88 ::!~~ ~~~-~-~ .. ~:~~-~~ .. ~rig. 6.11 HOW 3.88 FALL BULBS -LAST CHANCE TO PLANT Tullpt, Hyacinths, 5 legs 1 OO Daffodils. ........ Orl9. 6tc INtg. NOW for • PLANTS :,.::~1~-~~n•alMl'L--~~~~ .. ~~ ~~.3' How .88 l •' ! . I ' { .. ~ .. '· -. BEA ANDERSON, Editor TI1urld•1, J1m11ry U, 1'11 ,..,. U TAKING THE CHILL OF F -Hot cups of coffee will r eceive a warm welcome by music lovers who will brave the early Chilly morning to board buses for the Los An~eles Music Center Thurs- day, Jan. 28. The event is schduled in lieu of the customary con· c.ert prev iew. Mrs. Edward W. Schumacher (right), chairman, pol1rs for Mrs. J . Donald Ferguson, while Mrs. Allan S. Johnson supplies her own coffee. I CALENDARS FLIPPED BACK -Caught up in the nostalgia of the . good old days are l\1rs. Philip \Vinsor (standing} and Mrs. Frederick Grat:c r , \1·ho \Vill be joined by other members of the Women's Auxil- iar y to the Or ange County J\tledical Association for a Turn-of-the-cen- tury party. Medical Auxiliary 'Catches' Nasta lgia The dnys of th e cigar store Indian and sarsaparilla will be recreated \\'hen the \\'on1an's t\Uxiliary to the Orange County J\1edical Association celcbriltes \\'Ith a 1'urn-of-the-ccntury party honoring their husbands' an- nual in.~talln t 11Jt1 of off icers. 'f aking pla ce 1n th e Sa nta Ana Country Club Saturday, .Jan. 23, the party 1vil l fe~ture deco rations including nickelodeons, pe nn y arcade peep sho\vs and other nos talgi~ re.collections from the good old days. \Val lers in straw hats and sleeve garters will dispense complimen- ta ry ch ampagne along \.\'ith the sarsaparilla beginning at 7 p.m. while a jester entertains the assembling guests. A vcr!>at i!e band. familiar with all eras from rag to rock will play for da ncing during dinner a nd following will be a show featuring imitations or George rvl. Cohan, Harry Lauder and other old-time greats. Presenting the progra1n \Viii be Ted Bower s. who also collects the decorative relics. A surprise guest performer will be a feminine singer who star& on TV's l\1elody Ranch. During the evening Dr. Lyle Voge of Orange will relinquish com- mand or the association to Dr. Fred Kay or Fullerton. Assisting Dr. Kay during his term of office will be Dr. Marshall Stone street of Anaheim. president-elect, and Dr. John Farrer of Newport Beach, secretary-treasurer . Music In lieu of the customary preview lecture w h i c h precedes each Orange County f'ttilhannonic Society concert, music lovers will be treated to a. Day at the Music Center where they will view an open rehearsal. The day of Thursday, J an. 28. will begin early, for those attending will be bo11rding buses at 8 a.m. at the Irvine Coast Country Club. The rehearsal of the Orange County Philh a r monic Orchestra with Zubin Mehta conducting will begin promptly at 9:45 a.m. Afterward a luncheon and tour of the center are planned. Chairman of the event is Mrs. Edward W. Schumacher, who is taking reservations. Separate tickel.!l for the bus trip, luncheon and tour are availab~ to the public. Two days later on Saturday, Jan. 30. the orchestra and its condllctor will travel to Orange County lo play the third concert in the currtnl 11ubscription series. The program . lo begin at 8:30 p.m in UCI Crawford HaJI , will Include Symph<>ny No. 3 (Scottish) by Men· delssohn and Concerto No. I in D Minor, Brahms, played by world-famous p I a n Is t, Daniel Barenboim. Tickets. at $4.50, are on sale at the Philhannon.ic office, 201 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, phone 646-Mll. Student tickets are $2 .• Zubin Mebt.a, 34. 1.s In hls ninth year 1.s music director of the Los Angeles Phi\hannonic, and during that period he ha.s guided the orchestra to an enviable poai· lion among the world '• great orchestras. Through awareDeSll of the Lovers Circle Dates dramatic changes which have taken place in mus ic and his unusual ability to program, the conductor is credited with attracting growing audiences, especially the young people. Barenboim, 27, was brought to the United States for the firsl time In 1957. l~is debut with Leopold Stokowski and the Symphony of the Air plunged critics into a search for new adjectives . A nati ve of Buenos Aires, the pianist has been a citizen of Israel .!\!nee he was 10. His l~ne of the world's most highly praised young artists and also is one. of the busiest, appearing repeatedly season after 5eason in North and South America, Europe, Russia. the Far East and Australia. From lntern at lonal acknowledgement of h i s virtuosity as a pianist he i.s placed in the front ranks, and his recent entrance into the fie ld of conducting has com· manded m u s i c a I attention around the globe. 'Doggone' Nut Sale Benefits Camp Fire Girls Nuts for you will be sold throughout the Orange Coast area by Camp Fire Girls. Begging for an ad- vance sample before the sale which begins Thurs· '\ day, Jan. 21 and ends Feb. 8, is Fifi, who is beinf ' treated by Barbara Rush, top salesgirl for 1970. ,some Facets of Life Can Never Be Sweetened With Honey !nEAR ANN LANDERS : Several weeks •o you used Rose Kennedy as an ex- at1Ple of great courage. You cxpres~ aamiration for ''this woman of lll- dfmitablc spirit v.•ho refuses to be ctlfeated." I'd like you to know theh! ale thousand!'! of women in lhis country Who have had plcnly of tragedy in lheir lives but who didn't have a hundred rdHlion bucks to help them sweeten tltelr sQ.rroY(. Money can go a Jong way to cllm the nerves and heal a broken he11rt. Jl burns me up the way rich people aiiays get praised for handline ad- vehilty. Whoever said money talks knew wbat he was talking abo~t. -NO KEN- N'tPV, WORSHIP PER DEAR N.: lf you belleve money ca• a~eo sorrow you have a great dtal ., ANN l_ANDFRS ~ to learn aboat Ille. Tbe rldi modter who loKJ a ~fld dies lllM nfltr )rnf becaue allie bas DMDey. Heartadrie ti ne rupee&or of bli1t-acco&llll.t.. Bow maay motlaen, rid! OR peot do 1• bew ..-bve lo.I • daag11ter fn • pine crm and tllree .... - one II die anlform of hl1 country and two wile were mmlered by a11aulm! And '-" many •year-old wome1 do ynu know who h11ve the ma1nlllaat carrlq~1 the dlc•lty •nd dWl ilt-defattpb~ eM:rO of Roae: l(eanedy? ta uae you llave the lde1 _that ~ am 1pe1k.ln1 ap for a Irle• 1• are wroos. I hve DeVer met Mn. Knaedy. DEAR ANN LANDERS: With divorce epidemic In this ~try, millions of stepmothers and stepfathers are facing problem.s virtuaJly unheard of 25 years ago. I have read 30 many letltrs in your column reeenlly dealing with thi!i: dilemma that I Would like to tell you how t 90Jved mine . I Wall one of those protective mother! who took my son's .side every time he had a disa"'eement with h\.ol stepdad. Our home wa.s a battle zone. Finally 1 took r. good look at the .situation and I saw a boy growing up with no respect for authority. I also saw a clever kid who wu gelling what he wanted by playing on my gulll becatl9e 1 had deprived him of his natural father. l realized he had succeeded in driving • wedge between me and my huaband and in the end, we would •11 be loaen. I decided to let my hU$band discipline the boy and 1 V1lwed to stand behind him -right •Oi wrong. Sometimes I go Into the bathroom and just st.ay there to keep from Interfering. The resu lts have been remarkable. The boy and his stepdad now get along famously. My .son Is no longer testing limits to aee how rar he can ~ J am no longer being used as a battering ram and a refuge. This la.st year hu been my happiest. The boy Is happier, loo. My husband feels like a father and lhe head of the house. It wu not an ea.sy leuon to learn. My only rearet Is that I dkfn'l learn It sooner. -TOGETHER AT LAST ' DEAR TOGETHER.: A letter from tolDtHt wllt bM IOlved a pnblem ls fir' more me•hlgfll thin advice from Ann Landel-1. Thank you for wrttlnc. • DEAR ANN LANDERSo The cor- respondent who signed herself "Natalie'' is a lucky lady . She described her children's granny as 11 no bra, platinum blond swinger who 1 wears a pout'lds of costume jewelry and spends her lime in beauty salons: My children have a granny and a grainps who have beeft. drunk for 30 years. Thia pair of kook.I' has ruined every holiday u far back. as I can remember. One day will you please devote a, column to alcoholism disgut.sed as "social drinking"? -MARION, OHIO DEAR MARION : I kaft and I wD1 do so a1a1n. AltollollJlll Ml wrecked more marrlaett, earetn l9d Maltliy bodle1 .._ •1 1111,i. demeot blow to mu. ~ Oo you feel Ill al east . • • out.I of It? Is everybody havlns ti good time bul you? Write (or Ann ~ra' booklet; "The Key to Pop.I=;" m.t:lo1ing wtt.11, your request 35 -ln-1cOt. :.and ·• long. self·~-~ued, starriped nve~ in care of Uf DAILY PU.o'r. I I I I I I . I . -• IT'S IN THE BAG -1"1embers of the Newport Harbor Emblem Clu b, 11rs. Kenneth \Ve slman, out· going president (left), and A1rs. Olis Cardwell , in· comin£ president (center) present th e group's an- To avoid disappoint ment, erospect~ve brides are reminded to have their wedd ing stories with black and white j!lossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT \Vomen's De- partment one "'eek before the wedding. Pictures received after that time \rill no t be used. For engagement announcements it . is imperative th at the s1ory, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be s~1lr mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met. onJy a story v.•ill be used. To help fill requirements on both wed· d ing and engagement stor ies, forms . are available in all of it.he DAILY PILOT 0(!1ces. Further ques tions v.'ill be an s"·ered by \Vomen's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. . I Wedding Vows Recited St. Andrtw's Presbyteria n Chapel, Newport Beach v.·as tilt setting for the nupl1a! ceremonies linking Bon n 1 e Rose Fry and Gene Paul McGovern. Parents of the bridal ro.iple are Mr. and ?.1rs. \\11lliam Fry and Mr. and Mrs. Eui;::cnc Paul McGovern, all 0£ Cos1 ;a r-.1~a. The: Rev Dr Charles H. Dierenfield officiated. Given in marriage by her Novel Rev iew For Rivieran s A re view of ri.1axwell \ta111· no vel "Psycho Cybemct1rs" will be presented by .~lrs PhiUip Dennis for members of the Riviera Club at ID a m en Monday , Jan. 18. 1 Th~ meeting will be in the Laguna Beach home of :-Oi rs.1 Robert De Bussey. Reserva- tions may be made with Mrs.: Robert Souter. fathrr. the bride v.·a<> al!ended' by 1--lrs. Charles Palmer and ~fiss Nancy Lee ~!c{'..overn. s1sler of the bridegroom.I Palmer v.'as best man. Af1er a Las Vegas honey· moon. the newl~·weds will rrside in San FranciSt~ 1.1•hPre the bridegroom is stationed aOOard th? L'SS Orisk;:iny. Both the bride 11 n d hnrlegroom arP N e w ri n r t l!arOOr Jligh Sch()()! graduates. !I P also anendl.'rl Or<1ngc C1Jes1 College 11nd h:is done a tour nf dtJ\y in \'11.'lnarn. I THINK SALE THINK , , JEDJo tnhl WESTCLIFF PLAZA 11111 ,& l"'-fWP'Wf IRKfl JA.NUARY CLEARANCE AT VICTORIA 'S 20% OFF • DRESSES • PANT SUI TS • BLOUSES • CAPRIS .-w ""'*':l:"'"" =-* FROM OU R SPECIAL RACK OF DRESSES & SHIFTS * •j 50% OFF !' ~ .,..,,,,_ • ..1 • VICTORIA'S I/~ AND LAR6E SIZES ' HARIOll CENTER e COSTA MESA 545 '""20 M~N~'TH U R5., FOi. 10·• ,•~ 1 flll., WED .. SAT. ID·I · 'll' ... nual donation to ~1rs. Kenneth Watkins. representa- tive of the ?i.1ardan School of Educatioll:al Therapy, Costa lt·lesa. Gavel Changes Hands For NH Emblem Club Installalion ol officers for the Newport Harbor Emblem Club will take place al 2 p.rn. Sunday, ,Janu;i ry 17, in the !\'c1.1•port !::!ks L-Odge. Officiating will be ~!rs. J ohn c·. St.1rr, t;Upreme president, <ind ~1 rs. Cora Lee \\'iggs, m;irshall. ~lrs. Otis Cardwell ¥.'ill assume presidential duties fr om i\1r!o. Kenneth We!!lman. Richardson, HaJ"ry Frank:en and Loreta Frick, trustees; Stanley Panek and LeOflard Johnson, assistant marshalls; Ed Ragsdale, m a r s ha 11 ; Edward Lutze, chaplain; Rl11h J\loore, publicity; Emerson \\l!'ntzell, historian: Cessna l\1cGavran and Ari Kroen ing, guards. and Herb J\1aleas, organ ist. Dedicated lo commuruty ser\'!te a n d phHanthropie Battle of the Sexes Retort Watered Down By ERMA DOMBECK I know women:~ lib erou~ :. py that t:iufcally ·tbefe is no difference between the emoUonal make.up of men and women, but Ult)' are ~· ,_,1• J read l!:rkb 5ega1'1 ·~·Love ·Jjfory" while sitting in a park· t:ni lot waiting foi: my MUghter to have bV' teeth 1Cianed. (II'• the.Jlt«)' of two young people who m81T)' <ind are separated by death in the ne1t to the last chapter.) Small c:hlldren on the way home from school sold Ucke~ to my performaDCe. Tears streamed down my fact, my eyes became red and swollen, sounds of anguish came from my throat anci I had difficulty swallowing. l rushed home and said to my husband , "You must read this book." He sat dciwn after dinner and I watched him carefully as he read. Finally, he put the book down, looked AT WIT 'S END up and said, ''Did the boys tum off the garage light like I told them to?" "You really are an in· struitive person.'' I said. "Why, because I am sick ol ligbting this place up like an airstrip?" "I'm not talking about the garage light. I'm talking about the book." "It's a woman's book," he yawned. "What do you mean by a crack like that?" "I mean you cried when Roy Rogers' horse went lame In 'Sons of the Prairie.' " "Men cry too.'' J charged. •·You once sobbed al! the way home from a basketball game." "I never cried at a harmter's f u n er a I , '' he retaliated. "You cried when a kid at the beach asked lo borrow your innertube and y o u weren't wearing one." "You fell apart when the kids gave you a bookmark made out of a paper plate for Mother's Day." "You cried when a bird followed you home from the CM wash." San Clemente Women Toast New Officers "You even cried when Laura told you she was expecting." ''At 43, you hardly laugh :'• "Women wear their eme>- tions on their sleeves," he said ... They 're not capable of separating the real from the unreal. You've seen Bette Davis die on the Late Show 35 times and you're still a basket case." J didn 't say anylhing for a moment. Then , "The boys broke the wall swltch in the garage. If you want the garage light off you 'll have to get the e:1tensio n laddt:r out of the attic and unscrew the bulb. Oh, for heaven's sake, will you stop thal snivel- Members of th e Toastmistress Club of San Clemente will toast new of- ficers as they mUI at 9 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 18, in the Municipal Golf Clubhouse. Council Confers Mrs. GordOll Flttner, outgo- ing president, will tum the gavel over to Mn. Harry Sharits following a t a I k presented by Mn. Ann Lay on tier work at the ldylwild Institute Fiesta Incorporated ror Teeiage Girls. ~rVtng on the new board will be the Mme11. John Green, ing." Ecology Oriented vice president; Homer Holl, The latest ecology-oriented secretary; Betty C h a pi n , treasurer: Barbara Whitmore, way to look prettier is a club representative, a n d transparent facial jelly made Harold M a r k h a m , mem-with mineral salts, sea algae bersh.lp chairman. an~I~~~~· aid cleanses and ., .... ~i. .. JOY JONES Engaged Students To Marry l\1r. and Mrs. Robert H. J one.~ of Westminster have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter. J oy Jones lo Hrlbert Hoffman Jr., son of ri.1 r. and ll1rs. Robert Hoffman of Fountain Vall ey. Both Miss Jones and her fiance are graduales of Foun- tain Valley Hlgh School and attend Golden West College. Sile ~·as a homeco ming princess 11t F'VHS where he was varsity foo tball ro-cap- tain. The betrothed have set no date for their wedding. o-'°"ti ""'"""'-<!!fl~.''"~ ~~.:to.;.; .... ..,.o jewels by joseph APPRAISALS DIAMONDS GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWELRY Traveling to Los Angeles for a Southern California Council meeting of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will be members of the West Grove Area Council on Sunday , Jan. 17. More than 1000 members are expected to atiend lht: event in the Now Grove, Ambassador Hotel. Gerald V. Ru ben, executive director, Na- llonal Cystic F' i b r n sis Research Foundation. w i 11 speak. Other officers Include the tightens skin and actually Mmes. Frank Clewell, publici~ fonns 8 mask in a matter ty; Chapin, Whitmore and of minutes, the manufacturer Fleener, budget and finance aaid. Scuih Cc ••' Pl••• and Robert Gregory, hospitali-This quick action is supposed 8,;,101 "' Sa~ oo.9o F...-y. Miss Virginia Popkins will preside when the candidates for office are introduced. ty. to lessen chances of dirt enter-Ceil• M.,. s~G-9066 Appointed officers are the ing the por~~l~o~c~a~use~iiiii~~~~i Mmes. Ed'wan:l H ' Ar d , blemishes. pa r I i a Jn ent.arian; Burke11!!!!! Cochran, historian; Markham,/I protocol, and Fleener. educa- ti<>n. Hoste for the breakfast will be the Mmes. Green, Holl and Cochran. Other officers Inc lude the ~I mes. John Barclay. vice prcsidCfll ; Frnnk Gr a \'e s , financial secretary: D f' e \\';ide. lreasurer and \Vayne Thuestad and Richard Marvin, sc<Cretaries. "'Ork, !he Emblem CI u b---------------------- presented it...-armtial monetary 1\1 ore are the Mmes. Kip donation to the Mardan School of Educational Therapy. The f11nds were raised through bazaars, rummage s a le s , potl ucks and socials, fashions fo r ••• Fashion Island , Newport Beacli Stonewood Center. Downey JANUARY SALE famous-name bra and girdle sale continues LIL YETIE BRA S Reg. 7.50 (#806) famou s · seuet deep plunge. White. pink fulf ill ment" oc blue. A-B·C ...... . 5u OLGA BRAS Reg. 6.00 1#365) "young seuet" l;ghtweight polyester fiberfill pedding. Nylon 4" l~ce. White. A-8 cups --.. .. ..................... . VASSARETIE BRAS Reg . 5.50 (# 1205) undecwice demi-b". Con· tour cup. White, bl ue 421 or nude. a.c . ' Reg. 5.00 I# 1905) bandeau . Contouc cup. White, blue or nude. B-C cups-·-·· YOUTHCRAFT /CHARMFIT BRAS Reg . 5.50 (#250) lightly padded bco. White or beige. B.C cups 3ss 449 e CHOOSE YOUR FAVORITE GIR DLE S FROM THESE FAMOUS· NAME BRANDS NOW ON SALE: OLGA, V ASSARETIE, YOUTHCRAFT /CHARMRT. ROBES ~ SLEEPWEAR 2 price LOUNGEWEAR ~"" ~Illy 10 I.IOI. hi t p,IOI,/ -IY -ltMlly hi t1Ji •·"'· CMAllGI YOVll l"VlllCHllll51l llllY l'ASHIONS .-011 LA "IMMI' WI ACCll"T MOSJ MAJOlll CllllOlt (.llllDI RTVnSIDI WMITTIU JilEWPORT llACK AlllAlmM ~ivtrs1dt Plaz• Wllitttoood Cenr.r fo!Shion lsl •nd At1aheW. Center SAN DllGO SAVE 50°/o famous-name women's shoes values to $34 • price • Do,.lnk ••-•.. • 1111•11•-llelle • a-1n • ••-• • v-111 • .... 1 All-I.._ • C. ... sle • Old-hie Tr:ellw • C. ..... . '(~kti.<, ,..h;... hltiMI. "-.ir..,A..ti.I•! ..... c ...... , 1oc1.11tes• ......... .. •(Wll l"i.,· ••MllM hi-4, "-"•-AMMI•) • All S..t.t Pl...,I •Nit f .......... I • Hot tef ..... I open daily I 0 om lo 6 pm, mon., thur1., frl. I 0 am lo 9 pm tA N(.lME llCillltO. MASTfl CHAtOf, 'AVl AILAN CHAtGf ••• ,._i-wloPI-...;, ~-•1• M .. ..,,. ..., V.. - Frigida ire frost·Proof with 154·fb. size freezer • frosl·Prool1 You'll never de- fro51 1gain • Dee11 door shelf tor 'h gallon t1rtons, bottles. • Suttee comoartmenl. • Twiri "!etable Hydrators. • N~lo~ 10 lers for easy mo~1ng i nd clt1ning. FRIGIDAIRE BUil T-IN DISHWASHER e Supe•·•~·9• ... ,~i~q lit. 119·0•-no pr•·''"'i"9 • • ~ytl e1 · even t p!•ie ..... ,.,,., e Opt<11"•1 d11:9"•• door lro mi"9 ~.t Jiii&FIUGIDAIRE $199 95 Frigidaire! Jet Action 1-18 Wasti1r with Automatic Soak. cycle. Fle x- ible capacity 1 piece lo 18 pounds. Exclu1!v1 J1t Circl e Spray Sy111m rin1e1 clothe• bener. Perm1nent Preis Care. Mechanism h11 no ge1r1 to wear, no oll lo le1k., Mf!tlli"' lleclrk D..,tr llJt.tJ RADIO DISPATC/JF;D TV and APPLIANCE SERVICE w. h•"• 011• ow" rl11t 11f homt ,.,...;,, +.uc~1 1t•H1d w1tti feclory l•1i11.d 11rwite 1p•ci1li1h to 11.1;.,,, •11d 11,..lce +fie priteluch w1 1111 . Wt believe we c111 90w1 \1011 b1H•t produth with b.11., 11r,,.ic• fo1 1111 1110111¥1 Co'"• i11 tod•y! '°' .......... 548 3437 PlllNDLT 'IJIV'ICI CALL • COSTA MESA dally t-t aat. U 411 E. Seventunth St. 646-1614 ) .l UPI CeblePllDl9 Midi Approved Royally Great Britain's Queen Elizabeth IT appears in public for the first time '\'earing a midi-length costume, accesso ries v.•ith knee-hi gh boots. Horoscope Sagittarius : Display Analytical Abilities FRIDAY, JANUARY 15 By SYDNEY OJ\IAll H Th e Leo man is in love lll'ith love. 11e is not perfect, can be difficull where Taurus and Scorpio v.·omen are con- cern ed. Aries \liomtn find him physica lly attractive, v.·hile Gemini women crave his t1li1nulalin g mental ('oocepts. He is a natural showman, can appear bombastic and is a 1uckcr for nattery. The Leo man lo\•es the spotlight - and he "''ill seldom go back on a pro1nisc. ArtlES i ~l:irch ~!·April 2n ). Responsibility is key. Accept it, handle it. Trying to shirk dulics ca u~cs loss. delay . crn- barr::i:o;sn1cnl. !lssocialc \vant s to be coupcr:itivc. Extend band of fncndship . Accent progress. 'fAUlt US (April 20.r-.1::iy 20l : Children and their activities figure pron1inenlly. You can keep pron1isc wilhout too much in co nvenience. F avorable lunar aspect in· dicates fav orable changes, success£ul creative endeavors. GErtffNI (Ma y 21.June 20): Praclical aspects of situation dominate. Find ways or get· ting message acros.s. .O.lder, more experienced 1ndiv1dual will back you. Know !his and proceed with greater con- fidence. CANCER (June 21.Jul y 22 ): Some restricted information is made available. DI s p I a Y Versatility. Hunch can be followed through with success. Heed intuitive Int e ll ec t . Welcome eJCchange or ideas. 'LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Tim· ts;ig improves: r 1n a n c 1al windfall may be result. Stress vcrsatiljty. Look beyond the immediate. Make most of snaterial at hand. Friendly associate can provide vaJuahle information. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): to new friendships, ability to ga in support for special cause. Stick to familiar ground. Home base favored for en· tertaining. Accent diplomacy and sportsmanship. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Now is tin1e to display analytical ability to professional superiors. Show that you also know ho\v to keep a confidence. You can n1ove up ladder-in more than one .,,,.ay. CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19 ): Travel, advertising, gel· ling lhoughts in form that 1vill communicate to largest CJreas-these are emphasized. Nf'I lirne to sit on laurels. [)cvc\op in business and as pcrso;i. Grow. AQUAJtrus !Jan. 2G-Feb. 18 ): You get news concerning f;1r-Oung interests. Means "'hal seems to be distlmt 01ay be closer than you thfnk. Res. pond accordingly. Aries in- dividual does fit into picture. PISCES (Feb. 19--Marcb 20): you make denL in area previously close(. Mate or partner helps cause. Key is too be independent, but also to show consi&ration oward one close to you. Stand fast on principles. IF TODAY IS YOU R BlRTHDA Y you may be musical: yau s how ap- preciation for drama, the arts. You surprise many because you are warm, affecUonate, loving. Exterior often gives impression of aloofness. You recently made domestic ad- justment. Now, you are grow- ing in emotional stature. 'This may necessitate break in special relationship. What Is in future is much better than what was held in past. To tllld out fflOl'9 .-boul roo.tt1411 ~<Id e1tr .. 09y, orit.r $,dt>eY 0 ..._,,., 50•1ff bool!,lel, Tl>e Tf\11!1 Aboul A1t..,I09v. Send bln hd1!1t aflll so een'1 lo Omarr 800klet. !'lie OA ILY ~1LOT, e n n c , G,..,,,.. Cenlret $1ft!on. NN Yorllh H.Y. 10011. Harbor TOPS Cycle continues to favor in· JUative, Independence. Face JMues squarely. Red tape ca~ be unraveled. Deni rrom pos1· Harper Sc hool In Costa tlon of streogth. Refuse lo Mesa is the location where ht bluffed by empty threats. members of TOPS Harbor J.1BRA (Sept. 23-('.)ct. 22): Lighters gather each Mondly Lure of unknown ten1pts: be evening al 6:30. rcidY to anal yze knowledge. ;==========;! FJne to be mystical, b~t degree of pracUcallty now 1s 1 necessity. Gemini individual wUI make fine ally. 'CCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): l 'avoiaim ............ STARS Sydney 011'\•rr i1 Gne of tfte werllll'• 9reet estrol09en. Hie colum1r_ le 011• of the DAILY PILOT'i 9 re tt t.•tut••· lhursda1, January 14, 1'171 DAILY PlLOT Jf after inventory Starts Friday at 10 a.m .Save 20% in every department. Hurry in for best selection. We've cleaned up our shelves and are ready to pass the savings on to you. Limiled quantities. Sorry, no mail or phollf! orders. FASHION SAVINGS PANTYHOSE hosiery 7 -were 3.00 LEATHER GLOVES gloves 3 -were 8.00-10.00 BELT COLLECTION accessories 19 -were 5.00-8.00 JEWELRY fashion jewelry 22 -were 2.00-3.00 HANDBAGS handbags 26 -were 8.00-15.00 BLOUSES, PANT TOPS blouses 31 -were 7.00-10.00 FAMOUS MAKER SHOES women's shoes 51 -were 21.00 GIRLS' JUMPING JACKS yo ung people's 70 -were 12.00 CASUAL, DRESS SHOES blvd. shoes 112 -were 12.00-1 !i.OO BETTER DRESS SHOES better shoes 125 -were 24.00-34.00 BOYS', GIRLS' PLA YWEAR infants 38 -were 3.29-7.00 BOYS' FLARE PANTS little boys 52 -were 5.00 PEASANT DRESSES dresses 56-were 8.00-10.00 SWEATERS sportswear 77 -were 8.00 DRESS GROUP pre-teen 90 -were ! 3 .00-15.00 BETTIR CASUAL, LATE DAY DRESSES forecast 20 -were 80.00-136.00 FAMOUS MAKE DRESSES, PANTSUITS cos mopoli tan 96, 98 -were 28.00-60.00 JUNIOR DRESSES, SIZES 5-13 young sig. 94 ·were 26.00-34.00 CASHMERE COATS, SIZES 6-1 B misses' coats 27 -were 66.00 1.49 6.99 2.99-3.99 99c 6.99-9.99 3.99 10.99 6.99 7~99 16.99 1.99-4.99 2.99 5.99-6.99 4.99 7.99-9.99 40.00-68.00 19.99-47.99 12.99-16.99 54.99 3.99-5.99 DAYTIME DRESSES, MISSES & HALF SIZES daytime dresses 61 -were 10.00-17.00 SPECIAL SIZE All.OCCASION DRESSES 11 99 19 99 woman's dresses 57 ·were 18.00-34.00 • • • STROLLER LENGTH NATURAL MINIC COATS $529 fur salon 47 BLOUSES AND SHIRTS, SIZES 8·18 8 99 better blouses 39 -were 12.00-15.00 • FAMOUS GO-TOGETHER GROUP, 5·13 7 99 15 99 campus shop 43 ·were 1 S.00-32.00 · • -• SWEATERVESTS,WOOLANDACRYLIC 7 99 10 99 jr. knit sptswr. 138 -were 14.00-17.00 • • • LACY ORLON® ACRYLIC CARDIGANS 10 99 knit sportswear 72-were 15.00-17.00 • FAMOUS PROPORTIONED WOOL PANTS 12 99 active sportswear 76 -were 18.00 • FAMOUSWOOLGO-TOGETHERS 10 99 14 99 coordinates 101 -were 14.00-26.00 • " • WOOL FLANNEL PROPORTIONED SKIRTS 12 99 skirts & coordinates 101 ·were 18.00 • LONG NYLON QUILT ROBE 19 99 loungewear 53 -were 26.00 • LARGE SELECTION OF BRAS bras and girdles 44 · were 4.00-8.00 2 • 99.4 • 99 BRIEFS AND BIKINIS, WHITE AND PASTELS 99' daytime lingerie 28 -value 1.35 GROUP OF NYLON GOWNS sleep lingerie 10 -were 5.00-8.00 COTION FLANNEL PAJAMAS, PRINTS sleep lingerie 10 -were 5.00 GROUP Of DRESS SLACKS men's sportswear 45 • all stores were 8.00 ARllOW SPORT SHIRTS, S-XL sport furn. 84 -all stores were 6.00-10.00 ARROW C.P.O. SHIRTS men's sport furn. 84-all stores were 16.00 McGREGOR, PURITAN SWEATERS men's sport furn. 84 -were 11.00-13.00 VAN HEUSEN DESIGNER SHIRTS men's sport furn. 84 -were 10.00 FAMOUS CASUAL PANTS men's sporlSWear 133 -were 13.00· 14.00 BOLD STYLE SHIRTS bartoo hall 83 -all stores were 8.50· 10,00 FAMOUS MAKER OUTDOOR JACKETS barton hall 116 -all stores were $40-$60 BOYS' FAME MAKER JEANS boys' wear 14 -all 51Dre5 were 4.99-6.50 FAMOUS MAKER SPORT SHIRTS boys' furn. 23 • all stores were 3.00-3.SO 3.99 3.~9 10.99 3.99-4.99 8.99 5.99-8.99 3.99 6.99 3.99 24.99 2.99 1.99 FOR THE HOME 32 GALLON PLASTIC TRASH CAN housewares 33 -all stores was 8.95 FAMOUS MAKE 21" WEEKEND CASE luggage 36 -all stores was 17.95 MIRRORS WITH COLORFUL LUCITE bath shop 139 -all stores were 5.00-7.00 SHETLAND BROOM vacu ums 73 -all stores was 24.99 FLEISHER KNITIING YARN art needlewor k 40 -all stores was 1.80 PUNCH BOWL SET, 12 CUPS glassware 126 -all stores was 22 .50 RB.DCREST DAISY CHAIN SCATIER RUCS linens 30-all store5 were $4-$15 DAMASK TABLECLOTH SETS linens 30 -all stores were $6·$8 TIER, CAfE CURTAINS draperies 113 ·all stores were $5-$7 pr. VENETIAN POUFF PANELS draperies 113 -all stores were $16-$20 CUSTOM DRAP~IES, IABOR INaUDED 3.99 12.99 2.50-3.50 19.99 1.49 15.99 1.99-7.49 4.69-6.69 2.99-3.99 6.99-9.99 (80" minimum length) 1 99 custom fabrics 11 -an stores were 2.50 yard • SAVE 30-40% ON CUSTOM REUPHOLSTERY custom fabrics 11 ·all stores was 6.90.-13.90 3.99-6.99 ARVIN 20" DIA. COLOR TABLE TV TV722-allstoreswas449;SO 299.00 RCA CONSOLE STEREO, 100 WATIS stereo 728 -all stores was 599.95 399.00 RCA CLASSICS, 1:1'. RECORDS records 723 ·all stores 5.98 value ea. 3 .79 All VICTROLA LP. RECORDS records 723 -all stores 2.98 value ea. 1.69 100% NYLON PILE SHAG BROADLOOM floor ·coverings 32 - was 11 .00 sq. yd. installed 7 • 99 SCATIER AND AREA RUGS area rugs 137 ·were 30.00-50.00 19.99-34. 99 MATCHmCICSWAGLAMPS 19 99 lamps 63 ·all stores. were 45.00 • FRAMED GRAPHIC ART.PHOTOS 14 99 pictures-mirrors 75 -all stores.were 25.00 • · VELVETACCENTCHAIRS 88 00 furniture 141 • all stores were 139.00.-149.00 • 7-PC. MODERN DININC ROOM 770 00 furniture 142 -all stores was 11 25.00 • FROM OUR BUDGET STORE MISSES' BULKY CARDIGANS, 36-42 sportswear 800 -except Wilshire were 7.99 PASTEL PLAID PANTS, 8-16 sportswear 800 -were 6.99 ACRYLIC KNIT PANT SETS, S-M·l daytime dresses 810 -except Wilshire value 11.99 SEAMLESS NYLON PANTYHOSE hosiery 807 -except Wilshire were t .39 FAKE FUR ACRYLIC PILE COATS women"s .coats 828 -except Wilshire were 39.99 CASUAL HANDBAGS OF VINYL handbags 827 -except Wilshire were 3. 99 WARM BRUSHED SLEEPWEAR lingerie 821-except Wilshire reg. 3.99 SAVINGS ON WOMEN'S SHOES woman's shoes 81 2 -except Wilshire, Montclair, Oxnard, Carlsbad were 4.99-6.99 GIRLS' WESTERN JEANS, 7-14 girls' wear 824 -·were 2.59 GIRLS' BULKY CARDIGANS, 3-6X, 7-14 girls' wear 824 • except Wilshire were 3.99 BOYS' DOUBLE KNEE JEANS, 8-16 boys' wea r 822-except Wilshire value 2.99 NO-IRON CASUAL PANTS men's 817 -if perf. 5.99-6.99 FLARE PANTS AND JEANS, 28-36 men's sportswear 817 ·except Wilshire were !I. 99 MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS men's clothing 814 -except Wilshire were 25.99 LAMBSWOOL SWEATERS, MANY STYLES men's sportswear 805 -except Wilshire reg. 10:99 5.99 4.99 9.99 69< 29.99 2.99 3.50 3.99 1.99 2.00 2/5.00 2.99 3.99 18.00 5.99• . HEAVY QUALITY TUB MATS linens 831-if perf. 2.50-3.50 NO-IRON KING PRINT SHEETS 1.89, 2-3.50 domestics 803 -except Wilshire if perfect 13.SO INSULATED DRAPERIES, 4Bx54~ 48x84'' 818-Montclair, Carlsbad, Oxnard were 9.95 8Yix11 'l:i' ROOM SIZE RUGS _rugs 811 -""cept Montclair Carlsbad, Oxnard were 29. 99 5.99 6.99 22.00 m1y co south eo11t plau, 11n dl9fo fwy 1t brlttol, COit• meu, 546-m1 shop mondoy thru Hlurday 10 am to f::IO pm, aundly -'Ill S pm r ~ . MAVCO ' I 1 l ~-·-· .... ' J8 DAllY ,!LDT J Crittenton Homes Remodel for New Style Families By JO OLSON Ot !~o l>•llY 1"1 .. 1 U•li A lot has happen ed to lhe unwed n1olher since 23 )Car.~ ago v.•hen she wa s locked 11110 a Florence Crittenton hon1c until her baby was delivert'll. Today she most likely "'ill keep her baby and won 't s tay in a Florence Ctittcnton home at all during her pregnancy or delivery. J\.tiss Jean11e Olander. direc- tor of the Single Parent Service for I.tie Florence Crit· tcnton Home of San Francisco. de sc ribed the trend during the annual n1eeung of the Florence Crittenton Hon1P of Orange Coun ty in the Roya! Coach Hotel, Anahein1, A graduate of the University of South Dakota. Miss Olander curncd her masters degree in soci;:i l work al the Uni versity nf Cali forn ia, Berkl'lcy nnd participa ted in a !l\'O-ye:i r rrscarch project tn t'\'alutJtc . ., Toothy Topic Saddlcback ~-lothrr~ Twins "'ill sched ule a dessert meeting at 8 p.1n. on \Ved~ nesday, Jan. 20, in the .~!is~ion V1eJO home al. fl1rs. John Kem- P<' '. tile net·ds or t11e singl e f)<irent Defore assuming her Cr1 1len- lon position. In describi ng thr contem- pora ry trends 10 the field of n1aten1ily care for s1nglr wo- 1nen, she said. "The thread!'! are long <1nd short. Son1e ~lre!C"h back into tt11• la S1 cen- lury ·· RESCUE A-11SSl01'"S Jn Ule late 1800s. Crittenton h0tnes "-'ere resC'ue n11ssions for all girls v.here reform v.·as the priinary objective. 1'he girls agreed lo stay for six 1nonths, she related. and evrry girl did her sha rr 1n l.eep1ng up the house Sonie cr11phas1s was placed ion school work and n1uch \1·as r1ur 1n Bible study. The girls whn were pregnant were ask - I'd to stny 11nl1I their t·hildrcn 11't•ri• ;l{ lea st six rnnn lhs old, and ;ii! 1vere urged II• look l1pun rhc hoinc <is their hon1C' fnr hfr. Thesr ho n1 e ~ gradual ly e v o 1 \' t' d inl() inaterni!y hon1es. "Today, birth c ontrol devices have dec.reased the number of births out of \vedJock," P.11ss Olander said. ''Those who are left Lo carry thei r children are those v.•ho unt'Oflsciously want a child or are indecisive. These need counseling." Another factor aJfectlng the changing scene is the parents' v.•illingness to accept an unwed daughter and an o u I ·Of· we dlock grandchild, she ad· ded. The San Francisco hon1e i.~ feeling the changing trend. •·tt has a capacity of 42 and last "'eek had 20 girls in resi dence. Its ex tended services ca red ror 6:'.I in 1970 and now ha s a caseloa d of zero.'' Miss Olander added thRt the cases where a brief contact 1~ n1ade have decreased from 800 1n 1969 to 500 1n 1970. \Vhen officials ri'ali?.ed 1he ' disparity in their servk-es , "·ith two-thirds to three. fourths of !he out-of.wed lock babies being kept, a single µarent farnily conunlltee was for1ned wh ich met for several yea rs to find solutions. Misii Olander's research was an outgrowth or that commillce, and her work is an outgr()Wth of the research . NEW SERVfCEs "The design was to provide social services to one-half the sample Each mother (in the test cases) was interviewed in !he hospital t h e n in· terv1e"·cd several times in her hon1e . ·r he ci rcumstances v.•ere appalling." The hal f give n the se rvices improved draslically. ··1vhen the service was taken lo them , offered on their lerrns. thev were eager. " . \\'h <il arc the problen1 s fa c· e<:I by these young, unwed mothers, 40 percent under 18? J\.1iss Olander said they 11eed decent housing -high rent and reluctant landlords make it unavailable, relief from economic deprivation and day care centers. The San F'ra11cisco program offers individual counseling, group meetings, a clothing and equipment ex ch a n g e , a monthly publication called "Good News," transportation on a selective basis, infant care classes, a roommate service infonnation and refer- ra l services and a new young moth er's residence for six teens and their babies. DAY CARE CENTER An infant day ca re center is 1n the plaMing stages, to include training for mot.hers, schedul ed to open this year. ''\Ve are nol entire l y satisfied with our efforts," she concluded. "Teenage parents are hard lo reach. They are immature, adrJft, 1trugglln1 to rind their own idenUty. Wt. sUll have greater g011llj:, to ittcrease the number of gir!J we reach, to offer mol"t! ac- tivities, to get to know better those we know a little." New officers and director! were elected during the business meeting. Seated for her second term as president or the Florence Crittenton Home of Orange County, which was renamed Florence Crittenton Services of Orange County. was Mn . Edgar R. Hill of Newport Beach. Other Orange C o a s I residents assuming o f f i c e "'ere Rich.ant L. Berkson and fl1rs. Frank H. Binney, both ()f Lagun" Beach, Md Mrs. Pat Mellott of Newport Beach, vire presidents. New directors are Mikel T. llasty and Mrs. Fred Kay. both or Newport Beach and ll-1rs-. John Nolan of Costa Mesa. Sculptor Makes Use Of Hands Mrs. Hill summed up th• board's decision to change the name and the direction of Ute organization ia her l 9 7 0 mes.sage : "The 'pill,' libe.raliz.ed abor· lion laws and the changing !UOl'als have worked tofrtther to lower the need for resident materaity care . , , "Our board decided to recruit an executive director and, under the guidance of a professional social worker. begin to offer services at once to unwed mothers seeking our help. The director will work out of our present office until the caseload warrants more space. \Ve are defe rring our building program ..• "We feel collfident. howeve r, t h a I with the Crittenton e1- perience upon which to draw, \\'e will be able to provide an innovative program for the young girls in our com· munity ." Dr . .James Farthing will spC'ak on dental hygiene for children. Those p!anntng to .1uend are asked lo call th e hostess. (.;uests are welcome. South African born, United States citizen Nile Baker will discuss contemporary themes and materials employed in his sculpture for members of the Affiliates of the La:guna Beach Art Callery on P.fonday , Jan. 18 OUR JamouJ HAIR BEAT ~ t-\llVAMDO HAIR STYLIST MINI , MIDI, MAXIMODE llE-"W1..,...I QUlSTION: Wh11 ••• t h ,. y .,.,.,,;n9 in Europe 7 Stewardesses' Party Plan s Flying ANSWflt : Sp•1king in 9•n1r1I;. li11, r191rdin9 h.j,, I would h1•1 I!> l •Y th1 v "" info ~n "••••vlhon9 9011'' lvP• fh•ng: 1ho.+. lr>nq or mtdium l1n9th. QUESTION: A•1 +ho .ivl11 .J,(. ler•nl !h1n O•tr he•t 7 ANSWflt; Y11 •nd no. Tho h1ir- 1lyl11 ob101d .,. 1a1 the ... .,. 1111n •b•o1d; b11.,;.1lly tho ••m• 11 0•1 • hero ,,.ctpl ~ little J,,,, ... d "'"'" "'"'""' ,., 1h1:, Forrner airline ste"·ard es!;e!' living in ll t1nt1ngt.on thinq 11arbour \Vtll be JOined by lhe1r hus bands <.luring a QUESTION: W h1l ••• tho mnd ni gh t of gaiety in the hon1e of the l;eorge Schlagel.~. popul., h•i• •1'11•• .1 .. oed 10• 'flie t•roup \vii i gather al 7 p n1. Saturday, J an. 16, th1> n1w cloth11 l1•hion1; ...,.di, "" m"•i, 1!c. l'•-----------, 1 1 ANSWER: The A19onc .. (n•w YOGA IS . ' High for a sotial hou r, IJuffet supper. dancing and sk its. F1l1 ng plans for the pi lot party are (left to right\ Roh O'Neill .Mrs. ('Jarence Saat1ian. Mrs. O'Nei!l and the hostess. The meeting hosted by ~1rs. George Davenport and Mr:ri. Arthur Bode will begin at I :JO p.m. in the gallery. Travel through many Euro- pean countrle!I a n d im· prisonment in Czechoslovakia during the 1968 uprising are fe lt in his "'ork sucil as the Prisoner. the Lovers and a child ·s hand entitled, Hap. pi ness ls a Chubby Thum b. Ha ving bridged the language barrier by gesture. the artist focu ses attent ion on the hands. demonst rating that expressi\'e hands are an extensio n of the mind as muc_h as tile spoken word. Night Owls See Daylight Ne"·port Beach Night Owls nf lhe lloot 'Jll Holler Roost 1\•ill gather in the Ebel\ Clubhouse. Newport BeRch. at 2 p.m. Sunday. Jan. 17, rnr an afternoon or gemes ilnd community singing. CLEARANCE OF DESIGNER FASWONS SUITS, SPORTSWIAR, COATS, DllSHS, AFTIR·S & GOWNS IOrftl-rJy $-40,. $200J NOW •2s to '125 •*·»·>}·>} ·>}·»·*·» SPECIAL SELECTION OF COUTURE FASHIONS f0rl1l11al,., re SIOOJ NOW $50. {<· «·ie·{<·{<·{<·{<· «· SCARVES SWEATERS HANDBAGS NOW HALF·PRICE ·»·*·»·»·»·»·»·» Ft•nch l•n1 ) ;, 9oinq 1hon9 ond of ccu.,e, n,. other •lvl.,, "e ••• doi<1Q h•re but •o r>o•e ol •<1 "•lreme. Eutop etn womtn qel behond • ., ... ih•nq I.it"' !h•n W• do •nd th.,.fc., q;•• th.it •lv•i•I • <:h•nc• !c •••II~ The Tee Tat/er New Role Assumed Articles for the group's City of Hope table will be collected and refreshments will be serv· ed from a table decorated by J\.1iss Dorothy Dare a11d Mrs. Clarence Rains. tle;ance iH 'JasltiPH put tt !09elhe• lld•'c• • llo•• • <Olumn o! '"""''"' '""' u~I! \(O'M. ..,.11 ~o>P•~' •••<'• ""~' •n '"• QAILV PILOT In •epnri 'to•e• lo• rne """'~ pie••• "'"'' ,.,...,, !n P O l!o.o 1}60, Cc11~ M••• I~•• rl1u>I DI< ••r e,v<'<I b• l>'O"d•• I QUESTION: Do ~cu thi.,~ Cu •c· p•<tn "'omen ••• •~e•d ol U•1 ANSWER: On!v ;n '"''~ f e"J~! hou"! •nd th. b•el,., "'C••· f "fll' IJltSfl f•eflfJft• Ti1•etl? Te11sf•:' ll':L 10 110 .-LAO TOU RNAMl:Nl -6 ~1,9nt "•~ "'·'""' '-""v M~t•, ~·~b•rl '1• ol '''"· l en S•~· .. vccnd. (erl M•"~~ r• ·o e. ~l•gr 1 tn• 11m•> 11 .cn.v~ ._.,.,.~·· 11.,t. ~'t~•rd 1unneol, .-con~ ""'' l<ol•.nn •h r~ (. r1roh' "p "'"'' L••nMO 6U"" ''"' .... n1~ "' •n•'• • ·.ttnr>d • Fl:[E O[MONSTllATION FRIO.Al -8 P M. Cl<H'<" !.t1;n l <.at. -lO AM. A~~ Abo111 Out O!he• Cld~1e1 YOGA CENTER llA,.CHO ~AN JOAQUIN ACE D~Y TOUl!NAM ENT w.nn•• JO F11hlon l1l1nd Newport Cent111 '44-2151 •n E 11t~ ~1. Swot• ! (01!• Mt•f ..... 111 /J" ~ W Pe,.,i.on IQ,. net 01 /' I t yn1 A t!i• M"'•\ lun\1()<~ Jon•,, /~. Horold P Sorool, 11. f 1•11''1 B II>• Mm••· C••v• o·~-··· ti, P•~I w 1t1,.n1. n. ~l•O~I C '"" .Ym~· w .... n Collin•. Ai .... o. WOO<IMW l •<"-n~" NnrwOO<! J'olnd•"••, !", F 11~1'! D '""Mme• JAmei 61•~•,..or~, I ' Herl>t<t L<1wrent• 9'/; /lo>• ,,... mnv .. 1 ooll•• o• v•o< M" "•"I S••-•n1 I HAVE YOU SHOPPED OUR SHOE SALE YET? GREAT VALUES IN MENS & LADIES BETTER GRADE SHOES LADIE S REG . TO $25. NOW $2 .80-$16.80 MENS REG . TO $35 . NOW 58.80-$21.80 "Whe re Shopping Is A Real Pleasure" 1052 IRVINE e WE~TCLlfF PL AZA e NEWPORT BEACH e S48·8684 ) I ' l l!V!NE COAST NET PLUS U!"TTS -(lo" A '"' l!ollf'rT G•rO""" 110. Mli> O•• , .... WP••• llO (l••I 6 tn• Mme1 l'u• "~"l>l<ra, 1to; Jl)iin Dovoe1. 111 THREE SLINO MICE Cl<I'> A. ti" >1me1 Be~ Lonoloy ll. Nan<v •••wl~·>d 51 . Neol G•••• T W V.1ldl"• }$; (l•U I! lh• r/,ff'•\ ff•O '·""••d•t, j•, p~.,I ~ll• H I •,,.. •n>Qn 10 (I•,, (. 1h• M""' fl"I""' y.,dl•Y, \I, IJQ,,..rl "Mll•v. ( Od•~ 6<'<1well, ~-EL ,_IGUEl ""~~AU -A 1'"1191". !~t M"1•< 11.,.,~ w;n•n~ /}, Ed'"" J>~dl•~•, J~', "'"''""' fQ~n, II. Roger l11ie•lro<r> ·~·; louls E~•n•. 19: R Ftlgnt. 1n~ M"'"' Kennpltl ~•IHll, I•: ~oll8nd l>·~nloc\. )1; Wiiii• (,u pentt1, /9, l~c• Hn•n, JJ, DO"~IO lt1ornn1on, '"· c Fl•~nt. tn• M"'"' H~··~n Goll. ~;~,, "~:1:.''~rio"'1t'rnc11!;, "'~~.".'a w~r~:; L~O¥, 11 l'UTTINC lOUllNAMENl l•~•I r .. n,, M" II.Cb••' 11•1"~"· II I.,.. '''""· M.,, E~•n ,:; LC"" llt'. M•' W•l!o~m f<O""J'O, )< Named secretary of th e in· tcrnational Council on Hotel. Rest nu rant Ed~ation iVoodward. and Institutional v.•as Mrs. Nell chHirman of the 1 ,000'~ OF OIL PAINTINGS \ WHOLISALI WAllHOUSE ! OPIM TO THI PUILIC l' 30°/o off v ii tl\I •• •OINOl'll, SAMTA ANA f'HOHa IJJ.Mll ·» ·»·» ·>} ·»·»·ll~ NUMllR EUVIN FASHION ISLAND NIW'°IT It.ACK 644-2252 IJ1visinn of Cnnsun1er an<:11:""~~~~'!1'~0~•~u~•~·~·~·~·~·~·~··iii;;:"'~"~~~==::::::iii~~~~~~~~ ll calt h Scr~·1ccs a! Orangell Co.1st Coll:•gr 1'he nrga ntzation is com· prised of junior coll egrs, col· leges and universi11es and s pecial schools across the na· tlon FLOOR MODEL 1 Ski Boots Followini.i her election dur· ing lhe 2~th convention in Las Vegas, Mrs. Woodward ~rved on a panel discussing Educa· t1nnal Techniques for Today's Sludents. ~rving with her were Dr. The big stir in "k1 wrar Boyce Ph illips or the Univer!i· 1·11nccrns the anat om1cally -Iv of Nevada and Lionel n1nlded ski boot Brookins. area food service ,\o 1-A'O pairs are ali ke. coord inator £or the Gary, Ind . 'rhl'y're mndc by injecting public school system. pl a s1 a' r oa n1 into a ski l>oot I ;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= <1nd then shap ing 1t In the THINK SALE •·1•ntoucs of Ille r;ght •nd tell ft '(ll. \V ithin IS minutes. skier 1' rctnn\•es cast. 1\fler 12 hnurs, he hns .e , slo boot lhat's said to allow l h1111 perfe('\ control on the l· :-<lopes. Moke a Shorp Trade: Use Dime-A~Lines THINK . , JE.DJn lnhQ WISTCLIPF PL.AXA 1111'1 • ,,.,.........,.""'"' lffdl HAMMOND ORGANS THE WORLD'S FINEST ! Only a limited number of thew December floor models remain - This Is your opportunity to save, but come In now -these bargains will be CJOM in a hurry! ONLY SAVE $50 To $800 3 9! OFF OUR REGULAR P,RICES ! SHAG Alie •t 4.•9·6.99·9. t9· 12.••·16. ••·24. t• 1438 South Main Str••I, S•nta Ana ,_,,, ........ 01lly 9 to 5,30 ~~Cri, 9 'til 9 Plloflf for ~rM l1tl1!19t• 547.3993 Or9an 011d PH1110 in1tructl0ft 7 CaQ UI for h1formotl•n. 'Wllliehs Music City SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA PHONE S<I0-316.5 ' ' • \ ' .. • Recallin!J Past Lillian Gish, one of the major film stars of the pre- t.alkie era, chats \Vith Merv Griffin about the ear ly days of motion pictures in Griffin's ··salute to the Silent Screen" tonight at 11 :30 on CBS, Channel 2. IDI' 1 undy rom(liny's 1dvutl1in1 THUR S DAY c•mp.ai1n. m ANDY GRIFFITH & * DAVID STEINBERG JANUARY 14 on OAVlO FROST SHOW m Dl'rid' fniid. SlwN (C) (90) D1¥id Steinberg, Andy Grtflith. Oldl Linke. Henrr Boyd, Willie T,.te<. J1-e ':00 U IMa lhwl (t) (60) Jerry Dunphy. Ho!mts 1ue1L 0 IOl8C ~ (C) (60) Tom aJ OIJ111pic Bot.int: (C) (2 hr) M1d- Snydtr. dlewela:hts Al S!1 n-i1 and YICtor 0 Tlll Atl.n llMMo (C) (90) Basila !nfll in 1 IO·rl)Und conltlt. 0 Six O'Clodi: lllowlr. (C) '1twn m Nn Pl.,.._. (C) (90) "All .t SKorro" (-tern) '54-RGIJ Ideal Husb1nd.~ Keitt! Michell, G.llhoun, Pipl!r Laurie. M1r11.11tl LeiJll!CHI, Jei"emy Brett CJ Diet Ytn DyM (30) ind Suun Ham psllirt sUr In Osca1 G) Thi nlllbUllln (C) (l{J) Wildt'1 C0111edy-rnelodt1m1. dJ @(fJlbir Tret (C) (60) G,!)P.U.. fw Uwlnc (30) m friendly c;1.m <Cl g:oo o am cas n...-, MoN: 9 CII C8S,.... (C) (30) "f1'I lr90ld w_.-(dr1ma) fE Fillllf F••Hr (30) '60-Y1n Htflin, SilY1n1 M11111no, @II NoticiffO 34 (C) (60) Veu Miles. B1rb1 ra Bel Ged4es. m T1111 Adnntwrt (C) (30) .learmt MoNtu. Wart ime ~torr ct Sl) La Hon F1111illll eon Pl'tritit live WOfl'llfl who tor190rttd with t!lt (EJ lhwl ill Hie RHn4 (C) (30) enemy. , 1:15 fl) Qlrllc'1 PM (C) 0 Thi Flillitift (C) f60l • l:lO o c.ndid c..1Hr11 (lOJ o ll1l m m 11i.1oot i11 °" ,.. m TIM flJ'tlll MIMI (C) (30) (C) (30) (R) "You'll Nwer Wtlk ~Cl) llBC NJ&ldlJ NMn (C} (30) AloM.. ~ Cori. models t $3.000 fl.I tttdftpodft Ledp (C} (30) (R) elms It • d11ritJ affair. flattllt C8J (]) ltty F-'le M•rtln (JO) Sc.hal1r 1uests. tri') SOdal Securtty/Mnkllf (30) £ri) Cllllltnp (t) (30) m TM DM«1 Report (C) (30) @II ln IM!fy de Ptrafwi!lt (JO) (ID ln OMdados (30) c:E> Nl'tKhl (60) m • 1:"""'' "'" ('C) (311) ,. .. o ~ rn m n. Odd Coaplt <Cl J:fll IJ CIS (,..illl ...., (C) (30) (30) "The HidtnR)'." Rtnl Stntooi Wtlter CroMl1e. iuesb 11 a irert rolltl!f quarte1· 0 m Net Niptly lt..s (t) (30) brtk "'1om Ft llx •nd Osuir "ant David Brln~I.,-, funk McCe1, John to kt•P from !ht "corruption" of Ch1nceUor. pm footb1ll. 0 M11r1 MJ UM? (t) (30) 0 C...dW c.,.., (30) GI @ Cil I loft LllCJ (30) EID MllllcMt/ ...... .,.. (C) (30) Q) Q)@ Drlrn-t (C) (30) fI1 Conciafto M AINI (30) fD l•lttnt Wlldotll (C) (30) (R) ID:OO GJ @ (I) m Dlln Mtrtllt (t) ' . DA!LY PILOT J'7 Hart's Widow Stars Saddlehack Plans 'Light Up the Sky' Shines 'Cathedral' Drama At Huntington Hartford Drama studenu at Sad· Hal Prop~. Dan O'Toole, Bob dleback Colie1e will present Whs tley, John Schartz, Rick T. S. Elliot's "Murder in the Hoover, Mike Stoddard, Ben Hy TOM BARLEY 01 1~1 D•flJ Pl•r Sl•ff "Light Up The Sky '' lit up the Huntington H a r t f o r d Theater with the bright flame of Moss Hart's genius Monday night and it seemed more than fitting th.at the g r e a t playwright's widow should make a sU!llar contribution to this spark.ling revival. Kitty Carlisle, obviously in- spired by the occasion and ber own memories of her gifted husband, gave us a brilliant reading of the key role of Irene Livingston, the coolly calculating yet utterly charming leading lady of a controversial play who can switch from devastation to a dazzling smile at the drop of a curtain. You have to be brilliant to ~nd oot in the company of a glittering casl th21t includes Anne Baite.r, Sam LeYine, Kay Medford and Don De Pets on Parade Animals Star in Series 110LLYWOOD (AP) -The elephant poked Its trunk at television entertainer Betty White who ginge:-ly handed it Lelephonelike h> actor James Br111in. "Here, it's for y11u.you," she said. The scene was from Miss White's new television series, "The Pet Set." an outgrowth ef her lifelong love of animals. "Betty is an animal nu!," her husband! long·time emcee Allen Ludden, said at previews of two episodes last week. "At parties she'll disappear and be found with the dog or cal or pet tlf the hoUse. The show had its t1rigin in her head."' Miss White. as hostess. in· lerviews Hollywood st a rs about the pets they di splay enstage or al home. During the elephant in- Nifty Slates Poetry Night The Nifty Theater of Hun· Lington Beach has scheduled a special program of poetry. music and assorted artistic paraphemali.a for Friday and Saturday, Jan. 22 and 23, The show ls entitled "The: Gooseberry Disaster Relived " or "'A Night al the Nin.y."' Several local groups will be featured. including Big Mac and the Neighbo rhood Turkeys and the H.arpo Slix Blues Duo. Admission will be $1.50. Original poetry readings wll l be presented by several pro- ressors from Cal State Long Beach. Local groups, poets or arlists may arrange t fl participate by calling Susan Fried at 892-0374. cident, Brolin was seen with his pets -horses, cal-: and a German shepherd. Actress Mary Tyler Moore showed that one ef her two poodles has, she claimed, "beautiful lips." Viewers bad lo take her word that the ether has "reached middle age and is not housebroken." This was Miss White's cue to intrcduce a dog psychologist, Dr. Dare Miller, who declared old dogs can indeed be taught new tri cks -manners. Between intert iews J.1iss White was shown kissing a 50()..pound Bengal tiger. cud- dling a leopard and comb ing the mane of a grown lion at the sub urban Africa U.S.A. animal farm. Executive producer Ludden said the half·hour show will air weekly in 53 major markets, starting this mon th. For spontaneity, lhe show is laped only once. flu ffs and all. Distributed en tape, It joins the syndicated field already cccupied by such entries as Truth er Consequef1C1!s, Dav id Frost, Virgiria Graham, Sleve Allen, To Tell the Truth and Mike Douglas. Ludden, former host cf Password and College Bowl, and Miss White have two poodles at home. They have been married eight years. Karl Honored HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) Oscar winner Karl Malden has been hono red with a doctorate degree in Fine Arts from Pacific University in Forest Grove, Ore. Fore, Jwt four artl.als In an Cat he d r a I '' for two Crawford, Eric Van Dcusen 11-member troupe that ef· performances, Feb. 16 and 'n, and Ralf Reynalds. fortlessly and triumphantly at the campus theater. Members or the women's put.! on this llparkling play The dramatic read Ing , chorus are Loren Klein, Rita at the spanking pa~ called directed by speech instructor Draper. Avis French, Coy for by this clever script. N Joann Bennett. concerns the Greenlee, Jan Jensen, Bette Levene , grayer IJ\d heavier. ew Show murder of St. 'I'hornas Becket Killion, Joane Bartlett, Dori' l! back In the role he created by knight! cf England's King Vernon and Ba r b a r a when "Light Up The Sky" C Henry JI. Carmichael. enjoyed lt.s first . g r eat 'asl Sought Reading the role ef Becket The production will be stag- Broadway run -that of wil lbe La rry \Vhealon. Others ed at 8 o'clock both nigh ts. Sidney Black, the crafty Addltional t...otouts for an. __ ;n_the __ c_as_t_a_,._J_ob_n_B_•_ow_n_. _A_d_m_1_,_,;_o_n_i_•_f_,,._. ___ _ backer who has the sense in • 1 ,. a superb final scene to eat original musical entilled ''This the humble pie that turns a Wonderful USA" wiU be held sure loser inlo a certain win-Saturday and Sunday at the ner. Leisure World administration He chalks up a personal triumph in a play that means building. a grea~ de al to him and so Gwen Yarnell, 'A'ho staged does Anne Baxter as his wife, "Cactus Flower" at t h e Frances. the de I i c Io us I y Laguna Mou hon Playhouse ebullient a n d delighUully last season, is directing the gowned former ice queen who sho w, which was written by ties her fortune to Black's Alan Post. Actors and singe rs in the said controversial play of all ages are needed. and reminds him or the fact Auditions will be conducted for a full 99 percent or the Saturday fmn JO a.m. to l script. p.m. and Sunday from 2 to Blu if there's e show stopper s p.m. at the admlnistraLion in this great play -and it building, 23b22 Paseo de aeema hardly fair to single v 1 · La H'll out any Individual -it just.liiOiiiaiienciOiiiiiiaii, Oiiiiguii;.nii•Oiiiiii1 iisii. Oiiiiiiiiiil has to be Ka y Medford as 11 Stella Livingston, the eternally droll Job's comforter who had the audience rocking with some of the best lines ever penned by Hart. . . ~ - LUJ/111 =:'£ ~ She delivered them lm-,, R IQ" LOBo" peccably and it must hav e ''" been good from the stage to "MONTE WALSH" s!e the likes of Robert Ryan, •llfl L .. """"' Fred Mac Murray, Rosalindli~~C~M~•~·~-~· ~·-~·~"~"~·~·~··~·~~! Russell and Ann Miiier doubl- ed up in their seats with the rest of that capacity audience. There just Isn't a· weak link to be seen in a fine revival that features solid supporting roles by Mart.ha Scott, Harold J. Kennedy, Michael Goodwin, Russell Nype, Jack Collard and Andrew Gerado. Kennedy. of course, is the director of this Hart revival and he doesn't allow that chore to divert him one whit from a splendid interpretation of Carleton Fitzgerald, the eternally twittering producer 11o-'hose "I could cr y'' deligtitfully punctuates every other utterance. And a grateful last word for CWiard's depiction of Willlam H. Gallegher. the hap- py Shriner with three sheets in the wind who is almost conned into parting with his bankroll for a share of the play until a transformed cast realizes that their miss is very much a hit. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All c.ior ,.,,.11y Pr .. r1m AH Sl•r CMI '"IT'S A MAO, MAD, MAD MAD WOltLD" i6J .... e J.11,,_ Ga.....,. "SUPl'O•T YOU• LOCAL ~HE•ll"I'" !GI ...................................... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Und., 11 M111! •• W'I"' PllWll "I LOVI: MY W'1P•'" (It) cu~t ... ...,... ''T•O MULlf fOlt flSTtlt. IA•A" IGPI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I.II <:1i.r Preml•A En11t1_,.1 M1r1eft Ari ,,... "IUllN" (GP) ptfl e "A.W11 Kelttl "THI M(K'INlll a•IAK" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 16-iE.-) All Color Prem!••• l1>1•11mM1! Ulllltr 17 Mnl •• WUll PtrMll "l'l.AP" !GP) phtl e Cindi<• l•ree" "$0LDllll ALUE" t•l ........... .. ··•·········•·•••·•• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Al1 <:tlw P11111t1 1'1911,._m ....... $1~ ........ "OH I, CLlriAlt DAY Yl>U CAN SI• FO••VE,1" IGI plyt • J\llll And ...... "OAllllNG LILI" (Q ) ······••·······•·•········••••••·•· ·-·· His little bit of Hamlet ts 1'=~=:;;~~~~~~'=!:---------------------11 Hert ca ricature that neveri : fails to dellght the Hart buffs who abound in our part of the world and who, 11p- tBJ CJ) Tnitll or Consequt~w (C) (60) Gues~: Or.in W~lts. Ch1r1e1 €I:)Clwbt 1M Urine Word (C) (30) Ntlillln Reilly, Don Ritt tnd Thel------------------------l d) .._. (30) Golddlueri.. parently, were present in force fo r this triumphant revival. Ell) si.,lt-11 Mtri.I 155) 1J lit S Ji1tw1 ('C) (60) ~II (;D llloorit '-1111 (C) (30) S1nde11. Birney MOf'ris.. 7:J009 Cf1 F1111ity Altair (C) (JG) O @{]')(l)TH l •Mtrtll ('C) Clsty learns lh1! Greu is 1111in1 la (60) '08mthe(1 Kiii'.*-~ 8*n Rich· !ht Clll1ttt Mardi Gra1 "ith l!lmt-11ds btlirtts tit 1'11 found ~is ant 1he Peter Duryea ru esh. brother. Michael Stron1 1ues11. GJ !"'$ CJ) rn Flip Wl1110n (C) {60) 0 Btrter Wud frtrn (C) (60) Ztro Moslel. Steve U"r1nc.e •nd m Kews (C) (fiOJ Gecrge Putn1m. Robtril fltck 11uest. Hal F1sh1111n, 0 NYPD (C) (30) tI) $pte11latio11 (Cj (60) '1111 O @rD m M•tt line.ill (t) Cubist [DOCh.~ T1ped II th• u. {fiO) .. Clvilloph~.'' P1ythitl!1s1 County Museum. Matt lln(!lln tries to hel ~ • de €E E1!11lada 4• LtcM (30) s111lrina ~un1 concert p1tn•st mm fiI:) Etr.1111 tn Hell)'wood (601 tMlter fa c!n1 !o!al de~!nll'Ss. John 10:30 m I HI Jotin1 HfWS (t) (30) Rubin'Sl~ln guesh m La f1mlH1 (30) Q Miiiion S MO\lle: (C) ,.Son of 1 ll ·OO fJ eif ([l m ""' (CJ CiunllRhltr" (western) '66 -Ruu ' 0 Q.l Ci) m Ntn (CJ l 1mblyn, .ltmm Ph!lbroo~. 0 C.n You Top This? (C) m Trvth 111 CanMquencn (CJ (30 ) O ClJ lkws (CJ (D 11 Ttk• 1 Thief (CJ (fiO) 0 Mowie· "Sheriod: Hollnn tD Thrttrt htt {C) (30) ••[ist of 1./11 Volct. ti Ttrror" (mystery) '4Z JnP'1n.• Autho1 [_van W1l-er and -Bisll R1!hbont. Nip l Bruc e. dirlciOf Vin WM!f1eld ruts!. m Laml l HlrdJ Fi1111 fttlMI: fll'I CiONnlllll!TI flllll (,Cl (]{I) '"Solll ef tl'll Dnlff" Ind "llecl· G Mt c... "' IOI Holrbrtt (30) ll•ft. .. 7:55 m c-tloll d• 5tfll!dn <55l m 1nt u.. Clod (C) l.t'CI II a CIJ .ft:'l M•ll«1 (C") (60) @CD """' M••n Robert Goulft ruesh. EJJ) n. Adwlatn (C) (II:) n viritn11: '''"'"' sMw <tl 1ro1 a:i Htmapo * 11 rm . .....,.i Guats: M Mtlrano, 01n1 Ytluy, ll:JD89CIJ ....., Cirllfill (C") "A Gtor·e Pllm11ton S1lute tci tht Sllt11t Scrtf!'t.'" A ID To Tiff !flt Tr.tit ('C) (30) Ml>I• of old·til!MI Ill"-such 11 G!J WW.lllftlln ¥1'9" hi ·~ (t) Ridltrd .vt.n. ietklt Cooc111, Ktn Cl!l c:r.tlet RttNrdl (C) ( Mrrn1rd. UUitR Ciiall Ind ctlts11r Ill Ytp(Hl!ldo (C) (60) tonklin. IUtSl. ·~mr•ftfthb MnUf (55) OID Cil mtJof1!111t c-.. CCI l:Jll JciAnne Worley and Rodney D•n11r· D CHRYSLER presenl s litld ru•st. *THE BOB HOPE 01\o """ '-t<l CHRISTMAS SPECIAL D m Old ~ (C) rtorm1n -,,._ rr. ml ! IHC !AL ! lob Hopa M•ll11, Mitkey Spln1M .1nd l10111rd -...,., 1.11 • f f1Y 1utst. Owltlll• 5llOW (C) (90) ti\1hti1hl.s (D Mode: ....... If Mlrllllll_.. vf Ho11t'• Chr!llm1s trip to Amt11· (dr•m•) ·s~ttphefl BoYd kl tin Mrwlttmtn In [ngl1nd, West G Y1 · ni Qerr111ny, Crtft, T111il1nd. Viltn1m, 1 01· . "41•' t1H1 Alnkt. Ent1rt1intt1 In· lZ:flO 8 111 ... : "lnite ,__.. (d11m1) dude Ur111!• .wirm. Glor!• Lo<lna. '47--8urt. llncm..-, Anll Bi,tk, Loi• Falan1, Bobbi M11tln, Jenni!• Ch1r1ts B.idlor•. Hosttn, JGhnnJ Bench, Tht Gold· all{}) Diet tftllt (C) • dl111111. arid ltt Browft Ind hll l :GD 8 lkN: -C.,W. kerlltr {H· lltnf v( Rll'IO•n. \ltftlurt) '53-Rlthtnf Gr9ltlt. 8 11'.Z (l)-, ""'""' t<l J:Jl 0 0 ._ ICl "11ki4W•IR-l1W of th1 Ylll.~ SI· m All.fMlfll: Dor. "J1lt 0... ... ll'llfltfl•'• ll!Othtt (ndorl pnimotn A1n," "Murdlr ii tltt ... 11r1~ ......, " tht ldttl lllllhw-111·1... tnd "I MmW 1 W....." - Fr)I(••.• DAmME MOVIES ' t:flll B "nit Sl.tf M...,.. (mutit•1) '3' ' -l in1 C~lbJ, loulM C1mpbtl1. "'Stftl If '"""'""' (mullcal) '49 -MKd11111d Clrtr, W1nd1 H1n- 4'h. I" ., 8 -Ml_, b M.. It lllltlt" (df'lm1) '37-Glrtrl .. Bartl, .litn ~llllf. t :.10 0 ... ~·· Atr-t'" (dlt· 1111) '47 -GrttorJ Piel. Domh)' McGuht. m ._.. ,_ . .,__,.,. Motl. DtlllM G"J'. 1:00 ca "O.ln ..... ,....,....,. r• t•'1l ''~torrt lltft. U11 R1ln& Z:OO 0 lC) "'Mllllth. a. Lftl Ctllll-...r (1•111•1() '$1-• ftylor, Arrthol!J Htn. 4:90 • "T\t T111111 ........ (dn1111) '!6-llmas MtcMhur, .ltmn Dlly, Mi'f' t1unlt1 I Sears Professional Tax Preparation Service Sears now of!ers you a completely pro- fessional tax service with a completely personal touch. Trained tax preparers reallie the importance of your tax return and th ey give you the kind of personal attention that has come to be a Sears lrademarl< over the years. Seari Tu: Prepar11tion SCTTiee Sati8raetion Ca•nntttd OT' Your Money Back !Sears) ........... .ftHDCO. All SnnS..,.. epen d•Hr 9:30 a.m. tn 9:30p.m ••• Sund•yli 12 noon to S P·•· "Light Up The Sky" did exactly that for th.is critic. It always does. PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ACADIMY MIMBIRS: YOU~ CA~O ADMITS YOU ANO A GUEST 10 ANY PUtfORMA.NCI PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT ELLIOTT GOULD '~ • 11&>•0 l WOtP!• f',oo""''°" "I LOVE MY ••• WIFE" A Howa.d Hawks l'<oduct<in "RIO LOBO" It's 1 Feline Frolic .•. I • • . • • I . I . ! . I l I ' • . • I I ·' "' ·-' . • DAi l Y PILOT I IN LAGUNA I NU:r.:!.._..E 1Aswan Dam Completion Starts New Egypt Era .\$WAN, Ejypt (UPI> - tltnn yean Iller work ~gan, the Aswan Dam-a projttt wt-.kh opeltt!d the door for Russia's entry inlO the Middle East and gave 40 million Ara bs hopes for a bet- te'r tuture-will be inaugurated Friday. The $1 billion barrier 1s the first in !tistory to fully control .th'e River Nile. It broughl Egypt (() the edge of nnancial disaster but even- tually ga ve tM nation time to lay an industrial base from "'A"hich Cairo hopes to improve <.'OOditions for il!i peoplt>. The dam ushered in a new era in P.1iddle East politics. Jt speeded the demise of American and British in- fluenet with radical Arab noi· lions aand ""'hen Ru.ssia stel>" ped in to fi naoce the dam, it n1arked 1he start or Mos('ow's deep penetration in· to an. area it had always coveted but in which it had ne\'cr be(ore wlelded signifi- cant influence. Bolh the Unlted States and Britain initially agreed lo finance the 366-foot high bar- rier of rock. sand and clay &'.lO miles 30Uth of Cairo. But as relalions betv.·een the coun- tries v.·orsened , Washington and London withdrew their of- fers. Russia stepped in to provide the $27 1.7 million in hard cur- rency needed for the $966 million project. Moscow also IRING THIS AD FOR A FREE Car Wash Lagu1aa Car Wash 540 S. Co•st Hwy., L•gun• Be•ch -494-1922 !ACROSS FROM HOTEL LAGUNA) MOST CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED OPEN DAILY, SUNDAYS ANO HOLIDAYS Otfotr E~pirH J•n, ll. 1911 supplied l,Ol'XI R u as i a n engineers and t.echniclans to guide an Egyptian work force of li.000 In bulldlog the dam, which Ls 16 times higher than the largest pyramid. To raise more currency President Camal A b d e I Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal. Aulhor Tom Little said "the country came near to disaster in porsuit of lhe need- ed money and its credit in years to come is pledged to Russia for the building of It. .. Of Russia's participation. a British diplomat said that "in terms of prestige, propaganda, and influence amon g emerging Asian and African countries , R1HSia 's participation in the dam was an incredibly cheap victory for the Soviets." The dam was an engineering marvel. Two and a half miles long at its crest and requiring 40 million cubic yards of material, it was built at one of the most inhospitable sites on ear th , where daily tem- peratures soared lo 1 3 5 degrees. More than 220 construction workers IQSt th~ir lives on the project. Many eXperts said the dam created as many problems as It solved. Econ om i s l s , however, said it w a s SPECIAL NOTICE Effective Jan. 1 sf, 1971 the new . General Electric Authorized Service Dealer for _Huntington Beach & Fountain Valley is Dunlap Appliance Co. We have expanded our service dept. to fill the need left when the former dealer went out of busi- ness. Dunlaps 23 years experience as the servicing dealer for Costa Mesa-Newport Beach area assures you of Fast-Profes· sional service. Dunlaps is a.uthorized to serv- ice the followin9: General Electric applian· ces. Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers, Dish- washers, Ranges, Televisions & Stereos. FOR SERVICE PHONE-548-7788 ••• BOJH FQR ·ONLY • • !~~ f 1 •• .. " ~~/ '298. '-2 CYCU nLTER.fl.O and MATCJllMG nimlc DRYER -QUALITY SER.VICE PHONE 548-na 1815 · NIWPORT-ILVD., COSTA MESA . J7JS..tt.C.-H ....... necessary to buy time ror Cairo to est&blish heavy in· dustry. The nauoo ·s basic prob!~ ls ovtrpopulallon. Egypt has 34 million per!IOrul and, witr a birthrate of around 2.8, th population is increasing b)' million persons annually_ . electricity annually, the dam minerals and seriously harm-ulstence, tbua In effect mak will provkle the power lo turn 1ng the sara1ne industry at Ing the Nile a M!ries of lakes the wheels ol industry and the mouth of the Nile. from the high dam lo the ~ t i • t. I :• I INYt ._ ... Het91t..f ... 497-llSO light the neition's homes. Coastal erosion has become !t!ll:. Nauer, who died in Sep-a serious problem since the The new lake worries Egyp-..... "cof:f.EE Only S pe!°cent ol the nation is arable. Though the dam will eventually help reclaim 1.2 million acres of land from desert and convert a further 700,000 acres from basin lo perennial irrigation. the nation has reached an absolute agricultural saturation pOinl, according to experts, ' . tember. once said, "The high silt stopped flowing anti even Han doctors who fear ils dam is more than a mute the bed of the river itself, walers will help spread monument of rock on which denied the protection of layers malaria al)d ~histosomiasis one may put wreaths of of heaVy sill, is being scoured a parasite which causes ex 1£ANS ·,, vA•'l!!,1!t-r1 flowers. It is a live c reative by river currents. haustioo, l monument" To honor Nasser, To slow down the river a nd Even wiUi the slricles who pushed the project to check the scouring action. lhe precautions, experts feared a completion, the. inauguration government is planning lo least one million persons rio Friday will be hekl on the build seven more barriers, In oow affected by the disease a,..,... "Y . l . GIFT PACKAGES l WE MAil EVEl\'Wlllll£ anniversary of hi s birthday addition f<Xir already in woukt be exposed to it. The lake formed by thel...:::::::::::::_:::__:::::_.'.'.'._'.~'.!.._.'.'.'.__::=,:'...:::..:~~~'...'.'.:----------::=--- '11iese e.ipert.s said the only way for Egypl to increase the standard of living fo r its people, some oC whom still earn only 25 piaster (60 cents) a day, is ta industrialize. The dam, affecting large areas of northern Sudan, al.so will bring benefits to severa l million persons in that ~~ try. experts said. With 12 turbines generating IO billion kilowatt-hours of dam-312: miles long and an average 7.7 miles wide-was named in Nasser's honor before his death. The government recently estimated the dam would pay for itself within two years and add $566 million to the national income annually. Other expertn, however, not- ed disturbing side effects. Min· eral-rich silt is backing up be- hind the dam al the rate of 100 million tons annually, depriv- ing the lowlands of the needed No Turning Around On Canal Projects SACRAl.1ENTO (AP) -The rontroversial Dos Rios dam may not be needed after all. but there is no turning back . on the Peripheral Canal, State Water Director Wil\lam R. Gianelli said Friday. Gianelli told the State Waler Commission that Io w e r population growth estimateB have given the state an extra 10 years lo find allernalive water sources to a JI o w preservalion of the Ee I Klamati:i and Trinity rivers as untouched "wild nivers." The lower projections -29 million instead of 35 million people in the stale by 1990 and 45 million instead of 54 million in 2020 -also ease the need for a bitterly fought canal around the Sacramento Delta .. from a waler supply standpoint," Gi anelli said. But the Peripheral Canal ls still needed for "protection of the Della," Gianelli said, again rejecting arguments of con1erva lionisls ii will h11rt instead of help delLa ecology. There vo'ill be no delay in the project, he added. Reversing his earlier posi· lion, Gianelli said his depart- ment is no longer thinking about dams on the Klamath River on California's North Coast "at this time." On the Eel River. "I thi nk we have a breathing spell now to take another !oak at alternatives lo the Dos Ri os dam," Gianelli said, adding he still wanted to dam the river for flood control even ir the water isn't needed for Southern California. Damming <>f the North coast rivers, prized by con- servationists for their rugged natural character, has been one of the most controversial parts ol' Gianelli's massive water development plan. · Final Voyage Last Alolia Not So S·weet NEW YORK (APJ -With Ashore on the p i e r , three mournful blasts on her maritime historian F r a n k whistle, the last American-flag Braynard lamented the l:ick passenger liner on the East of allenlion paid to the Santa Coast sailed into the twilight Rosa's demise .. after the on her final voyage Friday. farewell celebrations th a l A scant ha 1 f -do 2 e n we re given to the Queen Mriry. v.·ellwishers stood In I he Qu een Elizabelh and ot!1cr darkened pier ~hed lo watch foreign shipr.." the Santa Rosa, 15,000 gross Among The American.fla g tons. depart for a Caribbean passenger ships that preceded cruise. No ceremony was held. the Santa Rosa Into retirement On her return Jan. 21 , the was the superlmer United liner will go into lay-up at States. laid up al Newport Baltimore, leaving f o u r News , Va ., in November 1969. American passenger vessels The 51 ,000-ton vessel. queen operating from West Coast ol the American merchant ports as the sole survivors marine since her maiden c1f a once mighty fleet. voyage in 1952, was holder "I hope to continue sailing or the Atlantic Blue Ribbon _on freighters.'' said Captain and Hales Trophy for the Frank Siwik. skipper of the fastest tran'!!ltlantic crossings. Santa Rosa since she was built Other American li ners that in 1958. "I began there and recently left the trade in· J can 'end there." eluded the: Argentina, Brazil. Interviewed in the Master·~ Independence, constitution and quarters just <>ff the bridge. Atlantic. The liner Ame rica the veteran of 41 years at was sold in 1964 to Greek sea said he felt larger sovern-interest~ and sails as the ment subsidies might be an ;:=A="=''='="'=i'=· =='-====ii answtr to the d eclining American.-0.ag p a s a e n g e r business. With him on board lor the final voyice were 2 6 S passengers and 2711 crewmen. Andy 's Fun Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" ts fun. Set it Saturdays in the DAILY P!WI'. YOU ARE INVITED to "Go South Pacific" Cook's film ''l1land1 In the Sun" e Presentation 'by A.urtr•ll•n and New Ze1l1nd Government Tourl1t Offlce1 · e A new & tflfferent II or lJ dey tour Including Joyco Clark WEST STAR ert crulN, escorted lty ElolM Fulmer Wed., Jan. 20 8 P.M. Capri Room Hotel Laquna Seating llmltod -R11erv1tiona ...._ ., 54f.tl09 ,. ....... "f: Adventure Travel Service ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF THE HOUSE OF DESIGN 209 OCEAN AVE .. LAGUNA BEACH "WHERE PRICE MEETS QUALITY" QUALITY CARPET -DRAPERIES EXTRA· ORDINl\RIE TILE . FORMICA · LINOLEUM Free Interior cCM1rd inating with every vinyl ... ""• 97~ 2 97 liin91i&• to pillow protectors .... 9 7.~ ';"· 1 47 P"• pr. purchase through Feb. '71 . OPEN DAILY MON .·SAT.' TO 5 EVES. IT AP.f'OINTMENT-4,4-7600 ~c;;;~----~10 ll 90 sheet blanket Hot.., told ~heeh? 297 Snuggle be~n cozy co"o" flannelette>! assorted pillowcases In ony co~e .•. your pillowi w•ll hove o new look of lo~hionl A•~•'d J><llt~n~ dresser scarf ,,., ... 57~ 1 ~JI 41 1~ ''· morys heavenly thermal blanket ~PP•r...IJ1on d1ud 4 per,al• pillow Pf'OfM'fM •••. 97,... lvxor nylo1t polyest•r -26 .x 45 97 shag rug ....... ! ...... 2 AM loce, loce-edged sol.d~. P""'~ o..d do1ted ~wi\1oe•. bath kits bath rug set J ·pi•<• 5 97 f>lu~hy "Zephyr~ to"'°"' n•o1 . lid co'fel" of\d n."). Wo~hoblf' vinyl 5 2xl0 tablecloths Aocoden! "'""once IQ<'" your loble to p; 2 5 7 •P•ll• w tpe up Ass!" d colo<s or>d ponern1. assorted sweaters l c,p.. 1n to pp ong'! II'~ IWll'Oler· pot~>ng lime ..• you• t ho""" to ~coop up'°"""' g reo! voloe:. tn cottons, 'WOOh, ocrytoc~ ond or\ons .•• lor>g or shorl ,leeve\, "'"~Y ''~"'·colors. 3J. 10 J.Q ' -;·. . . -- 1097 1597 ,,. 1997 To cut to me-owre !Of woll-10 won co""rogoe ; pcit1ern po,,.,. indud..d. A,i.orted col0<s. 3. chihon teflan frypans .~J) '\ assorted skirts from 3. I H..,-e o fl ,nog '" flat•• 0< pl.ms. ploy 111TJ01gh1 in llom-11...s . , , 9e1 " ""w ~IDn! with A-lir>esl FonlD11ic fob•ic1 ond colors . , • your1 ot lonlo)!ic low pr•Ctit 11 •. 147 10.; •. 196 chef's sklllet99' I colorful plo1tic Mo~t th11 o "'""'tn'I ""!>lo" e-..ent. decorated decanter handi mixer 148 sink set 168 waste basket 116 138 Mod•i tM WOtd! flowe•· de-eked dec;onler fOf both ho1 ond cold drinks. ~I lk 67' show ... caddy .......... . ... ,.,,,°'•" 84' mv•tr•a. ........•... lucky brand b·complex 249 100·1. ... , _____ ._. __ ,_, ____ •.....•.. ~~~~-~-~i~.~~'~-~ .......... 659 Tobltuuln dm 1 39 4 •••..•.•• , ... _ ..•••.••. --·····--····-· . 30' ) 83 11 nutabs 1 .......... -........ . •'l•llJ.tll •I MOSI lta'fttKCMlf MTU1 ltho'"'•·i~t Dngle Of\ how to b.o OOod mi••r! -•• 9'1P9(ioUy for tDk.,., eic • ··'~'-2 "'"'· 6 8' ,.~., ........ _ .. 6-ft. tape rule 76~ f 17.50 ""°"''••try own''"' tape wilh "'°'kl119l f.-om 1/32 inch lo 1 ·fl. ;nt~voli w!tlt rlvt"d1, ••. fl0n·n.r1I plojlit <O•~. _., ................. 48' 761~1 (HAPM A i.~;I ,~,\~I 1 "'41 Wi"1"" ' ' trlli~ , 1,lltl 11I, ,,i,1" ,~ ,,, \li~l I Iii~ ,, '''">\ 1 'i '°'" "T , I IA M .. IJ.' \HlPPI~( 'l~I w • "IT" II ,. :, 'I Ill t. \Ii• , " 1,0 I .f j.>o~o ~~II Wt '"''~ '!• 11n79 AlU!jO~n RIV') ~IW\li ,ii H lj' ~,,,I ~ ,,..,,,, ' '• \ '\••' "'" .. I ~ . f" .. ' • \ ~ \ • < • • • • Thund.11, Januat)' 14. 1971 DAil V PILDT J ... "Artistry in Moving" for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway Alcohol·ism War Mounted Disease Blan1ed for 37% of Fatal Traffic Crashes Estobllshld 1926 1-l '-71 COf''llllC,H119 T97l by L1><ky Sro•~•. Inc. - All lligh" lles~ed. Pro t es ore Oi5. counled Except on Fair.Traded o nd Govern• men! Cont1ol led !tenu . FRESH FRYERS U.S.O.A. Gll AOE 'A' WHOLE BODY CHICKENS •. ~~r.NINEO FOODS~ ":t BABY MEATS r:.1~';~JA1 ..•..•..... __ ._.76< SWIFT'S DINNERS =~~~~~!~·-·--· 18• o-< DEL MONTE CORN ~~ .... 22' COFFEE lltUJ.1101, 89< l •OZ.C•ll···-- COFFEE llllll JI~. SJ" llllT••Tl f OLIAI .•••• COFFEE 11111$ 1101. i2" 'I OZ.CAii .•... ,, __ • LIPTON TEA ~-;:~.~T• ..... _.98• MEXICORN ~~~1.~~~;.'_ •• _.19c GREEN GIANT :~~z.c••··-·········-·····18 < ~:l !~~::E~/2-3-; T7·0UNCE CAN .-' CHINESE FOOD "" uo .... -.95' (-11-oy!C•><••~ (Mw "'•i•, ,.,\I l•of 0.0.'-t, J.twl-CM •"'•!•) FRUIT COCKTAIL ~:1a~cNi: ............. 28' ~ NOODLES ~~~11r·~:G.~.~~~.~~·~······ 29 c FRUIT TREATS ~0~1:1c111 .................. 35 ' O>""°' Hl ·C ::~;.~~·=-~~ ............ ., ........ ., 32 c BORDO GRAPEFRUI T ~~c;:0~~-.... 30' fr1I PUNCH ~::1~1!~~ .. ·~1.'. ................. 99c \VASHI NGTON I !;Pl) -Al Ieng l:ist. the U S. ~ovcrnment is niountlng a serious attack on a disea"se that costs more lives each year than the Viet· nam W11.r: AIC<Jholisn1 Alcoholis1n afflicts a n et;limated 9 mi l.Lion Americans and causes 30,00'.l deat hs an· nually. It is responsi ble for 37 percent of all fatal highway accidents, a statistic that resulted in go v er n m I!: n l • sponsored conferences this week on that part flf the pr~ blem alone. The cost to Industry Is about $4 billion a year in lost man· hours of production. Offi cials rate it the nation's No . 3 health problem, surpass· ed only by cancer and heart disease. ThrougA the naliooal in- stitutes or health, the federal government has been spending more than $1 billion a year to combat cancer, he a rt di sease and dozens of other ailmenl5. Until now, however , only a re latively small sum -about $10 million a y ear-wa s ALL LADY LEE DAIRY PRODUCTS * ALL HARVEST DAY BAKERY PRODUCTS * All LADY LEE BULK CHEESE These fine products ere never sold after the date printed on the carton ... they are all !?uar- anteed 10 be fresh and wholesome for at least 7 days after purchase if you keep them proper- ly refrigerated. You can always serve Lady Lee Dairy products wtth complete confidence in the freshness and quality. Harvest Day breads, foraxample, have a plastic The date means 1he item will not be sold tabwithsmallernumberenexttotheprice.This 1fter that day. However; this "product, "date# means that loaf will not be sold as fresh with proper refrigeration; will be fresh bread after that day of the month. With proper and flavorful for at least 30 dava after care. it will s tay fresh for at least 5 days after purchase. You can depend on Ledy Lff purchase. Those produc ts not having the plas-· tor freahnei.:S and quality-every t ime- t ic tab. have their dates printed on the end seal STANDING RIB ROAST :~~·· 79~ T-BONE STEAK :~ ••• $12! lUCKY TOP QUAllTT IOUED IElf ·-······--··•. lUCkT TOP QUAUTI IONDID IEff···-•··-······· GROUND BEEF PORTERHOUSE STEAK ::~~ ... LUCKY IONDED fOI fl.AYOlt .~•···········-·-53~ LUCllT TOP QUAllTI IONDID l(lf •••••• ,, .. , ...... $13~ FULLY COOKED HAM =~~••• 58.~ CHUCK ROAST ~~':'11 57~ fAllMER JOHN -fUll SHANll HAlf ·.-···-·······-lUCllY TOP QUAUTT IONDID lltf ···•-•••••• ...... CROSS RIB ROAST YOUNG TOM TURKEYS IONELESS-lUCKY TOP QUAUTT IONO(D l [(f ••••• 87.~ U.S.O.A. GRA DE "A"·····················--~··· 38~. CUT-UP FRYERS EXTRA LEAN GROUND TENDER JUICT ANO PlUM, CHICl:EltS ....... --·-· 31~ BEEF -ROUND QUALITY ••••••••• 85~ BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST lUCKf TOP QUA LITT BONOlD 8fff ()' ---·K:.tfkr! CUT GREEN BEANS 22c DEl MONTE lb.OUNCE CA• r.NINED RJM_JB:' SYRUP ~~::.1:~~····-············-···--~39• ~ DENNISONS ~:~·f!~~.--79' ~ SPINACH r:~~:~·---····-·20' CHUNK TUNA ClllCllllOf"fltliU 37 ' •l'I OZ.CA•·····-····- LARGE OLIVES ~·a'i.'c~~ ... ~.~-'.~39' er TOMATO SAUCE ::~;~1t ... e •• 1oc SAUCE MUllT1 HIM•TOWn OllU-10 22 ' O"""' Jlll. IJOl .(AN ....•••.••••.. _. r BBQ SAUCE ~~~,~~~t.~ ...... _33< ~ PRESERVES 11•••H111'·"11'm 59' 'Y" -011 J! Ol. Jll, ••..•.•. ,.. O""' CHB PICKLES ~:~f.'i!~~~-~H 63' o-< LADYS CHOICE '"'·'"·-·-39' w-..1. om•••••"-• o•u •he fe.., ;, • ..,, !111.,<1on 11 .. , po9e <0t0•lhul• ru•! 0 ,..,.,.11 1o!"'plon9 ot •~• !hou.,u•cl• of lo .. , <l i><o un• p•ic~• •n •1~•~ fo• you o f ludv ()' .... 4&y1 LIQUID RINSE 69C LUCllY GALLON aonll CENTER CUT ROUND STEAK lUCllY fDP QUA UTT IONDED '/li5~ _,,..,.. ~~.:AlOZBI ~J'~ ~"'· • .... , ' . - . -. .L~:/t'\>~ OltE-IDA POTATOES ~':i~i:.~.28c STRAWBIRRIES :l-:t'i:.~~51' CORN ON COB :•: .. 0:~~, .. ____ 4g c VEGETABLES ~~·.1.~.'~·~·-····-·--·52• 't J ORANGE JUICE ~.":~~~-~--.. 63' WAFFLES ~r','.'~-~~~~~~.~~. 16' MRS. SMITH'S PIES ~"-"'·····--89' ({K .... C..._..Ap .... ().' •···K:.tlktl PINEAPPLE JUICE 29c DEL MONTE 46-0UNCI CAN CREAM PIES •U'11l (t •orio•in l 27' 1401."l··-··· .. -·-...-- MEXICAN FOOD '""· .. ~ ..... ___ 52' .... n •• 1 ... 1 , ..... _.. w.... c11;11 -.~ BEEF STEW :':f.:'.'~·······-············-···-·36< PEPPERED STEAKS :~:1.·~s,',1.~ . ..:: __ 73" FISHSTICKS ~!·;;:':::~ ........... ······-·-i1 10 BREADED SHRIMP ~!101i:':1'!~.-··-·'21l ZUCCHINI STICKS "'" ""' 47' •Ot.,lc ..•.•.. _ .... __ ':J.MMCE ;' SPf RlT$_ . .:_~·: · liACICA8EO '~()S..:, t• "RUSKET FLAKES :~.':~~--.41c PANCAKE MIX ~~=~,:~ .Slc FRENCH BREAD r!~L~:~J __ 41 ' BISQUICK 111(UlfMIJ 73' MIOl.tol,, •• ROMAN MEAL ~~s~:.":oC:.~~--·e··-·47' PIZZA PIE MIX ~;~'!~.:;.~~.~ .... 43' · llOUSEllOll •il~: ~ ZEE TOWELS r~(v~::a~21· BOLD DETERGENT 14 e1.1oi.~ .. ·-5145 ..... NORTHERN l UTO. IOllrTlJSJllll 37' '1'50 CT. 101.L ••••• _,_ • DASH LOW SUDS :10':.~~-; __ 83' ¥' VILLA PLATES ~0:1g.',':,~-.. 59• IVORY LIQUID ~~T.'ri~ ........... ~.--57" '1""'" HOT CUPS ::~~,!~~~~~-.39" IVORY SNOW ~~~':"..1.~ ••. ___ 88' oA PLASTIC WRAP ~~';'.~~~ ... 26' HIRE ARI JUST A FEW ll<AMPLIS OF LUCKY COOi DATED PRODUCTS HAllVEST DAY BllEAD DELUXE ROUND TOP--.. ~Lw 3Sc RAISIN BREAD ~ ............ "-~.1 .. .ul.llf Jlc 100% WHOLE WHEAT .. _. __ .1 .. 1111C[ LW 31 c BROWN 'N SERVE ROLLS -11.c.-i "' Jlc CHUCK WAGON BREAD .--.u.tt11tEt• 37c SPLIT TOP ·-................. -... ~u-1111t1 t• 37c -----HARVEST DAY BISCUITS ··~~·•·""" Ml Be euTITLWt.l a. -nrn1 IADY lff DAIRY PRODUCTS HOMOGENIZED MILK. __ ,.."-.. E C111. 56c MALf l HALF -·--·n·n.."11eE m. SOc BUTTERMILK ·"·-·--···•·M .. n.n.. urt! ell. 20c NON-FAT MILK _ ... _. UIL llllCI m. 2 ,. 43c con AGE CHEE SE ···-····--lfMllCl UIT1ll Jlc SOUR CREAM ............ e .. ··-·· U-Wlltl WTlll 49c ~~!>~.!~.!~~~~ ..... ,_ .. _ 49• f~mR,~!! .~~.~-~.:.~~~·~·~····· 55c R~~tn~.,~~!.~~ .. 8 ~~~ 69< ~~!CJ!!.!.~~ .• ,., .. --·· sac l'!!!,!~S21~or ........ ·-·-·-77c DISCOUNT Pt!CED DELI. ITEMS ~~~f!!;.l;.,!~.~[l~.~1-~-~~!!,.. $] 02 OSCAR MAYER BOLOGNA 73< Sllt!1 llll llUf .. l'ltE l(U ....... ll·ll. Pll. ur LOW EYer)<layPricc! AMERICAN CHEESE llCKT, PIOCISSEO, INDIVIDUAl WIAPPID SLICU -12·0?. PllG. 69c SMDKIE LINKS 79c twt •n1 .•..........•.. --•. 1r.11 "'· FARMER JOHN FRANKS 62' au 111.11 ................. -•.•..••... I lL I"'- j~~~~i~~!~A~_luc~PIL .... 52c SLIC ED JACK CHEESE ·82' UClll HUil .......................... !li·t.I. SLICED SWISS CHEESE 89< CCIII: nun .................... ___ ...o. F ~·I/ lDW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUTY AIDS ~?.~~)1~2~~.!~!~~~!_ 83 c ~!~!!o!~~!o 201. UMl-.. ---· 8 9c 2?.~~~~.~~~~-~~-~~-----$366 w~Van de vamp's• !!i1 nt ···K:.tfkrt.·-- AN OUTSTANDING VARIETY. SHAMPOO or BUBBLE BATH L1r, Let £11 1r 'rte• Shunpe1, Crime llHI If kb~ll 81111 !ft chO•CI t! J 11111, ln1r1att1. ll·•~•t• 11 1~ SPAGHETTI POT "111 ll·•l tftl!lltl"lrt ••I w1li Siii• 1ittl91 t1'11r.s111r Ii•. c...,tett. ssc c:::....--=a.-s. .... 11 ----- I Crest~ ' _,_.... 1f.) CREST TOOTHPASTE CHOPPING BLOCK l Ht•1•1i11 tlllp•itt -lttk 111H 11 Ill· 11• la•iultl UrMeh. T\e f11110tl c1•llJ·f11•ti-.: t111•,11tt recl(lltM ., $176 tll AllltflC ll DeRlll Ultlllltl. llm lk Hllr1 l111- i1J Ill It rtt•llrlJ! l[C. Dl Mllfl EXTRA URGE SIZE 64C PRICE INCLUDES 5< DFF ROAST RACK 11tt1t1)l1 t~r111e·li1is• r-,c k ~1e,s 11111 ''" slrtri•t i• its ..,. ;.ices. DISHCLOTHS 57c ~ .. ·Ker&ff.·.-.... 7 8 c l PRELL IMPERIAL ltflf:·"tllilJ, 1ntr•11t. w1lfll·Wll 'ft lllklt~s. Stltl ••! Plt. ti$ ..•...•.... SECRET ROLL-ON DEODORANT S,eti1Hr l1r•1l1ltl It ~op ""''' ,,,. ' *'·'"' "" ... tit11I stnu 1M str1i1 Cl 111 1 1111ttr ,.r'flr•HI• '''"' .. ry It. EXTRA LARGE SIZE PRICE 68c INCLUDES 150 Dff WEL LIQUID SHAMPOO Th 11tr1·"lct. trlta-rict, IMfiN f'ttl li••ll P 111Jtt 011 •t••tJ·ttUb Jiii' •1lr 11 ii 1•111,ttl. Mt• dtH ..• •t •••• a.11 ,., l'IW • .,... ft ~ im! Slttl 'I 11W at ~ lC..OUNa SIZE KEY IUY PRICE 97c (•.-..~i. .t •11 ltKn s-wltli u-r OorL) ... J;;y~t·- WAGNER DRINKS 49c Oll:AMGf & GIAP(,IUIT S4-0UNCI IOTTll "" ,. JS t CAT FOOD ::!Lu•.--~---18• DOG FOOD Wo~'<.All ... -~·----10' JONNY CAT ~:~~: :~·-·-·····--·57' RALSTON PU.RINA l':IT.'.'.'~ ....•. 93' .... ~ .• ~~'--· ~ .... oA KRAFT DINNER ~~-20' BREAD llAIYUTl•1(,._w 37' ~.._,MIL 1•1r,_, __ CORN MUFFIN MIX :::n::.'.._,_27• DANISH GO ROUNDS :::~: ..... 38' ... GRAHAMS:O, .. L-.. -~ KRISPY CRACKtRS ~ .... ~.38' . ' ,. , ' OF f !rE~~s,~~1~iD~gpo5;l c....'-'\"..,rn.;.;'"._:~..,·.;.;~_•:..,:~_ .. _3.;;;.~5~cw W IDlVJIOOIDllJ'illa WW CASCADE IMHIWAJMllJl''"m 3101.101 .• -.......... -- ... WY PANTIES~'" 53' COJrAGE CHEESE :f.i.~\.. ... _33' MR CLEAN aEANER n•L"'-.66' MARGARINE:?,',~"'." 33' .-' PLEDGE WAX ::'~'"'·--'1" ORANGE JUICE::::::... 77' COMET CLEAN$ER ~:.":~ ... --26' ICE CREAM :::!"d.'.~~~ 79' .,,+ BLEACH ::.r ' 62' ... k;;y B,,;f.·--.. ZEST SOAP ::.'.ln.... 15' oA DETERGENT:.':."""~~83" '"" -oA DETERGENT"••··· , 45' Wi(U,fACIAl 25c IOU11M 11Ud1 . , 1 U.Coutn' IOI .. MORlllllG flESH Ptooua AT U1W DISCOUHT P,llClSI 1 ~ CHIQUITA liAMD ' GOUllN, 9 c BANAUS. ,~~~ .. ' U.S. NO. t-&aA"I RUSSET •o"°llD3ac @ POTAIO~f·"• ~~,0 '71i.. available for redt.ral support of the fight against. aJcoholi!m. On the lut day of lf'IO, President Nixon signed a bill that had been nursed through Congress by Sen. Harold E. Hughes, (D -towa ), a recovered alcoholic. 'l'be Hughas Act establiabes a new naUooal tnstnute tf alcohol abuse and acobolism. which will operate out of Bethesda, Md., under the Na- tional Institute of Mental Hi!'lllth. It authorizes t h e ex- penditure o( $300 million dur- ing the next three years in federal grants to states and private lnstitutions for treat- flent and rehabilitation of alcoholics, and research into the disease. At lhe momenti the program exists only on paper. because Congress adjourned without acting on an appropriation for the institute. It Is anticipated, h-Owever, that funds will be provided in the first sup. plemental appropriation bill that clears the new congress. Thus the institute should be in business by Spring. The passage of the Hughes Act is a signal victory for groupa .-auch as the National Council .on alcoholism which have been campaigning for many y~ars for gOvemment recognltiOn of alcoholism as a treatable disease. Thirty years ago, there were virtually no public facilities for treatment of alcoholics-. Jn 1943, ConnecUcut became the first state to provide for medical care ol al<Xlholi~. Today, 46 states and the District of Columbia bave alcoholism programs. Most of them, however, are ~harply circumscribed by tack of money. That's where the new federal aid program can make a differenee. ll could have made even more difference had not the House. made a small but significant change in the language of Hughes' Bill. As passed by the Senate, it would have cut off all types of federa l aid to any general hospital which refused to ac. cept alcoholics as patients. This would have provided a mighty incentive to those hospitals-nearly two-thirds of the total-which have resisted the pleas of the American Medical Msociation to treat alcoholics on the same basis as other sick persons . But the house changed a few words, so lhat non- cooperating hospitals will be deprived only or aid under the Hughes Act itself, while continuing to receive aid under other tederal programs.:. Since a hos pital that refuse!! lo accept alcoholics obviously would not be seeking Hughes Act aid Jn any case, the effect or this "minor amendment" was to emaaculate the whole provision. Although dlssppointed about that change, Hughes feels that what emerged from congress is "a good bill ..• not a panacea but a st art toward facing r l!:a 11stle a1 1 y thei d imensions af the alcoholism epidemic in this country." EYES RIGHT ., DL LOUIS J. HASILHLD "'Depth '••c•plio11·• it the •bi1i. ty to judge d i1fenc1. It. i1_.,,ry imporle11t i11 9ood, 11fe drivin9. If you h1v• trouble p11ldn9 OT 1!1v1 b1,11 9iv111 "tick1t1" for "t1il91fin9 .. , m1yb1 your d1plh p1rcl!plio11 h poor. To l11t II, pl1c:1 11v1r 1I foy c:1r1 1..-eth1r 1m1ll obj1ch) 011 • ,,.,r, tip. With your 1y11 11 t1bl1 h1!9ht, ~IVI I fri1n<f move tlri1 llff 11 you in1lrucl lo li111 up v1r1ot11 p1i11 or 0111 ci r' with 1ech of 011 olh1r1 111 turn, betll 1111r 111<1 f,; on 1111 f1bl1. U1you 1111•li11• llP th1 c1n 111il'f", yo11r cl1pth p1rc1ptio11 Ii prob1bly 9ood • If Vou c111't a/1911 lh• can l'N• ci11ly, tak••h1.dl Di1t11111 111<1 ,_.4 Clll .. , IN 1a111r tltav calii anly IM •1· tJmatacf, ltut it l•lf11 ••Ptri• •11c1, cf i1t•11c1 l""911t11flt ,,... • trve '"'••ptiofl .... ....,.1.-,... 011 ''''"'ft• -"'"' ~'" a.t allly .,.u, c11t1fMt •wt 1110 T•Wf-t•ftty cft,.,..I Ill t•od '11io11, 11 tfltra 1111 r1a1011 ... ,, ••• your .., •• 1,)it1 c.11 141.111J.t.r '" •itPolllflW.-.t., ••p-"'-'••--··ffi .. 111 tlt.-tst •• ;oi11h Shoppl119 C111t1r, Mtlfl St. 1t 1,.,11 11.,J. I I . " ......... ~ JIB DAIL \I PILOT Thunda1, Jvn1M1 14, 1971 Moon Hot Debate Scientists Debate Planet's Mysteries By EDWARD K. DELONG HOUSTON (UPI) -Two leading scientists disagree over v.'hether the moon was born with a liquid, seething core. Two 0U1crs a r g u e OUTH COHS'f '~' ''~I 1 ~, ......... " Ol'EN NIGHTLY 6:45 r .M. Sunday •t 1 :45 P.M. ANTHONY QUINN SHELLEY WINTERS "FLAP'' COLOR-RATED GI' V.'helher the layer knocked orr lunar rocb each year by Ctls· mic rays from space on atom or 10 atoms thick. Big and small, the learned debates are racing at the se- cond annual Lunar Science Conference here a11 the men who have studied moon rocks from Apollo 11 an<.I Apollo 12 test their findings against theories about the origin and history of earth's nearest neighbor. Their discussions center on specific aspects of the ('('ology, chemistry and mineralogy of the moon. These presentations began Tuesday after en open· ing day when !here was general agreement about the great theories of the moon's origin. ... feels the moon ha! always had a solid core. Strangway called their opposing view- points "A difference of In· terpretation" of dala on 1nagnetic prCJPertiea of the nlOO/l. A pair of experts on cosmic rays and their behavior in lunar material, Dr. P. B. Price of the University of Caliromia and Dr. Robert t1. \\1;1lker of \Va s hi n g ton University in St. Lou i s , rrp<irt ed their session also was "fillet! with controversy." "The man next to me and J argued over whether it was one atom layer a year being eroded from lun ar rocks, or JO atom layers a year," Price saict. referring to Walker. 1'hey said there we~ also reports of mysterious, long . . . LUNAR STRUCTURE 150 MILES THICK '.=s;:!----LOWER MANTLE 60 MILES THICK ~""-:---CORE 1700 MILES DIAMETER ot:es " STIYI, DAN • IYkON flNLIY Mew wHMI yow tlk• I r111<1!-I¥,. homo, bulH tf odOH brk k tM _,,,..prooted It tllt pOlnl whtrt Y" COVIO ,... I •••ncl 11l1M wu-• t1l1lurbln9 1111 ntlthllo•l1 Th• "'°"" -Ill l\IVt lllrH tr IMN ,..,... •-Int ..,. 1 ltllll "rllU, wlllcll in luni oPt"n• en I c...,rt, Thi 01111..,m -t•t thl1, t•llu - ;1 tor l•rv•• '""" on~ 1M1>1 pu ~•¥• .. ..,; ~'9 -uth lo IWll>I I c .. I• 1M !Mii toO..,.. TMI Plt<'.1 If Im• P'""VKI .... 4'1111t bOtoll I fln"ltllll ba!M~D Duilt ln1o tn1 floor •!!Cl ~°" c...,10 olol~ 1rtu,,.. In lrnll 1"'111f Dr. D. \V . Strangway of U1e ~1anned Spacecraft Center in Houston said Tuesday he is convinced from studying the physical properti<'s of lunar rocks that the moon had e magnetic field about 3.5 billion vears ago that was about one- ienth the strength of the earth's. "tracks" left in moon rocks MEASUREMENTS INDICATE MOON HAS 210-MILE BASALT-LIKE MANTLE by some kind of "wildly ex· Device Pieced by Apollo l2 Astronaut5 Took Planet's Vite! Statistics Sollr\dl .-. ell] W•ll, 111...-1 "'• hlld1 -"'• Mme "'" h•Y• dn<rlllM 11 typic•I o1 the rNI Hille I• Olyl>" l!lllS, G<H<lt blCll in ll21C. Ar<"* fl>lllth r-.:onUy pkkH Ind 1110v1ltd Olynlhut 1n1<1 Th• 11th! ol 1111 •11'1 dlOCOYtrtcl lhl l !hi 111<!.nt Grffll• knt.,. 1>ow "" liYI -bu! .-. Threw In It TV lltl Ind In l lKlrlc bllfllltl 1nd II >011Nh like pt111ll llvl..,, Th• Greell1 m1k1 lnllre1tl11111 r.-llnt• bul ltl'I git 11 1 more lm..,..1•1• problem -11!11 1111!'1 ~011r ln~11r1n<• prot r•m. II'• ' medtrn 111. •11111 yo.. ohould Ilk• tdY•nt1g1 of 1!11 mllll•"' mllhod of pretedlftf your t1mlly 1nd preperty. S 1t1t BYRON I' EN LEY INSURANCE, fOl Mlin, Hlltltlllll.,. BHch, Phone 'J6.7U,S, ebowt ~ur ln111r1M1t n1eC11. Wt hlYI It comp1tt1 lntur1nce p""9••m for ~Ill Ol'fN NIGHTLY 6:45 l'.M, Sundey at 1 :45 P.M. THE LAST WORD IN THRILLERS - TERRIFIC ···I I otic·• rays that have yet. to---------------'--'--------------------------- be identified . They might be COLOR-U.TfD GI' "This was somf!What con· troversial in that not everyone agrees that the moon has be~n subjected to a magnetic field," he said. He speculated that this magnetic field was produced by a molten core lbat has now cooled and solidified. In contrast to this. Dr. Charles P. Sonett of the space agency's Ames Research Center in Mountain Viev.·, Calif.. reported Monday he from super-heavy elements, or from a type or particle called a magnetic monopole that some scientist! have speculated might exist but have never found. ;'You ha•>'e nol heard the last of these very high-density tracks," Walker said. Recent lunar m i n e r a I studies add fresh evidence to a widely held belief that lava once flowed on the moon. reported Dr. Peter M. Bell or the Carnegie Institute in \Vashington. ARTISTS ''Lava flows tunder lunar conditions) are not like those on earth," he said. "They are much more fluid in behavior. There is evidence that the quiescent central d e pt h crystalization was somehow interrupted and that lavas spewed out to the surface, flowed and tumbled around." FREE DEMONSTRATION by KEN KNUTSON MARINA HIGH SCHOOL JANUARY 20, 1971 AT 7:30 P.M. ALL WELCOME STARS FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PHONE 847-1870 Svdn1y Orn•rt 11 on• of t~t world'1 9ro1t •1trolo91ro. H i1 col~rnn i1 0111 of tkt OA1LY PILOT'S 9r11! f1ol ure1. AIR CONDITION WITH GAS NOW ... RECEIVE $100 CASH Upon completion of 9•1 a ir-conditioning inif•l- la tion. $ YOU'LL GET 100 IN CASH $ with trade In of your HEATING or COOLING eq uipment ••• upon delivery of new Gas Air Conditioning. I Otfft HCl1 Felin1cuy 21th, 1 •71 J 6 day &night gas air conditioning ® PACIFIC HEATING CO. AIR CONDITIONING SPECIALISTS 2175 LAGUNA CANYON RD. Call Us for Prompt Service and Repair L"GUNA IU.CH 494.9745 WITH PILOT PRINTING Phone "2·4321 For FREI Pick.Up -Dtll .. ry ' LAGUNA HILLS-VIEJO 837-2000 ESTABLISH YOUR PRESTIGE Complete Modern Plant Facilities For Every Job From Busin .. to Social . PtlnUng. U.S. Probes Food Fond 'Skiinming' Lovell Says Economizing grams create ln this country that resources. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon -caught with ils cash drawers open -says it is sending scouts around the world to find out, in part. how much Food for Peace money was converted to arms for war. Armistead I. Selden, deputy assistant secretary of defense , said it's "extremely difficult, if not altogether impossible" to place a dollar value on U.S. military assistance to foreign nations. SPACE CENTER. l~ouston space agency's way of ai:r (UPI) -As four·time space proaching probldednu sys. veteran James A. Lovell sees temalically could be ap- it, the Federal Space Agency's plied to lhe problems in- ncxt big challenge is to learn tercsting students. ri:lany of how to operate economically the students he talked with in space. were "very critical" or the ''And we can do it, just space progran1. as we've made o ther "It sort of amzaed me in breakthroughs," said Lovell, a way because one €If the commander or the abortive big things \Ve've been trying Apollo 13 moonflight and the to do is stimulate education . man who has spent more lime We tr:ed to show them, and 1n space than anyone else. J feel strongly about this, that FINAL CLEAR-A WAY ADDITIONAL REDUCTIONS DRESSES & SPORTSWEAR FU.TURING FANTASTIC BUYS AT "These figures are in the field. They can be gotten : they will be gotten.". he told a J oint Eco no m 1 c sub- committee. But he sald Sen. J. \V. $5-$15-$25 RE~E He said the moon has bren there arc various programs conquered ''and we weren't in government, all necessary. too careful about how much ''The welfare programs, the money we spent to get there. poverty pro gr a m s, arc Now the breakthrough in necessary programs 10 bring NASA is to do the job up the level of the average economically. I think that '\'C citizen in this country. Boll Liq u e really have to look a I "But these are progra1ns Beech Fulbright (D-Ark.), was cor· reel "as far as he went"' Jn estimating the tot a I military aid cost at $7 billion in fiscal 1970. ourselves very closely and say thot use resources." Lovell 1970 So. Coast Hwy.-L•guna Can do lh . b !'ARKING IN REAR we e10 · ~,~·a~id:·_'~'\~·o~u~h~a~v:e~t~o~h~a:••'_l'P~,o~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "It's going to take some,· \\'artime conditions in Viet· nam, said Selden, h ave prevented the Defense Depart- ment from cataloging money tumed over to South Viet- namese, That and Philippine troops. "We certainly are not trying lo hide any figures," he said. Noting the U.S. has been In the war since 1965. Sen. William Proxmire (D·Wis.). said. "all you have lo do is 1nention war and somehow you don't have to be accountable." "Most of us in Washington have seen a lot of mismanage- ment in government prf>- gram5," said the sub- committee chairmar\. "But this is the first time I hal'e come acr<>SS one that ap~ars lo be characterized by un- manageme.nt. ·• P ressing for .3 coun1 ry-by· country br eakdov.·n of classified military assistance funds, Proxmire v.•as !nld by Lt. C.en. Robert 11. \\larrrn that such discl()Sure IX'forl' ap· proval by Congress "<'ou\d be embarrassing to the Defense Department.'' Selden said totaled about fi!teal 1970. assistance to military sales. tJ.S. :irm.~ aic\ "4.8 billion in excl uding Vietnam and Foreign arms progr<ims v.•ill e.1pa.nd, he said. because of President Nixon's decision to withdraw U.S. troops from abroad. ]earning, but I think it's a possibility that we can build the shuttle and build the space station and do it so it's not a big drain on government expenditures," Lovell said in an interview. The space shuttle is the ke y to the nation's future in 5pace. lt is seen as a reusable rocket plane that will be able to rerry a dozen p;isscngers or 25,000 pounds of machinery to and from orbi1 at something like S5 1nillion a trip. Lovell now is the head or an advanced planni ng group 1n the astronaut corps working on the shuttle -"putting lhc operators' inputs in early so \\'C don"\ have a vehicle lhat v.·asn't oriented or tailored to the people -n·ho \\'ill use it.'' As soon as LovC'll. J ohn L. Swigert ;ind Fred \Y . ll<1ile made it back safely from the Apollo 13 mission. they helped investigators pin down the <"ilUSC or th<" oxygen tank ex- plosion that struck 250,000 n1ilcs fr om earth last April. Lovell and his tolleaguc!' !hen went on a ~ood·\\•ill u11ss ion to Europe and Lovrll [1Jund the people overseas "are quite enthusiastic" about the i;pace program. \Vhen he returned home, he l ou red colleges and universities with Swigert and former astronaut Wil liam A. Anders. now executive secretary of the President's Space Council. Tbe tours end· ed last menth. Lovell said they went to eollege! lo try to see if the FASHION GALLERY • IS SELLING OUT ENTIRE CHILDREN'S DEPT. So that we mav expand our Women's Fashi ons and Men's S portswear. to become the most complete stOre of its kind in Laguna Beach. AT COST BELOW COST NEAR COST No Returns -No Exchanges -No Layaways -All Sales Fin•! - STARTS 10 A.M., THURSDAY, JANUARY 14th Open All Day Sunday -Fri. Eves. 'tll 9 p.m. IP.ABHIOR 611.lth&PU . 660 NORTH COAST HIGHW"Y -FREE PARKING NOT ON SHO.P WORN MERCHANDISE NOT FLOOR SAMPLES NOT DISCONTINUED ITEMS BUT ON WOULD YOU BRAND NEW SOFAS CHAIRS AND SWIVEL ROCKERS BY STONE & PHILLIPS With your penonal choice of fabrics & styles done especlally for you! SALE GOOD THROUGH FEBRUARY 1 lTH ONLY f'IJ R NITIJRE ·INTE RIORS BLACKMAR R'S LAGIJNA BEACH FIJRNfTIJRE 260 FOREST AVE .-LAGUNA 545-8491 OR 494-1071 • Lortg While David Paul flefl) and l\tike 1-lubbard look on, D~yle_ l\lcK inney tries to make it horne after a heavy dr1nk1ng houl in a scene from •·Look Homeward Angel ," on stage this v.·eck and next at the Lagun~ l\1oulton Playhouse. Off Broadway Revival Of 'Doll's Hou se' Scores By .JACK GAVER NEW YORK I UPI J -When a man 11nd \1•Hc dC'cl dc lhc_v 'vould like to s1<1gc a liule Henrik Ibsen, it is nice that he is ll1!lard Elkins, a pro- ducer who docs things in a handsome manner , and that the spouse is Claire Bloom a luminous and vrrc;..'lti!e ~tar Their first effort ,vith a work or the t-.'or1.,.egia n playwriting gianf 1~ ··A Doll's llousc," pr<'scnted \Vcdnesda v night al the off-BroadwaY Playhouse Theater. "lfedda Gabler" comes laler. Miss Bloom. of course, lights up "A J)(lll 's \liusc" in lhf' rolr of Nora Helmer, giving ;i eharming ;ind even- tually moving pcrfnrrnant'r :is a rebcling wife who leaves the home v.·hcre she is pampered and dominatt•d to find n11t if she is rcDlly a human being She is at. her best in the last act of the pla.v when U1e selrish. do min cc ring nature or her lawyrr-hankrr husband, Tnrvald, is exposed in all its meanness uhcn ht' discovers a n1oocy scandal resulting from her altruistic act fnr his hcnef1L and fears It \\'ill ruin him 11.s day with its theme or female independence, 1 s described as a new one by young British p 1 a y \'i' rig h't Christopher Ha1npton. Aside fron1 a few inconsequential deletions and word changes, it seems to be pretty much like its numerous predecessors. Roy Shurnan gives a n ('ngaginJ: performance as Dr. Rank, lhe great friend of the Helmers u·ho knows that his death is near. Robert Ger· ringer 1s impre:;sive as Krogstad. making this pseudo vi llian, who has the power lo expose Nora, something of a pathetic fig u r c , Pa1ricia Elliott is excellenl as Krlstine Linde. \\'ho comes back inlo 1he Helmers' Jivel'i after a long absence and docs so me scheming of her own in the Krngslad matter. Elkins )1as presented a handsome production. with a channing living roon1 !'e( rine period costumes and lighting, all devised by John Bury J.flss Bloom also "'ill appear in '·Hedda Gabler," which will haYS., its premiere f"eb. 17. The f1,1,•n plays then will he presented in repertory fa shion. i\ladd('n also costars in the second play. Ri ta on TV Thursday, January 14, iq11 DAILY PILOT jf Irvine Curtain at 8 LEGAL NOTIC& ' LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE "'*'"' JU .. elll~ ~·T Of'-TMm ClllTl,ICATI Of' I UllNlll OC:IAH v1rw ICKOOL DIST"•teT JTATI °"' CAU .... llHA .... ll'ICTITIOUI HAMI nt• CO\OfTY OI' oaAllil4I . Group 'Splits Difference' With NY Tl\tl 1111dt"l9'*' 6oes cer11tv ll'I• II 1tJ1 WlrftW ...... _ c-~ cond11eli"9 1 t>ullMu 11 U24 "•ladl,,, "\Mlillfl..,. ... ,,., CIN ... ..i. D-flf\• An11Mlm, C1lllor"l1, ullOlr 11>1 11c11nou1 NOTICI 01' IALI 01' SUMMONS tMAJ11tv.e9) llrm ,,1,,,1 of Ol>T1Mlll!O COM .. UTER .. UILIC .. IOf'llTY Ill ,.. Ille rMf'l'i..t wt ,..........~ SYSTEMS -,,.., uld llrn'I lo (llll'UIOUd The 0<••11 vi.w kMal Dl11rlC1 lllY11tl .. l!GGY L. tllUILI .. ........,... Of !II• tollow!r>t H'WI\, -..t1ft41 fllme l" Ml lld bld1 DI\ Ill• fallow!,.,. M1•11<11 C< ,, Mo:it community theaters in_ Orange County raise lbeir cur· tains at 3:30 p.m., following a long standing Broadway tradition. This season the Broadway theaters m o v e d their curtain time up lo 7:30. The Irvine C ommunity Theater is splitting the dif. ference. •1enceforth , its pro- ductions will gel under way at 8 o'clock. Carla Dow, vice president of lhe Irvine group. explained lhe change· "There was a time when an 8:30 curtain was necessary, hecause going to the theater was almost always preceded by dining out. Yetirs ago it was possible to afford both a r estaurant and the theater -m one evening. Thus, a tradi- tion was established to allow people sufficient time to enjoy their dinners and still get to lhe lhealer on time." According to l\.1rs. Dow, that tradilion -the 8:30 p.m. cur· lain -is no longer relevant. "In the firsl place," she said, "over the pas\ 10 years or so, the state ol our economy has been such that only the well-to-do can afford to go to both a restaurant and a theater in one evening. By the time a middle-class couple (who's still rearing their family and paying for their home) go out to dinner and the tmater, and maybe nightcap, and pay the I r babysitter for five or six hours' work, they've spent maybe $25 or $30. That's unrealistic. "People nowadays want to go to the theater earlier, get out earlier. and get home earlier," she added. "If they could do that, they'd go more often. They can see good com- munity theater for five dol- lars a couple, That's realis- tic.'' ' "{ wanted JCT to go to the 7:30 curtain time." said Mrs. Dow, ''but I was out· voled. Our executive con1- mittee feels that, for now, anyway, 3 o'clock is enot1gh change. lf we get the people Friday's 'Game' Segment lull 1nd P4•<• o1 rt•ldtr>q h ,, tollaw•! PUbllc l rOHrtv wllldl 11 to ti. IOld !;.!~1:~!1~1 .. used to the 8 o'clock curtain M.,v All" Fori1, 252, ,.111d111. 10 '"* 111111ttt rtt00ntlb11 blOdtr 1ub1~1 The ,.11,..,._ u. 11..,. • ..-i11on for the remainder Of this An111~1rt1, c1111ar,,11 10 rermi •nd COl!dlllOfll wr lortll 11ere1r>: c01>Cem1119 Your mart\ffll-y.,, """ th h ·11 t}llld Die-JI. U1fl U•ad v.llkt... ·~ OIQ<lllrntl\I, flU. writ! ,......... wltfllll ttllrtv seani, en pc!r aps we try M•rv AnM.Ford u.111.r!• tc1Yl1m1nt, i.chaol rurnTT1.1r1. o. 1 •of """"c1ti. ""'' flll• ....,.,_, 7:30 next season." STATE OF CAL!FOANIA •"" otMr mltctll•ntOU• "'"''· wlllcll I y WO If "°"' '911 -1111-0RANGE COUNTY· ' l\1v1 ~II dt!trmln..:1 Ill W 1'111 ~tr I M~tt.11 o;' 'J'W, wltl\M IUdl ttfM New York's 7.30 curtain On Oecu .. Der 11, ltlO, bf!Drt ,., •. I llll'dtd for"'"°°' PU•-··· :ou~' dff•1111": ... .....,..., .... .,,; tim ,,.m t be k" NQ1trv p.,1111< 111 •M lor ••Id siut e1<11 wlll "' re<1lvtd 11 '"• olflu rt 1111 11,_.,._. an;.1111...., e S 0 WO r Ing P•~0t1lllV •-••t<I M•rv Alln Ford ol ltl• Mtln1tn111C1 Dtt>trlmtnl, 17t1 ~llctrv!" ot '!tt:, .,.,..,. C#C>fflll"9 nicely 90 far, she noled. Jl 1'nown ro m• 10 De in. """" w11ou w.,,,., Av..,vt •. M""11"11°" '"''"· dlvllllon of pr-'Y'. _..1 _,.1, nimo I• sul>Krlflf<I 10 the wltt>ln C•ll!ornlt , un!ll 1.00 Pm,. Tundtv, dllld tOlfY l\lld t..-or1 ,,.,,,..,,. appeals to those who dislike 111t1n.rt1..,, 1no 1c1tnowl11<111..:I 1 ~, JlflYtrv "-1t11. wh1n l!ltv wll\ be 1 cu•, ',:i wGJI .... ;. •,...Mil' u be. th t I l •~Kulffl tt.1 stmt 1111b1lclv _,..,;I. 81di mu1t be .,,,!Oh<I '"' COi •· • o 1ng on e s reels ate a (Olli 1 1 $1! I) · 111 , •••ltd tnveloP• m1r1te<:1 "81d .,, • ., "-trenltod bV t1M court, night and also to suburbanites '• ~°"''' "· N ....... 1... e>i>.1111111, ''oo "'"'·· J•nu~rv t6, lt71." 11 .!._'!..~'"' •,_ .-....._'!'-~-'; ' N<>I p 11 lid form• mtv l>t ol>ltlned. tnd •'· aft • ._.,.., 111 tlln lftl,,.., because they can get home ,.,1~~P.t~~c~ ~:lltornl• r1n1trt1..,t1 m1v be m10. to lnsi>K• " • _,,_.,,., " ""'' .,..,, •1"'1 M I I N Oran cou !h• 1•C1Pertv by ""''tell"" tlle Mein. ,,_ .. .., H tll"f, 11'9" ... flllllll Oii fM. ea r er· e W Y 0 r k ll'ubllsl'led 0,:,. ~:., OtlTY Pilot lt111nc• 01PtrlmtM, ntl Wtrlltr Av ... ue, (5E'A L) restaurateurs on the other OtcemDtr u 11 ,,10 , •• J , ,, Hvrollnot"" letc~. c111to•nl1, Motldtv O.ttd Oct. JO, irn ' ~ ' ' ·~ tnutrv ' • lllrOllgh Frld1y, bltwe.., t :OO •.m. Ind W. I!. ST JtlMN hand, were concerned over the 1~' 7399•10 .. ,oo •.m .. 1.1n111 1~1 "°"' "' tor OPtnlnv c1er1t d . ol "'• bldo. II~ ltulh Hofllelm. amagc 1t may do to the 1>1vmen1 mu11 IM m•d• bv c••" or Dlputv restaurant business LEGAL N011CE r••t+t11>C1 cllKk dr1wn 11> tt>• order MICHAEL A. DION ' OI Ille Oc:Nn \'llW ki'ooo\ Olllfl<•, .A.!IOrMY •I iiw "We don't have that many 11 fll• tlm• prDPO••I h •cc11>11c1, '"" uoo Ad•"'' Av-. th I · SUP1!111011 COUl!T 01' THlf pr-rty mull De •MICVtd bv lllfl out• COllt Melt . CtlltWlll• restaurants In e r v In e STAT! OF CALll'ORN IA l'OR (tUlul bldd•r wl!l'IJ" '"''' d•~· tl!e r Ttl: (714) M .. 7»1 area." said Mrs. Dow . ··And THE COIJNTV 01' Ol!ANGI! •~co0ttnct of Ille PtOll0\11. Al!Omey1,., ... 1111-· be , . No, A·611(1 TM.. l!enn lrt pflfr..t tor >t!t PYl>l!tl\ed Or1"'t COUI Dlll'f Plier, sides, community theater NOTICE 01' Hl'.A.RIN~ 0, ""ITIOM "ti I• '"" wllert 11", wl!hovt rK<KJ•U Janu1rr 1, lt. 21, 1t. lt71 fl-11 cater• to <'ts -mmun1'ty and FOR 'IOIATI 01' WILL AND 1'01 "' '"' Oc1tn \/l1w St~ool Dh!rlc1 . ..., ' , LETTIRS Tl'STAMl!NTAIY (HO TM Ol1lrkl ... 1~10 no 1Ytrl!\!V. w1r- the residents of the lrv1ne aoN01 r1111y, or r11>•1wn1111...,, •K•''"'° or LEGAL NOTICE communities don't dine at 01~~,:~.ot MILTON MVll!:RS aooHER. ::;:11.ci. 11 Ill c0Nflllor1 ar 11111tH lorl-------,--------- New York 's 21 Olubt" NOTICE IS HER EBV Gl\/EN Tilll TIM lalf'd et l!CIUC:llloll of !tie Oce•n Cl!ltTll'IC ATI' 011' IUSllllUS , ' . . Om1 Hall llOOl'ltr ~•• 1111<1 herein I Vl1w lctloe! Dl1lrld r.wrvet 11>1 rl9111 l'IC'TIT!OUS HAM• The new Irvine curtain time u1n1on for prob1•t cf wm -..,.,. to 1'1led 111v -•II bfdt. TM urt"-t1li;rn1<1 0on c:.t1lf'f • Is t 'ts f' t l t f lnuence ol Lttlt•s THll!Tltnltrv to IOARO OF IDUCAT ION conducllnv t bu1ln111 ti '301 ,,.._r1n• ge s l IMI r_you f'leX Petlllorltr !No llondl. rt!tttncot lo wMlch OCEAN VIEW ICOOOL AYI. Na. 1. l•!bot lll•nd, C•llfer11!1. week when the group opens 11 m•d• for 1ur1"er Ptrllc11t1~, tl'MI flUT RtCT undtr lh11 1kt111ou1 firm 111me of "lll'S'' . . d od f Illa! !tie lime t nd pltct ot fM••l111 Clt renct Htll, llALllOA·ISLAND llATH' IOUTIQUI!: 1ls thir pr Uc.tlon o the '"• ••m• II•• been ,.t '"' J•"u•rv Ucl'11trv. 111d tt.11 u 1c1 firm 11 com_.ci of 111t season a blend of con-n. 1911. 11 t :lD 11.m. In 1110 courtr111>m "ubllt/\l'd °'"'""' Coa11 0111v P11,,.,, 1o110w1n9 per_,, who•• n•me 1n fllll • of OH11t•menl No. l n! Hid co.url. Jtnu•rv U. 11, ltn 2'3'·10 alld pltcl 01 rtildtnct 11 11 tollowl: lemporary short plays Under et 700 Civic '""''' Orlv• Wei!, 1nl;.:__:.:_;__;_.:_c_;__:._ ____ _c;::.::1 Moroertt T•et1tlle, llO Ftrfllndo Ne. lhe litle "Shortstuff" in UC 111~,','.,'v r, .. s~.~ ,',",',·,', •lllDrnl•. LEGAL NOTICE :ioJ. B•lbaa. ... ·' Dt!ed Oecem~r Jn, 1910 Irvine's old Studio Theater w. E. ST JOHN. M•r••••• Tr1111tt1 • Covntv Cletk, 1"·2'117 Mele of Calltornl1, Or•n111 Countv: 1 l"1rt1t and Ptltv, (lllTll'ICAT'll 01' I USIH•SS On OK. :IC. 191~, De!or• m11, 1 No!try llOl Civic C1111tr Orl~t Wt•I, l'ICTITIOUS NAMI! Public in end lor Hid Sl111, perOOflt llv $11111 ARt, Ctlllornlt n xi1 The 11nd111lgned doe• ctr!lfv II• I• IPPtt rt<I M•roarwl Trt11111t known lei Ttl: !110 141-110 C011d11clln11 t b111ln11S1 1! 151S Stn!t mt io be 11\t Pl•lll" Wl\Oll 111,,... AUOJ'l'l•V• !or: Ptllllol'llr An• Avt., Coat• Mt11, C11Uornl1, Ynder 11 sul>.crlbtd to 1111 wlllll" lmlrumtnl Pu~lls/\ld Orerove Coil! 01ITY Pllol lllt ll<!l!lous firm name of &COJ( t nd acknowl<'llp..O $ht extc11t..t tl>t """ Jtnu•rY •. '· 1 ~. 19n la·11 ENTEA.PlllSES •nd 11111 teld nrm I• <OFFICIAL SEAL) CDMPllH<I ol Ille lollawlnt """"'"· wl!OH Rebt H, Cinell i LEGAL NOTICE n•m• 111 lull Ind Pit<• of ru!dtnco Noltrv Publlc-C•llforni1 1--------------1 '' •• foll-1: Prlnct""t Olllc• 111 IAR·mt lle~•d Wiicox, 1315 S1nli: ANo A~e., 0rt"9t Cevn!v SU .. ERIOlt COUltT 0" TH• C~tt Mt••• Cilll. Mv CommhtlOll E:irplrtl Dllld Otctmbtr. 30, ltN/ Sept 1~. "n STATE OF CALIFORNIA l'Oll llern1rd Wiicox Publltl\ld 0rt"9t Coul D•llY .. lie! T"E COUNTY o" OltANOI STATE OF CALIFORNt.A., Dtc•m .. , " ,, ... tnd J1n1Mrv 1 ,. 21st Ce~fu,ry Nighttnare By JERRY BUCK ,;J, ll~ up a fuss some years NEW YORK (AP) -Where' ac0: tfith his indictment of do yoo go to shoot a film •.•mbnu.m" in "A Generation about a city driven un· , ., His eru'ocb and dcrground in the future by of ,V,ipen. _ air pollution? ~ st9J1es were made Into Finding the Ion g un-a televt:aion. series in the 1950s. rlerground corridors necessary buti he did not write the to the story was a major scrlpis. ; production problem in making "lA 201?" rtsulted f~m an I he f i r s t science..fiction ecology piece by Wylie that episode attemptec: by NBC's . was published in the Los "Name of the Game." Angeles Times. Hargrove read Gene Barry, in a segmeqt, to be seen Friday, is overcome by ~ha11 sl fumes from hiA· car and wak~s up in the year 2017. it and called Wylie and sug· gested the story premise. Wylie received lhe show's eustomary fee of $7 ,500 r o r the script. The show takes a strong Nt. A"'llll ORANGE COUNT'V· ' "' ' • stand ln lhe ecology ~ HOTICI! o• "EAR l"IO OP' ,.ET!TION On OK, :JG. 1910," 'Delore me, • No11rv 2l, lt7t 1G>JO , f • ~Oil .. llOllATE OF WILL ANO ll'OA ll'ubllc In tnd !Qr ••Id Siii• p1~Uf ment and accuses mdustry 0 LaTTl'RS TESTAMENTAltY IPPlt rld Bern1rd Wllco• k,;_n "' "'' LEGAL NOTICE polluting the envl.rooment and E•11 of WALl!S G. JACICSON. Ill Dt Ille Pt•i.on whOM! n., ... 11 1ub$Crlb-' --------------• , , Dtclllilld. ..t IO l~o wUll!n lnitnur,.nf 1nc1 1' the sclentil1c conunimJty 1•nd JrtOTICE '' NEltEBY GIVEN it.ti IC~nowl"'91d lie eJlK\lltd 1111 Umtl, .. .Jftll the • of .+a...tl .... lttllf Gi J.U-Ind Artllur A. Jtdl..,.., (Offlcl tl Seil) Cl!ltT"'l(ATI' 01' lllJllll•SS govemmen. ..-...-... h.11119 ,fl lllll llw1l11 • P11111an Tor 1•oh•t• M•rv Bell\ Morton l'lCTITIOllS NA/Ill Idly by ol Win tiff fw •-..c• ot Lone,,. No1trv PYbl!c . Ci!lfornli The uncltril1~..o -unity 1M I• . l T91ttr!llflll•rr "' •l"el1!1oo11'1 ~lt•tnct Prl11dp1t Otllct In Cor>dYCll"' I bu1IM\I ti 111 ToWll & There are some saUrlCaJ IO *"'ell 11 l!'ldt for f\ort ..... per!lcul aro, Ofl"llt Cevntv, Counlrv, Oronpt, C111rornl1, Yncltr l~!I touch'' In Wyl-le's .,,·lpl The ....... ....., tlM ,,,.,. •nd 1ltai ol heiring Mv CommlHlon l!J<P!•e• llctltlout llrm ntn'lt or ME Ml! MAIC"' "'--Ilea llMn~ HI lbr JonYft'"" APr11 t 1'Jl UP ST\J010 1nd tt.1! ltld !!rm !1 culture has become frozen In 29.·.fm , .-t t :Jf '''"" In lht courl'1>DITI Publlihl'd Oran~• COftt Oii!v p ,101 comcoo..o ol !he !ollowlng P.,.IO<', wiio•1 · , ol ~rtl\'ltflt Ne.'~ "' 11ld covrt, Otc:tml>lr Jl, lt10 Ind Jinutrv 1, 1 ntme In full •l'ld Pltc1t al rt11dtnct the SO years the city haJ beefl, tr ::>10f ·ctv1e , anttr fl rive we11, In 11, 1t11 ,.,7.1~ '' •• 10110 .... Und. em-'nd and -k h8! ltlt.Jt'IW DfJ~~~ .... ,, • ..,e111tarnlt Me Me Chen, 2•1~J !1t1ncl1 Orlv~. •o·VU ~..... Oll'lld' _ • ..,... " LtOYftl Nl~u•I, C•llJ. '2677. ....._.,,e the music of the w. Ir. IT JOHN LEGAL NOTICE Oiled J•nutrv ., 1~71, ""'I""" (:OVftfY Cltrlt Mt Me Chtn eJde.riJ. NGllMAN •· llUDOL .. H Sit!• ol Celltornl•. Or~119t C011ntv: Co · U h d 1• lwtll 011 ¥11!1 ... :iono on J111yerv '· !~71, l>tfo•• ,,.,., , ~UnJCa On 8 I 8 • tlll C...._..; Ctll .. r~l• Cl!'RTIFICAT• 01' •UllNISS Nol1rv Publle In 1nd tor ltld Stete, V8n_,..;i !O three-dimensional T•I: mo .n-UU l"ICllTIOUI HAMii! ~trMlnt!IV t Poe1red Me Mt Chtll •now~ • ~ , • A~ ftr "•lllltnen Th• undtnl1111td dou certl!V llt I• 10 mt to De !he ot11on Wl\mt "lmP holographic p1eture phones -.P'Vblllllld Ore1111e coast O••lv Pllol tOnduc!lng • bu1l11t•• u 16201 Sin Is 1Y1>icr1-lo Ill• w!ll\ln 1n1trvmtnl but they 'till don't WOrk Well . Jl ll\lll'V 7, f, )•, 1911 ,9.71 Jiclnlo Cr., Founl1ln Velley, C1lllarnl1, end 1cknowt"'9ed lhl IXIC~ltd fht HMt. ·1:::::::,:_::_:::_.:,::_:::_:._ ____ _:_::::Ynd1r 1111 llcll!lou1 llrm ntmt of (1) (OFF'ICIAL SE'ALl •-I d ~•ker stantly LEGAL NOTICE CONTltACTORs GENERA.t COMPANY Mi rlon 1 ""''°" UV • OU -~I"-con (1) MARCH EQUlll'MENT ANO RENTAL No•1rv 1>Ubll( -C•llfoml• blares OOt absurdities. COMPANY Incl ll'ot! ,..Id llrm I• (OM· ll'rlnclo•I O!flct In CIRTll'ICATI 01' BUSINISS POI.cl of 1111 lollowlnv Pl,_OI\, WllO" Or•no• Coun!v l'ICTIT10U5 NIMI!' 111me I!\ lull Ind Pl•<• of ro11aence MY Commlnlon l')(!llru The und•nlonld Ooe1 <•rl llv tl'o•I' .,, 11 11 loltow1· April 10. 1tn COl'ldu<ll119 t bu1lnt•• •I 75' W. ltlh Rcl1nd ltaY•, 16201 ~111 J1tln!o C•.. Publltl'oMI Ortnot C111t O•IW Pllvl. The air is unbreathable and the three million people left on the earth have taken to underground shelters and lo interminable warfare. The United States, what's left of it, is ruled by an iron-fisted corporation. Year Round Sports On Monday Evening? 51 . Cotlt Mt11, C11llorn11. unOer tilt Fount1ln V1ll1v, Ctl Jtnu•rv 1. u, 11 71 1171 to.11 l\ct!llou1 firm n•ITl4I cl SIR HOLROYO'S. fl•l<P<I J1nu1rv 6. 1911 ' ' LEGAL NOTICE Ind 11\tl 11ld firm 11 comPOted of Rcl•nd ll oyv !ht lollowll'lll Mt10111. wholt ntmu tn STATE OF CALIFORNIA, lull IM Pl•ct1 o! rtil<!enc:1 1rt •I ORANGE COUNTY: !allow\: On Jtlluttv •· 1911, beforv mt, al--------------Hcl Rovd W. M. Wll~I"" toS Tow"" No11rv ll'ubllc In t!\11 !or .. 1.r S!ele, IAI 2'11 Str..t, '°''' M•••· Ct!ll .. Stna .. lM ,..,.......11.,. tl•ott•td Ral tnd ROI.I• lr.r><>Wll MOTICI TO CRIDITOllS W1llr.lm, IDS Towf\e S!rffl, C°'lt MtH, lo mt lo De 11\t ot•Mln W!101t "'"'' Sllll'IRIOI COUl!T OP TH• Ctlll. li 1ubKrlbed lo Ille wlll\I" ln1lrum1nl STATI 01' CALll'OINIA ll'Oll fltftd J1nu1rv IJ. 19n •"" ··~nowll<dgld llt t•Kllltd IPlt .. ,,,.. THI COUNTY oir OllANO• Hol ...... d w, M. W•ttr.1111 (Olllcl•I Sl•U Nt. A ... Hn pro baskelball is "a good Sandr1 LH W•!ltln• M•rv 111111 MortP11 e~111e"' C!•r1 P. Loret1Ct. Do<ttlld. h 5!•1t a! (1lllor11!1. Or•<'O• County: Noltrv Public. C1lllornl• NOTICE IS H!!RE9Y GtVl!N lo tM possibility" (Or weekly S OW-On Janu try 11, 19n, flelor1 mt. 1 PrlndPll Olflct lfl crldlto" ol 11\t ebavt lltmtd dtctd•"' . . d . t" fllol•rY Pyblk !" ft nd far ••Id Sl•I•. O•IMt COiHl!V ,,.,.1 t ll PPrlOll• l\tvlno clt lm1 111lmt 1ngs in r-.lon ay prime 1me Peroe>nallv •PPt•r..O Hclrovd w. M. Mv Comm!Hlon E.••lrt1 t~e u ld dtct01nt •r• reciulrld to rua By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI\ Dean Hargrove, the pro- ducer said, "What we had in mind was that everyone lhinks t c c h no Jo gy wlll somehow save us. It's a safety valve. Wha l we wanted lo show is that technology may noL sHve us at all, but may cause lhc problems. \Ve .show that the world or the future may u·ell be a slum and a Year-round programming of sports in Monday night prime time is being consJdered by ABC-TV as a future· possibili- h h f t W11~1ns 1nd 5ond•• Loe Wt!k lns known APrll '· 19n lllim"O, will\ 11\t Mi:tn•rv w:oucl\eri. h• next season w en l e pro 00 -10 '"' ro ~ 1~, Peroon• w"°"" n•m•• Pu1>111111<1 Ortng1 Co111 Dall¥ P1101 the ottlc• ol '~' cleri. 01 "" 1bov• 'b U --• du!' • I t d •r• •~bscr1bad lo 1t11 wlll\111 rn i!rum'"t Jenuorv 1. 14. 11, JI, 1t71 3!-11 en!ltltd court, or !a prewnt tlltm, wlrl'I 8 '!Ule C IS comp e e • 111d tC-llOW'l...ittd llltY t~Kulld !ht '"'" nitC nurv v~uclltri, lo !ht ~ ... I , ltml dt,,10lltd tr lht ollkt <If ~II •"Of'lltVI, nightmare." But wh!<re did they go for 1hnse underground corridors? Afler the l--0s Angeles lnlema- tional Airporl turned them down, Hargrove said. •·we finally wound up goin~ to the Hyperion sewage plan! tit Playa Del Rey." The desolate outdoor seen-es \vere filmed in the section of Los Angeles swept by brush fires. The film was then wash- erf in an orange <iye to {:1\·e the out1toor scenes an acrid, ty. 'l'l\B.t ts. the. wO«! (rom James Duffy, presidenl of ABC-TV. The basic reason for the possibility, of COUTS(", was the enormous success of the network's new, Monday prime lime pro football ser ies lhis season. The first step in possibl y using Monday nights for more th.in just football was taken recently when ABC-T·v tried fl prime time pro basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and r-.1iJ1,1,·aukee Buck!. "Eventual y,' he s a Y s . roFF1C1A.L SEAL! LEGAL NO'nCE co1-1eN. STOKKE a. OWEN, 1112 ND•'" " d t Lottolne Lewi• aroodw1v, Sul!I 111. S1nt1 A111, year-roun SP 0 r 8 pro-No•a•v Pvl>llc-c 1ruornl• C•lllo•nl• f'101, which 1• lllt •l•ce · M d ·..,1,... Pr111crc1! Ol!lct In p,JfNS ol by1lne•• ol lhe ur>dtrofgnfd tn ti! grammmg On On 8Y nl&<•WI Orongo County CIATll'ICATI Oii' •UltNEll matte,. 1>11rt1ln!nv IP !tit 111111 of is possible," Mv Com,,,ln lon ExPlrH 'ICTITIOUS NAMI 11Td decf!d•nl. wl!M,., lour month1 1t11r Marth ;, !91' TM Ulld.,.il;ntd dOO'I cer!Uv ,.,, 15 lh• llt>I PYblktrlon of tlli1 rtOllc-. Some observer! had felt that Pv1>111,.,e<1 O•~not Coe•! DtllY ll'l lot, conduclf!lll 1 1>uilnoH 11 1':.0.B Gr••• Oiied Otcember ll . ltJO JanYerv !1. 11, lt ind F!'ll. ~' 1971 11·'1 HEllMAN JI. LORENC!! ABC-TV's con1mitment to old L1111, Cont Meso. Celltornl1, ur>drr E•oc u!or ol l!I• Wiii ol , '"'" !lclf!IOYI ll•m !\tmt ol .. ACIFIC lh• ol>avt ntmt<I de<tdtnt movies following this season s LEGAL NOTICE wooD oes10N '"" ""•' ••Id firm coHl!N. sTOKKI 1 OWl!N footb II indup as th I• <omPo•..0 of lhl fallowln• PIB()n, ll!J N. 8ftlalf'W••· Suit• 211 a v.· w e reason p.,..n w~o•• nom1 In tull 11\d •I•<• "' r1tld111ce ''"" ,,.., c1u1. t11tt lhe nct1,1,·ork did not take a Cl!R TIPICATI! 01' IUUN!.11 ts •• follow• T•I"'"""' IU-1101 quick step IO move rt'ght In ll'ICTITIOVS NAMI Thom•• WtYnt 0111, .Mt <•••en, l.llo•ftlYI .... !.•ttul .. n..e Yl'ldertlontd do <•dllv lhf'I' .,... ltoun1 Beac/\, Call! Publl•lltd Or•n111 Ca.tit CMllY Pllcl, With pro basketball c0t1<1u<llno , iw.1nen 11 1SJ01 ca111mbl1 ~tld 0~•,mbtr JO, 1f10 J11>111rv 1. 14. 21, H. 1f71 n -11 · . l t ne, H\lftllnqfon !etc/\. C1U!Drnl•. under on>11 W1v111 G•ll espectally after the rating'"" 11<1111011• llrm ntme c• B & L STAlE OF CALIFOltNIA, LEGAL NOTICE rcsut'-Of th Lo A I ENTEl!Pl:USES ~nd th•t 11ld firm 11 OllDNGE COUNTY: "' e S nge eS-cOfTIPOstd ol tt.o lnllow!no l>ll••Oru Wl\olt On DtctmDtr Jll, lflll, btlOtl ll\0,1----,=,--~~~==---Milwaukee game ntmP• In 1u11 •nd Pit~•• of r~sldl!l'lce 1 Na•irv Public In •nd to~ ••Id !111t. NOTtCI! TO 1100•11 B ff . . Is &I 1a!l~w1· ,.."""111V t PPlt•ld T~omtl Wtvnt Gt•! Nollet I• nt rtbv 111~1!\ 11\1! lllt lotrd Uf OU Y says thlS WaS Ktlnrv11 A. !•udrV Bl01 Columblt ~-n to me lo bt lllt Ptt11>11 w"°"' of Educf'!lan at Ille Oc•tn View Sclloot nol the reason. The problem. Lant. Hunl!""''"" Bt•cn ~,·,~,"~ :~bo~~1::iow1~0:.:" ~w~~~ .. 1~ Dl•trlc! will ~K•l•t bkh lo PU•UI• .. h . , . Ellen L Lt<•· ~l rvr0t11 Clrclt, ine ••m• tor <••~ lo !tie 11191\nt bidder, ol>lol9!1 e mdicaled, was Jn booking HWl!lnv1on ll•••~ 10111,111 Sitll •""lcles •t'ld ••let••I• eciulom1111. "" the required arenas on such Dtttd J•~. •· 1911 Mt.-. B••h Morton 1, . ., wM<h ~·· llffft d•lttmlntd • This. too. 1~ the act that brings out the <;\ron,(!est playing bv l)nn:itrl ~!:idrlen 1n the role or the hu.,bund. Thl' two pl ay the c!1m,1e11(' scene in ~s forr cful and con\·1ne111g niannc-r as one rould tlcs1rr HO Ll.Y\VOOO ftPI ) smoggy cffrcl. Duffy says the netv.·ork was definitely pleased with the ovemight rating result.s in New York City. And, he adds, h . ICotnrv~ A. ll1ua•v Nol•rv Pul>llc . Ctllforn lt ~no lon91r l'tl<ltd tor 1cllool ourPQIU, s nrt notice. Ellen L L~cY P•lnCIPt l oruct In 1111ereut<1 blddtf'I m•Y ln1PICI "'• Duffy feel s pro basketball Sttre "' c~•uornro. Or•no• enounrv · Or'""' cou~1., ~l>ov• n ..... '' I~• oc11n view Mii~ h . . . 0~ J&nu•rv I. U TT . Mlort "''• I M¥ CommlH\on Exolrn ltn•nct F1cl llfV. 1791 W1rntr AV1!11Yt, Rita H:iywort.h, ;iftf'r hold ing Th£' shn1,1,·, called "LA 2017." Ulll for a!mo.~1 1 w n drc.-adcs i~ thr fir~! televi~ion script \\ill niakc her tclrvis1on debuL by 11u1h0r Philip \\'ylie, who as really arrived as a major Note,-, Pubnc In t nd •p; ••'d 5'•'•· A~•ll t , 1911 Hun!lno!an ll11c~. Rid ,.,,..,,, 11'11 rt t'•a t' Ptrsonallv IPP11rtd IComrvn A B1ud,-, ll'vl>llt~t<I 0,,ng• (~•I Dativ l"!tot IP!Clflca!IO!I• lndlctllng ••tel loct !l<lft spo S a ,,. C inn . '"" Ell1n L. Locv ir.ncwn to m• •a oocembpr JI ,.11 and Jin ,,..,. 1 u •nd IN!m1 m•v De a~TRlnM trom the The current adaptation fr11m the original Nl/rw<:i::1.:in of 1111~ !}(}.year-old drn1n;1. w hi C' h crcalrd a lrcmrndullii s11r 111 as a guest star on the "Ca rol 1,------------"--''-----=========o,, Burnell Show." ''It now has a star system" be"'• 111"""" """"'"• l'llm•• •r• •ul>"rfb-11. 1911 ' " 1;21 .1Q 1>urc111,1,. A;tnl. 7'71 w1r111r .-.v""""• ' ad lit !ht w!ltlln ln•trvmtfll tnd Hvn11no10~ e11cn. he Says. 11c-nowl""9ld Ill...,. ll<KV!ld 11\1 N/l'>t, ln•oec!IOll l\Ourl •r1 ~I IO!IOWI: As for this season's recent tOFf'Jc~!'.Ln t~~!t:.t LEGAL NOTICE ~,~·!~~~a;!~.01'S~:1.:ii'v1 :;: h:1·1~v1: "M·A·S·H" b the best American war comedy •inc• sound came int" _,,. -~ -ALSO PLAYING-- An lngo Preminger Production Cclof by DE LUXE ' 1 Panavision" The slory o( a bc .iu!1tul girl"; lifetime bet\veen the .1ges ol 19 and 22. ~fl()NAl GlNfRM. l'ICTU~lS Pr~ ,,,...,..,,.,,_ ~ClOO' ® ~te> EXCLUSIVE W ith a djectives like this • , ". , •• the mo1t JOYFUL. LIVELY , ENTERTAINING , DISCIPLINED. POIGNANT. FRIGHTENING local TIMES theotrt exferlenct ,,l'ithin memory.'' -L.A. •.• , You can't afford to miss MOTHER EARTH • "w '""•kal ..., .. Wed .• Sun. I >O 'or R1Mrv1tlon1 C II 641-IMJ I -.- 1\lCHAAJl BURTON GENEVIEVE 8UJOLD KA.i.WMJ.i5~ .o.~llo< t WillDAYS· FlA, 71161• DntlUSlt4S SAT.& IUM.· 'lA• 1t1JO -411S • 1 & 111JO DIMGllS J1JO • S!OO & l 14S llt IOUTll 'Ill tOAJT ,~AJA , ...... ~ I pro football games, he added Nol~rv Pybllc.CotTIOtnl o l'l!dl mu5! be 111cla1ed 111 • 1t1l1d h t h . l'dncl~ll Ol!lct '" T·47'1U envelo~t. tOdrt~•td lo !he B1>1•d er t a I e average audience for or~nu~ C<K1n!Y HoTtCI TO c11:101To1s Educetron. and 111..i wnh 1111 Purch11t119 an ABC.TV Monday night con· MY Com"'""'"" E11pJr11 tUP•lllOll COURT 011' TH• A11n1, nn W1rntf Avtntll, Hur+llllllOll Mer(h 1. 1'1l STATI 011' Cl.LIPO•MIA ll'Oll Bt•tl'i. Ctllloml1, an or l>llor. Tut1d1v, test was 30 million persons, Publiihl!<I Ore11111 Coe11 Dtlly ,.11o1, THI COUNTY OI' ORANO• Jtnu•rv 16. 1•11, 11 1:111'.1 o.m., ,, which f h. h ho . . 1. J•nutrv 1, "· 11, 11, 1911 11-n HL A-111" t!mt tnd pl1c1 1111 bid• will bt _..ci, 0 w JC a ut eight m1l 1on l!llt!• -"ORACE s. ll'RICI!, t llO Th• l'lo•rd of Ed\ICtllOll rtMrvft ,~. were women, LEGAL NOTICE ~..-n 11 HORACE ST. ELMO P'R!CE, r1g1i1 111 1cc~1 Ill' r•le<.t 111~ .. 111 ' 0.Ct•..0. bl<lt. Whal other events is ABC-,..,,.>0 NOT ICE is HElllEIY 01vl!w to 111e D•fllll 0tc:1mbt• '°· lt7'11. 'J'V considering, besides pro CERTll'ICATE o" I UllNISS ~:i1::riPl~IO~"'·v'::::'c1:~.:~.:1~~r~ ~=~Gill~"''" football and pro basketball, Tiit und::~!~oud~:A~~!lfV 11, 11 11ld """""'' •rt reoulrld to 1111 11\tm, lt1•d 1111 Trvirftt• f , Witt. !IHI nK1H1rv vouc11tr1, In 1111 offlet Ocl111 VllW lchmll Dl1tr1el or year-round Monday night COl'ld Yctln9 • bu•lntn " u1u cii.ndut• 01 11"1e <111•k o1it.~111ov@ en1u1e<:1 c<KJrt. or 1u&l1111«1 Or11119 c11111 0111~ "''°' t I 'f . Avt .. Fovnt1l11 V1ll1y, C1lllor"lt fll'Ot, lo prtHnl 11\tm wl!h ll'lt nKn" J•mi.rv 1 It. JI lff\ UJl.111 spor !I programm ng I 1t ~natr tllf: 1i.1111ou1 tlrm ,.."" of W1UCMri. lo !tit u:.C,1,119....i •I""' o111c':1----·---·------'---should come? RAVELING .-.uTO SEllV!CI! •nd ltl•I "' Ill• tllorne~. TED 5ULLl\/AM, 5501 LEGAL NOTICE >tld flrTI" 1, '""'"°"" ol ""' fallawl ... Ct l'IOll SlrH! Sullt JOO Llkewood Duffy says baseball is a .,.....,.,, wil<IH lltml Ill Tl.Ill •nd PIKt C•llfornl• 9071j, w"I•" •• '111e p1K9 ,,; tb 'llt I tr k or Nola.nee I• •11o11owt: ill11Tnt11oflfHIunae ... tent<I 1" 1ll i•11n1,.,l------~-------poss I y, RS we I as ac Eil'w••d A. Ukt•ol1, inn c111nc1u1e "'"''1"11111 1" lht ••'•'•"' u1c1 d1<;tdenl ""'"" and field. But he adds that, Av• .. "°""1•1" V•llfv', centvm•e wt111tn 1aur .... nr11, lfl•r trit 11...; ClltTlll'ICATI o, 1usr11111U f Dlltd Jtll, 6. ltn jouttllc•llo" o1 11111 none1 'ICTIT\OUS lllAMI o course, there are numerous E. A. 1111a.11 Deild D-tie• 11. 1'1t ''"" lllldtr1fpMO c1<1 Cl"'lllV fM'f ,,.. other events to consider The 51•1• °' C•lllorn••· °''"'' Countv: E••1 R. Price conduefl,.,. • but!""' 11 Po. IOll 1m. . . . . On Jtn '· !t11, ...,..... IM, • H ... 1.... EXICUIOI' ol 11\t wm or Wit! Or•llf• 8r11'1Ch, O•tllN Ctl!IC1'!'111 basic approach, he 1nd1cates. ,.,,bile 111 ind ror u 1c1 s1111. Hl'10lltllv ""' •llllv• n1m1c1 OfCPOlnl '1'61, Yl'lder ,,.. 11c1111ou1 llrm ,...,,. f th II IPPttrld E!JWttd A, llltc.1111 ltn<Jwn ••o !U"t••• of !~AR ROOF•NO C""••HY ,~ s at 8 such Monday night ta mt te be 1111 Plf'Jlll'I wt.c .. n•rrw UH c...=. "'"'·tulle • '"'"' ttld nrm 11 ~ of W.:: sports events would have to 1• W&ierlbtd 10 1111 w1tt.1" 1n1!rum1n1 l•lt.-.. c.i11tr~11 M7U lallawlr>t ,.,_., ~ -111 fl.Ill •nd 1cl:11owl9dlled ~· uecu!oa ""' MIM. Tth tml Ol•Otl 1nd Pleet• ol r1sld11111:t 1rt 11 fellOWI; be exceptlonal, not routine, 10FF1c1A1.. 1EAL1 Alt9r..., itr ••Klllw Jo11n ... o•c ...... 11, * _. 11 .. thletl . W..ry IC. Htnr1' I .. ublllllld o...... CN•I 0.llv il'lfrol N_,., IN<t\, Ctllf. a c occasions. Not.,., '!fllllc-C11lfW!!ll o..cimr..r ,,, ll, 1t7G •l'Wll Jtnu.rr 7, u. s11n L. F111rlne, lttU 111111Mftl f"or example he recalled Pr111e1N,1,0tt1« '" 1tn 71'1·70 W•Y. Tu11111, c1111. th • Orl!IM ou111v 00fllld w. MorlOn. 1117 t, ll'l•w-. e success of past prtme t1mt , ...,, eom111111ion 11~pt,.. LEGAL NOTICE s1nt• An•, c1111, iu:hedullng of Olympic events. "u1>111~!d· 1~1~','; c1111t n111w 11111o1 l-------~------I °'1"' J•nJ~·;.i: t;.~~!,.11 Jtnu.v 1, u, 21, 29, 1'71 t1.n' ... ,.., ~Id w. Morfin 1--------------1 ClltTl,ICATI 0, SUllNlll 11•11 L. ft.rirln1 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTIT!OUI fAMI STAT!! OF CALIFORNIA, L.... T~• ulldln11lllCI 0. etrlllr n,.y ,,. OllANGI! COUNTY: ... ,,.., P.>ttft concluc!lnt t but I-ti '"" VIiii 0... J111u1ry I, ~ 1"1, , tl'llt • ClltTll'ICATI 011' l llltlllllS Cl•Tl,ICATI 01' IUSlllllSS Htper, N_.I 81.i:ll. Ctl!l11t"lt, ll!ldtr Noltrv l"ulll!e In •ncl tor .. Id ~lllt. l'ICTIT!OUS MAM• ll'ICTITIOlll MA.Ml "" !1c!lllil<lt fir"' -or DIMEMllON \llMOl'lllf"I' ........... Jctflll P. O'COMtlt Tiit Undtrllflltd °""' ctt!lf\I' ... •• T1'lt llNltr\l•ntd clvtl e.rtlf'I' "" II s '"" ,,.., .. lei llrm .. (lln'lllOllld •nd s1... l . Fttor1nt •M °'"''cl w. COl!ducll"' • "111-,, Hunll"'loli condll(llllf ..• butlf!IM •I 2101 Htrbor "' Ille 1o11owr,,. J'll'mll&.. wlloH """'"' MorfOfl II'-,. llM ,. " .... ~ Htrllor M1r1,.; Sii• f'-1, H1111t1119ton 91\/d., Cotti 'MN, C1ltfQrnl1, 1,11\dtr In 1\/11 tncl 'llCPt of '"ldll'ICP 111 ~I l ~mn •,~,...-, ... _Ibid tr.~ lltlCfl, C•llfotlllt, llll!ltr tlM lldlli..n fM l1t!!llOU1 firm l\llM of El Ttco It lftllewt: .. .,,, 11 !If rvmtn • """r llrm 111me of SOUTHWl!ST ,1.VIAT ION No. .W tl'd 11111 .. Id tlrm I\ ~ Oonllll W, R-v. 74'4 Vld1 "'91r, t100•«1Ultod01 .. ltl•1~""· M.Alt lNll!: •lld 11111 uld firm I• ~ l1f tlM follow!"' w-. "'-1111M _._, kid!, CtJll. < • l1f "" lftllowllll "'""· .,.._ 1\111\1 Ill Ill II.Ill lfld .i.e. or rwlllt!Kt I• .. Rlcfltrcl A. Sll'llll•i. fl• • 1'"' SI.. ' .. ",rlirr l.-.,'"c."1'1-·-fl,IU -1l1t1 vt NlldPl'tU It ti follows; lollow1: All!, R..fll, N-1 tMd'I. Clllf. try r" c ...,.,_ Allll'lllftt> Hllbll!NI Jr .. l!TI TIWllll ll'Wtllll SOl'ICIMJ, JU Ht mlltml St., 0.19111 N11¥1n!bitr 22, ltll .,,"rlftt!NI 0Ma In Ori .... LM Altmllo., C1)ll. "°"° ..... IS, (1111• ~ e1nftr1Mlo. DonlN w. ··-.... , ,_~ Dlftd ~, n . 1"9 0.ftd Ope~ 30. "" Rldltl1! A, llftllll Mr IWllrnlbllll .Dll'l5 Afl#llrl'f Ht!bll• Jr, Enrklue SOftCflll • ST•TI 01' CALlll'otl:fOA. Flttnll" 2. 1'71 ITATI 0' C...Llll'OAHIA. SI~ flf Ctllfol'ni., 0t•ft91t <-fltf1 OIAHOI COUNTY ! ~""II.,._., 0re"'9 C-1 Dl!IY ...... OttAHOI! COUNTVl Oil O.C-W ~f'"tm~ ...... tMo 0... "'°"""'* 11, ""' btftr'I !NI, ~,., f , It. II, 21. 1'71 •11 0.. 0-blr 71. ltN, ..,.,.. me, I I Nollf'Y PlottC !It •'•'tifU'M ...... t~l'Wlc jfl otllCI fW Mfd .$11lt• H<1J•rv ll'11bl!c Ill lfld '°' Miii s1111, ""'"""'· ........ l!11rl!Wt ~ ~ 00....111 w, lltrnNv LEGAL NO'I'lCI ,.._.11v •-•tel An1'11an'f H1lbllrtt Jr, •1-11 "'~"' ~..._ 1 A •A. trrrnh •-to m1 •nown '" ll'Of 111 M IM ""°" ""*' Mtrt< • · fv • 1ft i... ~--..,._ ..tllltt ntl'f'lll 1•1 l--------------11<1m1 11 tullKr~ to t1M wlthlll tl'l\!llnPftl t fld.. i... l'QCYIM ;;,;1,.: lllt wlf11111 IM~ •nd •tCTITIO'lt IUllMnl hitlr.1•,,•111 I.lid ~llOffd""' -.wtld Ille.._,._ "" • • '""I ,.,_ -ulltl 1M Mml. NAMI STATIMIMT ,,.. 1•m• IOfl,l(IAL. SIM.\ • ! dlt I • "" tollowfne --l!'t ..... (0Nlcltl IN!l f lt ..... l_C' tJMrl/'' ~· , 1 ' "t1 It•-IMlMU t•: GUl!RHSIY •HD IWl!•K, H111M •lrd•M Jlf/Y ' ..... ,., .. ~ ' ~ .... • ""' .. lltl!lc-C.tllfomlt ,... cemoYI DP,. No. 11t, ,,.......,.. Nsltrv ll'ubllc • CalllOl'lllt-' ..... ~ (1 ...... il ,..,. t tnclllll OlllC. 111 lle~JI: WUlltlll L-,...._, 111f ~\Wt Of't-('""llf'f Cwn!Y ti Ml\fll 0<'11111 Countv lt0fl4, N .... Ptr1 l11du ltotltft C, Hllllllt Ml' Commlttlo!I l_,lrtl Ml' CommlKl<lft •••I'*• MY Cllf"\llllhlon f'x<!lrt\ 1~ Ttrt/IC9 WIV, LatuM m-ft. ' ()cl, U. 1f72 . , Aug. 11, ltTI Julv 17. 1'11 OINlllAL .. AllTN I AIHll• O"ubtlthtd Or1ttll9 Coe11 Diiiy """ PulMl'ltled Or1n111 (:0111 tU!lv Plkl!, l"ubll1h..i OPt,.,lt Coe11 O.t1Y .. 1kll Sl1Md. wm11m l . $Wiii! Ktmber 24 J , 1t70 t l'MI J1~rv 1, 1.t. Ptc..,,blir 11, lfJO tM J111111ry 1, IA. OtcemDtr 11, 191'0 etlCI J111111rv 1, u, Pulllllhld or1n11 CM•• O.lf't ''* 1911 JJU-10 21, 1tn JAV•.it a1. 1tn im·10 ,._..,., 1. 1.t. n, "· 1tn tt-n ~· . . .. I I " I rvine Post Personnel director Robert \V. Perkins has been promoted to the position of vice presi· dent v.1ith the Irvine Company. Perkins join· ed the company in 1960 after three years' service with· the FBI. He and his wife, Carol, live with their son in Corona del Mar. British Looming Decision LONDON (UPI) -The year 1971 is likely to be the "crunch" year for Britain's third and probably final bid to join the European Common M;irket. The present members are Fr;ince. We<it Germany, Italy, Bel~ium. Netherlands and Ltixembourg. By the end of July British officials expect to know whether the marathon talks in Brussels and Luxembourg will succeed. tr they do. and if Prime Mi.,ister Edward Heath can sell the deal to a bfllky Parlia- ment and deeply skeptical British public opinion. officials believe Britain could be a member of the prosperous six- n::i•ion tradin~ group bv mid- 1972, or January. 1973. at latest. If they fail or if Parliameni rejects the entry terms as too tough, Britain will have to "go it alone" indefinitely in a kind of economic limbo between Europe and the United Stat.es. British officials say frank ly t.here will not be an other chance. The Weeklv Ee on om i s t predicted reCentlv thi s would mean that wil.hin 10 years the averajle French ·worker wo11ld P~rn half as much aga in as hi o; Rritish counleroart . Tr Britain does f!et In . she would take with her three other countries v.·hich also have apnlied to ioi n -Ireland. DP.,mark and Norway. This would create a si n11:le market with an area or 600.000 square miles and a cnmbinrrl poonlation of more thal'I 2~ millions -a new economic l!'iant on the scale of the United States and the Soviet Union. With It l\'OUld be linked the remaining memhers of the Eu.rope an Free Trade Associ.'ltion (EF'TA ) -Aus- tria. _Fin I and . Portugal. Sweden and Switzerland in some form or tracf\nf! Associa· tion. Greece, Spain a n d Turkev probably wonk! be associated too. All this, Heeth has predicled would mean the prospect of a new era of prosnerity for Britain and Western Europe. But there are major hurdles to be overcome. Britain stil1 wants an eight- year period In which to asl:ume gradually her share of the common budget for the Cominon Market farm system. Franee wants to limit this to five yean. Britain has offered to pav 17 \ ~t of. the overall budget France want5 her to , pay up to 23.5 -t. BrltalR wants lafel'Uards In ca• . this harden should prove too heavy. France refused them. Britain wants opedal ar- ..._.,ta !or New 1.ealand's l1111b and dairy product and Commonw~ ..-. France nd · !lier membors ol ''The • 0 . -'-'! SU:'" object to 9tJ1 .,.....a ... c;:epUons. Opposition In Britain ltatlf 11 atron( and P"'bably IJ'OW· lnsJ. In Parllameot It cu.ta across paarty ,11.... llec!"! op\n.ion pollJ hatt 1tndlcaU10 up to 70 percont· ol Briton• are agalnat, Joining. Ol!lclals predict one of the btg,.111 political batUes !n decades In Britain before the <1~1slon fnally ls taken. 1 Thursday, .... January 14, 1971 • Ill Red China Party Being HONG KONG (UPI) -The reorganization of the Chinese Communist Party at pro- vincial levels appears to be moving into full swing with the military retaining its dominant role in the party leadership committees. This is the reading of preliminary analyses of four Provincial Party Congresses concluded in December. Three of lhe four provincial party standing committees are headed by a veteran civilian man. bu t the top deputies are members of I.he military. The first of the party con- gresses was in Hunan, the home province of P a r t y Chairman Mao Tse-Tung and hi:s consti~uLionalJy designated successor, Lin Piao, t h e party's ·vice chairman and defense rpinisler. The Hunan Party Congress. held from Nov. 24 until Dec. 4, elected a provincial com· mittee of 75 members and 15 alternates. Official reports said the committee consisted of "old, middle-aged and young people." The real power. however, resides in the panel's small standing committee and its leaders. They are 'Hua Kup- Fehg, first deputY.-&eCretarf: Pu Chan-Ya, secretary; Yang Ta-Ti, deputy secretary. Hua was ·secretary . of the previpus Provincial P a r t y committee and also was .. vice goVernor of the province until those posts were superse:ded during the cultural revol.Ution. On New Year's Day, China anoounced the conclusjon of party congresses K l. a n g s I , Kwangtung and Diangsu pro- vinces on Dec. 26 : The Kiangsi C.o.n gr es s elected a committee Ot 89 members and 16 alternate6. A . . 1~ C!?JP.!fti~.o('l3 '~ who in turn elected a 13-WaS eleaed and Oien Shili-membtr standing . corltmittee. Ching wall~ n_ftmed · f i r s t First sccrCtary is Liu Hsing- secretary :, Chen .is a political Yuan, 8. member of the Na-<;o~ &(,the .~l.oo-:1\a: Uonal Defense ·Council and a iDgsi iMilitaty dls~ict. ; •, Polltieal commissar of Canton Ya n g 'fllng-J.Jaqg, corn. Military Unjts. mander of the Kja·n.·g s-i Secret.a·rLes of the Militai'Y,' disti-iet, w~ eiec~d Kw;mgtung s ta.n ding corn· ~l')'. ·Deputy secrel4ries mittee are Kung Shih-O'hna~. were Pai Tuqg~Tsai, a·veteran another PQ.litical commissar par:t~ l~ader ~d agricuJtural assigned t.o7 the Ca n t o n specialist, and Wen Tao-Hung, milital!y .region : ,Ting Sheng, "'.h~-·baekground was · not com mander of Canto.n known. Military Un~. and Chen Yu The Kwangtung · Congress aod ·W8ng Sbou-Tao, veteran elected a COl.Jlmit~. -of _75 party leaders. members and-,·"29 alternates, The Kiangsu Cthn•gress elected a committee of 56 .me~rs and ~ alternates. A nint:-meniber :itanding com- mittee was headed by Hsu Shih-Yu as first secretary. Hsu is a member of lhe na- tional defense council, a vice itefense minister and longtime comman(ier of the Naking militclry .re"gion. Two political commissars in the region · were n a m e d secretaries of Ole standing committee. They were Tu Ping and Wu Ta-Sheng. Yang Kuang-Li, commander o f troops in the Nanlting military district, was named a deputy secretary along with Peng Chung , a veteran civilian party leader who w a s secretary of the previous pat'- ty committee in the province. The announ cements of the provincial congresses did not provide a name list of the remaining members of the party committees. Analysts specializing in Chinese affairs assumed, however, ihat they also included a sizeable pro· portion of military men. just as the party central com- mittee which was elected at the Ninth Party Congress in Peking in April, 1969. .FOLDl,llG DOOR [iPi;?ir;7:;;o;;:;:;;::=:;-• 32" ll 80" sin -fits· mast lntaftor opeaings • Oiract trorn th• mill to Angels •All h1rdwar•incfuded 1 ROSE FOOD ' • Compl111 blend for 105tJ : of 111 typt1 iil-"'li' • fttd now -before. 'Pring 12 INCH KNOTTY Pml bloom begins RIG l LI. IOX J.00 SH 'E·:LVING · .. ICAUOP IDGING Thll most Ylt»t.11 lull)btr ltwn •ny""'8rt. Surfle*! fou r lid& This Ml.et quality m.ierilli ct:n be 1111ed In 1lm<Mt any type of construct.ion projact. REG . 16C • lO'lllf9lt pri<11 in ........ """T ,' , .. ~ ,115.-Sf.\O ;/ . "Red sullop bord1r - ~or1tlv1 llEW! M•I C·SO HROBELIGHT • Futty t~imriad - ~· ss-N'cuntro1 • 1/12 ft~ pi, acortd I a1&:-12•. ts . ' I 110!1$ l&lT Of 5 POllTS -)VST1'AST 'Ol llMAllilll llYD . 'HTWlll SO. "I" ST. AID AllOWllAI JUST EAST Of 605 fWT. 2y, lb. BOX ANAHllM IAIDEll GIOVE 12662 CHAPMAN 100 YDS. IAST Of MAllOI ... Landry's Gamble Paid Off ~'ORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - Ask mruit professional footb all fans for their opinion of DaUa.s Cowboy ooacb 'fom Landry and the most frequent description would be that he 's an emo. tion \ess human-computer. Al times Landry keeps this false theory afloat. , Like when he's asked about the big Dallas turnaround Landry answers: ••\Veil, the players started playing relax. ed." Asked if this came from the head roach, he said "J never relax." Cowboys' Forgott~n Man-Hill FOliT LA UDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - "I just feel lousy when I don't get to play. It's hard to feel a part o{ thf'! team when you're on the blench." Those are the feelings-of the forgotten man of the Dallas Cowboys -1969 offensive Rook ie of the Year, Calvin Jlill. Hill , who missed considerable actioo over two years because of injuries, lost his job lo rookie running back sensation Duane Thomas in the first half of the season and hasn't played regularly since. Al 46 Landry Is the dean of the Naticml Football Lt:ague coaches wltb 11 years' service as the only headmaster lhe CowbOys hav~ ever known. He is indeed a football genlm. Landry invented the f..3 defensive alignment as an assistant coach for the New York Giants.· And when he came to Dallas as coach in 1960, Landry began work with castoffs and suffered through an 0.11·1 season. Dallas now has a 77~ record In the Landry years, including flve COil· secutive playoff trips and now a Super Bowl game with Baltimore. Landry's physical appearance it&elf is stole. But cold Landry is not. He can be quick with a quip and has a good sense of humor. Like the time former Dallas quarterback Don ll~~'"edith was missing the mark during the passing drill. "Well, I'll be a ... ," Meredith said. Landry, standing behind Meredith, said "I don't think that would help you hit I.be target, either." Thb bas been the toughest and yet most fruitful year for Landry, who took what he admits was a gamble and turned Dallas from a finesse learn 111Lo a physical, run-oriented club lhis year. TI1c gamble slemmed from a ques- tionnaire he sent out during the summer which frankly asked the players what they thoughl was wrong v.·ith Dallas' failure in lhe playoffs . .. It gave me an insight into their 1nental attitude," Landry said . He said most of lhe players agreed Dallas needed to lake it more physically to their opponents. Landry decided thars v.·hat had to .• Tllur~Y. Jinu.vy 14 , Jq.j'l DAll V PILOT ~J for Cowboys· be done and he stepped on toes to do it. He se t perfortnance levels and even if your name was Bob flayes, Craig f\.1orton or Ralph Neely, you could find yourself on the bench if you· w~rcn 'l pult111g out. And that's what happened early in the season. Things got b:1d. The Cowboys sank to 5-4 on Nov. 16 after a 31Hl whipping by St. Louis. Defensive line <.'Oath l::rrue Stautner .said "Tom wasn't surprised. He had warned u.'I this was coming. tie aald this team would sink and would eJt}\oer show character or stay under. Jt ~i> P'!lled ... and thank goodness they show- ed the character he thought they would.'' Dallas won its trust seven gamel. ·· "fl would have been tough if-:JPe gamble had failed,"' Landry said. · ,.,, Landry also has Lhe reputation of hem& aloo f from his players. His answer to that is "Well, w~·re all professionals, but a coach can't be buddy-buddy with his playefs amt' 1ct the job done." Mr. Nice Gn y -Lunn Unknown of Golf .. -. ~ ' ·-·· I-ii Cro.~by Claesi~ PEBBLL B£ACll. Calif. (AP ) -Bob Lunn is a big, b11lding guy. almosl cer- tainly the best of lhr yQung players on the pro golf lour -t1nd almost cumpletely unknown lo the general public. "I guess I'm nol very colorful."' Lunn ad1nitted today as he sought his second victory in as many \vecks in the first round of the $135,000 Bing Crosby na. tional pro-amateur tournament. "l just try to play the best golf ·-son1ehow jinx n1yself. All rm concerned about is to con!inue to play well .'' Other leading contenders i n c I u d e Casper, Jack Nic:kl aus, Palmer, U.S. Open champ Tony Jacklin. defending champion Bert Yancey, Trevino a nd Stockton. And what has hurt the most. Hill hasn't seen a down of play in the two playoff victories over Detroit and San Francisco. • ,l can." Ch e11g Voted Top Fe1nale Athl ete of '70 .. Of course, T was ha ppy we won, but you can't feel as close to the rest of the players who had a part in the victories," he says. INJURIES HURT Player-coach Danny Reeves, who Is in charge of the running ba'*s, says, "Calvin has heen hampered by injuries. And one of hi s big weaknesses is an inability to run to daylight. "Of course, there aren't many backs t hat can. Thomas Is one of the best J 've ever seen in finding daylight. Hill admitted that "J'm not running naturally. although I do think that 1 ran to daylight welt in the I a s t few games I played." The G-foot-4, 225-pound Hill said it's more difficult to be a good running back in the sophomore season than it 1s as a rookie. ··when you are a rookie, you don't J.;no\v where your blocking is," he ex4 plained. "J broke a lot of plays for a lot or yards last season through the wrong hole. I got to looking for the blocking this year and I believe it slowed me up sonic." Hill said Thomas is a "heckuva football p layers." TIIOMAS BETfER INSIDE ln fact, llill, a former great at Yale, sairl, "Duane is a better inside runner than I am. I feel more comfortable on the sweeps." Hi!J also believes Thomas is stronger above lhe waist. "~ly strength is in my legs," said Jlill. Hill said he hoped to play against Baltimore in the Super Bowl Sunday. "\ g r e w up in Baltimore and the C o lts were my t ea m ,'' he said. .. It v.•ould be a great thr ill to play against J ohnny Unitas."' It appears U1at Hill's only chance let fllay much hinges on how fullback Walt Caprison's right ankle holds up. Garrison has been hampered by a sprain or the ankle, but he ran with the first unit Tuesday with Thomas in the other run· n!ng spot. Dallas coach Tom Landry also worked Thomas in Garrison's place with lli\I the other running back. Hill said he doesn "t intend to spend another year on the bench. ''I don't consider myself a bench player," he said. "Playing ls the name of the game." Mesa's Ascher In Seventh Spot DENVER -Costa ?.1e&:l'• Barry Ascher is less than JOO pths behind the leader after the second mmd of the $50,000 Denver Open bowling tou:rna4 ment. After 12 games Ascher has 2,691 pins. 84 pins behind leader Johnny Guenther of Seattle. Guenther roll td a resounding 1.521 series in Wednesday night's aecond round. Ascher was seventh In the )frge f~ld. Action continues today and'FiJday with the high five men a•an~ to Saturday's televised final! Which will award the winner $6,000. ~ < rt ' ~tt DALLAS COACH TOM LANffii"~-~is~usst$~UPER ~OWi..STRA'1°~GY 'w1;~ TEA~:· T ....... King Rodney Outlasts Roche For $10,000 Injured Duo to Play ; Frosh OK for Varsity FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -Coach balloling:. 'Taylor received 14 v n t c ~, BOSTON (AP) -'To borrow Mark Tom Landry of the Dallas Cowboys was Thomas had nine. No other players werf' T on. 's phrase o't looks as though those heartened \Vednesday b)'. improvement in scrjous <..'Ontcnl1on. wa ' in fullback Walt GarrisorJ:7who hlls been reports of Rodney Laver "s demise as nursing a sprained ankle. the king of tennis may have been great· "Garrison is .running okay," Landry Iy exaggerated. said. ''He'IV°be piayirig. As long as he 'The 32-year-old longtime ruler of the has two arms 31'd )~ {egs, he "''ill game lost many of his big .titles last be in there.'' '. -; \ year and the ''obituaries" started. Laver Landry alSa-silid that injury-p lagued quarlerback Craig fi.1or ton was throwing was perhaps slipping just a bit, they well in the workouts. said, and younger men like John New-"His arm seems to be al! right and combe and Tony Roche were ready lo he hasn't shown any ix-oblems with hi.~ take away his crown. elbow:• Landry said. Nobody's talking that way right now , e and little v;onder. The fabulous Corona HOUSTON The NCAA m ade del ~ar J.efthander has started off this freshmen eligible for immediate par- year'!i $210 ,000 Tennis c;;hampions Clas-ticipation in all College Division sporl:ii sic,,iwith three straight victories in SlD.-Wednesday but turned dov.-n the same 000 winner-take-all matches -tbe latest proposal for University Division schatls. a comeback triumph over Roche WecJ.. By voice vote. the membership also - rejected a proposal sponsored by 32 nesday night. colleges in the Northeast to abolish the The victory before 3,632 fans al Bos· conlrove.rsial l.6 -or C minus -grade ton Garden \\'as a lypical a[J-Qul battle requirement for athletic competition between the two southpaws. with Lav· adopted six years ago. er forced to survive match poinl in the However. they approved a counter pro- posal by the NCAA Council modifying fourth set before coming on for a 7-5, the financial aid provisions of the 1.6 4--6, 3--6, 7-5, 6-I decision. rule for disadvantaged student programs. La.Yer, 1!fVing ~do~ t.J 'th games The amendment also clarifies and in that fourth !et;~lle:f.~ ,a ~Ji1 I e,y at ~thens the 1.6 rule's application to deuce ... to give Roche the advantage. air athletically recruited students. But a proposal to permit athletes whose Roche netted a drive in bis bid for vie. predicted grade is below J .6 to practice. tory, however, and Laver came through and play -but not receive financial \l"ilh a pair of winning volleys lo win the aid -if they obtain a minimum l.6 game and tie the set >all. scholastic average for one seme_,ter or Laver then won the,.. . two quarters. death tiebreaker. whl i two ~ e games in the score, t' ·! -. .. j,, .J ~t· .. and even the match. :.~ ..:, • :~? ~~ ~. New Zealand -Kathy Roche broke Laver'i'l .. ·. · ~ u,e,.; ~ of Seal Beach won her second rtrst game· of the rinafi ·1 l.avi .Mb ln the Auckland provincial tennis broke right back, then 'b.0 '~-~:14·..-,npionships Wedneaday, defeating Jan the fourth and sixth sets aiid Rrvtr11 .out:·; ":'*"tlleld of New Zealand, 6-2, ~I. the match. • Laver, the defending champion In the. classic, ~as now knocked off Ken Rose-NEW YORK Bruce Taylor, • cor· wall , Newcombe and Roche so far in this nerback and punt returner for the San year's $10.000 matche.!I. Franc;isco Forty·Niner1, Wednesday waJ11 • LOS ANJ'.IEL~S -The Los Angrles Rams foolb1ll team. announced the s1~n- 1ng pt thre,e defensive coaches for the staff · of the-ft.a.ms· flew head l'Oai.:h. ·rommy Prothro. They :ire Toin <.:athn, 39, rleft·n~1~'~' coach for the Ran1s for the p<ist f1v£• y('ars. anrl two members of Prothro.; slflH v.·hen he coached at UCLA Larry Weaver anCl Rich Brooks • I.ONG BEACll -The four·dav H11\1" Jean King ln\'1tational tt'nnis tour11:11111·111 -named for Long Beach·., l:nnriH· queen of the courts -be~an tflda.1· ~1·ith Ill young women shooti ng for SI~ ifMI 1n prize money Feature match of the nud-alltT110011 featured t.1rs. King and Franco1si· l)1w1 of Paris as th e girls cn1IJ.'l.r~ on l/I•' seco nd nf a swi ng of matches around the nation. By winning Wednesday night he earn. J\altlell United Press i n ~r n a 1 i o n 1 I eo! the ri(ltl,,~ ~<,playing, and wµI "~;J>.!..J.11! •. Y.yt': .. r• lhe.N•U•lll\I · . n:Ow tntefNeWJfofth.JJdch's RQy Eme"f:i,tP.~~ 1! .... ~1 · ~-.,,, "' aon in the_ next match at Philadelphia Taylor beat out Dallas running back Saturday night. Duane Thomas for lhe honor in lhe GW(; Player Drafted fltark Cresst11t a e1tcher from Golden West College and Marina High. wu \trailed by tlle St. LoWa Cardln.i. for their AA Arkansas club 'in the major lea. guc. draft. • ' 1, • Other JC players dnrted indllaed Richird Thompson (Cypress), Glan;ts ; Don Stanley (Fullerton ), Dodgers ; Darold Nogle tRlo llo,do), Angels; Alan Cox (Fullerton). AnQel.!!: Mike Averill (f'ulllrton), Red So1:. , . And tqat has been pretly good . ~ ~l:l~'s. ~n ·over SJ00,000 in the last thref y'i~. ineluding tl2,@, ~or ~is victory ·rast 'tl'eck in t~e Gle11 ~ampbell· Los Angeles Open. It was his firth tour victory, n'atching the c11rcer title ac· ~u1nulation of such well-known players ·as PGA champ D:;ve Stockton. Lee Trevino. Chi Chi Rodriquez ;ind J ohnn y Pott. And he's only 25 Lunn, a husky, 220 pountler, wurkerl 011 a San Francisi.:n rlriving range ;1f\er w1npleting high school. won the N~tional Public Links !\tic. then turned pro late in 19!i6. He 1-1·011 only $1.871 in 1967. th en brnl-.e through \o \V.'O v1ctor1cs and 11 $100 .000 season lhe follov.·1ng yt•ar Hc "s been one of the tup p\;iycrs i111d leading n1oney v.·inncr!i ever since. J!c·s unknown bCl"ausc he's non-con- troversial. very quiet and Mr. Nice Guy. • Nol goodie-good1l'. Jllst quiet and \vell- mnnnered. He's buill along thc lines of a-' professional footh:tll linebacker. but ha s a very soft vole<' lie doesn't drink. sn1okc or swcn r lie doesn·t do •1nyl hing but play golf . 11ell enough to bc.1t Billy Casper in .i playoff [;1st wet.1k. lo beat Arnold l'alrncr by ii strok(' at the Citrus last year. to beat !Jave Hill in a playoff at Hartford the year before I le has no hobbies. Everything is golf "People ask me what my hobby is ;ind t don"l know what lo \ell them:· hr said. "! want to lose some weight 1his \"Car. ~laybc that's 1ny hobby. losing wright·· 1~un11 i~ uni.' of the r;11·orilcs For the S27.00'l first pr11.1· n1 lh1s 72·h11lc tt1st tha1 is being 11la~ t'd on thrr,.. l\!ontcrry pl'ninsuln courses. Spyglass llill, Cypress 1'111111 ;inrl Pebble Jlcnch But he doesn't want lo ta!k ahou1 11 "\Vinning hr!p~ m.v conf1drnl'.t'. bu1 I .can"l lt'l 1ny:se1F !hlnk f1bout winning !\\"O i11 iii row for to>o !nng a time." ·he said. "l might :st:irt pressing or POr.10NA 1AP J -The years of frustration and anonymity are over for Chi Cheng, \vho has literally hurdled obstacles to become the world's greatest female athlelc. The pert. 26-year-i>ld N at i on at i s t Chinese beauty with the dimpled smlle was voted Female Athlete of the Year 1'hursday by The Associated Press, · lt"s a far cry from those years or run ning in empty. rut-ridden track arenas with only the sound of her feet - and the feet of th ose girls running behind her. Today, Chi prepares to graduate frorn Cal Poly-Pomona in physical cducat.ion. learns to cook for her new husband Vince Reel , her trainer for nine years. and plans for 1972, when she hopes two Olympic gold medals will become part of her boutique. "l love lo train." she says. "but this year will be a planning year. I want lo train for Munich. J want lo be really prepared for the Olyn1pics. ·· 'l'welvc months ago, Chi se~ out on a trail that led to one of the mosl fantastic seasons any fen1ale lrac:k athlete has ever had. She ran -and won -a series of 80-me!er hurdle and BO-yard dash races in indoor mecL~. setting records as she went. \Vhen the outdoor season began, she started receiving invitations lo major meets and there the performances stag· gered track fans who previously con- sidered the sport only for men. She first sel a world record in the 100-yard dash at 10.0 seconds. lt had been !OJ. Then she ran 220 yards in 22.6 for a v.·orld n1ark and thell It was 22.4 for the 200 meters. another n1ark. Her 100-mcter hurdle tirnc of 12.8 seconds 'tl'as a world record until twu European gals went one-tenth of a second faster In the 440, ;i rai.:t sht· never ran until t9i0, she zipped to a 52.4 time, one tenth off the world mark. Tll• t!rll ~ound ot rnt10f' !N g.,. lllKllonJ 111 W!'d~•Y'' ffn .,,.111 ~jtl>lll llrtll: 1. ""'t Dltl!O -~"°"' oM Dtvlll1 lB, P .. •l•fld, MASON RUDOLPH (LEFTl, ARNOLD PALMER, YOUN C FAN PREPARE FOR BING CROSBY UP'IT~ OPEN PL.l'I'." ' • I 'I , Gau cho s r Scalp Apach es lly CIUJG SHP..Ff' ....... ,.._ S.1dC !t!:i.t'J: ~- ~ by QDr f&!IC1 ~ by Tom ~a-JI:! Enc ~-rUltd to a Ml l'....IS!Y..e C or. I t t e ~ e t laU!."'":,ar: '~ o 'I" t r So:r..tr.~ ~td~t1C2 y =-~ a: ~ \"»t)O p~ ~ CT~ ~ct'! ~ !l:::U"e!. ~~ ..:: ?' SNXO;! b:..J ~:..!' • b 1 It G~ h<I il ~ ';.!)t lil!Cmid :on !'!"iJD.J.l.~ 1£1 ~ ~ ~tc.o~~ "t.e-~ .-.): ... Tb! \ le"n!')" ~·1 !i~ i.J:: w O'.l>- ftftfllCt ar.e a pw ci d:lse delnu °'5;>.::.t :.".'-fl:W Jl-p;:ai:m :z.;,r-~ :.ne m "'u IJtr. zn ~-«< fOI!'" Cf»Ctt Ray ~'°'-~ Tnr r.'O tea.rm ba.'ltltd m e-.ec tmm ~ ~ fff1 ~ •"rth ~ ~ held:ng a 33-Jl t:dgt .a.t the Wir..!!N' brnt.. Cut ~ \0 l:t free t.hrtN~. Sovt.h•~ ~~ tar lead for the fits': fivt ~ of tbr ~ half t....Jtil 5addlebac-\ s I a r t t d p!a:·"l:li a 1m}r mon: ag- ~~ cm de!'msr. W-r.ll U.-Apad:Je! up 4Q...S. Clns'~ aod go.a.rd Slt"l"t 'li!l;an fired l!l foor pomts Deb ~ g.:ve tht Gaucho! a ........ 44--40 a-j\-~ T~ A~ CV. ~ 4lld.!'gln tn r-o (e-461• W: a full coon • mni.'lg :...~·-ci ~ Oxnsterueti • and Mmt«J"' jurnpn-from th!' basdint gart Saddkback 11 -=::~mt lead 1 ~1. :::::jbto re.iJ cli.Lcbe:t Ca:N • :::)iOiruie la_tn :::::$fna ~i up b:r Joor ::~1. M crnw Pt t t ==·~ 'it! !".llti:! •il..~ ::!fossmi m a 1"C>-p)m'.r. f:a::1 ::a~ t'W AW gd"...tl'.ll ~ ~Tr'!' -:•:jbrow. H~ ca.mt ~1 ;:"'\act. 'IJ'!t..b 3 ~ Y.i ~C! ~b.ttT \o grrt ~ Ga~ a ~i..d ~r" ~ U:c..'!bed 1 !:. ' .. :f'~ TitiJ ~ ;n.:r~ !er g:a=.t :::~ boocn.. Ht~_,. :;:.-%! fidd eoal ~ & ·=-~ ~eri d. 14 .e t!lt :: : eio:o:f bai! ::~-~ h;il 22 ~-~ ::;tic OCI ~ ~ Ll ;JO~ Ui ·: tM 5ttDBi ~ M :::: :.-." • • t:mn ! roo tht fl!".i!i r. ~-~ ::.trios . -. ~ --.. ~~ ,~ ~ .... .,..._.. - " ,, = -' =·· ..-•• •• " • u..:.~ .. ·~· .. ~ ·-· -~ ............... _ ... • ' lS J4 '"' SI-• l t S' ....... • t I I Df.-" l ,, OI-' II • ... J • • •w11r1 ..... •• • .. 4 ,,.~ J • • ...... 1.1--t t I e T"tl• a • ;, tt ... ,,,_: S.."I< AN Jot. OCC l't ~ ........ ; .... DUL 'r 1"11..0T ,._ ..,.-U.. ,.._ TYING BAS.KET -~t"7:"": }ic_·:,...: ii if!:".! B..:! Jones 1.)51 ties the game at 55 \iitb 2 iSi io p...cy. Ji,~:-..:..;.· 0.t.:r::.dE.""'5 s:'t" K.;.i;> BLr-d 1-t-4 1 a."ld Dean Bogdm 14.2 •. Edi-S o11 Co 111 e bac k Does I t, 57-56 ~ F..O~ £'\ .\_ '\5 c:. "'" C-llJ ~, .. ~ ~ c.u::,, ! ... :.t::.~ P.:::'..C'-:' -1·. i t:r.;.i-~::.::i.: ... '. :•:.>( .i RJO~ !I.~ ci'i't' ttl Cr.-..::l~~ C1:1~---~ t"l"'e:~ "li:-11!:: L""~:r ;:i~ <i! a .=.i:·a~ c~c:t t.:. LJ? s.u,. :.,;, -~ \"~ ;;;'-!16. :11 :!lr .-..,:: .a:.i'! ·~ L....-n ~--ue ~ge..,:ia!: ~ ~"""'! oc:: d. ~ ::>fJY', .. '. "..:.! d d !ht-fi. ""St t:.W v-: .. -·.:_cp1.-·~ ?;.Jt t."Je '::.e-a:e.""! ·::.~ a :-r~.a~i.z!tle ·¥-..r·i-e;:r 0..:&1:6 :.hr li=.;.l ii :'~ p-~ w. i:".E' \ .c: ·):-f v:.e Greg Mill! ~~ ."! .C'~·;o ll ~.::i 1l ~ k'.". ;r ;r.r: :!I( !'~..,;; :.oocti CT'! V~ <i ~ :;,..~ d:a..-:i.at.c ('t:-"' - ·-:r-...r:.<-..:..:.-,a \ l~O~ L1 Cii-" w.~.:ic.:: hl£t~ M....:b" ~ b..a!..i!: ca:r>f' ~.e :!\!.ik.t Sr..:·.o ~~.-.tie ·.• ... cWl from ;.hf Falcoc~ ro£.:" i:mdcour"1.. Sm.!th Mi OC-Y made tbt s:u1.. WI bt ;i-ilS also c:redi\ed with '\.he ail·:.'D· poruot &!:Sin as a-elJ_ SaDb Am \"a.Dry bad ctt fma.I chance to pW.J oo: a "idory. but afW c:allmi .a timrrut. mWed 1t.s oe.n ~·= and with Lbe rruss carot t!le ...._ Uni Scores 56-52 Win ,.1,.-:""'J.a~.-al: Ille d:".::-.z:.::< (i>..Jl' L"'l \tt J..._,.., <;J.O.r.e: a."ld :::.:;;;: <o! ::.ie~ we.re p!'O\"ldf.d L. :ne !...r..aJ () 5<~ £•en :bCl'Jgh uir 0-..a:gf'l"'S r-'21die a bHte: ~·'ll ;;ig !!" 0:-At ':.!:..'...-0 o-.;a:-:e-:. tnt-. !'~ t:~ l!Je f~ b:• 1~· poi.r.>.!c ~ ttl"..O thf' las: per.00.. Thtt> ui.n;~ ~.]~-,;::~t-.::1 :> ha??rfl a."ld !·~~ •a• ·-'"le ~·!".:· C'Cf;; f:.t: :..'lf :".t'•l'":·~:·<.P (~,a:gr:;: ~ &--: .1.=.; · CP'!"·~~ '..."V!' • ·..;, ,_.._-~-'j '..'.I .. :.;:;-~ ;..:.e .::~:e: a :.?.<.L!: :-·• :.e""-.-:::...--:-.:-:! : c_~ r_,-~: ,..,:i c·· _ ::!'f •.' :~-,:r. • ... · •• ,: ;i. '..1 .,. ............ ',j - ?"-~:.--· <:':id a ~·t--:~_-·.-. :' ;~·-~-.; ··." r.a ----~· tti<d :t' :-~ : '";: f .::.":-"."..; ! .:: !""« -•. ~-c .... :,.:. • , .. ,-._-: (! '..'""If (.:;.-.~ .. -y :::.t-·. j--~ - •. .. :•.:,) •.:.i f!'I"".) ~) ~--.-.-1, It~: B.J: l.'l.2: r . .a;i J11 .;:..s sro."'ed a pa.! o:-1 C~!'"l:" l~~ w"t..h -« ~-:a!!' k>~: an.:i !bet ad<kd <l '-tr Ulftt-potn! pla:v ~U: ~f.ICH later 1.o bring Ed15lXI •<:n.t:1 ~ pii).N il:I 56--$.5 a:i.rgn fans real!;· we:it irt- :1) a fl"t.'11T>' ~ ~hi:e A1·us t:t~td a w.ss .. i!h rs ~ ~: b.rt tM cheers n:. '"nEd :o groaru; .. hr!l tbr C"irgr.-s •P!'l' fWlt'.' C.: a 1 ·otvtfmi ',.;11.atx:.o ~ !a·e· ..... 'l>". ..,,._"'"' '·~ -~-.. ·.~ ~· ~ .. .... -.,.., ~ ,, .... ' ! • : I • • • • . " "' .. , ' ' ' .. ' . • !1 '--• .._ ,...., , .. , -~ '·~ 19 .... '"' ) I • 1 ! I ' J I ) ! '' ' I : 11 " k9'• "' "'-"""• . ' ' . ' ' f " .. f-• 1f • :1--!J ..... , ..... v.-. ., l'S 11 1 ... Rustl ers Tri11n1ph. 114-100 LOS -~•GEl.LS -T:i! O:.lde:J. 'ill~ Cdle-g~ R~Jr.-s ;r.ti\~ •lli: t J: C f p I J 0 D ii J t;i..u.."'f' ~~· ba•·e "'·~)· r-b--:.~ r tt-ecr...mg a 114--JCIO s. ..... ~r.i. C.i:. Conirrtn.:~ ~.b.iil ,-,:-.cry °'·er bc1Fi L~ S......r.::.esi ~ C«!i~ •: L-.dt P.+:- C1~ D ·. S.-...:-lC·il:n ~ H•? ~~.lb:! C....:irr ..11 J--... :·~ ct'l· ; . .;:t c-i:-:t: r:.<od ::. ~ .. :'!" dn .,._:"-: ... : ;.;;~ ew .. ~ ~t:>.......L"t t-!· 'f"': t".!-:.:M" O \""t:rf~:c us (".:rJ~a:"s ;,.."ld 'll!'!"l' a J s G : .. _. -~ -.-.-v: R~;;.:Je:-s · !~<i"..:-:..;;n doo r' E.-10 'l.a:-i:: Oeder and (..~ J_-:l -~ cornbi.::ied !or 1 ~ pomt.5 ..-bile guard Ch:lS I Thompsoo potl-r'd :J pt.i..'",!£ I •rt!> tilS .aitt'.""J:!'a.~ Otr..s.:Qe W:io:ing A.rnbrozldl Y<.!S hf'kl to 10 ;io:n-.s. ~ lowest total o-1 ~~ SP.aso:i.. in ieninf: m:o earl~· fool L~P HP fou!t'd "-1 Y<ith t'il"O r::iil'W.n le:ft LO \hf' Ch. .... ~~ ·~ ~·· ~~ ....... ~~·~ ,, .. _ --... flU J •• .. ' • • • • ' .. ' " ' ' " '~ ...... $ ' ' .. " u.~ ... , ' ' ' ' :i ,,, '""""--·--·~ ....... ...... ----c.~s ..... ..... '-~-, ...... -- • ' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' .. . " ' . ' ' • • . " . ' • ' ' . I I • T • , • 2 I ' I t ,. n n ,. ---- Cards Rip_ Garde11a ··"-• ...... ,.. .. ,w. ... ...... ,......._ fol•lt ·--,., ... fl .. "' ) I I t I I I I 1 I 1 It s ' J " ' I 1 I) f I I , 11 1S ~ """ in °"'"""'"' t•.. ......... •• ' 1• l • .....,.. '\ !) ,, Tht T t Urdmals of roi.. Laso \'allf'y llK':'"t~ t he Ir ~d kt IM Sur:iday with a IS..2 rout of the bos\ Gl.t'dma ntnf' in a oomt:agure wtniprO bascl>iiU pn:w al ~I~ Part U1 Cardma Oa\·f' ~ bangtd oul t•·o hits and a' P.JCUd up tM •1n en U~ m I P.K"\ Dt-~mf't Re•\ -k asrin and Bit t::llcr a.LC<> hi. .. a p.tirr <ii tuu eKh )or lhf' C.rdmah tr!lll (;~'s lbr e t•TQD homer in th!' third inninl i..-. ""' big -- Sailors Win, 60-57, Es tancia In 77-58 On Extra Timeout Reversal By GlDiS 1l1D1E ............... Se-9.JiG1 Ba:tliUt U i I ll • ' Sadan n;9'ahecl a. a didq:aa a:lite W:m!m!. al .. Uru S«nds ~ ri tbe pmit' lO ~ ~ l..a,pt ba*d.· ha! trt:tt ~ Imm. ... ~. lr ,.o:...cta.' -cCJt ia thr r~. l'U'1fioes n. ~Kl•:CC Iimecul .. """'lubJ •-- ~ bad jlm 1ef1 ••-W a _,..._,,.. __ ~ '° pll)' Eld the ~ 'bed.. S24'. ~-hr i!>r \'hp had u-i, -· ed thr laS; " t!rsr" ~ Ul:iaii Gd. lie ••• 'I'm---... ~ s:;:::u_ ii pw ~ ........... w ....... 1'1t ball ca d. t-dl. T.-.s Tmq.. stmt met. '*-Uq hid ............ ..... ""' -"'tllr \'iap. !!mdr dlir ,,,, i ....... • ~ liis mu&aS67 ltad.. Dim. Elle •• , .... -.,, -""" -... l>oll ima lr:im. Hr QI .,... a1 -~-..... tff 11•••i+C't-fret tww1i a u.r: SIW-1. h ~ a 1;ia1ew1 'Cl diadi tidDry far ~ Qdi Oilers Keep Pace; Nab 67-44 Victory · Canpl......-y almm:1 lo:lill: a Wile ""' "" "' !he -- --00... ·~ modoy »igb1. ~. coach Elmer c.ombs' ,_,,,..,,, tUI s...t Leag'J!f' bnt"'lh'ID cutfit ... adnnl>ge "' !be -"" hand a{ 6--3 jllniol' ~ Brooks .md wmc on tD dmnp th< Sa"1I Am s.inh. ., .... ln .. s.mz aimed at tbt s.utt gym. ,,,. Oiler ..... <mpl<d - :Snrpcrt Hatbar's 't . S 7 decisico O\'f!r Marina.. Upt Combs' bwrl:i in a fY0-1nT deadlnct for tht Oreuit-s top ..... -S""P"1-Hmrtingtaa b 0 i 1 s thr \\"estmimttt Liem F r i d a ~ night at I o'dod: in ~ al iu fourth "'2jgb! loop triumph. Twire t.1-r talrrt..td Brrob t .;rned in:o a mt>-Ir.!.."1 jUE· f"!T.3u1. tor lhf' 111.~ n.. high ""'1~· m in Run~·s doo post d- fm...orie. Brciok5 _ L"P ~ ~l po:nt..• !n liuJr are" tiL"'ft' fCJt.tr".h.! ol tbt a<"l)(;n.. And. hr pichd up lhe hLln: of hll poln1.s m a pai! d t--:i: P.um:inr.m !<'Ori:nE S:rinis , thr ~ and t!l!rd O:.lar"..en · T'!le 011 C'"iry ~ wm f:-orn a 211>-ts edgt .-itli m ~es W:f': m \ht-Wtia.1 ha.!! 11) bttild »-%1 ~ by m- u--n~ Bftll'.:C ~Pd fO!' 1% of t!;p o:m-· 2IO rnarUn in that •• ............ : .......... ..... ,, -·· ... --...-un h "' .. ,. • 1 n ' . ' ' ' ~ ..... ! .. ' .. ' ' " ? l • ' .. ' 1 ' ' ' ., l~ 0 •• ' ' • • ' . " • ~lustangs Host Mat Tourney Tra ~1l95-1195 Baseal ~1l95-15.95-IU5 Tellis Sllles--llel's-7.!St!S-15.95 Terllis Situs uin'-7.5J7J5.15J5 Ball Wiii Pn lmdal Situs 11J5 C111reue llasbM ~ & 1U5 bselials 95c II 2,95 Baselill & SlfM Ills bselill lltts--7J5 II 42.95 Masks--aest ~·--hi Gins Wis• llnis D I ' Bm1ft Tiiiis llcbts rm. m11 S1111 amts Ol'EN 9 TO 6 CLOSED SUNDAYS \ Md. tr.aed molt Of tbt ....., Jiln tbr p:mr·s ~ a r I y CW'JMI -.. '"'""''' Utbtr <Pd« I arriftd a1 t.bt gym • "...,.... too la1r to ~ ant d bll iu:i · s 5'ancblt I'*" b OLl!V'ft 1he s r .a i o r \' oaQI 1-1 been gitii:c • t£SI .. °'-°""' Cdleg<. Bil ... }rd aJI IO:ftJ'1 1lith ......... 'nlaT .-•••icms n.rn!:ni -hid llliop m;p "' in aan fw coadJ Jun Slrphms-' \ikillp nen c::ie o1 tbr loUf1er'S .dipped and f~ lO tt.t Bmr nm rumD:ng oa: to tbr amer of the rourt in .. ~ p lay t r in- bowi•'•m Tbt lat mimrol' ~ a ln!my d prtSSW't wt.b to'J> --.. key """'-!Wwpa1 hid r ..Jbed thrtt tima to tie the En., tht lat dfan m:q: ca Of v.....-. .mmc .:botJ from tbe csuer-9idt 1 : SJ to go. One o1 the Ur Jlh:rs m the lmsie ~ C2mt tli1h 21 leCXIDds ~ rm the datt.: a liUrina misRd a mot bas: I d"1 ••Jed on}! to lose Jl 4s+ m:i a ~!mg c:ill 'Ihm ~ held on for cm Int dildJ a11!:mpt misJ.. inl willl four l!ileCODd5 n-- JMC."c ,,.. nst fW bxnr. Xnl"'rl mzl<d lrom ""' 1'nm-. dtoCltinc SS.I pertrtrt to 4U for Jrhrina. And coacb DUe ~· Sa.ilon had to bf' hat liDce they got off 15 f~ dids "Piru1 tht-taller, -\"lke. ... ~ ·---· ~· .... --·--:-..,,._ ··-~~ ·----- ..._,t•l _,.,, ... "' ... tf l • l ' 10 ,,,, • • • l s l 11 J J ' • 1 • ' l t< II 1• .. ... Iii ,..r I• • r ? u • , • l I I • t l I h . . ' . ' . • r I lO 1 1 I 1 s • • If !"" ' 11 i1 -~---:. 11 tJ~ :r a".........:. Tbt La• ti neraaes caugbl up with &Panda Hlt h'i bask.ilWl ..... w-., night in !be incndlbly boJanc. ed Irvine Lupe ~ Host Magooli.1, wtnleu af!.e1 -....... """' !be &tgi.. wagon. 71-51, to drop EstancU into a four-1l'1y tie for fml plaa. wilh ""' IWanc. "' u. CIJ"C'.iil trailinc by 0De paw. Coach Gary Clrr'1 E'Atancia =w lost the lboo<inl loud that had catapulted It intc the cin:u.it le.ad as tbt Eaglt! c:olltcted only it of a at- tempt! from the noor flO .' ptrtt.Dt). !tiagnolia. mumrbilr, •itJ- bt!lht advantage and ar oat!idr mooting ey,, apped the evening with a Zl-1 ~ margin in the final stanz a lO win goinj: away. Estancia trailed thf' entire second ball after awuntng a brid lead early in the game. Gary Orgill, the viliton' all· league guard, WU beJd to ) J poi.a1..5 oo four fidd 1oals and thrtt gratis shots while mate Hank Moore led Est.aDci.a w-itl- U. Cun Thomas gave Estancia addtd balance •i th 10 points. bat it wasn't enough to cifhf'l tM scoring prow-ess o I '.'olagnolia's 6-5 Keo lotarray. 6-3 Bob Sttwart and g..~ Qwley Richie. 'tll-00 collecttd 21. 20 and IS points. ~!oore, a sophomore. and Doug Coofer 1ed E5l.3.ncia ·s rebounding corps trith W: apieet: . W estniinster Topples Colon y Fi ve, 62-49 the boards for the taller Lions. ~-oo sported a 2>13 halltime lt&d . Terry ~!ei"'1lheimer ~ tM Lion scoring effort wtth 14 points "·bile Gordon 81.&Uley and Southwick chippt<I in with 11 and 10 markeis. ........ 1roi t•> S'">C>J1~ 1C1tt t 1,. .,,, .. ,, l l I !' ' ' . ·-~ • t I 1l ~:;;-;a l •noltM ..._ Tott ll ' • I ! f ' ,~,,,;ti !ll . ~" ' . . Wison T2000 Steel Rackets Nylon Stnmg-32.95 Cut Slrung-38.95 Pemsylvania Xtra Duty T ms Ba1s Per Doz.-7.50 Racket Strincing-4.00 ta 16.00 Tennis Dresses-10.00 to 27 .95 Men's Tennis Shirts--4.95 to 8.95 Mii's Tenlis SllGrts-5.95 to 12.95 Atllletic Sox-59c·79c-1.25-1.50 Bies-larts-rm-Tmms hdlle T lllis Padllles ,. llacbts Table Tms Sets & Paj•s T Mii T llllis lilts & Bals • 531 CEN'lllt ST. 646-1919 • ' , • Cdltl on Top Gadfr y! Another One-point Gaine By R<XiER CARLSON 01 Int 01111 l"llOI Stitt Jt's ,eetting lo the j}(JUll v.·here prrhaps c v e r y o n c should file in <tnd sil down v.·hen one minute remains in games involving Irvine League basketball te ams. Anything prior lo the one- minute mark s e c m s an- ticlimactic with the sensational finishes at every turn Corona del i\1ar \\'as in- vol\'ed in its third slraighl one-point verdict \Yednesday nigtit as CQach Tandy Cillis' Sea Kings prevailed , '41-40. over Fountain Valley. wh ich receipted for its second onc- point loss. ln the end it boiled down to a single play -one wh ich displayed both team's major strength and the result was indicative of the entire night. Co<1ch !)ave Brown's Foun- tain Valley crew had battled fron1 <1 JO-point deficil with 4:26 lefl in the gn rnc to trail by one. And \Vhen Baron K e n Shibata took lhe rebound with 14 second s left on a 1nissed Sea King Rralis shot. the Barons had their last chance. rorward Dave Lynch. a 6-3 senior. maneuvered around the right side of the Corona del Mar defense and then shot in toward the basket for what appeared to be a picture layup. But it was here that 6-4 Mark Sevier . Corona del J\1ar's junior center stepped in and batted the ball cleanly out Bucs, GWC Enter Meet Orange Coast and Golden \Vest College launch the 1971 track and field season Satur- day night with both schools entering the junior college mile rela y at the Sunkist lnvi taliona·l indoor meet at the LA Sports Arena. Running for On:inge Coast's Bucs will be Darci Blood, Malt Peasley. Kevin Butler and Bill Van Note. The Golden \V est foursome co nsists or \I/ a I t Ankerman, Ron D i c k so n , Brya n Strough and Dennis J\1aas. of bounds with three seconds left. The Barons tossed the ball in but Goorge Gerber's desper- at.ion 22-footer missed, giving the winflers a ponion of the Irvine League lead, along with three other rivals. C-."""' Ml M•r 1•n .. " .. " K111~1er ' • ' • ,~, ' ' ' • Sumn...-• ' • " Cc-rn•"n ' ' ' ' S..vl~r ' ' • ' G•!9St>f • . , • " Tnt•I> " " " " ""'"'•I• ll•Hcf !4fl G. Gerber ' ' ' • Foore ' ' • ' S~ll>at• ' • ' • Powr r ' ' ' • "•'"'' • ' ' ' Ktl,l•n•I ' ' ' • Lyn<~ ' ' ' •• Tol•I> " " " ~ S(MC ~, Oulrlln f"(lfllt" del M•• .. • • ·~· Foun11ln Val rev " ' ' ,._.., Lion Grid Aces Feted \Valt Maddocks was named most valuable player o n Westminster High School's varsity football team Tuesday night at the school's annual fall sports awards banquet. Mark Kenworlhy (water polo) and Kevin Coleman (cross country) were named most valuable in their sports. Special award winners: Football Varsity -Captain: Mike Dodd; MVP: \Valt Maddocks; Junior varsity -Captain: Je£f Noon ; J\tVP: George Harl. Sophomore -Captain: Walt Sinner; MVP : Chuck Carlson; Most Inspirational: Dave \Vu; JI.lost Improved : Tony Dom- inguez. Freshman -Captain: Rick Rosen; MVP: Tony Ac- comondo; Water Polo Varsity Captain: Art Lillis; ~1V : J\lark Kenworthy. Junior varsity -Captain: J\ia rk Do\\'ney; ~1V : Jeff Phillips. So p homore-F'reshman Captain: Dave Hill : MV; Doug Brandlman. Cross Country Varsity -Capt.a.in: Dave f\1iller: MV: Kevin Coleman. Junior varsity -Caplain: f\like Keough; MV : John Alvarez. THE '71' s ARE HERE!! * NOW READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ALL 1970· MG -AUSTIN SPORT CARS and SEDANS .. MUST GO! ,.. ... - Austin Ame-rica The big little car If'• 1111< .. "" Hf1l4t. lltl .. "" -· - JJ.erl :JrieJfanJe 13750 BEACH !Hwy 391 " KEY REBOUNDER-Corona del !\tar's !\like Sevier (33) is shown operating among Fountain Valley players Bill Kris tinat (behind Sevier) and Ken --. .. .._. • Shibata (33) \vhile George Gerber (22) and Mike .Foote (34 ) look on . Corona de! ~1ar \\'On, 41·40. For Preps, JC Saddleback Thursd.:11, .bnuary 14, 1'971 DAfl'f PJLOf 13 .. To Griffitas Mesa Goes Cold In 64-53 Loss By ltOWARD L ltANDY Of 1111 01llJ" l"llClt !1111 Coach Emil Neen1e's Costa Mesa Mustangs couldn't find the basket in lhe second quarter Wednesday night and as a result fell behind the host 1.-0s Alamitos Griffins early and never recovered as they dropped a 64-SJ decision In Irvine League play. They may never unscramble the Irvine nag chase this season as the eight com· batants take turns belting each other around. To date tile team with the hot band has been the winner and after three games, four of the teams are tied for first place v.·ith 2·1 records while the other four are a step behind with 1·2 marks. It can't get much tighter th:in that. Nccn1e·s charges opened pla y by turning the ball over lo the Griffins on seven oc- casions in the first period to Call back. 20-IJ. The Mustangs made a run et the taller Griffs in the second stanza to close the Cac.re Scores ~ C1I SI. fLBI IOI. C1I SI, !LA 1 '' w~1111.,. H. Pomo.,. ~• SO<>ltit•n C•I (011....,. Ill, C•l!~ft n vl11e...,...1 "· OeP1ul St Calumbl• IKI, G'""'9elown CO C.) M Du<1ue1ne !II, St. F r1nd1 {P1,) 71 P it! 81, D•vldson 61 Penn 67, sr. J<»toh'• iP•.l u l'Ov• 76. Woslllnplon & L"" 53 J~Ck•onvllle 01, M&nlwll•n ti) Vlrglnlt &6, Wike Fore.I II l~ltne 18. Florf4'e St. 119 Nor!ti CaroUne St. 9J, Ol!~t ~ lllce tl, Te••• ("rliMJlon) ~ tlou1to" 1()6, L1m1r Tecti et Miernl (OMol ~I. Wnlern Mkhig1n 51 LO<>•••lllt r,i. 0.YIOn 48 Evon•vllle 104, SOOllle•n tlll,...,i1 91 O~lo ST. 8J, Wo•I Virginie 1• BredltV Ml. Oroke I! l ol&do ll. Monti•ll 69 gap to 22-18 and appeared to have the ship on compau. Unfortunately, it was a n 111- wind that blew in another direction and the Mustanp could connect on only three field goals out or 16 attempts in the period for a miserable 18.8 percentage figur:e iand Los Alamitos left tbe floor at halftime with a subst.antial 38- 24 edge. :~ Rick Quinn , a 6-3 forward, and Steve Gall at. 11i-S, con- trolled the boards !or' the Grif- fins ""·ith Quinn also scoring well to lead both t~ams with 21. For the game tbe Griffs hit 42.4 percent while lhe f\tustangs were limited to 28.6 percent. · .r. In addition to shooling poor- ly, the Mustangs ·round themselves in lroublf" with a front court prcssin'g ·'defense several times when L o s Alamitos moved the ball past lbc front men and had ·a three- nn-0ne situation going to the basket. Costa Mesa will jol/rney to Fountain Valley Fridoy night in an effort to break the log- jam for the runneruiJ"f>Osilion. Both teams arc curr,eritly 1-2. CMll Me1• (sJI 1 ,. • tt IJf '" ,I J ' ! . ' 0 ! • .oss11 B•lda•1 Ma•c~!orlttlf Moore Sam1>""" M~cLHn s 3 1 lJ 5 I 1 11 .,.0,3 10! 18 171f !l l H Alln'lll01 (6') ·-Allen fQl!ll o u•"n !l4•~ff' Gall Miller l'o-t,,•• Re1>1•u• ll orlar.d lrom<>eftr Jttk~on To1'1> ' J '71 I 0 0 1 ] 1 5 1 ~ J •• 5 ] 2 11 , 0 , 1 1 0 1 • 1 I I S .(I ' 0 1 25 ,. 16 6.<I sc...-. br ouartti's (O•I• Me•a \] 11 l~ Lo> Al1mllO> 20 II 14 INSTALLED Prep, JC Wrestli11g Cage Standings Ba11quet Set Sadd!eback College's foot· ha!! and cross country teams will be honored at an awards banriuet ~1ond<1y night at 6:4S at the Santa Ana Elks Clul>. CHAIN-LINK FENCING V1n llv Min .... Vl1l1 {41) (16) COM JVS -Gorda tMI plnnt!d Sc"'• (Cl , .• lOd-!tal~tr !Ml dee Je<>es !C l 17.7 llS-Kelstv (Ml "" Hll116'd tCl ~·?. 11J.-C1ldwell (Ml 1>:nned Do~otr (() ~:)S. l:JG-.-Wa"~ ICJ dee Mllll'L'k ie.,ltl (Ml IJ·O. llll-Gr1n1m /Cl ""' C.Craon (Ml l•-4. Ht-P!< !Cl 1>lnnl'd B"'tt1nd (Ml l:S!. lol&-Jont• (() pln~"1 CourlrighJ (MJ J' 51. 111-Doti11l1• !Ml 1>lnM-d .Jillson ((! 1 •I, 164-1\o<lkf (Ml 1>lnne<I G1rn ((I ):DO. 11&-M. C.Ovt r !Ml plnr.e4' 1-<e11ev (CJ 1.•7. u0-G. Gover IM I 1>lnned R lc~I• IC) l :~I Hvy-lllte CM) pinned Grttlev I( I J: '~ V•nltf ~1k1w'°" CUJ (UJ Cosl• Mts1 91 -.Jone1 CCMf 4'ec Novi• ell J·?. lll~1ra7on ~~f1l''o1 ((Ml pln-1 by IU -R. leo;l•1>I CL\ -..an b1 lorlel! Ul -E'mb•e>· !CMI pinned t,. M. L"11Pi fl l l IO !JO G. l(onq ICM) pl.,ne<I G1vll1rd tl I l 11 lllVINE LEAGUf w ' " .. Corona 4'11 ... ' '" "' E4'iSM ' "' '" "' Aldmi•c• ' '" "' CO"• Me•~ ' '" ., Foon!•ln Voll'y ' '" "' Mennoll• ' "' •• Sf n!• An1 V1llCY ' •• "' Wet1n11d1''' Su1r11 '"" "· Foun!Ain Vollry .. E<1l1<:1n SI. SA Volley !.I M•9n11!i• " Eolanci~ " Los Alami•os ... Co•hl Me•a " Frldl,'S G1..,ts Co•'" Me•• " Fountain V&lley " V111ey 11 E"an<llt Lo• .O••mlto• .. Edi•on M•9notia ~r (o•ona <1el Mlt• SU,.,SET LE•GU' • ' " •• >iunt1nalcn Bt~<ll ' • "' "' Ne,.<>0•! H••l>o< ' • ,., "' MltriM ' ' "' "' We•1mon~lef" ' '" ... llonltlle im • "' •• WH!trn ' "' "' Le.••• ' '" '" So~•• ••• • "' '" ni. -~roc~!on ICMl det bv Me1dow1 Ill S.O 1•1 -B1> .. ron9 ((M) 4'ec fo•d lL 1 6·l td -McDoo-m1n !CN.l dtC bv Binning !l l 6·l We<lne•dl1'• Store• H11n1>nq•on El~•Cll 61, ~an·~ '-n• H Nt"'OO" Harl><ir 6(1, Maron• 51 w~,1rn;n,1er 6). Ana1>eu•• n 157 -S"<>•<ll ICMI o•nne<I llv P1r~er /Ll i ?1 168 -WIUl1m1 iCMI de< Jen..rw> (l l I·? 111 -c1101un (CMJ ~Inned bv Fr..ie,,ck Ill ! nl 19• -$tll<l"'llt• ICM) P•nntd bv l~rn~• IL\ J·l7 Hv>' -Mdltr ICM! ~lrined Ge•ma~ (LI ) ~. JU"IOr Vtrlll~ C~Pr•u (11) (10 GGIG•ft Writ 11!-Bffllev iGW,I det. Jc!IM'1!1n {C \. 11·1. l?._ltlnr~ver (Cl ~<. Fen (GWI. 6·1. IJ.1-Wommt<k (GW) !If'~ Flook((\, H . U1-M•lon•' (() dK. McO•nnold CGW!. l1·1 1»--0ol\•111•" IC! W<lfl bv ctet1un We1let11 ??. L°"•• 1S Wel'"'I~""' •t HuntlnQlon &10t h '·nahl!•m al Marina Newoo•1 Ha'I>"' ~· Loaro Sanlo .Ono a• W~lt'n SOUlHEll." CAL CO NFEllENCf w ' " Gol~cn w.-1 ' • "' llio Hondo ' "' (VP'"" "' LA Ho,l)()r .. Ea'I LA ' '" LA Sootllwell " ' "' ""' • ' •• W1dnt•daf't S<ll'l"tl .. , .. ,,. '" " '" "' "' av•• L11wk tGWJ, 111-Kurh !GWI (lrN -..Ith Htr,,.,r IC). l.f. (,<>10"" WH! 11 •. LA Sourn .. esl 100 (v~r~u •l, LA Harl>l>r U 167-Sw•"IOll (Cl WO" b'f !Ortell. 117-Noble tGW) 4'K. s.awvel [C l, 1-0. lfO-Hllllt•d IGWl de<:. ~o«k !C !, 11-6. HY'f-Yh1...-•ldt CC) won bv ltldtll • Rio HOfl<lo 91, E•~I LA llO l'rldaf's Gamt• LA ~°"'""'"' JI (yoreu Eal! LA at LAC( Rio H-0 .. LA H•rl>l>r GolOefl Wtt!. bye SKIERS INVESTORS BUY IN MAMMOTH LAKES NEW RESIDENTIAL LOT Subdivision opening, all improvements in, on wlOded view lots. Also new condominium com· pJex. MAMMOTH SLOPES RLTY. For Further Info Write P.O. Box 535 M1mmoth L1ke1 CA. 93546. Coll 714 934-2221 or 934-2834 ' MISSION CONFERE,.,CE • ' " (llltlfev ' • '" C1hu' ' "' 11r~e'l·d• ' "' SH1<11ttiac• ' , .. Groumonr ' ... P~lom•• ' ~' S•n 6ern~rdlno ' "' Wedn~•d•Y'• Seo••• :[>1~<1'rb•<~ /9, ~oolhwe,lrcn '1 (h•f!~y 98, (llru• 91 (OT) S•n Betn4rdlno 95. Gr<l'"n!lnl ll Ri.e,.lde n. f'olon"or l>.f suurd•f'• G•m•• (hlttltY ot Sltddlel>&Ck Groumont 1• C1tru1 Polomar ltl South""••le•n R'vetilC1 11 Si n Bernordlno SOUTH COAST CONFEllENCE w ' " Ce,.1101 ' • "' FulltrtDI' ' • "' Or1n9e Coa~t ' ' "' Sin C!e<,io Mo1• ' ' "' 51n1~ '"' ' ' "' "' ~•n ll.n!Cl<llo • ' '" 51" o • ....,a • ' '" " "' "' '" ,., '" "' "' .. "' '" "' ,.. ,,. 1 .. / ,. Film<'d highlights of the 1970 football f;enson v.·ill be shown and individu:i l and team awarrls will be presented. Tickets, priced at $6 e<ich, ar<' avai!able-~a=t_:tl~lC~>=·t=u=d="~''~!!!i~~~~~~~~i'!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a!faJrs office. I USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH '12 gal.npw_. W1ont1d1v·1 Score• 01~not Co~•I 1', ~•nla Ana 6~ lOl ) Fullet1on 93, S•n 01eqo 11 Ce<rdo1 'IO. s~n ortoo M••• &4 S•turd•~'I O•me• "" Son An•onlo ~! l'u1le•lcn ~d" Dle90 •• Senti An• C•rrll°' nt Oranve Coa•• START THE NEW VEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS $11" S•n D1~0 Me1•, t>Vt r ·------- SKI-SNOW REPORTS 547-2545 SANTA ANA-219 !. 41h ST.-KI 7-5723 #27 FASHION ISLAND-NEWPORT CENTER-644-2121 FUU!RTON-601 S. !UCUD-871 ·S988 \ r SPECIAL SNOW BUNNY BEGINNERS PACKAGE $109.35 ONLY$9J45 YALU! • laminated A& T Skis • 1971 Nerdit1 5 Butklo Boots • Stop-in Binding • Strong Alu. Ski Poles PLUS FREE SKI LESSON UP TO 6 1 OF SNOW OUR LOCAL MOUNTAINS SNOW TIME! FUN TIME! r IUN 1MINGS IOI SNOW SNOW JAUCUIS TOIOOOAf'IS KIDS SKI SkATIS SPECIALS • SKI PACKAGES STEP IN BINDINGS, POLES REGULAR Tempe1t •••••••.••••• $ 70.es' Sun Voll ey-Fiberglots , . S 105.85 Alu-Steel , •.........•. S 125.85 •SKI BOOTS (FIVE BUCKLE! MEN'S SIZES 9-9 V1 SA VE TO 600/o f XAMl'if J ASA'A It••· .. ,.00 •SKI PANTS SAlf • NOW IN STOCK lONG UNOflWEAI. GlOVU, lo\ITIENS, WATfl Pl00f1NG, CHAINS, GOGOlfS, ru1ne NECt SHlllS, WINO SHllTS, C"l Sll CAlllflS, SlOCllNO SALE $54.95 $59.95 $89.95 •2495 "'"'A;~ HOW MANY TIMES HAVE YOUR / /_ BOOTS RUINED YOUR SKI TRIP?-/ CUSTOM BOOT FOAMING fOUI BOOTS All THI AllSWIRI / .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fAi SHOP WITH THE PROS 0i'\ Glh Ctrtlflc1tt1 t' ~ ~ l1nlc.Am1r1c1rtl • Matttr Ch1r11 j Dl11trs Clu~ • C1rt1 ll11tth1 1 ~ OPIN NIGHTS . MONDAT THIU lllOAY 'TIL 9 P.M. _,; IASHIOll ISWID ·: SUllDAY NOOfl.S P ftl. I I' II OA!l.V PILOT • s LEGAL NO'llCE LroAL NOrtCE WHAT IS A ''WANT IOOK"7 PAil LIDO PHA•MACT l 11 H .. ,1hll ·- N..,_rt IHclri 642·1 S•O -......... doubl• tr11t trou1•r1 ••11•11111•li<tr4 e 1111tt1r f f1 .. ln hlt114, Mwporl c111t•r c.htrt• .... 1070 Complete-New York Stock List ' ) •t G• •~ L•rn•n ~eu l•n•B Vil IS ltiW R I .a l• obt' s Le11 S •11 .lO t::.~: g~ ~5 Let>D Pfl 10 lot •WIV 'lO ll!«I N }{I •eon• ..cl l('llP('1• •O t ehVal II l 'n"n I Oq L•ve Fii (a1> l~• F c /~II LFE C1> LFECP PSO l bOFa 'p lb0FP •15 l JbMcN l l ~rtvCP 70 l t>r ~ln 2l<i l bvln pl '~ 99Mv 2}() l 9<:1MPI 1 L lvE l •D L ncon N• ' l """lffl v t nq fV AA t "'ITV p S l OMI Co p l onna 'lot l ""pc pf t oo 11fB 1 o~lt~~·d ,., r °"w Tn•d I L !Inn wn Looa SC'rn LollfSI p • I~ l on•~G• • ng I J• l latB S l o• Cop Le Lana I 9' l ouv GE ! .a l oo $Nao.II ·~ l 0"1"$ n 'ill t ub lOI 10 L11<~• S 90b Loll ow 0& Lulte >~I 1 Lum~ ><. LYO Cop lv-~1 YnV• Lv~,$ 'l'n~ pf ... IWll H ... L .. ~ :i ~ 19~ 2N 2Jh ! ff ti~ h io ,, •! •1 : "' ' 3: ll ll 10 " ' " '~ ~ . " 51 31 -L-• " " '\ " • ' . " ; ,. .. • • " " • " .i " • .. ,. " " '" .. " • .. ~ "' " " ~ " " ' • ' , ; " .. ,.... 1• ' ' "' " • • " " " " . ~ ,,. " " " ' . ~ ' SIA>ek Leaders MOST S!lAJWI ' ~ .. ,.... .., (Na.I H1911 l-CllM <Ill, ..... .,. ............................. , U J "1.o I .+ 91l'1 :!2 •7,..+t< 10l " • » • 13\o ..;tb -$- "' ~ ll n '" '" " " ' n "' " • ' .. • " • " "' ' " • • • " ' " " ' ,., • ~ "' " " " "'' • • ,. • ' " ' • ' " " ' • " ' • ~ " "' '" " "' '" "" "' M .. " '" .. " " "' " ' " . .... ,., , . •• " " ,.,, .. " '"' • 51\~ ' . • • • " .. .. •• "" " ... • • • " " '" •• ' ' .. ". , .. '" " " ""' ,,. '"' " • "' ". " " "' " '" ' • •• • ". " • • ' ,. •• ' " .. ' Stocks Sl1ow Mix h1 Heavy T1·ading NE\V YORK (UPI) -Profit taking turned th e stock market mixed \Vednesday despite a generally c.:onstruc:ll \e ne\VS background Turnover was heavy The market 1s right for some corrective ae- t1on one analyst commented But he d1dn t think 1t v.ould be very deep or last too long because of t he Nixon Adm1n1strat1on s determ1nat1on to boost the economy 1n order to reduce unemployment Another analyst however said the hst had a substantial rise since the middle of November and he looked for the next move to be Jo\ver prices Shortly before the close advances were leading declines by more than 200 issues But the Dow Jones lndustr1al Average was off 3 07 at 84112 • " ' "' ' ' ,,: • " " om ' " " '" w , . • " ·~ ·I . " . " . ' . OJ ( ' ., :n 'll t5 JI • 11 11•. l61'0 u . . "" ' " " " .. " ' .. • , .oi. " "' 4 17 IT i~ 71 I 06!/• ., ""' " "" t-1 7J • ... 11 IJ~ " " 11 1n " " . . ' 31 J:lo .. .. Ill ' • s' t 11 !Oh -T- " " ' . ... ' ; ' '" mo " " "' " .... 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CJ 'lt oa:lo +n' 111 '"",""-\ J I J2\t r,,L l2 ..... ,, ' l~i.: J\: '~ ,.,. J1 n .. 1 ~11"..,..,. ,, -. ,• ~ ~ ' ~ 1t '1 -10,~ 11 ... I 1' " . t tl'o tU'o u , -"° s. } "" .... f I• l '\I -'lo 7 • 7 ' lQO\ tl o 11\ l~-o, '1 I ~ I fll\oo ... ~ .. " I" r'i -:i. ... !'lit. ~ ~ ;, ~': '~: ('" ,., ·:f'1h;,?:; ttt~J I .)"\o )II t iit •• • ,., ... • L.. 4o •lJ"'l~t ••· ~ • • • L.. \ I ~, *''-1 •' ~-1!\ ·-· J'I ' ~" l 1 ------ -· TUMBLEWEEDS FATHER, WE Rl'ALLY J)()N'T NEW A CHA?fRON FOR THE: DANCE! ·-~II .' ~ n•,,.,.,•~· ....... ~ '•"-· .. mJUDGE PARKER Thur~d.lJ, January 14 1971 iUf· TlJT, M'D<ARI YOU 1\lt) JUST l'tlJoY YOURSELVES A/ID FORGET ALL A90UT Wf 111\CK HERE'! ... By Chester Gould By Tom K. Ryan L£T600FHER HAN~_JUNIOR, OR rLL 9RtAK YER ARM! I By Harold Le Doux U'L AINa SALLY BANANAS .'l.U"'W(FO!f' ~&et r I ~ vnoll 'Ao\i GORDO MOON MUWNS ... ~~~~~~~~~~-I OON'T KNOW WMY! TM.l.T'S WMiAT I 'M ASKING 'r'Otl ! f-:"< ' ~ fHA.T ~PARTMEMT SLllLPING ON THE R16HT 1S WH ERE HE LIVES! FO!i: A LAWYER, YOU 'RE NAIVE, PilVEIZ'. DON'T YOU HAVE NO IDE.l. WHY Mi. T WAS SENDJN6 ME TO MEXICO CITY? ~E WAS 60NNA MA.VE ME IZU15BED OUT'. __ !'LAIN JANE i . --'" I SEE A IALL, DAI<!'.<. HANDSOME MAN COMING IN'"JO )OUR FU"TL.lk>E ! Ul-4 Cl-\, "'TROU8LE I 60MEBoOY 10::. IRV'll't;. IOTAKE l-llM AWAY] WAIL y CROSSWORD ••. by ' A POWER I ~9 Blur- blJ\~ Dr lndlJ ~n Dr1vP (I ~l t C,2 Kmd of e lrc\r•t •1/ ~4 Fel1!1r lt~\\irr ~b H1Jld 111g: 41id hO!•\lr'l~ or g ood~ ~9 lh ..•. F "t16r1.1I drlrtl!Yf i·2 c~11111~ F~miloa• b~ P~rl of~ ~l rrlnt.11 rr at Ii 111!' a5 "Th~. Lady 2 warl1s h7 At\ or renln19 from a1101l1er renter 70 Syml!ol o! l1~rdnt ~S 71 Lamb'~ plum"' 12 Ma11's na me 7J01mk 74 Cost-of- llvln9·1\tm 7 ~ Notch DOWN I Co11verSt l ··-· ntl 3 Ce1 tifled 4 Sa lty Vt<>!trday's Puzzlr Sol vtd;-- s C A A 5 I :> k ogh p•l t'~l ·~ \~t Bo hie 7 Fav ~\ttnho11 8 Prodded 'I A lyonQ11111 10 l11~trumrn l l l Ga•mtnt 12 Soon . Archai c 13 M ea~ur t out 18 us playwrl9hl 12 Caltndar abbrev iation 2S Man or lhe sea 11. Layer~ 28 Statt: Abbr. 30 Vtge!~bltS 32 Ludicrous copy 33 EQu~I 34 Loo~ tor 35 Baby A B 0 0 ( JS Tea.srs 4l "1! la1d " . J words 4) Ptw 4b Arternoon --- 48 B uSin es ~ ~stabl ish ment Sl Qual ity of some cheeses !13 Did a hollSehold Chott ~S One wl10 ts skunked al tt ibbage 57 Igor·-·· 58 On one's tee\ S'J At111osphe1lc: condition bO Freposl\lon bl Wm lk ed bl Beast of bu1den MISS PEACH • >C.ELLV' SOlooL- J)MM~ f1 C. $oq~TY ·--· ... - STEVE ROPER 0 • i ; _, ' ~; ::~ ,, ~; ,. ' .l "' ,,. '"" ··-.._,,_ , 4'0T TILL 1 60T HEl(E I ···STARTED GOl~G 'MTH AAD FO!JMD OUT HOW 5 The ••• Manitoba carrJagt 36 Klrid o! bb Afr it1n rul tl b8 Conta iner b~ T It !or -- DIRK DANl<JEMOR .til DADDY HAD SEEM ' STATE U, MQ. ROPER/ ·•ATTACKING HIM/ ·•· I DIDN'T KNOW··ABOUT I, 12 ll I H!S FATHf HEit.i.' PEANUTS • "'""'"" W<Rf<T 50"4E CF W FALll5? . ' ANIMAL CRACKERS _ >1KJ eiwrHER. PID I Me POr UP A ~111'. - -AU. OF' A. SUDPl!IJ, 'Ill!! u 1)1! SAIAPf'I! I> AllD 'fH!! B.11"fUS. \1)~$ Dl'll' ! - 0"' YES, Ml<. Gl<JMMIG. IT?i A Tit.AGE.PY ABOUI A CU/LO Al..DNE JN 1).JE C/Z'UeL WC¥1W, GOING FllOM SN> TO WCfiSE IN n-'4€ 5NOw, WITl-l NO ~HOE5 0 11: FOOO- ly By John Miles By Mell OKAY/ DAl"C&RS ON STAc;E J:Oll TME OPENING,, NUN\&ER .. Saunders and Overgard rtlOW !!JES fl(! HE DOESN'T KNOW FEfl ABOUT ms ABOUT It'~ IT RE·R\.lrril ~ 'ROtiEO v.tu.D UPSET HIM Atrl>JULIEi;"'OOLLY. TERRllLY/ so ~f.M_L 'lt\MriCT MENTIOW IT •WIEN"ltlU SEE tfJMt ly Charles M. Schub l(OU'°lr SOT 'It> 6ET ~OF '!MOH FAIUN6S ! IT'S 'TH05E F'MJHH lllA1' ~ HOlPll5 'l'OU llAQC ! IT'•- • I I I ly Al Capp By Charles Barsotti ~~~~~~ ~ • 8V\ z swuie ~ \!JA$ OfER Sil< ~El!T' (..()~& .4111> /N61' ~Al!E I ..-~eo 'Al Ft:XilJOS· MR.MUM •· Johnson • '. DENNIS THE MENACE --p;01 , ' • f-<'f • Mv !lAD ~ ~!Giil? llE SA10 'AAJ'o SllOVf UP Cl1fl; ~1' VOl1> Oil MIGH ~ ! • ' Th.....,, Joo..,. 14, 1971 ·~ DAILY "LOT !!l Everyone Hos Somethin9 Thot Someone El•• Wo nh DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trede It With " Went Ad : ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results l~I _ .... l~I _ .... I~ I --··-l~I -.. -I~ _ .... General ELIGIBLE VETS JUST REDUCED JlnJa !Jj/e SELLER PAYS COSTS!! ,.,,.. ,, th• ~· pri" °" PRESTIG E WATERFRONT HOMES Thal's right~ Ju.~t l\Jmiture and kids n~led to occupy rhi:; r11.n1blini;, trf'e·Shack>d 4 Bedroom. Entrrtainmen!- size<I living rm. Bar and burning fireplaef'. Spacious 111\ elM:. kitcht'n. Terrazo pn- lry sliding-glass to covel'f'd pa1in, New f'Xlf'rior paint. Prof. landscaping. Conven. icn1 trtflll. fl urry or s tand in li11e~ Call {714) 962 -5.."iSS. Nev:Jy listed -Lot .,:;.so: perrect ror the fam - ily \vho '''ants a spacious waterfront home. 4 Ex tra li!:e BR .. 4 Ba .• D\\•dr . .rm. Lge. Jiv. rn1. & den ; 3 car garage. Beatlt. patio/garden 'v/rm. for pool; deck & dock. By App't. For complet• information on all homes & 1-::its, please call: 833 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642·4620 FOREST E. OLSON General 1-------- NEWPORT HEIGHTS TRIPLEX Cute older 7 RR & I BR units on corner lo!. 10~;, Do1vn. call for app1 , Only.,. $32,500 (General Inc. Realtors J91 3t B!'ookhurst Ave, Deluxe Condominium Hun1ing1 on Beac:h SPACfOUS "lliREE BED-N""'PORT ROO~f. T\VO BATl{ wl!h ~ff hugp 12'x24' sunny, brautJ. HEIGHTS fully planted enclosed patio, HOSPITALITY OffC'ri ng BIN Elect. oven & rangf', lire plate, radian! r.O?ms galnre ;~ tttis hrim~ hea t lush carpeting ar.d l\1lth a gpa.rldinc; pool. ;i dra~!<. dPtacbed dnuh!e bedroomii. fam ily f'l'IOm garages, proiessionally land-with riI'eplac.-e and ~e. scaped rhni~!. Enjoy easy DPlux kitchen \vith built-in living ~n the badminlon h-ee-zer, refrigerator and th13 sharp 4 bMrm, ]* balh hOml!'. lotatl!'d ;n a beautiful area. It has a 15.ti 18 M'parale family room large enoug-h for a pool table & a co1·ered patio ideaJ for outdoor living. F ireplace, bltns, & 11. new \\'ater heat- er, loo. Take advantage "' the lower inte""rt rates by huying this rnA or VA tenns. ~ co:Ts ~WALLACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • MEREDITH GARDENS-H.B. ELEGANT THE CIRCULAR DRIVE Leath lo lht> dnmatiC' rntry of tills Ba.ycJ'l.>st Estate. litas- Si\'e fieldstone fireplace. \Vann u~ or "'oods. C'Ulltom carpets, Very l\Jnctional fl.oorplan, leaturing lorntal dining room, 3 be<lroom11 llnd 2 bath!. cn·~r trarul· ferred. VaC'8.nt. $57.500. May ,,., sno1v you today! Colesworthy & Co. Fkaltor Ne1-1110rt Beach Offi~ 1028 Bayt;i~ Dr. CALIFORNIA RANCH 1.nvely Califcrrnia R a n c h St)'lt' nn a cul de .!lie strl?f!t in Nf'\.\."1>0r1 Heights. 4 bt!d· rooms, la~ livirl$t roam overlookin11: t11ll! free form pool 1-1-ilh loado; of decking. \Valk to tennis courts and school.!l -All yours tor $45,~. ?bone 546-2313 -GI or FHA TERMS- \Yith somt> fbd~,· up -this eoold be Ike bes1 b\1)' a.round. 4 bednn~ -7 baths, cozy bric. firepl11.ce -double r.ai-garaRe -ff'nced b.1f'k yard -slab patio -owner leaving area -S:M,OXI, an-1 xious. Phone 64&-TITI ·-0 THE RE.'\L \"-ESTATERS Fountain Valley $15,800 F .H .A. Anyone quaJitie11 1ubjttt to FHA Loan with 614 annual pe~n!age rate. Total pay. ment $148 pt'r month. Sharp 3 bedroom homf' ~il;tenlng \\ilh HARDWOOD FLOORS. 2 luxuriool! baths modern built-in kitchen. ~ady for in1mediti.tc-occupancy. GI buyers v.·elcome. C.\LL! Walker & Lee La9un• B.!.ac"-"h"-~~~ EMERALD BAY J BR. 3 Ba., aep. liv. rm., din. rm., tam. rm $'75.IXXI. TI6 EIMrald Bay By App't. Bill Grundy, Realtor lllJ DoVt"r Dr .. NB 6424620 100• View of ocean & Cata l in a . Small but bulldable lot in Laguna. $5,950 full price. Low dn &. 0 .W.C. W/ low monthly payments. Birr, 493-ll53 or 494-6632 eves. Realtors FOR Sa.le or lse-option by 2790 Harbor Blvd at Adams o1-1•ner. Ocea11 vu, pool, 3 $26, 950! I :»5-0465 Open ;Ill 9 PM br den. 2 ba. $49,000. 494-6923 Low do1-1·n payment & assume Huntington B•ach Lida Isle excellent FHA loan • pay. ments Just like ren!! l ovrr-f.H.A. 6V2Y. LOAN ON STRATA CENTRO sized bedrooms. 2 baths, $20,500 PRICE 4 Bedrooms, 3~ Baths graciotis large livinb room TOTAL payment for this 35 Ft. + Lot f!nhanced by a gorgeous l'!harp 3 lx>drom home is Street to Strata fireplace. Kilchen with all S1J6. ~ubject lo Fl-IA Loan $72,500 the buill -ins. 540-17"..{I with 6~ annual percentage LIDO REALTY INC. Newport Beach BELOW Marilllt-~ 2 br, own your owJCtand, + quallry hc>me. ~ * 2'l3 OCEANVIEW A vt for saJe by owner. View at,Bay &: Ocean. ~7983. Newport H•l@"t• RARE CHARM 3 BR&famrmtn~ American charm. Beam cell. ings, \\'OO!f panellnc. uwd brick trplc. New cpt./drpe, Elect kitchen. Larae enC::los-- ed yard, gar on alley, ~.800 COLONIAL TARBELL 2955 Herbar rate. All flPpli11oces such as 3ln Via Lido 673-7300 Charming prntjp mm.:nke washer, dryer, tt.higerator ~. 4 BR., 2 ba..1.aro':kil. Sell or Leese/option • all also included, W ll Y ** 40' lot • Clean 3 br, 2 with all bltins. Italian r!w"· 4 BR., 2~~ ba .• fii:ilc. 2 Car RENT if you are'." Submit ba. Ne1-1•ly redecorated. ble fli>lc. Chandeliers, ~e gar. J Yrs. old. 2200 Sq, Ft, your down payment . SEU-Large patio. $71,500, Jiv. & din. rm. overiookiiig A-1 Cond. Vacant quick pos-ER ANXIOUS . ANYONE I -~Kl~5-~2S_I_2_a11_•_•_6~P~m~~ lllll:e POOL. Partial odt:an M!lls. Call today! QUALIFIES. * $51 ,960 * 45' lot * view from larze t..Ic0ny. ci: ~Tii~.:::. ,::;;~ Walker & Lee s~·v3•n::~ ~~ ~~3715 $55.000. , """ vw•~ CALL ~. •••-U. " NO DOWN TO VETS Large 3 BR with 20x20 rUm- pu11 roon1, hrd11·d fl oors. Rear yard comp! block llt'all- ed 'A'ilh jumbo <'ement patio area. VA appraised a! .•• $24,600 hlrndC'r. lAn.ai v.-ith wet-ba.r. t.wr1s, shuffle board, puf- ting grPt?.n, and healed pools Sre 1hi.!l in1erestlng home. All for S.19,500. Phone with ::2' other <:harming 5 Bectronms -2 Ba.th.! rmmaculate. 25IJl !!(J. fl.. MPredith Gardens Home. llxl5 formal dining room , beautiful black wa.1mt pan- neled family room_ Com- ple1ely C8J'Pl"t.ed, curu>m draperie.o; throughout. dee-- orator "A·allpape-r. magnifi- cent la.ndscap~, complete sprit\kler system, block wall 11nd !llAAy more tine fea- ture11. See it to belie\-'f" it - 0 THE REAL "-ESTATERS Zll1 E. Coast, CdM 673-3211 d 9 \;I' •-•~-[M;,;;;•;•;•;V;,;;;•;r;,;;;•;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;; t It .... B k B ~ ... , -" I -•-•--•~•------I 279n Harhor Blvd. at Adams IEALTY · "~°"" ""'" '"' ' PM Unbeatable Bargain ""' "'"''" '"' ""k• FOR Sale by owner, I h i s week only reduced $2000, CUSTOM FOURPLEX Choi('t-Nf'Yi'Pfll1 al'l'a, 3 BR & 2 BR units. Ideal 011•nrr oc('upierl & ta.x i;hr!ter prop.- erty. $!'1,120 Income. $12,000 ne1ghhors. S4i.OO per month 616--Tin inclu<les 11!1 1na.inlenance \o ·THEREAL ~ESTATERS 3nrl ex1erior painting. Rf'l11x i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I New paint, Lovely garden, Good cpts. J BR, 2 ba, F'.R .. , Dbl frpl c, Service DIVORCE OCEAN view -4 br, 7!\11:. in Mer;a Verde. Just listed lge rumpus rm w/'bc, Jae Forceii sale of thi.!l immacu-at $27.000. Lat'ie 3 bednn, !iv rm, frplc. 3,00'.> aq ft t+ late near-new 3 bedrm, 2 2 bath & apacioUs tamUy 800 sq ft un.lin!shed. i41,5DO. bath, cu~tomized Ayres room. New covered patio, 548-5766 or 54S.5.ln. 11 nd Livf' • FULL PRICE ONLY $3.J,750. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;I for only $46.500. f'tnle porch. Ownl'r v.'ill carry 2nd TD. Jmmrrl o cc up an<"y. ·. . ' $26,500 $75,000 HARBOR VIEW HOMES 546-2313 \-0 THE REAL ·('\. ESTATERS S32,000. 2304 Fairhill Dr, 2 On Th~ Lot. 2 Bed.room 548-f,68.1. Hou se & 1 Bedroom Garage I========== Built Home. AU bltns, d~. block wan knee. Ottered • San Clemente • • 1· \V/\v crptg. frpl c, lihake no down GI or FHA temu1. · roof, profes11\ona.lly land-Don't mh11 thi.!l one! Call (',QLF Counie llome, I BR, 642~1771 Anytim• S BEDROOMS St' the first to s1•r. thls ele- gant, split lrvl'l home df"-i-========= signed for 1uxurious family Assume §l/4 0/0 living. Huge fa.m. rm., w/ 220 E, 17th 2nd '"'''· au.;,., ' bo.. Loan 646-0555 "'""'· wo11 "' <'"''"· "'·""' 4 Br·2 Ba Sharp CALIFORNIA Evenings Call 646-137:1 --Take over this existing FHA CONTEMPORARY 3%. annual percentage rate Cu,.om b tr. E,\S1''1Dt: OWNER ILL Coldwall.e.*8r '~". ' targ, Bdrm,, : 2 Apt. on large E-side lot. Try 10'1~ down. Newport ., Fairview 641>-1811 (anytlm•) COSTA i11F.SA , ra1nblin~ • ~-baths · formal d1n1ng . JUS1 hoine cnmp!e1rly frnced 1n I remodeled thruout • t'xtra I!!!!!!,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I wi1b block 11·11.lls and 11•roughl PLEAS[ HELP large grounds, V~ fe w it-on )!air.~. Laff.:e Livin.t; 833-0700 644-2430 good &Sll'UJTtabl~ loa.ns left • UDO SANDS Rm. ,1·ith open beamed ctil-This spacioui: 1800 s<L ft. Bettl'r hUITy Dial 645.0303 CHARMER ini::~. Thrr<' ~ooms, t11·et home 1.~ just t,oo _mu~h for TAYLOR co FOREST E. OLSON Sharp :I bedroom with ~n- haths, D1nine: roon1 Rnd nnc P"rson. 'ou Ji find a REALTOR n~ed den. One of a kind. ('\e<'ll'lr BIN Kit. r-cnred huit> fa mily room. and 3 • 2'299 Harbor, Costa r.1~ .Rl'deroratl'd with new car· off hcall'c\ 11nd filterrd Pool. very large bedrooms, idt'al-CITY LIGHTS VIEW 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1' peting. drapt'll mid palnl. Only s:11.9:i0 11·ith GI OR ly localed in nicest section Prrstigl' Onver Shorrs • GOLFERS' SPECIAL All n<'"' kitrhl'n a ppl!Anres. fl·IA TF:P.~1~. or "?flN a Vrrdf'. Assumabl<' BR. fam rm. formal .DR.,.., . . . A -· 1,1 · 1 -• VA Joan at 51 ,'/; Annual & :i1;i has. J. .. noks like • l'.'.xc.1f1ng larg,. cu.~tom Trt-cor ..... v in R p ann•:u PrrrentA):'I" Ralf'. fl.Yu ST nlrxil'! home $124,;,oo, Level .13.10() sQ. f l.) along <'QITlmunity 1-1-ith pool vsiv- SELL NO\V! · S33.!'150 Ast;Jng S NISH, • "I 750 17th ra1 r.vay & a~ut l block ilegt>'1. All this, and t.he PA -r • from pool. tenn1~ & club-ocean a black away. f<'or prirr. .1 Bdrm. DR homr.. Courtyard hou!'le of l\1esa Verde Court-$.1.~.!60. Phone 646-7171 11.ssurts priv11cy. 0 w n er try Club. Call for detaila. says "!\fake Offer". R 1 I 2 " en as 10THEREAL I"-ESTATERS 220 E. 17th 646-0555 .. Oll r :;rh Year 2 BR. Fllrn. .'iJ75 Wesley N. Taylor Co. 4 BR r.lesa Verd., S:ffi:l 1-========= REAL TOR.<; 4 + pool Eastside $400 F.vf'ni ngs Call 642-1·138 BLUFFS BAY VIEW If _\·nu 1\•;:in1 11v1oi:: I.· enff'r- 1:i1n1nl.! S"J"l<IN:' mrtK-i· than :o;lr.-pml.! s[l;h'". C'hf'{'"k into thi~ 1'!J(]n1y '.! B!'droom, l:in 1- ilv roon1 h1 1rh \\"l'I li;1r~ h~mf' Jn flrld1n nn '.!'~ h:tth~. br:iut1f11.I f";\W <"<lrf' kitrhrn anr1 11 ll'l"l';fic b1-1y ;:ind grrrnl)('I! \"ie11·. Somf'th1ng sp:oeial for only s;·J,~. P))nnf' 67~S:i-.ll. Gingerbread Duplex Water- front & Dock 2111 San Joaquin Hill11 Road Nf'l\'J)Ort Cen1er 644-4910 &"'·NIO C-cNM-. 4 BED + 2 STORY GE REALTY +STEAL -·-Macnab-Irvine Rnom 1(> run in this 1600 SQ· I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Hl'11.Hy Company 11 CaJ)f' Cod Cott;oige ""'h ASSUMABLE I I 1011 101v .$144 paymenlio1 or • • OLD WORLD CHARM F!IA 11 nrl VA Terms avail-C'.a.~h to this S?-3.500 -61~1. ]~ f<-oot. doors from a Villa Ahlr. S26,000: F'llA loan will put )'Ol.J intn 1n Spain • rntry al r1um -w lk & L thi.~ lovely hnme fnr R total 5.000 );Qllal"f' ferl ()[ luxur. a er ee monthly p.<1ymrnt of only iously 1;QmforrJ.blr la ntily $Zl9. 3 beo1rooms, 2 beths. J1v1nJ:: • :; hrrplarrs. 5 bl'rl. Rr11ltori1 1!1rgf' 21x21 beautJfully fin · roon1s. All 1his 'vith 11. FOR-2790 Harbor Blvd. 3f Arlams ished bon1r.. room. f.:fany EVER View tn Dnver ShoN's. 545-9~91 Op<'n 'til !1 PM 11.ttractivt' features for ~I Slti9,000. fllmily living. Call fo1· in- 6 UNITS Macnab-Irvine $75 ,000 good spendebl• 675-3210 Exclusivr wit h u5. Ea!1side! ! """'!''".'!~'!"'~!!!!°!~~""1 7 BR, J BA rat h, Bltns. 642-8235 :-;pe<..1:inn 546-ZIJ.3. O THEREAL "-ESTATERS MESA VERDE ttfrii::., crprt!, drps, fenced POOL w/oomplere privacy, separ. CORONA DEL MAR 111e patios. 2 Blocks to 17th DUPLEXES POOL Spark] 1ng 4 bedroom home \\ith beautiful Rom11n pool, J<'ully carpeted, a.JI bltn~. family rm., covered patio. fire pi t and moT'f". Only $35.950. Ca.II !-45-8424. $27,950 4 BO.+ DEN 1..a.raf' lam\ly 2 story 1'1!~i . .:lence . C.ounlry club living Jn wallf'<l cnmmunity with J'f'Cn'ation cluh, ten n 1 1 court~. pool, elc. 2 baths, f"XQUiSitt>ly Dll.neted living & dining room. 2 p11tio11, dream kitchen, 4 bmmom. 54<J.1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor PictuT'f"~IJllr. hi'~ rlesc.rihe.!l these l\\'o Jov<'ly unil.!l. Ju.~t remodrlrd by an n1vrw>r 1-1•ilh eXct>llent !II.S ii'. 3fi ft. boftt dO('k + da\·it for skim- mer. Located on Balboa. Prninsula and ide11I invesl.- ment or hidea\\'a:--. Beller hurry, Di i'll 6-15-030.1 Jlf'ff'0'< ::i bei'lut;Y -'.': bed-S1. shoppin~. Pn'senl income Live In th i!I delightful area f<)flm~. 2 hlllh.~ and family SS5(J per mn. bu! should be with 11n income unil to sup- room home ,1,ith a sparklin,i: raised, Good irmts. port your inveslment. Priced hc11t~ _and filt~d fl?O' for Lachenmyer RJty. h'Om S44.JOO ro $89.500 -some 1--A--W-l_N_N_E_R_I __ fun hvint;. Qtnet neighbor-Call &l6-J978 E • 647_0185 wHh ocean view, • hood \.\'ithin "'"11.Jkuig dl8-. Ve.!;. 675-3000 3 BR. 2 BA, beauty. Adult OC· tnnCP. to shopping_ r-.1och cupied a ll of it11 3 )Tl!. Walk more to see for only S31.9JO. Want to Build? In beach! Don'I mi~R this m II\\ ,\ 111:.U 'II Ill-. U:r\· I 'I'. Call now r,-16-2313 How l'tix"iut a beautiful ftt one a t only S.11.500. Coll ins O THE REAL ·~ ESTATERS Jnr. 00x'125 ff.. in ex('f'llenl & Watts, 962-5.'123, Newport Beach IOC11don tor c & w only $21,500. call 673-8550 FOREST E. OLSON £<" '. , ~J 'i ]~'J REALTOR$ n:19 Harbor, CO!!ta r-.1esa $800 DOWN, EMERGENCY SALE 'O THERCAL '"-CSTATERS MAKE YOUR NO GIMMICKS BM"< Y"" """ °" th~ PMm• Irv. Terr. 3 BR. hmne w/ NEW' YEAR'S will move you Into your own 1----,-====='i pool & m11ny extras for 4 bed charmer and pay-RARE in Bayshore• choice Jiving. Asking i:is.ooo RESOLUTION n1ent.s like rent. Take l'td· 4 BR. al'f' r11re &. rarer Rtill, by 11.rudous owner. vantage or this once. in a on Bayi:;OOre Dr. only 111eps COR·Bll-Call fnr an t1pPOintment kl llfeUme steal. $24.000 TOTAL to , .. _ beach & dock. Encl - fltt th!~ 1 hN!room Doll '"' :;, 00:e ~~~,:~s1;_~ru;;e~ Walker & Lee ~C:e 4 s~~~· ::~~r' MARTIN Coron11 <kl l\.111r.' 0 n I '1 RettltoN; •· Annchair H~huntina:'" $32.!f)lwith exedle-nt 1e1m1. 7682 Edinger 3535 E. Coa!!t Ifwy., Cdf\f REALTORS 644-7662 """"" l_.).. ...... ~~56:;·~'~5'().5~~'"'::'.--l-::=-:-:~'~7s..~7225~~c:::-:-:~liHc;Ul<liiiO<dl"C;iimjN'ny -0 THE REAL I"-CSTATCR'.~ I· ' HouM Nffds Company DOVER SHORES BEAT THE' COLD Vooanl ~'°"""'"'"for fAm. BAYFRONT Swim in your nwn he•ted l\y, 3 BR . 1% BA in pre"" BY OWNER Anthony Pool. Bring aome tig,. area. Scrt-ened patio • 1-.:;C;:O;:L;:L;:E::;G:;E""'P;:A;:R~K='= 13 Br, 2 bit, steam room-paint !Ind ,ieal thi:il 3 bf'd. lg F/R w/FP. Garrlen kitch- h F I jacuzzi. den & bl'tr, pitt, slip rm home. VA •pprahwd al en,• t1ea.I @ f.lli.500. Coll ln1 Open Wed, T ur1, r • for 40' boat. Reductd $7000 p.l.l;(J. FltA/VA te:rma. & W•tts. 967.5523 1-S for quick We. SU0.500. FULLER REAL TY 2345 COLGATE "'8-1936, ""·""· -14 lmm11c. ~ BR . J Ba., fam.1 -~B"E="A~C~H~S~P"E"C"l"A"L,--J•iiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiii'I ,m., l•pk. N;,., .,.110. 2 4 Bdrm,, 2 hathg, Xlnt rood, NEWPORT HEIGHTS Car g11r. 2'JXJ Sq, f!. 8 o t, sas 9= This \\"On't la.~t? ! tepg IO ocean. n 'l-. ·• -N SHARP DUPLEX Ct.111111 M~'9: 2. BR, PA, unit. Nr.,•ly p11ln!C'd out~i&-. Xlnt loc. n1·. Harbor Blvd, Look ~nk Properttc~ fl'J:'.1-5726 I 11t !hi~ price . only $77.~. (;~~W"'ooD REAL TY z 11nm's o n A ~r Loi A Goor1 Tnvf'slment At 6306 W. COMt llwy., NB $2',750 --~54=_12_90~~~-i Roy McCardle R•altor * * '' ACRE, pool, 2 Br. 1810 Ntwport Blvd., C.M. Ho!Yll OK. Ownrr. S'l7,SOO. ~7nt .-rrl~·M * C&W BRAND NEW Pool, p1tlo, view. 4 Bedrmtt, :l b111. y.·et hlir, lg dln nn. Jg kit w/ hrkfsl nook, panelled f11.m rm in lh!tt exclusive Dovr:r ~hon:s hnml!. Roy J . \V11.fd. Rltr. lO:t.l M8riner1 Dr. ~1550, "pen d'Ii\\y. * OCEANFRONT * DUPLEX Comp. furnished, 3 Br. up, 2 BR. rlown, $79,500 George Wllllamton Re•ltar 673-4350 645-1564 eves REPOSSESSIONS Sparkline clnn borne~. wom• newly painted A carpeted, 2, 3, 4 I 5 bdrma. Some wlUI J>ools. FHA-VA oonv. lumt, from $17,000 to $40,000. Collins A: Walla Inc. 8843 Adams Ave. !ISJ..:-:623 SUCH A VIEW! f BR, sunken L.R, w/f'P, Roman bath • g-s~ kitdl· en -F /R, newly painted • V11.cant. SJl,500. Collin.a I Wallll, 962-.">523. C&W ,2,50t'I 00\1/N, !contract of salel. 5 Br, 3 BA. fom1. l!v k din, lrx fa1n rm, '.story. Owrlf'r MG-1713. Balboa Island HEATED POOL e $3.1,500. 492-1003" _ e i;capt'd, block wall. 540-1151 open eveB, 2 BA, 2 patios, !andd.pect.1• 3 B 2 •-+ 1 h 1. only one n1ile from 1-lunting-SH "t + A ' r. U<I. gs ~. pa 1", en age 3 BR. 11,; BA. l BR. pl,• 'd f-" t trpl ton St11.te Beach. Assume 7%. · \ rov , '"'• nr wa .. · Walk to beach -itli1)00. SlOM dn, Chvn. car 1st. loan. a ~teal at S32,990!! •••LTOH * -49'J..7W ..,,_,~~: 1. 67J..6267. [~C~at~t~r:o;•~•~P:Pl~.,~.,..=~":"=.;":"';:· 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~I .~~!]~!:]!!]~~~= Santa An• He1ghtS_:.: I Colleii• Park ASSUME SV• LOAN MEADOW HOME On this spark.ling 3 br home. O\VNER TRANSFE~ I POOL VA-FHA lmmac Jndscpg, Owner must $1000 r.ssume.!l 71~!.. -GI 4 B1·., 3 B<1, priced at only sell immed. Take over mortgllge 5 BR. family nn. $30,9:-.o. Good }ocadon, close pymts Sl6S mo. incl princ, zroo sq. It. 545-299'2. Cabana, den, f1un1ly rm., 3 bedrmi;, dble frpl r , bltns. $34.950. Assume $27.000 FHA 6't loan. Open Sal/Sun l -5, lXi Princ('lon. let F'OU11ta!n Valll'y High. Int. taxes, hu. Call Ray Tustin I Big bedroomli. rovered pa. c "'"us H · ault, .......,. I. entage TUSTIN •IEADOWS • •yJ rm. Very good buy at this RE a .•. foPl!'n eve11). I JEAN SMITH, RL TR. pricf'. Owner. Lrg 3 BR. ! Bath. FOR SALE BY OWNER formal din, aep. tam & 400 E. 17th St, CM 646.3255 I' Corona del M•r 962-4471 ( ::::) MMIOJ Condominium, Sp a n i l'i h • laundry rm. $36,500, 14561 w/w carpet. drapes. blirui. EmeJ')'\\'OOd Rd. 83!-0807 fireplace. :'I br. 21, ba.. JUST REDUCED Lovely 3 &. <lrn w/3 hRth-PENDING FORECLOSURE. ronm!I. Only 11-) blks. to the Beaulitully kept 4 bednn, :r::1~-r H::;~s-. ll~du~~h ~ ~o:~":J ~i~i~~e~R~i~e &w~~~ 11park!ing ba1h11. Fu 11 y S!":ill.~. c11l'fJf"terl, air ronditiont'd &. Delancy R•el Estate rxcellent rei1id~tial area. 2828 E. Co11st J-l1-1'Y., CdM Submil all terms. PMced 644-7770 under 11JI 01her" ar $39,950. DECORATOR FRESH Call 54:>-8424, Sout"h Coast HOME + INCOME Realtnt11. 2 Bdrm. plus den, 2 bath~. Assume 5¥•% GI Loan plus roomy 1-hdrm. apt. Tip on 4 bedrm, 2 hath, single lop cond. Best loc. story near Douglas Aero- S52.500 .~J>ll.<'e pl11nl. Excellent ron- UNIVERSITY R.EALTI' diljon . Prrs!'nl monthly pay- 3001 E. Cl'll. l-b\'y. 673--fi:JJO men13 only $191 P.1.T.r. IRVINE TF.RRACE Larwin R•alty, Inc. 38.500 962-6981 anytime Cha.rmi11g :l BR -2 RA. GI/NO DOWN! TED llURERT f..· ASSOC REALTORS CAN'T BEAT THISI 3471 Via r.ui{I 67;...>:~ffl ONLY $25,950 Costa Mesa 1.Anze ki!rhen &. family roon1! Low J-i!A 1erm11 11180. Beaudful ground, & ponl, Low mainlenance. Adult!". 549--0977. N•wpart B•ath NEWPORT HEIGHTS SO. OF 15th ST. $30,700 That's right! UnbelieW!.ble in Newport Beach. View. Large BR's. Formal dining rm. Huge parllllt"d tam. rm. with cathedral beam ceilings. 2 fireplaces + BBQ. Cherry kitchrn. 2 bathli. Ui.!h & plaS1er custom built. Terrac- rd rear yard. Brick patio . \\'on't lm111. Hurry and call (7141 961--5.385, FOREST E. OLSON COUNTRY CLUB LIVlNG:! HAFFDAL REAL TY Largr al'lrl n1orll'rn 4 bt>rlrn1 842...4405 Inc. Realto rs honie 1-1·\rh ~11nkrn livin~ 19131 Brookhut'!'L Av~. room formal din1ni;:. f;1mily $3,000.00 Huntington BPl\Ch rnnn1' enrl jus1 11rlja("'nl tn Tol:-i l C11~h. Vac11.n1 .l befl. Luxurious Livin9I thr Country Cluh. 011't1Pr !Wm, 2 hAth. f.ireplRc .. , new Fabulous upgraded .. Bluffs .. rt'<1cly tn mnl'e -1ry S4R,9:i0. painl. Clo~e tn Dougla.!l, Angt'lita. 2 BR. model on Call 54.':>-!!424, South Cetast 11hopping & .i;chool". one Jevrl. 01~om, profcs!, cR~·~·~'"'~~~·-------1 BRASHEAR REAL TY deNlr11tf!d -mnv" in cond . C.Q. _ Calling -C.Q . 847·8507 .sumptuou~ m11tr suite. ldeaL Li8ted 1-10-71 . :l RR It. drn .1 P=RE=.:sn=~c~EO-h0-,,,.-~1=illO~m-od~o71 I ly ~ituated on corner, Evtn- Dbi <II'! gar, huge lnrisc.pd rot Cu.!ltom pool I patio 4 BR, •xtra. CAIL NOW for app't. Good area 2 ba, SI0.000 dn 3 BA, family, dinlnr . 'tmm~. Asking S42,50o • Won't last. to 5~ 10an or Vet S9!IO. ore .. Nr Warner & Graham. Ask tor Elll.. Freeman All listings in 1910 . !';(lld. By O\\'lll'r, $46.500 FHA 6~ Guar. Sale -N,.t Pmrrf'rl,. 11s~11m, loan. SJ1 -!f77o Day1/ C. Qu intani, Rhr 642-2001 1"-6706 eves & wknda. Salisbury ..... 1 ! • [~INDEX) I ..,...., .. s.i. C l•ssific•tion I 00· 14t Real E1tata, f'A1 .1 Ge-al ~ '-c-1-.-.. -,,-,-'"-,-,-•• -1-s'o.114 I ~-·-~·~-·~-~11•1 Cla 11ification 200.260 _,.._ I~ Cle s1ific ation }QQ.)55 I Apm---1~ Cla1sification 160-170 "'""" I~ Cla11ifica tion 400--46' .,_, ]~ Clas1ific•tion 500-510 -· l[jj c1.11ificafion 525-5)5 '°""-18) ct.s1ific•tion 550.555 $18,750 OR LSE OPTION EXEC Pool home on 1/3 Spacioui; E.fiide 2 BR. 1\1: 11cre. by owner, 4 BR, din. 315 MARINE AVE. 673-6900 •-.,.,-""-.,.---~l{I•) Ba, town!-. condo. Like rm, ttc rm, $45.900. 846-7040. BALBOA ISI...AND tt&Kllon _ new, all bltM, P atio . 1-----------1 pr~. Nr pool &. ciubhllt.. _L_•g~un_•_Be_a_c_h ____ ,,1,,500 IS THE PRICE Clas1ification 57S..510 6:,::;.~-54~;rpr ice d . WOOD & GLASS for this very livable 2bed·1 I~ =~==~~.,.-,,--=-::I room hOme that 9etll on a ...__._.. . NO DOWN Owner must Modern OOm~ deilgned by huge R-2 tot Buy now, rent · . ' move. A!sum~ Fl-IA 7'h'i'i OnU Abel to enjoy a never it out •nd build iatf'r. Gremt c1.,1ific•fion 600-b9t Joari. :l br + lam. Lrg etKling coaatllne & town view area with other luge units I llf!ll' cul-de-aac 101, J yr old. from alJ rooms. Beam cell-Jurroundlng. Submit down &,ioyo-.t f' .MC!lll Woods. .$ 3 z. 9 5 O. ing11 1.hruout; \11ood wal!11 In· payment and terma 10 . 557-76.13 11ide & out, built-In cooking Walker & Lee Cl•••iflcation 700-7,l"D e COLLEGE Park"• moal \aland, Swt!di!h firepl11ce. 2 ~ unique hot~~-3 hr, tk>n. Bffirooms, 2 be.thi!. i:;8,950, n-alt-I M9tc:Mdtw I "" 1% b.a. New laodRC&pil'lg, Call • n.c ~·• . . "'V rustic l11tf'rior, remodf'led 7790 Ha.rbor Blvd. at Adams b&th11. 546--0902. ~ I 5ts-1M91 Open 'til D PM OCEAN-h.lrbor v .... Lu•k ../T01-an BEACH COTTAGE """" '""'-· 4 BR. ... REAL ESTATE ' BR. "'' Lot: """' "'"'k fam rm, wet bar, 2 trp1c·a. to ~ach, Good wmmer fun M!'Par&te RT'\/. pt>l"('h, kat ttoo Gif'nneyre St. uvtnr + lot!I of future pc> gar, ('(Mrriy<l, $ 7 4, SO O. 494-9173 549-0316 ~ntlal. Undt'r $30,000, 644-5258 Ow"'r. HARD TO FIND MORGAN REAL TY HOW'S THE In "" oJ '-""" better 67:1-4642 67U4.lt artu • < BR, 2 BA, 1arp BALllOA COVES TIME FOR livint I: family rooms, vtew WATl!R,RONT of OC"ean l hllla, nice ne lgb. Prime Joe. 3 BR. 2 ba. alnrlt Clas1ific•tion 100-116 ---Classific•tion 150.e!ll I -"'"';-_. I@ c1.11ific•tlon '°°·' 1'12 "'UICK CASH """""""· '""' "' "'""'''· ''""'· Newly doeor. Y•r""1 c1 ... m .. 110• 91 l-f47 'I" Good fin•nclng available. )'d. 30 ft. boat aliP. $79,500 ... I r-.-.. Iii THROUGH A Hum'" thl• •o• ot 1<2.illO. Biii Grundy, RHltor 1: _ ... .,.. l[~J RrYIERA REALTY 833 Oo\ft'r Or., N.B. &12-4620 . . DAIL y PILOT •• • •99-2a!JO • • • MUsr sEtL BY OWNER c1 ... m •• 11 •• 950.,,0 SY OWNER • 4 br, 2 b111, Bnt.nd new, fff 1lmple, 1 ' le WANT AD ptoyroom. ''"""' , "" btk h<ach, s hr. 2 ""· 2 bltn~. crpta, drp11, dtclni, trplc, bt•m eelllngs, w/w nrE J'utelt draw in · 64J.567B <>CeJfl vtew, SS4.00J. °'""34ll carpet, llup dbl 1ar . W1!11t ... 0.lly Jltlot .... •ti 4 642---"rn23. Ii Clusl!led Ad. lfl.M7I I Th11~t.Y. January 1~. 1971 I e ~I ~-~ .. -~l~;;.-~ .. ;m-~l~~l~I -~ .. -~l~;l~[-... ·-·· .. _ .. -~H~~·J 11-.. -1 ~, .__. .. _lit] Mobil• Home/ ,,Hou;.;.;..;.;".;.';..;...Fu:;m.;c;.:l".c'*=-"'*;:;:l.;;.-==-'U;.;n;..fum.='---30"05""-"-=-"·"-Unf=uccm.;.;.;.. __ 30;.;.;;.SI -Unfum. 305 Apts. Fum. MO Apts. Furn. ft DAILY PJLOr ! _ .... _ l~l L.. -~--'-·_·!l"'__,J ~ I -.. - 360 Apt. Unfum. Unlvertlty Pirie VACANT-J BR. ~ Ua th, &ingle family res!· dcrn'. 1700 Sq. fl. Fresh pain t & New lawn, Lo"' dov.'n pti)'lfll, 1no~·e1 you 1n. 132.9511. ired hill RE.ALTY Univ. Park C.enlcr, ll'VL/lt' Call Anytime 83.J..a!20 Alreaga for s•I• 150 2~!1 ACRES in J oshua Tree, water. el('(.• avail, S24!JO. Aft 6: 546--9390 Cemetery Lot1/Crypt1 156 CRAVE SITF:S j2J. Beaut, Hilltop Pacific l\tcmorial Park. 67J--n74. Commercial Property 158 Shopping Center Site ID ac. C-2 down to11•n San Juan Capilitrano -or can he split for dev,lopment, Bkr 493-1153 or 493-1706 eves. · Condominiums "fo'r 1•1• . 160 * BY O\\'NER " BLUE LAGOON VILLA No. 1 :11781 S, Coast 1111.y. Laguna Beach ConMminium Apt 2 ~room, 2 bath, carpels, drapt>S, bu ittins, etc. 2 pools, private beach tennis C(lurf. ' $38.CXXI 499.3005 \\'ill ronsider lease purchase or outright salt'. LAZY LIVING Trailer Park• 172 1 · -----'--...;..;.o.1;..:;.....c...._:c;.. ___ = ....c:.:..:::=;.;.;;.=:.o..-...:.:=.1$165-Wlllk to heh. S Bt. du· Ne!JIO!! Beach Newport B.ach Unlve"tty P•rk Costa Mesa N•wport Beach TRAILER Jn Mammoth . plex. Child or 1in&let1. 8xlll. 1!1~ 5. Ri'oom a<ldJHon Blue Beacon* MS-0111 cpt'd w/trplc 10x20 . Balboa island LEASES-LEASi:::ES~LEASES WE GOT 'EM II 2 BR. 1 b th REltARKABLY a .......... $235 \JNBEUEVABLY 3 BR. 2 batba .......... l32S EXTRAORDINARILY Just For , sn. , b•. ~ .. ,, "''"'· 934.2286, N.B. 6'M·2'l38 aJ1 6, Real Estate Wanted 184 Ap!, Units In pld location WB.nled by pvt buyer, Cond no! Important. 675-3Sll . r~ Bus ines1 Oeportunity AITENTtON I~ 200 Oistributor1 Needed HUNTS new multi.mill ion $ advertised snack pac pro- ducts NEED NO\V! reliable men or \\"Ome.n in So, Calif. to service fast moVing coin operated products in co. ge. curerl Jocafions. Commercial factory, Part or full time. 10·12 hrs per week. No sell. ing. C AS H REQUIRED. S-1900 -$3900, Write for person- al intcrvic11-, giving name, address & phone no. to Dis. tributorshlp Div. 51, P .O. Boll' 3155, Ton:ance, Cali!. ry,)5()5 • 4 BR. tun1. Avail Fl!b 1sl $375/ mo yearQo. Ga. a. wtr pd, 646-7130. Balboa Peninsula 45' BAY1''RONT B alb oa Penln, 5 BR. 4 Ba, pier, Jloo.t, winter or y,arty. ti13-2039 Bay shores 2 BR. O>ttag~. Aval! 6 mos. $295 mo. 2611 Bayshore Dr. 6#--5226. or 645o-35M wknds. Corona del Mar Choice Bluffs Townhouse Homes Available on one year leases 3 BR. • 2 bath -trl/level .... $325 per month 3 BR. -21> bath - 2/story .. $385 per month 4 BR. • 3 bath -family home $400 per month Bay Vltw • "VIP" Home 3 BR • 21> baths -split level $450 per month Speclell1t1 In S•lat & Lea1e1 3 BR. 2% batM .•. , . , .• $300 EA 3 BR. <Un rm, 2 ba •••• $325 , B UTJFUL 3 BR. plu. .. , .. ,_ bonua room Val D l1ere Garden Apt1 -• Adult! 2 batba ........ , .••. , $350 , no peta 4 BR., tam. rm. 2~ ba , $375 Puttln& green, waterfall & 7 BR., 41Ai baths ••.••.•. $450 .strtam. fiowen ever:ywhere, WE HAVE 01HERS 45' Polll, tte. room, billlanh. ' I' I ·11 111 I 1·1ld ---i !1·111 111 1· BBQ'•, Sauna., turn . ..unturn, Singles, I BR, l BR + den, ~ BR .. From $135, See It! 2000 Panons Rd., 642-8670 Betw~n 1-farbor & NeWpOrl 2414 VJ5fa Del Oro NEWPORT BEACH c.,a:>f ls t 'Vestern Bank Bldg. CASUAL Calif, Uvlng In a f 2 Blk N. 191.h. ' C:. §.(' "SmCE 1946" CASA de ORO n ty 644-1123 University Par!< wann Mediierranean aunoa- Vl EW -VIEW -VIEW Dty1 833-GIOl Nights pbere. Spaclo11a color ro- Of lhe ocean from this beau!, ordinated apts -designed & 3 BR. 2 Ba. furn. home. Hou1e1 Furn. or furnished fur style &: com- Avail. now thru June 15lh. General Unfurn. 310 fort • liealed pool • Kitch. Call : 673-3663 675-8886 Eves. I----------~ en. w/ indirect lighting e WHERE EU!: can you find Hol4'I tor Rn: 1.-. Balboa l1land DelUXe RIO. Adults only. No a large 3 bedrm home w/2 TEJ pets be.Iha, family rm. elec bltns, 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii;'l~n lse /byvt o7r, bayfrotlnt . 1 BR.-$115 furn. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS J02~ W Balbao 67J.J66) dishwasher, newly painted, I me w P Per on Lil e UTll.JTIF.S INCLUDED big patio v.•lth BBQ, large Houses Unfurn. 305 Isle. Furn or unfurn. 3 BR. 3G5 W. Wilson 6112-19n d d f _;_;.c....;.:.c.;::c:;,: _ _::.:: I 6o7o.3-':.'C71~38~"7~----l••••••••il fence yar or only $2'15 H t ' 1 B ..L :-• • • • • • • • • I -C~o~•-t•_M~e~•~e;_ _____ 1 per .mo? VACANT AND un 1ng on ••Ql Corona del Mar $6 nite up $Z1.50 wk up . AVAILABLE NOW; call E STUDIO & J BR A t X1:-NT 1..-0catlon -neu shop-agt. S46-4l.Cl. B AUTJFU L 3 bednn, 2~~ HOUSE FURN/UNFURN 11 s ping _ 3 bedroom 2 b a. I lo 1 BR po'o" •ott "ti pd s~.50 ha , Mered ith Gardens home, So of Hiway _ near beach • ~!or TV, phone serv, ~l u ho b lit ~ ... " '"' frplc, l.am rm., form din., • Lmens, maid serv avail. Single Adults ~': ~~ p, 1 "" 11 "· LC unique brand MW S br, South Bay Club Is a ~le 2~ ba, bm ceil, filll, all new way of lite designed bltns. best area. 673-6904 Just for single people, It's. tun l!ving with warm, dy-2 Blks from ocean, 2 BR, namic neighbors. lt'i 8 2 ba, !rplc, blln!, 1,:pts, drps, h alth I b . tt'JO. 548-7983. l' c u , saunas, liWUll· n1ing pool. part)' room, bil· l BR. apt. unrurn. for adult. llsrrls, tndoor golf driving $150 mo. inl'ludes util. Call range, tc.nni~ courts. pro !!37.2'.J.17 e\'es. shop and resident tennis pro. 2Bn. So. of llwy, NO Sini;le. 1 & 2 Bedroom lux-children or pets, $185, ury UfJartmcnts '\\ith all the Squares only. 6·12-n!l.~ modern t'Onveniences ava11. l="'=========ol able, Furnished and unfum. ished, 110DELS OPEN DAlLY 10 A.?11, _ 8 PJ\t. RENTS FROM $150 NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE & 16th (714) 64S-OS50 Coste Me1a FROM 5135 Spanish Garden Apts. Conveniently Located l & 2 Bedrooms Built·ins Carpets & drape!! Enclosed Garages Pool & Rl!'Creatio n Rm. See: 160 \V. Wilson e~ccu ve me -u -ins, l BR priv colt Balboa $90.00 Ill! b!tns, call Mr. Hoegee, .,.tor lease~ rent Social clubroom-billiar&i, etc • •-.. -"ry "·if 0 _ • * dishwasher, disposal $285.00>BR f fix •~oo • Bedim 214 Bath L' h 1 L,<lu'"' -= =rv1ce mo. waler paid. 2 year , am nn upper ~. South Coasl Rea l tors, . '. ' ive were the fun s! Jn major shopping center. lease with ""!Ion to buy 3 BR, crps, drps, kids OK $120 545-8424 family & dllling room 2376 Newport Blvd 543-9755 SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS • • • J\fost deluxe in area. 2 Y"'"' _, 10-f 2 1 •· 3 BR 2 . . $300 Per Month • • • • • • •. • • I available. No pets. Ref. and ""." sq. 1· 1 ory uvme, ha condom1n1u L h RI young. Carpeted, color TV. sec. dennc:il ....,..,,,__., Toi. kids/pets OK .......... $165 All f . ·rr m, ac enmyer ty. QUI~. studios $115 1 BR's paneled; e qu ip p' ri by .-~ ...... ue\< BR aci 1 16 llvflll. Ca\J 646-3928 Eves· 642-0183 1125 N hld ' 545-8609, 3 horse ranch * 002-0224 * · . o c rn or pe1s. J\1aytag, Excellent trade, al· stB.ils/t.11.k ............. $195 4 BR 2 Condominiumi 2135 Elden Ave, CJ\f. See L Ive where th• fun is I teridant. Priced below Avail 1115, 3 BR, l STAR* LET 776-?330 , ba, heated pool, F l!S Mgr Apt 6. replacement cost. See at ba, lease, S225 mo. lmmac. l Blk., from Jr.l --'-'u~r~n~·-____ ..:.:.::1"";;;;;n7,:;-e.=rc:::--; cour-.TRY CLUB Baker & Fattview, Costa &la-1622 * $160-Lrg 4 Br, stove, c:tpt.5, Hlrb. Vacant. S295 774-8393 L STUDIO Apt. f urn, Gu & LIVING :\1C'Sa, then call Betty or l·BR . house Fum. Sl!O. 1 kids & pet v.·elcome, 2 BR, lge yard. closed aguna Beach water paid. 1975 P~ns, Luxury garden apts, offering John, after 5 p.m. 644-1307. or 2 mature. Adlts. No pets. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 garage, $120. Ref:s req'd, BLUE LAGCX>N VILLA No, 4 C.1\1. Call 7 pm 646-4205 romp!. privacy, beau 1. Business Wanted 210 i~"""'--"-' ~-~----IJ BURM. + family rm., full 847-2352 30781 S. Coast Hwy. DLX I Br. nev.1. 1'~rigidalre lndscpg & unparalleled WANTED: Small busine ss in the Newport-Cosla M'sa area. Prefer mail order eleclric lix1ure business nt manufaclllring level or akin line~ or ope n for other pro- ducts. l\tail lull description lo: Rite O' Li!e, Box 4642, Glendale, Ca. 9W. Laguna Beach dining nn., built-Ina., brk. Irvine Laguna Beach appliance. Queen !I? bed. recrt'atlonal [acilities in a ::;:...:c:.:::..OC:::::'.:----1 S390 a monlh. NO FEE, ----------Condominium Apt 2 Comp!. crpt'd. Call 646-9Z78 country club atmosphere. RENTALS Newport, S40-1720. LEASE OPTION avail Feb. bedroom, 2 bath, carpel3, eves. Furn. or Un!· l\Iode\s open 1. c~ •. old red\\'d, house Balboa Island 1. 3 br, 2'1' be., fam rm dpooraj1, .bu,ilt·~· here .. 2"B_E_A_UT-. -Ba-<h_&_l_B-,-.-.-p-ts. ~~15~·8 pm, H.enls from at Vic!or1a Beach. Ocean \'U townhse on park. $280 mo, s, pnva e ac · tennL• $35 wkly & up. Furn Incl & path lead 10 beach. Com· 3 Bdrm _ 2 Bath Owner -494-'335 o• 64" "°"" court. $300 mo. turn. or ..:1 M thl il OAK\VOOD CARDEN • ~ 1275 tu .. "" """" w•t Uu . on y t'nns ava . APART•tENTS pletely furnished, Flreplace. e UNFURN e un rn ... ""'""""" 998 El Cami 546-IH-1 " ~ Pegged Door. Lease $2751\.lo. e 675-87n alt 6 Pl\! Laguna Beach consider lease-purchasl! or oo. ;:i 1700 16th St., NB 2 outright sale. l Br. turn. Gas &. water 642 81-0 . 2 bdrm. furnished apt. at Balboa Covei FURN OR UNF: 2 nn. den. pd No chlldrcn no pets I c=-~~-·~·'---- \Voods Cove. 150 yds. tol "-'-"-'-"--'..;..;."-'-----· I Adults, no pets. Emerald Ouplexe1 Unfurn. 350 Sliotmo. 545-599i, 6'16-7058: \VTR. 2 BR. UtU paid. Nr, Realtor~ 673-4400 • CORSICAN New, large, deluxe J-2-J BR'1. Private patio living, only 3 neighbors in }'Our bldg. Bltns, d\l'hr, fof'C1!d air heat, shag crpls, drps, trplc in 3 Br, gar. fl,;. ml. E. of South Coast Plaza; 1urn oll Sun- llo"·er al Ross.) t""R0!'-1: $150 S.10-1973 or 5-1;,.2321 FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. 2 Bedrm. 2 bath, single !ilory, professionally d e co r a I· en. Low nown payment, take over gov't loan with no qual. ifying. Ne111'. new. Owner transferred. lnv •• tm .. t beach. Lge. lree 6hadcd pa. \VATERFRONT, decor. 3 Terrace 494 0388 bch &. stores. $145, 300 34.th BR 2 B M ! . . Coste Mese * * BACllELOR APT, st 220 tlo. LeaSe $165 Mo. , a. o. lo I\. o. $350. . N.B, See Bert l\.ferriman Opportunity 3. Lgc. older 2 bdrm., un-Bill Grundy Rllr. £42-4620 Mesa Verde $125/mn. Call 64&-3589 or ot tel. (673-7727) (5.19-33-16) 2 & 3 BR's --'-'----'-----fllm. unit. close to dov.·n. Corona del Mar * 2 BR uni DUPLEX-Crpts:1~61'hl=~7_67_______ aft 6. except on \Ved & Private patio, pool • Jndlv. INVESTMENTS to1-.n. Fireplace, w/w car. BV~~ED ho NE\'V'f ~tESA & drps. Garage, A l(Ulet BAC1-l apt, util"s pd beam Sun laundry fa c. '.~• "AAA" me or ea!!e. couple 548--0422 ~otti•g• • ~1 J d·''t o I N••• Ora•g, Co "·-rt • 1 • n pets, lots of 1-.'00d paneling. 3 BLKS TO OCEAN S200. 3 br, 2 ba, all comforts . .. " "" c. a w n Y. OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, • " · ·~I"' Larwin Realty, Inc. 962..6981 anytime TENANTS.LEASEBACKS Lease S2jQ l\Jo. inclu~ed. $115 mo. 642-8520 crp!s, drps, dL'<. \V inter. UCI. AduHs. only. OFFICE MISSION REALTY 3 Br. house, 6 mo lease, S2SO/ 646-0920 or 54&-3335 I l[W'] QUIET Lg dlx 1 Br 4-plex. $275. Adults only, No pets. 20122 Santa Ana Av,. Income Property 166 ('Q!\1MERCIAL 985 So. Coast Hwy Lagun.s. ~· lnc(l'~~toveb& retrig, BEAUT'"UL L·d••p•d .......,_. .. _ f/a ht,' dwhr, gar, l mature 673-$088. !\lgr. l\1rs. Joachim, Apt S-A ·~ BLD'GS Pho-40.07'•31 .-encro y ... u. d I garage. u " ... " di 112750 546-62'15 &. ,.,.., "" """' home ln J\1esa Verde. 3 Br,· a I. · · 54&-£955. Apt. Unfurn. 365 w. R . DUBOIS, INC. Lido 151• REV•A<Ran1 .. :.w·1m""ma1,•.99,•1B1R'.· 2 ba, fool, dbl gar. trplc. 1 en. $125. Pool. Spacious. • MARTINIQUE • TAX SHELTER (R. E. Brokers) 545-7166 '""' lst & last. S269. mo + smllll Apts. Furn. 360 Adults. Ideal tor Bachelora. General .. " bltn • I"-'==------Park·Lik• Sur roundings 4 •· .,_ 2 d I -"-k 5 BR. 41~ ha. waterfront cp"", urps, s, gar cleani"°' depo•. 64" •~1. 19!13 Church. 548-9633 vn1..,, · up e:<es. ,,..., e Money to Loan 240 · Qui 1 .... -,,.,~ DEI.UXE 1·2 & 3 BR APTS. roof, bl1ns in{'I relrig'•, l ~ ---'--------homl' \\'/dock, on Lido patio. et cp, oo children SHARP 3 BR , 2 BA. qu••t Ganerel CLEAN. l BR·, 2 BR, I \; -Nord. $1500 month. or pel1, UX1 yrly. 673-2278 ~ Also FURN. BACHELOR ba, 2 lg bedrms sundcck 1st TD Loan 'BR street. Now vacant, $240 per RENTING FURNITURI BA. Crpts., drps. lrg cloi;ets. Prv patios • Hid Pools over priv garages; t;0ncrele . 3 Ba. off·"'atf'r horn' LIKE oew 2 br & den dining Cd! LARRY H rlt Pool Adlts no pets Util RENTAL FINDERS Nr shop'g • Adults onty drives, mllhognny panelling r.urnL~~~ s450 month rm, frplc, crpts & drps. ~~I Estate ~lisi.' age COSTS LESS pd. 5.i&--03.36: . Free To Landlords 1m Santa Ana Avl!, CM &: much mo'"· Siiow, xiot 7~li% INTEREST Bill Gru ...... y, !Utr. 642-1620 No pets. Days 6i5-nD1; 0 • 2 JD L 673-6974 S25(l NEW 3 BR dup. pvt ACAPULC Apts attractive, 645.0111 J\1gr. Apt 113 e 646-5542 yield on $65.000 price. Top n d oa n N•wport Beach eves lncd yanl, el'c bltru, dbl Complete 1 BR. Furn, Pool, Util pa.id, Garden location, always rented. 3 BR, Z ha, fenced yard, garage. 536-l947, 2131 as low Ill! $12 per mo. llvlng. Adults, no pets. 2 BR ~~';:':':W:·~1~'~"~·:C:•~,.:;M=""= 2 BR, l'; ba studio. Sl7\ Bkr/Ov.·n r says sell FHA & Terms based on ~ity. SHARP 2 BR/, cmpltly Near beach. $250 mo, 414 241-8647 I 00 7. PURCHASE $175 -l BR $145. 1800 -; utilities incl. 339 Cabrillo . P "" 0 ,94 remodeled. Steps to ocean. Fernleat 54&-2176 all $175 New apt. 2 BR. b!tns, ~8-8303 or S.'IS-3&1!1 pay po1n1s. hone: oJJV"OO 642 2171 54.s.4611 ..,~1598 ,969 • OPTION W ace A\·e., C.1\1. nr 6(2.2436. ~,.;ing Harbor area. Z1 yrs. .-.w ... · Costa Mei• Ind. item selection FURN Bachelor & I Br. shag crpts, drps, patiOs, I S I M C 4 Br. 2 ba, lg, houac otf Newport Beech 24 •-d 1 M th •t gar. 3;,s E. 20th, Cl\1 fi.12-4905 6 . 2 BR UNITS aft er ortgege o. 111• e v. on to "·o. Exceptionally nice I E:tceptional. slurlio 1ype, all 3.16 •E, 17th Street beach. 7IOl Seas~re. Avall l\10VING-TRANSFERRED-CUSTOM 2110 Newport Blvd., CM Back Bey 2 BR, 1\1 BA. SubtetTl1tteAn W .ct thru June 25· $2S.J, &12-7671 Tired of fighting wl'lh WAIT Furniture ltfttal . VI E\V OF TJIE BAY-2 br, garages. 32 spaces. E.Sitle, Mon•v ant 250 Housel Unfurn. 305 renanb? Call the problem 2147 VISTA LOREDO 517 \V. 19th, C.l\1. 54S-34Sl s~:RP ro;,~cl, \Br. ql~;:_t crpt~. <lrp~. hl!ris pool & C.l\I. Cali Mr, Harris, Sou1h COMMERCIAL STABLES .'IOlvera -South Coast Real NEEDS Ann.helm 77~.280() g, a on y, .. ). sundeck, Adults ' $170 . Coe.st Realtors, 545·8424. Construction & permanent l;G;e;n;e;r;a;I =====;;;;;; Estate, Property !'11anage· A Good T'nant Lallabra 694-3708 540-97n or 547-2682 673-3690. financing needed. $35,(llXL men t Divi8ion. J Bedrooms JIOLIDAY PLAZA 11-CO:\tPLETELY furni~hed ;i-7,=='.,-.,--c---- TRADE Equity 24xli0 Olym· Owo·< 673 . .,,,.,9. UN IVERSITY !'ARK 54!>-8424 3 1 Br Ap! 131 Flov.·er Balboa Island I plan mohile home, locall'fl " "'""' Baths DELUXE Spacious 1 BR · · in beauti!ul Orange O.lun1y Mortgages, 2 BR, 2 Ba's ..... · $250-$300 2 BR. DUPLEX Tu-o-S!ory furn apt $135. Heated pool. St., C1.I, SlOO/mo. 646-7883. COZY 1 Br. apl, yrly, No park for equity riuplex. Trust Deeds 260 J BR. 2\~ Ba'1 "" $.'lCJ0.$325 c~. drps, bltins, Carpels&. drapes Ample parking. No children • pets. Squares only, Ref's. triplex, 4-p!e:<, C.'.\f. are.a. 2 Eleg11nt 3 bdrm., 21!J hath Lrg. Fencad Yd for Double Garage IElKtricl · no pels, 1365 Pomona, 1.D_•_n_e_P_.,_n_t ______ 1 SlG:i + util's. 673-1503. I * 7>-1~141 * $35,000 1st TD on J acn> toivnhouM!~ · •··· · $375-$425 Children & Pets. Ready Now C!\1. SINGLE, TV, pool, pell ck. LSE 2 BR, 2 Ba un i. Stove, CORONA de! r.t11r / 4 lnconir estate parcel v.•/ magnifi-3 Br, 2 ba , fam rm ••· • $340 Prlv gar $150 S100 -Or Offer $25 & up \\"kiY. DAN A re frig, cpls/drps. l~eat. unlt1 on 2 adj lots, open N'l'll vie11'. 9,..,n inf. 5 }T 4 Bdnns.,E2L ~~~~····· S260 .1111 Paulari ~. c.'M. 549-17~ f ~:~:~~~~T 1HMwa~.na l nn 341.11 Coast Adlts only. $225. 6TJ-D486. beam ceil's. frpt ·~ under due dalf", 12'1(, disrouot. 3 BR & t 2 b ~ VJF:\V -3 Br .• rpts, n~~. 4 Bdrms., 2 baths ...... $.125 sq ft bonus rm. Dream 11 Y Huntington Beach rnrl. gara,i;:P . Yrly S32:l $60,000. Ov..-nr 837-2S47_e\'(' I Bkr. 4!13-1153 or 4g.1.66J2 CORONA DEL l>IAR am, a. 150 Sst ~· b ·' lndu1trial Property 168 t:i'('§. (i ed h kitc:hen, panelled Jlv'g rm l STEPHENS & KAYE \Vinton Real ty 67~3.'.'.31 TRAJLER .,,,, •.• .... l•l,000 1 1st Trust Deeds r .,, "'/!n>lc. Dbl gar & SP!'.:CIALtZtNG IN BEAUTIF"UL f1JRN. APTS. Balboa Panlnsula " ~ 0 I I kJ 1:170 I It $14[J..$llhl. Qu1,1. pr iv, patio, l "--":..:...;,.::.;,;_c.::;::::..... __ 11q . fl. on l ~• fl'nced arr<'~ $13,500 !~~ n73 ,~•.-s, mo !t'. . om~ & Smaller Units. 2 \\'tll'drobcs, f,....lc, dressing "-"'·not C I l -""""'" -ro 645-0122 .,.. ATIRACT. L£T dplx, 2 br ncl<.Lll S, $15.000. fl R~. "' interest payable at I n -loll-I Vista Del Oro 1.,,~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I rm. locked Sf'fl. gar. Pool. + <len, bench & SllQpping, 673-265-1 / , EAL TY !'OH Lease R39 Santiago Rd, Newport Beach 644-1133 1~ Sauna Rl'r rm. \'-L b .,, . 8 nrv-. ' si;.o mo All due incl year Univ, Park Cenler, Irvine C.\·1 4 BR, 1~ BA. 2 BR FURN $155 POOL 17'01 Keclson Ln. Ii blk IV. Ad!ls, no pets.. $190 + util's. ~...... UI" to 6Ult -.~· \,,,,,_ ''"· ,.·-. c I A ,., I n1~ d di • 6700112 aft 6 • w'·-d· f . ,. ~~' . 11 1 """int, 833·08"" rep"''· <'.'"...,..15, dr.-•. "" <tits "'S a ls No t B h Bl d SI ) '~--=~.;,cc:.,:::.:.:..:;"cc.~M=•·~· -sq t, 111·1. Prorluchon 71·1'87'J.J433 ext 502 "J' ...., ~,.... .. ~ • • • • ., • .. o e11 c '' on at'r .1: P l N large f,ncecl yard. Clean ELF~GANT 2-.~ty home. 3 pets. (Teen ok). • ,,.2.7848, • 1 BR 4-plcx, $160. Cpl. a«, .B Own~r G73-:1:lt:i CASH FOR 2nd TD'S LEASE on OPTION & l!veab!e. Oose to schools. Brms. 2 Ba, 3 car garngl' Also UN FURN $135. 6-12-9520 <>"I AKE Rcfr ig, 2 hlk~ 10 heh. 675-8765 eves. !llr. Fry, 64.2-3573. ,5 BH, 3 BA, form. liv s, Need referencc11. 54:>--7359 llnf ori Lido's hest street. CHATEAU LAPOIN DEL . L ' MANOR LI>':. 1 H no ans-67;,...Jt:ll. 13.iO · • l'vtul!11.n Reali 540-2960 DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt. 536.6717 •PIS reno eac Lotl for Sale 170 I <!in, Jrg fam I'm, 2 gty, VERY Pvt 2 b< hom• 1 to 5 yr lea~ available. . • TE BR. $140, Pool, patio, adul!s, C • I B h /mo. or Assume low w/stove dbl gar tri yd Y ' Pool. Close to 1h0Pll. $150.1---------- MONARC!l BAY rare ot't>ll n KouMifor Rent JI ~] in!, rates. 5-16-1713. $165. ~. Ut ' & last'. "BLUFFS" dlx 4 Br. 3 Ba Adults, no pet.s. 1 BEDROO:\-f, netr bch. $130 *THE PALISADES* v!ew Joi. E:<cius ive priv. . $1E-Nrar 2 Br. w/gar, Lrg 6(;,...lt69. lam rm. lrplc, !ncd yd, 1941 Pomona. Av~ C.M. per mo. Tradc~inds Really, * Ne\\', ocean view beach community. L<-8.M!ho!{I fncd yrd for kid~ Ir_ ptota. 1,3~.-,-AM--~--.,.,,-to-d-,.,,.-pool. Nr schls. $350. fi.14-2730 ' 847-3511 * Lwrurlou11 1 br apts $25,t":JO. 496-4819 Houaes Furnished 300 Blue Beacon* 645.0111 F/A heal, f~c. 1ri )Td'. 2 BR romp\ re-mod, crptd, Balboa Island $125-$135. LGE. modem 1 hr * Lge doubJ, wardrobes PRIVATE Par1y wishes to 3 BDRJ\t, Family rm., park $265 ls! & las!; $50 clean'g steps to the waler. Yrly • Furn Apt • nr bch; crpL"I, drps, etc, * Private patios llell large Emerald Bay llke yard. <mta Me,a. Klds c1,p. Call ~eves aft 7. or Winter rental. Sharp. Ph: e Balboa Isle e 409 Calif. 53&-4261, 847-5169 * Oean ell elt>clric view lol. c~, General OK, brk., $200 • month. NO FROf\'T House, 2 Bdtrns.. 598-4969. * 673-1067 aft 5pm * DELUXE Bachelor Unlt& • * Range:B, refrig, cable 'JV LAl{E E15inon: 3 adj FEE. 540-lTlO. 2 ti.., carp .• drapes, S25ll 3 HOMF.S in Newport Shore! SMALL but very attractive \Valk to Ocean. Utll pd. * J{eavy shag carpeting hlll1ide like view lots, nr SUO-Sep. 1 Br cotta.g:e, £. $150-Redec. 3 Br nr bch. Month. ~nt 675-2101. Ea. has 4 BR. S300 -$375 l BR pt LINDBORC CO. SlS-2579 * ~tra. carports, boat sp, eulno. $3000 cash, 536-2-449, side, CM. Adhs. Avail now. Stove/cpts, kids/pell ok. EXECUTIVE hom• _ 2 hr & MOO mo. on yrly lease a · 673-4324. LUX 2 Br, 2 Ba. 1 BR-eep * Adultt, 00 pets. Sl.75 53(1...llfiO. Blue Beac:on * 66-0111 Bl B * '4S..Olll 'Caywoorl Realty 548-1290 • shower at 130.1 Walnut. See 35322CamlnoCapistrano Apt ue ••con den, Iii ba, dbl Pf'al'!, NEWPORT Island 2 BR Belboa p..,1n1ula M-219 15th St HB. 10, l\1anage:r, 495.iisS or 9u1lnes1 C?re>rtunlty bltns, petlo, gardener, S:l65. tlrepl f "''• • 49&-1495. Bu1iness Buslnet1 Adult.II, 00-7755 or 64l-0506. · sep. arn rm. ~ ba. BAGIELOR t f l pd Oppo~~·~i:c!Y._ __ 2::00'.:'...._:0::Jppo!2::!rl.!:un~l::;tyL--'200=: IOJTE cottage, 2 br, {rplc, ~7~-"1ar. S295 Lease, BAYFRONT·YEARLY S75/mo. i:: '10 u ~actt: Corona del Mar 200 $©\\dtl1A-.!£t.~S& The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle .7, ' • ,.~~~~!~~slflTERS I~ r 1· ,, 1: ,. r I • ~~~~"~~1 "Tl!" I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWEllS IN CLASSIFIED 700 I farn. rm. SZIS, $250 furn. Duplex, loW'l!r 2 Br, 2 Ba. Student pref'd. 642-8.~ Avail J/20. 642-..1645. Or•nt• rum or Unlum Pvt beach L a_ h & patio. No pets, $300 per agun• u.ac 2 BR. 19119-C Oiar!e St. NOHL Ranch view hOme, 5 mo. 673--0774 . SUO.f'URN. cozy Mudlo far $140/mo. No J)'ts, 1 child br, ! ba, din I: tam rm, PENINSULA Point. t..ge 1 1. Lovely 1 Br. apt. $150. ok. 642-22S9, 646-7017. water tall. Many xtru. Br. $150. Yearly. To dftlr. Nr. beach. 494-4200 30v~~', 2 n~p1!': r;: : :0·J637-50:. 1 ;:J:..:!~11· 615-tl58, l5f4 $30 WK LUXURY drps. $.265. 546-5793. an uan ap 1trano • & up Bachelol'!I 1\naJee 1 $25 WK-OCEANFRONT • • ... · 3 br house-Newly carptled. 1----------IL.ovtly Baehdors, 1 _ BR. Bdnn, ateps to bch, all utll, Stove, $175. 2 children ok. 3 BR, 2'ii> BA Spanish town-Maid 1ervlce. Poot Utll. htd pool, lln,n,, rec rm, 642--0857. bouae, bU1ns, cpl1, drps, • &Th-8740 • res9urant, coi;kt.allll, danc-1:3~B~~--~-.~~----hl-I pool. elec 1ara~. many OC Ing. r, ... .._ .. , ;u, Pt', nr sc 1, othtr extru. S2l5 JeaR. EANFRONT APT5. Village tnn Hotel Apts m ~ti. 1918 Pomona. 6U-D3() dl.1; tl73-l028 eve.. VERY CLEAN-NO PE'I'S, 494.!WJ6 M()-.900t . I s;jfti;j~~;.;j;i;~'-1' ,-,=~*~6~73-<~921~•~-~ I~==:-===== 2 BR. I "-~i. I Santa Ano Ho,....ts ..... ""'" • drpl. 'II"' 1 BR. furn. Utlllties pakl. Newport Beach Yard. Garq~. $165/mo. m 1--. --------Sl25/mo. Adults. 310 E. l--------- E. 18th St. &U-8029 2 Btt. hou1e., chlldttn I pell Balboa Blvd, BaJ~ 1 BR, UtU'a pd. ·refr!.e .. Jtow OK. N. Bay area. n25/mo. C d I M OCEANFRONT 1 Br. IdeAI $90 mo. Adulhl 0 n t y . Aw.U Feb lst. mu Birch •ron• • ar location -palnred. can>eted. S49--353.l. St, PH. 67S-2177. 1----------1 $130. mo. utll pd, \•early ""~~-~~---1 ·=.o.;;;,,:-'::::;'-.,,.---l·OCEANVU dplx ll!OO 11q. rt., or teuonal (213) 898-3627. 2 BR ....... t Sludlo &pt. TIME FOlt 3 "" 2 Ba, ... dlb pr, OCE. ·-"NT 333 E. 21st Street, Cmta 1'1~" .n.v 2 hr, w/w Meu. "'UICK be.Jc, Imm. OC1:. r t f '1. crpts, 1 P.l'll&'e. $175, 11,._2 BR, 1 BA. F«>c«I .'I" CASH . 675-4113 Wintor. '"'""or er>-0746. ~ :nn ... _, ----TH 0 Pvt. bach. nn l b&. 3 BR, 2 ba, Uptlaln. Dlhwsr, ,..... ·~~ ,_, C>I, It U"'H A NI I f ,, N 675--4092 al! 5 Pm. w ce Y um"· o Sondeck, GI'# ptld, Quiet Eesl Bluff DAILY PILOT caotoina. '™"" '"'· >44-334S. F I BR. nicely furn, harbor F1JRN. 1 BR. Collage, $90 ounl1ln V•lley ''le"'·· oo children or pets. mo lncl'd uUI. Yearly. lnq; WANT AD Sl90. 67l-2811 ~wa. 315 34th S!rt'f'I NB. ,..Ail-UL'\' hon1e • t br. 2 ti.I, bltn1. S)l(I mo. AVIJll fmmcdlattlY. fi.f.Z..2284 642.5678 $75. Bar helor apt. Utllltles LARGE 1 br, ~teps !o B11y paid, Sing!• peraon only. A-Sch. Adlta, r.., pets. an- 673-8938. nual , $145. 613-2164. ~· ~~;~ ON TEN ACRE.$ J A 2 BR. Furn A Unhlr!I nteplac.t1 I prty, patlol I Poola. Tema. O>ntnM Bktlt, ._, Sea l..a.M, CdM tu.2b11 IM&rArthur r.!' 0..C H-.y) * COROLIDO APfS * 2 Br, 1tudi0g Ir 1treet le\lels, Sl.&5 & up, P'nthouses S220. Dshwhr, lrpJ, dbl carport. Pool. 613-3378 DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba., bltns, dshwhr, tlt'IV shag crplg, h'pl , laul'l!l.ry nn, food pctlo A pr, S245. 6'4-8302 2 BR. Frplc. Stove/Rdrig. N'w flhg crpt. encl gar. Sl95/m6. No pets. 673--ll09. NEARLY New 2 br, 1 b111., •hq: CJl'll, blha & drp1 w/frplc. S200 mo. 675-5724. BR.AND new 2 A 3 Br apts. So of h•«y. 322 MarguPrlte. G44-13-C2 or 673-2222. 3 BR, 2 Ba, cpb, drp!, stove relrtg, tlwhr, garb dl1p!'. $2!'.iO/mn. fi7>2698. CLASSIFIED HOURS 8:00 11 .m. to !5 p.m. ?11ondny thru Friday 9 10 noon Saturday Advert i~cr!I may place thrir ads by tc:Jrphone COSTA ?11ESA OFflCE 3.10 W. Bay 642-5678 NF:\VPORT BEAClf 221 1 \V. Balboa Blvd, 642·5678 llUN'JTh"GTON BEAl1.Z 17875 Bench Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUN1\ BEACII :.!:.!2 Forest Ave, 494-9466 SAN CLE?.fENTE 30:l N. F'.l Camino Real •1:J2-·1420 !\OflTH C0UNTY diaJ free 540-l:.!20 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Dendltne for copy & kills is 5 :30 p.n1. the day be:· forf' publication, l'xcept r o r l\londay Edition ,,·hen dC'adline Is Satur- tlny, l2 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Adverliseni should check their adl daily & report errors immedlal<'ly, THE DAn. Y PILOT fl!t!l11mes liabtlity for the first in· correct Insertion only. CANCELLATIONS: When kllllnl! an 1111d be s11re to make a record of the KILL. NUY..UlER given you by your ad taker as receipt of your cancPllatlon. This k.tll iiumber must be pre- icnted by the 11.dvertlser fn case ot a dispute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECTION OF N EW AD BEFORE RUNNING: E\lery effort is n1ade tn k.lll or correct a ntw ad that has been ordE'ftd, b11t we cannot guan n- f@e to do 10 until the ad ~ appeared in Ow pa,.. ..... DThfE-A.UNE ADS : 'lbne ads are atrlcttY cuh In advllnC"e by mall or .at ""Y one ot our of· fltft, NO phone ordera. TifE DAILY PILOT ,... serves the rlf?h t to clu-slfy, edit, censor or ,.. tulle t1.ny adverHsement. 11nd to chang~ Its rat~ It. rf'l:l1 latlons wllhout prior notlC'f'. CLASSIFIED • MAILING ADDRESS P. o . Box 1 ~, C.01ta M"sa 9'lli2(l • . ' . • . ' ...... . ~ . . . OAll't' PJLOT :!91 ---1~ I -··-lr!l [ ....,_.. .. _ lr!ll _,_ ...... lltl l _,,, .... J[!][ ...,_.,,, .... )[~J .__I _·--1~* --*-*-*--* -*1 Apt. Unfurn . 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apta., Aph., Newport Beach 1---------Fum. or Unfurn. 210 Fum. or Unfum. 370 l--'-------Trader's Paradise lines times dollars Co1ta Mesa Costa Met• Costa Mei• Huntington Beach 1-----------------'--.CC:...IPROf"ES&ONAL woman or 1;;;;,;~;;;;;:;:;;:,;;;;;,;;;;,;;;,1 ~=.!!..!::'.:!-----I .::;::;.:..:.:=::.. _____ I''-"';:,:,:""-:::,:..==~--Huntin..tan Beach Huntlnn+nn, Beacti student, near 15th &: lrvltlt'. I! $1 75 BRAND NEW NR new :z Br, l\~ Ba. 2 Bdrms 2 • th ~ ~ S80 :>t&-7386 LA COSTA · ~ot1d-. !tvtdshwhr. ga.r. • • u3 · mo. I 2 br crnts .i~ garage ' .. ~ R t I I Sh NE\V 1 .\ 2 br Billi wt · " · Ult'<', Avl now, 766 W. Wilson. en a • o are . '· I m. 11.1-C V.'oodland Place $1~ MONTI! . POOL oft Q. .JJ. ming pooJ . & garage. AU --~~:'."''':'_'.•~_'&1~2~-5550=""~-1 ."'2"'::1'5!1~~:;------1 • f \\'ANT I I f utilities paid. $150 10 $110 cpts/drps/bll.ins, pa1io Q Utll a ermo~a em J()Omma1e, Prt' mo. Adults, nu pets. 354 BRAND NEW 3-PLEX Dana Point Kids & pet~ 01<. lrg rooms Agto 30-45 lor 2 BR, Oakwood 26°• '"I•• 11 ll Casual .~-te ti · g E t La Qu· ta H Ga.rden apt. Day• -Avocado St CM. 642-5401 2 BR. Garage, Extras. OC EAN VIEW ""u.> 11are, · · ;)WJI Vl.Jl • n er ID er-·lo~, ft J "'J'16 ' I h Im h & U 5'\S-9038, alt 5-642-8175 1 le.ft. $175. 645-35-\4 Lge 2 br 2 ba, d!nln~ rm, "'""'"'~ : a er p.in. J.>\>O mosa s us green a osp ere stro lree- 2 BR. l BA. Garden Units. Shag crpts, <lrps, dshwhr, ~l·I~ · 2 BR. Ne1v drps, crpts, patio, heam cl'ilings, lrplc, !ltove. Adults, no pets, call gar. 2650 Elden, 531--0062 642-5848 a!! 7 pn1 & Sun, $165/n10. 2 BR. Duplex. Bltns. Pvt 2 RR garstgr + pnrking, ytl. 368-A 16th Pl Of. 1 c:rl)IS, riq1s, h!tns. Adults child ok. $159/mo. 549.3666 only. 2210 llutge rs Dr. HEARL Y NEW 646-6919. l BR, l ba. Crptg, drps, sell OPEN llOUSE SAT & SUN cleaning, gas Ol'Cn, encl 10-2, BRANO NEW Eastslde pr, Patios. 548-3005, 377 W, l & 2 BR. l & 2 baths. \VUson. $1 5.5 to $195. Crpb, dt')JS, 1..:C:::C:------- dsh1vhr, self clean gas own, $150 · LRG 2 Br, l~S. Ba all wtr & gas pd, Hid pool. ~plit Jev. l mmac. No pe ts, 32~ E. 20th St. 646-9148 Mgr 2868 No. l LaSalle. ~9-352-1 TIIE GABLES • $165 LGE. dlx. 2 Br. 11h ba.lcony,' erpta, d.,,., bltns. 2 BR, Sl.55 Up.. -3 BR lined walk ways lo your ~t l\IATURE E1np1eyed >n'on1au, 11&0 UP p "LL UTILITIES I CLUDED no smoking I drinking. $185 837·3927. · all(), poo l, " Ass"m" '•' '"'''· M••• <l•I Own ·11 d ~·1 · · children ok. MORA KAI 1 BR. Unf, $150 -F urn . $180 " .._ " er >n'I tra e .... " equity East Bluff Ap1s . 1118$1 l\lora Kai Lanl'. 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210 ~1ar. 5'19-04Zl , 6-8 Pl\f. in 65~1 Executive 3 BR, 2 1.~ blk J<:. of Beach olf .\IID age t>n1p. y,'On1an, share BA home in Arcadia for Garfield. 962-89!H 3 Spac. flr. plans, deco:. furnishings: llve n1y beaut. lge. 2 Br. apt. beach or Orange Co, unit.~. N.EWPORT B•EACH 2 AITRACTrvE 1 BR apts, within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. No ri rink or smoke . 213.355.7312 collect, Villa G r an ad Apts. nr Huntington 11 8 r b 0 u r. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ ~s-&132. 'l~R-~~,.-,-,,-=,.-n~C~~-n-,-,.-1-,. F'our bedrooms with balcon. $JGO-Sl10. 846-9152. seculded sealing compl. w/Ramada & Faun-SHARE 1ny y,•aterlront home Commercial Jot, D&na Point, le~ above & below. Graciousl,1=~. =.::..=..:c=---tain. y,•/ dock. ~1an, 30.fiO years. \Vant inco1ne, TD's, or ~ living & quiet sUITOundlng . rv1ne * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect lighting. $150/mo. 615-4331 The Doyle Q::impany tor family with children. I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;: * Delu•e r•n9e & ovens * Plush sh•g crptg. GIRL Tu shatt Victoria E11es: 838-6341 Near O::irona de! Mar High[• * Bonu1 stor•9• spac• + Cov. carport Beach house. 2 trpll', ocn Fully equipped Duft & !old School. Fireplace, wet bar & NOW LEASING I * Sculptured mar ble pulfman I: til• baths vw, beam clg, 494-4631. laundry, est l2 yrs, vaiue built.In kitchen appliances. • * El•9 •nt recreation room. G f R .,. 835 Af.llGOS WAY 644-2991 N•w. family and adults unil<1 FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY ar•9•a or ant ._;, $10,!XXl; suil couple, £x. Coldwell Banker & Co. with total recreation club Blk f H change mobile or motor Managing A.gent 541_5221 and pre-school. 1, 2, & 3 · rom untinglon Center, San Diego STORAGE Garages, home or sm house. 548-5640 bdrma from $L50. Nr. shop. Frwy .• Goldenwest Collel?"e. Phone ~1 ::~t~. pm. 6 Jou. 1.2 acre!, tree & ping, goll, schools. Jusl San Diego Frwy. lo Beach Blvd., So. on clear, R-2. Huntington Har. south ot San Dieg1:1 Fwy. on Beach 8 blks. lo Holl; W. on Holt to •. , Office Rental 440 bour &rt"a. wan 1 income THE SEVILLE K' , B' l " B I Adi l ba. Quiet: adlts. G.E. 1t. Twnhoo.!e. 2 BR, 2% BA . • i a, w rar. 5, Storage. 240 E. 16th Pl crpts, drps, ranae, fncd yd, 548-6432. Bltns, frplc, encl dbl gar. Culver Dr., Irvine. 833-373.1. LaQuint a Hermosa 714: 847·5~ I SUPER-DELUXE QUAtJTY property. Submit all otters. PARK WEST 1-2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq. c"c:"'c:·,:53&4~· :..c."':.:c..· ---~ pa tio. 636-4120 752 Am igos \Vay. 675-5033. 24;;1.o Oranae Ave $155 * * UNUSUALLY spe.c l Fountain Valley 2ti19-E Santa Ana Ave $155 br 1% ba f.am Aize studlo.1 .:..::;::.;;;:;;;c._:..::.;;.;,c... ___ I CAPIS'rRANO (.ZONED 4 + Acres, lrec & clear, $1.30,000. TRADE Jo~OR ln· come or??? REAL"roR 5-\8-1711 llavc new dble wide 2-atory mobile home. \Vant smaller sngl 'ol'ide mobile home, late model motor home or what have yoo. 673.6800. Owner will trade 50M equity in 2 C.M, tri·plt>xcs for 2n :ir more units in Orange Co. Principals Only. 549-013.l. frade Lake Arrowhead \01 w/lake & rounrry elub priv. neges, $15,000 ('() FOR beach ()!"Op, condo, apts. house. '.;ell(> or Dick, 714/822-0569. APARTMENTS Apt. Unfurn., 365 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ft, oU\ce lulte!. Immed. oc-'70 V\V Squareback, fully Owned and Managed by ----------'Apt1., cupancy, Orange County. equipped auto. Will trade What do you have IO trade? l,..~"".,,•~1"'~~ine"':'C~o~m~p~a~ny!!!!!!! l .N~e~w~po~rt!_!B~•!•~c~h~---1 ;:':::~:;::-:-:-----·I 1.irport Irvine Commerc• for '69 oi· '70 club wagon. List it here -in Orange HARBOR GREENS ,:'.,,.:::0 .::35':;:':i_"·_1""_· _"_"_ 527 _ 0 ' ALL NEW -VALLEY PARK Costa Mesa Complex, adj. Alrporter Even exchange, County's largeRt read trad- ' •. opens new dooi-s for THIS IS IT $165 -2 BR, New shag. Bltn.~. liiiiiijijjjijiiijiiiiij!liiiijijijj;iiiiml llotel & Restaul'llnl, bank!, 5'18-0089 . t 64J.S6?S GARD!':N a: STUDIO APTS 2 BR delux, Clean, Quiet, APARTMENTS Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR'•. from $1JO. CplS/drps, bltns, beam ceil· 2700 Peterwm Way, C.M. lng. Adlts, no pets, $150 YOUNG FAMILIES Bachelor. 1 ~r. ~ liv rm, lHd Pool. Quiet adultJ: no San Diego & N'pt F'wys mg pos . . . . "°'' • "''"" Util pd. 1160, ,. ... 64>-2514 • VILLA CORDOVA UNCROWDED PARKlNG * * * * * * 546-0310 mo, 1974 \VaUce, 546-5386. NEW DlJPLEXES DELUXE TOWNHOUSES NEWPORT BACK BAY 2 BR. Apt1 $160 675-1892 LOVELY 2. Br, trpl, cpts, LOWEST RATES l ~I i.2.3 BR. Wa.sher/dryer book-2 BR. Gerden Apt1 $175 drps, patK>, lndcy, etc. NEW NEW NEW Owner/mgr. 717'.! DuPont Dr. -- up, end gar, patio, frcd air. 2 BR. Townhouses $115 Laguna Beach Adlts, no pets. $110. 646-1912 Rm. 8, Newport Beach ON 2?.=~~:~~=:.~:1:,, J>re.schoolcenter.Adultpool. roRrentorJeaseyearround Y::e~~~. ~ii~~. ~b~ Luxury 40UnltAdult s.n:s7~P~~ken I ~ts )~I Pmonals l ~ 3 & 4 BR.J Ba. Frplc, fam bltns, r/o &: retrig. No pets. Olildren's pool. Prlv petioa. 1 yr old 2 bdrm apt, kitchen mo. 499-2128. Apartment Complex room, double garage. Buut. $140. 961-1455 or 513-7729 Elec kitchens. Wall to wall furn., cwean view, w/v.· cpt, l·LA-R~G~E~2 7b-,-. 71i;-7ba-,-<-'1'-"· 222 Forest Avenu~ Laguna Beech lounge. Pool. Billiards. closefl!I & carpets. 2 play-unde...,....ou~.i pkg, d--10 d bl H I' Ad"'! , Chl'.1-DELUX, clean 2 Br, 114 ba, •p,· '"' v= rps, Ins, nr. oag ~osp . .., <>< •u.u:ns area grounds. Carports & stor· very nice beach. 494-9633 or $1&5 mo. 642-4381, 64.2-1771 ,250/mo 6'2-0300 o:An ""47 studio, Cpts, drt>!, pool, · ' """"'"' adlu , 1 child ok. 6'" "'96. age. 494-1441, Ask for 1\fr. BraC'k. "D"V'l DUPLEX., upper. \Vaterfront, 1 & 2 BEDROOMS FURNISHED OR UN FURN. -DESK SPACE 1 .:.A~n~nou;;;:~n~ce:;.;;m~ecn~l~•c..._..:S::.:00 Per1onal1 SJ() Quiet Adult Llvinn $110. 2 BR. l"Ai ba studio, 17"6 S E I'd St OCEAN VIEW -Lrg 1 &. dock. :Z br, w/w crpts, drps, ··• ~ • UC I • =: BR unfum apts, Crpts, bi.tns. Adults. 6134927. • Spacious Apartments 305 No. El C•mino 1 & 2 BR. Shag cpts, bllns, redec, cpt/drps, adj !hop'g, (jlllt south of \Varner In drns, bit-ins, patios. \Valk-e S•-cial cabinet SP'" I Re•I ATI'ENTION ARTISI'S, we I---------- have the gallery. 11 you NICE young mnn 24, wants have any art work or any oon-speaking fril'nds, Box art objects to sell, please 1213, San Clemenic. beaut lndscpd, $150 & $110 548-8301, 213/592-5227 .,.. S I a .,.. S.:.in C emenf• ----------I Fountain Valley) Ing distance to town. JOO a n a ""na e Lock garages w/ lg slor 492-4420 call 67>-3161, ~3589. ACCEPTING New p i a no students to learn theory, !ight reading etc. can Bruce {U.C.L mus I c bkgrndl ~6-4418. Social Club5 SJl incl all util, AdultJ; only no 2 Br, Crpb, drps, 1613 San· Phone (714) 54(1..4715 Cliff Dr, Laguna Beach I:::::::::;:::;::;::;:: I• Bm ceil • Lndry • Patios .---....::::.:::::::..._ __ _ r;!~· Avocado St. 646-097!1 ta Ana Ave, CM. $150/mo. ::--::---:----;::--:----1 ~'""~54~98~.,.---,7'".,.-,,.-I VILLA MARSEILLES • Dwhr/displ • Gas stove ~ s.q. ft ~und lloor, SINGLES Club no1v forming. Dating, Social, .\latTillgf>. For applicalion • wri(0 Pru-1 gramming, Box 191, Dann Point, Ca. 92629. I 542-1279, eves 54l-8572. Hunt"rnnfon Beech NE\V 1 bed~m. J1L o..~1h.<, • Special soundproofing prestige \Ve~t Ir . Dr. Pvt VILL • MES• •PTS • ·~ 1~ "" BRAND NEW entrance. Util paid, Park-"' "" "" • -----------1 Patio-Pool. $169.50, Zl75 S. • Shag carpel<!, drapes ·,.,, $85 mo. 1141 W••l•l'<ff 2 BR, Prlv patio. Htd pool. 1 &: 2 BR unfurn, util paid, SPACIOUS " .... 2 car encl'd gar. Children pool, no pets. $145. 1 BR. near beach, newly Coa:;t. 494-0209. Eves 494-1312 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. GAS & WATER PAID ,_o_r~, ~"'-"-'°="-·----- .,..,elcomf', no pets please! 642-2149 decorated w/pool .$140 per N 8 ch Adult Living AIR Cond, crpts, lacing j 1r-1 S1G5 n10. 719 \V. \Vllson. * NEW LUXURY 1 & 2 Br. mo. Also, 2 br., bltn1 & ewport ea furn. & Unfurn. 2323 Elden Ave, ~ Beach Blvd, Reas. Call Penona!1 ~~~~~~~~~~ i 646-12!>1 dwhr, shag crpt, garages. refrig, crpts I; drps. $150'1----------Di!'=hwasher .color coordinat. CM 842-2525 or ~w n er ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;::·~~ r ' ATTRAC. Like new. 1 & Pool & Rf!c. Quiet adult incl uW's. PARK NE\VPORT ~ care ed appliances -plush ahag 1. .. 1. -3• or u•.1121 '.::21::3::/3::94-00:..::;::15::· _____ I I I ~!.: !. ·oo &1"''10 Tradewinds Realty, 847-851] free livg overlkg the waler. ~ £ -£ 1· a • Lott and FOi.hi 2 BR aplll. Dshwhr, ,. ..... ts. ivi..., ........, · carpt>I -choice ot 2 color ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!ii~IVERY nice otfiee in Laguna ""uto tran1portat1on 525 _, W"LK TO BE'CHll 7 pools, 7 tennis cts $750.000 2 ba •· ll B I drps, b!tnl!, Htd pool. All $30 wk-1 per. w/kit i35. "" "" -scheme9 • t • .., • 1ta .,~8 .. 111... 1 & 2 BR f"m each, w w cpt, drps, LOVELY.NEW 1 4 2 BR's. Spa. From Sl7:> to s.;50--"· , _ __, __ _. u-c u UJ " 494 =,, 49414 '1 A k util pd. Only nso 4' Maid ser, linens, TV &: tele. Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 ..,..,wets • l"'luiv:~ wwu-f t OFFERING· . ........, or . " · s lor \VANTED: Very mature and S16.1/mo. No children. Jr1:1: Seal.ark }.lotel 2301 Npt Ctpts, drp1, dishwashers. T ho El kt robe doors -indirect light· 0.,'1"1". "1,man". •0~.:. .. ,, o;w' (<'n. Mr. Brack. do A 109 Palm, st?-3957 sty own uses. PC. · In kl h b •·•--.. ~~· 1----------307 Avoca · pt 9 645-09St Blvd. 646-7445. ..:.:::.:.=c:c,::.:.:,:c.c..._~~I pri. pat or bal Subtrn parkg, Ing tc en • rea.......,t 2 Br), displs, shag crpts, CORONA DEL MAR respoMible 21 year old or Found (frH ads) 5SO older female lo share <lriv-l----------I Ing and ga.s in VW bus . ' BR D"plcx at! 2 R NEW 2 BR 2 b F I" ·d bar -h""e private fenced .. u • • garage. * DELUXE 1 & B . , a, l'P ... , opt mat ser cpts, drps Just .... drps, Jacuni & Sauna bath. 2 Rm auile, pvt ba, pvl entr. Dean, vacant on quiet SI. Garden Apts. Bit-ins, prlv. shag cpts, drps, Bltn11, N. of Fashion lsl at Jam· patio • plush landscaping • Huge Pool. FOR ADULTS Prkg, crpt/dri>, util pd, Good driving record! Am FOUND on Jan, 7 light bt>ige 9 mon1h old mate puppy going as far north as Couer al lluntinttton 11 a rb 0 r D'Alene, Idaho. Am leaving boardwalk Shopping Center approx Jan. 15th. Cuntact 846-0016 $125. Small child &/or sml patio, heated pool, frp~. garage. nr bch, S 1 7 5. boree & San Joaquin Jlills brick Bar-B.Q's ·large hut.. only. $145/mo. Owner. 673-4l151 dog ok. 646-8362; 5-ls-4969; Adults . $145 mo. 546-5163. , 646--0841 or ~3528. Rd. 4l44·1900 for leasing info, e<I JX>Ols & lanai. MERR1u•c WOODS NEWPORT tfl 6-12--0191. Also 2 BR houses 3101 So. Bristol St. m.l"'I 0 ces, c Pt s · !urn & unlurn. e e BIGGER than a bom. CHEZ ORO APTS PENINSULA Area -Lge 3 {\!. }.U, N. ol So. Coas Plaza) 425 F\1errimac \\'ay drps, ocean view, from $65 Jack at 551-4982 or 5-13-3990 3 Br, 2~~ ba stud io. 8234 Atlanta, 1-l BR, pool, br, 2 ba, upper duplex . Costa Mesa per mo. Onr Aft 4l pm : :i.lODERN 2 Br, l~i ba Sl95/mo. No pets. MS-5~0. private garage, \Va.shen, BltTl!'l, w/w crpts, freshly Santa An• 61:>-4641 WANTED : Rider/driver to F'OUND 1/11, Sm blk poodle. share expenses to Nashville, female, Has Ilea colla r $.· Tenn 011 or about l/23. Scottish plaid co l l a r 962-3415. Y•lllskers, Vic: Orange' Coasi among pine11 on cul.<Je.sac. 833-3540 dryers, 5.16-81138; 53&--2727 painled. Very nict'. 11:, blk PHONE: S57-1200 1 BR. furn. Sl3!1. 2 BR lurn1 ..:::_=:.:__~-=-- Encl gar. Nr bus. Come $1 55. 2 BR unfum. $15.5. 600-1200 SQ. FT. SHARP L 1 b !if/ W •LK TO OCEAN to best Bay beach, 1 blk p I Bit 1 d 21 see many luxury \terns. g. r, crp 11• "" s-1 oo · 115, crp 11, !'PS, m OHices, CM, 646-30 bltins. Quiet bld'g. · t 1 BR Crpl~ dn>~ 110me w/ to ocean, "~., nlO year Y children no pets 325-J E Adults. $155. 1'1gr, 124 E. ,_,;. pati'o•. 1·"-11'"" -· lease. No pets. 673-9217 CAN'T BE BEAT . . . 3100 NEWPORT BLVD NB Co!l('ge 615-005-1. SJO l •r"-0'-u~ND""....,1'11"1....,1.~.~ .. ~.~.~,,-.. ~,h Seller approx l 'I to 2·1 months. E. J7th SI., c.r.r. Scar on rfght !Jank, 64f,..-0.'!36. :?CHh. OK. $130, 540-9722 o r .,. ... • L.JU-~ .--11th Pl, 0.f. 548-2738 ON TH!; BAY ' 547·2682. mo. Adults. SEACLlFF ~tenor Apts. 1 * TOWNHOUSE * LJNDBORG CO. 5.3&-2579 & 2 Br, 11.-2 Ba. $145-$.160. SINGLE STORY 2 BR, Crpts, drps, patio. 675-244l4 or 541-5032 LRG 3 Br. 2 Ba. New Jhag $150 unt $160 furn 2658 2 BR, 11,t BA, crpts, drps, NE\V 2 BR •-m SlJ·,, Cp-, $30 move in aUowance + "-A . · 1670 SANTA ANA AVE CM FREE ' . Ad II $l!O l34 E crpts, Bltns. Newly dee. Nr. uv .,, I C I South .x:a tmosphere Orange Ave, CM. 545--1657 3• I I ' ra 10· u 11:. • • DCC. $169/mo. 557.6151 drps, bllns, pstlo, ram Sile-reg: d sc<>un~. rps, drp.~ 2 BR. -2 BATH x sq. 00 i'o1elody Ln. 64Ul&l5 tion, 01,.u area, No pol.JI. patio, pool, 1n.f&nt ok. 152,l Ciirp<'ls & d"'~ 615-244l4 or 541 -5032 Ba.~ic BoaUng Course ofr. QUIET 1 & 2 BR., giir & "'.r Pl f 548-2b82 'r Huntington Beacti LRG. 2 & 3 Br. Crpts, drps, I Cp /d d I ·-~~1;m'.;,_=~=~~--he'i8~'~'~"~"::·i;;c:.,;;;;;;;;-;;;:;;:: flir Conditioned * NEWPORT BEAC1I C!vlc rOUND Brown Icmali! do~. ered lo the public by the Looks like 8 poodle. Vic Balboa Po.,.,·er Squadron. of Edison Plant in ll.B. poo. ts rps. A u ts_ freshly painted & clean. n1 ts 642-8042 BEACHBLUFF Aptt 3 BR. 2 Ba loy,•er duplex Priva!e PatioJJ Center, 300 ft to 1000 fl. Kids ok. 646--0627 or co~y~·~"'"-'"'""~·""~~·~-nr beach cor frplc bltns llEATED POOL Anws & Secretarial, 67S.J601 sail 8.!I ""'e!) as power 536-J25l. hoaUni !aught, Starting 642-63.i<l. NEW 2 BEDRM $175. Shag New 2 BR, l ~a.,d,,i~hwEll"lh· crpt.s, drPs. s2'75tmo'. Year: Plenty of lawn ON BEACH' HISS Park Ave, CM. 1,000 LRG l Br. apt. All new cpts, encl gar, bale. 1 child ers, pool, patio. 1 s. ly. C11.ll 213: 388-52.i5 or CarpoM & Storage • It. 4 Rms. Alr-<:Olld. Phone ok. * 646-M76 l i"iii-2-"'84~17i;i'"~"c:'..:·3"95;'1'-:;:::;::l2'C':"'.;',.'6;;22-~91';930.,..~=~- 7 pm Mon. Jan. JS. Every GREY. blk & white lemale 1'1onday nl!e for 13 weeks. dog. Appears to havt> jus! <'J'Pts, drps, tile It: paint. * 2 BR. elec bltru, lock. lllDDEN VILLAG E e Bachelor Apts. From $215 833-3921 eve . CJ_sy to Bkrs. Bllns. $145/mo. 546-0451. V nl Bl $llO MO. 1 br cluple.x EXTRA LARGE GARDEN APTS. e 2 BR t Fro $225 CUTIV'E ! r f had a li!tt'r. t.!ixecl bf'('(!d. At Newport Barbor Yacht Irvine area, S32-563S. Club, 72() W. Bay Ave., 998 El Camino, CM. :~,~~eS:155temo~ ~··-ts~ w/1tove & crptl. No kids, 2 k 3 BR 2 Ba CJD bHns 2500 South SaJta • 2 BR Fun . }' m ~'XI~ ~?'E 334-N su le to Bl od. .--no peta. 2 blks to bch. . ' · Sl=· ' Santa Ana 0 S4S.l525 urn. rom ~ 1ct's, ::i e....rpor v , NE\\I Unfum 1 Br. apt. 5.11-8400 53&-:LOOli p11.ho, encl gar. ".J & up. Carpets-drapes.dishwasher N.B. Call 645-45'15 Newport BeaC'h. Bring S.\fALL Blk Poodle pup'.' notebook & pencil first Back Bay atta. 20 311 w/bltns, crpb, d rp s, ~cuL'F.h:-l:i:;;;-:[s;: I ~iiir~· e;-:-c;;;<;:-;i;;;;J~54~8~·3~1~08~-~~~--heated pool.saunas-tennis rlsh1vhr, llll util l n c I . AVAIL Feb, 1-Lrg 1 Br· NEW 2 Br. Crpts, drps, 2 b Bl ff · I"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! rec room-ocean viev.·s: S11l/mo. Jnq . 301 Avocado, Crpts, drf)6, bltn&, encl gar, stove, patio, garage . 3 Br, a on u 1''/\'l'''' Westminster Bu1ine11 Rental Cypress Santa Ana Jil'igh!i; nite. Any question! call 445 673-1855. Y 0RK S11 I RE Tt>rri,.r, .I" l\ilo.• adult, no pets. $140. 4J46.-1762 $165/mo. Ph. 536-6027 or b~y k ocean. S330, .1~5 ----------patios-ample parking Apt 9. .r-v.,.,..., ..:::::.:::::...:.::,,:::...::::;. __ I Domingo Dr Pool privil. Security guards. ANYDay lsthl!BESI'dayto LARGE:? BR c arpe t s , l BR. Adult. No peu. Call 66-J2t0.' LG 2 BRI, crpts, drp!, bltM, HUNTINGTON I ----====~--· I Harbor Shopping Ctr, J ;in 1----------1 FREE Rth, 645-0US. srORE or Shop a v 1 I 1 .KE ""°'v~s~Fu'-",~nd7'0-n-,~,-"-.,-v~.-"-" down Io w n San Juan Jfuntinglon Beach Power near Country Cl uh, d--• __ , b"<'ll I"' 1125/ Q to -·ta! gar. Chi d ok. $140, 8J9.4605, run an ad~ Don' l ,u,.... ''"" " • '"'• mo. ose I · 3 BR' 2 BA f C ooo ,,14 I * 646-0486 * Gas & Wt:' pd 842-838.~ s • un . rpt.~. ......,....,., PACIFIC , :::"'c:'':!'c.· ;:;.c~al:..;:lod:::o,y~, ,:"::"::;561:,:::8_:.,o========'"-=~===·===· =I drps, 'blk to beach. Yrd .1 7~-------,. 2 . Apt1., Capistrano for "ma 11 Squadron'11 b&sic boa ling 1 "==~-'-'°-·"-·-7;; Apt. Unfurn. 365Apt. Unfur n. 365Apt. Unfurn. 365 Yearly S 50· .NJ> pets. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1-'-'-~--~~~~.:.....~....-~-~~--.:.....~-~~~~-~673-80,;:;;:='~'=::coc=cc;--::cc~:.~~~~~~-- General Ge neral Gene ra l 2 BR, car1l"ll••I. tlrnped. n1;"11r \ l...:.;;,....;_ _______ _::::;;~;g:::i~;;;:--'-'--'---------1 braeh S11nd1>ck. garai:;e, Costa M esa hooklut;O lamt'}? llvlllll··· HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adulll OftlllllCSPUlll.-l llEJlllOOll l'ICll ll45! CASAdel SOL Hu r 111 r:.d!es • Printl Temce • Rec Bltiklini •Saunas 2 Poofs • Btlllrrls •Gym• Puttina: Green ind Volleyblll Built-in IOillltfll • -• ~b • Clrpets/Dnlpcs CloM ta •11 "'°PPinl • Printt Pafllni mil Stonp , AUO: ! Bed,_ wtrrreplt<t flOll! l205 \.\'t1sh ir1g facll. y,.;irly.j---------- 64'2-397R {'\'f's&. \1kn(!S. BAY MEADOWS APTS. * BAYFRONT * JBRllNDNF.\VUNlTS nll11•i1h lligh:n~c ~ en·:'; fror.i. .$2\:r,. I hellnl l'{·ilin~s. paneling. p11t 3 s1r1e tie slips al'1nl11hle , 1111tio.~. frptc alt 1-cc fncil. 642-2:.?AJ2 Li ll"!'=. Arlults.' no Ptt~. ATTR 2 BR apt, unfllrn . • Ilach. rrom SIOO • 1 blk from ocean, very I~ • I RR 1rorn $135 e L. R. w1frplc, $221 mo. I • 2 BR from $165 e 673-22:17 4 BR. 2 ba, 2 porches, nofriK, l:lS7 \V. Bay St f bllvn Jlnrlxir '"rpts & t!t'ps. near beach. &. NPwport Blvd, ~ mi N. $27j, I Of 19th SI). :,.-u;.2176 ' CALL 646-0073 NICE 2 BR. JX'IQI, bhns, cpts, drps, sundeck. Ad.its. m pe:ts, $150. 642-8001 , 642-SOOG. DELUXE l & 2 Br. furn & unfu rn. Sl30-Sl65. Pool. 177 F.. 22nd St. CM. 642-3645 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. Cn4l 536-1487 O!C" open 10 nm·G pm Daily \\'ILL!Ai\-1 \VALT~RS CO. busines! or olfice. Si~/mo. course Ior sail or power, FOUND Black Jnt,--,.,~,~~-,,-,.,-., 493-11 53 or .i93-1706 t'\'Cs. Approx. 6 n10. Vic o! JJaria E . 17th St., Costa Masa Cla:!'SC!< srart: ;\londay, Jan. Poi nT 496-.i,'JR~. StnrC".(lr!l ce, $fo0 i\!0n1h uury 1llh fEi\'iALE-,-lktr•lt'r C0111r'1>,· Rf>~lonornic" f'ori1. 67fl.li700 T\1nr: 1:t~J P.i\1. l.JJ\'~lllc i!ispos1!ioo. \\'hllL· l & 2 _nn·s. FllOi\I $13::i STOHE: ror lt>a.,t' 2orio ~fl. Al : llunt1ng1on Rea ch Jfigh l"hest & n1:ck, Ifi ll foc'C' rt'C. Ov1.•rlook1ng: beaut ~arr!en fl. on Nv•pl Blvd. at Jlorlnr. School, Roon1 12"1 !1111! pup~. l'hon,• ~1 1·i-1.1~!:l pn~o & h!d p00! .. \•lull~. C.i\1 Leon Vi]wrt , Jlllr ror iniorm11.!to11 rclcphnne: Qr she 1\ill bt' ~Ivrn A>1·ny. 103:i 12th St , nl'ross froni :...J~f~ll.'I, <'VI'S ~ G73-4l~i3 1 ·'="~,-"'"="====""'--i BLACK & 1111.' hrown malr Lake Pnrk, :136-2692 -ADVENTURE Slor-e-~2& IA' l!llh !'L, f'~f p11p. Pl. Grrn1nn Shrphcrd. Laguna Beach $115/mo. * 64~7414 SAILING C RUISE Vii·. Stop & Go ~tarkct at 1.1() ft , 3 mast Square Rigger. 60fll Coast 11 .... 'Y. N. Ii . STUDIOS -1 BR. util Incl. Industrial Rental 450 I f>-12-0362. Quiet, pleasant. Call collect Leaving 3/15 11 r o r 3 _ _ -~~~--~-- Dwyer (2131 437-6204 NEW BUILDING months. Men & 111omcn y,•an1-FO UN D l.Julic•s watch in rd w/desire for adventu"' llarhor shopping t' I.' n t c r San Clemente COSTA MESA & trnv<'I g, ahilily 1_0 share parkin~ lot J an . !:I, Qwll('r J28o Sq. fl. at $167 n10. expenses. For inlormation can cluim by c a 11 1 n g &:iOO Sq fl. Ile Grms rail Pam Reynolds, (213) &16-3·126. dsb.,.,'shr, laund~ lac. Rec. lmmediafe Occupancy 37S.260:i BLJ{, silvrr & bro'oltl silliy rn1. Tastefully deroratf'd. l ~=co'~====--110.220 Poy,·er, private o!fiC'f!!, FULLY LICENSED * terril'r, Vic: i'o1al{oolla & Adults Only -$l80. plenty of parklng, 18th and \V I 0 '1 =-214 Calle Patricia \Vh<'ll<'••. Rcnowoed Hindu Spiritualist arner, mu c. "'' .,....,.. be. r ... C 1 •92""" ' Advtce on a.ti matters. lore 8:30 or alt 6 pm. ......-. on enta , " -.i.~a9 &12-148;) Agrnt l.AJve, i'o1orriage, Business YOUNG l<'malc Siame!!C cal 2 BR., 2 BA .. bl1in range, 211il h1i.at1o Hlilllltil&l --OIA) lliZ-EI HUNTINGTON BEACH -Mutt ind F1mily Sections l~f,.$13S-ZW,_Z_F,_$1!115 ~A~p'~·-U_n_fu_m_. ___ 36_S _A~pt~·-U~n~f~ur~"~·-__ 365:.:::_1, Fountain Valley Fountain Valley · R9ntafa 500 SQ. FT. BLOG. Readings given 7 days a loun<I vie 18th St, & E. 17th St, Costa Me.sa week, 10 am · 10 pm . Raymond, C.i\1, Cli.11 brlore 22(1 Electrical Power. 312 N. El Camino Real, G pm, 646-0610. $100 Mo. 67~00 • Broker San Oemcnte FOUND Black p u Jl p y I~ HUniTINGTON GRANADA Prina TlmC!I • 3Pools1/Ctbann • Btitt<• -· CllJllb!Dnpcs • Walk·in aosets • Dimilll Rooms Cll1a ta Slopplni, All Baclles and leiot~ !ms 17111QIWeolllllSl.,11 rir-(71A)l47-1055 Uust Sovth Wamer) SANTA ANA-Adultlnd f1111lly Socllonl ---1-f'lllllll7l PARKPlAZA PrWn htios •Rte Buildia1•S.....•JICllZlf •Poot Btitt ... Jlitdlatts. -• Catpeb/Dnlpes llarSovth Coatl'll!a• L-.Aral•f- WO: 2 -12111111 from $117 Town H-w/l\l Blttls fn1m ll75 ---.---014)54~ (2 blocks oat of Bristol and MacA/111or) :J.ounlairu MeditVNU*UI S•yt. LM%U'1 1 &%Bed1oomo-1Ballle Adult lJvlq -..i a UDlurnllbod . , ... • LH.A--• Sli•1 C•IWl• • r,.....r~in. • a--c.r .... • It ........ c.11.,. 9565 Slater Avenue -~ 492-9136, 49'J.-0016 I h · II r ,11 400 INDUSTRIAL bldg, So. Santa .,.,. C ai n CCI ar, '-" at of- Anl, approx. 5100 1q•, de-MISSIONARY joun)('y of fiee, Colonial i\1Ql<'I, 1977 1-----------l luxe air cond oUices. 1240 P&ul. A 16-day jct cruise Newport Blvd, C.~I. Rooms ROOM w/bath In Univ Park E, J(unter St., ownr 495 . .i349 tou r departing 3115111 via ~1/1.TURF~ G1·ey ninlc cat for woman or student. American Flyers Airline v.·earing blac.k leather c."tJl111r Pool11, tennis courts, ki!chen NEW bldg, 1 728·2~ sq. fl, from L.A. $899 per person. wtbclL To t'la!m ca I J ~te~~r;~ri'3-f~~Ueges. Call 1;: 1!1~llv~,F~;;'. 1 ~~~i~rlhl'~~~fo~a~~~ :~'. !lfiR-8701, s to 12 a.m. 96S-9408 or 83S-5416 J."•:i'.1ALE, part Daln1atlan & SLPING Room, S 6 0 Imo . R 1 1 W 1_, ••• 1 ..:.::..;.c;~'='CC..;c"-=~-IV•r·mo<a-·. ~-brown & Prlv. entr. ·, bath. Adults •n • 1 an 9U '"" WILL PAY "'" "'"'.r no .,.ts, 2135 Elden CM . blk. Vic. Dana Point. 496-2450 ,.... . ., Kffd ride dally to & from See Mgr Apt 6. HELPI 11 work. Live In Laguna. V.'Ork BROWN framed tyeglasscs. • $15 PER week _ up Ntttfed a1 once, prmdmlly to In Co&ta MtRft . Hours 11 to Vi c Bnlboa Penn Pk . w/kilchens. $27.~ per v.·eek L.A. Int'!. Airport, by 1ln· S. ltome C!K-Sn9. 613-3180 ask !or Parker . • up Apts. }.10TEL. 5'\S-9755 cere, deserving couple, 3 yr. I==~=~==~=== SAT Nlte at So. COR!'!t Pla1.8, old boy & 4l mos, baby, 2-3 YOGA f'OR BUSY PEOPLE pup, looks pt hn~k\e. Well NEWLY furn room, $18 per d 1 1 Demomtration & talk, F'rl-I 61' - k • P ~ ll BR. ho~. apt. or up ex n mannem . .>-<:!"""· w~ up. vt enu ava . day at !l pm. OUU:s start .'-~-Phone 546-lM51 rental range of $150 mo. Xln t Sat At 1f) Am or Tut'll. at FOUND Dn~honil pu~y ----------! tenanta: who care lor prem-hlack/tan. Vic Edlnp:er and * f11RN room in prlv, !sea u their own! Pltue 2 pm. Yoga Center, 445 E. Bolsa Chica. 8·Hj..2-lfi6. homt', Co!tta Mesa. Kitch . call: 642-3589 Alter 1 Pt.l. 17th St. CJ\f. 646-8281. _ ----I privil. +. Nr. OCC. 5'19--1061 SWINGER Or11.nge Co . FOUND, wht Alghan w/blk n.vu:i.1 For rent ln Calta 3 BR hou1'1! unrum., llarbor Gulde. FrH Info OCSG P. m11.~k. Vk. Cb!ita M"""" Mesa nice quit'! home for H.S. dlJJ;trlct, family of ~ & o. Boll 21-U, Anaheim, 645-.1212 . working nian. 642-4794 . smtill dog. Approx $lX!. 92!l04. 539-9081. f.OLD P/Coll!e or rtGerm. PVT. rm & bath, have owt'l,,_m_o_n_lh_._&1_~_70_7_o____ ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Shep, l'>1ale. Vic Esta.ncM., car. Arllt working lady. ViS M isc. Rent•l1 46.S Phone 542--7211 or write w C.~1 . 54~21}13. mo. C.l\I. area. 546-1300 P, 0 . Box 1223 Co111a Me~. fOUNO B'~Jc-y-c'l-,-v~l~c.-,,Ora~.,..-I DIAL direct 64'.h"ifi78. Charge &. Santa lshclla 548-2932. yoo:r ad, then lit back and rOUND A1)r1cor ll'Jl)tlltl llNJ' ll1ten to the phoM n nc! llot1g llospHal fl46..62.11. I YNc: ('Ollrge or \\'Ot'klna; gir;ll rerl(:(!d 1ton1.ge l pncr BAll)OO. IAI. Kit G: TV rnl for campen, bnl\11 elc. !elP.. Slt:t/mo & up. £7!>36.13 Call 642-6560 • -~ . ' ~ 1 • J • •• J ~ .: ;,; .~ •• • ' ••. If ... WHAT'S YOUR HANGUP? 1, If mountain climbing is your thing, we can't help you much. But if you r real "hangup" is looking for a broad view of the news that in· eludes a good, hard look at what's happening al home, the DAILY PILO T has the line you should grab We give you a broader view of th e world than you can ge t even 12,000 feel above Chamonix in the Alp s. Mont Blanc, over th ere in the background, is the hi ghest peak in Europe; which reminds us .... ~I • Our local coverage is hard to top. When it comes lo piling up infor. rnal1on about local schools, sport s, social events, entertainmen t or crime and calamity, we're king of the mountain . We're you r home- town newspaper. We make keeping up with the world, the nation, the state, and the county, you r town and your school a lot easi er than climbing a mountain. Just grab our line. No more hangup. Th e DAILY PILOT will take you where you can sec the view from the top. I I ·--, ' DAILY PILOT ~ . ' 1' Are You Letting Cash .. Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD t . Stove 2. Guitar 3. Biby Crib 4. Eltcfric Saw S. C1mer1 6. W11h1r 7. Outboard Motor 8. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Clarinet 11 . Refrigerator 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Machine 14. Surfboard 15 . Machine Tools 1,, Dishwasher 17. Puppy 18 . Cabin Cruiser 19. Golf Cart 20. B1rom1t1r 21 . Stamp Collection '22. Dinette S.t '23. Pity Pen 24. Bowling 8111 25. Water Sk is '26. FrH1er 27. Suitcese 21. Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31. Bar Stools 32. Encyclopedi1 33. V1cuum Cle1n1r 34. Tropical Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 36. File Cabin•t 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41 . Slide Projector 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool Tabla 44. Tires 45. Piano 46, Fur Coat 47. Drapes 48. Linens 49. Horse SO. Airplane 51. Organ 51. Exercyclt 53. Rart Books 54. Ski Boots SS. High Ch1ir 56. Coins 57. Electric Train 58. Kitten 59. Classic Auto 60. CoffH Table 61 . Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis M. TV Set 65. Workbench 66. Diamond Witch 67. Go-Kirt 68. Ironer 69. Camping Trailer 70. Antique Furniture 71 . Tape Recorder ' 72. Sailboat 73. Sports Car 74. Mattress Box Spg• 75. Inboard Spetdboat 76. Shotgun 77. Saddle 71. Dart Game 79. Punching Bag 80. Baby Carria9• 81 . Drums 82. Rifle BJ. DHk 84. SCUBA Geu These or any other extra things around the house can be turned into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRICT 642-5678 . , DAIL V PILOT 3J l "'·-·-I~[ ...... ·-· I~ 1---1~ HouHCIHnlng DON 'T PINCH l='-Lost ___::::555 Bobysltting R E \V A R [) • Silky Terrier amalJ black & gray answe~ DCC College &irl want.\ Expa. lacb' own b'aMp. By ro Pepe Vic Tu'!tln Ave permanent be.bys!tlin&: job di-y or hrly. YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PINCH YOUR PENNIES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES Any Item Priced $50. or Less (If more thin on• lttm, the combined total c1nnot excffd $50.1 642-5678 Boy'sO;ib. 548-!73.2 ~th .... -ornan Who WO~ 1 -...,C;l.\.~=""~'~"="~''='-=-P~M~-I n!les. Resporuilble and re· HOUSE OF CLEAN LOSf Sian1ese Killen. Nr: 1'-blo. "-·' l••m•. Liv•· 1 Balboa I ._ uuvu ""' Complete Home Cleanlnc B vd & G Si. in OK. Call Lynn 531-3885. 642-6824 Reward C..11: 67~1276. • r.1onclay, \\'edncsday & BLACK & grey c.ucker, blind, weekends only. COUPLE doing house work. llllil vie On'hard Dr, Santa LOTS of Love my home 4 hour shlfta at $20. Ana Hgta. MS..9078. 6 days wk, hoi lunches, lri 962•8506 ORANGE & white male t<at frlC<I yd, 50c hr ptr child. RELIABLE Woman v.·/ref'1, ~ n10. old. Green collar. Xln't l"E'f'!I. E. 2'.lnt.I St., v.·eek days only own trans, Eastbluff. 644-1028. C.M. 54.S-1281. llB area. 8'1&-6970. S~IALL Grey poodle lost vie BABYSITIING my honie 6 1\1esa Cleaning Servi~ ~arbor & Victona, C!-.1 , mo to 4 yrs old. Loving Carpets, Windows, Flooni etc ~8-$-11. care, gd ref'~. ln1..-d yd, h:-Re! & Commc'I. 54S-UU FEl\1ALE Sian1e.~ kitten. 3 f.lart area C.l\I. 54;....1413, Housecleaning by day. 1no's old. Tan & grey. Vic Own trll1lllportation 62ncl & Oceanfro11!, N.B.C -~·~·~p~e~n~t·~''------e 6J6.~ e &12-0TI9. - GERM.AN Shepherd, female, CARPENTRY Ironing approx ll mo, mostly b!k, ttflNOR REPAIRS. No J ob ---------- "Cindy.'' Vlt:: H.B. 5.16-JS24 Too Small. Cablnl't in gar· Ironing: $1.50 pee hr. RE'.VARD Lost Fe ni Golden ages & o th f!' r enblnels. Bring Owh Hangers Retriever. Vic: Bristol & 545-8175 U" no ansv.-er lea\·f!' Call 645-3092 Baker. 546-0010 ms11: at ~237l. H. 0 . IRONING WANTED RE\VARD-cat. blai.:k. bob Anderson I 546-7462 tail, 1nale, blue roll/bells. ALTERATIONS &. repairs. · • • vie Park Lido. NB. 646-1706. Lie. & Insured-Res &. comm. Jen1tor1•I LOST A!ghan, answs to Door .hanging • drywall -_Q_U_A_L_l_TY_J_a-,.-,,-,.-,.-,-.-cl-,-.-,·_I "l\1 .. ,....ie" Vic : "Foxhall Dr, Paneling. 642-5872. -.b ing serv. wla price you H.B. 536-2188 or !":l36-9718. Additions * Remodeling can a.lford, De!)(!ndablf!', tns. C'.en•iick & Son Lie. Baker Cleaning &. Mainlen. 673-60~1 * . 549---2110 lfiml ance, 646--7082. t!!J Carpet Service Landsc•ping l~~~I ln1truction Schools & instructions 575 Diamond Carpet Qeaning ROTOTILUNG, soil cond, New Year Special~ sprnklr.! sod &: Sttd lawns. Fret" Minor Repairing t-t-ee sOil analy!l.is & est. With Cleaning 400' $20. l..ic"d Contr, House of Hun-, Free est, 645-1317 ting!on. 8.ll-2654. 1 ITS YOUR MOVE !---==-..:..::='---I LANDSCAPING ' '"''".'"• INDUSTRY CAREERS ~ei lings I ~:~::-· ,;~~~~;" • ''"'ing AIRLINE & TRAVEL (' OPERATIONS AGENT e TJCK!.I' SALES e RESERVA'n ONS e AIR FREIGHT .CARGO • cor.1r.1UNICATIONS e TRAVEL AGENT Airline Schools Pacific 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana 543-6596 PAINT Accous1ical Ceilings, Maintenance no ea or trade. 531-6921, or 63&-3110 Cement, Concrete Block \\'alls -Sid•1valks- Patios -Planters. :H~3173 to.torn or E\•e. CE:\tENT \VORK, r.o job 100 small, reasonable. Free Esrln1. JI . Stuflick, 548-8fi15. •.• CONCRETE, Floors, patios. Any size job. Reas. Call Don 642-8514. HUSBAND Busy? Ca 11 r.1oose Repair·Build-i\taint. ?-lost Anything 54;,....()820 evel'I Masonry BRICK, block. conc re te , carpentry, house le veling, all types remodeling. No job 100 small. Lie. Contr. 962-69-15. BRICK & BLOCK WORK i11ASONRY OF ALL TYPES COSTA MESA 1''or estima11', :iJ\-2852 Contractor PRE-SCHOOL Painting & 18th & illonrovia, n day ~-\\'ALKTNf: DECK Paperhanuing full day sessions Planned COATINGS program, hot lun~hes. Ages 0~ all types. ltt Roofing PROFESSIONAL Painting. , 2-6, hrs 6:30 A~l .6:00 P~t. Co., C:\f. &12-72?2 for free Exler. 1 story, low as SlJO $18 v.·k.COMPARE~ 642-4050 fc'"~· ·~·--------w/gd paint. Avg rm. S18. or RJS·5237. :\t'i \Vay, quali1 y home Acrou.o:;. ceilings 1tprayed. ~ . \V !! 11· I roals $15. Roy, 847-1~ PIANO LESSONS repair. a .s. ce ing, r ooN: , . etc. No JOb too srnalL No \Va111lni:: Bcginne!"~. ln1r rn11..'Cluues, a.13-14!}1, 24 hr ans. serv. * WALLPAPER * Learn lht'Ory sight reading ROOl\f Ad I'. When )IOU call "Mac"' etc Call BruCe (U.C.l. mus. 1 _ 1 lli~ns. L. T. ic ·bkgrndl 546.4478 ?llesa Corati:iction. Single story or 548-1444 64&-ln1 V rd · 2. Ei;hm., plarlll & layout. INT/Exler painllng. Free e e. 841-1511. est. Local ref's, Lic'd & ins. PIAN 1 0 1 . dC.• 1 .oo•h your ,no 1 m• [,L~l~C~'O:.:..:;~C~o-"1-,-. _R<_m_od_•_il_·,-g. Acroustical CC'ilings. can eer 1 ir roe ers. "us1c addo()ns, roofing, pain!lng & Chuck, &IS.0809. ~i:;;· /\Ir. Hathcock, repairs. 540.1858. !"">4(1.7664. l p=R°'O-~P'A~IN=T'°IN~G""". -cA~,-,~-,~,,-,I Lic'd Contr. Remodeling ceilings SlO complere. Also, Additions, Plan~, La.you! inter or ex!ers $~ + pain!. I ]Gif=J Karl E. Kencl11.lt 54R-1437 531-6921 or 636-31 10 SeMces end Repairs~ GEN'L CONTRACTOR PAINTING: Honc11t, guaran- i----------Rernodellng.Room AddltJons teed work. Lic"d. Local ref's Lic'd/ins 64.S-0991, 673-6809 I ~C=•~l~I ;'~75--~5~7~40:_::•1~!~5~. -c~- Fencing PAlNTtNG/papt>ring. J!I )'rs in Harbor area. Lie & BabyJitting DAY care ei.:per mother. my REDWOOD FENCES bonded. Ref's furn. 642-2356. home. F"ncd yd, ho1 meal.~. Pa!ios·Decking PAfNTING-Ext-Int. 18 }'rs. rea1. Nr \Vhiltier Sehl. 645-0991 or 673 "o""' I Li F 642-6267. .....,.,,, e.~per. ns. c. ree es1. . . Furniture Acroll!t. Ceilings. 968·9126. Babys1U1ng my honH•. day orf:..:.:Cc:c:::..:.._ _____ lNTIExter Painting. r~ree night, any Bil', fncd Yd. llot FURNITURE S ! r Ip pt n g . R I' J d o. · 64"3738 est. e s. mme , ..:x:rv1ce. meals ,,... Al.!lO, boat parts. \\lood & 64&-0210. 642-3014. f3ABYSITTEH all ages. l4 metal. In our ]0' ~·at. ---~------1 hours. \Varn'i meals, big.,_&1_2-_>_14~0_. -------, 3 BR. E'XT. $1 25. -, 1 Bil. BX'r. $110. hack yard. 642-1592,....£'1_. _Gardening Sle\"f' 54R-4!149 \\'ILL hah~·~il my homr I J\'TER/Exler. S~clalls!s Bayview &hi 11.rea. Any AL'S GARDENING Lic'd, bonded, tns. \.\'on'! 11gr. Ca!I 5-16--0!i)ll ror Ganlening &: 11ma\i lanr!. be unrierttid! 5-18-1671. f! . .\PPINESS-is a good sea ping servicc11 call 54G-5198 !--====~==~ babysi11er. Openi n~s 00". Servtng Newport, Cdf.1, C.os... * PAPERHANGING Fl/pt 11m'! Paularino area ra ?-lt>~a. Dover Shorl?s, ,r,, PAINTING. * 968-2423 ~~l(....(f.149 \\lestcli rt. Plaster, Patch, R•pair The DAILY PILOT -ORANGE COAST'S leading l\10 \\' & t'rlgl' avg fn11 & , N bk yd s;, wk , Rcir,:ulnr rnainl It PATCH I LASTERJ, G inimt'f! .~Cl'I.'. R c I! a . 1 All lypfs. F":.r.e ell~mBICS 968-13Ul. C11ll 540-682.-, NL\\.' Lawns, rc-Mrd. Compl 1 -P-l~u~mC:.b~in~g,_ ____ _ lawn co.rf'. Clran up_ hy j<Jb PLU!o.IO!NG REPAIR or~ nio. F"rfi' e~L For info No job 100 small R91-2·11T or 846.0932. e 642-3128 e AL'S l..andM:ap1ng. Tree removal, Yard remodeling. _R_oof __ ing-"-------- Trash hauling, lot cle11nup. LEE ROOF"ING CO: Roofing 11.epair sprinkler!!! 673-UOO. of all lypes, r ecover, EUROPEAi'l l..ANDSCAPI::R repairs. roof coa!ings. Lie Clean up • Tref!' Surr;tery & bonded since 19 4 7 . RcMonable. Eve1. 496-33&3 06'~·=2-~7="='=· ------~ 1f RMldenliAI -Apts * BEFORE You buy, call T. * Commerci11.I * Guy Rooling Co. Recover Complete Care 64&-9855 ! p e c i a 11 s I . 6 4 5-2780, GEN Oeanup, lfte &. 11prnklr 5-18-9500. 11erv. Rototll. llandyman, EASTERN Quality-\Vestern odd job11. Reas, 646-5848 Price~: All 1ype11 Roofing. EXPER. llav.•alian Gardener -'L~yl=•~· ~'T.l-7'79811:.;::=·-~-- C o n1 p I e t e G a rd e n i n 1 1_s_._w_i_ng=:._/ A_lt=•-•-•=l i=•-"='-- Servlce. Kamalanl, 646-4676. EXPEftf Lawn car e. • Dre1smaklng-A1teralions Special On Hem.~ Malntennnce only, Ca 11 Cal Jo * 646--&MG anytime, 536-6751. I ~=""":::_::;:.;:...::o;..:::_:::__ EUROPEAN dreasmaking all Complete Y•rd Carel CWLtom tined. Very nallOll- JlM 540...@37 able. 673-1849 1_G_•_n_•_•_•_l _S_•_•v_I_•_•_• ___ 1 Alterations -642-5145 Elderly, Attention I Neat, accuratf!', 20 ~an exp. wlU take you by <:ar, any I ·T~i~I•:.._ ________ , M k t I '""""· "' ... '" .,..,,,, ar e pace RAIN G"""' l n~tall<d . Quality work. Reuonable. Free est. 963-2208. * Verne, 1lle Tile Man • Cust, v."Ork. Jr11tall " repaln. No job too 1ml. Plaster patching. Lf!'alrinc 11hower repair. 847-1957/84&-0206. YARD, Garage <:1eanup1, lrff.1 d irt ivy ITITllJV&.i, tk\p IOflder, ba<:ktio.. 9624745. TRASH & Gange clean-up, da)ls, SIO a l<>11d, 1'rte ei;t. Anylimc. 545-5031. HouJeclean ng e HOUSECLEANING e 'Thorough A: l'f'Raonahle 673-1661 or 6¢119:) HOUS!X'LF.ANING By Day. Own 1'ran1porta.tion 8.1IHl643 CER.AM IC Tile work. Free f!'lt. No Job too mW!. 53&-2'26 Tr" Service TREES, Hedres, Top, Trim, cut, rtrnmred, hauled. lns. ~2-4030 Bia John Tut°'lnt TEENAGE tu t orln t 6 co u n~llnr. Exper ie nced, c r rd en I l 11 I e d li':M:her. M2-8.'lll. Ca.11 betwn C: . k 7:30 \ t SCNAM LETS fULL Or pt-1\mr, llf.I exp. LJVE.fN rom))ftnkin I siuer . • BEAUTY Adv I ?11 o r Id necessary. we rra\n, gtt'li l Jor 11 yr old )'(lung lady. * PL.UMBERS, repatt "- demonstrate cxcJUn< ~w .. _1., ,,.c·-·•. •·p. l"-g bl!allng_ Top wage1. Llcerw-o pp o r tun 11 y . Ku sro! "'""~ ... -..a.'&IC\.I .,.,, ,~ .. ANSWERS JH~UCl!. N~ door to door. !~rplan!lary Inc. 3'1&-984&, qi~. pYl ~ & pQOI. @d. Call 645-3130 I :-ielhng ttquire<J, nt>w coni-64&-2919. Lagullll. Father h It.! occ RESTAURANT help • nighU pany-lt'ta grow 1oge!her trnvPI. Call 4~2&10. or graveyard. \V" need WAITRESSES -over 21 Dining rm exp., neat &. attl'. Thlll'8, & Fri., 12 noon. AlllmO R~laur!ltll 2012 Dd Prado, Dana Poinl. ** AUCTION 2 SALES ** * HIU HOUSE* I Th• hous• th at r•91 built! Caclus -Calun -Ladlr -1 Call 847-6324. GIR LS. be your n .... ·n 00111>. hard Wilrking rellable iood J." t1 rAl-SIF Sell qualicy bra.nd nam(• 1.001-<:ING lor 1norc than just ' l ' ai_y-~ I BOATCARPENTERS •'"Othn""'b'JoinU,n "New tnannered, in t e ligent, F1ren1cn answrrrd 11 1·1111 C" • ___ _, 1 l cos111t-1 ic~. llight•st t(lrll-"" ,., r-= cJea-"I _.. E • · · I "'I .-~xpene1,.xu ony app y, Bt•f1utflul Ideas'' Div. o( '"-" ..-v .. IC. ...pt'r , WAITRESS, exp'd, ~ Newpon, C.~f. ltouse. Apply Brunch Thur., Jan. 14th & Fri., Jan. 15th-7:00 PM rand the city council wanti to tear down I Collet:tol's 1ten1s Irom Paul Mun i'11 Chinese robe in "Good Earth" $85 lo Elv1~ Presley's lx•lr in "K111111n' Cousins" S20 Also Ri!.rMll N11van'Q'9 111axi coat $100. Scimstian C;.bo!'s leathP1' hal capt' 1 l\1s1net? f $98 F1,1n1 Clork Gablf''s coal S;.9.5() 10 1'1ickcy Rooney's 111• S3. lrill llouse also sl)l'clalit.· t>s in ckllhing or !he VtC· rorian t'ra thru 41l's. \Ve hon· or Ba.nkAmeric11rd & J\.last. r.r Charge. Open 7 clays a "'eek 10 to ti. 1914 Ne"·port Blvd., C.1\1, &1&2".J86. f1"0n1 11 h ngcM(' 1110p. 11•11 \fillard Boat Work., n1i ulon. \\'ork y1i..1r 11\111 GENt.-:RAl. FOODS, Help helpful but not nee. JACK- they arr11,1l'd 1ht>rp hnd bo'<'ll lJ(JQ Lo A1,1 CM h0u1·s. No door lo door. _ IN-THE-BOX 38:i E. 17th no firt>. Their ollici111 rcpor1 · gan e., · · 5.tS-3750. n!lwrs 10 c.nh.11.ncl'. lheir St, C.l\f. Stt J\.1gr. BO\ T CARPENTERS · ll<:l'SOna! t>r:auty while en· I ;;-oio_.,,..;.,C;ce'c"",.-,~~~ l\!lit l ''FAI-SIE ulam1" 1 1 • i;onie GIRL t'ri. \\'an\•'if for tyvinoi: J·oytng , profi table buslnes!I. R.OUTE Sales-Sl 30. wk to &t. . F 1-02 I t'."<p. Apply: LUHR'S BOAT S\\llNGING Of''rtcE l\tUIT r k 1 b 1' II B h YOUNG International Co. 11Ceking n1anegen1('nL Eam $400-SHJOO per mo. Variabt~ hrs. Call 833-16111 be!"'n 2-5 pm Thur or Fri. Job Want•d, •ma• 1 1 co 1781 Platf!ntia, C.1\1, S2J..Sl50 ·wk up No t'xp nee. a I' ov es e u er rus BE YOUNG & a1lrer1. P No door to ~r 114z-2b&J rte in Laguna. X!nt pt Lime AIDES--FC1r i'Qn1,1a!;!lcenl'<'. BOYS TRAVEL O. 0.':lx 1~1 San Clrmetih'. !\1AHINE~:ngii:e lnstnller wk a.lso a1,1ail 542-.7573. l ........ _...._, 11~) ~idf'r!y c:re ur ~;~~care. 1'r11vf'I U.S.A. with grou p of GIRL FHJDAY-.-yuu111:,--:il-\•an~eV. Exp er i enc r rt SALES ._ ... _..,. v p~;;~1~u;rs~£•rl('.ra1-01tic:f', yo,,~~~~"!:."<,•,~~,· E,'~Jeo~~"ak:.:. I 11~1c1.~;kr~·l.f·s~;.1r;;er.!l;~~1~~~j ronly/apply LUHR'S BOAT STOP!!! •;;;;;;;~;;~ ""'m '° c• It CO. !78! Pl.>c'"li•, C.M. LOOKING & ACT I L1 Bk/Jg, reh11l salt'"-Tr.I r .. i\1 I Ix-"!~ lM 1\1 1.~Slt)ll V1l',IO, S\\llll .~· :11·-Antiqu•• IOO i1a11M'ss, t'lf. 612-3277 sing';:· .~~~s·s::;~ at o~e: I ~(·~Club -.\!AID Sti•ady v.ork, Relire-SaleK minded person e for D.'°I Y work wanted from 8·3. Only sharp net'(! apply. Se<" GIRLS TRAVEL Jul·nl tnnie, Laguna Beach. yourself a re I c~ e SOLD ho~. Selling anlique (• I Tl "" =·· 118 ., '"OOd I' bo I I (';ill 49-1-91.J.~ ......... ·1y'. ,, .. ·, , .. , ... ,' o,o .. , .ocw rxp. e · ,,.,.....,..,.IV " r. " al ~ar r nn Tra1·c1 S.10 Frun. Jt1•no, Sl'a!· - ----.. " " .., waJnu!, hand carved diri'g ti 'I l 1800 B 'boa Bl d i\·IECllANIC, full ll111c. Xlnt iight m•n. E,,n;o•• <-m. rx•r ay ore, a 1' ·• llr U.S. l\1aJQr r1111·s. Al! .. ...., -" nn suite, appraised $rl00, 'I 11.Ult_E_ .. .,.-,-,,--, ·, •' ' "· ·h IO \M . • l "<ll!;l'S & bc'rlt"'fits !or right ••·-· lmm·•,·a1•ly •hould . "' 0 . . 1 ~. ut:penca e o "e1•opor oo:ac . ' -:i rrans. [urn l::X l>t'll;;{'S R'. ,,.._._ ~ ~ price $u,;JO, tiler antiques fl. L·• bkk P l! Th , f' · _, 01an Rirhfi('ld. 19th & "--. ,·n ••• , .. , ol I~-. -, wk. g('n. o icr. i e g. ' urs. ''" ri. Q1uy_ v;inced during rwo ·,\"t'l'k ·~ ""'" " ".JV ,.... & contemp furn. 644--2374 :..iS-1737. __ BOX BOYS I training S~OO 11 mon1h. Guar. Ncivporr ~ns~\~~ -Nr. canvassing or 110liciting. ATTENTION DeL'Qrators: DEPC:ND1\BLF; \\'on1an ro :\Ius! be avail. morning~.· llll~(·e ihereaf!('r. l\!u~I be ,\tED ICAL Assistant, b3Ck Interviews by appointment Louis Phillipe canape Isola) I h k , h d 1 n 1 orfic:.'<', for busy G.P, ~1ust only 9-3 \l'eekdays. 8J5.Z171 -'d d ... .. 112~ Uncl1 imed Storag• from Smyth Bro,. In L.A .. Long B•ach &. Santa Ane Sealed boxes, Dish packs. \Vardrobes, Trunks, Cedar chests. Bdrm sets, Divans, Chairs, Mattresses. Vacuums, J-lome bar, Chests, Colored TV's, Stereos. Nice rattan furn, Dinettes, Coffee tables. Nice set golf clubs, Bunk beds, Desks. Avocado eye-level stove, Hanunond organ. Refrig's, Washers, Dryers and rnucb, much more! WINDY'S AUCTION COME BROWSE AROUND 207SV2 N•wport Blvd. B•hind Tony'• Bldg. Mat'l1, Costa Mesa e ~1686 OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 ro ousewor . , 2rs ~J)('r \\'kdays, pt limf' or n tunC'. JS-2-1, single. an s a a know El\G, X-ra,y, draw•lo====~~~~~~ ~~. 0 , 7 = 6 . a,...., a ste..,, .JV. day. Q,,•n trangp. G-1'-5J.;7. Apply in person, Richarrt's oner. Only shurp need ~P-blood, gi ve injeclions, ~al· SALES!'.lAN \Vanted. Exp. .,...,....,;, Help Wanted, M & F 710 I Lido ~lkt . 3433 Via Lldo, ply. Appl y in p('rson rronl ary <oprn. 1-ilission Vi!'jO prct'd. l\I us t be !!elf.SO '-=FcA-_,o,-,-~-,-,-.,c,.-,,-,-D0o-e~al !!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J~!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"!' N.B. 10 Al\1·:1 Pi\!, H!l rhor Inn are:i Call g,17_7520 startf'r. 1· a r essential. print, can·ed wood. Mat· Furniture 110 Garaga Sil• 812 --~~----l\lOtf'I 1/\00 Balboa Blvd ., C t 1·1 d · •h;• h . 67"3"07 BUFFUM'S -. -M·E -Dl-CAL OFFICE-a11X's, 1 1~. raper1es . c ... gcair ............ e A COOO i\lAN lo fill NP11'por1 Brach, Thurs & Comm. only, highest in ·A~~.~------c1=o2 \':tl;111\~·v 1n Beuch Ciries -NEWPORT-f1'1day onl:y, Nerd 2: ft~Jnl OJ~. exp. gd lield. NO phone calls. ltrs pphances . ·u'Cl'l. f:cpr('scnl Trxns Oil 1 ---typis1, Bocl; Ole~ exp. kno"'· 10 am-5 tJnl. 209 Ocean Ave. N• • · 1 ••• .. ,,., • GlRI. \\'ANTED * ' GE El •· (\">1n11011.1• Air niail E. T ·ill\ in _f>, ~i.-·ii g lt>dge in all procetlures. Laguna Beach. ec dryer $40, n.enmore I. I fo to work sn1aH u11i1 ('Ql!ec!ion 1 · ri ; c• k !' r s on, Pr P S., a1>P ican s r \Vrili•, Classifi('d ad #15,1 ~~~~==~~---e ecdryer S.i<I. Westinghouse d!'sk. Exp. not ll<'1'. bul 0 SALESW0'1 EN "·d 130 U··' ··' Sourhwt•s1ernPetr o le u m 0;1ily Pilo1, 1~ .. Box 1560 " • ex· e...-..: ryer .A ,untconu, Moving I CO!\-IPLETE Drapery work room equipment for sale, heavy -duty s t'wln;; machines. heavy v.·oodrn tables, auto1n11t1f' tablrr (measures draperies ,t,-ap- plil's buckroon1). Odds 8' ends-all must i:;o tit On('(': I 2957 Randolph C:.01 ~16-6300. EVREST Jcnnini:;s foldinz wheel ehair. ~·IO. Beautiful j aulo haq1 like new 1vilh tuning, kf'Y and pitch pfpr. instruction book $40. Call 557-7297 FOUNDATION hel11fu1. i\1usl IK' able 10 · .... · d d l 7 Coc1•. Fl. \Vor1h, T('X. Cos1:i 1'1esa, CalH. 92626. penenccu, career min e o guar. & deliv, 8'I -8115, C{lnverse "'ilh people. h('. k · f i· -$1100 ACCOUNTING -SALES-NEl·l,-0-R E-XPER-IENCE-D v:or into asst. nlgr 0 .1ne 5'1&8672. . . typing &· filin;;. ~l.S~1 hr. ladie!I clo!hing chain. Please SUPERVISOR II you are 3 fully i1ualih('d !o s1ar1. Conlac1 ~I r. Gibb~. SALESi\IEN. LAR\VT N apply i n person REF'RIGERATORS \V/LG Must S•ll By Sat • Bedroon1 sui1e $25. Sofa $[!. Desk & chest $3 ea. End lables $3 pr, 2 sf'!~ lamps $3 pr. Net play pen $4. Swing $3. Potty choir 50c Recliner chair S4. Oothes & misc. Items. 795 Shalimar Dr, !upstairs) Ap1 3, Costa Mesa LARGE color TV S12j; BluP, --.,...,,..,"°'"""--! vel\'el iuxedo sofa $150; GARAGE SALE King si:t:e headboard $50; Hl-FI, 4 pc birch <.'Orner desk Net, bedroom lamps, patio furniture, 8111m m o v i e • equipmen!, 3 . 5 children's toys, knick-knack.~. etc. 1866 Boa Vista Circ.le ~ i\lesa Verdel , __ fount.!arion f.i!ter and sates· co· 11>AN\' R 1 o· · · FREEZERS. 1""145-•""· Frt> Piud by Co . .....,.;al. ))(>. 6~2-7960 C.:'lt. ,\ ' esa e lVISIOn BACKSTRC:F:T No. '.!j ,,..... ._, P bl "'Oman, we have a plac" for I J aJ J • • «•1s-• • "l'l"e Ar.ctln<>. ron1ou1 e " --111•t-t s severa gener rea F•·"•.O" 1,1, •• , N.B. ~ ~ ' • ,., fl . an n'"'ellenl GROOVY :.010.-!cl-1y1>t> llt.'l'(lrd , ... " IJU ================: fTIVlN ····bl bo ' . 1nun. Call Ann, &15.2no, 1• o cnng ._...... Pslalr <igenls. New of!ice1~-------·---or uvu e » pr1ngs \\'c>stchlf Personnel Agency, salary. for cassellr rllms. Harrison opening in Hun Ii n gt on SARAH Coventry Inc., full Building Mat•ri•I• 1(16 & mattress sets, i28 set. D N B •-Cori, 2l3/·l62-5830. Beach approx Feb. Isl. or pl-time help needed, no King sz box springs & mat-Wl:: \\lestdiU r.. . . ca.,,., 1 I S59 1 All Apply in person unly. !IOUSEKEEPl:ll & child Lisling leads, n1ajor Investment. 557-&183. res." se, se. fr *' jobsl. I Jntervi('\\'~ lx't\\'n 2-:1 pm cai·c. 5 day week. li1•1'--in, n1Nlical ln.suranc. e paid by SECTtETARY E'oe , 0 et" DOORS sterilized & in good cond. '\ccou-N'T JNG Clerk • R"": I ,. ~110 • ISL ··o p "' • R,.._. "•alo-'"-""W 11· -., A.-:r N · ''" salaf.v open Sp.-1nish ~peak-con1pa ny, incentive CC>~tests management dl\•i•;on 0·, INTER/EXTER .. uig.. ·~, W\c '"' • ~ HS grad, ~ome mllei;;:e help· :-."F~\VPOP.T BEACH in~ 0 1<. !l6:l-99GCJ after 7 and bonus pla n. Get 1n on "•t•blt.•h•d -al .,1,1• -m· "· ru1. nor n('c. Typing 50 1111111, th d fl r net gro " ... " "' "" lOOO's to l'hoose from. Some UFF 1885 1-larbor Blvd CL\! flc<·uraiely, lO key adding --CARRIER P~·I "·~h ~u~all ~rwfn ,R('!lt;: fi~:)boo~:~~~~g. s'.;'r!~t~ :~~:f~~.~~~:~~:i~en~ ' ~!WjT ' ' . 283 Chevy parts: tool.<;; misc. 14' inboard boat v.·ith motor Frost-free refrigerator $12."1. 686 Center St., Apl C, C,l\1. & tl'ailer. Fri, Sat, Sun. G42--4280 32.852 Calle San i\farcos, San I -~-~------~ J uan Capistrano. 493-4716 l\10VING Sal!': \Ves1inghsc 22 retrig, $300. Dinette i;rt $100, bdrm set $125, loung_e chr S25. davenport $2.i. chandelier S2S, liling cab S25, crptng & rugs. ?ifisc. 644--0916 :.OIOVING must sell n1any hsehld ilems. Baby clothes & furn. Rollaway bed $25. Kingsizc bed $50 . \Verl &- Thurs 12 10 5 only. 642-TI42. 160 W. \Vilson No. 11. Machin•ry 116 n1:ieh., by !ouch. \\'illing-BOYS llou.~cwivl's Inc .. 962-WSll or S-7-..:221, to ... oek ... ,.1h publ.tc ....__ BEAUT Spanish handcarved Good P I ., ., ,,... for trailer skirts, patio CC>V• · 6 c.· nes~ to Jc>arn . oppor. r:1·rirf'd f'OP e confidence kept. Quired. 1500 + benefits. (!ming rm table, cu • .irs, lunny \l'i\h growing firni. ~llldcnts-anynn(' ov('r 18 c>rs, fencing, siding· l5c sq $400. 6' blue sofa $60. J\.1aple J----------- 1 Nursery School Tea c her . Send resume & ~alarv. ,... 11 VGrov -1·ng p·1c1u-LATl lE 0 • JI H Call for in1e rvie11·, 492.11.:;~ WANTED F ULL PART TIME I' . . e pa ..... I ' '"' bunk ~s s:xi. \Vestinghouse -• ~ar.~ sn1a ome DESK and dn1f\1ng table combination, Jocking: draw('rS on both 11i(1('s. Ad- justable lilt top, Al! meto!, good condition 11·ith adj. chair $11!'1. S.19--0530 ~11•s Gnnzelrz ' ~· -\" I . Write exp. & quail's to quirements to Box 1\1-27, lraines. molding, cabinet 5-spd washer & el{'C dryer, Shop complete w I jaw , · · · .. I •~n i•xp. nee. ve rn1n Closi;ilied ad No. 16 Daily Dail y Pilot, 330 W. Bay, h""d••··-. doo•kno'· & I k ·1 10 8 •• -· ~ Int -"d 1110 1~1 Out"g motor, gears. dril chuc -. t111rac1iv1• for !Ii.:: lnh·1·v11•\\'S Dai y · pn1 Pilo1. J-.O. Box 1560, Costa CJ\1. x -.u.. · "" " -I Xco locks, louvres, sliders & bi. ger, CdM 644-5946. Xlnt cone!, $100 or best ol-SACRfF'ICE Two Goodyeaz· Polyglass C 70 x 14 wide ovals. J\.1oun1ed on nf'W chromr rev!'rsc rim:o;. Onl_y STENO.RECEPT DAILY PILOi TA Ml'sa, Calif. 92fi:?6 SHEET l\l!'tal Machine fold doors, 11indo"·s, 11·oocl & fer. Aft 6: 546--0730 Fn ·luxury front olc. po~llion, r-:~·l'ds Income Tax * NURSES AIDES Operoror. l\1ust ha v c aJuminum SRSh. Cardboard EVERYTHJNG · Goeg -Sale , J\1ust have good Sii & 1~·p-Daii;i Point, :">an Juan P1·eparers Now * COOK TRAINEF. press-brake exp. Apply in door skins. J\.1any other sur-pvt party. All furn, elc, 1ni: skill.~. Salary open. Call C;opi~1rano anrl ~l~MJG Cnmi no Capbirano ! Bayview Convalescent H06p. pers. 8'19 w. 16th St, N.B. plu.~ buildini;: mal!'rial itenis. CHEAP 19922 Potomac Ln, toe '"'"•·vi"'w ...._.ay. Cariistraoo Beath. . 540-5690 11.B, nr Adams ,f,,, Bushard, ~ ~ '"" San Juan Cap1s1rano 10-5 Daily, 11-4 Sun. An . ORANGE COAsr Conta..'f l\1r. Sra:v a! 493.1185 for lll1P1. 18.2:'1 l\1en "'anted, full & part Sf'.~LING ~1ANAGER ·_Ex· MILLER-DRAKE Glerunar tract. yhme Ei\1PLOYMENT AGENCY DAILY PILOT f , Sl200 f 12 wks v.·ork c1!1ng boutique sOOp ln Lido. btwn NO\V & Sunday. 121 B d Ci\f &I" 3111 HSKPRS Emplyr 1i.1ys fN'. ·•11m3;''4009911°r · Xlnt bt>ner!ls & llI'O'>l'th 2-4()6 So. !\-lain St., .s.A. SOLID mahog. din. tablf', ' roa 11'11Y, ·' · J· ~an Clemenlr office "' .-· pol•ntlal, 12131 ~3787 {Next to Standard Brands) George Allrn Byland Ai::ncy " •=-6 ch11irs & buffet, $200. ACCOUNTING CLERK 305 N. El C<i1n ioo Real OPERS.SINGLE NEE:DLE -~1032 i 1 ·d b C Gooc:l l\I th 492A420 106-B E. Hith, S.A. :-~17..{JJ!ri. S h Exp'tl only SERVICE STA AIT. all 675--0645. 610 Acacia, CclM. '-' e(' pat Y o. a · • -{)C(', mac · 8 · shifts ono.n. Apply ln rv>rson, o• SOFA d ill~ Call l..oraill(' &15.2770 \Vei;l--------HOUSl~CLl'.ANER f or home spo·ts"•car gd pay N "" ,..~ Furnitur• 810 " . never use , qu C\.I ' · • * CA.~BIEP.. :-."allooal h 1 00 4 'H• • 1~ ' • ' • • i\lac Arthur & 4678 Campus fl oral, sco!chguarded $125. rhH PrrsC1nncl Agency. 20.13 L 1 11 1 o[ 1l'ue er~. : 10 : . .., pm li42·.,•172. -----D• .• N.B. umier, un11n;:!1011 ~·ach. 1-----------!\latching loveseat $75 . \\'es1clilf Dr., N.B. tAlso rr.e C"l ~. ,2 .. -,.,2, 10 10 ,1 P.ll. i\lon 1hru Fri. ~~1!1-~712. e p L A S T I C S e l ===~----~--1 ~ ,,, 0 1 --o--o-=~ ------SERVICE Esli1b'd, Fuller 3 SPANISH sofas & love 530-8337 .IObsl. CASl-ll ER-fn-,·-1u11:-la11ici; * ITNHHEARLAATP1IOSTN * Brush rte, Sl25-.Sl 75 wk. ro seat isets, $99 a s et . BR SET like i\ G G R E S S I VE, !!harp clothin:.. ~1or,-., Par1-t1mr. --lnJcction molding operat~rs st al.'lO pl. lime 546-5745. Complete 10 pc. 1valnut & ('nd Ibis, Misc•llaneous 818 300 miles vf wear, Exccllf'nt 17 SQ. YARDS ny l on condilion! !\l ust sell, no"· carpeting. Blue 11•ilh green only $86. 1193-6460. necks. Good condition S40. e SKI FAMILIES 549-0674 ,,.-===-o~-ccc;c-,,--I Res('rve now! Cahin a1 :..ram. CHELSEA 8-cley US Navy mo1h ri.tountain. Sip~ 7. J•ln:-. deck clocks. $45 ea. i\lin-pl, "tc, SJ8.S20 per day. ney·s, 1'";i37 \V. Coast Jf"'Y· 53 1-3374 days. N.B. 54.s-4192. ! o,~IU~ST=~s.~.t'Cl ~Dc"-~-~B~u-gg-.·,. I FOR SALE Co r vair-12·· TV-A'.\f-Fi\1 radio 1975 \\'estminstcr, 0 1 afl 5 !l<llt'.<;man or sales"·o1na n. No phonr c·alb;. Backstr•cef, Graduate of lnhatarion Thf'r-or 1ra1nccs Graveyard shill ' bedroom set, ss;i. \Valnut tbl h OC\\', Coffee slereo cab, 6 42-7085 , :\lust ha1•r knowledge of No, 2.'J Fashion Island. N . .B. apy school, or minimum 11..S f;lust be neat a rlrpcndable . START JOB & white double headboards, :_21•50 couc ' foods & fond service l\lar. CASlllERS-Car ~·ash-fiJIJ yrs. 11•01•king e:ii:pcrience. Fcn1alr pN:f'd. Apply 9 am Typing 4D \l'.p.rn . short \\'Ork SJ ea. UFF'. 1885 Harbor 'c ~cAcNco0p0y~-.-ood~~b<d~-..,~,-m-,, Used double tier lockers. f air coodition. :Mr. Laney, Daily Pilot. "'==o-c--~-.,..-,-I Musical lnstrum•nt• 122 CARPET Layers have shag & comm'[ tv.·eecl crpts, Deal 1------------1 direct. Exper installer, Can DRUM SET, complrlr, $18j. finance. 539-8327, 827-8740 Incl. hi.hat, 22'' 1·ymbal . 1l'lnus oppor!unity fo~ t'lght time & part tun('. Cali-Pl'rm fu!J timr JI pm In 'ti1 nono. rxp, Call Lorainr, 64:>-2770, Blvd., CL\1. 54g.9457 posters & lop. Dbl S7.. Very prrS<111. Call 67.>-1002. • Gl-H450 * 7:30 aiTI . e WESOTSMPlNTSTLEeR \Vestc.lill Personnel Agency, SOF'A & olficr credenza & good cond. $39.90. 646-8441. ,,,\JBITIOUS .11oung n1arr1l•d ---C..'O:\>ti\1UN ITY H I A * Orangr Ct1a:;1 Pla;:1ic~ * 2043 \\'estcliff Dr., N.B. !ahles, armoirc, girls bt'd n1nn "'anted to 1r:11 r n Cl.O.SEH .. "i App I y Personnel, 17772 l(l(J \VCsL 18th 51., SC'!, v.·ood exec. desk & * CUSTOM FURNdlTIJclRE l D1stn butorship Sales B I Bl I llunl·t"gfo• C ,1 "·t·t *SUPERVISOR LVN 11.7:30 RENTAL. See a ass ~rocrry & n1eat iuslncss cac 1 Vt.. · " " ustn "csa, ._.. i . 1·eturn, c h a it's, sertees, to b<'come nlanngei•_ Call Franchisr. and !kach, nr cnlJ (7l4J S.17-7807. a.m. rclirf ~hirl, wk en1ls. SJJ--OlS8 4000. Call 54s-348l thron(', ucr,:r~.~. Excellent BARGAINS All. Lg pc. good conrtition. 5'1S-."1J'18 after .C carpet, overstuffed cha ir, pn1 or \VC'ekenrl:o;. metal wardrb close1, pie-,O;c-~=~~--"-~- tures, bkcasr. li7:>.-5-108 120 BASS B1illian!c ac.-Exp!.'rll•nrl'd Only Private Secretary Park Lido Conval('sccnl =c·---'-'-'·~~----UPJ.IOLSTERED c HA IR, 'Jr_ Adams, G73-3.'HO Sl .000/$1,j()() wk . l'tl11H11. To Presid•nt Center 642-8°'14 FOR sale: :r Pc liv room blue, low barrel shape $20. Assembly Trainees Qualif~1 ap11l11 •an!,.; Vrry .cunridl'n!ial. i\l11~t .nr TELEPHONE se!, sofa 1v/n1atch chair, 644--1140. ,-, llnn1rd. 0""11 in"~-for girl~ 11•,·11, 1·0 n1Jtn .. \11• 11···,·v 11 11 , ,, 2 end !bl•. 1 cofrce tbl ,,. ,..., " ., . ,.., . ··~. u11e 1g('n1. young, a rac :· SOLICITORS 11• !'.:<xlll eycsigh! &· finger Ti~vrl. All i.t>ads f!1rni.~hrd "·oman able to travel, Fu-. & 2 match lamps, S17J. dr . ..:ter1ty . Pleas(' hul1')', call Thru i\'ntion·1J Advcrlisin:; 1 •-~, lure unlimited for righl J)('r-E:ening hrs 5 to~· Mon 1hnl 847-71::3 r l'Ome in today, CaJl r.o ll rl'1 lll2l frl2-:li:i7 ~ san. Forrner secretary ru'(>. fn _&·Sa! morning 9 lo l , 6 l-IIGl.ol_b_"_k_v_ecl-,-"~'-,-,-Y OR.ANGE COAST ,\Jr. S.-ind<'n;, 11F'C -._ -inoted 10 execUllVf' posi1ion. $2.2:> per hr. Apply 3 lo 9 chairs, S.U ea. -4 high back ANTIQUE V i ctorian lovesrat, $150. Blue Chenile sofa, $50. 64&-9148 SIGNS. sho-cards, posters, wj.ndows, trucks. '""' price. Morn or ('\Jes 962--3887. FOR Sale illuminaled pla!c glass display ca.~es, 5x.2x2, $50 ea. Call 962-55:11 . E:'l1PWYi11ENT AGENCY Su1 !!' 3121 -JOHN llANCOCr> \\'rillrn l'f'!'Unle & any h('Jp-eves_ 835·8873 black vinyl easy chairs, $49 12•1 Broadway, C.1.1. 64~3111 CF.i'.'TER ·Chicago, Illinois • fuJ sereening information to ** \VA.ITRESS-Must have <'8. 6 occasional chairs, $10 BABY'S coming. i\1ust S('ll 60611 o"~ ' t'' J PC 0--1~ .. & Vario"e Staulier table, Excellent! 1\Ul'O POLIS HING t..· JJlV\NE PER:SONN EL I A.T..I., P .O. Rox 1.,.,.. Costa local Nferences. 1-~ull or · • "'""' n.... "" END TABLE Octagon i\laple $12 • 644-1140 • DETAIL positions. F:xp'd I COOK • woman. Rr1ircmr111 I · ,,. 1'1f'SH, Ca. !l2fo26. ·• part li_ml'. Apply in person Uft', 188J Harbor Blvd , Cl'\t, Home Furnishings. I c."'='ctoo=I 0 le 0 •c! 0>1c!4l6~0'_'=....,= •·ni.:uw ('lf'ani~ & paint-bu!· hnmr, Laguna Beach. Call SERVICES ~GENCY POSITION .or iusl. a joh? only, ;,930 \V. C:Oasl lhvy. '·' 548-9457 * * 5?.6-81~6 * * NE\VPORT Bch Tennis Cluh tin-: Salary Opl'n Gro"1h '1!}4-!l.l~ 1488 E. A r~·.<urnf' l!' the dirferencc. N.B. Surf & S1r lo1n. , PC Corner groups, $69 11.\'IN Bed, complf'1e \\'ith Jull family membership $~.';O ,.,. \IETHO CAR \\'ASH 17th \;u Irv1neJ C.i\1. & -100 ca. 1-9 pc oak Iv.in bedroom box $prings Jtnd mattre56 or best offer. 6#-0-184 :r;.-~! llftrl,,.ir Bl\d , C :\I. Collections Clerk 642-1470 , \\'r l'O~iposr 1 · ~~~nt Call WAITRESS, lull tiine, Call ser, $~19. 7 only -walnut & frame $2S s.19-067-t I====~~-~ . ----i = + ,1. I I 1•npir~ 11r on~ J. for appt, 67.:1-4110. Ttw "t•h• ,t-nd<., $1 "'. UfF, -.~-~~---..-~-1 BlCYCLES, 10 !<p, 3 S/l. ,T,: A S • C hi '""' . in yr c>X(l('r. \\' ''lf..-O:Oi"H J 1 .. ,_, " "" -. Ch • uto erv1ce as er I ,... •· <1r :IPI• Galley Caft 829 Bay~1de.1 1 ss5 Harbor Blvd. C:\I. Nia9ra Massag• air misc. oth('r bike!I. Good· \!u.-.;1 kt)01v f11 1'I <-launs. ('CJlll"Clion agency. LADY for rcslnuranl v.·ork l'RODUCT IO;.;'-\\'OR!\ERS Dr, N.B. ' S200 *,.. 642.7142 cond. Reason.ab!(', 6-12-1272 Newpo•t ''P d!'s'd. Plrn~r rail l'============""'-"";8=·'.=1:57,c,·======= c=========="1=========== l-~\µ'd . only. sal. 01X'n. Lon.e F'x"'TletJCt'd 11on1cn !or day --P ersonnel Agency ~1-16&i " •- ;;;'.'.."; ~~1 ~::;".~,'.' ~:::; 833 Dover D e . N.8 . L v N 3 ;n~I '° p,i-;;;;,;-' "~;:;,~~;';','.:;~,.,;,, '"' USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK, WE PAY THE POSTAGE! PiloT. P.O. Bu.-.; l~f11, Cost;i 642-3870 PA l1 °K I. I I) 0 <" 0 N-u;t.11 1_;,,1hard ~t. 11.B. \1r.~a. C;1l1f !l21i2f; VALF:SCENT C l~NTER. Pli X12-'i'11i'.l A.:s1 sTANT-l10u~r---;;;-1hrr COOK lND f,.l2·f:D M. ____ I !~HT U1~fu1t-11111r 111111>1not1;; f,ir \\U111f'1l'!I alc.:ohu!it' rrtwh ' 111ank yo11 for rr.ad1111.: Olir I p1.•upk Let Uf>' Show you l\•1111(' Sonic know It'd ~t· 1 s::.11> :i.10. \\'r !I es1ah. C'onval-ela~sifi('d ad~. hope 11'(' have llf)I' 111 n111kC' n1 on r y 1il<~1hnhsn1 . Ronm. board. 1 1'st;r111 huinC" need~ cxlJ('r. th(' future. 21.1/5!lZ-:iQ39 •<il<1ry. :Hta.v l\'('('k, \Vrlte I lady 2n•l cook on day shill. --_ _:~=======' '.:"i'1l(J HnrlJOr Blvd. Suite 301, Br111·h arf'u Help Wa nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Cuslil L\lesa 92(\26 !~1\ B\'SIITER-Litc h ~ r. k p . 0" n I rans. ~da.v wk. No. C.\I Days 637-7952: Afl 6. ~.1&-1716_. ______ _ HABYSITT"ER, ;; children, li1'('·1n. .$130 mo. Ca 11 ~hll'l'l'TI 12 "' S pm. 962-S{)70 l3'8bysi l!cr1ll.~kpr, live in. 1·h1ldren 5 & 7. Some li:ng pref'd Rrr's 1193-71192 Brtty Bruer rniJd l~ec Ag.en c'J Tv.·o yQijllli: a1trnd 1ve lad\es, unmarried lo work f(!r new apts . I 1nuNl do rental &. social wurlt l rhc other tor gt>n'I olc, Apt rirovlded + llllary, S Days a 11•k, \\'ed. Uiru Sun. • 410 W. Cout t!Y.y., N B. By appoint 646·39.."'9 BOB'S "JIOME or 'MlE BJC BOY .. TRAINEE-COOK Ne-•.t appeannc. good chu. NO EXPERrENCE NEC. hb.ny trin&e be.nefi111 lntervlews 4 ro I pm Dail}' 154 E. 11th, C.J\.t. Equal oppty employer Turn tholsft White Elcpbanls I In to CNh thrv a Dall¥ PUot ~ Din»-1-Hne adll .. CALL ZENA 1714) 9S6-IOOO CAL·FAI R EMPLOYMENT AGENCY C12:'1 So. Euclid, Sul1e-~ Anahein1 CCXJK . Deek, 75· yacht. Pt> rm an e n I job-i\1exican trip Feb-l\1ay. Stare r x- p e r 1 e n c.r - s a 111 r y re· quil'f:!ment , \lirite, classified ad No. 70, Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Rox \;,f,O, Cos1a l\1rsa, Calif. 92626. DENTAL ASSI S TANT i:hairsid(', GP. Girl 20-30, t':ii;p req'd. 646-9519 1-'l pm • DENTAL "* St>crt:llll'y /Rf'Cepl ion ill :~ffi..5613 DENTAL ASS1ST'°"'A"NT"".~1'°tE"°'· CEPTIONIST. Exp'd., ma . tun'. Hunt. Bch, 8'16-9235 orsrntBUTOR, l\f an age wur ~·n busines!f \\'/ln- L'Ome potential of $1000 per nK>. Initial invt'Almt>nt 1M11 than $100. Early ~tirement possiblt , MZ-2150. Ex•c Sec'y to $600 Xln't skills A ability lo v.wk urodt!r preMure for top exec. ·w/k:<'dini; electronic mfar. EXECUTIVE PERSONNEL AGENCY (10 \V, Owu1t Jlwy., NB <Sulrt" HJ 64$.2716 FLOOR WAXER Y.::ii:prr nnly. 5-46-5388 appt. Restaurant ANNOUNCING ANOTHER Exciting Cocoj AND Wa will accept application' for - • WAITRESSES • BUS BOYS • DISHWASHERS • HOSTESSES •COOKS • BARTENDERS • COCKTAIL WAITRESSES Starting D•c•mb.r 29 9 :00-4 :00 Daily Apply in P•rson 24001 Avenlde cM le Carlote Laguna . Hiiis Santa Ana or San Diego Frwy. to El Toro Rd. -Corner of El Toro Rd. and Avcnida de la Ca_rlota. Owned by Far West Services, Inc. Operators of Snack Shops, Coco's Reu ben's, Reuben E. Lee, The Whaler , Jsadore's 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES ' TIMI'S $4.50 • TIMI'S $6.10 7 TIMES $10.65 12 TIMES $15.90 ---l---l---·l---1---1----1------- $5.10 $6.00 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 r u"li1h f•• .. , .. , , , , .... ,,, "•9hu1in9 , •• •• •. -• • • • • •• • • • • • • " • • • • · • • • • Cl1u ilic1lio• , •• , , ,, ••,, •• •• • • • • • • • • • • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• '' •• '' '''' •• • N1m1 ••• ••,. ,. ,, ,, •• ,, ,. ,, ,, • • • • • • •• • • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •' ,.,.. Add111t ••••• I ••• I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• City ••• , • , , , , •• , , ., ., , , , , ,. , , • , , Ph•n• ••• , ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $8.21 $13.10 $20.10 $9.76 $15 .55 $24.30 TO lllGUlf COST rut •nly .... word in ••cli 1p1c1 1bo,,.1, l11clud1 yo~r •ddr•H ., phon1 numbt r, Th• co•t ol yo•1 1d it 1t th• end 1# th• line 011 which ffr1 ltd w1rd of your •cl i1 wra. t111, Add J2,00 ••tr• ii you tl11l1• ••• el DAILY rllOT l or t•r'fic1 with m1il•d ••· pli11. -----------CUT Milli -PAm ON YOUI IHVILOPI ----------- -W'tll S.NI .by Addi 17 IUSINESS ~E,LY MAlL flnt c:i-.... It "-ll, c.t. w..., C.llfenl9 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT P. 0. lox 15'0 Costa M.M, CaUf. 92626 Clauillod Dopt. "' ---,, .... ,.. ll 1" u.hftl Statn = = = = • cor<lion w/c11 s('. Very good cond, SJ L5, ;14!\-3j76 before noon FOR Sale SacrifiC('! New bulfcl ter10r sax \Vilh new case, $100, Call ~fl·l-8359 or 838-1889 ELECTRIC guilar 1v/ca5(' $40 amplilicrs $60 Ir. i450. ~:t-34:'!9. Office Furniture/ Equip. 124 Rl'fin'd 34x60 wood desks, $69.50 e Rehn'd "'ood arm rotary chail"!;, $29.50 • We have the largest selection of used office furn in this .,., .. ~1c ~T ahan Desir 1800 N('"'JlOrt Blvd. 642-8·1~{1 I L\lOf'lEL 209 :1'.\T a11!n pholn ropicr. nr". latr 'ii3, $1•162 vah.<•'. Purcha~rr assumr lras!' G payn1cnt~ ttl1al Sfl·l!t.:')6 rwiyabtr 'lllRrtrrly SHl.'11. ror full ~CJ u i I Y. 644--.jQ,")?i ELECTRIC A.B. ririnler min1f'Qgraph prox $50 supplic~. 645-3411 Dic k . ·~ $150. P ianos/Organs 126 FINAL YEAR END CLEAR OUT of P ianos & Organs J\Tany at \\'hole!lalc prk~ll \VARD'S BALD\VIN SJlJDIO 1819 Newport Btvc;, 642·8484 Hammond, Sl el nway, Yamaha. New .to used piano11 o: mos! make!I. BeS"t buy! In So. Calif. at Schmid t J\Tusic Co., 1907 N. J\.laln, Santa Ana. S•wing Machine • 121 *REPAIRS* Clran. oil & adjust your ma- chine in your hcimc, Spec- tal S3.9.i, all wurk G\lllflln- !eed. 5-15-8238. 1970 Singer Zig-Zag Auto, hcautlful walnut COfl801e. l\fake s butt o nko le1, overcas1~ ~11 m11, b I i nd hems. desi~ etc. Gu!U'. S~4.44 C'ash, nr small pyml!I. 5-15-8238. ~ ~lo-,~,-,.m-. -.-m~•l'la-..,,-,, tools, & rn1~c It,. m •. &1~-701~ or Alt '.). ~Y13--12Z7. Sporting Goods 130 --------7"14" Knre 13<);\rd S2S lllrlt. wnd. ronm 1poon 6T:J-.12:i3 1 ;;;! ---· ;;;;I~~ I .. h • ~ J[B ._I 1_"""""_'"Jon_I~ I ........... ..... ..... 96' 1 ,s;,~.;;e-_l'!f.._Good __ ;.• _...;:.'30:..:;. Cata as2 &oat•. s.11 909 Trucks 962 Trvck1 SURFBOARO 6'10" "Greek" low rail,r, clean 11ha~ $60. 64-1-1140 CHILD'S Skis $10, boot' S4, $5 & $6. Aller Ski booi.!5 $2 & $3. 546-4764 TV, Radio, HiFi, St•reo 136 J YEAR old neute r e d BLU"mei;e w!U1 papers. Good la.mll)' pet. $35. 646-67&5 Dogs 8S4 I Me.le silky pupp)', 3 mos .. s:.m. 1 while me.le reg. toy poodle, 3 mos., 646--0l~2 or MB-10:.!:l. 333 E, 17th SI., C.J\t. 23" MAGNAVOX COL.Oft J\fALE purebred Black Lab CONSOLE. l\1~dllerranenn 4\~ ~ars old. si;. ' pecan \\'OOd. 1'"•1 n speakt>rs-1 S.\8-8265 casters-most rlelu:.:e model. AUTOl\fATIC COLOR, FltE-REG. Collie, l~~ yrs, S35. QUENCY, <'1 C. Sold 13 mo Must go to good horne ago, SGliO, guarantecl like w/childn'n. 968-t477. ne11·. Need $362 1o cleru· Ps late. J . R eynalds. 839-1790. GARR.ARD record·changer- p\a}~r. Dianiond stylus, 1i_•g. $,39.50, ~ SZ7. Ne-.~ A!- lanric l\tu11ic 4-6 E. 17th. CURTIS-1\f.ATHES TV-Sterro r.ombin., cherry\1-ood Fr. Prov. $100. S33-272'l Af! 6 Pi\1 SYLVANIA 4160 expoflf'nt A;\1/FM multiplex, G11.rra1~! turntable 6-12-7j.1'1. FREE TO YOU e DALMATIANS AKC e * .. 642-1937 .. * AFFECTIONATE G e rm an Shephc1'd pups, Good guard dogs, 8 \\"ks. 494-0188· 2 COCKAPOO P uppies for sale $i eat h· * 5-<l:-r-2716 * * SHERRY'S POODLES * Yr ('1111 pu ppy sa1P, groom- in~. frt'c pk-up. 546--2848. AKC BLK l\llNii\TURE POODLES. 3 !\IO'S OLD S.75 * 673-0J:r.l NEED Gd honiC' fncd yd, SPRlNGER Sp11.niel AKC for lovahle 1nalc rlOOl:llc & Rrg .• 8 mo., mil.le, sacrl!Jce, ·wire hair 1rrr1cr n1 ix. pup .;-961\-&~~l~68~''~":='~5""'p~.n~>.-~~ :J m(l. ;,1G-3.Jti1; 836-44!):1 e rRISll SETI'ER Pups, Al\:C 1/16 Reg. Champion Lineage. BEAU. l\lale Basset hound ___ *_*_B_0_2--0_258 __ *_* __ _ pup 7 mo. hsbrk sl"iols loves * SCHNAUZER pups. children. Needs gd home at stud. Grooming. 546-2216; 836-4493 1/16 &IS.08.19 .l\lale SAVE $3,500 CONTEST 27 SLOOP SUPER SHARP DE.MO Complr!cly equipped f or cruising. Must see to apprt'c- ii11e fine Dulch cra11sman- shlr1. . Holl.iind Yachts/Newport ITI4) &M-0139 Confett 27-lO -ll-35-40 Boats, Slips/Docks 910 15'·30' slips avail for [XJ\\·er boats, Bayside Village, 300 E. Coru;t llwy, N.B. SLIPS AVAILABLE, 25' to G.M.C. TRUCK CENTER "THEY'RE HERE" 71 GMC CAMPER SPECIAL Power bra kff, H.D. sprints, 8 $3295 ply tir•s, r•ady for big camper. 111ossn 1stk. #lOOSI CALL 546·6750 24 hr. Phon• SALES e SERVICE UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 Ha rbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 40' * no:~-:Ps • 1__r_~_"'_'°'_'_"_10"_.JJI EJ I ;j;;;;r;;,..,....;;;;;;-;;'';;'1on;;;;;;;;J~\rft:;J Available Nrwp:>rt Beach. •••••••••-Cati: 54S-5."Ui3. Mobile Homes 935 Trail•rs, Travel ~B~o!at~s~.~S~p~•~ed~&~S~k~i_9!1~1.1~;;;;;:;;:;;:;:;;::;;::;:;:;;::; .61 GLASSl'AR >'lyin,.z , i1:J?l11(?J'!JtJ1jllJ'-j 945 17'2'. in/b, o/b, Like /\"('I\ i2950. 842-2007 Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 '64 Ford Camper Yan Completely equipped 11·\1h JX>JI top. ice box, s10\"C, li!r. Radir1J 1irci;. l owner. iUED- lCH) \Vlll lakl? car in trarlr or finant't', 5-15-8736 or 494-681 1. '50 l''ord Sehl Bus Can1~r. Ne1v mtr & trans, brks. 646-2213. SurroundPd by Irvine Oranges! Real rural living yet close · to ocC'an, sharping &. recreation ALL ELECTRIC Choose from 105 floor plans, you name it! Adults-Pets O.K. 10' TRAVEL Queen Camper. S.'llC OJ Trade. 1 ~: Nell'por! Blvd, Sp 47, C~I . NE\V self-contained 2 0' trailer. L<'ss th11.n whol<'snle. 71·1/531-18:JO. Trailers, Utility 947 1·1' Tandein Trailer, all sir.e l, welded oonstructton. 14·· Deck plating. 545-<1361 or 542-5.345, Will 1rade on Pick Up. l§J Cycles, Bikes, LOVELY Sea!poinl Siamt'SC EVER \Vanted an OLD Scooters 925 Private Club-$300,000 950 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET ThurUllJI, J.wwy 14, 1971 DAILY PILOT ff JAGUAR '64 XKE Roadlfer "'M!FM /SW R•dlo, Chrom• w;,. Wh •• r. IYWC SJl l MGI TOYOTA MGS-OT '68. 17,000 ml, '68 Toyota Corona AMfFM, Alr-cond, New matic trans., ndio, heater. rad1a1L $2350. 6f6...3863 aft Local owner, new car trade' 1 pm. I In, 18,CO'J orig, mtle1, 1U1i>- Bill Jones' e '63 MGB-Good oond. Ne~· Lie, WAR052. $1895 "'"' & pelnt. l!!OO. Call $1399 c:! ~ :,';i,,, B.I. Sportscar Center ~·"'"'"-'""'' '"'67>-0'i=c: .. ::.,· --~ HU H..._, C.M. ,., .. ,., '69 MGS-OT, Like ""w lo CHICK IVERSON PAYME!\ITS -credit pro-, nil's, wht w/blk Inter,· AU VW hll·m? WW take over 66JAGUARJ.8S t"lllras, S2250. * 6'75-7004 * payments on acceptable , Aulom•lic:, "';, Cond. OPEL . 549-30n Exl. 66 Qr 67 !are, model, lo mU eage, tully ( R.GV 911 ) 1970 1-IARBOR BLVD. e<fU!p~d t"Ar, \\"agon or $1895 COSTA MESA r nnrhero tyfJ('. Call Sall)', OPEL 1968 Kadett Rally 1----,--,--,-,..,--,---,-.,,----- ', '•"-""3 Bill Jon•.-s"''" 4 Spd, •~.vinyl l<>p, '71 COROLLA 8.1. Sportscar Center 1-n:::'="·~"=-,_,,..;c.:,::,· ~~-1 I,' I 1\ f lUP IJGLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS l lJl Hoit;or, C ,M. 140-44'1 PORSCHE Radio, heater, dlsc brakes, U your car Ls extra clean, M*l*N*T factory air, low, low miles? see us first. , '65 p h Take olde.r car or small1 BAUER BUICK J AG GR XK~ conv1._ Yellow/ Or5C 9 do\1/t1. Under fact. warnnty.! 23-1 E. 17th SI . blk. rJ:h, wtres. r.llnr "l·iiri-356 SC Survoof Call J.1alll)' dlr. ah lo arnl Costa P.·lt'sa 5tS-n65 course"' oond. J.-1.Jj()_ Pvt 540-Jlf)J 491--a>Ei 037327 ---;;:;;;;;;;;;;:-;;;;;;;;;:;;---J_P~t~y=· ~837~.,.,.,~-1~. -----Drltish racing green. or . .1 IMPORTS WANTED L;, YCC S2S BIIL MAXEY I Orang~ Counlie9 '67 Jagu:\r XKE cp. Dul.Stan-$2199 TOP $ BUYER d;og rood. lJ> m;'" j •pd, CHICK IVERSON BILL l\tAXEY TOYOTA slerro. $3500. 644-8191 . fTIOIYIC)fTIAJ 18881 ee"h m,,, KARMANN GHIA VW • --- ff. IWlch. Ph. 847-85:-ii 5-19-3031 Ext. ti6 or 67 11811 BEACH BL VD. WE PAY TOP CASH '68 KARtifANN GHIA like 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Hunt. Beach 147-155J new condition, 2ii,OOO actual C'OSTA MESA I rn1 N, ofo..t Rwy, 08 ~ miles, $1300. 492-3878 ___ '70 Porst'he 911-T Targa, 1965 EUROPEAN Karmann 39,000 mi's, Xlnt cond, Scrv Ghia, 1500 S, low n1\leage, records avall, Illness in '71 TOYOTA PICKUP for used cars A: trucks just $11)95. 497-2008 family, must sacrifice, $6200 With deluxe 30" camper, Full call us for free estimate. 'G.1 KAR~tANN GlllA $300. or best offer. Pvt pfy, price SZ'251. Take small GROTH CHEYROlll ~. 6~~~· Nc1vp o rt -~=:t:'::..:,;~"10=""~.'-''°_·_'_"" __ •_w_lmd __ s ~~::: ~a~:lr· 494-7503- MERCEDES BENZ '69 911 T, European style. :-:c::-:=__,,,--.,.---- Ask for Sales ?o.lanager Tllllg .• hill comfort group, 196G TOYOTA Corona: 4 dr, 18211 Beach Blvd. AM~· 23 IQ) · red, r/h, ovf'rslzed ties. Hun-." Be•-L • m11g~. , c "'• , mi .• SG9S. ** * 642--0SSS u• 673-6265 BBesl offer, femah', spayed, Adults only. ENGLISl-1 SHEEP DOG. i---'---'------'--1 Recreation Center 536--0476 1116 but didn't v.-ant lo spend 6 J\·IO old orange & •.vhite $500 & up. r~ather \1•as a short haired male kitt<'n. lg. Siberian llusky, motlier :i-16-7308 1115 a champion O!d Eni<;!ish. n.nJ""Ll"V1 14 BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED MODELS 847-6087 KI 9-33.11 Mercedes '71 280 SE VB 1..:c.:..;=-==,..:.:=--'69 TOYOTA •11-PE--CONVERT 1969 Pcf'8Che 912. This coupe --'67 CHEVROLET Sportsvan Autos, lmport.d 97(; 3.5 a>U IBLE is ex«'pUonally clean, ?-.tany ---~536-~11l8()i':::~al'=t'~'~s:_ __ 8 pas. 6 C)'I, auto 1raJJ:i, r/h, ----~-----1 LESS TliAN lOOO ?.ilLES ~xtras. SACRIFICE. :,;;~· .,.;, pty, $1250. AUSTIN AMERICA NEW CA:i;;;~RRANTY 1,;"::"-;':;l";:·~~~~~-1 ---TR_l_U_M_P_H __ THINK 10 Big, bcautHul, furry OLDER Male Cockt'r Spaniel pups, 8 \\·ks old $90. 642-5-172 good "'ilh chi!clrcn to a good AFGHANS, AKC, Female & home 89-1-4393 lll~ male. \\'ht 1v/blk mask, Top ~1 I N I ATlJRE dachshun<I, blood line, Champ stock. male, 5 }TS, !rtt to ris.:ht Good w/children, Hsbrkn. HONDA 10lr. TR193) Oun• Buggies 956 AUSTIN AMERICA &autihll metallic blue with '70 9115/5 2.2 Uter Silver TR 3 '59. Very good can- b.ack kid glove leather in-coupe, black In t erio r dltlon. Hardtop &: con- ter, ~·actory air cond. Po"'-Ai\1ff'M, air, dose ratio ~'ertible. $575 Ol' best olfer. ('r s1ecr., dlc;c brakes, clee-~ars. Pert. condition, 548-6654. J-,.:ime . 646-4352 1/15 6'16-7658. MUST SAC. Aust Shep pups. Reg. Blue Merles, shots. Come see & n1a ke of.r. 642-6400, 1-6 pm. &l4-81~ NEED big home for pcdigrtL ed German Shepherd, 1 yr old from Kay.J\.1or Kennels. \VclJ..lntined. 9138-4009 A.FGHAN PUPPIES Show ... "FRIEDLANDER'' t11• l•ACM (HWT. •l 5."l7-6824 • R'JJ..7:166 NEW-USED-S E RV. 14851 Jeffrey Rd. In Irvine 832-8585 '68 Dun~ Buggy WIB 138 $999 BILL. YATES VOLKSWAGEN 328S2 Valle noad San Juan Capistrano !137-431))/ 49:i-45l1I499-2'261 Sales, Service, Partl Immediate Delivery All ModelJ J1rtuµort Jlinµol't5 3100 W. Coa!t Hwy., N.B. M2-94M 540-1764 DATSUN DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND ,,.',. 11·i"'low.<, Becker AM-ic$8900:=::=· ~55~7--9~•~59~·~---I ~.63:--=:c----,,-------I ... .., TR 250 Tr i um p h, FM stereo. Perm. ?.tichelin SHARP "66 Porsche: overdrive. l.1ust S<'U. T .O.P. rarlial 1ircs. most every Am/Fm shortwave, chrome 548-SJSR aft 3 pm. xtra. {576BZS). Displayed rin1s, new eng/5 spd, $3100. j ------'------. shOwI'QOm floor for your Jn-or take ovr pymlll. 673-5853. '60 TR-3, Rebulll engine & •1, lransn1lssion. Xlnt C()Jld. s(><'C!ion, '68 !IU-T, l2,000 ml'.!l, S..sixl. Alloy whls, comfort group, =B~'~'-'-'-"-"-·-•_1_4-04_98_. ___ J ~ll>eW ere, Very clean, $4600. TRIUMPll TR. 6 1969 1 @ 646-3001 Al\t/F~1. \\'it't'S, exceptional CADILLAC '67 911, 5 _ spd, Wcbcrs, nu rond. Make oUer 673--01.36 AUniOAIZEO OlAUR E tires, 48.000 mi's, $3950. ve. I ~~~~~~L., 543-8105 cln)'s, ask for Greg. 'fR4 -1964. Blue. black top. Call 5-1(}.!llOO Open Sunday 'G7 912. Air, A.~/f"'M i;t~reo. $850, Good running, wry ~~REE puppies to gd home 20311 Cypress, Santa Ana }!eights. 1/14 ADULT silver per si an fem alr & silver labby male. 5'!6-7308 1/15 4 TONS of bundle. pnpers. To a non-protlt organiiatlon. 642-6037 1/15 ASSORTED cactus plants (one JO" tall) U-dig & haul. Call ti46-536l 1/15 COCAPOO puppies, 5 \'"eeks, Black mask silver. quali1y. 6~6-$2. Horses 856 Triple Wide Cornell H.illet"C'st e Flamingo Paramount e Universal Rarrington • Broadntoor Contiuental ti Star General • 1-Hllcrcst '60 CORVAIR for sale. Greil! for Dune Buggy. Goorl ruli- ber $275. 5-16--7817 af1t'r 6 p in. F·on'-Sa1~,-,-,.-,,.,-,-d~,-u-,-,~ Ruggy frame & 'engine'. S!ralghf a'l:el, 401 cu in Olds, Sl:iO. 6-12-&'.126. SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach ro-mt or ~f}-0442 • Red w/blk. Many extras. clean, 87,000 miles, A iood! l-----=------1 $3600. 64-l--0516 buy, 546-2050, I 16131 Schryer Larw. Bi':Atrr AQHA more, 5 yrs, grullo, 15 hds, sire-Zandy JI l\1any show ribbons. Fine dispo6ilion. SUOO 536-3008. '60 Mercedes 220 1968 PORSOIE 912-5, f.IU.!lt YO KSW I see this one before coMld-L AGEN I 8.ui-9678 1115 BEAUTIFUL f.lan.~ cat 1o J:ood home. l yf'ar old frmale, 61"":>--1666 Cd~t 1/14 2 Yr. MlniatuN> s i l v c r Low mileage. f:;<;ccllent rori- dilion. to.lust S<'ll. Full pnce_ (#0084·12) CHAPMAN MOBILE HOMES 12?.31 Ikal'h Blvd., G.G. .,,. 71·1 '530-2930 * 'iO :\1EYER.S To"•'d, i;:d cond. V\V po\ver. $1200. !'.to-~i990 ~:iy~. 510-9251 eves. '67 Df\TSUN 1300 4 dr ~e<lan in great cood. 494-68!11 a(t 6. Sfi;,Q or best offer 4 Door S•d1n. '4 Sp1•d !2XF 1551 $795 '"''" "'-''" 0 ' 548 ·"""· '64 VW SUNROOF * "60 Porsche. Mioor body Poodle, AKC regis. S.16-4625 l /14 6 REG qtr hon;es. 3 mares. I gelding, 2 cofls. Good breeding. $2100 tot n~: 613--55.\11 $699 BARWICK f"R EE puppies. Cockrr anri Livestock 858 Ji\IPORTS INC. Coll.ie 6 \\·eeks aH 6 calll ----------1 DATSUN 821-7357 1/1,1 •Box 11tall Sl a day • I Orange Co. Fairwounds 99S S. Cst. l·hvy, LB 4!J.1-!lin BL.ACK J\la!c Cockapoo pup-e 532-2374 e py. 8 "'ks 0111 lI't'e to Ji:d ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii home. 842--6!117 1/1·1 PUPPY lo good home. &Its and I I ~ ,e l 897-l2'J8 1/14 M8rinelquipmwit . 1(.. FREE l bro11·n rooster 4 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ monU1.!l olrl 646-2169 1114 I BEAUT. silky haired CaliL'O. Genera l 900 * HONDAS * Motorcrcle Tr•ll"" '•'" • s.n1 •• Fh1011cl1111 & 1 .. •rem<e TUSTIN HONDA 624 E. ""' •t Ne•P•rt ···-·'-......... ... :146-7308 1/15 ---------1 ,,,======~=!'.1 .p.J r.10.. French Poodle/ f REE • TRAIL BIKE • Dachshunrl. blk & \Van! To Lh'e Jn COSTA MESA Local spaces availahlt' now! Ir you are seriou.s about buy. in)! a mol>ile home. _ .Now's the !\ n1e to see BAY HARBOR MOBILE HOMES 1'125 Baker St, (a1 1-Iarborl Sports, Roe•, Rods 959 FERRARI 1--------1 '70 DUSTER FERRARI 3\ll CID, !looker llc11ders, Nev.'j)Ort Imports Ltd. JrtJclirock Hi-Rise, Bir.: 4. ange County's only 11uthor- Consistcnt 13.75s nl Ornn,1:C' lzed dealer. County. Grt'at Cond. Reacly SALES-SERVICE-PARTS to go. Ca!] aftl?r 5. 53'1-31913. 3100 \V, COB~t Hwy. Newport Beach Costa r.1esa. 5'10-9470 Trucks 962 &fZ.9405 549-1764 Triple Wide Cornell Continental • Paramount Barrington e Universal }'lamingo e General hroadmoor • Star J-Iillcrest • Cambridge --------'67 Chevrolel 'l: Inn 8 rt b<'d, ·'t mn rcnr suspf!nslon, slep humprr. G <'YI. big 6 ply flr"('s $1300 or best offer. 557-7315. Authori7.cd Femu1 Dealer FIAT "'""""""' "THINK" MG MG Sale!!, Service, Part1 Immediate Delivery. All Models \\wk. SJ15Cl. 126'1! 39th St, Newport Bch. 1965 PORSCHE·C Xlnt cond. Lo ml. 549-3)47 late '66 Portch• 911 Custom grt"en $3150. 548.()572 TOYOTA 1971 TOYOTAS ARE HERE! Mark II Corollas Coronas Pickups 1970 TOYOTA CORONA SEDAN $ SA VE $303.00 BEST BUY Artie white, with contrasting red leatherette Interior ra- dio, bealf:r. Lie_ Y\VZ886 l $899 CHICK IVERSON vw 54!}.3031 Ext. 6li or 111 1970 liARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '63 VW CAMPER (QMX0821 $799 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN beige. "Prince," Very gotXI Basic Boating Course off-1211 Kawasaki. autn Quick hcal!h, active, 646-3763, 2.'\3 ered to the public by the rh~nt:r spl'Ol·krt. For slrt'l'I Costa 1\11'sa St .• c .;-.1 . l/l•I Balboa P o\\•er Squadron. or trail. only 1,200 m1lrs CHAPMAN MOBILE HOMES 1206 N. 1-larbor, S.A. 1j() TILT -('ah Ford, 2 spd. a)(le, llllga1e. Hi' bed. \"<'ry F::d. tifl"'~. runs. &..looli;s exrrpt J;!rl. S14;i(). 846-0296. '66 Fonf ~~-!on pick-up. Auto. r & h. Ora.r. Brst ol- rrr. &l&-7fJ13 rvf's & .,,,-km~. ~BBB J2 rtuport jl111por1 c, 32852 Valle Road From window sticker pri('e San Jwtn Captilraoo • Ser 7826 Demo. R&li, aulo--8J7-4800/493-45ll/49'J.Z2fi1 * 714/531-8105 .. Nt:ED home fnr l '2 yr old Sail a.!l \\"ell as power S4ll0. 0111 aflrr 6 pn1 737-6-1-19. I----------NEW 124 CPE. DEMO $2795 ma!lr. cc~~~~=~~-"'-1 '66 Fslbck, R./H Xlnt cond, Wht exter w/blk intrr, Pvt ply, $1045. ~1 6. Cock-a-Poo frmale puppy boa!ing taugh!, St<U"tin,i: ------COSTA MESA ,1•/9 mo olrl pup. Has !>hOIS I 7 pm tt·lon. Jan. 18. Every l?iU T~ i: l!oncho Su7.ukl. f!\!=\1.11 t\tobL!C! }'.s!atc Liv'g &. license. 362 E. 20th, C.i\l . ?>.londay nitc for 13 \\"eeks. .>-~pl?r any exlr~l~. lrli':ll N\: 12 20 & 2·1 \\'ide ?.iodcls Auto l easing 964 1f l·t 1 At Nel'.'flor1 llarbflr Yacht forll trail . or ~1;'2.c !. "'u~T N"n,1• ~n displav in 5 ~r11r I :_:.:_cc..:.c..--"------- Cl h '" \' !f' , n1u\1n)(. •·> ·' nr \\"Ill GREENLEAF PARK '71 Oodne Van Wv1:::L; 3 Y<'a r ol d u · 7...., \·. Bay Ave., !rarlr fnr? ~111-tfl:i'l • ""hlt<'forangc ntall' cat. Newport Bearb. Brin~ _ _ __ lT."oO \\'hitt1er Avenue 6-12-1.,:"..0 6 i-yl. 11utn. 127" whi•el ha.'lf'. ~l!t'red shots, box tni.ine<l. notebook & pencil fir.il WA NT E D 11,000 milrs, 1114009fl S2900 , . Any , FUIL~ISHEO 1%6 f\e1vport or li'n•e $90 nio. K~rlis good home_ im-n1te_ questions call Any yPat 25(1 nr J05 Honda IO:'\:ii l\"/SXJ:i sc:reen porC'h. mcdldately. 6-14-01~9 l/16 --'-'-'-"-;~5·'-=~=----~1·rrirn hl!'T. nnl running. ("n~la .\lcsn ArlulT Park. '69 Mustang GT Option I c I ._,,, -.,., Air rond. Vln:v. I tor, lmme1·- ... "FRIEDLANDER" 3100 \Y. Coasl Hwy .• N.B. 642-9405 S.W.17&l 11750 llACH ILYD. -...._______.._ I Hwy. J9l ....-------,,_ 893-75fiG • 5.17~ & THINK ~ ··~~'' ..DeM Lewi.! W TOYOTA 1006 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '67 LAND CRUISER 4 whl'('J rlrlvc. power winch, PRISSY nel'.(~ a i:ome, ove FREE .... .,..]ij!,.., S-1!1'.l:, 11r oiler. Amrr1ran B "I · 1 11!01•~. 12 .000 mile~. <XSK-& affection. caut "'LJcpnin '70 HONDA Trail 7Qlik,.. ;i.1nhllhon1r ~Jr~, S.J ')...,'\241 Siamese cat, fcmelc, 6 rno. -1 •1 2'l. -----88·11 St7oo. old. Loves kids & o1hcr 1!11nt1ng!()n Deach Pn\vcr nriv, 1;1 11·r1rr1111 ), 1°11 Y ··' 1'2'xfi0' ~lohil(I homr, f'arporl. '69 Firebird 400 '6B FIAT 850 "FRIEDLANDER" "" ''"· IUZH464J SPYDER lllJO I EACH !HWY. HJ $2299 onimals. 11:13--1029 J/I~ Squ;1dron·~ basic boating mi's. mnla•· •'•1n' • st.rcrt f\\\'ning!'., sk1r1ing. T()(ll ~hr1! C(Jnvrrt ihle. 1\1r ronrl, rally course for sall or po1ver. lri.:a l, S2Rll, fl l:..o.i5! -~· lanrl~t:i ning i 11 f' I u r1 "rl • i;,·hrels & 'IA.~~ llC'ltrd I ires. RDSTR. Red \\'ilh black ln-89J..7566 • 537-6824 BILL YATES '"'"-Uko new. YQYSJ< NEW-USED-SERV. VOLKSWAGEN SON allerl(ic -female eat. •"n"n ,~~ IVh'I '70 Am. l~agl;• '.!50 Rcd11ccd 10 •"":~'-'"" 1 • SP'>r! criu•prrcl, 111,!XX) mlles. grey \\'hite n1uff & bootll 1 ' :ro hn . fA..;!! J.ikf" Tl('\V lirr f11•r, C \I. fi.12-J:lfi!. ("CN ~'01 12.'~. frr-c to good homr. C asses :-;tart: P.1onclay, Jan-,, , .1. :J-'l .,.,,., 6T..,....1j.l:I eves_ l/lJ uary 11th SGW. 67:\-~~ ar1_; __ 8:.:36 1 11H. mobile homf.', CORT FOX $m S ~ 328.\2 Valle Road CHICK IVER ON SAn '"'" C•Pl•tntno LOVABLE female minia1ure Tin1f': 7:00 P .ti1. 1970 JI ONJ11\ 3:0CB space avail, All"ning, Kell' Shep & beagle mi:.: pup 3 At; Huntinglnn Beach lligh • XLNT COND, e hot \\·Ir Mater & roof. LEASING vw 196'-J\lGA 160() MK II . Good 837-4*X>/493-45II/499-2'261 1.-oM. Red. $850. Tustin, I-~~=~~~~~::_ "~30n Ext. 66"'" BJS-0.1"'.,. 641-4136. '69 CORONA mo short halr. 54S--0813: School, Room 121. $600. 962-8796 &16-95ffi. 836-\~93 l/lJ i'"or informa!ion telephone: l!liO llON01\ Sl.100: Likel-1~2,c~;8""'1~B~l-t-s=po-,t-,ra~1t-P=,~, 1970 JTARBOR BLVD. !\IC ?.lid.get '69. Like oew, 1-Jardtop. Vinyl root, 4 .!l~, l---C~O,:..;_ST_A_M_ES_A ___ I 6;,cx) miles. $1900. Immaculate, Sky BIUe, Sac. 8EAUTTF11L loving Gern1a.n , _5.16-4 __ 1_38_·_______ N1•w 1:11 n1i. $3;)() or ofr. ply, lDx22 living mi e:.:-~586 NEWPORT BLVD. Shep-Colll1: mix, 8 mo·.~ 14 Fr Crackerbox, h i -67.1-6509 lc t11:1ion, Sil<'! 548-3343. Cosla ~1<'11&, Call!. 92G27 female. Nct'ds J ov In~ JJO""effil, small block, Chf'v * ~iO 3-'".0 HONDA ~Iut .. r N!Ct: S,;~2 P:urse Lr&!!er, in {TI4) 64:>-3661 (213} 62'l-621l '68 124 Sport Cpe. Id ~"'12 J/I' V~ inboard w/trailer. See M S I tWV" t•ll ehl ren . .,,.,.,......... .. ~port. 1400 mlles. Xlnt oond. adult~ park no pet.s. $2300. Auto S.rvice, Parts 966 •'ii'· up•' uv "" a t 32852 Calle San l\larCO!'. .,,-'"2 5151 ' $1395 FREE 1o good home. 1\lust • ."J • .,.. -21!11 Harbor, CM No. 19. San Juan Capistrano or call s ~ 7 givt' up black minla. poodlt'. 49J-4TI6 <lr 493-il66 $425 '67 J10NDA !JO Good oon-SJ\CTtlt·1cE nev.· double-wide 4 AP pnnt mais, l4x Bill Jones' Gd companion. '199-1050 oft ditton, good lirell, new lront 2-story mobile h o mt'. w1111~1• siso. 4 ·ss -·11 B.J. Sport•"'r Center 6 pn1. 1/16 Botrts/ Marine spri~s $225. S.18-8l26 67l-68ro V\V 10 Chell) adaptors $2S. .Jf.Jtl PUPPIES, German shepherd Equip. 904 '70 TRIU~U>H 500cc 4 mol'M~o;b~il~e~H~o-m-.-,---935 ~'46.-'"'.,1~27==,--;=,--== 21ll Horbor, C.M. 14M491 mixture. male & lemalP old. Most sell. Be!I offer. '63 Karmann Ghia, rolled. * '69 FIAT SPYDER, good ooeds good hon)e. CO!!tll INBOARD 1 .to 1 velvet drive ~,;IB-7n1 TltADE equity l.'170 24.'<fil Running cond. Eng, tran!!, cond. S300 t Take over ri1PM 549-l!Jj(l. 1/16 traru;. 2-23 gal gas tanks, ltONDA '!INl mA <L Olympian, localed ln 861c~:,"',.,rles xJnt. $300 . PY'"""· CaU 847-1358 l n struments, \vindshields, " ~ 3 i\10 old n1ale dog. Alllln bucket seats. Outb oa·rd Perfect cone!, 8 1no old, hcau!\rul Orange County 1968 FIAT s.;o Spider Very needs a horn~. Arreclionate l · •i99 .... 21 Park mr t'qulty duplex. SELLlNG Your boat! "List'" 1100 t.fercury props, controls, o m1 . ~ • o-rr-v 5 <'Ve~. CM guod. 1 · & good w I c hi Id r e n cab!c.!l. windshields, ~cats --1967 Hondll ]60c:c triplex, 4-plex. . • area. with us .. gcll lt fas!. Daily * 83.1-{)795 * 64•1-1680. l /l6 $275 Cash for all. $1,000 $250 or Best offer. J===*="="'="'='=*===-"'Poiilo=t=Cl'=="":="='"'=·="='-;5tl7:=BO= I ---J~A~G~U"A"-=R---I CAT Lowrs! Yna:. blk & worth of stock. 549--0530 Call 545-0'306 A S I p 966A •-I p 966 -----------1 bo t _, __ • -------~-1 ~=~~~~~-;;;~·li~u~t~o~•~r~v~c~•;·~·~rt~s~~~u, ~to~~~,.~~ce~·~"~'~t~s~ wht msJe cat, x riwJCU. FIBERGLASS 11cy.up spniy 1965 llonda 160 -JAGUAR Need new home by l''l-1. equlpml?nt. 3" exhaust ho!e, Runs, ~hi work. $175. 5411-<J;Jl l/15 Pvt pty, """""' 548-3150 BILL JONES' HEADQUARTERS Fl« Pupple5 Crolls Poddle, **\YARE Atrro PII.Dr, '70 YAMAHA-LO Ml BJ s rt c t ThronlyauthoriudJAGUAR :·M~~a ~~~<':. w~j S~mpl1?1e, 968-8873 $4%. • 548-!llM • po scar en er ::r iD _the mllre Harbor Mar, 11fter 4:30 1/14 '67 lfonda lW, Xlnl cond. Authorized Fiat Sales & Service ...__ .. .., 1 .1 .... 78 WATT mari~ n1>dlo, new: $2j() or best offer .....,,., FREE lo qua home 51 "V 2 seur hydraulic trim-lahs. SALES type, v~ry small dog, e ricl 1 ___ •_>_57_-o~·""--*---COMPLETE ONE STOP yard, 548-081.1, 836-4493. Vl4 _.,._w_._002-4~-9'11-·____ 67 HODAKA 100 SERVICE CENTER SERVICE DAY Bed & 10' ""'"· to~1 _&oa_t•_, S_•l_I __ 909_ STREF.1' OR DffiT. PARTS oond, frtt lo you · Excellenl 1225 675-75S9 ·For All lmpo.rted Cars BAU!:R r.3&-1009. 111<1 COLUMBIA 28·• 1969• SI0.750 '10 JiONDA SLlOO. Like new, BUICK Loaded I ncl: PWS. OPEN 7 A.M. DAILY TROPICAL fl1h, guppies. coJ. w ; 1 h 0 we r • o y ll : xtras. $3St.' IN orlul, h<althy .• ,._ '" 213/636-07'7 """ A>l-tsro tl.4 Million Dollar Service Facility COSTA MESA S pm. 1/ts 714/&l&-.'1724. HONDA SO, Like new, Ju8'. I~ %W E. 17th Strttl FRIENDLY mal~ PUP loves -N~EW~-,~6-.-G~,-,-,.-c~,-,.-m-,-,.-n o"llllul~ ocw llres. Runs 16 S•rvic• St•ll1. Parts Dept. 548-T165 ch)ldren. To iOlld ho~l!6 and lraUtr for $595, Ph.: great • G42-81.":ill &ft 7· Custom Paint & Body Shop TIRED ot that old tumlture! MS-10~ 1 67~2400. '68 TRIUMPH, 'fi7 V11.n Tech. lt'I re&ll.y not that hard S MO Gf!rman 9M-vhl!rrt pup 011'-"11-u7m~,-,0-""""'--u-p-7-C~he-,~k Su:tukr, 2 h1ke. trlr S·lOO ta.kts ta replace. Just watch the -need~ b!Q'er yard. Tor the H<'lp Want@d ~tlnn or _.,_ •. _,_t&-09' __ 9_. -----2833 H b c st M 540 4491 ftu'TJl!ure " mlscellsTICO'J!I chlldren M'l-0062 11.n1. 1/16 th ~ DA I Ly p J LOT For an ad to si>I! nround 3f or, Q a esa w rolumm In the Cl.u~tUf'd B11by whit<' mice 642-4926 CLf\S.~IF'I ED. th rlor.k. dtal &t2-S67B. St!clkln, ' Call 6'46-1096 rtflce. Will take trade or 62 ll.lG MIDGET Bel'!! oftrr over $.iOO Runs good 673-8322 DA ILY PILOT OlME -A -LINES oost you just peD- nles a day. finance pvt. fllY. Call Sid. dlr. 540-llOO or 494-7506 alt lO a.m. )."I'S 343. 1966 TOYOTA Corona; 4 dr, red. r/h, ()V!f'lliz.ed lil"f'.!l. $695. *. * 642-0558 • 1958 KARMANN GHIA ••• 961l-118!l '6J VW Squa.reback, Sunroof t. luggage rack. Owner wiU ~acrifit"I'. 644-1 370. '67 vw SQUAREBACK Va ilora gt'M'n. Radio, heater, transporlatlon special, Lie. UOHG77. $1S99 CHICK IVERSON vw ~9-3031 l:xt. ti6 or n 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA MUST sel l '66 VW Squareback. Lo ml, sunroof, AM/Fi\1 . A.Ilk !or Jell, 612-8335 '71 VW Camper w/Pop Top. Fact. tent. Red, 8500 mi's. Z3699-Germany llc. $3500. Phone, 675--0635 • • • --~. IWl.Y PILOT llw-. J....., 14, 1971 ---._ .. _ ._ ...... ._ .. _ __ .... 18 L ---I~ I ---1§1 I !A~ .. ; ... ~1~.;.;.; .. ; .. ~S,~10 A-. 1 .. , ...... "° 1·A_utoo._""-u_w1 ____ "°_L.:""'°':=::·.::U::Md=.. ___ ,,_:.:: Autos, Uwl ~·eiw• ~l ---•_u1_c_K;__ ___ c _H_EVR_O_LET__ COUGAR FORD MUSTANG '70 A ..... Uwl 1§1 I 990 Autos, Uwl 1§1 I 990 Autoo, Uwl 1§11 PLYMOUTH ,. : UI Ill • -!'I a ~ "' -" Ill " :a -< Ill - OI ... w I 0 8 0 ., " " "' 0 VOLKSWAGEN 1--------1 '00 VW Van, '64 eng, recent 'tll'Or1c done on ltans. New brake system, camper unl! iJ11lde. GOOD COND, Best offer . 54~3118. e '68 V\V bug, Xlnt cond. new 1Jre1. Must seU $12t'XI. 673.-5470 '58 VW Van • Needs little work. $300 or belit oUer. Call eves 557-1953 '69 VW camper AJ\.f-FM Nev.• Adv-enlnle Camper unit. Ex. cond. $1950. 645-1666. '69 VW camper. Pop-top. r&.h, faetory lent. Owner v.'&lllll action $2750. No trades. 544-6831. 1968 VW Bus. 7·pass. Radio, Xlnl cond, New tires. $2150. Days 494-8571; eves 646-4780 1965 VW-Damag~. Motor & frame ok. $375. 646-5639; alt 6, 673-5719 '68 VW Auto. SACRIFICE $1250 • 536--3107 • '69 VW BUG Xtrll.ll/xlnt cond 67J..8370 '62 VW Seden $400 Call alter 6, 536-7393 '64 GREEN VW Good cond. $625. 673-4384 Large Selection Of VW Campers, Vans, Kombis, Buses, New & Used Immediate Delivery CHICK MRSON vw S49-3031 Ext. 66 or rt 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '69 VW BUG Low mileage. (XNB 91.5) $1499 BARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 S. Cst. Hwy, LB 494-9771 '67 VW Sqbck, AM!FM shortwave, radial plys, good cond, $1000 BEFORE 2/15. 497-1267 '67 VW • EXCELLENT $1075, 673-5366 1968 VW Bug. Radio, rear seat speakers, $1375. prl. pty, 64r4687 after 6 pm. • 2 VW's • '64 Bug $800, '61 sunroof $600. Xlnt cond . Must sell, aft 6 pm: 646-8014 '66 vw Sq, back-Sunrool, new ti?Tll & exhaust. Pvt party, 642-1031. '64 VW Camper fullr Equipp•d !FMU 716 1 $1195 BUI Jone•' BJ. Sportscar Center Zill H.ti.f, C.M. 14M4f1 WANTED I'll J*1 top dolla-for )"!Ur VOLKSWAGEN today. Call and ask for Ron Plnchot. 5-IS-3031 Ext. ~:. 673$'X). '69 VW BUG Radio, healer, (TURl.2-1) dlr. Mwst u c! Will take older CLEAN CARS '62 Buick Skyl•rk lt & H, Auto., P/S. (LEF 616J $399 '51 Ford F•irlane Clb CJ>e. Auto., R It. H. {KLT 073) S436 '61 Chev Conv. Au10., PIS, A!r. (JTfo~ 174) S399 '62 Ford Clb Cpe; Auto., P IS, R & JI. <RYS 917) $595 '63 Pontiac G /Prhc C!b, Cpe. Auto., Air, P IS, PIB. Clean. {IWL 444) $895 '67 Mu1tang Clb Cpe 3 Speed, R & H. (UKE 414) $1,495 165 Old• 4 Door Full P ower $15" '64 Cad Conv. Full Power (QWS519l $1,295 '65 Chev Nova 4 Door Auto., R & H. New paint. (YBH 638) $795 '67 R•mbler 4 Dr V.8, F'ull Po~r. (9435) $1,195 '67 Cortln• GT Clb. 4 Speed, R & H, (VCK El $995 '63 Cad Seel Devlll• Full Power (lBT 942) $1,095 '65 Mu1tang 6 Auto., R & If. Clean. (RJK 547) $995 car or lliiance. 540-8736 or '66 Mu1tang _<94-<811 __ ~· =~=~---I 3 Speed. R & lf New Paint. VOLVO Nko. !SvL 679) • VOLVO $1,295 All 71 's Are Here Saving!! Up To $466 on remaining 70's (lrl B782 ) OVEREF.AS DEL. SPEC: ..Derut lewiA ~-VOLVO 1966 H11rbor, C.M. 646-9303 '68 VOLVO Local ov.-ner. }ow mileage, automatic transmission. ra. dio, heater. white Aide v.-a.11 tires, etc, Otick'g special al MONTIO $1999 CHICK IYERSON vw 5'19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~tESA U"U"Lft.IU lHIHI ~'VO~O' '65 Mu1tang Auto., R k 11, J\.'lce. <OVG 4!M) $1,095 '63 Chev P ·Up Long Bed, Autn., New P ainl (G96244) $998 '62 Ford P·Up 3 Speed, Long Bed. (L.57651) $899 '65 Chev P-Up Auto., R. & 1-1 (""646) $899 '64 Ford Wegon V-3, Full Pov.•cr. Nice !OSJ 573) $1,295 '65 Gran Sport 2 Door Hardtop, 4 11peed. (2S7079J $799 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 328S2 Valle Road San Juan Capislrano 837-4800/ 493-4511/ 499-2261 '68 BUICK GS 400 4 speed, vlbrasonic speakers, brand new !ires. bucket seats, special wheel covers. Lie. XEZ528. $1699 AT CHICK IYERSON YW 1970 HARBOH. BLVD, COSTA ~1ESA 1962 BUICK Skylark (spec.), V-8. auto, trans, vibrasonic radio, A·l shape w i th recelptll lor new para, $JOO. or best oller, phone Terry, &124Jn we ekdays , or 675-1382 alter 5: 30 p.m. and \veekends '6.1 Buick Riviera, Full pwr, air cone!, custm inter., Orig 1hroughout, $950, Pvl pty, !>lG-3592. • Chev. '70 Monte Cerio S.S. 45t \V /ONLY 11,600 MILES Hydramatic, ~ steering· 'd.15C bn.kes--window1, AM/ FM mu.lUplex, strato buck. el seat1, full gauges, tilt wheel, 111.ctory air cond., chrome spon wheel• wide track belted tires:, auio load leveler, etc., etc. Balance! of faerory warr11.nty, Gorxc. ous, (!M4BEM), $3666 ~~~~ AtrrHOfllZED O[Al.Cft 2600 llARBOR BL., COSTA MESA Call 540-9100 Open Sunday • '66 IMPALA Vt', automalic, pov.·er steer- ing, radio. (SRP527) $1299 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Viille Road San Juan Capistrano 837 -4800/ 493-4511/ 499-2261. 169 COUGAR 1966 Falrtane 500 Slalion LUXURY SPORT Wag air low lll ll . .$1100. Bcautilu! Arttie white finish Call 1 orig'. owner, 642-4441 With black Jandau roof with about many extru! matchln& interior, .automatic transmission, power steer. '70 COUN'.ffiY Squlre-t29. Ing, air conditioning, T'.adio. Loaded, all', all xtras. $5865 heater, compleiely serviced New-$4300 Now, 532-~B. &. ready for delivery. BaJ..1.c5#-_~1""=·------ ance of warranly available. e 'S7 RANCHERO $2550. Lie, XWS 707 J ohnson 536·2605 or 5.16-3695 & Son, 2626 llarbor Blvd., ,,,,, F . '· GTA JOO c M 540-563() uu a1rwnc . , mags, ' ' • Stereo tape. New tires & DODGE hrake>. Coll 61:>-2lJ.12. '38 DODGE PICKUP '69 COUNmY Squire. Air concl. R&J-1, luggage rack. Loaded. SZllO. 833-1467 1 owner collectors (PIA 1801 $399 BARWICK IMPORTS INC. item. '&I FAIRLANE Wgn., VB, auto, PIS, lll'w til"Ci, X!nt concl. $60I) or best offer. 96Hi~I. MERCURY 1967 Mu1tang Coupe SPORTY ECONOMY' B@autifU! hi·IO~ blue. ffif'IBl· lie exterior wlth two tone matching inleriOr, auto trans., radio, healer, Po v.·er steering, air co11d., console, new tire1>. Econornical to purchase, economical to drive_ XflL 316. $1450, ,John- son & Son, '2626 Harbor , c.ri1. :>-10.-:")630. '66 MUSTANG VI, <4 Spt•d. R1d io, H••l•t (TPE lT7 l $895 Bill Jones' '65 PLYMOUTH Cunvt•rllhil._ Aulu111ulic, riitllll, f699BS0 1 $599 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 328.l2 Valle P..011d &in J uan Cap1s1runo tq7 -4 $00/-193-1511/ 499.2'261 1968 PLY~10UTH R O AD JlUNNE:R 426 Hem I . 4-spoo:I & tach. 962-00!11.. PONTIAC BJ. Sportscar Center Look;ng for • car? Jill Ha1bor, C.M. 54~4•1 EASY C811 Au1o Helen-al free nf '6.1 r..J ustang ronvr. Auto., VB. charge. \\'t' have sellers Good cond. Movlng. $700 or waiting, AU types & prices, O!l!'r. &12-4993. S'-'Ue~ also \\'el1..'0me, 1970 Mercury Montega 6424431 Mx 2 D HT '6:") MUSTANG , Runs good, DATSUN 998 S, CsL J1 wy, LB 494-977J r Autn Referral N>rvice DEALER O\VNE.O Bl'st oiler. Call DGn btwn SUPER-ECONOMY '64 Dart SINCE NE\V _l~O~&o_::S~, ~&12::..;-9~Ti~•0:__ ____ 11956 Pon!iac Catalina. Cl!'an, 4 dr slan~ 6,_stick. Ex cond. Dea ler o1vned, dealer main. MUSTANG '69-Fstbk, VS, sharp, 1 o11•ner. Ex<.-e!len! $550. 6-12-1085, 646-2150 tanred. i;ince brand l'K.'W, auto. Air, p s Ip b . ltn-condition Sa.II' or trade. "·'" ,...., &12-i5·M. '69 DODGE CAMPER VAN Drive11 only 10.000 ml. buy. niaculat!', $7{ffi ...... ~34. S.Cyl stick shill. er receives balance nf 5 yeRr OLDSMOBILE 196-1 CATALINA Stn \Vgn, S:Z.150 * * 6-12-6189 on 50,000 ml wan-anty. Beau-Loaded Gd. cond $500 Oi' tiru! po\\'der blue finis h with e Bst O!r. ti73-:l6Z'.l. '62 LANCER, 6 cyl .• R&H, new battery, Clean. $275. 645-2168. au1.o. medium blue Interior anci 'ii8 GTO. Xlnl t.-ond . Air- !. OLDS '70 98 Coupe ires. dark blue landau lop, Au!o c:ond .. ~!i.000 1ni. l ft'.!male Luxu1·ious hardtop cpc. 11•iU1 !rans, radio, h!'a!!'r, po\\·cr owner. S1B9.'i. !"1111-788.f Factory Air Conditioning, I --~~~'=-~~~~-I s!cering, po11'('r brakes, fac. 1~1 PONTl,\C V-B Catalina full pQ\.\'Cr, vinyJ toP, tapes. tory air cond plus lin1ed 2 dJ' llarc!-lop. CJc>an $295. '65 SKYLARK V8 ENG: 2 '66 CHEVY 396. suck, Jlurst FALCON 4-spd, slicks, Holly 4·barrel ---------I dr, pis, r/h, air. $750 * * CADILLAC carburetor, air lifts. $1000. Pvt pty. 545--0340 11 am to 6 pm only, e SHARP e CLEAN CAD. ,65 Seel. De VIiie '66 Impala Sedan, VB, auto, F . _ _.. . r/h, 52,000 local mi. $97i actory air co .. uitioning, 644-0532. Vinyl top, FUU Power, All ..:..;..::;c. ______ _ leather interior, Cruise C.On-'60 2 DR. Chevy for sale, trol, Many deiUXe extras & $150. an execplional value. (WWV. ___ CaJ __ 1 _..,; __ ,,_o_; __ _ 066) * '67 Chevelle SS 3!:6-Silver $1555 grey. Mags, Tape deck, ib 962-6031. Gl\TAI eq, '51 Chevy Statinn °Wagt1n A ~CADILLAC BEST Of'f'ER AUTHORIZED OEAU't * 49i-1692 * 2600 HARBOR BL., ·59 El Camir»VS auto. Gnod COSTA MESA Ores, radio. Nt-cds minor Call 540-9100 Open Sunday repair. Make otr. 646-3055 • '64 CHEV, Camper Van '64 SEDAN DE VILLE All ""''· O•;giMI ow"'' $950. Call: 545-3679 '68 Falcon, VS, 4-dr, Slick shill, Lo m i's, $1100. 546-231!.. try interior, II"U nk opener, glass. \Y/\Y tires etc. Com· ;..16-llo\5 aft 2:30 PJ\f push but ton radio. tilt & pl!'tl'ly serviced !Ind ready RAMBLER !or delivery, 003AGO. Clear. 1eleseopic slcc1ing:. n1ost evl'ry deluxe exu-a &. low, 1-----------1 '""" ,,;..., •. Joh•"'" •So"· 1ow mu ... , & •b~1·"1' '67 Rambler Wagon 2626 Harbor Blvd., C.l'.T. sho1\'I'OOm fresh thnlout. '64 FALCON 4-spd, VS. Blue w/black. $370. 675-7063 54()...56.10. r..1ust be seen & driven to AulomaliC', poll'('r ~te«!rinl;. 1969 Mercury M arquis appreciate. 12&1:1E) radio, heah.'r. (\\'BJ952) Broghm 4 Dr HT $4222 $999 FORD e EXCELLENCE ib FORD '70 LTD Formal PERSONIFIED 61\Tal eq, BILL y ATES Luxurious hardtop cpe._ w/ This beau_liful top or th!' ..t...~CADILJc VOLKSWAGEN factory air cond. Vinyl !OP, Mcreury line has the ~pul_ar AUTttOl'ltZED 0£ALEA power steer., j)O\\'er disc ?ark l~y green ~etaJhc f1n-2&0() JIARBOR BL :r.!852 Valle Road brake!, auto trans. st!'reo ish 'l'.'1th mateh111g interior CO~TA MESA ·, San Ju<1n Capistrano multiple:'( + sterrotii.pe c1c and black !aridau roof. Cal! 5-JQ.9100 Opl'n Sunday I c='7"-~=8~00~/71='3~·4=5=1l-/=499=.2'26\==I "' & le>• thM 12·000 mu.,: Eq,;pP<d with •II the h"· • '64 RAMBLER WAGON l!Y.J!!AD\VJ ury features. Auto trans, ra------'-----1 $3333 d;o , ""''" pow" ,,,,,;,.. '62 OLDS WAGON po'l'.'l'r brnk!'!'I, po\ver v.•in· ib ~ dows power seat 6 way, 81 Cl~ factoi-y air conditioning, set VS, auLnmatic, po11·er s!!'er· ~CADILLAC of excellent premium vogue ing & brakes. IBDS102) AUH!ORIZED OLALH\ tires. Ask for demonstration $299 ll;idio, hra1rt•. (TGX8112): $499 '&i CHEVY Impala, auto, 2600 HARBOR BL., in this oulstarK!lng car. Lie BILL YATES Full power + air. (100910) COSTA MESA YW\V-183. J ohn!!On & Son, $899 r /h, $495. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN ~?$:i2 Valle Road Call 6-14-4719 Call 5-Ml-9100 Open Sunday 2628 Harbor, c .r..f. 54()..5630. VOLKSWAGEN San Juan C<l.pi.s!rano e S?.7-18()()1-193-4.1\1/-199·2261 BILL y A TES "60 Chc\'y Irnpa!a 396, Rtil. 1969 Me rcury Marqul1 32832 Valle Road Good rood. $300 or best 2 Or H T San Juan Capistrano '6.1 RAi\-IDLEll 4 dr Very VOLKSWAGEN 011 ... 551-9280. 70 FORD LTD LARGE &LuXURIOUS 8314B00/493451JJ49!J.mt good roooll»o '""' P ri,.I• 32852 Valle Road '64 CHEVY Impala 4-0r i-IT. This beautiful toP ol the r..tE"r-l 1~!>;4~~D~ld~'~'~o;n;;';;v~•~r~t~;~b~l ;, I JP~IY~.~&~t~Z.~>1~2'~''==----1 San J uan Ct!.pistrano Factory air, full pov.•cr, VS PRIVATE PARTY cury li ne, ref1ects good care Dynamic 88. Ps/Pb, ne'v T-BIRD 837-4800/493.4511/499-2261 Pvt pty. Very clean. $695. 1hroughout and is equipped tires & battery. Sac S?~.1 ---------- 965 11 bl k ill 644-5m. Blue with black Landau top. \i•ith all the luxury features. 646-5639; aft 6, 673-5719. T Bird 2 Door HT l a ac Cad ac _ _. fm Aulomatic tra.nsn1ission, A~T· O>upe de Ville . Lot! of CONTINENTAL air COuu, am/ stereo ra· '63 Olds 88, 4 door, auto Cl..f:.ARANCE PRICE miles but beauti!ul cond. dio, 4 new tireA, ~.000 miles, F~'\" stereo radio, heater. I rans, air. ps/b. 646-T/::.:i r..1!'d1um Blue mt'lal1c Unlsh All xtnl!, U 750, Owner. 1969 Contine ntal custom interior, pi s, p/b, power stttrin_g.dpower6brak-days, 5-IS-lS86 eves. with matching interio r, ra· * 644-621.8 * 390 engine. cs. power \.\'lTI ows, way I -~~==~===-· I d!o, heater, power steering, 2 Dr HT $3,100 power seat, factory air ron. '64 OLDS COUPE po1\·cr brakes. Auto trans, e LIKE Sl-IOWROO l\f NE\V 673-1176 ditioning_ cruise control, ti!! elc. Runs gooc!_ NB f' 511. CAD. '69 El Dorado Th\9 beautiful 11.ulornnbl]e ls ""~!"l'~~~~~!!!!!!!!J wh!'t!I plUR r.t ich!'lin x rn· • So ~26 t ! · = Radio, healer, auton1a1\c, S100 .. rohnson & • n, .. u Vinyt top, full leather intr.r-a tracl Ve tn every respecl. ,61 RANCHERO dial tires & style s1ecl power steering. (Ot.fL023J Harlxw, C.t-.1. !'rf0.-5630. ior, stereo AM·FM radio, Popular medium turquoise wheels. See & drive today. fX>\\"er door locks, tilt steer. n\ist fin ish 1\·Hh matching XTP178, Johnson & Son, 2626 $599 * 'ti7 T-Bird Landa11. All ex- ing, full power equipment leather in!.crior and \Vhite (LEC 107) HarOOr, C.W.. 5'10-5630. BILL YATES 1"1~a1$/9?r1~.'r 5• Sl6-'IGZ5 plus lactory air conditioning landau r oo f. Auton1a1ic $399 dlx · trans, radio, stereo, Ill"" 195.1 Mercury Con v. Good VOLKSWAGEN J\'JUST Sacnlicc, 'l)t;-;r-l~inr. most every . extra, ,,~ · I'm "· {XWB-500I. system, heater, pov.·er steer-BARWICK transporta!Jon. LN or rx:sl All pwr. Ai r, illichC'lin X <All!lftft ing, power brakes pov.'cr offer. 547-9COO. 32852 Valin Road lirt-.s. 5-l6-i972. _..,..,.., ll\f PORTS INC. " \Vindo11·s and \'ent.S, power TSUN LEAVl.NG For nclive duly. San Juan Capis1ranro VALIANT ~Aibl -~ scat 6 11•ay, power door DA ;\lust Sa<"ti!it.-e '62 Merrury J ,,;"~'~·4~800:C:.:::/~4~93..J:..;;5~U~/~49!J.:;,:22=6::.l:_, ----------1 ..t...~ Cl~ locks, tilt \\'hl'l'l, and lac-998 S. Cst. llwy. LB 494-977t Best offl'r 546-4232. J;\1J.1AC '66 Olds Cutlass. '66 PLY. Vali&nt. G ood CADILLAC tory climate conlrol 11 ir rond. -~,=6~5-'-=R-a"n~c-h-e-ro---I C'.::::'.:.'.'.M'.'.:.'.U..:S'.'.T::.A~N::._G__ Aulo, r&h, pslpb, New l.."Ond. $100. -19>$00 or alter AUTHORJZCO OUJ.ER One 011•ner 1radc on '71 l\lark 6 1' -~-HARBOR BL tram1 &. brakes. Runs great. p.m., 6 :hi""~· 4.<>W ·• lTf. ZLK208, Johnson & Son, $1095 or best orler. 5.w.:..t912. COSTA MESA 2626 H c !>l 5630 Automatic. 1-adio, hcater. :\IACH 1970. ?\Jus t Sell! Xlnt THE "YcUow Pages" of 510-9100 Open Sunday arhor, .M. ()...~ · (MPP,fl'2) Cond. I.l.000 mi, 351 Eng. '67 OLDS Cullas..~ 2 rlr 11.T. ctasslfierl ... D11ily P I 1 o t • '66 CONTINENTAL 4 dr. lull 5999 5 Yr \Varranty. V-8. 31,000 mi. S 13 9 5 . S!'rv1cc D1n:'r!ol)', Cherk It P\\T, air ('()nd. $ l 5 7 5. * * 675-5028 * * 6'16-8068. for the Sl'1-..1t•c yut1 llfffl. PVT PTY: 1963 Coupe De 642-7719 aft 6 pm. v ;11, ~,"' "'""· F,11 "'".1 -'"'11~6,~c°'o"'N=T"'1N""E~N=TA~L BILL y A TES r11~r & ,;~· ~~ ,maj(>r 2 DR. H .T. VOLKSWAGEN unc up · t pm. LI KE SllO\VROOi\'l NE \V 32$52 Va!!"' Road 646-?BJ·I 2·100 'llLES ' " ~n Juan Capis!ranro • Th19 beautiful autoniobilc is /!,'l;7-4800/·1!13-4'11 1/4!)9-.221il CAD. '68 Convertible like nl'w in c1·cry J'Pll'J)('rt. I----------- FACTORY At!rac!ivc mcdiuin hroii·n 1969 l TD 2 Dr HT AIR CONDITIONING ml'lalic finish \.\'llh ginger DRIVEN ONLY 21.000 to.IT. Full Pnwer lncl rloor-locks lcalher interior, ivhit!' Ian-Exccptionull.v ('\can through. tilt & tel<'scoP1c s!eerinf;: duu roof. Au(oinatie 1rans., ou!, b!'autlful .medium blue Stereo, Scnlincle. Full leath-radio & stereo !RPc systeni, n1ctalic c.""t:tcrior. Dark hlul" er in1erior & eX!..'('p!ironally hea1er. powe r steering, po11·. lan<lau roof, sat.in black ln- n\r!' inside and ou r. {VDR-er brakes, power 1vinr!ows 1crior. Auto trans. radio, 5.i2), & vents 6 \Vay power ~-eat, healer, pov.•er steering, pow. power d0or Jock!5, & factory er brnke.s, factory ll ir. See climate control a ir rondi!ion-and 11s.k to drive 1h!s at- ing. One owner trade on tractive car tod;i,y. ZPN540. '71 Mark TII ZLK208. John-Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor, Mn & Son, 2626 Harbor, C.l\1. 540.-56.10. $2999 ~~~~ AUTHORIZED OE.+J.U!. 2600 HARBOR BL., ('()STA t.1ESA Cs.Ii !t-10-9100 0P!'n Sunday • C.l\-f. 54()..5630. CONT. '7ll 2 dr, $-l!)j(). T11.ke over cH>scd--end lease, lull main!. $185.49 mo. 968-9126 CORY AIR '66 EJ Dorado Convl., \Vay belO\V wholl'Salt' at $1350. Good 11hape in & out, 1964 CORVAlR convt, \Vhite. 645-2317. Ne1v top, Asking $<125. Call CADILLAC '69 DeVille 2 dr Tom Burns, 543-9301 or eves S500 under re!ail, By nwner:" 673-0798 Dys &1~7 Eves; &16-2746. '60 CORVAIR, red. Goorl rubber, Good 2nd car $27!"1. '59 CAD. Cdv. Ale. all xtra!I, 546-7817 alter 6 pm. gd conrl. s2g;,, 1968 CORVAIR Ph: 968.29St Xlnt cond. $950. 962·0538 '62 CPE de Ville, beaut. 1naroon metallic. like nu, COR\IEm St'rv. l'e{'., $698 SC 492-9706. '63 SQUIRE WAGON Like New. lfHZ 479) $699 BARWICK Jl\.tPORTS INC. DATSUN 9!l8 SQ. Cst. Hwy, LB 4!!-1-9771 1959 Forti Galax ie, 4 door. VS, Auto. Trans., Air Cond ., Radio, Heater. Good trans· porlation car. $250 or best ol!er. Call a-19.0114. DISCOVER THE ALL NEW *HARBOR* AMERICAN Ol!MO SAl..E '70 AM.X X221505 '71 HO•Nn E10 Jl l 7 '71 AMI.ASS. P1011!62 '71 JAYILIN Al0561 1 '71 MATA.DO• P1016JI '71 HO•Nn Al00780 "71 MATADOl P!Sl 1511 ,OltMl!ltl..V SOLO '0111 $4l•4.JS Zl2J.IO 4•l1 .IS l514.SO 4066.45 l1ll.l5 5311 .l O FREE! G.E. TY SET With Every New Car Purchase DEMO SALE Year End Price• Today .,. SEl..LINO AT S:JOJl.61 2521 .53 lfl6.01 2t•l.~S ]417.17 2117.71 4521.ll OISCOUN"f $1255.61 l Ol.21 f6S.84 515 .0S 64•.o• 263.57 14J.17 '°" taACtl urwr. •> ~ce#4 ~ '67 CdV Clim11te control '67 YETIE 893-7566 e 5.11-6824 A~f/FM 1>term. All ~'. Fa~baek • '"l2?", ol-q>eed, "FRIEDLANDER" 1969 F'ORD Fairl11.ne, PIS, PIB, F.A. Very I ow mlle11.ge &. equipped lo pull trft.Jler. 220 Ogle St. &16-4nS '64 CHRYSLER JOO H1rdlop, auto. h •"'" FAC, ,.owtr Sl••ri119 IZXVI 1•1 '68 AMBASSADOR Auto. tr•"•·· pow•• 1l•1ring, FA C, pow• t r bre~tl. fWTICll41 NEW-USEO..SERV. 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645·0466 $3000. Extra. clean. 645-MXI. Arif/FM rad!G. New poly- ... -----------... Calta Mna CAMARO glas1 Urea .• Excellent con-• ._....._....... IUICI ditlon Drlve.n ea!)'. '59 VOLVO 8-16 '68 CAMARD 377, auto, RIH, , $2150 * 6t5-28l9 * e '61 Buick 4-41 w/1/w, stn'!O, Xlnt rond., Ask fnr Mr. Granni• S46-8&IO 9IO Xlnl eond * $350 $1695. 8471389 aft 5pm. M u s T Sell 11....... 1966 Autot, New .......,... ,_," * 675-w•• * '68 CA.MARO. Good cond. C'mveltt! conv Wfl'P.m H.T. BRAND NEW ·n '69 CfiST. Sk;vlaric, Air V.T. Lo miles. Pvt PI Y. 427, kpcl. Jmmac eond. GREMLIN 17.COJ ml $2795. Will co..-WholeS&Je. Call 54>5201. 646-0068. Only •Ider tndo. 6<>-= CHEVROLET ·;1 VE'ITE, Good '°""· $450 $1898 nt.E Faatesl dnlw in the 1----------Gr bt!t t offer. Ordt>r Yourt TodAy West. .. a Dally Piio t 1966 CHEVY Be! AirT 6.1.!XXI =~,,;AJ:;;,t ,:6;,' 0.540'6-'.253""l-~ Cla.ulfied Ad, 60-5673 mt. ~r 1tttrinit &. '60 CORVE'T"J'E, 2 lop~. + ff.t:tor American I ·r-'o.=RESULo..;,.~~TS~,..,--.,.,,--.,..~ hrakf!ll, new tires $650. l!lpd, outstanding oond. U. Harben' Blvd. 646-Zl61 pend on. Call the SUper-I ..:~c:.14-85()6:..::=--~----• 813--034 1 • Se1Jtbeold 1tunBuythenew 8ale1man. ..t>ally Pilot '68 OtEVY BiM".Ayne 2 dr. '64CORVE'ITECONV. thdf.I YOu can do both dtt· ~ O aaalllfd 6C2-667a -plac:e 250 Cy 3 1pttd, Nu t.ire1. auro. Best ca•h olft-r 673--0338 DAJLY Pll.DT Want ML )'OUI' ad• chatlt tu $995, offtt. 67!'>--1CM5. Jack ' '65 RANCHERO (NE~f 118) $699 BARWICK IMPORTS rNC. DATSUN '6-1 CTRY Squire st. ""'i"· n!'W Ira n.~. i;rl tires $700. 642-~7. $495 '66 VOLVO 1 doo•, •ulo, l•tftl., r1d:o t!ICI .,,,1.r, IWl•090I $895 '68 AMX Awto. lr1n1., pow•r 1l••tin9, powtr hr••••· IXTf9511 $1995 $1295 '67 REBEL Auto. h1n1., FAC. pow'' •'••ti119. t USO OO!I $995 '67 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN Awto. tr111S., t ir cond., pow1• 1l••tifl<J, pow1t br•k•1. ITGE'1111l $1495