Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
1971-01-18 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 ' ' c· overn a - ode~ Bea1e~ Body Of WODtan Foa.-nd • In Cou~ty Canyon ' DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * MONDAY ArnRNOON, ~ANUA!t·Y. :1 s; l 971 Snorkel Res~ue ... ' ' Ill· -. --... 4 emo Fa,11ily of ~hree Fle·e to S·afety 111 Laguna Blaze I ' ..... . ,.,. .. ........, .. · .. . ..... . .. . ' ' . USING SNORKEL UNIT~REMEN LlfT MAN F,ROM PIT Painter Injured In 40-foot Fall at SanitatiOn F1cility Firemen Pluck Painter Ftom 15-foot Deep :Pit :Huntineton Beach firemen used their tall snorkel unit Saturday to fiBh 1 painter with a broken arm out of a lP;,oot dltp' pU at the Orange County TIQ..ev~ Enter Clemente Home •.. 'ftUeves prRd open the window of a ~ _.aemerite apartment while lts oc-..,.... ...r. 1ttendlnl! evening church --Sunday, llallDg l2SO wwth of con; plttoll Ind booMMld itelnl. Qrly 0. Von Engelenhlveo ol 1111 Calle ~ador, told polite he and his wife diecovered lhe loll after ~turning from tbe rltel at 10 p.m. Offlcert said thieves ransacked the eoUre residence aJld stole a .375-caliber m,.nam revolver, a .zi.callber piltol, ,..~, rare coins and other ltem1. - Sanitation Dilt.rict's ·lreatfnent plant No. %. Lou Rangou&Sis,, 31, a contract painter who waa Working on the diitrlct's grit chatilbers near tbe ,mouth1 Of the Santa i.Aha ruver:,• ~Uy slipped off the edge of O'!' cl\U"b<r •11!1 ph•ll!ed to the bottcm · of the ' empty .plt about 2 p.m. Saturday. .... ., Firemen said the snorkel unit nonnally · .....£· to fight 'fires In tall buildiiip -wu brought out ., 1 long boom and hoist could be u8ed \o lift tbe ma.out in a stretcher. · "W'atb•tbe norkel we could Aly ••11 from the qe ol the ptt ind lflod I anoOtber rimoval,'1 Capt, Carl Dun- can, reported. Fimi>en Slid' Rangouub sulle(ed I broken arm, but · no other apparent ln.. jurlel. The sanitation dlatrlct~1 Flt chamben remove gravelly aabltlnoet Crom the water. A crew ol lillnlert It cumntlJ rerurbi!hing . them, Five Bodies In Wreck Ropes ended today for surv ival of a Santa Ana student pilot and his four passengers, missing since Sunday noon on a hilly, fogbo und approach lo a Sacramento Valley airport. Searchers found their bodies in the charred wreckage of the plane rented from Mission Beachcraft !l 0 range County Airport, shortly after dawn today. The pilot was identified as Edward Dominguez, 28,whlle identi ties of three other victims was withheld . Glenn County Sheriff's deputies - whose boss broke his leg Sunday in a fall during the search -said they were flight instructor Gerald Bennett, a woman and two children. All are from Southern California, but it was not explained if they were Orange County residenls. Sheriff Alvah Leverett's men found the wreckage on a ridge about a mile IOUth or the litlle town of Sites, near Maxwell, the city lo which OominlUa was flying. His parents live there, deput.ie1 said. Dominguez had taken off from Oranp County Airport at 8:30 a.m., without filing a flight plan. He is known to have contacted the Air Route Traffic Control Center in Oakland to request permission lo fly under a dense overcast. Officials at the same center gave him aulhoriz.ation at 12:22 p.m. to begin·tbe ill-fated approach to tho• Willowt-Glenn Co,unty Airport. Dancer Knew What to Do Cheri M. Fleming knew what she wa1 doing Saturday nlghL The bluHfed blonde, climbed down from t.be.stq:e,at Colla M'lll'• Firehoule nudle bar ond --Olli<* Dick De Frli>c:llco dloppid In. Miss Fletnln(, %% •• w• pll<>ed W1dor ormt .. l!Ull>ldoo ol .lndecen~ -f~ wl>al q '!U ~ ,elf lo -llO mole polmll, polkO Ald. Her lrip from the popullr bor 11 ITI E. 171h Sl.,.to Droqe pou.'1\JtU , .... the third qae -... --by Ille manapm;e,tt •• 1 -dancer. ' Ollloer De Froncllco allO cited nllhl manager Nonn Drey, whole wlft ll an C>Cellt9nll Ri!f'fOrmer, for opierltlnl an unllcented pool table. I -'""".'~-.I.~ .. ,~:.;!~ Body of · Woman OFF AND RUNNING C1ndld1t1 McGovern Sen. McGovern Launches Drive As '72 Nominee WASHINGTON (AP) -Democrallc Sea: Geora:e S. McGovern, aon of a prairie preacher, made his early-bird prtaldentla.l bid offlclal today, promising to ~al to America's ''better ange~." ,;·The kind of campaign I lntend to rwi will rest on candor and reason," said the South Dakota senator, a strong liberal and early crlt.ic of the Vletn&m war. "That kind of campata:n takes Ume. And that is why I am ma~ • tbil announcement far ahead of the tradl· tioJ)al date." McGovern, the first official entrant In 'the 1'72 presldentl•I race, made his announcement Jn letters lo hundreds of newopaper edllorJ ond m ,ooo -tit! campolgn -balon: lle·•lao IChedule!!. 1 t.tev1'1on lidclretl to h~ borne llate of SOalh Dal<ota for Iller today. ' lie llOUlbt the ~Ille nomlnallon In ltM 11 a ltllnd-m for antllfnated Sen. Roiiert F. Kmmedy, bul dlu ooly I -of ·ms cm !ho' bllltol tJi'al OYWWllllmlnllY nomlllli.d !f~berl . ff, Hdmphr<y. Sm then McGovern bu made no oeCrel ol hit compaJln 1nd bu spobn on hundredl of college campues, and noir clolml Ill llUdenl &tOUJil Ind 30 faculty .....,. working for hit nomlii/. lion. He allo kept tn the national efe last IS.. McGOVERN, P1p'li • Found Ill Canyon Orange County Sheriff investigators have identified the nude, badly beat.en body of a woman found during the weekend In Modjeska Canyon as that Family of Three Flee to Safety In Laguna Fire Three occupants of a Laguna Beach house scrambled down a neighbor's lad- der lo safety early Sunday as they fled a fire that Inj ured three firemen and caused an eaUmated $50,000 damage. Officiab said when the blaze began at. about 2 a.m. Sunday, the three oc- cupants of the house at 629 Bolsana. Drive were sitting in an upstairs room talking. They were idenUfied as Judy Genh, Dave Baldwin and George Hancock. They told firemen they heard a noise downstairs that sowxled like breaking glaD Ind tboto&ht It WU I burallr. Then opened a hall door and were forced back by blUowing .cJouds of nn<4e. The tbree then went out a door to a sun deck and climbed over ~ roof to a neighbor's fence. 1be ae.lghbOr was wailing for them wilb a ladder and they climbed to safety. Two flre unlta and 2fi firemen, including all fire department volunteers, nlponded to the Ure. Two ..P"r ~· 11141ond heavy 1mob lhb19t1onrlm'~rliohmteer . cut hit hind while fllhlln1fthe blau. · Firemen· .... the' "' 000· 'bowie, -by 1.1,..,. 'lleoch :roiddtnt • !1•1 r I Falrbllm, WU pll'ltally dtltroyed. 'Tbe four ~~ ·•nd other llvtng quarters were pUed and , all of ~ occupantl' fllrlllture, ~ clolblng wtn -.,..... •. Firemen uid the furniture WU new Ind Ml · the dlmlp lo Ille, -ellil of lhe 1-1l fli,000.;8~~ to .!hi home WU Illa lolllolly aijjqalOd al sa,ooo. ' . J Tbo -· .... "1Jl!dtT -• ,.,. -received ooly ll1PI -~. nr .... Aid. . P'ln Manllll Jim -uld -of 1111 btaJt' WU nol lmdlldfli!if; ""°"!'t· altboueh bo did 11y II ....... In .,. fariluy room of the boull. · ""-opeaillled that Iha 'Clua brOutnc ...... th< three_ .. bell'd before dllcoveri of the fire wat a wtndow popping ou1 frOm the l!tal of the fllmea. of Zelma Rachel· Wltgenstein, 46, of Norwalk. Los Angeles County lawmen are today working with local offiei!s in a bid to establish the reason for the woman's pru!llCC in Orange County and to reconstruct, if possible, the events that Jed lo her slaying. Investigators are working on tht: theory that the dead woman may have been th e victim of a sexual attack but they are awaiting the outcome of a coroner's examination for confirmation or denial of that supposition. . Mrs. Witgenstein's body, stripped of the red stretch pants, while crocheted sweater and pink coat which were scat~ tered nearby. was found by three hikers Saturday in a brush-choked ravine. It was partially concealed by dense. shrub- bery. An autopsy carried out later that day disclosed the cause of death to be a broken neck, possibly suffered 11 a result of heavy bl ows to the head and face. lnvestigatnrs said Mni. Wltgensteln was a widow who Uved alone ln a Norwalk trailer park. Relatives and friendl are being questioned in a bid for a lead to the klUJng. Weatlaer Leave your overcoat at borne· Tueiday. The .~-wDl bo heading for the •middle aevenue. along the coast an,::I up over the 80 mark inland . .rune Jn January? i ' I' I i' I ' I ) % ..... y l'ILOI oµ_ ~piped_: -: ... As Tankers -. Crash in SF SAN P'RANC!SCO !UPI) -TWo lor1• oll lank..., colllded In foe and darlmtaa und~ lbe Golden Gate Bridie today, 1plllmg lhousands of gallons of bunker fuel into San Francisco Bay. There were no injuries. The Oregon standard, outbound for British Columbia vdth 4.5 million gallona of bunker fuel , was rammed on the port s~de by its lncmning sister ship, the Arilooa -Standard. and al least two ol ,.., tanks l'\!pllll<d. . A Coast Guard offictn aboard the cutter Red Birch radioed that about half a million lallons of bunter f u e I had le.aked out of the Oregon Standard 's No. 2 !Jnj. · At Stulalito. a p~ villagf! and tDurist_ resort across the bay from Sao Francisco, some oil was observed coating the waW but it had not reached the beacba:" The lwo 523-foot ---ships owned by SJ:udard 00 ol ~ ~ togetJier. f(ler. lllt l oG·l;in. -$1' colllnon, clrifte:d .. '1 on tjie llo)> and lied ap a ha*.mil< ,,..i ol Aqd· llland aaoa from San l"'ranci8co'11' J s be r ~an ' 1 Whart • The''.llecl.Bfrch commander .. id tbe Oregon.; Staiadlr-d'1 no. 2 tank, wbich held 1;c!10 Q.gaUon bm'els w" JeUini "quite~pldly," and eeuinated about 6,000 ~b had ...,.ped. Re Sljd tank no. 3 was also Ie.aking snd 001 4 miab.t have been ruptured slight!y.:,.No leatage was reported on the -lllaodlll'd. The J>rtwin Standard was hit just forwart:;:'4. the bridge, be said. at an angledr-W~. c:oaa·~ euttera and a hovercraft e:~ to lhe 1eene, and other ships sprud oil ~ on the water and dropped booms: w ,keep tbe tbict fuel from spreadioc. .An area between Ana:eJ lsland and T1buron,.aortheul1il SluialJto, was clot- ed "' llO!pUoil:1111au:ou1 CUMd a'OYS a!!e"'J'!!'!V.-.lllO'<li·--e. The Cbnrs!Oif OCcurTed ~g under -the west strand of the bridge. One of the heavtesl foll• of the year poured lhrougb the Golden Gate into the Bay. The Cout Guard said the bow of the Arizona Standard pierced the fide or the Oregon Standard to a depth of •bout 40 feet. A Standard oil company of California spokesman said both vessel.! were loaded lbe Oregon Standard with 110,000 barrel~ t f bunker fuel, or about ~.620,000 gallons. and the Arlmna Standard wtth the same amount of crude oil. Bandit Spooked, Loses Hat, Bag In Mesa Store A cleancut, would be bandit who jwt didn't sound all that convincing was chased out of a Costa Mesa market Saturday night, losing his hat aod boodle.- bag In the procell. He went right up to manager Milo Mackin in the 7·11 Markel at 219tl Placen- tia Ave., according to Officer Tom Boylan . Mackin said the well-dressed man ordered him to fill the bag with mooey and be quick.about Jt. "~ove. it, <>':' else you and the couple commg 1n will lfi It," be declared turning tovrard a man and woman en: tering the store. He never said he had a gun and k.ept his hand in his jacket. apparently 11mulating one. . "Robbery!" screamed Mackin, diving for cover behind the couriter. The horrlfle<t would« bandit sprinted out the front door -hiJ blue' and cold plaid hat 'Jeft at the scene - and fled in a cat be bad par~ nearby. DAILY PILOT .,...,.., .... " ............. ......... ;Ii ,_,. • ..., c-M... •ci , ' -ORAMGI!: COAST PUii.i .. ._ COMPANY lo'b.1t M. W..J Pr•"""I 1r_. l"WlllMt J1(.k '· c ... 1.., Viet ,.,.!dtM ..:• 0.-11 ~ Tho"''' K...,11 l!llllw Th'"''' A. MvrfHilRo M111111ln1 llttlr tli(.htr4 P'. Htr --~eowitv---, (,Miii M"': 2JI Wiit -., SIT'MI ~ ... c,., m1 w.1 ...... ....,.... .. ~ ... ~: 121 ........ _ .. ~ kid!: ,,.,, a.di ""~ IM~:-NwlllEC:-IMltett _,, ~ II, ltll Cooler Tuesda1 Heat Wave Seen Ending Our, calm , u.illng, aluahy 1k.Hn&1 hot aunbathlng and record •Wna bi&b temperatumi Ulat continued along the Orange Coast today will yield to a cooler Tuesday. The N.allonal Weather Service expects night and early morning patchy foa t.o di:Minish the llllU5U&I warmth that bu visited Southern California since Satur- ay. Aller a windless night, Orange County Harbor Department expected variable wind! of less than 15 knots lo continue through Tuesday along the Oran1e Coul. Bea.chgoers will continue to find amny skies and a high of about 65 Tuesday, but water temperatures that should chill lhe ardor of all but the mo5t darin& swimmer: a eooUrtg 55. ' on Coast elevations of Northern California evu the weekend, although rivers were reported down from crest stage today. In the Sierra Nev11da, !he Stale Division of Highways reported both Echo Summit and Donner pass open to normal traffic with gome icy spots. Tunnel Falls On Two Boys In Anaheim THIS IS WORLD'S LARGEST TUNA BOAT, APOLLO, SEIZED DURING WEEKEND Tiny Ecuador Flexes Its Muscles in c;>tt~ho;re Fishl"'· Dispute With U.S. -.'----~~~~~~~~ While the weekend's winter heat wave brought the highe.!lt January temperature ever recorded at Lo!! Angeles Civic Center, 90 degrees, it also me I led snow al area 11ki resort.s. Three foot ac- cumulatinns ef white l!ltuft, turned nto less than one foot of soggy 1lusb as 60 degree breeze.a fanned the slopu. A tunnel dug into the side or a dairy yard excavation collapsed Sunday af- ternoon, trapping two young Anaheim brolhtr.!1, nne ~f whom wa.!I literally brought back to life after 10 minute.'! without air. Price Hike ' Ecuador Captur'!'S Four The mild Santa Ana wind condi~ion, made poaslblt by two stron1 low prMaure sy!l.e1m located north and south ol us , barred cool OCWI 'breezej from bWIJld arus, bringing inland warmtb to.J\be cout. Jerry Slentz, 9, of 2450 W. Valdina St., was listed in satisfactory condition today at Martin Luther Hospital. .. Rolled Back By Bethlehem More U.S. Tuna Boais The warmth alao confUled the hiberna- tion timetable ef r1ttlelnabs. Four persons were bitten over the weekend as the drowsy, deadly snakes wriggled out into the sunshine . He is breathing normally, hospital aides said. but suffered a fractured pelvis in the cave-in which occurred while he and bl!!I brother were playing with a third boy. SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Four American tuiiaboats were seized today by Ecuador, bringing: to eight the number stlz.ed within the past week. the American Tunaboat Association said. The vessels were picked up by a former United States destroyer and 11everaJ patrol boats while former United 'Dinosaur Bones' Really Rocks In San Clemente By JOHN VAL TERZA Ol tM IMll't ~Jlltt 1!111 A pair of experts confirmed this morn· ing that the two objects found last Friday in an earthen. bank behind San Clemente were not dinosaur-remains al all. '.1be~ .were sandstone rocks. shaped m1llenH1 ago by wave ttction into· forms -w·hicb could easily confuse the untrained eye, Traveling fo the. Jl.eep terrain in hill s beQ,.ind the populated areas or ',San Clemente, the two eiperts determined the• exact nature of the pair of white formations in a freshly cul ban k wit h the simple whack of a geologist's ham- mer. The two men who stepped forlh to view the find by utility crews were Roger Desautels, p r e s i d e 11 t of Archeolngical Re.search, Inc . or Costa Mesa and David E. Fortsch. assistant curator of vertebrate paleontology for the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. Slates. _warplanes flew overbtad. Ed Si.Iva, vice presideot of the as10Ciation said. ' Seized today were the San Die&o-based Antonina C and Ocean Queen and the P~erto Rico-based Cape Cod and Captain Vincent Gann. None was fired en ac· cording to Silva. ' The world's largest tunaboat, the Apollo , was seized Sunday and was ex· peeted to be released after paying a fine estimated in excess of $100 000. The A'.nria "Marie and &Id Vf:nture ~re seized Friday and released Sunday after paying fines of $52.000 and $49,000 respec- tive!r. Sil va said. The San Diego-baaed Le:ungton was seized last Tuesday and rele.ased Saturday after paying $34.160 In fines. Silva said the State Department ha11 advised the owners to pay the fines:. They are reimbursed by the federal government. Silv~ said he called Washington D.C. for atd but v.·as told everyone was in conference. •·We-w11~ some protection dowrr there before they shoot our men and damage our boats," Silva said. Se~~ ~f tbe eight p; a r It t ~ tRe-'. s~rongesl concentration in the It-year history of tunaboat seiture.s. About 100 such vessels had been seized between 1960 and the first of this year by Ecuador, Chile and Peru. . Th?se counlries claim a 200-mlle ter· r1~r1al limit while the United S t ate s claims a 12-mile limit Silva estimated the . eight will involve fines totaling $550,000. . "They see a mill ion dollars noating 1n tbe bay and they go pick it up " Silva said. ' The 1,800-ton Apollo and the Hornet an 800-ton vessel. both based in Puer~ Rico, were strafed Saturday by what the captains believed -w·ere Ecuadorian warplanes. The Hornet wa.s not involved "'hen the Apollo was seized Sunday, NEW YORK (AP) -Bethlehem Steel Corp. Monday slashed its annouoced 2.5 percent price Increase on som e major steel products to 6.8 percent alter being criticized by President Nixon. Bethlehem's rollback pul its boost on prices of steel used in shipbuilding and construction on a par with the more moderate rallie announced Saturday by U.S. Steel Corp. Bethlehem, second in size to U.S. Steel io steel production, said hs action was in order to be competitive with other producers. The 12.~ percent increase J-.ad been announced by Bethlehem last Monday. It was the biggest raise in a decade and covered about 15 percent of t-Otal Industry shipments. Nixon called the increase •·enormous" and directed his Cabinet Committee on Economic Policy to look lnto 1tee..I pric· ing, including the posslbllity of opening the doors to more steel imports. Late last week Bethlehem rushed out 11 preliminary report sbowlng that. its earnings had fallen 40 percent in 1970 from the 1969 level. A ew of the smaller steel producing companies joined last v.·eek l n Bethlehem's range of price increases. Belhlehcm's original boosts were in the area of $16 and $17 a ton for sheet piling. H·piling, wide·flange struc· turals. standard structura ls and carbon pl ates. 1lhe revised increases ranged from $9 lo $12 a Ion, much the same as the increases made by U.S. Steel. On Sunday Kaiser Steel Corp.. the nation's 10th largest. said it would go along with the 6.8 perwit boost. The firm said rising costs and tow umatisfac- tory earnings caused the hike. Al times. visibility ranged from !iO to 90 miles making ~sible cry1tal clear views of the mountains rimming the Southland. The warm spell ended a two-week cold snap brought by lhe flow of northern cold air which wa.!I cut off by the low pressure system wh ich raged over Washington and Oregon Friday and Saturday. The Orange Coast can expect a high or about 65 .degrees and a low of SS degrees Tuesday night. Inland highs will be about 86. The low pressure system to the north brought wind, rain and flooding io lower Michael Slentz. 11, was also trapped in the mishap at 2164 Crescent Ave., but playmate David Johnston. 13. also of Anaheim, dUi him out quickly. Both boys then began cla~·ing at the collapsed tunnel with their hands to free Jerry. Faced with rapidly diminishing time to save him, the older brother decided to run to a nearby ranch fire station for help wh ile the Johnston boy continued digging. Using hands and shovels, the firemen located Jerry within 10 minutes, but he had ceased breathing. A doctor who happened onto the scent gave emergency treatment, including mOuth-to-mouth resuscitation. •utooper Bowl' Sunday's Slow Motion. Laugh-In By RICK DU BROW Very early in the game, wha t looked HOLLYWOOD (U PI ) -Centrary te ti) be a list fight broke out on the previous reports.. tht -madcap en· pla ying field. Suddenly there wa.s a t.ertainment special knowtt"as.''The Super cutaway to something else, and details 1 Comedy Bowl" was not merely on CBS-of the fracas were tactfull}' omitted TV last week. It turned up again on from being presented to the viewing NBC-TV Sunday, and this lime the chief public of an estimated 64 million persons, performers were the Baltimore Coils who undoubtedly were felt to be un· an d Dallas Cowboys, previously not prepared for such nasty matters. Things known for humorous specialt ies. got funnier after that. They called it the Super Bowl. and Actually, Sunday's game really helped it may have been a bowl game. but put pro football -and sports -back. it wasn't huper. There were so many into their proper perspective. The fact fumbles. interceptions. deflections and is that Baltimore and Dallas are t"'·o other foulups that ii looked as if the genuinely excellent teams, and they just game had been produced by "Rewan happened to have a very zany day. and P.1artin 's Laugh·ln.'" As things got Television, however. has often seemed messier and messier, you half exepcted to make football such a source of phony to see Arie Johnson come out of a reverence that we may frequently forget 9 Anierican Troops pileup with a fumbled ball and streak that it is. after all, merely a source for the goal line. with Goldie Hawn of entertainmenl and pleasure. And the Felled by Own Tank ~ahy~t P~g~s~~t.. Stt de.tails in Sporls entertainment in Sunday's comedy of errors was truly worth tuning in for, The two men were among several callers at San Clemente Police head- quarters over the weekend as Assistan t Police Chief Stan Matchett began seeking experts after the workmen unearthed the pair of two-foot.wide forma!Lons In the steep bank last Friday afternoon. Fort.sch, whose credentials also include expertise in g~LOIY., s1id the "'bones'' were cqastal aaRdati6tle wom into in- triguing sJ>apes by weve action before being deposited into what eventually became a hlllsl.de. 'A part owner ol the Apollo, Ed i~ .of "SM Diego. said. he was • hf ~tant. contact with Apollo skipper . , Manuer aGtU. during the board"'.. tn. t3dent. ~ "' ... · -· ... oe There have been more polished football In addition to defiating the reverential SAIGON (AP) -An American lank games at picnics. The two defenses gave side of sports. accidentally fired 1 sbell into a U.S. the contest ill chief source of re.spec· It v.·as sad. or course. tit see "Jt's easy to ae¢ wh y the man was curious about this," Desautels seid. "To. the .untrm.d eye they really look Jib lar'ge l:IOnQ;" he added. BotH.:~ agreed that the entire area bthind San Cleni.erita held' .po.c;1ibilltles of findlog the real lhlng. Madruga said Cintas observed the patrol boat when it was about 10 miles behind the ~polkl. _ .. , could _.outrun bim, b1.1t I'm just going to go: e,bout T"(IY bus\Jless as if I be lqnr.rbere:" Clnta:s.:m:!d~. "Jf t see some ""flsh;. I'm going to try to catch them.·~ • . · Fi'o·m Pa11e 1 McGOVERN .... infantry unit ft was 11upp(irting in a !ability. But you could find more offense Baltimore's incomparable Johnny Unitas fight Sunday and wounded nine or the in a wisecrack by Groucho Marx . Both forced out of the game by an injury. American infantrymen. the U.S. Olm· teams played v.•ell enough to lose, but And it was equally sad to see the mand announced today. only one of them made it. The game splendid Dallas coach. Tom Landry, The accident oca.irred 27 miles almost \lo'Cnl Into a "•. "dden dealh" slat"' d · d -h h ~ en1e once again the c ampionship after nort east of Saigon ai troops of the ti) decide the outcome. If ii had, the coming so cl05e. Amid all the unintended 2nd Brigade. 25th Infantry Di vision bat· general Feeling in my neighborhood ls humor of the game Sunday, one could lied iln enemy foref:, the tank W&.!I from that we woul d have had a deciaion no' help f~!ing sympathetic to these the I Ith Armored Cavalry "Regimerit. by next Wedne sday. forlorn figures. e::::~~=-=~~--------- " "It's also encouraging to find workmen finding l!IOmethin& like this and calling · a!-'tborities. So .t:rumy crews jurt plow right over what they find and don't 1 call anybody, .. • he said. • . ., The area where the slone formallon& year. as a sponsor~ ttie.UMUcceesful were discovered i.!1 the site of a Jar'tt ' Harfleld-McGovern amendment to force --- transmission line pro}eet. U.S. withdrawal from Soulheast Asia. The San Diego Gas and Electric Co;n· Earlier this month be stepped down pany workmen. had cut an acnss ra1d as chairman or a party reform commis· MUST MAKE ROOM FOR ITEMS COMIN iJP FOR SALE THROUGH OUR LOAN DEPT. to the wort lite when they found the sion to avoid any conflict of interest with fornuiUons. hlsH1presid~li~ campaign . LADIES 18 K GOLD $ssoo Botll: of the experts agreed that the s ~ment timing is seen in BRACEL ~~~-~South Coast caused no real part as _an ·attempt to bolster showing~ EJ WAJ(H ............ _~,.. in early presidential polls that put him • · · · · • • • "Yoa never know when somelhing Uke far behind such unannounced candldale• ~p~L ~4~1D CAMERA $3496 thlsid can tum into a real find," one as Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Milne u . the Democratic frontrunner. ' ' . Cf~inente Store · .~?hbed , of $,63 -. .. A bandit armed wlth a .~auber 1utomalic pistol robbed a s.n Clerher\te convenl~ market of $63 In cash Sah~r· .~. ~ ~ . .. ,'J'bt l"'tPoM ()f Ille. holdup . oCc:WTing near mldn!gbt at the 7·1 1 etore al Pallildl Ind tl Camino Real came via a 1411 drlve.r who radioed the call ,to hit cl!Plld*· §be calle<l11'1J«> of· fkerl alld.'. • • . .. I~~ -41tatement McGovern denounced $ 89 WOF{JlOl~tion, radsm, crime, unemploy· S TRACK TAf!ES 1 menl,.~ l•l'lation, inadequale school aid . and atsiHuslonmen t of youth. ' ••.. -.. ' ' • H. "I believe lhc people ·of Ibis counlry SPANISH STYLE $1296 r tired of the old rhe<oric." he said. GUITARS Roe-'Rather. they seek a way out of the All Wood· 19.95 wilderness. But if we who seek their $100 trust, trust them: if we try to evoke .·,w1ooc1,.011 . ' , • . . . . ... the "heller an&els of our nature: the GOLF CLUBS people will find theit-own wa~.''. 1 He said he Is Mllll)lng ·:,,.:s;ise •· ·MASON :.X :1,1. • . • $7'& believe deeply In ~::,Q)enci,n ~-Bl~UlARS s.~ the aod can no longer oc<:ept.llle ·'""*"bl!ID( , . World , . , , ..... . nature of that prornat'.''::. --.. mt •hrfl>. '9 ~l~~ll')'\hing fully gull'Mtttd. He dJsavowed "~ _0 r ~top.le In tht kn~ s•v• mofl•Y everT tim• they buy televl&lon commerctm. ~. :~ -it l• no! ••'/.-~• ltuy for cash, but i you hev• c:esh, deal!, coallUons of ..:se1r.:t~iat ·--: • .'' a.11 .. Amer1car , ot M•ster Ch1r9• you c•n s•v• tr•· lnstead. he vowtd tO. "try )Onesfly ·14 ~en.do.us •!""..!'t• iin• •tti!tjtllin9 every ~•Y· AM-FM-MPX With :rtkws ond Full Sl1• IS Changer ... , ..... , , .. , .... USED WATCHES Guor:~:ood CULTURED PEARL NECKLACES COLD JEWELRY SOLD BY WEIGHT OF COLD WE ALSO IUY and LOAN MONEY ON ANY ITEM YOU MAY HAVE. ,. e Sii US FOR YOUR SMALL MONEY NEEDS ' - The thief walked into the. store _at 11:50 1.D1., RrOdlfcta the ~!•pon , asked for 1n the cash, then fled . Clerk James ·r: MltherJ:r tJ?td lnve1tlgttor11 be could not tell If the tnan ned in a cir. confront our problems in alf tbt:tr Com: Iii '" •' t •L · plcxlty, ind stimulate the seardl for '111''/t'/ S CO "!~~1~; one plec!J• .aho<• '" Olhers 11•1 STA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN -·to ' .eek end spe;t !be Jruth with 1138 NEWPORT ILVD. PHONE 646-7741 Tbe market titl near the San Dlt,G • P'reeway. .. 11 Ille resciurces 6f mind and spirit DQ.WNTOWN COSTA MUA ·--11-'ot ' -- 1 command." '••••••••••••••••••••••••lill•••••••---·~-••••••••• I I l I I I r 1 . . . ' . . •untin.gton Beaeh Today's Fbaal N.Y. Steelu VOL 6'1, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES it ,,_ DAILY rtLOT ,_bl' l.lc ... rd KMhl•~ USING SNORKEL UNIT, FIREMEN LIFT MAN FROM PIT Painter In jured in 15-foot Fall at S.nitation Facility Fireme1i Pluck Painter From 15-f oot Deep Pit Huntington Beach firemen used the.ir tall snorkel unil Saturday to fish a painter with a broken arm oul of a 15-foot deep pit at the Orange County Sanitation District's treatment plant No. :. Lou Rangoussis , 31. a contract painter who was working on the districfs grit chambers near the mouth of the Santa Ana River , apparently slipped off the edge of one chamber and plunged to the bottom of the empty pit about 2 p.m. Saturday. Firemen said the snorkel unit - normally used to fight fires ir. tall buildings -was brought out so a long boom and hoist could be used to lift the man out in a stretcher. ''With the snorkel we could stay away from the edge of the pit and effect a smoother removal," Capt. Carl Dun- can, reported. Firemen said Rangoussis suffered a broken arm, but no othe r apparent in- juries. The sanitat io n district's grit chambers remove-gravelly substances from the water. A crew of painters is currently refurbishing them. Valley Council to Review 484-unit Apartment Plan A 484-unit apartment project proposed tn FOWlta.in Valley will be revie\\-'ed by the city council Tuesday night. Ponderoea Homes. the developer, Is seeking permission to build t h e 1pariments on 18 acres al'Qllfld Warner Avenue and San Bruno Street. The city pla.ruWig commission had ap- proved the apartments, but councilmen espreaina: concern over the number of unita pr'OJ)(IMd, asked ror their own public hearing oo it. The Ponderosa project exceeds the number of apartments per acre allowed under new, tighter apartment reguJations ln Fountain .Valley. Planners passed it bec8use they said It was a continuation of a project started before the new laws' were eUeclive. Councilmen· Will 1lso consider urging early deveiopmenl of the Route 3t (Hun· tington Beach) Freeway. ,~ . ! Hilclih;iJcer Gets WcSntan's Purse A :&-~-old Santa Ana woman who picked '1lp .. male httchhfbr f!otuntay loot.her -to him ln • stnmprm nbberY on·tbe San Diego Jl'rffway. i .car()le E. Ebinger told 'Costa Mesa pcllcl Ole dark'<klnoed mon cribbed ' th> hoildbag M llhe stopped It J :20 e.m. to let him out at BHstoJ. ,Street. LoSI was only '7. 1ccording to police, who constantly warn motorists - • eipectllly """"" -1g1lnlt p!Oklng up hltcbhlkers. • Their decision may be lnnuenced by a general discussion of the freeway sponsored by the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce at noon Tuesday. Several facttons ln Huntington Beach are asking for a small change in the freeway route. which would take it away from iieveral homM and the headquarters or the Fountain Valley School District, near the border of the two cities. The city council meets at 8 p.m., Tuesday, ln council chambers at 10200 Slater Ave. .. Illness Delays • Phoenix Trial A defense attorney'11 coatinued illness today led to a further delay In the Or"ange County· Superior Court rape-kid· nap trjal of Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa Mesa. Judge William Murray o r d e r e d Pbc>enh. 29, to return to court Tuesday aft.er !taming that deputy p u b 11 c defender Roderick Riccardi had failed to ah.eke off the virus -that led last week to a ""' day delay of the trial. -ta 9Chedeted to open tl!'I deftnae of Phoenix tO 33 felony cflnrgea atemmtng from the defendant's alleged attacks on nine women during a 28-day period loot ,....,.,_ . Phoenix 19 charged with rape, assault with intent to commit rape, kidnap, robbery and 1e1 perversion. lf Phoenix la found guilty on the major charges deputy dlltrlct attorney Michael Capizzi wlll ask for the death penalty. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·MONDAY, JANJARY IB, 1971 TEN CENTS • McGovern Throws in Hat Democrat Senator First in White House Race WASHINGTON (AP) -Demoeralic Sen. George S. McGovern, S<.'n of a prairie preacher, made his early-bird presidential bid official today. promising to appeal to America's "better angels." "The kind of campaign I intend to run will rest on candor and reason," said lhe South Dakota senator, a strong liberal and early critic of the Vietnam war. "That kind of campaign takes time. And that is why I am 1naking this announcement far ahead of the tradi- Crash Kills Area Pilot, Four Others Hopes ended today for survivU of a Santa Ana student pilot and his four passengers, missing since Sundl'ly noon on a hilly, fogbound approach to a Sacramento Valley airport. Searchers found their bodies ln the charred wreckage of the plane rented from Mission Beachcrafl al 0 ran g e County Airport, shortly after dawn today. The pilot was identified as Edward Dominguez, 28,while identities of lhrtf: other victims was withheld. Glenn County Sheriff's deputies - whose boss broke his leg Sunday in a fall during the search -said they were flight instructor Gerald Bennett, a woman and two children. All are from Southern California, but lt was not explained if they were Orange County residenb:_~ ... ·-··I 8llerilt 'AIYlll .......... , iiil'lliiilf' the wreckaee on a ridp about a mile souJh ,of .lho_Ji~ ~ of ~·· Mi'Mll~· .. !b 'lll!kh fl . • ""'as ymg. ,,_. tional date." . McGovern,' tbe fll'St oUiclal entrant ln the 1972 prulde.ntial race. madt his anoounce~t in let~ to 'h\Ml<lreds. ()f ne~r editors and 2751000. p<?tenUal campais:!J COAlributors. He also scheduled a ~l~v~ address to h~ h;:i_me state of South Dakote tor later today. He SOUlht th& ,Democratic ·nomination in 1911 u a .atand-ln for asSaainated Sen.. Rol»rt F. -Kennedy,-bot drew only a Jiandliil-of.~ on the ballot that overwhelmingly oomlnated Htlbert' H. Humphrey. Since then MeGovern bil made no secret of his campaign and ha' JPOken ou hundreds of college campuae.1, and now claims 12S student · 'lfOUPS and 30 facu1ty groups worldng far bis oomina· Uon. He also kept In the nlttonal . eye last year , as a apon!IOr el ,ote ~ Harheld-McGovern ttpeUdment to fOn:1 U.S. withdrawal from Southealt Alia. Earm!r this month be stepped down as chairman of a party refonn·eommia- sion to avoid any conflict of Jntertlt with his pfesidential cam~ign. His announct!ment .. timing ls 1ee11 tn part as an attempt to bolster ibowings in early presidenUal polll that ~ blm rar behind such unannounced cUdldates as Sen. Edmund S. Muald• Of '.Maine, (See McGOVERN, Piia 1)-- . ' -....U&f .. iLOT ltwlf "'---Hi! parents live there, deputie.B Mra. - Dominguez had taken off from Orange County Airport at 8:30 a.m., without filing a flight plan. PASSERBY MIKE TURNER EJCAMlNlS PLANE W!llCH SPJllT NIGHT ON BOLSA CHICA BEACH Tho Pilot S.ld Ho Couldn't find Llghtl111 IMtd~k Airport In Ev .. lng Gl-.i He is known to have contacted the Air Route Traffic Control Center in Oakland to request pennission to fly under a dense overcast. Lost Pilot Lands Plane Officials at the same center gave him authorization at 12 :22 · p.m. to begin the ill-fated approach to the Willows-Glenn County Airport. Deputies said the lingering overcaat had hampered their efforts in the fog· shrouded area. On Bolsa Chica Beach They were notified after residents heard a plane passing overhead, followed by silence and then what sound~ lite an explosion or the impact of an aircraft crashing into the ground. Investigators for the Federal Aviation Agency said Dominguez'1 rented plane. \\-'as last observed by radar when it passed a marker point 10 miles aouth of the airport. 'Dinosaur Bones' Really Rocks A pair of experts confirmed this morn· ing that the two objects found lut Friday in an earthen bani: behind San Clemente wen not dinosaur remains '1 all. They were sandstone rocU, lhaped millenia ago by wave. adloo into forms- which could euily confuse the untrained eye. _ Traveling to the steep terralD In hills behind the populateO areas of San Clemente, the two experts determined the exact nature of the pair of white formations in a freshly cut bank with the simple whack of • geolot;ist'1 ham- mer. The two men who stepped furth to view the find by utility crews were Roger Oe!autels, pr e s I d e 11 t of Archeologies) Researth, Inc., of Costa Mesa and David E-Fortsch, aulatant c~rator of vertebrate peleontok>gy for the Los Angeles County MUHUm of Natural Hiatory. For Ecoloflv ' .. A pilot wbo landed his light plane on ·Bolsa Chica Statt Beach Sunday even- ing bei:ause he could not find Meadowlark Airport" was Jooltjng for a new propeller loday. - The .tip of the wooden propeller was the oniy liamage Vernon Willingham·~ Mooney Mi te 1ustained in the emergency landing. Willingham , 35. a motorcycler dealer from Sparta, Ill., said that because of the fog and failing light he could not locate the Meadowlark strip. "I circled for quite a while and then decided to put It dowr1 on the. beach ralber than take a chance," he explained. "I landed on the hard aand near the water but damaged the prop when I tailed "tJp to. the high tide Ii~." _ 'rlt was fortunate that the beach was deserted," be adde~- w1w..-"""t the night tn a al .. ping bal Ullder the wtng. Realty Members Eye County Water Supply Orange Cowity'a water supply will be ~red by memben of the Huntington Beach-Fountal11 Valley Board of Realtors when they meet for. breakfast at 8 a.m., Wedne1day ln Mlle Square Golf Club. Nell Cline, uslstant manag~ of the Orange Ciolutty Water District, wilt ex- plain the methods of constrving wit.er in the county and · the problema involved. Willingham is on vacation and had taken about a wttk to reach the coast, hopping acro.ss country from Illinois. The incident is likely to renew interest Jn whether Meadowlark All1>0rt should be allowed to use ruaway lights. The airport lights were out Sunday, but Mrs. Marge Turner. wife of airport operator John Turner, commented, "Obviously If we had been able to turn on the lights this would never have happened." Turner ha s installed runway lights, but ·the air Held ha1 not yet been ap. proved ·for night flying by the California Department of Aeronautics (CAB). Accident Kills Santa Ana Man A Santa Ana man wu kUled Sa=-day night ·-.!>< wu·lfnlcl; by;a motorey· cle and run over by I Car. Andrew J acbon Blair, 58, wu knocked down while crossing the ltrtiet 1 in front l'lf bis residence, 2424 W. lit St., by a motorcycle ridden by Richard J. Greenacre, 22, a Marine . 1\aUoned at El Toro. As. Blair was lying on tM P.vemept, he was run over by • 1 ~r · drtteft by Fr"1 s. Garcia, :IOI, a11o o1.santa Ana . He _. ~~~··'Dirty fictur-~~' ~ ' ;,...,+I •t ~ • .•.. -, , "· ·'"' . • ·" ' , I . " ~ CiMwr ·'' ,; ' '-1111 --~Tho pkturto ""''t 6i"' -... ,.;. -~ ~. "Which would JOO ~ laovt.-1 lllct • "II -Joiof pl)et UJ ,;,.,... ed _mon," clean beach or I~=-... tflP.I-· MIU Smith, ~~the don H~ ~ plcWra an ~ of I beach, clun t11tb-t 'i*'be'1 liqin. 11'!1' --'ltl)ljtct "Wtiicb be 'lloPeo wUl nlng to thlnk other p,liliPk brie a • 111m•aiii-P tbl,Llte ruk. · 1 fondness for Junkyards, ' : . . , , • ..Mllf ·"" ""* other peoplt-w_lll t¥- la•t w .. k he took i .. 1, 1W-"'""" w.a< ·"'If·...., •'IJ!ile -mon around bis -b "1,..--. ~-'~ ~-neighborhood and ~ -""" . .,. ooma ol lht tl\lnp ljjkt t . ' . .. l....i4 wi.'lle IMllJCbod t11a;1ioor-looc trtl< ,,.., bis home ti 1711 LomdM Drtn: -A· ditch Jail ol, 1'00Cl •nd trub. · -A . field which bot.. blComo 1 a .. lll>borl>ood Junkyard _ with obeer Clfll, Old toy1 Ind oilier.~ ,,_..i ' - .,ti, waJll. . i . ., ' ' -Old _rusty c,111 ~ ~ (loo BEAC!i. P• I) • • ' APCD Will Hear Resident Gripes Over Bad Smells The Orange County Air Pollution Con· lrol District has called a meeUng to hear complaints · from residents in SOL1theast Hwit.iagton Beach over ob- noxious odors. The meeting will be held in lhe Edison High School cafeteria at 7:30 p.m. Tues- day . DougJas Jeffrey . an engineer with the pollution control district, said today that many homeowners complained about an oily smell last week. He said the district traced the odors to the 40.-acre Steverson dump at Newland Street and Hamilton Avenue. "Rotary mud and oil brines are ·dumped there," Jeffrey explained. "The odors were wtpleasant and quite strong last week. It has abated now because they have •topped making the loads lhat caused the problem!' A repreRntaUve from lhe district at- toniey's office will· _be at Tueadat'• m .. tlng. Jetmy added. 1be sludge dwnp Is behind Southern California EdiaoD Company'1 plaDt ahd near Edi.Ion High School. Weather Leave your overcoat at home Tuesday. 1be temperature will be heading for U!e-~ middle HvenUes : akl)g the coast 111d up over :the •SO mark inlatld. June In J:uuwy? .. INSIJ!E TOD-'"f N010 tMt the BeoUcs hove uparql<d tcllo IDfll be t!lc nut 1~r1tar. or....upuproup.J" Che . mid of -pqp· ,....,7 . .41 !he cf<· toikd accwioc oti.'.,_l!f-..if •• ,.. 28 .ivw..w, w~,.,.~·· 111'<1.S- ' t ' ' • • 1 2 DAILY PILOi H ,. Irish You ths Gather Bott l~01.or ,Bo1ub~ ; BELFAST. 'N&Uiern.'k:ala nd (UPI ) - Roman Ca~lio yOuthl i'ang doorbells m Belfast fOOay a,w ecting milk "bottles lo make gasoline bombs fur what British offi cials fear may be an all-0ut campaign of \'iolance by the Irish Republic.11.n Arm y {!RA J. Premier J a m e 11 Chichester-Clark scheduled an emergenq-meetii:i8: ·with llon1e Sec retary J\.e&ln~kj M~ .if? .. L<indon todaY' ttrdis,c.il:s!; !he -.Jill's · of clashes betwtelr.Catbolits and.1!lrtrlab troops. ... · ._~-: saa:.•· IM'i'"~~:· .· Trio Flee Home l.n Laguna Blaze F rom Page 1 -JJ EACH • • • Three occupants of a Laguna Beach house scrambled down a neta:hbor 's lad- der to safety early Sunday a11 they !d a fire that injured three firemen and caused an estimated $50,000 damage. Officials said when the blaze began at ·a.bo~t 2 a.µi . Sµnd~y. the three oc· fUPants .of the house at 629 Bolsan.. Drive were sitting in an upstajrs room talking. They were identified as Judy Gersh, pave Baldwin and Georp Hancock. They told flremen they beard a noise ... -~~taiA . that sound~d like breaking glass and thought it was a burglar. ~· .~Q'-<>pe!""1 a bill. door and wm1 , f«ced"bod< by blllowilli.cl!llda of smokt. ~ 1'ie-<11iee-then wenf out a door t& a sun deck and climbed CJver the roof to a neighbor's fen~. Tlie rteighbor was wailing for them with a ladder and they climbed to safety. Two fire units and 25 firemen. including all Jire, df!p~tment vol1.1nteers, responded to th1: fir"t. l'\to reguldit f!r.en1en sllffered: heavy smoke inhalation and a volunl-eer: cul his iland while fighting the blaze. Firemen said the $65,000 house, owned by Laguna Beach resideQt E a r 1 Fairbairn, was partially destroyed. The four bedrooms and other living quarters were gutteQ and all -of the occupants' fur~itore and ~lothing were destroyed. Fll'emen aaid the furniture was new and set ·the • .damqe to the contents of the home at $25,000. Structural damage to the. home was a1ao iniUally ~timated at $25,000. The carage and laundry room of the home received only slight water damage firemen said. ' Fire Marshal Jim Presson said cau.se School Trustees Ask for Project On Student Size Truslees (lf the Ocean View School I>Wrlct · may lift the »student.s-per- ¥Ul!ichtr ·· tnntt Tuesday night to allow an experi.men! in ctiss ·me. -. . ¥ T~ district is trying to get approval ,(rn'!I. l\l< "'" w .!le .. "O!l• ~r """'"' districts ·in , a pilot J1toject which :may restructure the lradilion1.I C'Qncept of classes. CL1rrentl,y, the distr ict maintains a level of about 30 students for each certifi cated teacher. "\.\'e"d like to spread those students f!Ut among teacher's aids, student teachers and other adults," Dr. Clarence Hall. district superintendent . explained . "You don't need a master's degree from Harvard to read to children or grade papers," Dr. Hall added . "If we can free the teacher from somt of the mundane work. the teacher can con- centrate on the sophisticated parts of education.·· ·St11te officials an! looking fur In- ,_ iwvanom 1D education.wbictnrlltprOYide :.:. ~-best" JJWization ..ot· ftlgllfyt tralnell- ~ mi.clws. ·sy no! tififlg teachers down t'h '. 0W1'&11ine claisroom work it ii-eXpected -A. can of oil, half buried 1n th~ .. ~l tleaclters can ~nlraij an in- ground. ~1vldual-~sfudents. -Traj;h, Old tire.s, ;ind Chr1st m21s trres "lf the_ :i:otate approves our district dumped Iii an open field. for the pilol project , it means we can A oded dr · have larger classes at cil'Uin times -:-n er . aJnage d1lch covered v.'1lhout losing any Slate mof!ey" Dr -with papers and trash. Hal! said. ·, ~ ' · .-B.arre~ ~f~lck ~·here anima\s ·(Ind District lry_~ees wjll 90nsiO,tr the su b- Ml!\," -~~·Uv~( . jcct at·lheir 7:30 p.ffi,•lJJeetil\I. --1' lldfl' Rood~control chahnet:\tl\ich nows··~~: ~lirrying \,Khu traa~ ~;. .. ;~ "':"'.::~. •• ·_ and debris which ·r,nay c~ '.~k up ... --·ch ~ ~~ .. ...::_ ~ .. ;_· of the blaze was aot immediately known, although he did say It began in the family room of the house. Pressor. speculated that Lhe glass breakinis llOUnd the three occupants heard before dilcovery of the fire was a window popping out from the beat of the flames. Inves tigators Identify Body In Modjeska Oran1e County Sheriff investigators have Identified the nude, badly beaten body of a womar. found during lhe weekend In Modjeska Canyon as that of Zelma Rachel Wltgenstein, 46, of Norwalk. Los_ Angeles County lawmen are today workif}g with local offices in a bid to e:i:otablish the reason for the woman's presence in Orange County and to reconstruct , if possible, the events that led lo her slaying. . ' \ : ··"' . . ' . ,, Ul'I T1l•PhOl'f Investigators are working on the theory that the dead woman may have been the victim of a sexual attack but they are awaiting the outcome of a coroner's examination for confirmation or denial of that supposition. STUDENTS WOR K TO EXPOSE SKELETON OF WHALE Amat11:1r Paleontologi1t1 Make Find in San Pedro Mrs. Witgenstein's body, stripped of the red 111tretch pants, white crocheted sweater and pink coat which were scat- tered nearby. was found by three hikers Saturday in a bruah-choked ravine. It was partially concealed by dense shrub- bery. Fo ssilized Whale Bones An autopsy carried out later that day disclosed the cause of death to be a broken neck, possi bly suffered as a result of heavy blows to the head and face. Fo11nd in San Pedro Hills Investigators said Mrs . Witgenstein was a widow who Jived alone in a Norwalk trailer park. Relatives and friends are being qu~tioned In a bid for a lead to the killing. SAN PEOHO (UPI) -The fossilized remains of what a geology professor and the two students who found it believe to be a 30,000-year-old California gray whale ha ve been discovered more than three miles from the ocean shoreline. •otooper Bowl~ Sunday's S loiv 1'f otio1t La.ug h-I n By RICK DU eRow Very earl y In the game, what looked HOLLYWOOD (U PI) -Contrary to to be a fist fight broke out on the previous reports. the madcap en· pla ying field. Suddenl y there was a tertainment special knCJwn as ''The Super cutaway to some thing else, and details Comedy Bowl " was not merely on CBS-()f th e fra cas were tactfull} omit ted TV last week. It turned up aga in on from being presented to the viewing NBC-TV Sunday, and this time the chief public of an estimated 64 million persons, performers were Lhe Baltimore CCJ!ts who undoubtedl y were felt to be un- flnd Dallas Cowboys, previously not prepared for suc h nasty malters. Things known for hum orous specialties. got funnier after that. They called ii the Super Bow!, and Actual ly, Sunda y's game really helped il may have been a bowl game, but put pro football -and sports -back it wasn't super. There were so many into thei r proper perspective. The fact fumbles , interceptions, deflecti ons and is that Balt1n1ore and Dallas are two CJther foulups lhat it looked as if the genuinely excellent teams, and they just game had been produced by "Rowan happene d to have a ver y zany da y. and Martin's Laugh-In." As th ings got Television . however, ha s often seemed messier and messier, you hall e:iceprtf'd lo make foo1b:ill such a source of phony t~ see ~rte Johnson come out of a reverence that we may frequently forget pileup v.·1th a fumbled ball and streak that it is. after all . merely a ·11ource . !Or the goal_ line, .with _Goldie J-Iewn .~· of entertainment ;ind.. pleasurr. And the in ._~...pursall See detlilai 1n Sports entertainment in Sunday's comedy of today, Page 21. -.. ..--errors ~·a s truly worth tunlng in for. The.r:e ha~e ~n more ~\ishe~. rootball in addition to defla ting the reverel\tial gamea at picpice. The ~'°-de'"fenses gave side of !;(>Oris. · · · · the contest its el\lef 10\ll'C'e flf respec-1t waq :i:oad fl f course to see ~bility: But you could fin d more offense Raltimore"s inco 0 mp1t rable Joh~ny Unite s tn a wisecrack by Groucho Marx. Both forced out of the game by an injury. teams pl ayed v.·ell enough to lose. but And ii v.•as equall y sad to see the only one of them made it. The game ~rlendid f)<illas roa ch. Tom La ndry, almost went into a "sudden death" sta1u s den1rd once again thr ch11mpionship aft er to decide the outcome. lf it had, the con11ng so close . An1 id all the unintended general feeling in my neighborhood 1s humor of the J<lame Sundei, (lne could that we would have had a decisi on not help feeling syuip11thelic to thel!c by next Wednesday. ~ [.or!orn figures. Paul Kirkland and Bob Montgomery, geology students frCJm Los Angeles Harbor College, made their find while searching lhe San Pedro hillside ror shells during their Christmas vacation. When fi rst sighted , the students 1aw CJnly chips of bone. '"There was a small piece protruding through the surface . I dug dov>'n and it went two feet. Then 1 stopped," said Kirkland who wants to become a pa leon· tologist. Kirkland notified th e Cabrillo r..1useum which sent William F. Samaras, A museum consultant and a Carson High School teacher. back wilh Kirkland tG identify the specimen. · Since the fossil was found. !he geology class from Harbor College has returned on the weekends to dig it out. The v are being ext rentcly carefu l beca use Or the sandy soil and the softness of the deposit. Eugene Fr itsche, an associate pro- fessor of geulogy at San Fernando Valley St~te Co llege , who ha s joined the digging, said the whale was probably a gray whale because of its size. Only pilot and gray whales are knCJwn to be com· mon to lhe area and the fossil appears too large to be a pilot, according ID Fritsche. Kirkland and r..1ontgomer~•s te ac her associate professor Martin ·Reiter. said that during the Ice Age f pleistocene era), the hillside "as probably a lagoon. and the wha le probably v.·as v.·ashed up on the beach in the same v.·ay tha t a group of whales recently were on San Clemente Island. Copter Plucks Cows KAUNAKAKAI. Hav.·aii !UPl i -fnrty co ws were lifted from a barge s1ruck on a reef off the island of ~10\ok a l Sunday and Down to shore by • helicopter , one at a lime. --. ·--· ·-on the beacbes. T)¥! ch;inncl l{;lt~qnc;e_ _' i:t£Jes :-.l'·U:rI¥ .. __ : ,. fl our!shed ."'1.th bas$, b_ut no~...Dnly carir-;· _;_ ~-:-_.:: -_;· can_ sutttye...U.-cbem1call_&nd' IG<.4\1. s • __ L*::.. "ft.I.. 8"' ozygen, ~·re dying tOO;oys MiJ(;; .. , UCCllllllll!t P<I'· "";1 DAILY PllOl OltAHGt co...n PIJallt.HlfllO. COMPMIV R ...... H; W.-U. 'rnia..il .. fMMr' J1ck It 6-f.Y Vlt • Pmi~tnl •r4 Gtn~1t .1M11111r Tkom11 K••Yil E01ior lho'"11 A. Mvq1hln• M•nagln3 IEdl;or Altn Dir.in Wti! Orlftllt COUtlt'f Iclll« Alb•rf W. 1•111 A"'OCl•lt (cll!O!' H•l .. t•• IMt• Offtc• • ':".J7f75 l•1c~ loult•t•d M't.1'.4ii A.cldr•u: r.o. 1011 790, 92641 -'Co Otller Offlcw LHllM ... ell: tn ....... , A•11111e OM!• Mn1: llO Wtll a1v Sir"' "'""°"' lttell: 2211 W•I l•lbo1 llou!tvtrlS "",~'!':,l•i _, N«lll I I Clml1111 It.Ml :tr;;: ...: -~ . . • - 1-l:eople . should be aware "of .w~t '. ·:-.. ~:..,..: /$':;."': ...... _ they re doing." Mike pleads .. :·if ~Ill· Charles Robert Ftlff';-..W:M!rvcd"'llttn=' would. ~k at fl. they 'd rW.1z.e thf9 · lington Beach for 22 years a11 city clerk, are killing all the vegetation au·. the controller and auditor. died Saturday v>'ildlife." • ' at lhe ;rge of 89. -Mike hopes to be:• niartM :t ioki1st Mr. f'urr he ld all three posts from MUST MAKE ROOM FOR ITEMS COMING UP FOR SALE THROUGH OUR LOAN DEPT. some day. but for the present he':i; 1926 to 19477 Priot to that he served concentrating an l!Ulkilli-..fliOOPle av.·are the city ti-a deputy clerk and .• n of the simple .. ~llution around them enC?ineer's Clerk. -t~ .u.~, iu"mj>f:id trash. Funfi r'al services for f\.1r. Furr will "n......te f t 1 be held al I p.m., Tuesday In Smith's ~ ..v., orget 00 easi y," he explain s. Chapel. Burial will follow in Westminster ''I'm going to try other projects to Mrmori;i l Park. bring it out." Jn a yeaf's time Mike has wa•·'cd The. focmer city clerk was also a ~1 50-,yiat !member of Elks Lodge 1959, the rabbits -and snakes d5.sappe1r ·rrom r-.1ason\c Lodge 380 and Rotary Club. tWt · open fields. the bass dfe · i"n the The Jlev. Edward Ernie of the Fir!lt channels a.nd surrounding Vef!el..!ltion Methodist Church will officiate witti "the trampled or burned. help of the Masonic and Elks lodges. He asks his friends the sjm_J.le ~esi.Kin . Mr. Furr lived in Huntington Beach ''.Wh1c:1' would YbU father baVi ,8 '.cfean for 57 years. 1*ieb..Or a }unkjard." 4 ·-1 : • .. LADIES 11 K GOLD $3500 BRACELn WATCH ....... . ~!~!>ID CAMERA $3496 8 TRACK:· TAPES S~ANISH S'ri'Li GUITARS ~II Wood $199 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. R09. 19.95 GOLF CLUBS .':'~· •..... $12 96 $100 ... ·· u.SOH: 1:xu ~-9 ~.Qle~c.a~ l ~~s Felfe_d by Own .Tank F rom f~" ~ l\fcGOV~!N;~ • -;"ti..,~ ,fiituftr.111 'lthr. SiO th• ·.~~. ~ ··..-nuw~· ~1d ......... . $r6 th De ( . 1 ,-, ...... ,.,_..,. : Mu1t 1hop to believe-Everything fully guarAntccd. c mocra tC: ron~.--~ p I I th kn • h b rn his statement ,il..t'.nW.... afin • id .ap ~ " • ow ,,,.. mon•y .,..~ hm• t •y uy war llution c~-:-cy~' · · ~--It 11 riot M l y to buy for c:•sh , hut if you h•v• c•ih, men't.po inflat~n~a iJiadtq~t;'~=~ ~4i'ftkA,,)rlc:!ttl,. ~ M•ster Ch~r91 yOu c:•n 1•v• tre- AM~FM-MPX With Speakers •nd Full Size BSR Ch1nger .............. , , .. CULTURED .PE~Rl NECKLACES GOLD JEWELRY SOLD BY WE IGHT OF GOLD WE ALSO BUY and LOAN MONEY ON A~Y ITEM YOU MAY HAW. e SIE US FOR YOUR SMALL MONIY· MUDS . _. . ~ . SAIGON (AP ) -An American t~nk ICCiden{&J,ly . fil"td .. 8_ Shell·. 1f\t0 .a lt~$. lrrlan\rYJ _unit tt i wss supporlfnl In •a fight 'Sunday l!tfld wounded nine of pie American infantrymen, Ute 'U.S. Qlm- mand announced today. Tbe (MCJlda\t occurred 27 miles 'nOhheilllr :ot "'s8Tgon as troops of the 2nd Bri«adf, 25th Jnfan!ry Division bat.- tied an enemy fCJrcl". the tank was rro1n the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment. and di sillusionment of)tl\lth: • ! . ..,.... -,,•ndoi11:~t1 o11~ .•v!f71th1n9 •Y•ry d•y. ~.££~·~p,E':~~;:,;z;!~ R•t/ti's COSTA MESA JEWELRY ancl LOAN wild6'n~is: But if we woo ie<k !heir 1838 NEWPORT I' YD . PHONE 64' 7741 tnalt1 tru.!t them :· tf· we .. try' to evoke • • • the "better angels of our nature,' the DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA l ttw ... ...._ & • ..._.,, people "'iii find their own way." • I I j I I ' I Ii ' i ~ Doctor Says • .. Lt. Calley • Wa s 'Robot' FT. BENNING. Ga. (UPI) -A psychiatrist le.stifled today thal during the alleged My Lai massacre Lt. William L. Calley Jr. "was like an aul.Omaton, a robot" who was unable to challenge the legality of an order to k..ill everything in the hamlet. ~ Nineteen witnesses for the defense in 1~ the Calley murder court-martial have testified that in a briefing the night before the March 16, 1968, American sy,·eep of My Lai, Capt. Ernest L. lt1edina, commander of the company in which Calley Jed a platoon. gave such an order. . The psychiatrist, Dr. Altw.rt A. LaVerne ('of -New York. was called by the defense :• in a hearing with lhe jury absent lo :, detrmine whether it would be allov.•ed .; to give the jury psychiatric testimony ~: shoy,·ing that combat stress reduced Calley's mental responsibiilty for malicious intent. V,.IT ....... La Verne said that Calley, who i! charged with premeditated murder of ltJ2 Vietnamese civilians during the sweep, had a close relationship with Medina. THIS IS WORLD'S LARGEST TUNA BOAT, APOLLO, SEIZED DURING WEEKEND Tiny Ecuador Flexes Its Muscles· in Offshore Fishlnt Dispute With U.S. • "He had a very high regard for Capt. '-1edina," La Verne sS,;d. ';He revered him as a father image; proved to him that he was a good office r," The doctor said Medina y.·as an -.authoritarian person for whom the pJa. toon leader had an overy.·helming ad· miration. La Verne said that Calley was "perfectly sane" during the My Lai operation and "very aware of right and wrong." The doctor said that he had examined Calley three times and had given him numerous tests. "He could not challenge the legality or illegality of the order that had been given by Medina." LaVeme said. •·He was compelled in a manner to carry out the order without challenging the order ilself." "Did he have the abllity to disobey at that time '.'" asked Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel Ill, the chief prosecutor. , "No. he could not disobey," the witness replied . "'As long as that order was there. he obeyed it. "W hen the order came through from Capt. Medina that 'the party's over -that's enough shooting ' Lt. Calley stopped. He y.•as like an automaton, 'a robot. He could not weigh the com· ponent parts of the decision. " "To challenge the order v.·as a complex decision." -U Thant C lain1 ~ 1971 "To Be Ilis Last Tcl'ln ·• UNITED NATIONS (UPI) --1 U Th&Jl said today he ha s "no intention whatever of serving beyond the present term ·• as U.N. secretary genera!. Thant 's term as U.N. chief executive expires next Dec. 31. At his first news conference or the year, the Burmese diplomat who ha s been secretary general since thl' death of Dag Ham1narskjold in 1961 said he had "cautious optimism " about the out- ·come or peace talks concerning the Mid· die EaS1 . Tight Controls Surround Jury In Tate Case LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Jurors resumed deliberations in the Sharon Tale murder trial today amid the tightest security measures in memory at the hall of justice. Sheriff's deputies. operating on in- formation that followers of Charles Manson would attempt to disrupt pro- ceedings, searched everyone who entered the 13-story courthouse, in c 1 u d i n g newsmen, lawyers, and even secretaries who work in the building. Two lines were formed at the downstairs doors, and everyone entering had to present credentials proving he had reason to be in the building, and then be frisked . \Vhen lhe jury began deliberating al 8:50 a.m., ten minutes earlier than usual , there were lines extending out into the sidewalk of persons waiting to get in the building. The paflcl met for more than .sll hours Saturda"y and had lunch brought in instead of returning to the hotel where it has been isolaled since the seven-month.old trial began _ Only one door to the hall or justice was open during the deliberations and all persons entering were searched . 'The tighl measures were instituted because the sheriff's department said it had information that followers of Manson, accused mastermind of the seven Tale· LaBianca slayings, would attempt to stage a disturbance. The're were no disturbances and the jury did not meet Sunday. Manson. Eusan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten are charged in the killings on two successive nights in the summer of 1969. Ecuador Captures Four More U.S. Tuna Boats SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Four American tunaboats were seized today by Ecuador, bringing to eight the number seized within the past week, the American Tunaboat Association said. The vessels were picked up by a former United States destroyer and several patrol boats while former United States v.·arplanes flew overhead, Ed Silva. vice president of the association, said . Two Young Boys Rescued After Tunnel Cave-in A tunnel dug into the side of a da iry yard eKcavaijon CQl!Jtp!tqd Supday af- ternoon, trapping two yoW1g Anaheim brothers, one of whom was literally brought back to-life after 10 minutes y.·ithout air. Jerry Slentz, 9, of 2450 W. Valdina St .• was listed in satisfactory condition today at Ma rtin Luther Hospital. He is breathing no rmally, hospital aides said. but suffered a fractured pelvis in the cave-in which occurred while he and his brother were playing with a thi rd boy. Michael Slentz. 11, was also trapped in the mishap at 2164 Crescent Ave .. but playmate David Johnston, 13, also of Anaheim, dug him out quic kly. Both boys then began clawing at the collapsed tunnel with their hands to free Jerry. Seized today were the San Diego-based Antonina C and Ocean Queen and the Puerto Rico-based Cape Cod and Captain Vincent Gann. None was fired on, ac· cording to Silva. The world's largest tunaboat, the Apollo, was seized Sunday and was ex- pected to be released after paying a fine estimated in excess: of $100,000. The Anna Marie and Bold Venture were seized Friday and released Sunday after paying· fines of $52,000 and $49.000 respec· lively, Silva said. The San Diego-based Lexington was seized last Tuesday and released Saturday after paying $34,160 in fines . Silva said the State Department has advised the owners to pay the fines. They are reimbursed by the federal government . Silva said he called Washington D.C. for aid but was told everyone was in conference. "We want some protection down there before they shoot our men and damage our boats," Silva said. Seiture of the eight m a r k e d the strongest concentration in the 11-year history of tunaboat seizures. About 100 such vesaels bad been .seized between 1960. and the first of this year by Ecuador, Chile and Peru. Those countries claim a 200-mile ter- ritorial limi t while the United S t a t e s claims a 12-mile limit Silva estimated the eight will involve fines totaling $550,000. "They see a million dollars noating in the bay and they go pick it up," Silva said. ThP. 1,800-ton Apollo and the Hornet. an 800-ton vessel, bolh based in Puerto Rico, were strafed Saturday by what the captains believed were Ecuadorian warplanes. The Hornet wa.~ not involved when the Apollo wu seized Sunday. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! WllTE rM .WIEAT ••••••••••••• The sWI of life .•. baked by ~. _ • iches ••• tout it ... enjoy it! Reg. 27e sire loaf. Buddig' s Sliced eats ...... ~! ~!1:.~~·!~~t.~~~ ...... 29',,.. A "·idc variety of !avDriles from which to choose!.. Reg, 43c each ••• enjoy the value as well aa the flavor ! 3 oz. Pork Chops ·········-~--~---· .... 89~ Lean .•. Crom selected mjdwestem grain fed t>OT"k ! Pork Roast ········---~--~·-······ 79~ For 41. memorable main course ... Ml flavorful! Stuffed Pen Chops ........... . Lean chops, filled with Mr!. Cubbison's Dreaing ! Stuffed Flank · Steak ....................... Sl4? With Mn. Cabbilton's Dreeiing' ••• ~?J:1r1st>nedJ NWBfA: 320 11111 C.llfado Blwd. Bananas ........................................ ·--1 o:. CentnJ America's finest t ••• add a banana to their lwneh t I Priut iA et! <et M ""-• T...,., Wed. J oA. 18, 19, to. No tKlln to d.<okn. .: ~ 5*11 PASADENA: ftss1111 •" r ctoe-Dr. .l f.lond,.J, J.anuart 18, 1971 II DAILY PllO! 3 Cooler Tue1day Heat Wave Seen Ending Clea r, calm, aailing, slushy &kiln&, hot sunbalhl.ng and record settinc high temperatures that conUnuec:. along Ute' Oraoge Coast today wW yield to a cooler Tuesday. The National Weather Service erpecls night and early morning pa.tcby fog to diminish the unusual warmth that bas visited Southern California !Ince Satur- ay. Afte r a windless nighl. Orange County Harbor Department e~ted variable winds of less than 15 knots to continue through Tuesday along the Orange Coast. Beachgoers will continue to find sunny skies and a high of about '5 Tuesday, but water temperatures that should chill the ardor of all but the most daring awimmer: a cooli ng $5. · While the weekend's wtnter heat wave brought the highest January temperature ever recorded at Los Angel es Civic Center. 90 degrees. ll also melted 5now at area akl resorts. Three foot ac· cumulations of white stuff, turned nlo less than one foot 0£ soggy slush as 60 degree breezes fanned the slopes. The mild Santa Ana wind condition, made possible by two strong low pressure systems located north ind south of us. barred cool ocean breezes from inland areas, br~ging Inland warmth to the coast. The warmth also confused the hiberna- tion timetable of rattlesnakes. Four persons were bitten over the weekend as the drowsy. deadly snakes wriggled out into the suruhioe. At times, visibility ranged from 60 to 90 miles making possible crystal clear views of the mountairu rimming the Southland. The warm spell ended a two-week cold snap brought by the flow of northern cold air which was cut off by the low pressure system which raged over Washington and Oregon Friday and Saturday. The Orange Coast can expect a hi,!!h or about 65 degrees ano a low of 55 degr ees Tuesday night. Inland highs will be about 86. Russian-built Plane Crashes In Switzerland ZURICH (UPil -An Jlyushin 18 11ircraft of the Bulgarian air liD•£~ In. heavy foe while atlem~ ·I blln\I landing at Zurich's Kloten Airport Wday, airport officials said. They said It was still not known whether there were deaths or lnjwies in the crash. The four-engined turboprop plape, the regularly scheduled flight number LZ 130, crashed at Il:50 a.m. EST after a flight from Paris, officials said. They said the plsne, which has a passenger capacity of about 65, was not fully booked for the flight, but that the exact number of persons on board was not certain. Ofl!clals sakl the plane caught fire after the crash. on Coast The low pressure sysltm to &be north brought wind, rain a~d Ooodlng 1n lower elevaUona of Northern Califomil ever the weekend, altbougt riYen were reported down from crest sta1e today. Price Hike Rolled Back By Bethlehem NEW YORK (AP) -Bethlehem Steel Corp. Monday slashed its announced 12.5 percent price increase on JOme major steel products to 6.8 percent after beinl criticized by President NiJ:on_ Bethlehtm's rollback put Its boost ort prices of steel used in shipbuilding and const ruction on a par with the more moderate raise announced Saturday bY. U.S. Steel Corp. Bethlehem, second in siu to U.S. Steel In steel production, said Its action was in order to be competitive with other producers. The 12.S percen,t IQcrease tad been announced by Bethlehem last Monday. It was the biggest raise in a decade and covered about 15 percent of total industry shipments. Nixon called the increase "enormous'' and directed his Cabinet Committee on. Economic Policy to loOt into 1teel pric- ing, including the poaslbUlty of opening the doors to more steel Imports. Late last week Bethlehem rushed out a preliminary f!'!port showing that its earnings had fallen to percent in 1970 from the 1969 level. A few of the smaller steel producing companies joined last week l n Bethlehem's range of price incrtaset. Bethlehem's original boosts were tn the area of $16 and $17 a km for sheet piling, ff -piling, wide-flange atruc. turals, standard structurals and carbon plates. <._, Victor Dunsmore Rites Conducted . Funeral serviCea were lltld • at Pacific View Chapel in Ccrona del .Mllr for Yi~ F. Dunsmore, a fOC'IP.Pf atde of """""1er William Randoillb. lloant Sr.· Mr. Dunsmore, who served as business manager of the U>r Angelet Herald Examiner, died Friday at his Balboa Island home. He wa! 73. He was employed by the Hearst chatn for many years and was regarded by many in the newspaper world as tbe colorful publisher's right hat¥I man. He leaves his w:i(e, Janet, a daughter, Mra. Ruth N. Nerny and a granddlughter, Shelly. Mr. Dunsmore was a member of American Lf:gion Post Yll, North Hollywood, and a member of the Muonic Lodge of Seattle, Wash. Miracle Whip .............................. 49', For llloda •.. and a •ridwich' •J)l'O&d, too I Quart. S.cker' s, Goober ................ 59' Peanut batter and jelly ••• In the same 18 ounce jar! Strawberry Preserves ................. 59' Heap JI hlah on tr .. h bread alice.t'Smucker'a ••. 20 ounce ju. Fudge Brownie Mix ....................... 49' BolQ' Crodrer malteo lt eaay for you I 28 ounce pecbp. HEWPORT BEACH: 'll'll ""'1*1,M.., 2!155 Eet I di Dr. (flilMl!f .. c.w) • • " .f IWt Y PILOT Wlelu Strikes Multiply, Paralyze New _ York '/'11e decided to qujt am oking •.• cigarettu, that u!' Tears Take Spotlight By DICK WEST WASHINGTON -As is apparent to anyone over the age of 1.37 years, America is in the midst of a cultural period tha t strongly emphasizes sex. Books about sex dominate the best- seller lists and "X" rated films have taken over the movie theaters. But some students of the arts think that cycle is about over. They see. a new trend emerging, bellwethered by "Love Story," a tti&hly successful novel th.al moves readers lo tears rather than appealing to their prurient interest. If tha t prediction proves correct, then here are some or the things we can look forward to in the coming months: -A team or medi cal researchers, head· ed by Dr. Alfred Maudlin, will bring forth a book titled ''Lach r ymose Behavior in the Human.Male," popularly known as the "MDclfn Report." S.sed OD lntlniews with more than 47 """ jl>e. ojudy wjll show. that Jachtymitim'.;wrncmg American miles 1i Ja r more frequent and wldespread than previously had been SW1pccted. These findings will create a sensation, for in our society there are strong taboos against men crying. -A medical team composed of Dr. Elegiac and his assistant, Mrs. Mewl. will publish a controversial paper on "'human lachrymal Inadequacy." In their investigation of why so many people are unable to have a good cry, Dr. Elegiac and Mrs. Mewl will invite couples, both married and unmarried, Into thei r laboratory and observe them in the act of weeping. from this they will recommend ways of helping proplr overcomt' dry-eyedness. -A psychiatrisl named Dr. David Snivt'I will Y.'t"ite a book I is ting "everything you always wanted to bow about y.•eeping !but were crying too hard to ask)." It y.•i][ explain In tenns the layman can unders tand how the tear ducts work snd also clear up such mysteries a11 \rh.Y teardrops run down the cheeks rather than up over the forehead. The subject of premature sobbing will be discussed frankly and humorously . -Someone using the pen name "K" will \1'rite ;;i book called .. the tearful woman." Ji will encourage v.'Omen lo go ahead and cry their eyes out any time they Feel like it. And what Ls more, enjoy it. -UPI NEW YORK (AP ) -Talks aimed at eodiJli the 1trill:e by 20,000 cily patrolmen were reported ' 'g: r a v e I y deadlocked" today as a wildcat sympathy walkout continued to spread among transit patrolmen. To add to the cify't labor woes, l ,500 teamsters struck Sunday, cutting off most of the fruit and vegetable 11upply. A !trike by telephone repairmen and inst.alters enleed its secoad week with oo sign ol a break. Copter Fleet The Transit Authority Ii.id th.at about 25 percent of lhe transit police force, which patrols subway stations and trains, refused to work Sunday in a show or sympathy with the walkout by city patrolmen. Detectives, senior unifonned officers and probationary . patrolmen continued meanwhile to work ti.hour shifll'I to provide essential police services. Police Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy said they could probably sustain the effort U.S. Picking Up Cambodia Pace SAIGON (UPI) -Cimbodlan and South Vietnamese troops with heavy sup. port from U.S. Army helicopter gunships entered the Pich Nil Pass an Highway 4 today and were heavily engaged in hand to band combat with Communist troops on ill mountainous slopes, the Cambodian high command reported. Although no U.S. grOlllld troops were reported in action in Cambodia the United Stales has greatly increased its invol vement there. Vientiane dispatches reported jncreased use of U.S. air power a g a f n s t .a Communist of- fensive there and the U.S. command in Saigon reported new protective atciltes in North Vietnam. Pich Nil Pass is 60 miles soulhwest of Phnom Penh on the 138-mlle long Highway 4 linking Phnom Penh with the deep wa ler port of Kompong Som. A South Vietnamese tank force was driving northward from Kompong Som and a Cambodian and South VleLnamese unlt was driving south. The Cambodian command sa id the southern task force had reached the isolated outpost of Kompong Seila, just below the pass, and was battling to link up with the northern task force only 121,-i miles away. The command said the northern force had entered the pass and was fighting to dislodge C<im· munist trOopS from its slopes. The U.S. Anny Cobra Helicopters were operating from a U.S. Navy Arnphibiou.o; 'I'ranspotl,_Shig_(LPD) cruising in the Gulf oI ·fiiailand off Cambodia -the first known example or such Army-Navy ~Utn..-rln·addition, a U.S. Navy Helll\lpter c.;;f.,. (LPH) of 18,300 "'"' was operating nearby in support of the LPD. The LPH carries 32 choppers. While South Vietnamese and Cam- bodians battled to reopen Route '4 and restore Cambodia's ga:;oline and oil su~ plies. a heavily guarded South Viet· namese convoy arrived iJt Phnom Penh Sunday night with fuel -plus cognac, Big Bank Lowers Loan Rate to 6% NE\V YORK (AP) -~lorgan Guaranty 'Trust Co. reduced its prime lending rate to 6 percent from 6• . .;. percent today. Major banks had cul the rate lo 61/• Crom 6'>;: percent last Friday. The prime rate is the interest charged by commercial banks on Joans to their biggest corporate borrower3 , lt has an ultimat.e effect on mortgage and personal loans. If Morgan Guaranty's move become.-: general, it would be the lhi rd lime the prime rate has fall en this month. fi.torgan Guaranty is the nation's fifth largest bank. A spokesman for the bank said it had no comment on the reduction. The redu ction on Friday was initiated by First National City Bank of New York and wu quickly followed by other major bankl throughout the country. beer, cigarettes and Citroen cars. UPI fie ld dispatches said it had full U.S. air support during the trip up the Mekong Ri"ver. UPl front dispatches :;aid the U.S. Army Cobras were working three at a time in support of the ground forces and that the airwaves crackled with English-speaking radio operators calling in coordinates and were answered by airborne Cambodian interpreten in French in heav ily accented English. Russ Promise To Maintain UAR Might United Press International Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgomy held their second and last strategy con- ference in Cairo today on Egypt's stand in the Middle East peace talks against a background of Kremlin pledges lo maintain Egypt's military might. In New York, Egyptian Ambassador Mohammed H. El-Zayyat announced he was meeting today with U.N. Med lato1 Gunnar V. Jarring to discuss Egypt's replies to Israel's recent peace plan . There were growing indications Egypt y,·ould ask Cor a Security Council meet- ing before I.he current cease-fire expires Feb. 5. The Sadat-Podgorny talks wind up the Soviet president's six-day vim\ during which he pledged to keep Egypt stron g, io help it with rural electrification pro- jects. and inaugurated the $1 billion Aswan Dam, built largely with Soviet help. He returns to Moscow Tuesda y after hosting a dinner for Sadat tonight. Egypt has said there was not hing new in the Israeli proposals but politica l sources said this could not be construed as outright rejection of the Israeli pro- posals. Sadat in a speech Sunday reiterated Egypt 's interest in a peaceful settlement but said Egypt would never give up one inch of land. 'IJie refusal to cede one inch of land could make for long and diff icult negoliatons. Israeli Deputy Premier Yigal Allon said today in Tel Aviv, "We should have steel nerves because the neg otiations are not likely to end in a hurry." One complication could be a security council mee ting. The se m i·o f Ii c i a I ney.•spapcr A.I Ahram inditated today Egypt would ask for such a n1ec!ing before Feb. 5 although Jsrael had said 1t d1rl not want one an d that such ;i n1ccling could bring a breakdown 1n Jhe talk.s. £gypt moved meanwhile to strengthen its relations with Libya , the u(,lan arid Syria. Official sources in Cairo s a id the higher defense council of the four-na- tion fede ration would meet in Cairo Tues- day to prep.are an agenda for Wed- nesday·s su mmil meeting. From Freezer to Oven Rattlers End Hibernation, in Sizzling Soutlila1id California A to 6Q•H 1111~ 11 "" LOI "ntl'tl c •vlt. t.,.1.,. s11.,.,1Y brolo.1 1 J1.,,,,<0ld •KOrd 1nd "'' umc ,...,Mr11urt 11.u ••Pit ied -II• '°"'' •• SoUIP•e•n Co!· 1lot11i1 OJl>llnu9d • ml<1·111mmtf '"'''" •tr•--lft Jan!H,.,. Sk!u _,. tlMf Ind !fM WI FI" )tm• ""'''"''' 1•11llld JllOW 1>1 c•1 on !~1 "'°"nltllll 11\d I Yl l\ i/lock..0 ~ml •1Hlft'llOl<h 111>1 o! hl~•l'l!I.,,, Feur Wlll1191'-..... lllltt l\ In LCM Anv11 .. I nd Jll¥Wlkflo c:oun!llt S11nd•Y Tiit _.,i.i, Lot ""'•''' Jl"ll''" .. lt~ WI~ It ... ll'll •lll~ lfl 1 ... , TM low tll~ ,..1111, -• •"41 •flt 111111 ""'*'-· .. Tempf!1'atur"• I v UNl'l'IO •••ss llot'lllllM4'110MAL Trn11•••••utn tnd 1r..:loll1!lorl "°'" tt.e ll·l'!ollr "''locl ..-wf!nt 11 1 o.m. .llt""'Vt '<>ut Atl~nH ""<""'•9t f1011on 8uf!110 (Mt•N (1.,clnnt tl M!lll Ltw Preo;, . ~ n " ~I -U ti 10 It cs ,01 u 10 . .. l t ~1 .. ~ ,. 1l ' " " ... ·P ... 1! OI T " .. • ~· ,4 n " for "several more days." Some help was provided by a fottt. of 63 men from the federal EJ:ecutive- Protection Service in Washington. They were deployed to protect Soviet o{fjeeg, a measure necessitated by a series oI recent anti-Soviet incidents. ·There · continued to be no apparent Increase in crime. Mayor John V. Lindsay said "the. city is secure, the city ls safe ." Public schools, which were closed for Dr. Martin lAl.thtr Klnc'• birthday Fri· day wben the W1ldcat strike took full effect, are open today despite the lack of police protection, Undsay announced. City negotiators continued talk! with representatives ol lhe p at r o I m e n . firemen and sanit.atkinmen, all of whom ha ve been without contracts since Jan. 1. The settlements are interrelated. Firemen and sanitallonmen received and prompUy rejected a new city offer of a 17.4 percent waae increase over .;i three-year contract. UPI Ttlt111t!1 AMBASSADOR BUCHER TELLS OF 40"fiAYS OF CAPTIVITY Played Cards, Watched Television, Suffered Claustrophobia Freed Envoy Describes Time With Tupamaro RIO DE JA NEI RO (UP I) -A small room. a hard bed, 11 bottle o! gin. cards. radio. te levision . books, records. tempe rature thal hovered aroun,d 90 degrees. and claustrophobia. . . . Better than a medieva l dungeon. but 1l v.•as s miserable. 40 days for kid- naped Swiss Ambassador Giovanni Enrico Bucher. . "I wasn't too keen on television ," Bucher told friends after his release. Leftisl guerrillas lel him go Saturday after the Brazil government freed 70 political prisoners as ransom. Bucher. according to his intimates. ne~·er felt lhal the abductors would kill him. His fear was that he would "hccome another Gomide case ." Brazilian Consul Aloy sio Dias Gomide has been in the captivity of Tupa· maro guerrillas in ,._1ontevideo since July 31. Bucher. Y.'ho suffered from claus· trophob ia. said. •·1 do not know how long I could lasL" , Bucher was quoted as remarkin~ to one diplomat. "I 1.1•as never really scared until they st.arled cleaning their machine guns in my room." Bucher gave some advice to diplomats: . . "!£ you really want security you should hav e _tv.:o machine guns, one_ 1n the front and one in the back seat of the car. If not. Jt is heller to have nothing at all. One man v1ilh a revolver can not do anyt hing. My case proved I.hat." Bucher·s lone bodyguard, federal agent Helio de Carvalho Araujo, was shot to death defending Bucher during the kidnap Dec. 7. He never had a chance to fire a shot. In his press conference. Bucher said hi s kidnapers alwa ys y,·ore ma~ks He described !he kidnapers to friends as "mostly young people, 1nlel· lectuals o rsemi-intellectuals. Most were well educated .'' Bucher told friends that as the days passed be and the kidnapers "warm· ed up." He played a Brazilian card game called "Buraco" l'lith th e man as- signed to ~uard him. . "There were political discussions but never any attempt to bramwash me." Bucher :..aid. Five Cowles S11bsidia1·ies Na1necl in U.S. Fraud Suit \VASHlNGTON (APl -The Justice Department today filed criminal charges or mail fraud against five subsidiaries of Cowles Communications, Inc. The SO-count criminal information wa• filed against the subsid iaries in Des Moines. Iowa, where they are based, Atty. Gen . John N. Mitchell said. A civil suit also \\•as filed aga insl lhe five subs1diaries on the same charges in connection with sales of magazine Russ Moon Robot Bacl{ to Luna 17 MOSCOW (UPI ) -The Soviet Union's rolling moon robot to d a y drove back lo its Luna 17 mothershlp to complete "one of the planned experiments'' of IL~ moon e:.:ploralion. Tass so,ki . subscriptions, Mitchell !aid. The civil suit also na med as a defendant the parent company. 'The civil suit seeks a perm aatnt In- junction again.rt the allegedly fraudulent sales and collectior1 practices. Named as defendants in the criminal Information are these Cow I es subsidia ries: Home Reference Library, Inc.: l:lome Readers Service. Inc .: Mutual Readers Le.ague. lnc.: Civic Reading Club, Inc.: and Educational Book Club Inc. The criminal information charged the subsidiaries had engaged In fraudulen t and deceptive magazine subscription practices for more than five years. · Justice Department spokesmen said filing of the complainl caps a three-year investigation or the selling practices by postal inspectors. The complaints said the five companies entered into franchise agreements with dealers Jn hundreds or communities throughoul the country to sell magazline subscriptions by contracts requiring monthly installment payments for a period or years. 'llW ~If ,. .. lutlll'I Cini'-' Oillrltl ._... """ tnoot Ill 1111 1Mt1lft l1t .... .n.,_ 1111t vt.111lt11Y ~11.......t 111111. ff!t "" 61'1' tl'ftflCMll wllool! """""'1 Fr+ct'I' f'""" 1111 Nt"-1 WNll\tr 34-,.,,lc.t c1ll9d tw t1lr wtlfl ¥•rl1111 <IOUlllMM •111'1 • ,,._, of • ,,,.., _... Ill IN "'141 COllll l 1r•1. """' -· tt .. ..._ lh Ill IN dsMt" tt :io. 111 ,.. "*111!11""· V.S. Summary ct .. •t•"ll 0 •1'&• ~Molnt• OtltOll F'•lrbln~1 H-lulu 1tldl•ntlWl'1• J•ttM"vlllt Junt11u 1(,,,..,(11, L11 VeM! Loo .lnltla Lt11i!1~lllt .... ""'' Milw1u1<tt ') •1 " . n " ... 1bt SoYiet news agency did not specify wh y the eight-wheeled vehicle made its way beck to the landlng stage or what it wtll do next. The-Lune 11 ship, carrying . Ibo Lunokhod macblne plgybaclt, landed T • Nov. J7 in the moon's Su of Rains. ''Hundrrds of thousands of penon1 ....·ere contacted each year by telephone solicitor!, door to door canvUSiers and other franchise-em ploye.s who misrepre-- .senttd the cOSt al'ld the terms of the pact· age subecrlptions," the complaint said. hldl lrtU todl ¥ -· Ill ""' ,.. 11'1111 !I'll "''"" .u. Molllll•ffl rnotl ''"*' ,._,.., ~~ '" .... """ •• "" •...,.,H(ll• mt!lld -to tlt•til' • llMlt .. 1l111f\. M!fltt ~ 1111 t ...skttoil Ill.,,. -.. 11•'1' In(.!"°': L-•tMti 1'.ff, ll1tt1 Menlc1 11·7•, 9urlMtM U.. Ml. Wll• -U·J.S. ,.llmNll '6.llt, IU .. •tlt• at. II, ,.,1rn llttfl"" O.f.l. lt~•nf!tlof 10-4ot, Slltl'I, Dlttoe 11·'1, Sl~l1 lllblr1 11-Ji, ~ to\H!il' IH1, "'-'"' fllM'I' ,_..,, Lltllt ¥1•lebll' •IMI lllff!t 1-"I "'°'flifle '*lrt tote-...., _,.,,. s tt n •1111ti 111 1n•rnrao11t i'oolt'I' .... Tiit..,,. """ ... 'I' -· Ill. eo.u .. ~'""" ,.,... '""" • te 11. lllllfllll '-'Mt•~ rt ... ,._ " ,. ff. w ..... ...,.__.,._ .. . Su•, ,,,,...,._ J'IUs MONDAY -.•... l~k t.tn. 1.7 ':M '·"'· 1.1 'IUllOAY 1'1111 111111 • r:n '""• l.• 11'1"' i.w . t~M '""· I • St<..,.. 111.,, • ''°' 1.m. ''' S«.n low 1:U1.m. f' Su11 111111 1 _,. '·"'• lilt SJ10 1.rn . ~ l !Jt. 10:.lo 1.m. I f UNl'llll ,.11111 IN'llllNA'llOMAL 5outl\lt11 Clllfenlf1 start"" "" "'"" w!lll ,...,,,.,.,,.,,.., oo •trm rot! .. ~It ,,..., tfltl'I' ,....., 11'1tlr 11~· M ilon. WI~ ,._ York t nil N•• 1!"1ttllnd 111111 Nllllfl atlll. H11ll'Moll *""'"' "'"'"'' w..-1 l1t tllKI Ill "'Mil .. ,iy lo01• 1Hc•11t1 ef -lf<ll trwtlfit '''" •ncl "' 111n 1 ef A•-•ntll •nil Tfl\.,.UH bKtu.\f ol ltl"• °" ~rldvft 1nil cw•r111u1. L."' """It •• 1tmH•••~· .... ,.,,, f$ • •KD'd tO 11ttr11• !~11C1•v. b•••-1"' t t.i·v11r.Ofd mt rh. Al ••••• lwr 111•· -· ..... bll!t!I ~ "" ...... -., .... -·~• ~'ll!lto, l11th1clln1 111 l·Yt•r.e!d bOv '""°wt • ll1llCI Ill -1eu1 ~lllctll. l.l•M ,_ 11\C! celd delted !ti• m!11- <111 al !~I lltl""' OIJI "'n•••ll'I' 111• ·-~ w"t Ille rult JltfW"'"· lirw Ort11111 01~11t111 Ot.l1"0<!MI ~tr ... , ...... ~.!~ P"l'-dtlol\11 """'"'' Potll•"ll, 0<• II.in•~ (lly Rid 811111 .. ~ S.tt•m.,,11 St Loulo Sill L•-• tllf 1111 DIHo $•n "'"nci.c~ M111I• SM!lo~nt l k""'"' WI Jll•"ll ... " " " .. n u ·• .. n • ... " ~ "The apparatua turned ln ill tracks abou.t half 1 kilometer rrom lhe landing 11'11," Taas Aid. uyor some time lhe old tract: showed clearly on the tel evision !I .. .JI screen and the controllers of the Lunokhod used It for guldanCe. '' .)I '' ·" The agency called it an historic feat : "'For lhe Urst lime In the history •0' of i:osmonautlci there "'as a solulion 01 to 1t prac1lcil ntn1lgalional problem: the r(!turn of the self-propelled apparatu3 " ,, " .. ~ _, SI 11 11 . " /l '\ " . ,, •S " ~ I I •I n I' ~1 lo 1t preplanned point Bl a preplanned Ill time on lhc llUrfacc of e different cclesUal body." Prospedive customers were told they had been given frtt 49-to-80-month subscriptions. Ute complaint said, and 1hnt to take advantace of the oner. they had only to pay be\y.·een 25 and fiO ctn~ per week for postage. edl torl1I, wrappin g or handing cosls. Act ually, the amount represented the full co!lt of all subscriptions and lhe contract the. pufchaser had lligne-d re· The offer would raU;e firemen '.!> salaries by $1 ,900 from the.ir pruent base max.imurn of $10,950, and satllta- t1onmen by $1 ,711 from $9,871. The head of the sanilationmen·s union scorned the o!fer as •·pennies." Talks between the city and the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association were al an impasse according tG the chie.f mediator, Matthew Kelly. He said the PBA was insisting there would be "° settlement without a resolution of the pay parity issue . Bomb Hits Mission Of Arabs NEW YORK (AP) -Three patrol1nen ttave been assigned to guard the United .l.ra b Republic·s mi ssion lo the United Nation after a fire bomb thrown i nt fl the building shattered glass and set fire to a door. fl.fission personnel using hand tJI'.• tinguishers smothered the flame s before police arrived. No one was injured. Within an hour of the Sunday night Inci den t, an anonymous male caller telephoned The Associated Press and said: ··The Egyptian mission has been bomb- ed . The Arabs and the Russians are the same, Never again." "Never again" is a slogan of the militantly anti-Soviet Je\visb DefensP. League. wh ich hours ea rlier had .staged a demonstration outside the nearby Soviet mission. Three protesters were charged with harassing Soviet personnel. ''This city is becoming a place of terror for diplomats," declared fi.1ahmoud Amr, a spokesman for the U.A.R. mission after the rire bombing incident. In Jerusalem . the Israeli governmenl censured th e JDL Su nday, declaring ii~ ''vigorous opposit ion lo any form ef terror action in the struggle for the rights of Soviet Je\vry. •· A statement issued after the weekly Cabinet meeting did not mention the league by name but qualifi ed informant~ said it "'as discusse d al length durini the session. Al the san1e lime. the government called for an escalatioo of .. public and politicaJ activity for the right of Soviel Jews to immigrate to Israel." The JDL, headquartered in New York, has called for harassment or S o v i et officials in the United States In support of the same aim . In Sunday·s demonstration, 11 crowd of 80 protesters marched near the Soviet mission, chanting: "Let my people ge -Never again." The three. protester!! 1•:eri! arreste d after they allegedly follow · ed Soviet personnel along Third Avenue near the mission. shouting obscenities. City polite assigned to watch the demonstration were assisted by a dozen federa l guards sent here Satu rday nig ht al rita yor John V. Lindsay's request after city patrolmen began a wildcat walkout. Early today. police reported JI threatenin~ phone call to the head· quarters of Tass. the Soviet news agency. with a female voice sayin g, 'Your nev.·~ agency is next on the list. The Arabs got theirs and you are. ne.xt " Boy, 10, Fincls Brotlier's Heart To Be Defective WEST BEND, Wis. (AP) -Ten·year· -0ld Steven Neumann became cunou~ about heart beat,, while reading a book on the subject Ilis curiosity Jed "him to compare the heart beat of 6-year-old brother Jackie and another brother by placing bis ear against their chests. "They don't ~d the same," the fifth -grader told his mother, Mrs .. John Neumann , a nurse·s aide. She responded that it wa s Steven's bedtime and urged him lo end the 1ame. But he insisted she also lis t.en to the "swishing sound in Jackie's chest." "It sounded like-a wet sponge does when you squeeze it," Mrs. Neumann said of the October e:(pPrime nt. •·stevP. told me his heart book said th e. sound was indication of a heart disorder.·· The boy's suspicion 's were confirmed by the family's physician and Jackie underwent a series of tests this monttl at University Hospitals in Madison. He will und ergo open heart rurgery in a few we-ek.s. Physicians said the &-yerar'<'ld has an enlarge-d heart, a pinched main artery and a hole between the lower chamber~ of his heart that should have closed after he was bonl but didn 't. The coodiUon went undetected anlil Steven's curiosity Intervened. Johnson Ends 3-day Stay in Hospital SAN A.N'TONIO (AP\ '-former Presl· ck'nl Lyndon B. Johnson h11 left Brooke A1·my General Hospital afle r a three-day stay for treatment of mild viral pneumo11ia. Johnson, 62. went home by car Satup. day. Doctors said he 111as in good con - dition. ii ., I I I , I I •' ,• FUTURE A UTHORS HONORED -Reviewing the rules o{ a creative writing contest for all Fountain Valley school children are Mrs. Donald \Vill~ams, member of the sponsor· Br idg ing the Gen e ration Ga p BREA KFAST PLANS STIRRING -&rambling lo get ready for a fund-raising dinner dance and breakfast are Huntington Beach Juniors Mrs. Thomas Eskridge (left) and Mrs. Frank Pizzata, chair- man. ·- ·---------- ' ~men BEA AN DERSON, Editor • ..... 11 Creativity Rewarded Outstanding creativity and originality will be recognized When Friends of the Fountain Valley Library sponsor a Meet the Authors Tea Thursday, Jan. 21, bet\\•cen 4 and 6 p.m. in the community center. l·lonored "'iii be "'inners of the group's annual creative' writing contest sponsored for children from kindergarten through the eighth grade in all the city's schools. Invitations to the winners and their parents already are in the mail, according to P.frs. Ronald Murphy, chairman of the contest. Civic leaders and patrons of Friends also have been invited. Poems, short stories and essays following the theme of Winter Holiday will be judged by a panel of children's authors in .the are1. The contest, which ran last month, was based on origi.Qality, crea· tivity and attention to theme. .. Youngsters in kindergarten through second grade were permit· led, to have outside help providing a note was attached to their entry stating the amount and type of help given. Children in the third through eighth grade were expected to \Vork without outside aid. Eeach contestant was allowed to enter as many tin1es as he \vished as Jong as each entry was submitted on a separate sheet of paper. ' ' ing Friends of the Library, and Amanda Ryder. Youthful contestants \\'ill be honored during an author's tea taking p lace Thursday, Jan. 21, in the community center. Categories judged will include kindergarten to second grade; third through fifth, and sixth through eighth grades. Greeting contestants and guests will be Mrs. Chris Schneider and her committee. !\frs. Schneider is hostess chairman for the tea. .. \ .•. Principle! of poise and charm will be demonstrated to girls between 9 and 14 when the l{untirigton Beach Junior Woman's Club sponsors two self-im- provement classes. Classes will take place between 9 a.m. and noon in the woman's clubhouse on Saturday, Jan. 23 and Jan. 30. Instruc- ting will be Miss Charlene Weedn of Wendy Ward Charm School. They will include hair styling, skin care. makeup, diet, exercise and fashion coordination. 1'1iss \Veedn has been a professional model for eight years and has appeared in two nationa l magazines. The class will be lim ited to the first 50 girls who apply, and a fee of $1.50 for the two sessions must be pa id in advance. Additional information may be obtained by calling Mrs. Robert Wakeman, youth chairman, at 84&-0521. Assisting Mrs. Wakeman will be her conimittee comprised -ol the MmCJ. Thomu · Biss, Karl Hammer, Ray Hopkins, Robert EVans. Gary . Kocb. William Biss, Willlam Loken, Randall Lanford, Frederick Speaker, Edward Williams and David Crandall. On Saturday, Jan. 23, the Juniors will spon!OI"' a dance topped off by a sausage and egg break!a!L in the Meadowlark Country Club. Open to the public, lhe dance will take place from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. when breakfast will be served. Music will be provided by lhe Gents, and admission will be M per person. Mrs. Frank Pizzata, social chairman, is handl- ing reurvatiom: and arrangement!. POISE PRACTICED -Learning the secret.. of charm and poise are Karen Cosby (1eft) and Becky Gambucci, who will be participating in the self-Im· provement classes ror girls between 9 and 14 under . ' the s ponsorship of the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club. The first session will be offered at 9 a .m. Saturday, Jan. 23, in the clubhouse, Ann Turns Thumbs Down on This Solution to Pollution DEAR ANN LANDERS: We of the University of Mlchig8n Environmental Action group are veatly upset at your antihilchhiking philo$opby. Pr Iv al!! automobile! are pe~rhaps one of the most ecologically damaging faclors in our society. Wben a person rides alone in his car he contributes a great deal more to environmental destruction than a group of people who ride In one car. Your column Is 'doint 1 serious disservice to thoee of us who feel strongly 1gainst cars and have decided not to own one. Public transportation is an alternative but It i• often inadequate. It aeem! unflir lhat the people who own cat! win benefit from our decision not to own cars (they, too, will have ANN LANDERS ~ cleaner air ) but thanks to you, they will refuse to assist U! Jn oor transporta- tion needs. We suggest lhat yoo en- courage the soclal acceptability o! hitch- hiking initead of knockina I~ -J.)Y.i . ANN AJ\BOR, MIC!t • DEAR J .W.L.: I, too, 1m dl1tre1~ abou& 1lr pollution. The exlunllt ,,.m c1n does tMietd pretenl a tllreat IG the eeotostc•I stite of oar coatry, 'bOt· Utere •re othtt tbreilts lo tOClety -••ell 11 dn1 •base wtllcb kas accelerated violence-... ~ ud ,....ctd 1 triptealq dlare1anl for, If you will pardN tMl exprnsln, law nd order. Ont addict• wtn do uydn1 to 1et ,._,, ' . I am ... abolt to eocnrqe my tt:Drs to pick ., 1k ... 1 •• I iuoo• IUI maghlp ud '""11ar1<1 ...., al • all-time 111p. In feet, •~lklDI • 11 a1alnd die Llw II IW..U ud maay otber.•tet. A bd&er solutln l.o the problen 11 commaaity • or1anlud car p • t 1 s - workers drfvln1 friends, ltoiaemaktn .driving: nelg:"bon to de tbelr IPl'ffttlt. moUten laktn1 ttber people's chOdrt• &o ldtool, alon(l wldl tlttlr owa. ADd bdter }'et i• lie bfeycle. U more Amer~ pl off tbelr daff1 ud dkl 1oDte eurdlln1. Uley'd live loa,er. DEAR ANN LAfjllERS ' My neighbor I! In her early 30S, a Dic:e woman and the mother of three well behaved children. She did tometbfnl the. 04ber day that I thou&ht 'was abloluttly ridkWous. 1 told her so ind the Slid· J was out of my mind. Pleue be the referee. Martlll'• 7-year~ld IOn got lnto her C01metlc · dr•wer Ind .scraped out the eye makeup wlth her tweezer1. He said he wanled the caae. When Mart.ha saw the mess she told him he had ruined something that belonied to her and he had to pay for " (t. She did nol let him keep the case" and she · made him wipt up the noor. J told Martha it waa raoUsh to ehirge s child Sl.25 for ruining something. She said, "He ha1 a piggy bank and a savings account. I will buy him an extra gift tor hb birthday wi lh the lllOll<)'. But I ..-ant him to know: when • ht destroys property that he hi> lo poy for II." (Jn't ·this weird? 1 'belleft .notber kind of punishment, such a! no destert or 19ing to bed early, or even a spanking would b1ve made more stnff, To cherge 1 7-year-old kid $1 .25 ls nutty. What :· do you say, Ann 7 -MINNEAPOLIS QUESTION ' ' .. DEAR MIN: I 111 booray r~ ~ Her •ppl"NCll rules a lot .t ...;: lo 111e. Y• ca.a be iart tile b9y ....... a tes.Oll frtm daat experience utl ~ wt U ttdlembrit H well. Kids tftn Iii: •It udentalld Uiat UUn1s C9lt moaej; Hiii THEY bave lo P11 ltr -111114: .. CllelDlelve1, : : ~ When rom1nUe 1lances tum to waria:: embracn ll It love or Chemlltry? Seft.1: for the booklet "Love or Sez and HOW'; lo Tell the DW'""'"," bJ ~· Enclooe a long, 1lamped, •ll'tdd-: enveia90 11111 311 cents In coln ,wltb yooiJI:: req11e1qn care of the DAILY Pl!.ar .• :.'. ••• ~ .. : ~~; I I • -....... -..... ' .... ' DAILT PILOT • Your Horoscope Tomor1ow Cancer: Understand Emotions Westminster Club Draws Plans for Las Vegas Party Giant playing cards \\.'ill provide the decor when the . Carousel Section of Westminster Womin's Club . .opens its season with a social at 8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 23, in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John.P. Mc· Shane. Carrying out a Las Vegas theme are (left to Oakland Home Chosen :By Newlywed Reeces St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa was the Riling for the double ring m.iptials linking Di an e Newland and Stephen Reece. Parents of lhe newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. George Newland of Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Reece 'of Newport Beach. Given in marriage by her .father, the tride was attended , by her sister, Miss Barbara Newland as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the Misses ~ancy Livingston. Rosemary ly, Anita Newland, anothe r u of the bride and Jan ce, t h e bridegroom 's er. ~Dale Reece served his rather aa ~bat.. man. "While er duUt! were assumed Bill Rtddlng, Paul Le- moine, George Newland, the bride's brolher and Jeff Reece, t h e bridegroom1s brother. Flower girl wa s Colleen Gibbons and ring bearer was Michael Kimes. The bride Is a graduate or Westminster High School and attended Orange Coas t College. Her husband, a Newport Harbor High School graduate, also attended OCC and now is a student at the University of Ca Ii f o r ni a, Berkeley. The newl yweds will res ide in Oakland. MRS. STEPHEN. REECE RKitis Pledges • =' .. J Anecdotes Presented right} the Mmes. T. M. Brewer, Donald Andreasen, section chairman, and Mrs. McSbane, club-president. Members will provide entertainment and a buffet will be served. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white ~lossy P.boto- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it ls imper ative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed- din~ and engagement stories, forms are available in all of the DAJLY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 4H-9466. Calendars Crammed ' 1 TUESDAY, JANUARY 19 By SYDNEY OMAllR Altrole11 ii • 1clfltUk: arl wide~ lreall ol Ille .,.. rbnlllclly --,.._,, pnJtioa ......... cYeatl. ThrooP,.t bll1ory Ille .... Jed has OOllri1btd dRrlq: mu's hig.bffl puJod1 of learnlng. Attrology has been usoclated with medicine 111ad matltemallcs; it attracil Ill 1hare of charlatans -but ( \ • \. alle ht drlln to It Mtb arull u ~ Uuloy, U...,Mllltr ,PytUI«"', Neweo. ud C.penalca1. Conhveny aeem1 alw•r• to awirt aboat utraloa:r, a aabjed wh.lclill cae be Mrioas and alJo can be raa ud &•JSWL YOI mut take your cbolce -or combine botb, Ute pme upect ud tbe serioot 1tady. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Check tax record!. policies. If married, finances of mate ! ' ..-I . ,~ /.~ \"'----_.I -----I . \I 72990 ~ , \I TT Irene Gilbert cut and shaped this divine dress with the front curving around and meeting in the center back creating a flared skirt. A most becoming design ideal in soft fabrics such as \Vool or silk crepe, silk jersey. synthetics, fine linen or li ghl\veighl wool. 72990 is cu t in ?l-1isses Sizes 8-18. Size 12 requires approximately 2~8 yards of 54" fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better fit. Order 72990: give size. name, address and zip. $2 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford, N. J. 08848. Pattern Books by Classification: Coats and Suits -SI. STARS ' conunand attenUon. If ~e. you may be contemplating money requirements f o r special aaaocialion, including marriage. TAURUS (April »May 20): IJe low ; let otben call shots. I m p r o v e communications, public relations. Cbect details. Legal loophole could create havoc. Know this and be on guard. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Health reqW'ements should take precedence. U y o u neglect essentials, be ready to pay price. Keep recent resolutions. You can make solid gain. Associate will a.id cause. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good lunar aspect coincides with time when you can understand your own emo- tions. Nothing halfway here. Enthusiasm builds; you make constructive decisions which lead to needed changes. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Prepare to overcome obstacles. Older person may go back on promise. This is a test. Be ready for it. A~pt on security, baslc domestic siluatlon. Take ofr rose-col· ored glasses. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)' Stress M short journeys, ideas, special visils. A relative who makes numerous claims may be covering up financial embarrassment. Know this Fashions On Parade The nimble fingers of 7th and 8th grade students at J. H. McGaugh School have p~ duced a parade of fashions to be modeled at Ht a.m. in the Marina Community Center Wednesday. Jan. 20. The fashion show will be presented to the Seal Beach Woman 's Club as lhe climax of a contest sponsored by the group. !\-lore than 40 girls have participated in the contest under the direction of Mrs. Nell Sharp. Gift certificates v.·ill be awarded th c outstaAding dressmakers. Mrs. H e n r y Schadee will preside and a luncheon will follow. Mrs. Allan Denton Is host ess chairman for the day. and act. accordingly. LIBRA !Sepl 23-0d . 22)' Money or what to do about it -tbaL may be questi on of the hour. Key is to con1plete rather than beg.in project. Roucd out theme. Look ahead. Don't be goaded i n t o premature decision. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Cycle high; circumstances turn in favor of your desires. efforts. Take lltiUative; lead the way. New contact! will be beneficial. Highlight in- dependence of thougtit, action. SAGITI'ARIUS (~ov. 22· Dec. 21): A secret agreement seems to be on agenda. No need for fears, rdoubts. Self- esteem is essential . )'our in- tuition serves now as reliable guide. A former teacher makes appearance. This is good. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Now is the time to make friends, influence people. Most persom are receptive la your ideas. A Scorpio individual could play slgnif.icant role. Share knowledge; exchange ideas. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Accent on standing in c o m m u n i t y , professional endeavors. Key is to give full play to inlellectual curiosi ty, Read and write; don 't be satisfied w i t h :klperficial knowiedge. Accept invitation. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Personal awareness earns you respect of associates, relative. Avoid making extravagant claims. Heed words o r spiritual adviser. Be true to yourself. A journey may be on tap. IF TODAY JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, aggressive, b r i g h t and creative. You need an outlet. Wilhout ii, you b e c o m e restless and pugnacious. You Jove deeply; your emotions often rule. You recently met indivlidual who made you aware of assets as well as s hort com i n gs. You can develop now. Currently, you are co nfused. In upcoming month, however. you will know where you are going and \vhy -this is all te the good. To !ind oul wllO'• luc\y lot ~ou 1n money •r>d love. orOt• s...-Y Om•rt"• booll~. "SK•et tll"'' lo• M•n 1n0 wo~n." s..,., ttlrt~d•I• •nci so ctn!'t 10 Om••• AllrolOQ~ SK•t h. Ille DAILY PILDl. Bo• n..i, Grand CtMr•I $l1non. New Yor•. N,Y. 10011. WE LOVE TO NEEDLE OUR CUSTOMERS We .,. ea,.ns h1 1upplyltHJ ell of your •11lttl .. ...U. eth'lce too, If yo1 M.d ttelp. ColN 11 -d fO't oc.qHl11tff! AN EARLY LOOK TOWARD SPRING BE FREE ... OF FAC:l.AL HAI" FO,.(VE". LET US SHOW YOU HOW CAJY IT 15 TO "£MOVE EXCESS HAI" WITH M00£"H ELCCT .. Ol.Y•I•, MIDICAl..LY Af'l"ftOVEO,,, SAIC, P'AST, GS:HTLS:. CONSULT WITH OU" LIC.IEHllO TS:CHHIC:IAH IN OV" allMITY •ALON. "OBIN.SON'S NEWPORT Grandmothers At noon every second Thursday the Newport Harbor Grandmothers' Club meets in t.he Costa Mesa G<>ll and Country Club. 1,000'1 Oil OIL PAINTINGS WHOLHALI WAllHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUILIC 50°/o OFF ~ SALE! BLOUSES-SWEATERS- SKIRTS-DRESSES-PANTS PANT SUITS REDUCED 2s•1. 1o so% ALL TENNIS DRESSES 50°/o OFF JEWELRY--SCARVES- HANDBAGs-IELTS- ACCESSORIES-BELTS REDUCED 8ARGA IN TABLE PRIZES-LEFT OVERS-ONE OR FEW OF A KIND Si-t~ICl-$15 ~L.. BIDTIQUE 146-7 VI• "·I • • RICH GIRL HAIR FOR JUST PENNIES! M-.T .... ·WINI. Shampoo-Set '2" Slylecut s1 so ITYLllT ... ICU ILIOHTLY MtOlt•lt '2000 Holiday Perm '12" Holiday Frosting s15u Complete with H•lrcut 2 COSTA MESA SALONS Crownii1g· Glory tlilrmetly Guit l« CoHl111 .. 1 SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 L 11 .. ST., COSTA MISA l ow1r l 1 .. 1l-N1~1 1o S11r1 ..._.. 146·711• ,.. .. 141-ff1f BONDED KNIT JERSEY •crylic •nd wool in • wide r•ngo of 1olid color1, bonded to I 00 ~. •c•l•t• fr icot. 58"/60" widths ALL WOOL FLANNEL for a new sprin9 dress, pent suit er for qeuc.hc's edd • bit cf braid er trim. 1 Z solid colors 54"/55" widths BONDED COORDINATES e PLAIOS e SOLIDS be•ulifully textured in m•fc.h·m•fe color1 for suits, iackets, 1kirt1, pants. acetate and nylon 54'' wid• II HOUSE OF FllBRICS ,_... c:...t P'l..,._lri1tol 1t S•" Oi•t• Fwy. c .... M-t;41·1H6 o,......, M.U-Or•1191ihorpe '"' H•tb•1 flll..,..__,,,_JJJ4 "-P'l---1 71~ •' 1.1,1.1 ...... __...J.1111 1Mt1o P..t c...--t1 '•'"'• 11 S1 111111 11 ..... r-t-CZl·6JJJ I I I I ,, ·-'· • . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY,. JANUARY ti,. m1>' TEN Cl).m; ' --. • McGovern ThroW.s:-i·it =·Hal ... ,~. ___ .. - Democ1·at Senator First in White Hoose -Race WASHINGTON {AP ) -Democratic Sen. George S. ~tcGovern, S<.'n of a prairie preacher, made his early-bird presidential bid official today, promising to appeal to America's "better angels." ·'The kind of campaign I intend to run will res t on candor and reason," said the South Dakota senator, a strong Jibr.ra l and early critic of the Vietnam war. "That kind of campaign takes time. And that is why I am making this announcement far ahead or the tradi· Crash Kills Area Pilot, . . ~ Four Others ' Hopes ended today for survival of .... a Santa Ana student pilot and his four passengers, missing since Sunday noon on a hilly , fogbound diJproach to a Sacramento Valley airporl. 4111NG SNORKEL UNIT, FIREMEN LIFT MAN FROM PIT '•Inter Injured in 15·foot Fall at Sanitation Facility Firemen Pluck Painter ~· From 15-f oot Deep Pit Huntington Beach firemen used their tall snorkel unit Saturday to fi sh a painter with a broken arm out of a 15-foot deep pit at lhe Orange County Sanitation District's treatment plant No. 2. t.ou Rangouss~. 31, a contract painter ••"'-' was working on the dil'llrict's gr il ch&.'flbera: near the mouth of the Santa Ana RiVer, apparently 1dlpped off the edp of one chamber and plunged to the boUom o( the empty pit about 2 p.m. Saturday. Firenttn said the snorkel unit normally used to fight fires in tall buildings -wa s brough t out so a long boom and hoist CQUld be used lo lifr the man out in a stretcher. "With the sno rkel we could stay away from the edge of the pit and effect a smoother removal," Capt. Carl Dun- can, reported. Firemen said Rangoussis suffered a broken arm, but no other apparent in- juries. The sanitation district's grit chambers remove gravelly substances fro m the ~·ater. A crew of painters is curren!ly refurbishing them . Valley Council to Review 484-unit Apartment Plan A 484-unit apartment project proposed In Foimtaln Valley will bt reviewed by the city council Tuesday night. ~tro,,a Homes, the developer. is ate'lln& · penrussion to build t h e aPartmtnis on HI acns around Warner Avenue and' San Brano Street. ·1lle city planning commission had ai>- Jtoved the apartments, but councilnlelJ. dprealn& coricern over the number of units 'prVpoeed. asked for their own public lii!arilll '"' It. ~ 'lbt Ponderosa · projed exceeds the Jianber of 1partmenb per acre allowed under new, Ughter apartment regulations ill P'aunllln Valley.· Plaruiera pused lt -.cause they aaid It was a continuation of-•· pro)ecl .tarted before the new lawa ,,... effective. Councilmen will also consider urging arly dtveloi>n\enl 'ol the Route 3' (Hun-r. Belch) Ftt<way. Their decision may be innuenced by a genera! discussion of the freew ay sponsored by the JlunlinglOn Beach Chamber of Commerce at noon Tuesda y. Several factions in Huntington Beach are asking for a small change in the freeway roole which ~'Ould take it away from several homes and t~e headquarters 0£ the Fountain Vall ey School District, near the border of the two cities. The city council meets at 8 p.m .• Tuesday. in council chambers at 10200 Slater Ave. Illness Delays Phoenix Trial A defense attorney's continued Illness today led to a further delay In the Or8nge County Superior Court rape-ki d- nap trial of Gary Harold Phoenix or Costa Mesa. Searchers found their bodies in the charred wreckage of the ?lane rented from Mission Beachcraft at Or an g e County Airport, shortly afler dawn toda y. The pilot was identified aa Edward Dominguez, 28, while identities of three other victims was withhe1d. Glenn County Sheriff's deputies - whose boss broke his leg Sunday in a fall during the search - said they were flight instruct.Qr Gerald BeMett, a woman and two children. All are from Southern California, but it was not ,explairied if they were Orange County residents. Sheriff Alvah Leverett's men found the wreckage on a .rJdi .. alimilio '°ulh pl the. !i\U!f,.':, _', Maxwen, the city' o c auez was Oy~g. . <o.. '-°"'" , His pAriirlti 11v1!tllere, dtput; .. ..,, r • Dominguei had ta.ken oU from Orange County Airport at 8:30 a.m., without filing a fl ight plan. He is known to have contacted the Air Route Traffic Control Center in Oakland to requ est permission to fiy under a dense overcast. • Official s at the same center gave him authorization at 12 :22 p.m. to begin the iii-fat ed approach to the Willows-GleM County Airport Deput!es said the lingering overcast had hampered their efforts in the fog- shrouded area. They were notified after resident! heard a plane passing overhead, followed by silence and then what sounded like an explosion or the impact of an 1ircraft crashing into the ground. Investigators for the Federal Av iati on Agency said Dominguez's rented plane was Jasl observed by radar when it passed a marker point IO miles south of the airport. 'Dinosaur Bones' Really Rocks A pair of experts confirmed thla morn· Ing tha t the two objects found last Friday in an earthen bank behind San Clemente were not dinosaur remalm at all. They were sandstone rocka, shaped millenia ago by wave action Into forms which could easily confuse the untrained eye. Traveli ng to tbe steep terrain ln hills behind the populated areas of San Clemente, the two expert! determintd the exact nature ol the 1>4ir of white formations in a freah1y cut bani with the simple whack of a gi;ologiat'a bam~ mer. The two men who stepped forth to view the find by uWity crew1 were Roger Desautels, pr es l de 11 t of Archeological Research, Inc., of Costa f\.1esa and David E. Fortech. aulltant curator of vertebrate paleontololY for the Los Angeles Q>unty Mu1e11m of Na lural History. For E~okn/1 Uonal date." "McGovern, the · first aff)daJ entrant in the· i9n: prestdential rltce, rftade his announcement In letters to. hundreds of oewspAPtr ~ltor1 11nd .m;ooo potenUal campaip cotilributora. He also scheduled a televlilon addrUs to h~ home stiite of Sol.dh'Dikota f0r later loday. · He 90ught the Democratic nomination In U168 as a !!land-In for assassinated Sen. _Robert F. Kennedy, but drew only a handful of votu on the ~ ballot \hat overwhelmlnily nominated Hubert B. IT.S. wtlbdrawal 1-SOlltbeut Alli. Humphrey. Earlier thia month ·i; .. ~.dc>n Since lhen McGovern baa made no ~chatrman oi -a party reform COIDDlill- secrel of bll campw .ud hu apoan --lo avoid alljo oailllJd.<il....,llOI with. on hundreds of collele" Clmpu1U,' and ~ presidentW" ~--. now claims 125 atudonl · "°""'· anc1·311 1111 ~ llmio( lo -In faculty groops worklng·1or"bll nomJna. put aa· an attanpl ' 16 ,oo!Jt<r abowlnp lion. • ..... ..,ly pmldeou.J-.pOjb'o~llOI him He also kept in the national e)'t _l~t far behind such ~.candidates year as a sponsor of the u.rwuccealtUl u Sen. Edmund S. -Muskie cl-1111M! Harfleld-McGov"ll ameiidmeiit tq· ;..,;a (!Jee McOOVEllN,. p ... SJ. l. • !· Lost Pilot Lands Plane APCD Will Hear Resident Gripes Over' Bad Smells On Bolsa Chica Beach A pilot who landed his · light plane on Bolaa· Chica ·state Beach Sunday even- ing becaU!le he could not find Me adowlark Alrport was looking for a new propeller today. The Up of the wooden propeller was the only damage Vernon Willingham's Mooney Mlte austained in the emergency landing. Willingham, 35, a motorcycler dealer from Sparta, Ill., said thal because of the fog and failing light he could not locate the Meadowlark strip. "I circled for quile a while and then decided to put it dowr, on the beach rather than take a chance," he t1pl'ained. "I landed on the hard sand near the water but damaged the prop when I taxied up to the high Ude line." "It was fortunate that lhe beach was deserted," he added. Willingham spent the night in a sleeping bag under the wing. Realty Members Eye County Water Supply Orange County's water aupply will be explored by members of the Huntington Beach-Fountah1 Valley Board ol Realtors when they meet for breakfast at a a.m., Wedneaday In Mlle Square Golf .Club. Ne.IL Cline, aaa:laLant manager··Of the Orange CowiU' Water District, will_ ex- plain the methods of conservln'g water in the county and the problems involved. Willingha m Is on vacation and had taken about a week to re1ch the coast, hopping across country from Illinois. The incident is likely to renew interest In whether Meadowlark Airport should be ~llowed to use runway lights. The airport lights were out Sund ay. but Mrs. f\1arge Turner, wife of airport operator John Turner. commented. ''Obviously If we had been able to turn on the lights this would never have hsp~ntd." Turner haa installed runway lights, but the air field baa not yet ·been ap- proved for night flyina by the California Department of Aeronautics (CAB). Accident Kills Santa Ana Man A Santa Ana man wu killed Saturday night 1'ben be was struck: by a motorcy- cle and run over by a car. Andrew Jacklon Blair, 58, wu knocked down while .,,..Jn( the sir.eel In front of his ·retidence; '424 W. lat St., by ·a motorcycle ridden by Rtchard J. Gfeenacre, %2, a Marine stationed al .Et Taro. Aa Blair wis lying on the pavement, he wu run over by a car driven by 'Fred S. Garcia, 26, allo of Santa.AA&. I The Orange County Air Pollution Con· trol District has called a meeUnc to hear complaints from re!ldentl In southeast Huntington Beach over ob- no·xioui odors. The meeting will be btld In the Edison High School cafeteria at 7:30 p.m. Tues. day. Doog!as Jeffrey, an engineer with the pollution control district, sakl today 1hit many homeowners complained about an oily smell last week. He aaid the district traced the odots to the 40-acre Stevenon dump at Newland Street and Hamilton Avenue. . "Rilta ry mud and oil brines are dumped there," Jeffrty explained. "'lbe odors were unpleasant and quite nrong last week. It has abated now bec1uae tbey have stopped making the loads that callled Oil problenl." A repruentiUve from the district at-. tonley'.• office ~II · be at Ttleidly'1 mtttlng; Jeffrey added. 'l'lie sfudgo dump II behind Soutllem C.IHomla Edlaon Company'• plul and near .Ediaon Hijb SCbool; <:eed Hitehhiker Gets ... . . . . . . Wei-man's Pur8e Judge William Murray o rd e r c d Phoenix, ,29, to return to court Tuesda y after learning that deputy p u b I i c defender Roderick Riccardi had failed to lhalte oft the virus · that , led last weelt to a one day delay of the trial. He Took ~Dirty Pictures' • Riccardj Is scheduled to open the defense. of Pboenb: to 33 . felony charges stemmlnt from the defendant's alleged auacp·. on nine women durina • 28-day per~ J~ summer. . - l'llOenlx Is charBed vllt~ rail", 8Mlult with intent to commit •Tape, 'ltl(lnap, robbery and !lex perv~r!lion. If Phoenix la found guilty on the major charges dtp.ity district attorney Michael Capl1.il will ask for the death penalty. By TERRY COVllU! _ Of .... ..._ """ •"'I "WblCb' would you rathOr bave, a nllle• clean beall\ or.A bmQOllf1.!' I ' MID Sidlth: 1'. fllJfori ~ihe clean "be.Ch, clean~ li 1fhe'1'bel:ln-! nlnt: to think other peopie hive a fondness for junkyards. j Lttst week he took a ooe hour walk . around ·/cls north Hun~· "leM:h. neighbor[ ood and documented the pol~~ ·'r., ·, ' . ' ~ ~: .. ' . : I "• · I ,) .,,.., I. !Gund-. ,. .... lie .11und•fct11o.lmr-lols Itek from •lilo ' bomi at ·mi 'Lo1lrdls Driv~:. ' _;A 'dlldl Nil of wood and'trub.; -A · (jOld wi!lcb flal -· a • nelpbaftlood Junkrm! -'with beer -· . 9td lcyl and· -lloms -.... 'nearb1 walls. ' • - -01d r:ustY cam tosse¢,•n)'l'hert. (!Jee BEACH, Pap I) r . ~ .+ ' - • • ' -,:!:::"" ~·· ,., I ~ .. ,~ t• -.• . . M DAtL'I' fllLOT 1!11'1' l'lw!M IKE SMITH SURVEYS POLLUTION IN HIS NEIGHBORHOOD In Huntington hach, a On•hoUr Walk on the Wild Side. · Irish Youths Gather Bottles for Bombs" BELF~ST. Nortliern lr"ela nd (UPI) Roman Catholic · youths rang doorbells in Belfast toda y coHecting milk bottles to male£ gasoline bombs for v.·bat British official:; fear may be an all-out campaign of violence by the Irish Republican Army (IRA). Premier J a m e•· Chichestet-Clark scheduled an emergency meeUng with Home Secretary Reginald M.!Uldlng in London today to discu-ss the a,b: Mys or clashes between Catholics and Britisb troops . •. · DAILY PILOT Ok,l.NG! C:OAl?""l>UIUStilNO COMt.\N'I' Rob 1r.t N., W1M Prc.ldl'lll ar.C. PlllClll&ller J1ck R. Cui11v Vlt1 ,.,..,~.,! •r.d 0-•I Mill'lil'I' l hom 11 !("vii l~o"''' A. M11rphi111 M•MOlng Eor.w Al1n Oirkin w111 or1no-cavn1y l!ft!llr A!b1rt W. l1t11 IJ.tocttl'I ECll!w "''''"'•• ..... Offke 11•1s l111d1 lowl•••rcl M1lii11t Addrtu: P.O. loir 790, !:tM• OtHr omc. L••"""' a .. c~: 2n For"Ht "-Cott• M111: ~ w..1 a.v sr,... t.ilW!lllrl llK~: 7'11 W..I h lb01"lou,.Wlrlil bn t;lf"'l'ft_!I : ~ Hor1h t:I C..mlnl 11: .. 1 " . .. ... •· . • .-J -· ·- r FroH• Page 1 BEACH • • • -A can of oil half buried 1n the ground. · -Trash, old tires. and Christmas tree~ dumped in an ope.n field . -An eroded drainage ditc h covered wlth papers and trash. -Barren fields n·hcrc animals and SQ&~&!,OllOI! lived. :-A.huge flODd control chan]le! which nows .out to se e. carrying with il trash end debris which may come back up on the beaches. The channel l!sclf llnce flou rished with bass, but no\\' only carp can survive the·chemicals &nd Jack of oxyge~ and.they're dying too, says Mik&i "People should be aware of what they're doing," ~like pleads. "Ir pcolSle. wouJd . look: at it, they"d reaJiie lheY BN! killing all the vegetation aJI the wijdlife. ·• ' Mike hopes to be a marine bio\Oflsl some day, but for the present he "s concentrating on making pepple a'4·are of the !!imple pollution around them -tbe ua11. dumped trash. "People "forget too easily.'' he explain~. ''I'm going to try other projects tn bring it out.·• . In a .yejr's time Mike has watched lh! f!b!:iJts".and snakes . dis.appear fr'om the ·-open f1elds, the bass dte in the channels . and surrounding vegetation trampled or burned. He 8.W; hi s friends the simple quiSilOn ''Vlhich_·would Yoo rather ha\le, a clea~ beech or a junkya rd." ' 9 Amfri,can Troops . Felled liy OWn ·T a.rik SAlGON (AP) -An American tank · JICC identally. Ufed a sheU into a U.S. infantry ~ uil .~t was supporUna: ln a fiiht SUnday and wounded nine. of the American Infantrymen, the U.S. Coili- mand announced today. Tbe eccicjtnt occurred 27 mile~ northeast' of Saigon as troops of the 2nd' Bripde.. :mtb. Infantry Division bat· tltd an enemy forcl', !he tank was from the 11th Armored Cava lry Regiment • ••• ,000 ~1..9 •• Trio Flee Home In Laguna Blaze Thtu occupants of a Laguna Beach house scrambled down a neighbor 's l1d- der to safety early Sunday as thty fled a fire that injured three firemen and caUAed an estimated $50,000 damagt. o rrtclals said when the blue began al. about 2 a.m . Sunday, the three oc- cupants of the house at 629 Bolsana Drive were sitting in an upr;t.airs room talking. They were identified as Judy Gersh, Dave Baldwin and Geor1e Hancoct. They told firemen they heard a noite downstairs that sounded like breaking glass aild thought it was a burglar. Ttten opened a hall doer and wtre forced back ·by billowing clouds of smoke. The three then went out a door to a sun deck and climbed over the roof to a neighbor's fence. The neighbor was waiting for them with a laddtr and lhey cllm bed to safety. Two fire units and 25 firemen , incl uding all fire department volunteers, responded to the fire . Two regular firemen suffered heavy smoke inhalation and a volunteer cut his hand while fighting the blaze. Firemen said the $65,000 hOUJe, owned by Laguna Beach resident E a r I Fairbairn, was partially destroyed. The four bedrooms and other living quarters were gulled and all of the occupants ' furniture and clothing we.rt destroyed. Firemen sa.id the furniture wu new and set the damage to the contents of the home at $25,000. Structural damage to the home was also iniUally estimated at $25,000. The garage and laundry room of the home received only slight water damagt firemen said. ' Fire Marshal Jim Presson said cause School Trustees Ask for Project On Student Size Trustees er the Ocean View ScbMI District may lift the 30-students-pcr- ·teachtr limit Tuesday night to all&w .an experiment in clas.s site. . '.I'he district ill trying to get approval from the state to ~ Ont. o! several districts in a pilot project wh ich may restructure the traditional concept or classes. Currently , the district maintains a level of about 30 'students ror each certiricattd !cacher. "We"d like 10 spread those stude nt!< nut among teacher's aids student teaChe rs and other adu lts," Dr1 • Clartnce Hall. district superintendent, explained. "You don"! need a master's degree from Harvard to read to children or grade papeM>," Dr. Hall added. "If we cRn free the teacher from somt of the mundane work, the teacher can con- centrate on the sophisticated parts of education.'' Slate officia ls arc looking ror In· DOVa\ions in education whi<:J"i will provide . I~, ~st uUlizatiOn of highly tralntd 1.e~che~. B1 not tieing teachers down li> r~tlne classroom work, it ill e1pecled that teachers can COncentriie on in· dividual students. '"If the state appro\leS our district for the pilot project, it means wt can have larger classes at certain times without losing any· state money," Dr. Hilll said. . Dis\rtct trustees will consider · the sub- ject at their 7:lJ p.m. meetin1. Charles Furr Succumbs at 89 -Charles Robert Furr. who aerved Hun- tington Beach for 22 ycaNJ as city clerk, controller and auditor, died Saturday al the age of 89. Mr. Furr held all three posts from 1926 tn 1947. Prior to that he served the city as a deputy clerk and an en1?ineer"$ Clerk. Fu~ral services for Mr. Furr will be held at I p.m ., Tuesday Jn Smith '!! Chapel. Burial will follow in Westminster Memorial Park. Tbe J<lUllCr city clerk was also 1 5()..y~r~ Jhember of Elks Lod1e 1969 Masobic :Lodge 380 and Rollry Club'. The ltev. Edward Ernie of tht First Methodist thurch Will officiate with the help of the Masonic and Elks lodges. Mr. Furr lived in Huntington Beach for ~7 years. From P"fJe 1 - McGOVERN. • • • the Democratic frolllNiiner. In his statement McGo.;,na·denou.nced war, po.llutton, raciJm-,r Crtrfte, ... ~ ment. mnauon, ina~u1te tdiiool and dlsillusionment of youth. •· 1 believe the people of thill C'OUl'llry are tlred of tht old rhetoric," he 11ld. "Ratbfr., they seek a war 'out of · the wilderhes,.,. But 1f we who sett their trust: ti-us' them ; if we try to evoke the "better angels of our nature; the people n·i!J fi nd their own way.'' of the blau wu not immedi.11.tely known, althou«h he did aay it begM in the family room of the hOU3t. Preuor. speculated thet the glass breaking sound tbe three occupants heard before dillrovery of the fire wu a window popping out from the heat of the flames. Investigators Identify Body In Modjeska Orange County Sheriff investiga tor!! have idtnUfled the nude, badly beaten body of a woman found during the weekend In Modjeska Canyon as that of Zelma Rachel Wltgenstein. 46, of Norwalk. Los Angeles County lawmen ate toda y working with ·loc1\ offices in a bid lo establish the reason for th~ woman's presence in Orange County and to reconstruct, if possible , the events that led to her slaying. U'I T~..,,.,. Investigators are working on the theory that the dead woman may have been the victi m of a sexual attack but they are awaiting the outcome of a coroners examination for confirmation or denial of that supposition. STUDENTS WORK TO EXPOSE SKELETON OF WHALE Amateur Paleontol09l1t1 Make Pind in San P~ro Mrs. Witgenstein's body , stripped of the red stretch pants , white crocheted sweater and pink coat which were scat· te red nearby. was found by three hikers Saturday in 1 brush.choked ravine . It wall partially concealed by dense shrub· bery. An autopsy carried out later that day disclosed the ceU!e of death to be a broken neck, possibly suffered as a result of htavy blows to the head and face . Fossilized Whale Bones Found i~San Pedro Hills Investigators said Mrs. Witgenstein wl! a widow who Jived alene In a Norwalk trailer park. Relatives and friends ilfC being qucstlontd In a bid for a lead to the killing. SAN PEDRO (UPI) -The fosllillzed remains of what a geology professo r and the two students who found It believe tn be a 30,000-year-old California gray whale have been discovered more than three mites rrom the ocean shoreline. •otooper Bowl" Sunday's Slow Motion Lnugh·ln By RICK DU BROW Very carly,.wi tht game, what looked HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Contrary In In he a fist fight broke out on the previous reports. !be madcap en· playing field. Suddenly there was a. tertalnml!nt special known as "The Super cutaway to something else, and detail~ Comedy Bowl" was not merely on CBS-or the fracils were ta ctrult} omitted TV last week. It turned up again on from hc1ng presented to the viewing NBC·TV Sunday, and this lime the chif>f p11hl1c or an estimated 64 million persons, perrormer!I were tht Baltimore Colt~ who undoubtedly were felt lo be un· and Dallas Cowboys, previo usly n<il prepared for such na sty matter~. Thing~ known for humorous specialties_ gol runnier after thal. They calltd it the Super Bowl, and Act ually. Sunday's game really helped it may have been a bowl game, but pu t pro football -and sports -back it wa!ln't super. There were sn ma11v into !heir proper perspecUve. Thl'l fact fumbles, lnlerceptions, deflections and is that Ballimore and Dallas are two other foulups that it looked as if the genuinely excellent teams. and they just game had been produced by "Rowan happened lo have a very zany day. and Marlin's Laugh·ln." As things got Television. howe\lcr, has often seemed messier and messier, you hall exepcted tn rnake football such a source of phony to see Arte Johnson come out of a reverence that we may frequently forget pileup with a fumbled ball and streak that it is. after all. merely a source for ll'lt goal line, wjth Goldie Hawn of en tertainment and pleasure. And the in hQ.l pursuit. Set details in Sports enlertalnmcnt in Sunday's co medy of today, Page 21. err<irs was truly w<irth tu ning in fnr. There have been more polished £001ball in addillon to deOa ting the re verenlial games at picnics .. ~ two defen!ICS gave sid(' <if sports. the contest lts chief sourct or respec· 11 was ~ad. or course. to see tabillty. But you could find more offense B;1lt1mnn.•s incompa rable J<ihnny Unitas in a wisecrack by Groucho f>.1arx. Both for<'£'d out nf the game by an injury. teams played '4"ell enough to lose, but And it ..... as cquillly sa d to see the only one <ir them made iL The ~arne i;plcndid Oallas coach. Tom Landry, almost went into a "~udden death .. status dcnird once a~ain lhr i·hnmpionship after lo decide tht outcolll't. If it had. !he rom1ng sn close An11 d all the unintended gtneral reelin g in my neighhorhood is humor of the jlame Sundav ent could that we would have had a decision not help feel ing sympathe.tic to these by next Wtdnesday. forlorn figure.~. ~~~--=~~~~~~· Paul Kirkland and Bob Montgomery , geology students from Los Angeles Harbo r College, made their find whi\11 searching the San Pedro hillside ro r shells during their Christmas v1c1lion. When first sighted, the students aaw only chips of bone. "There was a sma ll piece protrudirtg lhrough the surface. I dug down an'd it went t~·o feet. Then I stopped," said Kirk land who wants to become a paleon- tolngist. Kirkland notified the Cabrillo Museum \\'hich sent \Villiam F. Sa maras, ii museum con~u ltant and a Carson High School teacher, back with Ki rkland to identify lhe specimen. Since the rossil Wils found. the geology class from Harbor College has rtturned on the weekends to dig it out. They are being extreme ly careful beca ust Of the sandy soil and the sortncss or the deposit · Eugene F'titsche. an il ssociate pro- fesso r of geology aL San Fernando Valley St~te College, who hfls joined the digging, said the wh alt was probably a gray whale because of its si7.e. Only pilot and gray whales Rte known to be com- mon to the area and the fossil appcar1 too large to be 11 pilot , according to Fritsche. Kir~and and Montgomery"s teacher. associate . professor Martin Reiler, .!laid that during the !ce: Age ! pleistoccn11 era), the hill side WilS probabl y a ta goon. alld the wha le probAhly was washed up on the beach 1n the silme wa v thiit a group of whale.~ recently w~·re on San Clemenle Island Cop ter Plucks (ows KAUNA KAKAL ~lawa ii !L"Pl l -Forty cows were lifte d from a bargl' str uck on a reef off the island of MnlokRI Sunday and flown to shore hy a helicopter, one at A lime. MUST MAKE ROOM FOR ITEMS COMIN UP FOR SALE THROUGH OUR LOAN DEPT. -· LADllS II K GOLD $85 00 BRACELET WATCH .... ' ... ~!~~91D CAMERA $3495 8 TRACK TAPES ............ $1~ $12 96 $1~ SPANISH STYL! GUITARS All GOLF CLUBS Wood Reg. 19.9S Wood a or front ... 'MASON"TX JS $ 85 ·BINOCULARS ~1~~......... 7 Must 1hop lo bclltve--Ev.!rythini: ful ly J1,11rant~. AM-FM-MPX With Speakers and Full Size BSR Ch1n9er , ....... , .......•. USED WATCHES Gu .. ::::, ... $500 I & up CULTURED PEARL NECKLACES ..... $2495 GOLD JEWELRY SOLD BY WEIGHT OF GOLD WE ALSO BUY and LGAN MONEY . . .. ON ANY ITEM YOU MAY HAYE. e Ill US POR YOUR IMAL~ M°"IY , NllDI -•" . Pt~pl,• in tht •now , • .,.. money every time they buy -1t 11 11ot .••sy to buy for uiih, but if you'fi•.,.• ctih, l1~k~m1rjcer1'1 •r Mett•r Charge you can s••• tre- men&s '"}°"'nt1 e~•. everything every dey, Raciti s COSTA MESA JIWELIY ancl LOAtt 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE ·646·7741 • DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA '-''" 0 H-& -- ' I I I '. • • 'I I' '1 ----- "' ( Ne t Beaeh ' ... ~- -- VO[ 64, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1971 TEN CENTS ,, Newport Beach May Face Loss of Road· Fu~d·s By L. PETER KRIEG ot ""' D&11Y "•"' s .. tt A ~t.Y official todQ lfarped Newport Beach it faces the loss of road con- struction ftmd.s beca.UR of its opposition to the Paclflc-Ccwl Freeway. COunty Rold Commissioner Al Koch, Jn a )e~r to the city council, said the gas tu revenues couJd be withheld unJ.tss the city adopta "a mutually-ac- ceptable" traHlc meter plan. KoCb 1akl the council 's support of * * * FunttStash Would Hurt Road Plans A cutoU of Arterial Highway Financing Proeram monie! would force curtailment of one, or possibly two major road construction projects ln Newport Beach Public Works Director Joseph T. Devlin 1ald. tbis morning. Devlin, responding to a threat by COWl- ty official! that the gas lax tUncts may be withheld, said the city has applied for '230,000 to help finance two pt(ljecb, the widening of Balboa Boulevard and the ei:tension of University Drive. The'Univeraity Drive project )J planned IA conjunction wilh the state's timetable for. realigning MacArthur Boulevard and preliminary grading fo r the new Corona del Mar Freeway. Univtts.i ty Drive is planned to be ex· tended from MacArthur to Jamboree RQtd •t' a cost or $232,000, Devlin said, with Ute cost to bt shared almost equ.ally betwel!ll the city and the county. Devlin said he dots not know how the caundl will react to Koch's letter Wltlling of the poslibllity of curtailment of AHFP funding . "I certainly do not think it ill justiifed at this lime," Devlin said, "there have been no official changes in the formal master plan.'' He said, however, "rather than fighting this in the newspaper, I will make certain rectimmendations to the council for a formal written response." In the event the county carries out the threat, Devlin said he did not know whether one or both of the projects would have to :t>e she1ved. "We will just have to reappraise our pr~itiei," he said. Investigators Identify Body Found in Canyon Orange County Sheriff investigators have identified the nude , bad1y beaten body <Jf a woman found during the weekend in Modjeska Canyon as that of Zelma Rachel Wltgenstein, 46, of N<Jrwalk. Los AngeJes County lawmen are today Wtlr~g, with• local offices tn a bid ~ e.itablish the rea:!IOn for the woman s presence ln Orange ·CotJntx and lo reconstruct. if posSlble, the events that led to her alaylng. · ...investigators are working on the theory that the dud woman may have been Ute victim of a ~xual attack but they are awaiting the outcome of a coroner's examlnaUon for confirmation or denial of that 1Uppo.!IUon . MTs. 'Witgenlttln's body, stripped of the red atretch .pants, white crocheted sweater and pink COAt which were scat· tered nearby. was found by three hikers saturdpy In a btu!IH:hoked ravine. It 9 partially concealed by dense shrub- IJory. An a11tops~ carried out later that day dilcloled 1be cause of death to be a beoken 'necJc:1 pbalbly !JUUered 111 1 retUlt ollleavy blows to the head nd'fltt. lnyestlsaton 1aid Mra. wttgena\ein Mi i w1'IOw who llved al..,. In a Nonrllk triller perk. Relatives and frieods are b<fit· ~-In a bid ,., a IHcl to >trio ldlUnl, • \ . Heavy Layer of Smog 1 . ll&ngs , Over Newport Al.._., 1.,.,. "' -buaC -the Harbor Area today , rediJc:ln& vleiblllty In JOl"O portlonl ol Newport· -to lesl than -btocb. ' An official of the county:1 Alr Pollution Colltrol lllatrtct 11id the -hn ... oe.ived many complltma from people whD a,. ba•ln( .difficulty· brealhllJI, but Aid the smog Jndex II not at the potnt that ca~ be consldtrtd hazardous . 11 1 •• the Badham bill last summer is evidence tbit it oppo.es the freeway and therefore "la not. cooperating with the county road prOgra,m." Newport Beach bas applied for W0,000 in county aid for two projects in 1971-72, according to Public Worb Director Joseph T. Devlin. Koch aa.id lhe funding auth<Jrity, the Arterial Hig}tway Financing Program (AHFP) eould reject these appllcations if an acceptable master plan is not adopted by its allocation meeting next month . Jn his JeUer, Koch referred to a July ZO city council resolution urging the State Senate to pas,,. a measu.rt, proposed by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R- Newport Beach). which sought to delete the freeway from Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach t h r o u g h the southeasterly boundary of Newport Beach. "Inasmuch as deletion of the freeway woold confi~ all coastal traffic now!! to t!)e uiJUna: Pacific Coast Highway, it i3 obvious that the cfty's arterial highwi"y plan aa ·it now exists will be groUl)' lnadequale," Koob said. "The result i..s a plan which is not mqtually ntbftctory and therefore in violation of I major p·rinciRle of ·the art,:rlal hllhw:ay financing .program. '''nie tecfinlcal staff of the AHFP has dlr~t.ed the Undersigned to noUfy the city that iii eligibility to participate in the program ls now In Jeopardy; and unless a mutually acceptable master plan is adopted flD1het prioriUes for propOsed city projects, including tboae sub mitted for the 1971·'12 fiscal J.ear, may not be considered." Koch request& the city "advise the technical staff of the int_Mtiona .with regard to the correction of its muter plan and whether such coriecUon can be lmplernent.ed prior to the ~ of JllV!llel In Febnwy lor the coming ,..,... PfOlll'1lll," Newport lleacb olllcllll ,are In the process of revilinc lta trlfm muter plan, tbrou&J>. 1he ... of ""'8Ullantl' and a cltizloa' committee, but are not ezpOcled to · lllYti ;pylhin( """""' on paper by 1he end of nextmonlb, Koch lndlcalod 1he AH!'B 1D1Y take a h~ line over tbe.iaue.. He said because.:: of lta actiom:, the . (See ROAD FIJNDll;Pap I) McGovern Throws-·in Hat Democ1·at Senator First in White House Race UPIT ....... OFF ANO RUNNING Candidate McGovern J),q~, J;{1,µ1ting Eor Season Ends On Irvine Marsh Duck hunting reason ended Sunday, and UC Irvine offici1ls expect a tall y on fowl bagged jn itll San Joaq uin marsh from rnember11 of the private gun club allowed to hunt there. Dr. Gordon Marsh, chairman of the UCI marsh Committee. said he would wait "two ~ks" for the total of ducks ba~ed-by the seven members of the San ·Joaquin Gun Club, before writing Uiem. An agreement between UCJ and the club allowing use of the 200-acre "eCological · peserve" for hunting in season, requires tn,: club to list the numbers and kinds of birds shot. Marsh contends that the gun club ar- rangement was necessary to provide funds to maintain the marsh for educa- tional uses. The club paid $3.000 to hunt the marsh this year and will pay $5.000 in subsequent years. Meanwhile, a proposa l seeking $12,000 from the University to develop the preserve will be introduced at the next Regent.a' meeting, Marsh said. "I"m curious to see what the outcome will be." Among maintenance and development needs before the manih becomes an educational asset are the provision of a· water IUJ)ply, vegetation control, walkways and fencing. Located just ·north of the UCJ campus near CUiver road, the marsh is home for mort than llO tpeeles of coastal and migratory binla, Big · Postal Strike ' LONDON (APJ -Britons rushed lo meet the 'deadline for mailing letters today -~ • nationwide: polltal sti:ika wbkh also threatens to disrupt telephone and telegraph contact with the oulslde world. WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic Sen. George S. McGovern, sen of a prairie preacher, made his early-bird presidential bid official today, promising to appeal to America's "better angels." "The kind of campaign I intend to run will rest on candor and reason,·· said the Sooth Dakota senator, 1 strong liberal and early critic of the Vietnam war. "That kind of campaign takes time. And that is why l am making this announcement tar ahead of the tradi· Two Tankers Crash, Spill F.11cl ~~ " ... ,,. SAN FRANCISCO (UPIJ -TWb IDge ajt:;llui:u.c •1•11•1 1n fog andWfa tmder· t.hl'"" Gbldld Gate Bri~. spilling thousands of gallons of bunker fuel into San Francisco Bay. There were no injuries. The Oregon standard . outbound for British Columbia with 4.6 million gallon:i of bunker fuel. was rammed on t.he port side by its incoming sister shii), the Arizona Standard, and at least two of its tanks ruptured . A Coast Guard officers aboard the cutter Red Birch radioed that about half a million gallons of bunker J·u ed had leaked out of the Oregon Standard'a No. 2 tank. Al Sausalito, a picfuresque village and tourist resort across the bay frotn s8n Francisco. some oil was observed coating the water but it had not reached the beaches. The two 523-foot sister ships owned by Sta ndard Oil of California, hung together after the 1 :~ a.m. PST collision, drifted east on the bay arid tied up a ha]f.mile west of Angel Island. across from San Francisco's F ishe r ma n 's Wharf. The Red Birch commander said the Oregon Standard's no. 2 tank, which held 10,000 42·sailon barrels, wa s leaking "quite rapidly.'' and estimated about ~.000 barrels had escaped. Son of Fire Chief Arrested in Arson LACONIA, N.H. (UPI! -Timothy Warren, 25, was arrested over tbe weekend and charged with looUng and bumtng an elementary ICbool. Hia father, the fire chief of Epsom, N.H., atood beside him at hi..s arrajgnmenl Warren wu arrested Friday 1fttt 1 JO-week JnveaUgation by 1'-ite poUce oi the Oct. 4 blue at Center Brmltud Elementary School which Cluaed '371000 damage. A judge caatlnoed blil '"at ti,oOo pending a Feb. 5 bearing. lionaf date." McGovern, the· fint official entrant in the 1m presidential race, made his announeement-. tn letters to hundreds o( ncWspaper editors and 275,000 potential campaign contrlbuton1. He al!IO scheduled a televlaion address to his home state of South Dakot~ for Jat~r ~ay. He solight . the· Deinocratlc nomination In l!Ml8 as . a stand-in for · assassinated Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, but drew only a handful of votes 'on the ballot that '!/ '{., -. !W-eai: .of~ the Year overwhelmingly nominated Hubert . H. Humpbrey. Since then McGovern has· made· M secret of his campaign and has spoken on hundreds of college campuses , And now claims 125 student groups and ·.30 faculty groups worklllg for his nOmina-- tion. ' ' • He also kept In the naliona} eye last y.ear as a sponsor of the WlS\Xccn.sf!ll Harfleld·McGover n amendment ·w ·tm:te ' ' .. __.. .... , .. ~en; Edgar R. "Ned" Hill Oeft) and ·.Frederick Sc~oe~·~.:11,le . chOU:eJ ' of-Iii€ Newporl Harbor Chaml)er of Cpmmerce .for N'eWJllll'l:r BeacJi'B~Men of the Year for 1970. They·were cited for their1exten:· aive ·community activiti es and "a since~ joy of genuine givip.g" plus 0 deToti.on.to:.wife, family and community.,'.' Three Occupants ·Escape ' . $50,000 _Laguna Blaze· -> Three occupants of a Laguna Beach houle ld'ambled down a ne:lghtior's lad· der to . tafety early Sunday 11. they fled 1 fire that injured tliree f.iren].~ •caved an esUmated $50,000 damage. Ofllclab 18ld wben' the blau began at abb\rt 2 a.m. SUnday, the three oc- cuparita ol the hoUJe at 629 Bolsana Dl:iv:!:) wtn· 11~ in an upstairs roooi talking. They ""e Identified as Judy Genh, 11a,;,·eaic1w1n·and GP-ge Hancocl<. 'rbiy toltf firemen they heard 1 noise doWr\atarr1 lb&! 'sounded llR breaking g{fa ,\,id thought it Wl&a buritllr. Tllllii. -.inc1 a liall ~. ""!! were rotted back by billowing clouds ........ Tbe Uiroe tlicn Went oat a ~ to a iun detk and dim~ •over t6' 'foot to a neighbor's fence: The netctibor wf• waiting for them with , a• lfd'ler .11\d · they cllmte.;d to safety. . l , ' Prehistoric ·Fossil ,Fou,nd · Two fire unite and Ii riremen, inchldb1a: an flre 'department v9lunteierl, ~ t0 the rrre. 1'Wo,regu1..-llr.inen;~ heavy .amOke inhalation and, i v(ttiUiWr cut ji;.,ni_nd\WlllieJllhUq,U.,~;, · · FlrmMa•ulcl 'lhe 116,oe&--,ownOd by ·Leppa J Be,ch ~.t1 ~t.P.1 Faitbllril'I WU· ~llllY, ~-~ lour¥roPms·and ~r ·~""'8 ~ wen IU"9d and ,all of>-!lhl ~,,..,.,. furniture and clothing•,... dau0j1d;l ' ' Profe~sor IJelieves Re maim : to, be GYq,y 'JrJ,¢e , SAN PEl>RO (UPll -The rOAillwi mnalna~ or what a geology profeuor and the two·lludenls who found it believe to be a llf,GIJO.yur-old California gray whale)-boa dltco1'erid mmi 'U>an tlne --tile ocean 1honjllle., Paul KlrldaDcl" and Bob Montgi>mor)', leolocY ~II· rrom Loo Ange!OJ -.. ColJelt, lOlde their rind w)i)e aearCbinc the San Pedro hlloide ror WO. durq lbelr Chrlltm11 ..C.tlon. When tint ailblod, the 1lllclontl ' .... only chlpo of -· · "'There w1~ a rm.it! pl~ protruding through the 1urf1Cfl. l dug down and I .. • It went two reel Theo l atopped," ukf ff.:lllOl'\Of eaoloCY' it Sin J'emudo Valley Kirkland .who W1111a•to beconie' a pileoo-State°'"!C', wh6lm jollied t11e ciaii.. iologbt. ~~~~ .,".'"_._~!· ~.! Krrkland notiiied the Cabllllo Mu.e.m ' -..._ -~--·. ~., ""'" · , , , , , andVoTwhaleaarelmowntoba....,,. whli:h ... 1 Wllllam F. Samar11, a ·->·to-•q,e.,.. ind -tho ':t,:an m"'°""' COOIU!lut I!"! a ,Canixt)llsll · llO "*" tO .bl a ·pilot, 'lo' School teacbet, bacJr with Klrldaiid' to ~ ·-•' , Identify the opedmeri. • KllWald aftcl Moo~'• teOcher. Slnc:e the roan WU IQ!lncl, the ·(eology '...ct.to-prof-Martin llelter, llld· clw from u.-COllecc bl.< retumod tb•].daillil 1111', Joo . Ace (pi- on the --. to dig It out Tiiey eraJ;.fllt lllllaldt•wu Jl!Ol>eblJ a lagoon, '"' being extremely careful beca111e of and .~· """'1e .,._bi1 wu wubed lbe Wldy roll nd ,the -ol, lbe -up;a0)!W•!ilodrln 1he 11me way lhOt deposit. • ' • .,... j)( whalea recently we"' oo Eugene Frltach" an tlllOClale pro-IO!I !;la~· hlal!lf. : t '!'f P'liemen lllCI 'the furniture-,;,;.. 111<1 , set yie. damqe S:.!"~= of u>e l>Ome-at .Z.ooo: • ' 'lo Ibo -..... a1ao.J111tlaU12 ...... •h••· 1 1 ,,,.. ians• and laundry-...... •• ' • ' 1 • { ' • ho(tlO -I""" only 1lJPl 'water·~. · firemen ~':"' • . ' Fire Mal'lbal Jim "-ul~ callaa of llwbluo ..... ilot lnuiiadlite!J -· although · tie did 111 11 tlecn 1n-Ibo family room ol·the hou;e.-" • Pr""°" opeculaled :~I 'the lllll b,..lilhg1IOU!ld lbe -~·ta beard before cflaoovery of the fire w11 1 wtridow popP1n, out from the beat of the names. ,,, •• U.S. withdra'!"al from Southeast Alla. Earlier this -lb be. alepped doWlj .., chairman. of. a party reform commJa. slon to avoid any conflld of intereat with hi!: presidential campaign. His announcement tlnµng, is JaeD In pl!' as an •!tempt to bola:ter ibowlnga in early pres1denllal polls tliat put hlm far behind such unatmOWlC9d candid.ates as Sen. Edmupd . S. M1111kle of -Maine, , (Sec McGOVERN, Pqe JI PLANE CRASHES NEAR AIRPORT Officials at the Orange County Airport control tower reJUkd 1 Ugbt CesaM JlQ airplane crashed ,UOUJld • l p.m •• ~y. Tower officials say the pt&ne cruhed approlimallly .two IDilel ~ al Ibo ' 1aMfnJ llriP. No other tietans were avail. !Ible at. prm: time. -> .. _ ........ Crash Kills Area Pilot, Four Others Hopes ended today f0r survival of a Santa Ana . ltudent pilot and hia foor Pl"'"i'"· mlalin&: since Sunday noon on a ·hilly, f0gbound ·aPJiioaeh to 1 Sacramento Valley airport. Searchers found their-bodtea: ·tn the &lrTeO wreckage of the plane reriltd from Mlsskln Beachcraft at Or a n.1 • Cmmty Airport, shottTy..fter dawn today. The pilot wu identif~ 11 Edward Dominruez,. 28, While IOentiUes of three other victims wu withheld. Glenn 'County Sheriff'• deputies - whole 00.. broke hll leg Sund1y ht a fall during the 1eareh -utd they were flight ilia:tnlcto[ .• Gerald Bennett. a woman and two chlldr•. All are from . Soot.bun Callforitia, but It .was. not explained lf lfi.v Were Orinp County residents: · -~ -·:.1 ' ·Sheriff Alvlh Leffrtu '1 men found the --dlie .... a .. ride! about a 111il• aOutl\ fOf ~the ~~ '°""· of Sitea, near MuweU, the ~Y to wblcb Dominguez WU llJ'inl. · . ' . Jiii porerill il'je tliett'. deo\IU" Aid. Domlllguel l\ad iuoii-orilrom °'"""' COdnfy ,Algiort · lt"·i;a·· a.m,, witbollt fillni 'a flight. pliri:' . - ' ' I N • Court to Hear Case of Mesan Saffor's ·Reward Now picture this .sailor, home from the sea, being bussed warmly Sunday aboard vessel in Newport Harbor. Is it a welcome home kiss he's getting from a lass who clambered aboard as his ship headed for its mooring? Or is she a .member of the crew. merely much re- lieved at making.port after" a brisk sail in a not so summery wind? Costa Mesa Assault Trial ~lay~d Due to Sickne ss . . .-•, A ·defenit jtf.orney'11 continued. Illness tod~y · ,.l~. ~ a fµrther delay in the Oran,ge .Cquaty Superior Court rape-kid- nap trial of Gary Harold Phoenix Qf Costa Mesa. From Pqe I l\lcGOVERN . • • .tile Qemoentlc Jl'.<>nlrulu)er. Jn '1l! atattment McGovern denounced war, w,JAi!t.iofh racism, crime, unemploy- meflk Ujtlap~n;-Jn&ijeijuite schoQI . aid and disillualOnment Of 'YOuth. •·r believe the people of this country are tired ()f the old rhetoric," he said. ''Rather, they Hek a way out of the wilderliess. But if we who seek their trust, ~t them; if. we try to evoke the ~1bettu. ancela of our nature,' the peop~ will_fJ.Dd their own way." H~ stiid he is running "becaUBe I believe deeply in the· American ,romise and QD. ~_longer aceept the diminishing nature of that promise." Judge William Murray ord ·ered Photnlx, 29, to return to cow:t Tuesdsy after learning that deputy p u b I i c defender Roderick Riccardi had failed to 1hake off ~ the virus that led la.st week to a one day delay of the trial: Riccardi is scheduled to open the defense of Phoe.nl.z: to 33 felony charges 1temmlng from the defendant's alleged attacks. an nlne women during ..a 28--d•y period 'lDi ·nminer.; -' · ' Phoenix is charged with rape, assaul~ wjth intent to commit rape. kidnap, i'Qbbety and .ltI. gerver!lon. Jf Phoenlx la . iOund · g\Wty on the major charges ' . deputy diatrlct attorney Michael Capizzi Will ask for the death penalty. Hitchhiker Gets Woman's Purse A 2&-yur~ld Santa Ana woman who picked up i male hitchhiker Saturd.ly l.01t her purse to him in a strong.arm robbery on the ·san Diego Freeway. Carole E. Ebinger told Costa.-Mesa By JQANNE llEYNOLDll ., .. ..., . ...,...., A four-year legal battle between 1 Costa Mesa woman and the State cf California has been given new life in 1 decision from the Federal Appeals Court. Velma Mengelkoch, who ls seeking federal action again.It state labor laws which.regulate working houri for women. said today the 11ppellate court has decid· ed bet cue must be heard in federal court.-·~ •. "It's taken four years. three monUts, Fr om Pqe I ROAD FUNDS .•. clty'3 mutt!r plan silnply "ia no longer adeqy.ate.. ·: He Mic!, "U the city caMot ahow a satisfactory plan by the time the allocation is to be made , it will be at the discretion of the advisory ' board to determine if it is eligible for fund! or not. "The filef(," he said , "will only make recon1m~ndations . '' Sitting on the adv isory board, Koch noted, are three city councilmen -none of them from Newport Beach -and two Cowity -Supervisors;· Ronald W. Casper!!! of Newport Beach and Ralph Clark of Anaheim. Koch mede. it plain that it is the freeway that concerns the county. ''The city had a satisfactory plan until it withdrew the freeway uncondiUonally , and tl1at makes the existing maater plan wholly inadequate." he said. "There Is an element of intent here ," he said. explaining that the basic concept of the AHFP "is that all cities will cooperate in developing an adequate gystem of handling traffic. "~e city has unilaterally withdr21wn from that positi on, stating they have no intent ion for building a structure ~·hich will make their highway system work." He said, "The only thing, in my opi- nion. that would make them eligible would be for them to approve a plan. or start a priority plan, that would orovlde for a freeway In the city's tra~P.Ortation system." . Koch did not say what future city c®ncil-. ,actions might _ aignal ~ ac· ceptable "intent" -actions perhaps like the upcoming vote on whether to write a _baljot \8fgulnent against , the anti· freeway initiatives. He stressed only that "there is no requirement by law that the county cooperate with cities, no requirement it give any funds to cities. "It is wholly a voluntary cooperative program and," he said, "it Is the element of cooperation that is missing when one city acts unilaterally." Police Chief . Gr anted Di vorce He-; disavowed "image-making or televtaion commercia!J, . . . backroom deala. ·. coaHtiona of aelf·interest ... " Instead. he vowed lo "try honestly to confront our problem.! in all their com- plexity. and stimulate the search for solutions." police the dark-skinned man grabbed Ne.wport Beach Police Chief James the handbag as she stopped at 1·20 Giavas· .was granted.A di~lution ol "l make/OM-pled.ge...above all -~ -to seel!::~-~:1he truth with all the ~ .M Jnlnd Md spirit I command.:·· At th'' aMrlt ume, .lt. ,Wa! ll\nO(mced that ~n, Clark,· .. ._,ho wa1 ~ Eua:ene McCarthy's 19118 ta:mpil.gn mana1er, would be a vice-chaltm"i.n of McGcvern 's campaign. Former ~nt U.S. Atty. Gen. Jo~.n Douglu, wfUI backed.Kennedy in 1988, Is chairman, ind.Jean Wettwood, who is a national com.muteew~ 'from Utah and' bltUd Hu.n1phreri· also is a vlce-chai(mab. · : .... ·~ ..; ··-··-· _ ......... DAILY PILOT OllAMOll! COAafl'U•t.llKlNG ~l"AtfY Rokt¥,1 N. w,.ct -,rt1l11tm _,.. ,.,.,.1...., J•ck ll. Ci1'11y Vk9 ,,...lhllt .,.,,.:o...:;.,,I MIMIW Tho'"'' K11~il EllllOr Thofl'll l A. Murphi"' M1ne;1nt l!dllOr l.. ''''' Kri eg Ntwpc)fl ... di Cit\' Editor 2211 We•t le!boe loultv•rtl Mem.j ~•111 P.O. l11x 1175, '266) . ' ' ... .,..., Offl• c:e.t. M•: IJo W•l e1y St,._., ~ a..dl: m '''"' •-HllM_,.. leM1fl: 1n11 INC~ IMlltvl ... .. ,. CllmeMI: .. NOrlll El c_,nl"'O 1t .. 1 a.m. to Jet him out at Brlst~l Street. . .tnf"":.!3·-ye'ar marriage·. Jl"ridaY. ,bi Orioilge. Loss was onl y $7. according t~ pohce.;f.."' eow;l~:'.': Sµpe.rior Court actlon that who _ conatantly warn mot~r1sts -: : ar4frta" e:.qual an4 ap-eed di".islon of especlal\y women -against picking up ::c.o1t1munity .property. hitchbil\.era:. ~ ' 'Gll\ru: was ordered tO pa y Virginia Copter P l.ucks Cows KAUNAKAKAI, Hawaii (U.PI) -Fo~ty CO"''' -were lifted from a barge -1bluck on ·a Teef off tht island of Molohi SU!ldt:Y · and flown lo shore bt ;-a , helicopter, o~ at ·a time. ' G I a v a s $500 a month for the next yea r and $400 a month from that time until further order of Judge James F. Judge. Judge Judge award~ Mrs. Glav21s the retirement and credit union funda and stoc ks and shares, He awarded G\avas a Tustin condominium «nd the police chief's »foot boaL ·u1~per Sunda y's SzQw Motion Laug h-In Bowl' lly Rl<;K DU BROW HOLLYWOOD ·(uPJ) -: '.Contr.ary I• previous !'!ports, the m1dcap en· tertalnment speclal known )S .. The Super Comedy Bowl~'·wu not merely on CBS- TV Jut· ..... ~ It turned up again on • NBC:TY"" Sunday, and this time the chief periormera were the Baltimore Colt! 1nd Dallas Cowboya, previously not known fo~ hQIQOro\ll speclaltjes. , _ 'Alej\ '.1:aJli11! It die ·super BQwl , a~d it 1711ii'<llati1 ' been a:l>Qwl 1!1111t1 but Ii Wllll't .wper. There were ao many ·fum bles. 'lnWcepUonS, deflections and other ,foulu,pt j.hat it looked as if tbe Very early In the game, wha\ looked to be a 1\·st fight-broke out on the playing fi e d. Suddenly there was a cutaway to something else, and detalls or the,. fracas wm tactfull; omitted from being presented to the viewing public of an estimated 64 million persons, who undoubtedly were felt to be un- prepared for such nasty matters. Thlnp: got h.Oinier after that. • c•ma lfd Ileen produced by~ ,!!Jl<>wlb , ~-~llill'lln'' LluSh-1~~ Ai~~ (kJt -•I" and 'lnellier, yoo hitr expected to ·•· Al1e Jobnaon .. corn.· out · of a elleup wlt.b a tumbled bill and atreak for tbe .;,at liqe, willt;.Goldia..Uawn In , 1iOI '.Jl'lfauit. · see ' Will' In Sports ·to.fat; Pace 21. · · •• · -· Actua11J. Sunday's game re1lly helped put pl'o tbotball -and apOrU -back into their proper puspectlv.e •• 'lbe fact is that Baltimore' Hild ·oattas are two genuinely excellent teams, and they just happened to have a very zany day .. Television. however, has often seemed to make football such a aource -Of pnon.y reverence that we ma)' frequen tly forget that it is, after all.,,Jnerely a ,,..,~ of entertainment and;,:Pf!i11ure;·•AQd· ~ entertainment in ~·l'f.~ of errors was truly w~Ul.,~lnf.i.~.1fot, tn addiUon to denat(N#"'9..ttVtNftUll , "" -.inare_hatt been more polished football 1ame1 at picnic&. The two defenae.s gave •,the contllt ill chlef :tou~ .o~ .. respeo. 11obility. Jvr toU could 11nd 1n0~ oa .... In . a wiliiCri.ck by Gn)uchb Man:. Both llama played well eooiiab .. to. toae, but only one of them m•de It. The same al~oat went .b\tq •"sudden death'' status -to "'tftclde. the ·outcome. If it had, the central feeling. irl my nel1hborhood ii that We wtU.ld hava had a de cision by next Wednesda y. side of sports. "" • u ' - lt was sad, of courr. lo .,e Baltimore's incomparable ~Ohnq)Jftltaa forced out or the ' game 11)'~"11~· And It was equally aad to ·see the spltndld Dallll.'i coach, Tom Landry, denied ooce again the champJ~lp after coming so close. Amid a11 the Uftlntended ~ .of the pmc. SUriday, · one could rlol help feeling sympathetic to lbt1e forlorn figu res. one dly and tMie courts to get the dec:Woii that my case has a right to be heard," ahe said. Mrs. Mengelkoch's suit against the state and her employers, North American Rockwell, was filed in the Los Angeles Federal Circuit Court in October, 1967 . In her class action , she charged the application of state labor laws which limit overtime hour s for women is a violation of the federal Civ il Rig.hts Act of 1964 which forbids discrimination 1n employment on the bui.s of ssx. In May 1968, that three-judge court dissolved itself and dismissed the suit on the grounds tbat she bad no cue under Title Seven of the Civil Righta Jaw. The case. then went to the U.S. Supreme Court which gave it to the Ninth District Court of Appeals. On Jan. 11, Mrs. Menglekoch said, the appeals court handed down the decision that she did have a case which will be heard in the circuit court. •·1 just found out about it Sunday night." she said. "Of course, I don 't know yeL when we wlll be going back to court." I she credited bu current victory to her attorneys of record. Sylvia Ellison and Caruthers Berger, who have been assisted by volunteer altomeys from Human Rights for Women. a nationel, nonprofit women 's organization. Mis!! Ellison and Miss Berger are both members or a legal committee formed by NOW (National Organization of Women; to assist on the case. "Thill is a wonderful thing for women -it's a gicanlic step forward," Mrs . Mengelkoch aald of lhe de<"islon . "And now we have to be heard ." UP'I Tt fffMM Catholic Me ets J e w s Chicago Roman Catholic Archbi~ho p John c·ardina! Cody speaks from pulpit of Jev.rish synagogue, Temple Sholom. He became the fi rst cardinal in the U.S. ever to do so Sunday v.·hen he addressed the congregati on of Temple Sholom during observ· ance of a Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Newp ort Co uncil Weighs Lawsuit A special Newport Beach City Council study session. much of it expected to take place behind closed doors. is scheduled tonight at 7:30 o·clock In t·ity hall. Purpose of the session ls to review the city 's lawsuit against a West. Newpor1 oil producer. The city has filed legiil action nga inst Kadane and Sons. Inc .. a Texas -based firm operating on unincorporated county territory. The city alleges lhe firm is "slani dr\Jl1ng" into and under property within the city lirrills of Newport Beach. In its writ, the city has chargrd Kadane is in violation of Sec. 1401 of the Newport Beach City Charter which forbids exploration fo'r C1il Y•ithin the city. City Attorney Tully Seyn1our requested the meeting to fully infrrm council members of the ramifications or the action. He predicted the review "Could last two to three hours tonight. with an additional meeting probably needed in the future ." Chief Warns Residents To Check on Heaters \\'ilh temperatures often dropping to near freezing at night. Newport Beach Fire Chief R. Jan Briscoe is remi.nd!ng residents to inspect their heaters. "Alf heaters shoold be inspectM at least once R year by a qual!lied service agency to in!iure economical and efficient operation," he said. J-le warned that special preca ution.o; 3hnu)d be taken wl th older equipment wh ich lacks a ventilation system. .1sphyxiation ca n result from com· bu stion foml"!l which are not carried outside the home. he said. "Older heatcr11. in which the flame Is not fu!iy shielded also present a fire h::iz11 rd .. , Brisc(}{' noted. ..The safest roursf' 1s In replace aU of these obsolelP he::iters wllh modern, vented heating equipment. .. There is no doubt that certified vented ga s heating equipment, properly maln- lalned, presents no haz~rd. These modem heate rii now provide winter confort to a vast maiori!y of Southern Califomi11 homes. .. II an unvented heater must be used, every precaution should be laken tn make sure a window i11 left Qpen, lh~ heater is kept away from drapes and a screen is used if there are small children around ." he said. 9 An1crican Troops Fell ed hy Own Tank SAIGON (AP) -An American tank accidenttilly (ired e shell into a tJ.S. in fan try unit lt wa.'! supporting in it fight Su nday and wounded nine of the American Infantrymen, the U.S. Com· marut announced today. MUST MAKE ROOM FOR ITEMS COMING UI' FOlt SAll THROUGH OUR LOAN DEPT. LAD IES 11 K GO LD. $3500 BRACELET WATCH ....... ·POLAROID CAMERA $349& MODEL 340 8 TRAGK TAPES $199 ··········· ... l~ANISH STYLE GUil ARS All Wood Reg. 19.95 GOLF CLUBS Waod1 or Irons ....... . .MASON 7 x :JS· • S.i 'th• World ......... . .BINOCULARS. $1296 $1~ $~& Must 1hop to ~le.,.e-Evl'rytPing fully gutrant~d. _People in t~t kn•w·••v•· mon•y every time thty buy -It Is n.of ••v. t.O"buy for c•~h. but if you htvt ca th, let1kArft1.r1~1r 1 or M11t•r: Q..trg• you c•n c•v• tr•· AM~FM·MPX,. Wl tl-i Spetkers and F"ll ' Siz• BSJl Chin,... ..... , ........... . USED WATCHES Gu .. :~: .... CULT.URID PEARL NECKLACES GOLD JEWELRY SOLD IV ·WllGHT OF GOLD WE ALSO BUY and LOAN MONEY ON ANY ITliM YOU MAY HAVE. e 1•1 US POR YOUR SMALL fl'ON~ NI.IDS . I • • ' , , I ' MenJ0Uf '1motln+•. one '"•~hin9 •v•ry day. ·Ratit/s c'osTA .MESA .IEWELRY ,and LOAN ~~ .. 1838 NEWPORT ILVD. "HONI .646°'7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA .__ H-• ....... _, I i I. 'I I I I n n ' ' ' II I ~. r I I, I ·( ' .. PRELIMINARY FlTTl"G .:..'.·Though Mrs: Calvin.P. Schmidt, presi· dent of Damas de Caridad won't wear her elaborate headdress to the 1971 B~l Masque, ·she models it for Randy Molho (left) and "' ~ .> l\1orri Molho, area florists who are designing it for the 10th annual competition to take place Feb. 27 in the Anaheim Convention Center. This year's theme is Dix Ans Magnifiques. Foreign Flavor Favored American Field Servi c e students attending the Newport-Mesa School District high schools wilt be guest speakers for the \Vednesday, Jan. 20, meeting :,~ Newport Harbor Panhellenic. Hosting lhe gathering will be f\.frs. Fred Bice, and assisting wilh luncheon ar· rangements will be Mrs. Pau l Dubois. AFS, one <>f Panhe!Jenic's phi lanthropies. ""'ill be assisted by the annual Dollars for Scholars benefit, this year to lake place March 8 in the Stuft Shirt re s taura111t, Newport Beach. The eight students are part or the two-way exchange or the AFS program, where foreign st udents are brought to America to study and live in lhe American environment, and American students art sent abroad to !tudy and Jive. ~[!t·F;: i~~~~!E All members of national .~ O'" BEA ANDERSON. Editor ,,.,.~••1, Jf~lllrJ ... 1'11 ' ~." 1l Decade Salut ed . . ' . ,. . . Ball Plans Unmasked Plans ror the 10th annual Bal Masque slowly have heen budding during the past year and soon \Vil! be in full flo\ver. The ball, this year lhemed Dix Ans fiiagnifiques, will take place Feb. 27 in the Anaheim Convention Cen- ter, according to 1.1.rs. 1''red M. Kay, ball chairman. Sponsored by Damas de Caridad. a support group for St. Jude Hospi tal, 1''ullerton, the ball features an extra- vaganza of floral headdresses. created for competition by area florists and modeled by specially chosen mem- bers of Damas de Caridad. Among marinequins will be Mrs. Charles Currier of Nel\'port Beach . Florists from· the Orange Coast are Carl Freen1an , Carl's Flowers, Corona det l\1ar. and li1orri and Randy Molho of Flowers by Morri, Costa ~1esa . 'rhe participants all wi ll gather in the convention center Feb. 23 !or the dress rehearsal, the next date circled on the calendar. Dan1as de Caridad, under the direction of its prcsi· dent, !\-!rs. Calvi n P. Schtnidt o( Corona del Mar, will present proceeds from the ball to the hospital for Phase III of its pledge toward the purchase of a linear accelera· tor, an electronic machine lo be" used in the treatment of can cer patients. FASHION SHOW -Modeling her native costume tJ Mi$<. Pbanit Na Lampang (right). AFS .student from Thailand wh o will speak for ·the Wednesday, Jan. 20, Panbellenic meeting. Offering approval are Chris.Dahl (left), who studied la.st &ijlllmer in finland, and Mrs. Willi am Stauffer. ~:0;\ti:~:1'W:~u~1~c~· Lido Isle Husbands Wined and Dined ference and their guest.I are invited to attend the meeting . Mrs. C. Ray Lenahan Jr .. president may be contacted for info rmatJon at 548-&471. St. \'alentine will be toasted by members of the Lido Isle \.Vornen 's Club and their husbands during a gourmet luncheon Tuesday, Feb. 9. Robert Sis- sonnette, a member of the gourmet food society, Les Amies D'Escoffier, is planning the menu and wines to match. Sampling one of the rare vintages are (left to right) Phillip Wills, Mrs.· Atoold Dovey, Mrs. Wills and Dr. M. F. Lorenz. Ann Turns Thumbs Down on Th .is Solution to Pollution ·DEAR ANN LANDERS ' We of ',the , Univenity of Michigan Environment.i Action group anl greatly UJ>3eJ at yo11r antlhlt.chhlk1ng ph.Jl090phy. Pr 1v 11 t·e automobJles are perhapa one of the most., ecologiC'l.l]y damaging factors in oor sqdd:y. When a person rides alone in his i:ar bf:' "contrlbtites a great· deal more to e:nrironmeetal dNtrudk>n than a IT""!' of people llho. r14e In one c'r. ' "Your column b doil}&1. a serious disservice to those of Us whO feel strongly 8'ainst cars and have declited ,not to own one. Public transportation 11 an alternative but It ta often inadeiijuate. lt l!ffm.S unfair thAt the pt!Oplt wbe own can will benefit ITO:m our deci.!ion not. to own can (they, too, ,.,.Ill hnve •• ---·· I\ ANN LANDERS ~ .cle:ane.r •ir) but thank11 to you, lhe:y will rtfuse to asaiit w iq our traosporta· lion needs. We Sugge1t that you en- courqe the '9Cial llcc<plabnlty of hitch- hiking · -of knocking it. -J. w .L. ANN Al\BOJl;,.lllCH. DEAR. J .W.L: t. &oo, 1m, d.J1trened about air poDudoei. The exhult from ca'1 doet tnffed pre Hot I ,. tll.rel1 f.o tbe eootoJ1~1 1tat4! tf oar toa11try, but· Uttre are otber threats to 1oelety - 111teh as drug abu11t which h1u; acce•erAted vio&ffclr and crime and produced a trlgti\talar cli1regard lor, u you wnl pardoa tbe expre111ot1, law 1nd order. Ong adcticta will do aaylhill1 lo 1et -·. . J am eot about to Nt011ra1e my rtlders &t .pick up 1tran1er1 wht• r know that mugging• and bur1!1rie1 are 1l an all41me bl&b. Ia lact, bttcblilklng 11 11ain11t tbe law in lllhtoi1 and mhy othtr •lain. A better •olution to the problen Is , comm•lllty • orgllllized car p .• o I 1 - workm drlvblg frte:ed1, bOlbtmaktts drlvhq oelghbqrs to do Uttlr markdin1. motlten t.aktll( tt.be:r petplC'1 ebJ.klren to _ldiOo~ aloq wllb t!lelr o~. ADCI better . yet 11 1be bicycle. If more America•• iot off &belt d1ff1 ucl did tome e1ercl1lng, l.bey'd llve loapr. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My neighbor le In her earlf 30s. a nice woman ind, the mother of three well betiaved children. She did something tbe other day that I thought was ab.soluttly rklleulous. I told her so aod ah~ said I was out of my mind . Please b!l the referee. Martha's 7-year-old son 'gOt inlG her ccmmelic drt1wer and Kcraped out the eye makeup with her tweezers. He snid he wanted the case. When Martha saw the mess she told him he had ruined something that belonged to her ~nd he had to pay for Jt. Sbe did not !el him keep the case and she made him wipe up the floor . I told Martha il was loolish lo charge 1 child $1.25 (or rulnlng aomething. She said, "He has a piggy bank and a savings account. I will buy him 811 extra gift for his birthday with the money. But I want him to know when he destroys property that he h11 to pa~ for It." , IJin't thi! weird! 1· believe another kind of punlihment, 1uch a! no deeUrt or soing to bed early, or even • 911ank.ing woold have made more 1tnee. To chl!lrg.e A 7.-year-old kid $1.25 iB nutty. What rlo you say, Ann ? -MINNEAPOLIS QU!:STION •. .. DEAi\~: l tNY lilooraf fot ~ lier app ... ~lr mUet 1 lot of. -.. lo me. V• cu IN: 1111t lllef liOy Je.,.... ' ' • le:llOD from ~t uperielC!i .... k will remember It welt. Kkk ot&i.1 -" llOl llDderttud tat a.brip ctll 1IMDti: unUI TH.!Y lt1vt le ply ftt ~ themtth'es. :-: When rom111Uc glantes tum kl w•mt embraces b Jt love or clfemlstry? Send· ror the booklet "Love oc Su a)ld H~ \() Tell the Dtfferente," bf ·Anni LIDdertr Enclost ·a king, stamped, sell-address4 envelol>e 11'1d 35 ctnl! tn coin with 1fMI. reQl.ICSl In care o:r the DAILY PlLOT. -: ·J-~ , ---:: ~ I • l ' I I ' I l -·· .... • MoodaJ. Ftb""'1 1, 1971 Your Horoscope Tomorrow Cancer: Understand Emotions Westminster Club Draws Plans for Las Vegas Party Giant playing cards will provide the decor when the Carousel Section or Westminster Woman's Club opens its season with a social at 8 p.m. Saturday, ·Jan. 23, in the home of 1.1r. and Mrs. John P. Mc· Shane. Carrying out a Las Vegas theme are (left to Oakland Home Chosen ;By Newlywed Reeces St. John lhe Baptist Catholic _ Church, Costa Mesa was the selling for the double ring Dtijllia~ linking Di an e Newland and Stephen Reece. · •Parents of the newlywed.! x.e Mr. and Mrs. George 1iNewland of Costa 1.1esa and l!Mr. and Mrs. Wiiiard Reece ;~f Newporl Beach. :i Given in marriage by her ~:lather, the bride was attended ::by her sister, Misa Barbara ' . ; ew\and as maid of honor. !:Bridesmaids were the P.tlsses :!Nancy Llv ingston, Rosemary " ·;Kelly, Anita Newland, another ::ai.ster of the bride and Jan :~etce, the bridegroo m"s 1l...1er. MRS. STEPHEN REECE 11"": h Recites Pied"•• · DaJe Reece served is -------~·---it;~ ~ bell man, while r dut~ were assumed by BUI Redding, Paul Le· molne, George Newland, the bride's brother and J e f f Reece, the bridegroom's brother. Flower girl was Colleen Gibbons and ring btarer waa Michael Kimes. ·The bride Is a graduate or Westmin1ter High School and attended Orange Co a 1 t f,o!Jege . Her huaband , a Newport Harbor Hlgh School greduate, al!o attended OCC and now is a atudent at the University of Ca 11 lo rni a, Berkeley. The newlyweds will reside In Oakland. Anecdotes Presented right) the Mmes. T. M. Brewer, Donald Andreasen, section chairman, and Mrs. McShane, club pre1ident. Men1bers will provide entertainment and a buffet \Yill be served. To avoid d.isappolDtm.e!lt, prospec~ve brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy P.hoto- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it is lmperatlve that the story, alJo accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met. only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories. forms are available in all of the DAJLY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Calendars Crammed TUESDAY, JANUARY 19 By SYDNEY OMARR A1trolo1Y 11 1 1cluUfJc art which treatJ of tbe l)'D- chronlcHy betweea pll•etary po1ltSou ud mudane eventl. Tbroqhoul llJ1&ory the 111bject bat OolU'ltlted dar1q mu'• hlgheat perlodt of leant.n1. Astrol•IY b11 been 111oclaltd wl.tb mtdlcloe and mathematlc1: It attracts Us share of cbarlat.ns -but I \ • \ •. \. alto bu draw• &e It 1ucll areal.I 11 Aldous Hualey, Henry M 111 e r , Pythlroraa, Newt.oa and Copenalcu1. ControVUIY 1etm1 always to 1wlrl about 11trolop, • 1ubjeet wblcb can be 1erlou1 aDd alJo can be lua aDd 11me1. YOll mut tlke yolU' <"boke -or combine botll, the aame aspect and the teriou 1htdy. ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Check tar records, pollcle11. If married, finances of mate I I • -1 ''"'-"'" \---~____, '/ . .\, 72990 ~ , \I Tl Irene Gilbert cut and shaped this divine dress with the front curving around and meeting in the center back creating a flared skirt. A most becoming design ideal in soft fabrics such as wool or silk crepe, silk jersey, synthetics. fine linen or lightweight wool. 72990 is cut in Misses Sizes 8·18. Siz e 12 requires approximately 2 7/s yards of 54" fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better fit. Order 72990: give size, name, address and zip. $2 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford, N. J. 08848. Pattern Books by Classification: Coats and Suits -$1 . command att.enUon. If alngle, you may b6 contemplaUJli money req~menta f o r sptclal uaoc~Uon, including marriage. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20)' Lie low; let otbera call shot.I. I m p r o v e comrnunlcaUons, public relationa. Check details. Legal loophole could create havoc. Know um and be on guard. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Heallb requirementa should· take precede.nee. If y o u neglect essentials, be ready to pay price. Keep rtcent resolutionii:. You can make solid gain. Associate will 'aid cause. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Good lunar upect coincides with lime when you can understand your own emo· tlons. Nothing halfway here. Enthusiasm builds ; you make construcUve decisions which lead to needed changes. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22), Prepare to overcome obstacles. Older person may go back on promise. This is a test. Be ready for it. Accept on security, basic domestic situation. Take off rose-col· ored iglasaes. v moo (Aug. 23-Sept 22 ), Stress on short journey&, Ideas, special vi.sits. A relative who makes numerous claims may be covering up financial embarrasament. Know this Fashions On Parade The nimble fingers of 7th and 8th grade student! at J . H. McGauah School have pro- duced a parade of fashions to be modeled at Ht a.m. h1 the Marina Conununity Center Wednesday, Jan. 20. T'ne~ fashion show will be presented to the Seal Beach Woman's Club as the cllmax of" a contest sponsored by the group. More than 40 girls have participated in the contest under the dlrettlon of Mrs. Nell Sharp. Gift certificates will be awarded the outst.aading dressmakers. Mrs. Henry Schadee will preside and a luncheon will follow. Mrs. Allan Denton Is h os tess chalnnan for the day. and act accordingly. UBRA (Sept 23-0cl. %21' Money or what to do about it -that may be quesllon of the bour. Key is to complete rather than begin projecl. Rour.d out theme. Look ahtad. Don 't be goaded Into premature decision. SCORPIO (Oct, 23-Nov. 21 ): Cycle high ; circumstances tum in favor of your desires, eHort.s. Take initiative; lead the way. New contacts will be beneficial. Highlight in· dependence of thought, action. SAG!TrAIUUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): A secret agreement seems to be on agenda, No need for fears, doubt.. Self· esteem is essential. Your in· tuition serves now as reliable guide. A former teacher makes appearance. This is goo<!. CAPRICQRN (Dec. 22-Jart 19): Now is the time to make friends, inHuence people. M015l persorus are receptive to your ideas. A Scorpio individual could play significant role. Share knowledge ; excbsnge ideas. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Accent on standing in c o m m u n i t y , professional endeavors. Key is to give full play to intellectual curiosity. ~ad and write; don't be s11ti!fied w i t b superficlal knowledge. Accept invitation. PISCES (Feb. 111-Marcb 20)' Personal awareness earns You rtspect of associates, relative. Avoid making utravq:ant clalms. Heed words o f spirib.lal adviser. Be true to yourself. A journey may be on tap. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic. aggressive, b r I g h t and creative. You need an ouUet. Without it, you b e c o m e re1tless and pugnacious. You Jove deeply; your emotions often rule. You recently· met indiv.idual who made you aware of assets as well as s h o rte o m in g s. You can develop now. Currently, you are confused. In upcoming month. however, you will know where you are going and why -this is all l• the good. To lir.d aut "'"o'• 11.oc~v tor YOl,I In m-v •...:I l<>Y<. order S•C!f't• Om•rt'• -.1et, ""Stcrer Hin!• lo• M..., •nG wonwn:• S..-.d blnl•1u1• •nO ~ ctnfl lo Dm•rr Al!roi..., !K .. 11, tl'lt DAILY PILOT. BOA JUO, G111nd C1ntr1I Slltllln, N.-. York, N.Y. 10011. WE LOVE TO NEEDLE OUR CUSTOMERS W• •rw ••,.m I• pipplylllt •II •f Y••f k11ltttitt ..... ~ tH, If Y•• -4 help, C•-11 •114 tit •1111el1'94 I AN EARLY LOOK TOWARD SPRING BE FREE ... <>' FACIAL HAIJI ,-ol'tCV£11 , LIT UI SHOW YOU HOW 1."IY IT IS TO JlllMOV& IXCC5• HAlll WITH MODf:l'tN llLl:eTJIOLVSl I, MEDICALLY AJfttllOVIO , •• IUI, l'"AIT, OIHTLI'., COHIUL T WITH OUll LIClHIPJ Tl:CHHICIAN IN OUlt •llAUTV IALON, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT Grendmother1 At noon every aecond 'lllursday the Newport Harbor Grandmothers' Club meeta in the Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club. • ILOUSE5'-SWEA TER5'- SKIRT5'-0RESSES-PANTS PANT SUITS REDUCED 25°/o to 509/o ALL TENNIS DRWIS 50°/o OFF JEWELRY-SCARVE5'- HANOBAG5'-BELT5'- ACCESSORIE5'-IELTS REDUCID BARGAIN TABLE PRIZE5'-LEFT OVER5,-0NE OR FEW OF A KINO 5:1--$5-510-$15 :::JJ..... BIDTIQUE 3467 RICH GIRL HAIR FOR JUST PENNIES! Shampoo-Set s2" Stylecut 5150 ITYL.151' l'll!Cal ll10M1'Ll' HICIHll. s20°0 Holiday Perm '12H HoDday FrostinCJ 51595 Complete with H1lrcut 2 COSTA MESA SALONS Crowning Glo1·y ltormtf"!'t' (lpr1ct (llff~•l!1 SOUTH COAST PLAU 167 I . 17ttl ST., COSTA ,.llA l owt r Lt••l-N••I to s.,., ,,,... 146· 7116 ,,.... 141·'''' \ BONDED KNIT JERSEY •crylic incl wool In 1 wide rong• of solid colors, bonded to 100 "/. acetat• tricot. 58" I 60'" width• ALL WOOL FLANNEL for • new spring dr••S, p•nt suit or for 9•ucho'1 edcl 1 bit of braid or trim. 12 solld colors 54"/SS" widths BONDED COORDINATES o PLAIDS e SOLIDS beautifully t•xtured in matc h·mef• colors for suits, i1cket1, skirts, pants. •cetete and nylon $4" wld• @ill Yd. Ii HOUSE OF ·FllBRICS k•ttl c .. t '1-lri1lol •I S111 Ditt• Fw.,. c .... M...-141•1116 0,....,..,.lr M .. l-011111•thotp• •ntl Herbft hlltm-tl&-UJ4 HNM ,.__17th 1t l1illol ......~J·llll 11 I ( ·(;osia-Mesa N.Y._St.oeks I vor. 64, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1971 TEN CENTS Mesa Callahans Poi·sed ·for Andes Adventure 'Ihelr first names are Charles, James, Brian, Duane and Carlito. The last name ls Callahan. The middle name is Adventure. If you want to get In touch wilh the Callahan clan, write G e n e r e l Delivery, Ushuaia. Tierra del Fu ego. but don't hold your breath for a reply. Mail takes a week in either direction. And they leave Ushuaia Thursday for • !&.-month horseback trip from the Mesan Gets 'New Life' In Court By JO ANNE REYNOLDS Of llM DellY' l'li.t SIM A four-year lega l battle between a Costa Mesa woman and the State cf California has been given new life In a decision from the Federal Appeals: Court. Velma Mengelkoch, who is seeking federal action against st.ate labor laws which regulate working hours for women, said today the appellate court has decid· ed her case must be heard in federal court. "It's taken four years. three months, one day and three courts to get the decision that my case has a right to be heard," she said. Mrs. Mengelkocb's suit against the st.ate and her employers, North American Rockwell, was filed in the Los Angeles Federal Circuit Court in October, 1967. In her class actioo, she charged the applicaUOn of stale labor la'14'.5 which limit ovlrtime hOIU'I (or WOJnlfl la a v~tlon of the federal Civil Rights Act of l~ which forbids discrimination in ampldyment on the basts of asx. In May 1968, that lhree-judgt court di ssolved ilself and dismis!Jed the autt on the grounds that she had no case under Tltle Seven of the Civil Rights Jaw·. 'i.'he case then went to the U.S. Supreme Court which gave it to the Ninth District Court of Appeals. On Jan. II, Mrs. Menglekoch gaid , Ute appeals court handed down the decision that she did have a case which will be heard in the cireuit court. "I just found out about it Sunday night," she gaid. "Of course, I don't know _yet when we will be going back '° court." She credited her current victory to her attorneys of record, Sylvia Ellison and Caruthers Berger, who have been assisted by volunteer attorneys from Human Rights for Women, a national. nonprofit women 's organization. Miss 1:1\ison and Miss Bergey are both members of a legal committee formed by NOW (National Organization of Women) to assist on the case. "This is a W1lnderful thing for women -it's a gigantic step forward.'' Mrs. ¥enge!koch said of the decision. "And now we have to be heard," Dancer Knew What to Do · Cheri M. Fleming knew what ._,was doing Saturday night. The blue-eyed blonde climbed down from the stage at Costa Mesa '11 Firehouse nudie bar and dressed when Officer Dick De Franci!CO dropped in. Miss Fleming. 22. wou placed under arrest on suspicion of indecent exposure for what the was showing off to about 60 male patrorui, police said. Her trip from the popular bar at 177 E. 17th St., to Orange County Jail wa:i the third one since she was hired by the management as a bottomless dancer. Office r De Francisco also ciled night manager Norm Drey. whose wife ls an occasional performer, for operaUng an unlk:en11ed pool table. Yoga Classes Split ' Due to Large Size A te1dlng eq>onent of the ancient meditative method -of JOii bis IOCllid ao m.ny Harbor Area ltudents thlt he II tplilllJll Ills ' ellh•-k ....... lnto two lf.UlonL Vogt LIJpatrat Shonna, ol Lon!l Btocb. ~·W now teach Wedmlsday night cour1es 1at.S:4 and 7-p.m. In the UPltarJln. Unlvonau.t Churcl1 ol C.. ·-· He intended to te1ch cnJy OM class ; at 1 p.m. ln the sanctuary at 1259 Vlctorll St., but respome far e.sceeded hi• .ortpnal especloUon. ' southernmost point of South America baei up the continent to North America. Steaming, snake-infested j u n g l e s , storms, and the razor-like ridges of the Andes -with high , thin , heart-straining air -await them oa the 12,500 mile journey. But Shirley Callahan, waiting for her five men at 1577 Wintergreen Place, Costa Mesa, isn't worried. Not too wor- ried; anyway. They know the torturoua route like OFF AND RUNNING Candidate McGovern PLANE CRASHES NEAR AIRPORT Officials at the. Orange County Airport control tower reparted a light Cesgna 310 airplane crashed around I p.m. today. Tower officials say the plane crashed approximately two miles north of the landing strip. No other details were avail- able at press time. Mesa Sign F ete Heads Agenda For Councilmen A relatively light agenda i:; on lap for Costa Mesa City Council con- sideration tonight, v.•ith presentation of a $500 prize for the city's entry sign contest heading it. Mike Cole, 21. of 281 Del Mar Ave ., submitted the winning desig n whi ch will be built al seven major thoroughfare entry points to the city . The structures will be.ar il logo-type emblem depicting key features of C.Osta Mesa, suspended beneath a Spanish-Hied half-arch . M1yor Robert M. Wilson will pr~cnt Cole's award, a check representing dona- tions from a variety of clubs, busines:ies and other civic organizations. Only 18 among some 50 items schedul- ed for consideration are not contained in the consent calendar section of the agenda. Unless specific points are r1ised by councilmen or citizens, these are acted upon in blanket fuhion. A publfc hearing is scheduled 1t the start of the 7:30 p.m. legislative session on whether to declare two lots on East 17th Street public nuisances. The properties at 450 and 462 E. 17th Sl., are owned by Forman Developmen t Company. School · Presents Drug Program ' the backs of their hands lrom hours or studying maps and each -almost like the U.S. Army Special Forces team3 -has a survival specialty. Years of dreaming went into the itinerary , plus two ytars of living in Barilocbe, Argentina. Arthritis prevents Mrs. Callahan from accompanying them on the $16,000 trip which led to sale of their home. at 716 Cameo Highlands Drive In Corona del Mar. Callshan. 1 retired USAF colonel who quit his job a1 a systems analyst, ex- plains the trip in the understatement of the year . "I want to give my sons one grand adventure," he told a reporter in Washington, D.C .• on the first leg of the journey that has them in Buel106 Aires today . Jim Callahan. 19. who hopes to become a veterinarian and artist, will re-shoe the horses eve ry two months, while his brothers Brian, 17, Duane, 14, and Carlito, I , have special duties. ··Brian's specialty ls falconry. He. got started when we lived In Argentina in 1963," says the Callahan-in-ch arge. "Duane ts a herpetologist and a fungus expert," he adds. "He's a real pro at identifying edible fungi. He's also a good entomologist. Supplies for the trip include tents to protect the gear, staple food,,, fishing equipment and various guns for bunting food along the way. "We'll trade wtth people. •long the road for fresh vegdables," saya Col. Callahan. Toughest section of the route wfil pro- bably be crossing from Bolivia into Peru, where the Andes reacli 16,000 reet. •·People and autoa will be our bl&gut problem," says Cot. Callahan. '"People IS.. ADVENTURE, P•&• I) McGovern Throws in Hat Democ1·at Senator. First in White House Race WAS HINGTON CAPl -Democratic Sen. George S. McGovern, SC'n of a prairie preacher, made his early-bird presidential bid official today, promising to appeal to America's "better angels." "The kind of campaign I intend to run will rest on candor and reason," said the South Dakota senator, a strong liberal and early critic of the Vietnam war, "That kind of campaign takes Ume. And that is why I am making this announcement far ahead of the tradi- Uoaal date." McGovern, the first official entrant in the 197! presidential race, made his announce ment in letters to hundreds of newspaper edltora and 275,000 potential campaign contriliutors. He also M:heduled a televis ion address to his home state of South Dakota for later today. He sought the Democratic nomination In 1968 as a stand-in for assassinated Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, but drew only a handful Qf votes on the ballot that overwhelmingly nominated HL;lbert H. Humphrey. Since then McGover n bas made no · secret of his campaign and has spoken on hundreds of college campuJeB, and now claims 12.5 student groups and 30 faculty groups working for his nomina- tion. He also kept In the national eye last year as a sponsor of the unsucceuful Harfield-McGovern amendment to force Norwalk Woman U.S. withdrawal from Southeaat Asia. Earlier this month he stepped down as chairman of a party refonn oommis· sion to avoid any conflict of lnterest with his pruidential campaign. Hi:i announcement timing is seen ln part as an attempt to bolster showings in early presidential polls that put him far behind such unannounced candidate:i as Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Malne. Mesa Lawman Named Cop Of the Month ~u ;...~~ ,. Costa Mesa's January Policeman fer the Mon&h ii omc. Geae Nordin,,..#, a member of the department's felony unit for the past sil: months. He was chosen for the honor by the Costa Mesa Crime Prevention Committee. Sheriff Investigators ,ld£ntifyModjeskaBody Besides police work, physical con- ditioning and college courses keep the :J'h-year veteran or the local department busy. He is about to !iftish req uirement! for a BA degree in criminology &l Cal State Long Beach. Officer Norden took his AA degree In police science at El Camino College, where he met his wife PhyHis, 21. The couple married in 1965 1.od have a son Glenn and a daughter Diane, aged 3 and 2 years old. Office:-Norden. who runs a mile " day to keep in shape, was born in San Francisco and educated at St. Anthony Elementary School and Serra High School in Gardena. He intends to continue his studies in criminology and public ad· min istration. He has been in the U.S. Army Reserve rou r yea rs and was trained al the Army Security Agency at Fort Devens, Mass, dur ing his tour of duty. Beginning his police career as a pa trolman in Monrovia, Officer Norden joined the Costa Mesa Police Department in 1967. He is also a member of Costa Mesa 's polic~ tactical squad. Heavy Layer of Smog Hangs Over Newport A sickening layer of smog hung O\lel' the Harbor Area todlly, reducing visibility in some portions of Newport Beach to less than three block!. An official of the county's Air PolluUon Control District &:aid the district haa re- ceived many complaints from people who Rre having difficulty breathing, but aaJd the smog index ill not at the point that can be conaidered hazardoua •. Illness Delays Phoenix Trial A defense attorney's continued illness today ied to a further delay in the Orange County Superior Court rape-kid· nap trial of Gary Harold Phoenix of Cost.a Mesa. Judge Willi am 1tlurray ordered Phoen1x. 29, to return to court Tuesday after learning that deputy pub 1 i c defender Roderick Riccardi had failed to shake off the virus that led last week to a one day delay of the trial. Riccardi Is scheduled to open the defense of Phoenix to 33 felony charges stemming from the defendant's alleged attacks on nine women during a 28-day period last summer. Phoenix la charged with rape, assault with intent to commit rape, kidnap, robbery and ee1 perversion. If Phoenix ls found guilty on the major charges deputy dilltrlct attorney Michael Capiui wW ask for the de.at.h penalty. O!'Mat Counly shettft· ........_ bav& identified the nude , bidly ~ body of a woman fwnd durtng the weekend in Modjeska Canyon as that of Zelma Rachel Wltgensteln, 48, of Norwalk. Los Ange les County lawmen are today working with local offices in a bid to establish the reason for the woman's presence In Oran ge County and to reconstruct, if possible, the events that led to her slaying. Investigators are working on the theory that the dead woman may have been the victim of a sexual attack but they are awaiting the out.come of I coroner's examination for confirmation or deniAI cf that supposition. ~1rs. Witgenstein's bcdy, stripped of the red stretch pants, white crocheted sweater and pink coat which were scat- tered nearby . was found by three hikers Saturday in 1 brush-choked ravi ne, It was partially concealed by deme ~hrub bery . An autopsy carried out later that day disclosed the cause of death to be a broken neck, possibly suffered as a result Director Calls Police in Fire A Costa Me11a city official playing basketball Intervened Sunday after some- one tried to OOm down 1 portable classroom on the Adams School campus. Public Workl Director George Madsen checked the buUding 1fter two small boy11 reported they had extinguished a blaze that cauaed onl y $20 damage. Madsen called police to report the anon attempt involving 1 1beet of cardboard that had been ignited and then ahoved beneath a locked ·door. The boys who first extinguished the blaze left the area without Jiving their namea, investigators said. Powder Puffers Clash Estancia Coeds Whip Mesa High in Charity Games Penolty flap llew ~pealeilly -moot cften for W1MCeRl ry ro&flhneu.-11 the 11ri.. of Coota It.a aof !latux:ia hlJh scnooi. c1aahed -.., lllPl la ....,. Pull football. Evtn M,,.. PGltlGo and hla Loo An- Jtlel Rams teamma" would Hl¥e~bet.D m trouble - • Ono panxtpant complalnod ol rOat. pi'ln11 all over her 1-mf. • ''It wasn't the ~ Jt •11 lhe lan- guage •. ,"one petltf_~ llD(lllliomatt uld, teon strealcln1 ~ dlrfy -ks. The Eslanela Eag1'9 had proctic<d daily, evert durlna Christmas vacaUon for tl!e two-weekend aeries of 11me1. The weU-olled Estancia. machlat bcl11- doud ., vlctorl" In bolll S.:turdlf liflbl , veled 'ODl!!i battered' but unbenl JOier. .Delpjt9 Iba rougli qualJl)i ol tht1 iool!T- IUts, Moodl)o morn1n1 ~ mua CU. Into -•U<11 Iba filet Ibo pril petfonnod for charity. • Yoo a\llM 1!<111 maUOrs Oatl 7<io1 wlll ........ ..,.,,.,.. ..... jai~· an4 -.... -1111 ""' '1".M, " ', 'llaa.P.rloot, -~. Vickie .... Doaild. Llndil W-. Mindy Mutpllt J-VlrntJ, 'Joyce Dliwlon, ·~~ Wylltl; Lu<y Bcbott, Niner Prill_:;~ Frlll<d, PatU Jlo8trt,' Debbie McAllola!', Karen Hart, Curly A-r. M&i!Y Toner. Cberyl Zagrocbliy, Sendl VU! m k•nburs .. cau;, Dolan, .lfartJia Acldeman, IS.. POll'D£R P.llfF( Pqa I )' of Ml.y bk>WI to Ille held and face. hlmtlgators Aid Mrs. Wltgen1teln was a widow whoo lived alone In a Norwalk trailer park. Relatives and frli!nds are being questioned in a bid for a lead to the killing. Bandit Spooked, Loses Hat, Bag In Mesa Store A cleancu( would be bandit who Just didn 't sound 111 that convincing was chased out of a Costa Mesa market Saturday night, losing hls hat and boodle-- bag in the process. He wen t right up to manager Mno Mackin in lhe 7-11 Market at 21911 Placen· tia Ave., according to Offictr Tom Boylan. Mackin said the well-dressed man ordered him to fill the bag with money and be quick about it. "Move it, or else you and the couple coming in will get it," he declared. turning toward a man and v.oman en- tering the sto re. He never said he had a gu n and kept his hand in hls jacket, app.nrently alniulaling one. "Robbery!" acre1med Mackin. diving for cover behiud the counter. The horrified would-be bandit sprinted out the front door -his blue and gold plaid hat left at the scene - lnd fled in a c~ he_ h&F _earked nearby. We•Cier ' . Leave your ov~ al_ home Tuelcla;-. The lemperalurt will be beading for the ·mldrBe aevenu,a •IQllll the -1 al)d; up over. the ao mark inllDd .• JuM In January? msmB:~oAY N<JiD t114i • Ille :llcull., laav< 1tp0ra.&td who wtU be ihc ne::it 111j>ltatar or "liij)ctgroiljfloi ·the IDOrld of P'IJl ....i.:1 A1 th< II<-~ occovnt o1a Ent,ereoinment Pao~.:ie ,.ggesU; ll'• onibodi'• i1UfD:· --.. $u. oJ -" Q4aal IJ -·-. -.. ;:;:;.::r...: -.... =....::.,. ri ' ~--· -.... __ .. ~,..,.,., ,. _,,_ n =---:::!: -.. :.= ., __ .... ... / ....... • • . ' ! OAD.V mot t N ~~p~rt ~Get~s _~W arning City If.aces Road l;qnstr~tion Fund Loss ...--... ~ . . . ... . .=-. Ill' t. P!T!:lt'klm:G ---In 1111 ~~ ur.ild ~ Jilb' o. ....: o.ilt-,1 ... t1tH • ·cftY e · rilDlqu.e-lU A county offic\11 todsy wamed Newport ltate -.Ute•,... a ......... prtplMd Beach it feces the loss or road con-by Assemblyman Robert B1dham ( R- atruCUOn tOodt because. of iLs opposiUon Newport ,,J,tach), wl:licb IOUlht to dtlete t the frttway front Beach· Soulevard In to~ P..octlte, Co.it r .. way. Hunun,loft :·BNell th r •·•I h UH! Coun\11 Rood Comn>i&lonu Al Kocb, sOull>WltriY bouJ>dery or Newport in a letter to the city C()Unci~ st1d Beach. . the 1as tax revenues could be withheld . "lnumucb 11 iX!etion ol the.. freeway unleu the clt7 adopta ··a mut11&Uy..,,c-would ciJaftM •II cOa1tal it1tflc nows ctptable" tratflc lnbtlr plan. : ~ tp tbt, •~& P1ciflc 'Coait HJghway, Koch li1d tM:. &o..Alcll'I 1upp0rl. if it i& obvlOla.., that the city'• arterial the Badham bill last summer is evidence bighw1y plan as if now exists will be that it opposes lbejre~way and tbertfoce gro~ly inadequate," Koch said. ••is not cocoer1tUta wlth ,U't<! couo.tY. ~ . "Tbe ruult ii a plan which Is not progr1nr." t ~ · • · · • • mutullly utllfactory and therefore in Newport Beach bas applled for tDQ,000 violaUbo of a major principle or the in county aid for two proJtcU 11'1 ll?l-72. arterial bJlhw•Y flnancina program. accordihl · to BubUc .work.I Dtreot& "The tlcb!\icll ataff or the AHFP hia Joseph f . "Devlin. -' • • · directed the under1\1ned to notify ~e K~ said the fundift& 1uthoritf,. tbe dty that its ellfibllity to parU clpate Arterial -H1t:hw1y P'1nanctn1 Profram tn the proar1m 1• now Jn jeopardy : ('AHFP) could rtJect tbtM appUcatkm and unltll a mutually 1ccept1b fl muter U an acceptable mutar pl1n ii not plan ls adopted further prlortUeA for .odoplad b~ Ill lllocaUGO meellnC !11>1 propOotd cily projkt.., incl•<llnf tho,. month. aubd1ltted for the 1971·72 flsca year, Three Occupants Escape $50,000 Laguna Blaze .Three occupUUI of • Uauna Buch house scrambled down a Mlghbor'1 lad~ der to safety early Swtd.ay U they fled a fire that lnju:rtd. three firtmen and -.!lied 1n .-a114 llO,DDD damq1. Ofnclali llld lri>en. !ht bl11• bt&ID at 1~t 2 i .m. $uad1y, the three oc- cupant& Of tilt hoult It 419 llolana Drive were slutnc tn 1n upataln room talking. . They wttt ld1nunid 11 Judy Ot.rth. Dave BAidwin and Owae Hancock. They told firemtn they heard a nolae dowmtalr1 that tounded like breakln1 glass and thought it was a burglar. Then opened a hall door and were forced back by billowing clouds or smoke. The three then went out a door to a sun deck and climbed over tbt rbof to a neighbor(• fence. ·The nellbbor wu walti.llg for them With a IJ.dder and lh•y c\ln)!!e') to 'l'l~ty .• Two fire unltl and 2:t firtmtn, includlne 1ll flt!l*t''''--vol-. ~ to tM tire.,,.,,. r.,utll' -oulrm.l WavY slftolt l:Mallltioo and a volunteer cut Mt'iliftd wllJlt filllaq tho blue. rir-.oald tlJ& lll,DDD bouH, oWMd by LOiuU , !ltich -t £I r I F.irb1lrn, Wll· portlally dulroyed. Th• fOW" bedrooms and othtr ll•ini qU&ttir1 were gutted and all of I.he occupants' futniture and clolhinl were destroyed. From Pqe l POWDER PUFF and PatU Brady. Alao Nancy lttich. Cindy Ale1Mdtr, Mellua Hartlotr. Carol Patterson, Diana Attridge. Karen White, Alison Hall, Jtan HI,., Mart 8nyd•r. Klltl Bowrln1: Allllt' Ferryman .. Pew·.TSU, D11na Valent!, Jack i!! Hoaaley. Sandy Mcbont:ld, Becky Kendall. O.Ina 'WaatOl'ltt. Merri McDtn· it l, S1ndl W•ld. S.. Mwltrup, 111d In· irld Bouton. Also Paula Reichle, Mira Durham. Klm Tumtr, Carol Dl\1!1, Su& Moter. Robin HUI. Unda Purdy, AUIOn .Hall, Jackle Hoadley, NanCJ Murphy, Jaan Hit.. and AMB l"lrf')'lllln. Alto Jone Cesey, '1Jt·Fnlter ond Ptm Waid. Firemen Slid the furniture was ne" and ~t tbt dtma&e to the contents of the home at $25,000. StrucWral damage to the home wu also initially estimated al '21,000. Tl'le garage and laundry room or the homa rectlvld only 11Jght water damage , ftr"""' oald. Fire Marahtl Jim Pruaon laid CIUH ol the blaae w11 Mt immediately known, altbau&h he did Uy It bt1an In the family roam of the howe . Preuon 1pecul1t.ed that the gla11s brea.i.11'11 aound the three occupants heard btfor1 dltcovery of thl fire w11 1 window popping out from the heat of the flames. Police Arrest 3 Fron:i Carnival In !"f ~ Caper , . A trio of carnJvat worktr1 keeping ' . . c6ntaet v11 walkie talkie and ' citizens band radio was arrested in CO&ta Mesa eartytoeay, ab.er a W iod of 1urve!Jla!ice ' --~. by t>OUce. . Tbe men -two of whom den ied know - ina thl illflpd lookout, although they live lo&ttblr -were boOked for ln- veitiga'tion of bura:lary. Police identified tht 1uapect3 as Reo L. Al1ton, 18, Wllll1m P. Owen, 22. and Raymond J . Bltnchette, 27, 111 of 4721 Fiiaht St., SlntA Ana . No bur&l1ry loot wa1 found Jn lheir car following the 12:50 1.m. arrests in tht 1200 block of Victoria St., but aatorted tool1 and other equipment was COllfilcattd. The i\em1 Included l1ra:e pl11tlc bags, a cltlltna' band radJo, &loves. a crowbar and a knife, 1long with the walkle -ta\kie device. Offictr Bob Neal s1id he flr1l noticed ' ~*ant.I Owen walking near a shopping cerittr.· drrying th• walkii-t1\kie. ft.adialn& ht1dqutrters, he 1sked for l folloW\lp un it to check the immediate area for ~slble accomplices. Patrolm1n J1me1 WatlOn uld h• found '8!1ftCbette: lying down In a p1rktd car 80 ytrdl from the scene with 1nolher wilkie-talkie unit. Police sald Alston and Owen claimed they· were JOokJng for S10me female ~m· panionlhip, whJl1 .BlancheU. llid ht w11 lyini down beCHBe ht was Jlck. m'1 oot ~ c:cnall!ered." koih reoiUelto tliil city "•dvlit u.. !echnlcal oWf or tho lntlnllooo wllh regard to the correction of Its master pl~ and whether such correction c1n be Implemented prior to the Rltlng of priorities In February for the ~ming year's program ." Newport Beach officials ar• in the process of revising its traffic master pltn, through the u1e of con1Ultants al'lli-.1 'cltlr.ens' commlttet, bu t are not expected ttl "have anything concrete on paper by the end of next month. Koch indicated the AHFB may take 1 h1iil line over the ialue. He said because of its actions, the city's m1u1ltr pl1111 5imply "b no Ion1er adequate.'' He said, "If the city cannot show a uttslactory plan by the tlrM the allocation lA to be made, It wnt be at the "'d18creUon of the adv!Jory board {o determine if it is eligible for funds or not. ''The 1taff," he said, "will .only mike recommendations .'' Sitting on the advisory board, Koch noted, are three city councilmen -none of them fr om Newport Beach -and two ,~unty Supervisors, Ronald W. Caspen: of Newpor t Beach end Ralph Clark of Anaheim. Koch mede it plain that it i1 the freeway that concerns the county . "The city had a satisfa ctory plan un til It withdrew the freeway unconditionally, and that makes the existing mister plan wholly inadequate," he 1ald. "There la an t lement of Intent here," he said, explaining that the basic concept of the AHFP "is that all cities will cooperate in developing an adequatt: system of handling tr1ffic. "The city hat unll1ter1Jly withdrawn from tr11t position , 1tatlnf they have no Intention' for bulldlng a structure 1vhlch will make their highway 1y1tem work ." J{e said, "The only thing, In my opi- nion , that would make them ellg!ble would be for them to approve a plan, or 1tart a priority plan. that would nrovide for a freeway in the city's transportation syste1n.·· Koch did not say what future city council acllorui might sl1nal an ac-- ceptable "Intent" -acUon11 perhapa like the upcom ing vote on whether to write H ballot argument ag1lnlt the antl- lreeway tnlUatlve1. He 1tre.-ed only th1t "thtrt 111 no requirement by law that the county eoo~1t.e wJth cltlet, no requirement it itlv'@-any rundt to c!Ue1. "It ll _ 'Yh,olly a voluntary cooper14ve proararn and." be said. "It 11 the element of cooperation th1t 11 mluin« wh11n one cltf.;~~, u~llaterally, '' From PAfle I ADVENTURE • • -becauae they 're ptople. Curious and mean. And do you know how South Americana drive? "We have renectors for our backs and for the hortes, too." Jim, whose advuture may be cul short by Uncle Sam with a draft notlct, i~ 1n eet0mpllshed ar tist who wlll help illustr1te a book and score1 of 1rtlcle1 the C11lahan1 plan to write. "My draft notice Is IM!. That's in the not-sure category," he s s y s phUosophlcally. · the Callahans became clase friend s or ousted Argentine President Arturo Fron- di zi while be was under a:overnment ·deUn tion et the hotel there. ''11:11 be just like a reunion for them ." savs Mrs. Callahan. Reunions are tentativel y scheduled by her and her wan dering menfolk in Lima, Pe ru . and again when they reach Mexico \n 1972, perhaps in the spring. The final reooion will be In Lhe Harbor Area, after which life (or the Gallahens will settle down to the t.ypt of ex.lite.nee most of the rest of us lead. . ' OAllY PllOT OAAHN eot4T ........... OOMM.tn' ••i-i'.M. ""' ,,....,1~ ~otooper Bowl~ J ••••• &:;i.,. VJft ,.,_1"11 ""' Otwel MtMttr n.-•• ICt.wl ""'' l1i•111•1 A. M.,.,..ht• M-.V. tflrtr C....M .. 0-.. JJO WNt I•'( Strett M•iJl111.!"4lm11P.O.In1160, 91616 '":; : """" -....... -~ .. , ....... ....... utliM~ ...... ..... ....... ..._I,.. ... ......... .. ,. ~ • """' II CtlMll ... Sunday's Slow '1otion Laugh-In 11y Ille& Du aaow ~ HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -COl\lrtry to previoul reportl, the . medtip en· ttrtaiftment 1ptelal tnown ·u~i.tht Super Comt4r Bowl" wu not merely on CBS· 1'V lall ~wtlk. It turned up qaln on !IBc.T'V Sllli4ay, 1nd tills tlmt th• chier performers were the Baltimore Colt5 and DallaJ C9wboys, prevlouslx • n~t known toc.bUll'llrous speciJliiet.-· : r, rwy. ~ II the suocr=IOtl ~ IL dll!1 lllv• 'bMn 1 bciwl''pml. · but Jt wun't IUPlt. There wtrt ,to many fumbles, lntel'teptlons, d6.fi€ction11 and olher loo!I~ tillt It lotl<lid " ~ 111! -. ----~ boJ!ri ~·ciiFJif~,., -aod -lll&Ol"'1 ·Laul}l-tn.''-Ai~~~ mtular and m"'ier. Y"' _1-ij .••~ t6 lit MIO Jobnoan "°""' O\lt of 1 ptloup '#Ith .• fllml>lod bill 1nd 1trtll\ -ror u...fMI UDo. .wtt11.·Goldll Hli!lll . •Ii, lie(. P.uriUIL • 8'I _.-1il': llporlo tllday, l'ijt St. 11Mr'I --inort pOillhtd footblli tm: at plenkt. Ti.. two dlfa~ 1av• <onlotl, lie chlrll -.,,_ :Ulllllty. 11111,..CiOld flncl -"Oii- ln I ·-by Gl'OllChO M .... aot11 tltlM pl.,od wtll -IDOlllll-to -· bot oal1 oM ol tbtm made It. Thi 11me -i .. ~~-..r''auddtn dt•th" 1tt.tu1 tO .... ldt • 1111 MateOm•, Jr It hid, lhl ~ 1111111 111! llll' nlllhborhood II ' that we woukl bM had a dtclllon by nail W-1y. Very early In the game. what looked to be a fist light bl'Oke out on tht plflylng fi eld. Suddenly there w111 a cutaw11y to 10tnethli:if else. and detallA or the frtcsS wert tactfull) omitted from beln1 presented to the viewing public of an estimated M mll llon persona, y,·ho undou btedly were felt lo be un- prepartd for such nasty matters. Things gol flUiili!f after that. Aet'uiify. Sunday 's game really helped put pr'd· footb•ll -and 1p0rt1 -back Into their proper pe~peetive. The fact is that B11lllmore and Dallas are two 1enulnel)r excellent teams. and they juet happened to heve a very iany day. Television. however. has ·often 1&emed to make football sucb a iOUrce of phony reveN:nct th1l we m•y frtquently forpt that it i!~. after 111; ~11\f!rtlY 1 IOUl'Ct • of entert1lnment and pltllun. A"1 die entertainment In Sundq'1 • oomtdf ol errors w111 truly w011!t •. Qmlal Ill .. tor. in addition to defi•tinl -mt n....ual · 11lde of sporls. • It wa1 111d, ol cour11,. to IM B1ntmore '1 lncomperable Jolliqa1 Ulillit forced out of the 11:1mt by an lnj\lly. And It wa1 equ11l1 1ad to let Ult ~plendld Dallas coach. Tom LandtJ, denied orfOt lf•ln the ct\1mp\0Nl'llJ1 antr coming iO 'C:lOlt:. Amid 111 the unlnitndtd humor ct the 11me Sund•y. JM could not help reelln1 1ymp1th1Uc to tht81 forlorn fl1urt1 DAILY ,ILDT ,,..It •r T•'" Cf\l"lt Sailor's Reward Now picture this sailor, home from the sea, being bussed warmly Sunday aboard vessel in Ne,vport liarbor. Is it a welcome home kiss he's getting from a lass who Clambered aboard as his ship headed f.or its mooring? Or is she a n1ember of the crew, merely much re- !Jeved at making port after a brisk sa~ in a not 10 summery wind? Fossilized Whale Bones Found in Sru1 Pedro Hills SAN PE DRO (U PI ) -The fossilized remains of what a geology prnfesso r and the two students who found it bel ieve to be ,a J0,000-year-old California gray whale hive been discovered more than three miles from the ocean shoreline. Special Program To Aid Reading Readers of the Harbor Area arise, you have nothlng to lose but you r poor read!n1 skills. A special program liUcd ARJSE , short for Rea ding Association for Improvement in Secondary Schools will be presented Thursda y at 7 p.m. at Corona de! Mar High School. Instructor Larry Banner will ~ in charge of the show in Room 223. the read ing laboratory . "This k!nd of thing l1 very, very unusual." expla ins Banner, saying the ARISE progra m i11 purely voluntary and designed for fre shmen throu gh senior grades. "By the end or the year it will probably be the most advanced in the stale.'' he added. saying the public ls invited to the two-hour program. Copter Plucks Cows Off Grounder! Barge KAUNA KAKAI , Hawaii t UPI) -Fnr!y cow& were llfted from fl barge st ruck on a reef off th~ Island of Molokai Sunday and flo'>''n to shore by e helicopter, one at a time . Th e cows, 111 heifers consign~rt to Me1tdow Golrt Dairies-Hawaii, weigh 400 to UlO pound1 each. Paul Kirkland and Bob Montaomery, geol ogy 1tudenlt from Lot Ana:eft:a Harbor Col!cge, made their find while searching the Sin Pedro hlll1lde for shells during Uielr Chrl1tma1 v1e1Uon. \\'hen rlrst sighted, the student.s saw only chips of bone. •·There wat a 1mall plect protruding ~hrough lhe surf1ce. l dug down and 1t went two feet. Then 1 stopped," Slid Kirkland who wants to become a pileon. tologist. Kirkland notified the Cabrillo Muttum which sent William F. Samar'8, a museum consultant tnd a CarfOft RJfh School te acher . back wllf'I Klrkl11nd to identify the specimen. Since !he fossil wag found, the 1eol01Y class from Harbor College hal returned on the weekends to dlg It out. They are being extremely csreful because of 1he SRndy so11 and the softness of the deposit. Eugene Fritsche , an a.ssoc!ate pro- fessor of geology at San Fernando Valley St~te College, who has joined the diggin1, said the whale was probably a gr1y v.·hale because of It.I size. Only pilot and gray whales Ate known to be com- mon to the ares and the losail 1_ppttr1 too large lo be a pilot, accordlnl to Fritsche. Ki rkl and and Mont1omery '1 l6i,her, as~ociate professor MarUn Reiter, uld· that during the lee A1e (p\ebtoqent era l. the hlll s\de was proba bly 1 lalr>On, and the whale probably w11 washed up on the beRch in the 1sme way that a group of whales recently wert on San Clemente Island . The tw o men were among sever~! c;allers at San Clemente Police head- qua rters over the weekend 11 As1lst1nt Police Chief Stan Matchett began 1eeklng uptrts after the workmen unearthtd the pair of two-foot-wide forl'!Mltlonl in the sleep ban k last f'rlday afternoon. MUST MAKE ROOM FOR mMs COMIN UI' OUR LOAN Dll'T. Oil Spilled As Tankers Crash in SF SA~ FJiANCISCO fUPl l -Two Jara• oil tankers collidM in fog and darkneu under the Oi>lden Gate Bridle today, 1pllling thousands of gallons of bunker fuel into San Francisco Bay. There were no inJurie.s. 'l'ht Oregon 1tandard, outbound for British Columbia with •.a mlllloa 1allona of bunker fuel, was rammed on the port side by its incoming sister ship, the Arlzonl Standard, and at leaat two of Ila tarW ruptured . A Coast Guard officers aboard the cutter R8d Birch radioed that about hill a million gallons of bunku f u t J had le1ked out of the. Oreaon Standard'• No. 2 tank. At Sauaalito, a picturuqu. vtlla11 and lourilt reaort across the bay from San Fr1neiaco, aome oil wu obwved coating the water bui it bad not reached t.be beaches. The two 523-foot sister shi~ owned by Stand ard Oil of California, hun1 together afLer the. I; 45 a.m. PST colll11lon, drifted east on the bay and tied up a half-mile west of Angel Island , across from San Francisco's F i s her ma n 's Wharf. The Re d Birch commander said the Oregon Standard's no. 2 lank, which held 10,000 42-gallon barrels, was leaking "quite rapidly," and estima ted about 5,000 barrels had escaped. He said tank no. 3 was alao lei.kin& and no. 4 mJ1ht hav11 been ruptured 1llghtly. No leakage was reported ot the Arizona Standard. The Oregon StAnd&rd w1s hit just rorward of tht brldae, he 1ald, at an angle: of 100 degrees. Co•at Guard cutters and a ho vercraft 1ped to the icene, and other 1hip1 1pread oil diapersant on the water and dropped booms to keep the thick fuel from spreading. An area between Angl'l }5Jand and 'l'lburon, northeast of Sau1allto, was clos- ed to navigation while Coa1t Guard crews attempted to a1!f!ss the damage. The colllslon occurred just under the weat strand of the bridge. One of the heaviest fog1 of the year poured through the Golden Gate into lhe Bay. The Coast Guard 1ald the bow o( the Arizona Standard pierced the aide of the Oregon Standard to a depth of about 40 feet. A Standard oil company of California 1poke1man taid both vea11el1 were loaded, the Oregon Standard with 110.000 bamls of bllnktt f~l~ or about 4,UO,~it-11.orui'1 and the :Ari!ona Sta.ndard wltb the aame amount of crude oll. Hitchhiker Gets Woman's Purse A 2t-year-<lld S11nta An1 woman who picked up a male hitchhiker Saturday 101t her pur1e to him In a 1tronaarm robbery on the San Diego Freeway. Carole E. Ebinger told C-Olta Mua police the d1rk·1klMed man grabbed the handbag 11 1he 1topped at l :JO. 1.m. to let him out 1t Brl1tol Street. Loss was only f7 . according to pollct, who conatantly w1rn motorl1ts - •peclally women -against plckln1 up hltchhiktrl. 9 American Troops Felled hy Own Tank SAIGON (AP ) -An Americ1n lllnk accidentally fired e shell Into 1 U.S. in !a nlry unit It w11 supportint In 1 figh l Sunday and wounded nine of the American lnfanlrymen, the U.S. Com- mand announced toda y. R SAL! THROUliH LADIU 11 K GOLD $ -00 BRACELET WATCH ........ 85 AM-FM·MPX · ~~~~91D CAMERA $34111 8 TRACK TAPES $199 • . '.'.' • • • . 11 . 5'ANISH STYLE GUITARS All Wood Rog. 19.9S GOLF CLUBS Wood• or Irons .. MASON 7aU ' lrNOC-UlARS ... , ... W•rld ......... . s12111 s100 ... $7'11 Mu1t lhop lo btlll\+-Evcythln1 fully tuutntttd. ~~h.:r;~::" .. ~"" ,.n ........... . USED WATCHES , ... :~:..,. CULTURID PEAR~ .NECKLACES GOLD JIWILRY SOLD IV WllGHT OF GOLD WI ALSO IU)' QIMI_ '.LOAN MONEY ON ANY ITEM YOU .MAY HAYI. • ·111 UI POI .YOUI ~·MOMW ·NBDI P1~pl~ ift t~e ~n .. ••"• m•ftty •"•ry tim• th•y buy -1t n not •••y to buy for c11~, but if you ht•• c11h lenlr.Al'tl1rfc1ril1 or Ma1t1tt Chtrt• you (lf'I ''"' tre: mendout •.:.rnwf'lt' ent •••r)'ttllng •v•ry fliy. Ratiti's COSTA MUA JIWILRY •ntl LOAN !eia NEWl'ORT ILV.D. l'HONI 646-"'17-1 '. DOWNTOWN conA MIU -N.W ........ , I I ! II I r ' \ ! • l • .LJ ' ·---" ----... . -• • Saildlehaek N.Y. St.eeks VOL. 6-4, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1971 TEN CENTS Those Aren't Dinosaur Bones, Just Old Rocks By JOHN VALTERzA 01 IM Dall'I' l'li.t Jltff A pair or experts confirmed this morn. ing that the two objects found last Friday in an earthen bank behind San Clemente were not dinosaur remains at al L They were sandstor.e rocks, shaped millenia ago by wave action Into forms which could easily confuse the untrained eye. Traveling lo the steep terrain in hills behind the populated areas of San Clemente. the two e.i:perts determined the exact nature of . the pair of white rormatiorui in a freshl y cut bank with the simple whack of a geologist's ham· mer. The two men who stepped forth to view the find by utility crews were Rogu Desautels. pre s ide 11 t of Archeolog\cal Research, Inc., of Costa Mesa and David E. Fortsch, assistant curator of vertebrate paleontology for the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. The two men were among several callers at San Clemente Police head- quarters over the weekend as Assistant Police Chlef Stan Matchett began seeking ex perb after the workmen lll'leatthed the pair of twt>-foot-wlde formations in the steep bank last Friday afternoon. Fortsch, w~ credentials also include expertise in geology, said the "bones'' were CQUtal sand:!tone worn into in- triguing sh8pes by wave action befoi'e .. .>eing deposited into what eventually became a hillside . "It's easy tci ~ee why the_ fflB{l wa s curioll.! about this," Desautels sald. "To the untrained eye-they re ally look like large bOnes," he added. Both _men agreed that the. eJJtire area behind San Clemente held possibilities of finding the real thin&"· "It's also eneouraginfto find workmen finding something like this and calling authorities. So many crews just plow right over what they find alid don't ca ll anybOdy," he said. The area where the stone formations were discovered is lhe site of a large transmission line project. c overn at in _emo_- Capo Hearing Teacher Firing Set for Tonight Formal action to dismiss tenurl'! teacher John V. Robbins will be brought before trustees of the board of Capistrano Down the Unified School Board at tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting at Serra School. The board will be asked to adopt a reS()!ution which will formalize their intent to dismiss the music teacher. The resoluticn will also include a state· ment of charges against him. The San Diel<> Gas and Electric Com· pany workmen· bad cat ·an acceu ?Old to the work site when they found the formatio ns. Both or the experts agreed that the \rip to lhe South Coast caused no ruJ lnconvea.ience. "You never know when somethiDg like thi! can turn into a real find,0 eoe said. • Ill Viet War Key Issue For Senator WAS)IINGTON (AP) -Democrallc Sen. George S. McGovern, son of a prairie preacher, made his early-bird Presidential bid official ~y. promiaing to appeal. to America's "better angels." "The kind of campaign I intend lo run Will rest on candor and reason," sak! the South Dalrot.a senator, a strong Uperal aDcl early critic of the V\etnam war. ··"lbat kind of eampa1gn takes Ume. · ad ~ ls why I am making this J .. ntut tar. ahead of the tradl· Mission Robbins, a .San Clt,Jnenle resident ls currenUy teaching at MarCo Forster Junior High School. He has been a music teacher in the district for nearly lS years. ; lional -'-6-... ... ......,,. .. ----· ' Trail Saddlehack Sets Objectives Meet EL TORO -The objectives community leaders have for the Sadd!eback Valley will be aired on Wednesday at the meeting of the Sadd.leback Valley C:OOrdinating Council. The group , made up ()f c\u~ presidents and other group leaders will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Royal Savings and Loan in El Toro. Mike Shearer, president of the ?<.1ission Viejo Homeowners' Association, will present a repcirt on the status of airpcirt studies in Orange County. e Defense Classes LAKE FOREST -Classes in self defense and dog obedience are being organized al the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. . A demonstration will take place in the art of seU defense tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the club. Classes wi11 be offered for men, women and teenagers. The dog obedience; class will be for beginning dogs and will be held one evening per week. Large do~s are pref.er- red. Sign up in the club office. . &th classes are open to all residents of Lake Forest. e l\'em School Site EAST IRVtNE -'l'rustees of the San Joequin Elementary School District ha~e 11 verbal option on a new school site by the generosity of home builder Ray Presley. With state funds unavailable at the present time for advance school .site Purchase, trwitees thought they . might Jose option on the site located just off Y•le Ave. 900th of CUiver Road and wnt of Walnut Avenue in Irvine. But Presley. whO owns the property, hat told the board he'll keep the site a•ailable for the dilltrict untll funds are available, paying taxes on It himself b'f·the meantime. Lapidary Group Slates Meeting ·4 narTated IHde· pttaefi.IUon on I trip Jo lncU• will be preeen&ed fot men!ben of the Tri Cities Laplda"1 Society WednesdaJ In its first meeting of the yell' In Su Clemente Hiah School'.• Uttle Theater. Randy and Jean Howorth wW maU the1travel pretentat.lon. D\scuWon of two field trlps held In rect:nt weekl alto will be achedu'9<1 at the 7 p.m. meeting. The general publi c i! welcome. In a statement issued in June alter the board voted him incompetent Robbins indicated he would not resign from his pclSition. "If they th.ink I am incompetent, they'll have to prove it," he said. He also Indica ted ;it that time that he would be seeking former students to testify in his be.half. If dismissed lhe teacher will have 30 days in which tn demand a hea ring, the school district will have 30 days in wh ich to respond and the case could finally go lo Superior Court for a decision. When the board voted Robbins in- competent he was gi•en 90 days from the beginning of this school year to make corrections. ''The matter is no..-• up f or rediscussion," said Dr. John Crain, assis· tant superintendent of in~truction. "Thi~ is a delicate situation but you might in fer that the corrections have not been made." Clemente Store Robbed of $63 A bandit armed witl; a .45-ealiber automatic pistol robbed a San Clemente convenience market of $63 ill cash Satur· da y. The report of the holdup occurring near midnight at the 7-11 store at Palizada and El Camino Real came via a taxi driver who radioed the call to his dispatcher. She called police, of· ficers said. The thief walk~nl() the store at l.2:50 a.m., produc the weapon, asked for all the cash, ed. Clerk J"ames F. Matheny told investigLton he could not tell if the man fled in 1 car. The market lies near the San Diego Freeway. ' Need A House? ' I Daymond Allen, 10, and Vickie Frobish, 11. seem to be scampering away from doomed houSe in San .Juan Capistrano. Despite its delicious air of anti· quity fl"Qm turn of the century construction, the house must come do wn to make room for neighbor- hood ·park. It Includes a wine cellar, huge attiC and fireplace and is rumored to be the home of a bob- cat that has devoured i:ieigh.borhood domestic pets. The city wants it removed. Any takers? Grant's Shopping Center To Boost Cleme11te Income The new Grant's Plaza shopping center -the first major mercantile center In San Clemente -will have a signif.ieant effect on city Income by next fiscal year, City Manager Ken carr said toda)'. The center, which is expected to be open for business on a site along Camino de Estrella by June I, will yield thousands of dollars each year in sales tax revenue, Carr said. "And that'! a juicy piece of income for a city," he said. The Grant's Center projected yield to the city coffers and other aJ'UI· c~ income are being dlaclwed in clty ban ln forecasts for this spring'• bodget season, and tbe new center will be one of the .few bright spot& in an otherwi!e gloomy picture. Among expected tough lasues on the (See Plctare1, Page J) budget will be more requests for saJlry ralles from city employt!, a better pension system for publlc safety person- nel and increased costs ror materials and aervices due to the 10 to 12 percent Inflation rise each year. Cari said that intltution leads him to believe that last year's whopping in- crease ln aueped valuaUan a.long the South Coast by ·eounty AueMOr Andrew Hinshaw would not be llO aeve:re ~ year. Capo Families Seeking Way To Relocate The doien San Juan Capistrano families faced with eviction from their homes wiD bring thelr plight to the City Council during a special hearing tonight al 7 p.m. in t.hesounciJ chambers. The council ha1 agrl'!ed to hear an appeal by the property owner Mra. Lllllan Zengleln of Paudena, who LI asking the city for Ume to allow tbe familles to be relocated. The 22 shabby dwelllngs, ·rormerlJ 1 labor camp, were conde~ by ·the Orange County· 0e,artment of Blflldlnc and Safety -acUnt: for ~, city - because the structures were unsafe and UManitary. PreeariDU8 Position Mre. 1.etlgleln, In. her lette;r requtlt.1nc the appeal, asked the City. CouncU to help In fllKIIn• hornet fqr_ the (amW.. U they upllold the eviction. · . 'Brink' Home on the Block ~ ' I • ,. The erpemlve San Clemente residence perched at the end of a chum · for a~ a year will go on the· auction block Ju. fl and lta resldetlta -the ~ 8eeta family, hove mov.d to new, men lltlible quarten. Gmruo .,....,. of "'lls t""""'1 the Chriltmaa holiday, the civil engineer'• family. finally l110Wld out of their home which tnCt1 WU I drtln\, The nlflhtmare began 1111 February. After fl&hli"I for a year to teek help from the ctty and other agenda, the family c!eclded . to stop ma!Una the~ p.aymenta on their first home, JO.,e an estim1ted $10,000 and move out. ) .. ' Although foreclolure by ,i.,a;r ,u!n 1 Federal Savine• and LOan haa been scheduled flnt on Dec., 3, Stdi 'won a delay to allow bis 'famlfy .to. llimd UW: holldlys in the 'hQmi, '. • · • 'l1le tender ~' -· . N ... -Oie'bOiloe.' 'wh!Ch' ;ii; 1s··r.1 away from a gi!pia(.'M"I' ·•hkh•onl:e WU the back yard, (WDl'lO Into· trultee'I IUdlon In Santi Anl. Whitt will happtn to It 1fter thlt ls ln)'body'• guess, 11y apokesmen for the 11vtnp firm. '!be entire ni&htJnare -it the .,.. on 717 Avenlda Colombo started Wty \qt year when the {amlly awoke One ( - __ ,_ ~ -... .. ~-·· ....... ~ .. . MCGOvern, UJe first official entrant In the 1972 presidential race, made Im announcement in letters to hufl<ittdJ ot newspaper editors and 275,000 potential campaign contributors. He also scheduled a televilllon address to his home state of South Dakota for later today. He sought the Democratic nomination In 1968 as a stand-in for assa.s!inated Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, but drew only a handful of vote! on the ballot that overwhelmingly nominated Hutierl H. Humphrey. Since then Ml'Govern has made no secret of his campaign and has lpoken on hundreds of college campuses, and now claims 125 student groups and 30 fiiculty groups working tor bi! oorriina~ lion. He also kept ln the national eye last year as a sponsor Of the unsuccessful Harfield·McG<lvern amendment to force U.S. withdrawal from Southeast Asia. Earlier thls month be stepped down as chairman of a party reform commil- sion to avoid any conflict of interest witb his presidential campaign. His announcement timing is seen In part as an attempt to bolster showings Jn early presidential polls that put him far behind such unannounced candidatet as Sen. EdmWld S. Muskie of Maine, the Democratic frontrunner. In his statement McGovern denounced war, pollution, racism, crime, unemplOy~ ment. lnflation, inadequate school aid and dilillualonment of youth. - "I believe the p!!Ople -of thi! country are , tired of the old rhetoric," he &aid." "Rather; they aeek a way out of the wilderness. But If we wbo seek their trust. trust them ; lf we try to evoke the ·"better angels of our nature,' the people will fiDd their own way." Oruie We•daer Lea\'e your ovett0at at home TuOoday. Tho tempilll'ltuni wUJ be beadina for the middle teVenUes Alone the COii~ ·ad up over the IO mark ~ Judll1 in JlllUU")'? ·INSmEmDAY . - • • . ' I I I I A: OAJL 't flJLO T Steel Boosts Reduced B ethwhem Makes Cuts A fter CriticiSm NEW Yoiut (AP > -B<lhl•bem st.el Corp. Monday slashed its announced 2.5 percent price increase on some major steel products to 6.8 percent after being criticized by President Nixon. Bethlehem's rollback put it.s boost on prices of steel used in shipbuilding and construction on a par with the more moderate raise announced Saturday by U.S. Steel Corp. Bethlehem, second in size to U.S. Steel In steel production, said it.J action was in order to be competUJve with other producers. '!be l.t.S pen:el!I -tad been ~ b~tblthem )di -... It -lhe roJM Ill 'a dtcode ancl Covered ' I II pen:enl <II total industry shipments. Nixon ca11ed the lncrtue "enormous" and directed hlJ Cabinet Committee on Economic Policy to look Into steel pr:lc· ing, including the pruisibility of opening the doors to more steel Import s. Late last week Bethlehem rushed out a prellminary report showing that Its eariinp fiad fallen 40 percent in 1970 from the·l969 level. A ew of the smaller steel producing Record Temperatures Due to Cool Off Tuesday Clear. calm, salllng, atuahy skiing, hot sunbathing and r~ord setting hia:h temperatures that contlnuec. along the Orange Coast todlly will yield to a cooler Tuesday. The National Weal.her Service expects night and early mon:dng patchy foa: to dimifilsb 'the unusual warmth that bu visitell Soilthern California since Satur. •Y· After a windless night, Orange County Harbor Department expected variable winds ot less than 15 knots to continue through Tuesday along the Orange Coast. Beacllgoers will oonlinue to find sunny skies and a high of about 65 Tuesday, but water temperatures that should chill the ardor of all but the most daring swimmer: a cooling 55. While lhe _wttkend's winter heal wave brought the bl&hesl January temp.-atur• ever recorded' at Los· Angeles Clv!C Center, 90 degrees., Jt also melted· snow at area ikJ resorts. Three foot ~ cumulaUOna of white tlUl'f\. turned nto leH )ban one foot Of_ .c>uY slu.sb ll 60 degree breezes fanned the .slopu. The mild Santa Ana wlnd condltlon, made possible by two strong low pressure 1ystems located nort h and IOUth of us, barred cool ocean breezes from Inland areas, bringing inland warmth to the coast. The warmth also confused the hiberna- tion timetable of rattlesnakes. Four persons were bitten over the weekend as the drowsy, deadly snakes wriggled out into the sunslline. At Umes, vilibUity ranged from 60 to 90 miles making possible crystal clear views of the mountains rimming the Southland. The warm spell ended a two-week cold snap brought by the flow of northern cold air which was cut off by the low pressure system which raged over Washington and Oregon Friday and Saturday. The Orange Coast can expect a high of about 65 decrees anO: a low of 55 degrees Tuesday night. Inland highs will be about 86. The low· pressure system to the north brought wind, rain and flooding in lower elevations Of Northern California over the weekend, althougt: rivers were reported down from crest stage. today. In the Sierra.· Nevada, the. State Division of Hl&bways reported both Echn SummH and Donner pus open to normal traffic with aome icy spots. Tankers Collide in SF, Dumping Fuellnto Bay SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Two llr(e oil tankBs GOllided in fog and darknt• under the Golden Gate Bridge today , spilling thousand! of gallolll!I of bunker fuel into San Francisco Bay. There were no injuries. The Oregon standard, outbound for British Columbia with 4.6 million gallons cf bunker rue!, was rammed on the Trio to Discuss H ealth Services Three per!Ons from the Orange County Health Department will discuss available. health services in a panel discussion 7:45 p.m. Thursday in the Little Tbultr of San Clemente Hlgb School. Soutb coast rulde.nta· are invited to attend the sesikin which i ncludes discussion or problems of child protection and adoption, teenage problems, fam ily health and planning and services for the elderly. t.1rs. Barbera Locke, representing child welfare: Juanita Chavez, comm unity serYice aide, and Margaret Illingworth, chief med ical .social work consultant compr ise the panel for the American Associati on of Unlvtrstty W o m e n • 6ponsored program. port side by Ila , incoming sister ship, the Arizoqa Standard, and . at least. two of lb tanks rupture<!. • A Coast Guard officers aboard the cutter RtJd Birch radioed that about half a million gallons of bunker f u e 1 had leaked o.ut of the Oregon Standard's No. 2 tank. At Sausalito, a picturesque village and tourist resort across t.he bay from San Franciaco, some oil was obaerved coating the water but it had not reached the beaches. The two 523-foot sister ahipa owned by Standard Oil or California, hung together aft.er the 1:45 a.m. PST cotlision, drifted east on the bay and tied up a half·mile west of Angel Island, across from San Francisco's Fis h e r m an' s Wharf. The Red Birch command er said the Oregon Standard's no. 2 tank, which held Ul,000 42-galloO barrels, was leak ing "quite rapidly," and e'timaled about 5,000 barrels bad acaped. He said tank no. 3 was aliO leak ing and no .. 4 mleht bave been ruptured slightl y. No leakage "'as reported or the Arizona Standard. The Or9gbn Standard WIS ·bit fust forward of the bridge, he said, at an angle ~ JOO dfgre<a. compaolea Joined ~NI -k I n Bolblobom'• , .... of prteo.Ulcr.-. Btlhlthem'a orl(in&l boo.ta ftl"e tn the area of $16 and $17 a ton for shett piling, ff.piJing, wide·flange strUC· turals, standard structurals and carbon plates. The revised Increases ranged from $9 to $12 a ton, muc h the same as the increase.& made by U.S. Steel. On Sunday Kaiser Stee l Corp., the nation's Ioth largest, said it would go alol}g with the 6.8 percent boost. The firm said rising costs ind low ufl!atislac· tory earnings caused the hike. Crash Kills A rea Pilot, Four Others Hopes ended today for survi val or a Saqta Ana student pilot and his four passengers, missing since Sunday noo n on a hilly, fogbound approach to a Sacramento Valley airport. Searchers found their bodies in the ch1rred "!J'f:.Ckage of the plane rented from Mission Beachcraft at O r a n g e County Airport, shortly after dawn today. The . pilot was identified as Edward Dominguez, 28, while identllies of Utree other victim& was withheld. GleM County Sheriff 's deputies - whose boss broke his leg Sunday in a fall during the search -said they were flight instructor Gerald Bennett, a woman and two children. All are from Southern CaI.ifor:nla, but it was not explained if they were Orange County residents. Sheriff Alvah Leverett's ·'men found the wreckage·on a fidge about a mile south of the little town cf Sites, near Maxwell, the city to which Dominguez was Oying. . His parents Jive there, deputies said. Dominguez had taken off from Orange County Airport at 8:30 a.m., without . filing a flight plan. He is known to have contacted the Air Route Traffic Control Ceattr in Oakland to request permission to fly under a dense overcast. Officia1s at the same center gave him authorimtioo ·at 12 :22• p.m. to ~rr the ill.fated approach to the Willows.CleM County Airport. Del>tJf,ies· sald the . Jingerlbg oVer~t had hampered their efforts In the fog· stlrouded area. They were notified after residenta heard a plane passing overhead, followed by silence and then what sounded like an explosion or the impact of an aircraft crashing' into the ground. Investigators for the Federal A viatlon Agency said Dominguez's rented plane was last observed by radar when It passed a marker point 10 miles south cf the airport. Paper , Al umin um Drive PJ anned Ml!mbers of the Crown Valley Parent reacher Org anization ha \'e launched a pa per and aluminum drive. The first u·ill take place Wednesday. J an. 20 and future dri\'es are planned for the th ird Wednesday of each moo lh. Paper in r2 inch bundles, aluminum foil and tv dinner trays may be con· lributed by bringing it lo lhe Crown Valley Elementary School at 2959~ Crown Valley Parkway, Laguna Niguel. DAILY PILOT "..,.,, .... " ......... .... lAtlf• ... ~ ....... ..., C... Mn11 S. Clm••• QIU.NO .. COAST "Ull.llHI~ COMl"AMY •ntooper Bow.I" Sunday's Slow Motion. Laugh-In Jlob•rt N. W•H Prn!dtnl • ...., ,.,....., J•c~ JI. Cvrlev Vk • "m!ffM 1r.c ~I ~ Tkom1i K,,,.11 EOllOr Jhom11 A. Murphl11• M-11111 f.dllttr flich1r4 P. H1I lout~ on,.,. c-tr MIW -CO.No M-: Sit W.1 ..., St....t """'1 ... Kh: !fl1 W•I .. lliool ... lnft • _ .~ •"c111 m l'w.tt A- H........,, '"'"' 11171 llKll ... lt'lft lollf C...,_,.l aot Htrlfl E ""°'IM AMI . . . ~ 87 RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -·eon1r1ry 'to previous reports, the madcl1' en· te.rlalnment special known as "The Super Comedy Bowl" wu not merely on CBS. TV lut waek. It turned up again on NBc.1V Sunday, and this time the chief performers were the Balttmore Colts and Dallas Cowboys, prevlOusly not known for tt.~orous .speclaluea. . They called it the SuJl!1: •Bowl, and It ma, 1 hne befin a boi[ lllfM· but It •un't huper. There were so many fumbles , intercepticns. deflections and other foulups thal it looked as It the i1'me "had been produced by _!'Rowan ~d -~'• LIUf!f>-ln."";Aa.llllhl> rot meesler and· ...,.!er, YrM hall· Pllpete<I to aee Arte Johnson come out . of a pileup wltb a fumbled ball and streak ' for the . pl ltne, wlth Goldie Hl'Wn . lb bat J>Orsull. s.. detallo in Sport.! tOday, Pace 21. • • 'l1lert bin boon more pollahed footbell ramet It picnics. The two d@fenM!I gave the coatett lta chief IOl.lrct ti rt.SJ*• t1billl)': But ,JOa could find ~ olle.,. 111 a wlMcraet•ltyi Groucho Marx. Both teanu1 played well enou&b to lose, but CtftlJ one of them made., tt. The game almOlt went In~ 1 "sudden death" status to ·'detkle'·.U. out.eome. If It had, the general leellnt In my nel1hborhood la that ft• would have had 1 decision hy next Wednesday. Very early ln the game, what looked to be a fist fight broke out on the playing field. Suddenly there was a cutaway tO something else, and details of the fracas w~ tactful\)' omitted from being· presented to the viewing public of an estimated &4 million persons, who undoubtedly were felt to be un· prepared for such nasty matters. Things got funnier arler that. Actua lly. Sunday's game really helped put pro iootball -and sports -back into their pr oper per spective. The fact is that Baltimore and Dallas are two genuinely excellent teams. and they just happened to have a very zany day. Television. however, bas often seemed to make football sucb a sourct of phony reverenct that we may frequenUy forget that it is, afte r an. merely a source of entertainment and_' pleasure. And the entertainment in 6Uftday'1 coirnedy Gf errors was truly ~ .. hmlftl lti ror~ In addition to de0111DC tbe ttnrenu..1 side of sports. It was sad. Of coctt'lt, to lff Battlmore's incomparable JGhrmy"'~tu forced out of the A"ame b)' an loJil,Y. And it was equally sad lo lie 'Che splendid Dall as coach. Tom Landry, denied ooce again Lhe chempiOllllhlp 1fter ctlmln1· Sb. olose. Amid 'Ill the vnlntended humor of; the game Sunday, one cnuld "ndt ?lelp fee ling syinpatheuc to these forlorn figu res. THIS IS WO RL D'S LARGEST TUNA BOA T, APOLLO, SEIZED DURING WEE KE ND Tiny Ecu~dor Flexes Its Muscl•s in Offshore Fishing Di_s_p_u•_•_W_i_th_U_._s. ______ _ Ecuador Captures Four More U.S. Tuna Boats SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Four American tunaboats were seized today by Ecuador, bringing to eight the number seized with in the psst week . the American Tunaboat Associati on said. The vessels were picked up by a former United States destroyer and several patrol boaU! while forme r United States warplanes new overhead . Ed Silva, vice president of the association. said. Seized today were the San Diego-based Antonina C and Ocean Queen and the Puerto Rico-based Cape Cod and Captain Vincent Gann. None was fired on. ac· cording to Silva . The world's largest tunaboat. the Apollo. was seized Sunday and was ex- pected lo be released after paying a rine esUmated In excess of $100,000. The Anna Marie and Bold Venture we re seized Friday and released Sunday aft er paying fines of $52,000 and $49,000 respeC· lively, Silva said. The San Diego-based Lex41gton wss seized last Tuesday and reles11ed Saturday after pay ing '34.160 ln fines. Silva said the State Department has Bdvised the owners to pay the fi nes. They are reimbursed by the fed eral government. Silva said he called Washington D.C. for aid but was told everyone was in conference. .. \Ve want some protection down th"re h£>fore they shoot our men and damage. our boats," Silva said. Sci1.ure or !he eight m a r k e d the slrongest concentration in the I !·year history of tunab11at seizures . About 100 such vessels had hcen seized between 1960 and the first of this year by Ecua dor. Chile and Peru. Those countr ies claim a 200-mile !er· riloriCll limit while the United S t a I e s clain1s a 12.1nilc limit, Silva esllm;ited the eight wil l invoh•e finP.~ totaling $550,000. ''They see a million dolla rs floating in the bay and they go pick it up ," Silva said. The l,SOO.ton Apollo and the Hornet, ao 800·ton vessel. both based in Puerto Rico, were slrafed Saturday by what the capta ins believed were Ecuadorian warplanes. The Horoet was not involved when the Apollo was seized Sunda y. A part owner of the Apollo, Ed Madru ga of San Diego, said he was 1n constant contact with Apollo ski pper ~1anuel Cintas during the boarding in· cident. San Clemente Ma11 of Y eai· Al so Beco1nes Ne w Daddy To Don Hanse n, oWner or San Clement£> Sportlllihing Inc .. lest week was a whop. ~er. He became the daddy of a baby girt early in the. week. Then on Saturday he became the eity's man of the year for 1970. • Hansen. who admitted the chamber of commerce accolade was Cl "total 11urprlse.", said he and his v:ife. Lindn. had been campaigning hard for someone else to win the cove1ed cnmmunity service title. "rt really came as a surprise." the husky businessman fldm11!ed Among the tribu tes paid ll<inscn "·as his leadership for the past two years of the busy f iesta La Christianila , ia· clurhng onP of !he state's largest parades. In all. Han~n hCls served on the active commillce for the pasl five years. l!C1nsen bought the sportrishing conce rn .~ix hc<irs ago after having skippered his own boat from the pier-end offices since 1!l46 In his chamber or commerce litle, he succeeds Police Ch ief Clifford Murray in the fl1an of the Year annals. The a\\'ard "'as made Saturday evening at !hf' ch;imbcr of commrrce annual 1nst;illntu1n banquet . But \hr real a"·;ird h.1d aln:;ady C'('ltne. !O 1hr Hansen fC1mily -tiny Donna Hani::cn. "It w11s a heck of e week ." Dad observed. l11 vestigators Id entify Body In Modj esk~a Orange Coun!y Sheriff investigators have identified the nude, badly beaten body of a woman found during !he. "·ee kend in Modieska Canyon as that of Zelma Rachel \\11tgenstein, 46, <lr Norwalk. Los Angeles County lawmen are today ~·orking with local offices 111 a bid tn establish the reason for the woman's presence in Orange County and lo reconstru ct. if possible. the ' events lhal led to her slayi ng. Investigators are working on 1hc theory that the dead \\.'01nan 1nay h11ve been the victim of a sexual attack hut \hey are awaiting the outcome or a coroner's . examination for confirmation or denial or that supposition. Mrs. Witgenstcin's body. stripped of the red stretch pants. white C'rochrt rd su·eater and pink roat \Vhich u·ere i;r.at· tered nearby. wa s found by three hiker! Saturday in a brush·choked ravine. It was partially concealed by dense sbru b· bery. An autopsy carried nut IC!!Cr that day disclosed the cause of dea th to be ;i broken neck, possibly suffered ;is a result of heavy blo"'S lo the head and f:i<'e. Investigators s;iid Mrs. \Vit µcns1ei n wa s a widow who Jived alone in Cl Norwalk Trailer park . Relatives and frir.nds iHP being questioned in a hid for a lead to the ki!ling. T J1i evcs Enter CJemente Home Thieves pried ope n the window or a San Clemente apartment "'h1le its Oc· cupants were attending e\'Cn1n~ chur rh services Sunday. stealing $250 "'nrth ot coins. pistols and household it<'ms Orl y 0. Van Eogelenhaven of 1409 Calle 1\1lrador. told police he and his "·ife riisr(}verrd tht> lo.5s after returning from the riles at 10 p.m Officers said thieves ran.~nckrd the entire residence and stole ;i 3i5·callbe.r magnum revo lver. a .22<a!ibcr pistol, dishes. rare coins an d other items. MUST MAKI ROOM FOR ITEMS COMING UP FOR SALE THROUGH OUR LOAN DEPT. LADIES II K GOLD $3500 BRACELET WATCH ....... . POLAROID CAMERA $341& MOOEL 3-40 8 TRACK · TAPES ........... $1~ $1296 $100 SPANISH STYLE GUITARS All Wood Rog. 19.95 GOLF CLUBS Woods or Irons ... MASON Jx 3S BINOCULARS s.. tlit World ...... . ... $79& Mutt shop to bellevl!-Evcrythini fully guaranteed. P1opla in tft1 knOw 1•,.• money eYerl time they buy -it i1 not ees'l to bu.y for cash, but i you hav• cash, l •"kAmeticar , or Master Chat91 you ca" 11 Ya tra· menclov' arnovnfs one ev•rythin9 aYery d1y. AM·FM-MPX With Speakers •nd Full Si11 BSR Ch•nger ....•.••.. , ••••..• CULTURED PEARL NECKLACES GOLD JIW!LRY SOLD BY WE IGHT OF GOLD WE ALSO BUY and LOAN MONEY ON ANY ITEM YOU MAY 'HAVE. e SEE US FOR YOUR SMALL MONEY NUDS Raciti's COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN '1838 NEWPORT BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MW PHONE 646-7741 letw•• Herttor & lreiMw.y 7 • l 1 - Lag1111a Beaeh. ED l·T•IO N VOL 64 , NO. 15, l SECTIONS, l2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • ~ ,, MONDAY, JANUARY '18, 1971 TEN CENTS 'Early Bird' McGovern Throws· Hat Into Ring WASHINGTON (AP) -Democratic Sen. George S. McGovern, s~n of a prairie preacher. made his early·bird presidential bid official today, promising lo appeal to America's "better angels." "The kind of campaign I intend to run will rest on candor and reason," said the South Dakota senator, a strong liberal and early critic of the Vietnam war. "That kind of campaign takes time. And that is why I am making this announcement far ahead of the tradi- tional date." • McGovern, the first official entrant in the 1972 presidential race, made his announcement in letters to hundreds or newspaper editors and 2'{5,000 potential campaign ·contributors. He also scheduled a television address to his home state of South Dakota for later today, He sought the Democratic nomination in 1968 as a stand-in for assassinated Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, but drew only a handful of votes on the ballot that ove rwhelmingly nominated Hubert H. Humphrey. Since then McGovern has made no secret of his campaign and has spoken on hundreds of college campuses, and now claims 125 studen t groups and 30 faculty groups working for his nomina· tion. He also kept in the na tional eye last year as a sponsot of the unsuccessful Harfield·McGovern amendment to force U.S. withdrawal from Southeast Asia . Earlier this month b,e stepped dov•n as chairman of a party reform C-Ommis· sion to avoid any conflict of interest with his presidential campaign. His annQUncemtnt liming Is seen ln part as an attempt to bolster showings in early presidential polls that put him far behind such unannounced candidates as Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine. the Democratic frontrunner. In his statement McGovern denounced war, pollutloo, racl.sm, crime, unemploy· ment, inflation, inadequa\f school aid and disillusionment of youth . "I believe the people of this country are tired of tbe old rhetoric,'', he said. "Rather, they seek a way out of the \t'llderneM. But if we who seek their trust, trust them; if we try to evoke the "better angels of our nature,' the people will find their own way." He said he is running "because I believe deeply in the American ?romlse and can no longer accept the diminishing nature of that promise ." He disavowed "image.making or television' commercials. . . • backroom deals , coalitions of self-interest .•. " Instead. he vowed to "try. honesUy to confront our problems in all their com- plexity , and stimulate the search for solutions." r10 sea e una Planners Meet Laguna High Rise Session Slated A record crowd is expected to attend tonight's public hearing on a new zoning ordinance that would permit high-rise hotels on Laguna's oceanfront. but the meeting must convene in city hall council chambers as arinounced, Planning Com- mission chairman William Lambourne said today. High-rise opponents , who plan to turn out in force to express their \riews. had expressed the hope the meeting could be moved to the more spacious high school audilorium, as was done on one previous occasion fo ran overflow City Coun cil session. Only 115 persons are permitted in the city hall meeting room under fire regulations. Loudspeakers are set up on the adjoin ing porch for the benefit of those who do not get in. Lambourne said a public hearing such as this one must be convened at the time and place announced . Any decision to move the meeting must be made by vote after it is officially convened. One organizer of a drive to "pack'' the public hearing predicted last week that as many as 2.000 Lagunans might turn out The council session on controversial urgency ordinances, including the dog control Jaw, that was moved to the high school lasl year drew a crowd of ab<lut 7011. Only four planning commissioners, Rites Conducted In Glendale for William Holland Funeral services were held In Glendale today for former legisla tor and football player William T. Holland, 274 Viejo St, Laguna Beach, who died Friday at the age of 71. Mr. Holland, i. former attorney. had been associated with Lomas Real Estate in Laguna Beach for 11 years. He is survived by his wife, Urcal; four sons, John W. of Huntington Beach, .J. B. Holland of Redondo Beach. William 1'. Jr. of Los Gatos and Tom L. of Honolul u; a brother. John E. Holland of Upland : 12 grandchildren and three great grandchildren. A natiVe of South Carolina. Mr. llolland was a graduate of the University o{ South Carolina and served in the House of Representatives in that state. He was an All-American football candidate for South Carolina in 1925 and played professional football with the St. Louis Cardinals Jn the late 1920s. He was a member of Chapter 672 of the Masonic Order and of the American Legion, Compton post. Ma80TIIC services were held In the Wee Kirk of the Heather. followed by burial at Forest Lawn Memorial Park. , Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary were direct.ors. Big Postal Strike LONDON (AP ) -Bdtons rushed to meet the deadline for maUlng letters today before a nationwide postlll 1trlte ,vhlch also threatens to dlsTupt telephone and telegraph contact with the outside world. ' 1..ambourne, James Schmi tz, Robert Hastings and Carl Johnson will be in their seats tonight. The fifth com- missioner. Thomas Johnston. resigned last week. Carl Johnso n was the only holdover (rom the previous Planning Cflmmislloa. Tbe "ethett commissioners a!I were appoinled by the newly • elected CiU' Council last April. The 370-member t.guna Beach Civic League i.! spearheading the drive to bloc k high rise construction in Laguna. The C-R (commercial-residential) zone under consideration tonight was drawn up in an attempt to establish specific standards for a tourist-Oriented area on portions of Coast Highway between Laguna A venue and Agate Street. The area now has a variety of zoning, ranging from single residential through multiple residential to commercial, with as many as three separate zones on a single parcel of prope rty. As a result, most developments in past years have been by variance. Under the general p I a n recom- mendation drawn up tor the city by Daniel, Mann, Johnso111 & Mendenhall, the new zone wou ld provide un ifor m standards for a tourist zone including hotels. motels and appurtenant facilities including beauty and barber shops. art galleries, conference facilities. florist and gift shops, travel agents, restaurants. drug stores, liquor stores and clothing stores. The principal argument has to do with standards for population density and building height. Existing zoning sets a height limit of 50 feet above Coast Highway but permits building the full width of a lot in commercial zones. The proposed ordin ance would increase lhe maximum permitted height to JOO feet, but would require wider sideyards, commensurate wit.h height, to provide open spa~ between the highway and the ocean. It proposes a minimum sid~ard allowance of 10 percent of lot width for the first three stories of a building, with five additional feet of open space for each addJtlonal floor . Proponents of the ordinance maintain that controlled development of tourist facilities ls necessary for a healthy economy and · that the more permissive height standard would eliminate the "wall" effect possible under existing laws. Opponents deny the need for new facilitlee:, claiming they would only overburden the city and destroy its village atmosphere. • Jaycees Pushing Greenbelt Idea The Laiuna Beach Jaycees will unveil plan• to make the Laguna Greenbelt a naUOoal project for 19'il when the Greenbelt corporation meelt: at 8 o'clock tonight In ·the Riviera Room of the Hold Loguna. Aim of the project will be assisting the purchue of the '4 million, 500-acre S)l<amore llJUa property In Lquna Cao· yon as a key parcel In formaUon of a grHtlbelt to circle the city. 'Ille Jaycees are usembllng a library of color slides for UM ln p~ams supporting the greenbelt, iMny of which' '1"111 be shown 1t tonight's meeUng. DAILV l'ILOT Jlell """" FIRE EARLY SUNDAY· DID AN ESTIMATED $50.000 DAMAGE TO LAGUNA HOUSE Occupants Sc.nmbltd To Safety Across RoOf And Down 1 Neighbor's Ladd•r City Lifeguard Alliance With Policemen Asked T 'WO Young Boys .Rescued After T1Lnn el Cave-in "Swimming is recreational, drowning is not," says city manager !.awrence Rose in a report to the Laguna Beach City Council announcing his conclusion that the lifeguard service should be re- moved from the direction of the Rec:rta· tion Department and allied more c1oeely with the police and fire rescue tel'Vices. The report was pursuant to a City ~ ell decision last August that the poeiUon of Chief Lifeguard should not be filled untU the organiz.atiol'I of the Lifeguard Service ha d been reviewed t-y the in· coming cily manager. It will be presented to the City Council Wednesday night. While reereatJonal service, tuch as swim ming instructibn,.ts part of Ule: Life- guard Service, says R~. its principal function Is to rescue people from drown· ing and as such it is part of the public safety system. A comprehensive rescue and first aid system, he says, would IJ'lclude equip.. ment, trained personnel, commu nlcatklns and skill to rescue people from ~ water or its edge, from clifFside, motor vehJcle accidents and other dangerous tltuatioos. Posilionil'lg the Ufeguard' SerVice cloier to the other public aafety aervtcea, fire and police, ·11 a loglcar s1tp, Rose ~tea. Son of Fire Chief ' . . . .. Arrested in l\rilW ' LACONIA, N.H. (UPI) , -Timothy Warren, 25, was .1rlelted over lhe weekend and charg<d '('illl looting ·and burning an elementary ~I. Hit father, the Hrt chief of, lpil«a, .H.,,,atood beside h!m at his arra~ ' Wsrren w1s. arrested' Friday after a 10.week Investigation by it.ate police of the Oct. 4 blaze at Center Br1n1teld Elementary School which caused 13'7 ,000'1 damage. A Judge continued ball 11 '5,l'O'.I pending a Feb, 5 hearing. j He proposes deputizing the lifeguards and training them in other skills involved in rescue operations, including those prac. tlced by the Fire Department but not directly ,water-connected. , ·. ' · They also could participate in law en- force ment with regard to an imal reguJa. tion, littering and other ordinance prolr lems on the shoreline, with Jhltruction by the, Police Department. At the same time, he prciposes asalgn· Ing personnel Crom the Police and Fire Departments for training in assisting water rescue, for a more coordina'ted public safety .service. Under Rose's plan, the Lifeguard Serv- ice would have semi-Independent bureau status. reporting directly to the city man- ager, but under the administrative super- vision of the fire and police chief&. A tunnel dug into the side of a dairy yard excavation collapsed Sunday a(. ternoon , trapping two young Anaheim brothers, one of whom was literally brought back to life after 10 minutes without air. , .'!:"-_ Jfil.ry Stentz, 9, of 2450 ' W; Valdtna St., was listed in satisfactory condJtlon today at Martin Lu1her HQ!Pital. He ls breathing·. norm&!ly, h0epltal aide.s said, but suffered a fractured pelvis in the cave-in which occurred while he and hls brother were playing with a third boy. Michael Slentz. 11. was also trapped In the mishap at 2164 Crescent Ave., but playmate David Johnston, 13, also of Anahelm, dug him out quickly. Both boys then began clawing at the collapsed tunnel with their hands to free Jerry. Those Dinosaur Bones Were Really Sandstolle • ., , "I make one pledge above all others -to seek and speak the truth with all lhe resources of mlnd and apirlt l command." At the same time, it was anncnmced that Blair Clark, who was Eugene McCarthy's 1988 campaign mmmger, would be a vice-chairman of McGovern'• campaign . Former as.sistant U.S. Atty. Gen. John Douglas, who backed Kennedy: in 1968, is chairman, and Jean Westwood, who is a national committeewoman from Utah and backed Humphrey, abo i.s a vice-chairman. aze 2 a.m. Fire Loss Set At $50,000 Three occupants of a Laguna Beach house scrambled down a neighbor's lad- der to safety early Sunday as they fled a fire that injured three firemen and caused an estimated $50,000 damage. Officials said when the blaze began at about 2 a.m. Sunday, the three oc· cupanll! of th• house at 629 Bolsana ;1 Drive were 1itting in an upstairs room talkintl. Tbtf were Ja;;itfied as Judy Gersh. D&ve Baldwin and George Hancock. They told firemen they heard a noise downstairs that sounded like breaking glass and thought it was a burglar. Then opened a hall door and were . forced back by billowing clouds of smoke. The three th en went out a door to a sun deck and climbed over the roof to a neighbor's fence. The neighbor was waiU ng for them with a ladder and they climbed to safety. Two fire unit,, and l6 firemen , including all fire department volunteers, responded to the fire. Two regular firemen suffered heavy smoke inhalation and a volunteer cut his hand while fighting the blaze. Firemen said the $65,000 house, owned by Laguna Beach resident E a r I Fairbairn, w93 parUaUy destroyed. The four bedrooms and other living quarter• were gutted and all of the ottupant.s' fur niture and clothing were destroyed. Firemen said the furniture was new and set the damage to the contents of the hOme at $25.000. Structural damage to the home was also initially estimated at $25,000. The garage and lau ndry room of the home rece ived only slight water damage. firemen said . Fire Marshal Jim Preuon said cause of the blaze was not lrnmedjately known, although he did say-~ it began in the family room of the house. Pr.s.or. speculated that the ghlss b~klng sound the three occupantl' heard before discovery-of tht fire was a winitow popplni: out from the hut of the flamea. Weather -· · Leave your overcoat at home 'l'llesday. The tempora~ will be beading ror tht middle eeventies along the coast aod up over th9 IO mark Inland.· June In January? . iNsmE ~D~Y Now that ·ihc Beatler have .separated ioho will 6c the m~t .tVptrttar or wpergroup in the world of pop m\lllcl, ,i•' u..· di· tafttd ~~!'ht On.. Enttrt.ci~ent P~• :/6 •uw<llt, W1 'f'~liod¥'t au.cu. :::.. ': ~u, 1 c........ .,... g::e-,,.,. :; _....,...._ 'It ~ 'II •-....&...... ' .............. -..... ' ... -" --~ l l I t I l \ • -• z, \iitllY PILOl SC Mond.11, .llrwry 18, 1971 Steel . Boosts ;Reduced -Bethlehem Makes Cuts After Criticism NEW YORK (AP ) -Be!ll!Wm S...1 C.Orp. Monday slashed its announced 2.5 percent price increase on some major steel products to 6.8 percent after being criticized by President Nixon. Bethlehem's rollback put its boost on prices of steel used in shipbuilding and construcllon on a par with the more moderate raise announced Saturday by U.S. Steel Corp. Bethlehem, second in sile to U.S. Steel in st.eel produ ction. said its action was in order to be competitive with other producers. The u.~ pete111t IJlcreuO t.od - 1MOW>Ctd by e.thlohem wf ltoodar. It wu the b~ · raile in· 1 'decide and covered a 16 percent of total industry shipments. Nixon called the increase ''enormous" and directed his Cabinet Committee on Economic Policy to look Into steel pric. ing, including the possibility of opening the doors to more steel imports, Late last we(k Bethlehem rushed out a prelimina ry report 1bowing that its earning! had fallen 40 percent In 1970 Crom the 1969 level. A cw of the smaller steel producing Record Temperaiures Due to Cool Off Tuesday c1eir;'.-..a1m, sailinl, s1usbj, skiing, bot sunbathing.:. !00 ·;,{~ ti~Uing h,igb l~m~~·tl!~t $J>11Jmtte6 along the Oranga·eo.ast todl:V W!D, fleld to a cooler 'luesq&y. 1The· NAUonal Weather Serv ice expects !ght ind' early morning patchy fog to minHih· the unusual warmth that bas sitedjtoutbern California since Satur- .J~fter'-:"a windless night. Orange County ~bot Department expected variable ..,nds.bf less than 15 knots to continue ttrougb~ Tuesday along the Orange Coast. 1Bea~goers will continue to find sunny dies and a high of about 6S Tuesday, but water temperatures th.at should chill the anSnr ef all but the most daring sv"lmrl11t: a cooling 55. ~hile 'the weekend's winter heat wave lfought thi! highest January temperature efer recorded at Los Angeles Civic Center, 90 degrees. it also melted snow a'f area ski re.sorts. Three foot ac- ctimulations of white stuff. turned nto 14.ss than one foot of soggy slush as 60 degree breezes fanned the slopes. 'The mild Santa Ana wind condition , made possible by two strong low pressure 11ystems located north and south of us, barred cool ocean breezes from-inland areas, bringing lnland wafmth to the coast. ' The warmth also confused the blberna- tion timetable of rattlesnakes. Four persons were bitten over the weekend as the drowsy, deadly snake s wriggJed out into the sunshine. At times, visibility ranged from 60 to 90 miles making possible crystal clear views of the mountains rimming the Southland. The warm spell ended a two-week cold snap brought by the flow of northern cold air which was cut off by the low pressure system which raged over Washington and Oregon Friday and Saturday. The Orange Coaat can expect a high of about 65 degree• anci a low of M degrees TueJday night. .Inland highs will be .about 86. The low preasure tiystem ta the north brought wind, rain and floodina: in lower el evations of NDrthern California over the weekend, alt.boogl:: rivers were reported down from crest stage today. In the Sierra Nevada , the State Division of Highways reported both Echo Summit and Donner pass open to normal traffic with some icy spots. Tankers Collide in SF, I)u·mping Fuel ,lnw flay .. $AN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Two large oil tankei:$. ~olliQ~d in, fog and darkneu under the Golden Cate Bridge today, i;~llling thousands of ga llons of bunker futl into San Francisco Bay. There were no injuries. The Oregon standard , outbound for British Columbia with 4.6 million gallons of bunker fuel, was rammed on the Trio to Discuss Health Services Three person:i, from the Orange County Health Department wUI discuss available health services in a panel discussion 7:45 p.m. Thursday in the Lillie Theatf:r Df San Clemenr.e iji&h School. South ~ ~dents are invited to attend the lies..ic>ft • wtilCh In c I u des discussiOn of prob!efns ol Ohlld protection and adopt.ion, teenage Problems. family health and planning aod 11ervices for th e elderly. r.1rs. Barbara Locke.. representing child 1,1·e!fare; Juanita Ch.avez, community service a!de, and Marzaret Illingworth, chler medJcaJ.social work consultant comprise the panel f9r tht American Association of Un iversity W om,_~ n - i;ponsored progn.m. _ _ .. • port aide by Its lncomlnc 1lster ship, the 'A'tllO'ni stindliid. and ai · iWt '·two of ib tank5 ruptured. A Coast Guard officers aboard the cutter Red Birch radloed that about half a million gallons of bunker f u e I had leaked out of the Oregon Standard'• No. 2 tank. At Sauaallto, a picturesque village and towi!t resort across the bay from San Francisco, some oil was observed coating the water but ft had not reached the beaches. The two 523-foot sister ahlpii owned by Standard Oil of California, hung together after the I :45 a.m. PST collision, drifted east on the bay and tied up a half-mile west of Angel Island . across from San Francisco's Fish e r ma n ' s Wharf. 1be Red Birch commander said tht <>recon Slandard'J ~' 2 ta nk, whiCI\. heJ<t;JD,000 U.pllO(J·bJrrtls;was leaking "quill: rap~ly.' ... .and estimated about 5,000 barreli hid escaped. He said Uhk no . 3 wBs also leaking and no. 4. might have been .ruptured slightly. ·No ·leakage was reported or the Arizona 'StaDdA!'i!. - The Qrcon. Standard wag hit jvst forward "'of the tlrid(e, he ~ aaid. at an a!lll• " 1110 ~. ' . - """""'nlff J91Md Jut -k I n 11t1111-·· •1111• ol pr!OI -. Bethlehem's orlglnaJ ~ta were In tbe area of 116 and $17 a ton for shi!et piling, H-piling, wlde-rlange struc- turals, standard slrUcturals and carbon plates. The revised increases ranged from $9 to $12 a ton, much the same as lhe increases made by U.S. Steel. On Sunday Kaiser Steel Corp., the nation's 10th largest, said ii would go .along with the 6.8 percent boost. The firm said rising costs and low unsatisfac- tory earnings caused the hike. Crash Kills Area Pilot, Four Others Hopes en_ded today for survival of a SanLa Alla student Pilot and hill faur pa~'eis, miSsing since Sunday noon on ~ hilly , fogbound approach to a Sacramento Valley airport. ~hers found their bodies in the charred . wreckage of the plane rented frorTi Mission Beachcraft at orange County Airport. shortly after dawn today. :rtie ~pilot was identified u F.dward Domfniuer, 28, while idenUties of three other victlmS Wa6: withheld. Glenn County Sheriff's deputies - whose bes& broke his leg Sunday ln a fall during the search -said they were flight instructor Gerald Bennett, a woman and two children. All are from Southern California, but it was not explained if they were Orange County residents. Sheriff Alvah Leverett's men found the wreckage on a ridge about a mile 111outh of the little town of Sites, near Maxwell, the city to wbich Dominguez was flying. His parents live there, deputies said. Dominguez had taken off from Orange County Airport at 8:30 a.m., without filing I flight plan. He hi known to have contacted the Air Route Traffic Control Cent.er in Oakland to request pennisal>n tD ny under a dense overcast. Officials at the same center gave him authoritatlon at 12:23 p.m. to betlh the Ill-fated approach lo the Willows-Glenn County ..\i.r.port. . • • . - OtBJtjej ••14 t the ling<ting • clerclli had hampered their efforts in the fog· shrouded area They were notified after resident! heard a plane passing overhead, followed by silence and then what sounded like an explosion or the Impact Df an aircraft crashing into the ground. Investigators for the Federal Aviation Agency said Dominguez 's rented plane was la st observed by radar when It passed a marker point 10 miles south of the airport. Paper , Aluminum Drive Planned \11"1 TtllPhtl'I THIS IS WORLD'S LARGEST TUNA BOAT, APOLLO, SEIZED DURING WEEKEND Tiny Ecuador Flexes Its Muscles in Offahor• Fithing Dispute With U.S. -'--~~~~~~~~~~ Ecuador Captures Four More U.S. Tuna Boats SAN DIE GO (UPJ) -Four American tuna boats were seized today by Ecuador, bringing to eight the number seized wtthin the past week, the American Tunaboat As.sociation said. The vessels were picked up by a former United States destroyer and several patrol boat,, while former United Stat.es warplanes new ove rhead, Ed Silva, vice pmident of the associ ation, 1aid. · Seized today were the San Diego-based Antonina C and Ocean Queen and the Puerro Rico.baaed Cape Cod and Captain Vincent Gann. None was fired on, ac· cording lo Sliva. The world 's largest tunaboat , the Apollo, was seized Sunday and \!SS ex- pected to be released after paying a fine esUmated Jn excess of $100,000. The Anna Marie and Bold Venture were seized Friday and released Sunday after paying fines of $52,000 and $49,000 respec- tively, Silva 1aid. The San Diego.based Lexington wa1 seiud last Tuesday an(! released sifurday"'afttr" paying $3f,160 In fines. Silva said tbe Statt Department bas advised the owners to pay the fines . They are reimbursed by the federal government. · Silva said he called Washington D.C. for aid but was told everyone was in conference. "We want some protect ion down there before they shoot our men and damage our boats," Silva said, Seizure of the eight m a r k e d the strongest concentration in the 11-year history of tunaboat seizures. About 100 such vessels had been seized between l9fi0 and the first of this year by l':cuador, Chile and Peru. 1'huse countries claim a 200-mile ter· ritorial lin1it while the United St at es claims a 12-mile limit. Silva estimated the eight will involve fines totaling $550,000. "'They see a million dollars floating in the bay and they go pick it up," Silva said. The 1,800-ton Apollo and the Home!, an 800-ton vessel , both based in Puerto Rico, '"'ere strafed Saturday by what the captains believed were Ecuadorian warplanes. 11ie Hornet was not involved when the Apollo was seized Sunday, A part owner of the Apollo, Ed l\1adruga of San Diego. said, he was in constant contact wtth."'"-ApollO skipper l\fanuel Cinta11 during the boarding in- cident. · San Clemente Man of Year Also Beco1nes New Daddy To Don Hanse n, owner or San Clemente eluding one of the state's largest parades. Sportiishlng Inc., last week v.·as a whop-Jn all , Hansen has served on the Investigators Identify Body In Modjesl{a Orange County Sheriff investigators have identified the nude, bad ly beaten body of a v.·oman found during the weekend in Modjeska Canyon as that of Zelma Rachel \llitgenstein, 46, of Norwalk. Los Ang eles County !cn\'men arc tcday working with local offices in a bid 10 establish the reason for the V.'Clman 's presence i.n Orange Co11nty and to reconstruct . if possible. tile events lha1 led to her slaying. Investigators are working on the theory lhflt the dead woman may have been the victim of a sexual attack bu t they are awaiting the oulcome of a cDron er':1 examination for confirmation or denial of that 5Upposilion. Mrs. Witgenstein 's bod y, stripped or the red stretch pants, white crocheted s1-1•eater apd pink mat v.•hich v.ere scat~ tcred nearby. was found by three hikers Sat urday in a bru sh-choked ravine. It \'o'BS partially concea led by dense shrub- bery. An autopsy carried out later th at day disclosed the cause of death to be a broken neck . possibly suffered :is a result of heavy blov.·s ta the head and fac e. Investigators said ~1rs. \V itgensteiJ1 was a widow who lived alone In a Nnrv.·alk trailer park. Rela tives and fr iends are being questioned in a hid for a lead to the killing. Thieves Enter Clemente Home rier. active committee for the past five years. r Thieves pried open the v.·indo"' of a He became the dadd y of a haby girl Hansen bought the sportfishlng concern early in the v.·eek. sik: hears ago after having skippered San Clemente apa rtment \1·hile its oc· Then on Saturday he became the city's his own boat from the pier-end ofllcu cupan ts v.·ere atten ding C'\'Cn1n~ church ~Afembers of the Crown Valley Parent man of the year for l~iO. since l!HG. services Sunday, stealing $2.50 1-1.-orth of · · . . . Hansen, who admitted the chamber In his chamber of com~rce title, coins. pistols and household Items . Teacher ~at1on 'tte~e lat:10Cbed 1 _ al: commerce -.~Htde ·was a "lotal ?le succeeds PDl!ce Chief Clifford· Murrey paPer arid 'alli1'i!Dum drtve;: ~" "!Ul'plise". said he 11nd ht~ wife .. Linda, in the Man of the Year annals. Orly 0. Van Engelenha l'eo of 1409 C,1l!e 'Jlhto first will take place Wednesday, had been campaigning hard for someone. The award v.•as made Saturday evening Mirad or. told pn!ice he and his v.·1fe Jan. 2Q and future drives are planned else lo win the coveted community at the chamber of commerce annual discovered the loss after returning from for the third W.ednesday of each month. se rvice title. installatio n banquet. rhe rites at 10 p.m. p .· ".Ja ~ h bundl aJUminum "It really came as A .surprise," the But the real award had already come Officers sa id thieves r;uisncked the . aper in . lllC N, husky businessman admitte d. to ihe Hansen family -tiny Donna fo~I end tv d1n_ne~ tra.ys may be con-i\mon~ the lributes paid Hansen was l-fans('n . entire r"esidence arid srole a .175-caliber l.ributed ~y ,•bringing it to lhe Crown his leadership for the past two years "It. was a hec k of a week," Dad magnum revolver , a .22-caliber pistol, Valle}r"EJ.ement.a.ry Scho91 .. f t 296115 Crown . valley {arkw•:· i,,g'."'"":.iguel~ ~";' ~th=e~b=us~y;;F~le~st~arLa~~~hr=•~st=Jen~Jt=•=· :Jn:·::o:bse:rv~•~d=. ~~,;~=~=~:~~~d;is~h~"~·~·~·r~e~w~in~'~';";d;o;th;';';'';'m;;;'·;;;- · ~ :.pt04)per Bi.)fl ~,-. Sunday's -S..l(Jfii:Motion La ilg1i;In ' DAilY PllOT N..,ort lex\ HM ..... .... l.et-IMI Int• .......... ..., C"t9 Mn• .... ;s. C ....... OllANCiE COAST f'tJIM..llliiHco CCMPAllY 11;,,lotrt H ... W1M Pr~•.,rnt 1r.d P'11btll!Mr Jtck "· Cvrl.., Viet P~l.OtM l r.d G ....... , Ml ,,.... lhom11 K11vil Edlr.r 7h"'"'' A. Mvrphin t M1n1111\t Efltor f1.i,h1rd JI'. Htll 50tl111 Ol'"lf'llt C-ly ldli.r OfflHo , (iut1 Mtll: lXt WMI S1y S!rMI """""'] lllCh : 1'711 Wiii ••lllCll IOll!l'Y11"11 • .~ 11N c11<2n l'&rHl,ft,.......,. MW11nstat1 !INQI: 17llS •••ell 1111111.,.n:I .. ,,.t.,.,....1 at fflr111 IU C..11\!M ANl ' . -· BJ RICK DU BllOlf .. ·' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Conlr"l' lo previous. repxU, the madcap en· tert&lnment special known aa. "The Super Comedy Bowl'' was not m.rely on CBS- TV last week. It turned up 1galn on NBC.TV'&lnday, and this time the chief ff:rformen were the Baltimore Colts and Oall.!s Cowboys. previously not know.n for humorous specia!Ues. 1l'he1 ·cf!~ it the Super BolC'I •• and lt ni;zy h•ve been a bo"!.1 J~ :;but it ~asn't huper. 'There were tlO many fumbles, lnterceptlonl, deflectlona and other foulup!I that it looked as If the game. had been produced by .'.:Roran • ~ ... 1¥tlii'l.:1 ~n." . As. Jhlugs 1ot -Ind ..-,.you Ml! a~ to see Arte Johnson come out of a pileup with 11 funibled ball 11rld streak for the coal line. with Goldie Hawn ID , b<C-jl.lroailc.Set, detollo. )I> Sporu lodOY,\Pilte iJ.' ' · • There have been mor<! pcJJsbed foolball games at pJcnlcaJ Tht two dertfllU a:•ve the CODIW 11' cblo( IOW'CO ol ,._. tabl)fty • .But 70U CO<lkl find '"""-~ .. In 1 wllocroek-by Grooclli>. ~. 80!11 te11ms played well enoua:h to loM, but only Of'le or them made it. TM game .almost went Into 1 "tudden death" statu1 to deotde thli Gllkome. If It hod, the g......t leellna 'In my oeJ&hborhood 11 thlt wt woufd b1v1 bid 1 d~titlMt byt>eltWtdnudoy. Very early ln the game, what looked lo be a fist fight broke out on the pl aying ~fltld. Suddenly there wa s 8 cutaway fO iioriiethlng el!e, and details of the fr&cas were lllctfull} omitted from being · presented to the viewing public of an estimated 64 million persons, who undoubtedly were re.It to be un- prepared for such nasty matters. Things got funni.er erter that. A_chaally. Sunday's game really helped put , pi'o.,. football -and sports -back into thelr proper perspective. The fact is that Baltimore and Dallas ere two genu inely excellent teams, and 'they just happened to have a very tany day. Television, however, has often seemed to make football such a source of pbony reverence that we TllfiY frequenUy forget that it Is, after aU, merely# a source of entertainment and..pleasure. 'Anet the enterta.lnment in &mday~=iecb' ot errors waa truly w~ · ''1n for, In oddlUon to defiliillf ~ -tlll side of sports. ..:: · It was aad, or count, \o ... Balt.lmore·s Incomparable 4~. Vfthp forced out of tbt R&me -by 11 .~,. And It WllS equally Sid b:I_.,. tee :·the splendid Dallas coach, Tom ·Landry, dtnled o~ ag1lo the cbtmp,Jonshlp after wintoa ..rci .... AnJld an tlto anlntended humor. or the game Sunday, .cine could • ffot i htlp fMllng 1ympathetic to these forlorn r11ures. ., MUST MAK~R1>oif FOR tTEM$ COMING UP FOR SALE . THROUGH OUR LOAN DEl"T. LADllS 11 K' GOLD BRACELET WATCH POLAROID CAMERA ........ $8500 $3496 $199 MOD!L 3"40 8 TRACK TAPES SPANISH STYLI GUITARS All Wood Rog. 19.95 ... $1296 GOLF CLUBS .:'~~ . . . . . . . . $1~ MASON 7 x 35 • , $'196 ·atNO(ULARS. ~1~h· ......... . l'tllUlt lhop to ~ve-~lnl tully auarantttd. P•opl• in the bow 11.-e m:one y every time they buy -[f J1 net 11'1. ~o buy fo r C•1h, but i you h•YI c11h, l•nkArnerlcer , or Ma1f•I' Ch•r9• you c•n ,.,,, trt· 1r1endou1 amo\lnh •nt ••t~hing .Vtry d•y. AM·FM-MPX With Spuker1 and Full Sla:e BSR Ch•n .. r ........ , ....... , . USED WATCHES Gu.,:~:.oc1 CULTURED PEARL NECKLACES GOLD JEWELRY SOLD BY WEIGHT 0, GOLD WE ALSO IUY and LOAN MONE'( ON ANT .ITEt,t YOU MAY HAYE,' e Sii -US POR YOUR SMALL MONEY NEEDS Riititi's ''coSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN · 1138 NEWPORT ILYD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MBA ---I ••M••r • I I I I, San Clemente Capis,trano VOL. M, NO .• 15, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES EDI T ION I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' . -N. Y. Stoeks I MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1971 TEN CENTS Those Aren't Dinosaur Bone·s, Just Old Rocks By JORN VAL TERZA Of "'9 0&111 Plllt $fl ff A pair of experts confirmed thi! morn- ing that the two objects found last Friday in an earthen bank behind ~n Clemente were not dinosaur remain§. at all. They were sandstone rocks: shaped millenia ago by wave actioo into fonns which could easily ronfuse the untrained eye. Tra veling to the steep terrain in hills c Capo Hearing behind the populated areas of San Clemente, the two experts determined the e1act nature of the pair of white formations iD a freshly cut bank with tlie .simple whack of a geologist's ham- mer. The two men who stepped forth to view P:\f: find by utilily crews were Roger Desautels, pr es Ide u t of Archeological Research, Inc , of Costa Mesa and David E. Fortsch, asststant curator of vMtebrate paleontology for the Lo8 ~eles County Museum ol Natural History. The two men were among several callers at San Clemente Police head· quarters aver the Wef;k~nd as Assistant Pollc.-e Chief Stan Matchett began seeking experb after the workmen unearthed the pair of two-foot-wide formatiOfl! m the steep bank last Friday afternoon. Fortsch , whose crede ntials also include expertise in geology, said the "bones'' were coutal sandstone worn inLo in... '"iguing shape3 by wave action.before being deposited into what evllJ1tually became a hillside. "It's easy to see why the man was curious about this," Desautels said . "To the unlrained eye they really look like large bones," he added. Both men agreed that the entire area overn • at1n behind San Clemente held possibilities of finding the rtal thing. .. It's also encouraging to find workmen finding so mething like this and calling authorities, So many crews just plow right ove'r what they find and don't call anybody," he said. The area where the stone formations v.·cre discovered is the site of ' large transmission line project. emo The San Diego Gas and Electric Com- pany workmen had cut an acces1 read to the work site when they found the formations. Both of the experts agreed that the trip to the South Coast caused no real- inconvenience. "You never know when something like this can turn into a real liod,.. one said. Viet War Teacher Firing Set for Tonight l\.ey Issue For Senator WASHINGTON CAP) -DemocraUe Sen. George S. McGovern. sen of • prairie preacher, made his early·bird presidential bid official today , promising to appeal to America's "better angell." Formal action to dismiss tenure tea cher John V. Robbins will be brought before tr ustees of the board of Ca pislra no Down the Mission Trail Saddleback Sets Objectives Meet EL TORO -The objectives commWlity leaders have for the Saddleback VaJley will be aired on Wednesday at the meeting or the Saddlebaclt Valley Coordinating Council. The group, made up of c\u~ presidents and othe r group leaders will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Royal Savings and Loan ln El Toro. Mike Shearer, president of the Mission Viejo Homeowners' Association. will present a report on the status of airport studies in Orange County. e Defei11e Classes LAKE FOREST -Classes in sel f defense and dog obedience are being organized at the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. A demonstratio n will take place in the art of self defense tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the club. Classes will be offered for men, women and teenagers. The dog obedience class will be for beginning dogs and will be held one eve ning per week. Large dogs are prefer- red Sign up in the club office. B~th classes are open to all resident.I of Lake Forest. e Ne"' S~hool Site EAST IRVINE -Trustees or the San Joaquin Elementary School District have a verbal option on a new school site by the generosity of home builder Ray Presley, With stale funds unavailable at the rresent time for advance school site purchase. trustees thought they might lose option on the site located just off Vale Ave. south of Culver Road and west of Walnut Avenue in Irvine. But Pres ley, who ~wns the property, has told the board lie'll keep the site available for the district until fund! 1re available, paying taxes on it hlmf'lf '1 the meantime. Lapidary Group Slates ·Meeting A narrated sJJde pruentalion on a I Ip to lodll will be p,...nwd for nernbers of the Tri Cities Lapklary Society Wednesday in Its ftrst mMting cf the year In San Clemente High School'• UtUe Theater. . Randy and Jeen Howorth will make the travel presentatioo. I>Ucussion of two field trl?I hekl ln recent weeks alir.o will be schedulf!I(( at tll< 1 p.m. met1l111. The generaJ public ls welcome. Unified School Board at tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting at Serra School. The board will be asked to adopt a resolution which will formalize their intent lfl dismiss the music teacher. The resolution will also include a state. ment of ebqes a&~ him. Rclbbfns, ' Sant efe'mente relldent Is currently teaching at Marc6"'1'Forrter J~ 1!11!!' ~·Be bu heel' ~ miuk ~ In lfJ district for """* JS years. "The kind or campaign I intend to run will rest on candor and reason," said the SQutb Dako,ta senator, a strong Jiberal and 14r'1 criUC Cf Ille Vietnam war. '1'Mlat kind or campaj&n takes time. And that ill wily I 8"! makJna ,thla _ .ic: ';' 11#1•'Jliti•'tftll-JtM'i' iiiiolC 7 t-. 4111!." ': ... ..,.,~, In a statement iswed in June after the board voted him incompetent Robbins indicated he would not resign from his poaition. "Jf they think I am Incompetent, they'll have lfl prove it," he said. He also Indicated at that time that he would be seeking former students to testify In his behalf. If diamiaed the ~acher will have 30 days in which to demand a hearing. the school district will have 30 days in which tn respond and the case could finally go to Superior Court for a decision. When the board voted Robbins in· competent he was gi•en 90 days from the beginning of this school year to make corrections. "The matter is now up f or rediscussion," said Dr. John Crain, assis· tant superintendent of instruction. "This is a delicate situalion but you might infer tha t the corrections have not been made." Clemente Store Robbed of $63 A bandit armed with a .4.5-caliber automatic pistol robbed a San Clemente convenience market af '63 in cash Satur· day. The report of the holdup occurring near midnight at the 7-11 store at Palizada and El Camino Real c~ vi.a a taD driver who radk>ed the t!lll to bis dlspt1tcher, She called police, of· ficers said. The thief walked inlfl the ltore at 12:50 a.m., produced the weapan, uked for all the cuh, then fled. Clert James F. Matheny told lnvestigLtors he could not tell ·u the man· Oed in a car, 'Ibe market lies near the S.. Diego~ Fr<oway. Need A House? Daymond Allen, 10. and Vickie 1'Tobish, 11, seem to be scampering away from doo!ned house in San Juan Ca pistrano. Despite its delicious air of anti· quity from turn of the century construction, the house must come down to make room for neighbor· hood park. It includes a wine cellar, huge attic and fireplace an d is rumored to be the home or a bob- cat that has devoured neighborhood domestic pets. The city t\'ants it removed. Any takers? Grant's Shopping Center To Boost Clemente Income The new Grant's Plaza shopping center -the first major mercanWe cent.er In San Clemente -will have a sign.Weant efJect on city lncome by nut filcal year, C1ty Manager Ken Carr sakf today. The center, which ill expected to be open for bwineu on a atte aJmg C.miM de Ettulla by June 1, wllt yield thousands of dollars each year In aaJes tax n!venue, Carr 11id. "And that's a jul!:J ,i-ol - for a city," be said. ~ Grant'& C.01« projoded ylild to the city coflen and 111!\f:r ...,. ol income are being 4llc1 1 • m· clJ blil.I In f<l<ecasta for thla /lll<llW't, butWtl season, and the new Olnter wUI • bf one of the few bright spol5 ln an otherwise gloomy picture. Among expected tough Issues on the (Set Plctwt1, Pa1e JJ budget will be more requeats for salary raises from city employes, • better pension system for public safety person· nel and inl7eased coets for materials and •rv:lees dUe tn the 10 to 12 percent bd!iuon r1ae each )'W'. Cirr aid that lnUtutlon ieods him to beUO.e that lul year'• wboppina In- "-In u8etted valuation aloa& the ll4iUth c.est by Counly Aloetaor Andrew Himiblw wOO!d not be IO severe tills "'"· Capo Families Seeking Way To Relocate The dozen San Juan Capistrano families· faced wilb eviction from their homes will bring their plight to the City Council during a special hearing tonight at 7 p.m. In the COWlCil cbambtn. 'Mle council has agreed to hear an appeal by the property owner Mn. Lillian Zeng lein of Pasadena, who ll asking the city for tJme to allow the fanlilies to be .relocated, The 22· ahabby dwellings, formerly a labOr camp, were cortiemned by the Orange Cowity Department i>f Butldln& and Safety -acUng for the city - because the structures were Wllafe and unsanitary. Precarious Position· Mrs. Zenglein. 1n her .Jetter requesUna: the appeal, asked the City co'uncn to help In finclln& homu for the famillff ~ they uphold the t'IC!lon. ' 'Brink' Home on the Block The ,._,.i .. San Clement< ;..ldence perched it the end of a choim for ain)c!ol a ..ar will ~-on the -Llock.•Jali: :rr ·anc1 Its -II -'! the Eupno .s.tt JamJly, ha..-lllOfed , IO· ..... ---quorlm,_ . Glvto a ,.-of eorts thn>Ulil· the ChrlltrilU lioUClay, the civil enflneer's lamil1 flaall1 lllOftCI out of their .home which ooc:e ... 1 drtain. The olPlmare bepn Wt February. Aller fllhUnc !or a year to.~ ~ from the city and -apndeo, the family decided to stOp maldn1( the ir payn1tnbr •Oil lbelr fint home, looe .. estimated ft0 ,000 and move out. -·· ., Masonic J;.odge .. Names New.·Chief f ., .. • • ... ' Howri' Mont w11 otftdaby· .... .. u wonblpf¥1, -.Qf &o_.-.·1. Muonlc, lAdae ln ;cm•i)IXUel· 1111 ~ ... ~ wee~. It waa ihe '3rd 8QDllf1 ,'oPNt.lloa for the grOup. •• · Other ofllc:en "'°"' In In, FrldaJ, .__ Ing rites' were John Fierst, INlkw :.earden; T. Joe Lundy, Junior nrdln~ Dlvld H. ·Blakelock, treasurer:. 6trb lllvely, sccrtLlry; Ronald ~ chaplain: .Art Martin. leftlor 41pooo: HentJ Shinkle, Junior de:acoa;. .John Cre«i, aen\or 1t.eward; WamertCUrritr, jUlllor steward: Harris 'Jtlhg, 'Ol'l•Mrl, and Gordon Eckley, organllt. J McGovern, the nr.t oflidal entrant In 'the tm prestdentJaJ race. made b1s announcement in letters tn hundreds of newspaper editors and 275,000 potentlaJ campaign contributors. He also acheduled a television addresa to his home state of South Dakota fer later today. He sought the Democratic nomination In 1968 as a stand-in for assas:!inated Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, but drew only a handful of votes on tbe ballot that · overwhelmingly nominated ·Hubert H. Humphrey. Since then McGovern bas made no 1ecret of his campaign and bu lpOken on · bundredll af college catnpUlel, and now cla1ms 125 student Croups Jnd 30 facu.lty groups workinf far hil nomina- tion. He also kept in the national eye lart year as a sponsor Of the un&UCCessful Harfield·McG<>vern amendment to force U.S. withdrawal from Southeast Asia. Earlier this month be stepped down as chairman of a party reform oommi&- sion to avoid any conflict of interest with his presidential campaign. His announcement timing ls set!rl ln part as an attempt to bolster showings in early presidential polls that put him far behind such unartnounced candidates as Sen. Edmund S. Musk.le of M&lne, the Democratic rrontrunrier. In his statement McGovem denciunced war, pollution, racism, crime:, unemploy· ment, lnfiaUon, inadequate school aid and disillusionment of youth. "I believe the people of thb country, are Ured or the aid rhet<ric," he said. "Rather, they seek 1 Way out of the wildernaa. But U we who seek their lnlll, tnist them; H '"'. try to eTOb I.be "better anpla of our mture,' the people will find liloir own way." . ...... . w..-tW i.e, .. yoar ~ at home Tuetday. '""' ..._ ..... will be headJn& for the middle -Ua aloo& the cout .... ap ""' the IO mark Inland. J-ii Januiry1 ' IN~IDB ~DAY t;ow <Mt th< Br4U.a ,.. .. 1tJ)Ot'Ctld who 10iU bt tM *'' tuptr1tor or ••Pt~ •{ihc IDOrlll'ot·pop· .. w1 "'Jii< "'°" tofi.d 11'!< .. •t.01'(~~1- '/>oge If '""""·, u:• ""~·· gu<u •• =-': :.-::, "' ,,l ~~.. 11 " --M --M -.:;zo • a--,.....,... ,..,, ::-=,. :~ • • Steel Boosts Reduced Bethlehem Makes Cuts Aft.er Criticism NEW YOllK JAP) -Bethlehem s ... 1 Coip. Mondly !!ila&hed lb announctd 2.S percent prlc.e increase on some major steel products to 6.8 percent alter being criticized by President Nixon . Beth1ehem's rollback put its boost on prices. of steel used in shipbuilding and construction on a par with the more moderate raise announced Satw-day by U.S. Steel Corp. Bethlehem, second in slJe to U.S. Steel in steel production, said its action was in order to be competitive wi th other producers. The 12.5 porctnl -!:ad ' --by' llethlehem' !Mt lfOnAr, n "" Ille bllifal' rllle tn ~ 'iecde and covered ibout 15 peicerit of total industry shipments. Nixon called the increase "enormous" and directed his Cabinet Committee on Economic Policy to look Into steel prlc-' lng, including the possibility of opening I.be doors to more steel imports. Late last week Bethlehem rushed out a ~~l'Y. report sbowtn1 that It. earillg• liad fallen ·40 pertelll Ill I 970 from the-1959 level. A t.w oI the smaller steel producing Record Temperatiires - Due to Cool Off; Tuesday Clea(; 'calm. eailinf, slushy skitng, hot sunbathing and record .setting hich temperatures lhal cOntmueci. along the Orange Coast today will yield to a cooler Tuesday. The ·Nalional Weal.her Service upect.s nigbt ;iftd;early. morning "patchy foa . to dimin&b :ibe unusua1 warmth lb.it bu visited-sOutneqi California since Saf.Ur. ay ... ·.. . After:a wlndless night. Orange County Harbor· Department expected variable winds of less than 15 knots lo continue through Tuesday along the Orange Q:iast. Be~goers will continue to find IUMY skies and a high of about 65 Tuesday, but water temperatures that should chill the ardor of all but the most daring .llwimmer: a cooling 55. While' the weekend 's winter. heat. ·wave broughl iho,IJlgbeat Jag~llD' temperatllre ever recorded at -Les ·Angeles · ctvtc Genter. 90 degrees, ft also melted snow at area skJ resorts. 'Ibree foot aC· cumulations of white stuff, turned nto less than one foot of soggy slush as 60 degree breeies·fanned the slopes. The mild Santa Ana wind condition, made possible by two strong low pressure systems located north and south of us, barred cool ocean breeiet 'from inland areas, bringing Inland warmth to the coast. The warmth also confused the biberna· lion timetable of rattlesnakes. Four persons were bitten over the weekend as the drowsy, deadly snakes wriggled out into the SllllShine. · Al li~. visibility ranaed from 60 to 90 miles mak.ina possible crystal clear views of the inountains rimming the Southland. The warm spell ended a two--week cold snap·brought by the flow of northern cold air which was cul off by the low pressure system which raged over Washington and Oregon Friday and Saturday. The Orange Coast can expect a high cf about 6S degree1 anti a low ol SS degrees Tuesday ni&bl Inland highs will be about 86. The low prU!llrfl system to the north brou&bt wind, rain and flooding in lower elevations of Northern calllornia over the weekend, .ilthougt: rivers were reported down rrom crest stage today. In the Sierra Nevada, the State Division of Highways reported both Echo Summit and DoODer pass open to normal traffic with some icy .spots. Tankers Collide in SF, SAN,flW'ClS,00 (1'fl).-Two llflo- oil tanke"rs Collided in fog and darknesa under Ule Golden Gate Bridge today~ r;pilling thousands of gallorui of bunker fuel into San Francisco Bay. There were no injuries. The Oregon .standard, outbound for British Columbia with 4.6 million gallons of bunker fuel. was rammed on the Trio to Discuss Health Services Three persons from the Orange County Health Department will discuss avaJlable health services in a panel discuuion 7:45 p.m. Thursday in the Lillie Theater of San Clemente High School. South coast rnidents are invited to 11ltend the session which i nc I u des discussian ot problems of child protection and adoption, teenal! problems. famil y health and plannini and urvicu for th e elderly. Mrs. Barbara Locke, representing child weUare; Juanita Chayg;, community service aide, and Maraaret Illingworth, chief medical-social \tDfk C0"5u1tant comprise the panel for,~tbe American Association of lJrilVUil1$' W o 'ale a · sponsored prograrit,... • ' • port side by lt!'•·lnomning lrizter" ship, the ~ ·standar'\1; and at' 1Wt two of Its tanks ruptured. A Coast Guard officers aboard the cutter Red Birch radioed that about half a n'lillion gallons of bunker f u e I had leaked out of the Oregon Standard's No. 2 tank. At Sausalito, a picturesque village and tourist re.sort across the bay from San Francisco, some oil was observed coatlng the water but It bad not reached the beaches. The two SU.foot sister ahlps o~ by Standard Oil Of California, hung together after the 1:4.5 a.m. PST collision, drifted east on the bay and lied up a half·mile west of Angel Island. across frum San Francisco's Fisher ma n ' s Wharf. The Red Birch commander said the Oregon Standard's no. 2 tank, \\.'hich held J0,000 42-gallon barrels, was leaking "quite rapidly," and estimated about 5,000 barrels had escaped. He said tank no. 3 was also leaking and no. 4 ml&ht have been ruptured slightly. No leakage was reported or 'tli• ArlzoJll'Sl>O'Wd. , · ~·;"'"""'~ard was bit jut~ fO~-.&·· a.u ... e, he · Wd. at an .. ii 'iF1ar.1 .. ~:" · · ans . . . - joined Jut _.. I a ....... .,~ ........ •' . ~·1 orlchW booft,t:were ln the area of $16 and $17 a ton for sheet pillng, H·piling, wide·rlange struc• turals, standard structurals and carbon plales. The revised increases ranged from $9 to $12 a ton, much the same as the increases made by U.S. Steel. On Sunday Kaiser Steel Corp., the nation's 10th largest, said ll would go aloni with the 6.8 percent boost. The finif said riling costs and low unsatisfac. to.rj earnings caused the hike. CrtUh Kills Area Pilot, . ' Four Others Hopes ended today for surviva1 or a Santa Ana student pilot and hia four pasaengers, missing since· Sunday noon on a hilly, rogbound approach to a Sa,aamento Valley airport. ~rchers round their bodies in the chmed wreckage of the plane rented from. Mission Beachcralt at O r a n g e County Airport, shortly after dawn today. The pilot was identified as Ldward Dominguez, 28, while identities or three other victlms was withheld. Glenn County Sheriff's deputies - whose boss broke his leg Sunday in • fall during the search -r;aid they were light instructor Gera1d Bennett, a woman and two children. All are from Southern California, but it was not explained if they were Orange County residents. Sheriff Alvah Leverett's men found the wreckage on a ridge abou t a mile south of the little town of Sites, near Maxwell, the city to which Dominguez was flying . His parents live there, deputies said. Dominguez had taken off from Orange County Airport at 8:30 a.m., without filing a night plan. He ia known to have contacted the Air Route Traffic Control Center in Oakland to request permission to fJy under a. dense overcast. Officials at the same center gave him authorization at 12:22 p.m. to begin the jJl.fated approach to the WilloWs-Olenn County Airport. Deputie:S said the lingering overcast had hampered their efforts in the fog· shrouded area. They were notified after residents heard a plane passing overhead, followed by silen ce and then what sounded like an exploaion or the Impact of an aircraft crashing into the ground. Investigators for the Federal Aviation Agency said Dominguez's rented plane was last observed by radar when tt passed a marker point 10 miles south of the airport. Paper,Alumin1rm Drive Planned Members or lhe Crown Valley Parent Teacher Organization have launched a paper and aluminum drive. The first will take place Wednesday. ,Jan . 20 and future drives are planned for the third Wednesday of each month. Paper in 12 inch bundles, aluminum foil and tv dinner trays may be con· tributed by bringing · it to the Crown Valley Elementiry School ... t ~Crown ValleY Partway, LagtU'la Niguel; DAILY PILOT N..,.,, I••• H ........ 1M4 Bowl' •utooper a..-... '1 '!.-NI• ,.., C.t• Mn• :t. C'1•111s OltAHOll: CO.uT l'UILTPOMO CDM,..,.., Sunday's S.~w Motio1i Laugli-ln koborl'N, WoM Praldtnt ..,.,. l"ml~ J1ck R. Cijrloy I/kt Prei~a1~1 uA 0-.1 MlnltW' Tho11111 Ko..,.11 .... , Tho,,,11 A. M11r,lll110 M11W1gll!I •dltor l<c~11i P. Ktl SOVlh Ortl!M C:-ly ldtMr ....... By RICK DU BROW " · • HOLLYWOOD. (Ul'l) -';'.fio\>~ll'Y;::lo previous l"tJ)OtU, 'the madcJip' en· tertainmenl special known u ... Tbe Super Comedy Bowl" wN.DOt riilrtly on CBS.- TV tut !eek:··lt turned up a1aln pn NBCJl'v~ay, and this time the chlef <perftJrniers were the Baltimore C:Olts and Dallas Cowboys, previously not known for-twDlorous specialties . ., .. • Thir··c~ It tlla Super .a...l.;1nd It moi''h'fii been 'i bowl. lonr.'bul Ii' ii.lb'\ t;Uper. ™re W'il'e "9o m8ny fumbles., lnterceptlona, dtflecUona and other fouluPs that It looked as if !he · game · had be(n prqduced by '.'Jtowan _ .. 1111 MlrtiU lauid>io." ~Jtilii1 got -· .rieillol' IDll. m-: you· 11111' n't!>'lod OAIL;. ,!LOT, """' ·~ .. _..... ""° to see Arte Johnson come out of a :.~::.r~ "::t:: l:"r ..:..--• .=; '·pneu,;· with a 'fumbled ban met strtak ,_ ""' ---1 for Ille -1oal line. wltll Goldie Hawn -· ·-· .... ..:..:: ' . '~ 1"* :.,sllil· l!O\! detajt Jn Sport. ~ ~ tt11 ... , ...-..~.tp,., a. 1. • • • • ,...,..,,-.-. .... Wtlt ~ ..., -· -· I ,,,_, bave boa "'°"' polished fOQ\lJlll .::i::1aui1~ 'm•) NM111 pmes· It picnics. Tht two ddensea cave a..JfW Uctitllltl NJ.1111 the CODltst ltl chiel SOl.lrct of ~· ·-:C•=•• .... Dtpaot•••t11 ·tab!Uty. lut~ C0(1ld find mor..cai&e -·in a -·· -"0-~'· Grou<loi'<Mallt B<itl> :. !'"T1l1p•s•s 49J.44Jt ·aca:· ,,., ~'· ,..,._ o,......, c.t ,,.._,. tt11.m1 played well enouih Co lo~, but ':..,· H• ""C:.':"'..-,!i:"'..:=; only Orie of them made ·tt . The ga'm e :0, ~ :t.Kd •1~ ~.., ..,.. almost went Into a "1uddtn death" status rni..• .t ~""' .,._, .... , to ;'det-fie. wtcome. tr It had, the ~c:" M9~=;.~·:~"'f:.:': · · generil ·~ling in my neighborhood Is :irn~ u;:,:!~A~~~· ,. thar ·•:lWtlkf have had a decision .,., by next Wednesday. Very early ln the game. wb.at looked to be a fist fight broke out on the playing field. Suddenly there was a cutaway to tomething else, and details of the fracas were tactfull} omitted from ttlng presented to the viewing publlc of an estimated 64 million persons, who undoubtedly were felt to be un· prepared for such nasty matters. Things got funnier afler that At;u.ally. Sunday's game really helped put 'P..t'l :football -and sports -back into their proper perspective. The fact Is that Balti more and Dallas are two genuinely exei!llent teams. and they just happened lo have a very zany day. Television. however, has oft.en setmtd to make football such a source of phony revertnce that we may frequently forget that It is, after al~ merely a source of entertainment aod pleasurt. And. tbe entertainment in 5uud11's comedy ot errors was truly 'lfortb ·umtng 'ln tor, In addition to defl!Utll tht rev&tntlal 11ld~ of 11porlS . It was sad, of ~. to ate BeJl\more's ineo9parable~ohnny Unltu forced out of the ~ame by mt.Jnjury. And \l was equally sad fll see the i;plt ndid Dallas coach. Tom Landry, denled.onc;.e again lhe championship after comtng so close. Amld atl the unintended humor Ot-1~ game· Sunday, one could not · ftetp 1eelina 11ympathtllc lo these forlorn figures. ' • • ~·· "' .... , , I \. i r. • ' -' ,, .. UPI TtltPft•ltl THIS IS WORLD'S LARGEST TUNA BOAT, APOLLO, SEIZEO DURING WEEKEND Tiny Ecu1dor Flaxes Its Muscle' in Offshore Fishing Dispute With U.S. -'-~~~~~~~~~- Ecuador Captures Four More U.S. Tuna Boats SAN DIEGO (UPl) -Four American tunaboats were seized today by Ecuador, bringing to eight the number seil.ed within the past week, the American Tunaboat Association said. The vessels were picked up by a (onner United States destroyer and 1everal palrol boats while former United States warplanes flew overhead. Ed Silva, vice president of the association, said. Seized today were the San Dieg<rbased Antonina C and Ocean Queen and lhe Puerto Ricc>based Cape Cod and Captain Vincent Gann. None was fired on. ac· cording lo Silva . The world 's largest tunaboat, the Apollo, was seized Sunday and was ex· peeled to be released after paying a fine estimated In exei!ss of $100,000. The Anna Marie and Bold Venture were seized Friday and released Sunday after p~ing fines of m,ooo and $49,000 respec- tively. SUva said. Th~ San Dieg<rbased Leilngton Was seized Ia~ Tuesday and released Saturday alter paying '34, 160 in fines. Silva said the State Department has Bdvised the owners lo pay the fines. They are relmbur!ed by the federal government. Silva sa id he called \Vashington D.C. for aid but was told everyone was in conference. "\Ve want some protection down there berore they shoot our men and damage our boats," Silva said. Seizure of the eight marked the strongest concentration in the II-yea r history of tunahoat seizures. About 100 such vessels had been seized between 1960 and the first of this year by Ecuador, Chile and Peru. Those countries claim a 200-mile ter· r l!orial limit while lhe Uni ted S t a t es claims a 12-mile limit. Silva estirnaled the eight \l'ill involve fines totaling $550,000. "They see a million dollars fl oa ting in the bay and they go pick it up ,'' Silva said. The 1,8()()..ton Apollo and the Hornet, an 800-ton vessel, both based in Puerto Rico, were strafed Saturday by what the captains believed were Ecuadorian warplanes. The Hornet was not involved when the Apollo was seized Sunday. A part owner of tbe Apollo, Ed Madruga or San Diego. sail!' he was in constant contact with Apollo skipper Manuel Cintas during the boarding in· cidenl. San Clemente Man of Yero· Also Beco1nes New Daddy To Doo Hansen, owner of San Clemente Sportlishing lnc., last week "'as a whop· r er. He became the daddy of a. baby girl early in the wee k. Thef1 On Saturday he became the city's man of the year for 1970. Hanstil, who admitted the chamber of commerce accolade was a "Iota! surprise", said he and his wife. Linda . had been campaigning hard for som~onc el se lo win the coveted commun ity service litle. "It really came as a surprise." the husky businessman admitted. Among the tr ibutes pald Hansen was his leadership for the past .two years of the bu sy Fiesta La Chtistlanlta, in· eluding one of the state's largest parades. In all, Hansen has served on the active committee for the past five years. Hansen bought the sportfishing rnncern six hears ago after having sltippered his own boat from the pier~ offices since 1946. In his chan1ber of commerce title, he succeeds Police Chi~f Clifford Murray in the Man of the Year annals. The a .... ·ard was made Saturday evening a1 the chan1ber of commerce annual installation banquet. But the rea l award had already com e lo the }lansen famil y -tiny Donna Hansen. "It \\.'as a hec k or a week ," Dad observed. Investigators Identify Bod y In Modjesl\.a Orange County Sheriff in vestigators have identified the nude, badly beaten body of a \\'Om.'.ln found during the \\'eekend in ?-.1odjeska Canyo n as that or Zelma Rachel \Vitgenstein, 46, of Norwalk . Los Angeles County !fl\\"men are today working with loca l offices in a bid tn esl<lblish the reason for !he \\'Oman's presence in Orange Coun1y and lo rrconst ruct. if possib le. the events th ar led to her slaying . Jnve:;tigators are wor king 11n the thc11ry that the de ad woman n1ay have been the victim of a sexual att11ck bu! they a re awaiting the outcome of a coroner's examination for confirmation or denial of that supposition. ?-.1rs. \\'itgcnstcin's body. stripprd of the red stretch pants, white cro£'hclcd sweat<:r aod pink coat v.•hich were stat· tered nearb}r, \l'aS found hy three hikers Saturday In a brush-choked ravine. It \1•as partially coocepled by, dense. shrub· bery. · An autopsy C:1rried ou t l:itrr that rlav clisclosed the cause of death to he fl broken ne ck, possihly sufferer! ;is a result of heavv blows to the head and f<ice. Jnvesiigators s;:iid r-.1rs. \\'ih~ens!rin was a widow 11ho Jived alone in a Nor11alk tr;ii lcr park. Relativt'!s and fri ends ore being qu estioned in a bid for a le:id to the killing. Tl1ieves Enter Clemente Home Thieves pried open the 1\·indnw of a San Clemente apartment 11 htlc ifi:; nc. cupants \\·ere attending e1 C'n1n,e: church !<erv1ces Sunday, ~tc.ihng ~~5(1 11nrth or coins. pistols and hnu~thl'11d 11rm!" f}r ly 0 . Van EnJ:;el enhArrn nf 1411~ lallr l\1 1r;idor. told police he :ind his 11·1fr disco\'ercd thr Ins~ ri ftrr returning fr om the rites at 10 p.m. Officers said !hieves r11n~ackcr! 1he t>ntire residence. a11d stoic a .375-c;i!ihrr magnum revolver, a .22-cnliber pistol, dishes, rare coins an d other it.e ms. • MUST MAKE ROOM FOR ITEMS COMING UP FOR SALE THROUGH OUR LOAN DEPT. LADIES 11 K GOLD $8500 BRACELET WATCH ........ ~~~!>ID CAMERA $349& 8 TRACK TAPES $199 ........... ... SPANISH STYLE GUITARS All Wood ROii. 19.9S $1296 $100 or Irons . . . . . . • • ••· GOLF CLUBS Woods $r5 MASON 7x35 BINOCOl:ARS Seo tho World .......... M1.11t Jhop to btllne-Everythlna tully guarantH'd. Peopla in th• know 11.va 11'\0nty t v•ry +irnt th•y buy -It it no~ "'Y fO l:iuy for c.:11h, btrt if you hive ct1h, l•n~Amtri~srfl , or Mttttr Chtr9• you ct n 1•v1 tr•· mtndou1 ~ounh ,one sv1 ryth in9 ev•ry dey. AM-FM-MPX USED WATCHES G ... :~: .. d CULTURED PEARL NECKLACES GOLD JEWELRY SOLD BY WEIGHT OF GOLD WE ALSO BUY and LOAN MONEY ON ANY ITEM YO.U MAY HAVE. e SIE US FOR YOUR SMALL MONEY NIEDS Rt1titi's COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN 1138 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA lolwooo H-& lrooilw.y Sears· DECK H.tiNPS -Or wouldit be legs as displayed by lhese three ·pretty teenagefs who call attention to the 15th annual .Southern California Boat Show which opens at th~'Pan Pacific Auditorium Jan. 22. The three attention callers from left are Cheryl Smith Kathy Nodler and Janice Keefe. ' Boats Arrive LA Show to Open Friday The vanguard of more than 500 boats that will be on display at the 15th annual Southern California Boat Show Jan. 22-31· has begun arriving at the Pan PaCific.A.uditorium. The SCMA boat show is the nation's second largest all marine extravaganza, ranking only behind the New York Boat Show. There will be more than 90 manufacturers displaying their 1971 lines. Tb e y represent a who's who of the pleasure txiating industry. Also in the show will be 140 booth exhibits representing just about every imaginable type of accessory for a boal All the major motor manufacturers will have ex- hibits ranging from tiny fishing motors to 1 3 5 . horsepower racing jobs. The Pan Pacific will be decorated with huge amounts of bunting to reflect the boating atmosphere. Breezes Make Annual Winter Meet Fluky Vagrant breezes that ranged from eight knots on Saturday to eerG on ,Sunday . resulted in some dull, fluky -competiUoD for the 19' boats in 18 classes which turned out for Balboa Yacht Club's annual Winter Regatta. The absent wind s on Sunday prompted the race committee to call the race for the Ocean Racing Class, resulting in a protest against the committee. Results of the single race sail· ed in Olt were held up pending th.e pro~st hearing. Trophy winners 1n other classes: PHRF (27) -(I) Nike 11, John Kinkel, BCYC; ( 2 ) Bonita, Goldie Joseph, LIYC; (3) Lark, Pa1ll Holmes. BYC ; (4) Sail de Vel, 0 . DuBose, VYC; (S) Big Maggie, J\1. Harvey, PMYC. MORF (5) -(1) Si Bon. Don Talmadge, BYC. RHODf:S.33 (II) -(I) MLstresS. Bill Taylor. BYC; (2) tie between Fireny, John Kewell , and Folly II, Blair Barnette, BYC. PC (6) -( 1) Bela:!larius, Larry Pinching. VYC. LUJ1ERS·l6 (9) -(I l Pre· Empt, Leroy Sutherland, NHYC; (2) Wlndsong, William Dan Cohan Holds Lead In ~r«;go1is ~ HOBART, Austrllla -Don CCban of the UDlted States retained his lead la tbe Pr- Phllip Olp race for the Dragoo ClM!. Sundlly despl1e a third place finish in t.be fifth heat of the international yachting oompeiftion. Fundeoberg, •NHYC ; ( 3 ) Adalante, Barry Fenn. VYC. SHJELl>So(5) -(!) .. Eileen, Mark Evans. VYC. ENDEAVOR (6) -(I) Aphrodite, Bill La n g 1· ah r sssc. ' • ·P·CAT (!;) -(I) No. 229. Bob Baker, CBYC ; (2) Dead End Kid, Paul Allen, BCYC; (3) Hustler II, Ted Mosher KHYC. ' FINN (8) -Cl) No. 496, John Weiss, ABYC. ' CORONADQ.15 (II) -(I) Tortuga, Tardon, B. Martin, MBYC; (2) Dena, R. Dugas, PMYC; (3) Too, G. East PVSA. ' INTER!'AT10NAIA4 (7) - (1) Fox, Tim Murison, VYC. LllXJ.14A (23) .--(1) Magic, Dave Ullman, BYC; (2) Ditlo Bill r.1cCord. BYC; (3) LowteY Roman, Rolly L<ihman , BYC : (4) Old Pokey Too, Mar~y Lockriey LIYC: {S) One-For- The-Road, Jim Tyler, BYC. LIDQ.148 (17) -(I) Fang, Don Stoughton, BYC; (2 ) No. 3235. Dudley Johnson, BCYC : (3) Encore, Jack Scholz, BYC. KITE A (7) -(I) Duke. Jnhn Daigh, NHYC; (2) Fugitive, Terrianne Parker, NHYC. KITE B (7) -(t) Yellow Bomb. Cody Small, BCYC. FLYING JR. (8) -(I) Greased Lightning, Leslie Armstrong, VYC. SABOT A (13) -(1) Breeze, David Sigler, BYC; (2) No. 5540, 'l'tm O'Reilly, NllYC; (3) ~1>ellbie Gilchrist, UYC. '.S.µJ<7.f C (9) -(I) Bill's JtU<n, ll ll'I Billsboroogh, BCYC. 'WemanDies .'Off Oxnard • j. • ,, -• Axel Holme "-Denmark guided the MahBrltt to Its oecond vlcto11 .,, the 63-year ol' O:it!AllD (AP) -A IO-yeal"' old s)tjpperi took,14vantage of . 4 --~ woman drowned , tricky wind condli;>ns lo beal ~~ l>lsblnd wu·..,,.ned Adlos of Australia bJ a ·:,"'iM"!L~ P~ecl clrown-seeonds. . ...,.j' I ""' ~ ~ Omatd 1bAcb Sun- Cohan, wbo woo ~ "~ ... ,~~if ~._.wm. foorth ,..,.;, f,u another JI• ..,~ ~ ~ IOld. seconds bock 11 his rally 111 , .:~~bol!J',of' llonnli.Elleto the late ...... foiled lo ,nio-:-brGoibl - oven:ome ~blf leada w ,.Jli,a ~=:enlura ~ by Nal-M""11.Adioo. • . '~ · , , - -Bol!lll'•:Adloo 11 ,... .....-,1111 craft'•· alnkq _ ................... ,rr...rqio-. ' ·' c.,,.ic. with MtQ. 8 r I !t !ii . '!111. )'IQ!h' Ald~b • I tlifi<I !Ilic!>. '!'her< ~ '11"> rnm out.Jo Ibo ,_, . ~lnlng. The ~ llf.locll -·""I' -.. .... .. ,.... beoi>Nlled """"· -~ ~ ~ .. !lidloll -,. ' I -' .... ,..... t pWltll.~• blr undlr. " wM~;,. ..... 1 ' ,,. ,_ ·Aid iii found bar " ' . ~·· ·U •b,q!lt"l"f~Jt Nbcn. • ~ ........ ~ ..... , "' .. ,, '!.~~!to~ the ,.ormp . ... 1. ·-·-.... ·~ ' ~-·Su!iifa7 . ' ' lllltv Nte ~'f . ..,.111lty jf,itW c:OMr.1 '" \ · · Jtl ' . • "•""~',_.. ~ It'• <the DiQLif"' ~' itea·"'fi .. -'fot \I! Pl~J., a.ester Nk:bola. r Compact Car Owne~s Fits Many: V o\kswa· cauiaros. 4-Ply Tubeless Blackwall gens, ·-•· ""w· Buick SpecllW'• iu ' Chevy 11 s, ~a;,~slins, Coroets, Corvairs, Falcons, Dodge Darts· SIZES: 6.50113 7 35xl4 6.95xl4 88 Plu• f .£.'f. A.nd Old Tire 5· 6()xl5 7.35xl5 . . •4 More Per Tu·e Wbitew~ '3 or l:O '•. ~ «~· IUn Car Owners • F)t8 1111..t.... • PJ ·' .,··e<wy: Ford~ }'Jnouths Ch .. ' Tubel .,4-f ly . ' ess Blackwall lets D d ' evro. ' o ges M curys Old ' er-Cutlas~ smobile SIZES: 8.25x14 7.7Sx J4. 1.75x15 Whitewalls •3 or '4 JU u1ore Per T' ire Car Owners Plus F.E.T AndOJdTi;e Large 4-Ply Tubeless Blackwall 88 . ChrYslers, Fits Many. Oldsroo· Mercurys, . acs .1 p 0 ntl ' b1 es, d Station Buicks an Wago1lll s.5Sx14. 8.ssus -" •3 or •4 More Per Tire Wbitew..,..s • A1k About Sean Convenient Credit Plan• -,.... q • ....... Ill.... a "°""' .. IWIMt ~ ..._,,__..., ..,..""a .. ,.., ti 4Mlt ,_. Wf -'" '"""" ..... 74l71 •M ..... N;.vQC A~nUJ. ~-.. ~tllt, • ~t -'4,_ ........ , • ... ... ,, _,..,. .. a.ult ""'9 IUOI • Mnl •1'MN:& l090M Witt ........ ...,.,, .. ,........,.. Mt-Ull, <-Ull .-. ... 1 .. . ....... __. ......... ..... ,..,.. llli -"' .... c.. """' ....... ) _.,,...... ............ WOML .. 1.ao)lil.,...., 11 ..... IPA ' . ' ~ , .. ,.... ............. , ... ... --· Ml•1111 ..... .... ,.,, . .......,. ,. ,_ .... ,, ...... ~W.f;"U •• ' , ... :• __ e:::. . . ' ! M....,., JMwiJ 18, 1971 SC DAILY PILOT J9 I I \ I I I J 8 DAIL'i PILOT SC Executive Meeting Scheduled Beacl1 Man Appointed Manager Kenneth R. 11anour of •lun- Lington &ach, has been ap- pointed general marketing manager of Cas ualty Jnsurance Go m pan y of California, accord i n g to Robert E . Bennett, executive \'1C'e president. llanour will be responsible rnr developing the agency field force, a ppoint ing new agents and introducing new product lines. Bennett said. Previously. Hanour was a regional agency manager for Glen FaJls Jnsurance Co. in Los Angeles and, before that, was a field supervisor in Buf- falo, N.Y. for Tra ·velers Insurance Co. A graduate of the University or Buffalo. Hanour has com- pleted advance studies in management and supervision. He is an Air Force veteran. married \Vith five children and lives in Hlllltington Beach. OCC Offers Lecture-lab You may have the best pro- ducl in the \vorld, bul it v.·on 't sell if it nol presented cor- rectly. "Display and visual pro- n1otlon'' 1s the title of a new course offered in the evening this spring al Orange Coast College to help you solve those problen1s, l l1e class 1rill mcrt i\1on- r!ay'5 from 6 p.tn lo 10 p.m in a lecture·lab formal. l t i.~ de s1j!ned for those v•orking 1n 1nark et111g, for the on-the.jnh technician or beginners It will rover total store p1i.nning , t>venls. budget planning and 01 her problen1.~-F'icld trip 11•ill rec e j v e professiona l crihC1sn1 of their v.·ork. Instructor v.·ilJ be Jam!:S R. Garber. field displa y and presentation supervisor of the J C. Penney Co. in Southern Cal Hornia. Registration is under The fee is $5 per cla ss. I .~~--...~ ~' way, 1,000'• OF OIL PAINTINGS WHOLESALI WAllHOUSI J Ol"IN TO THI PUILIC L ~ t•lt E~l~%:l.~A~ ANA ---... OlAt.••S WANTIO Mond.a1. Janu.v~ 18, 1971 • • Al'l1C PICKS NEW L.A. ZONE l'lfANAGER C. John Brutus has been appointed Los Angeles zone manager. American 11otors Sales Corporation, \Vi!Eam G. ~1organ. general s a I es manager, has announced. Brutus, formerly assistant Occid ental Aide Named Richard R. Shaughnessey has been appointed assistant manager of the Newporl Beach branch office or Oc- cidental Life of California . Shaughnessey has more than rour years· insurance and sales experience. most recently as a representative in Santa Ana for John llan- cock Life. He is a member or the Orange County Life underwriters Association. He and his wife. 'Pat. Uv!: at 12051 Winton St..., Ga rden Grove. Tb!:y hive l w o children. WE LEASE ALL MAKES & MDDElS EXAMPLE ' 1971 BUICK SKYLARK l DOOR HARDTOP Ai1 ,011d;1io11l119, A11toom .tic h•11•on;,,;,,,., powtt , .. ,,_ 1119, powtr tli•c brt~ft, WSW, rodio, ~••f•r, ••1110+• outild• ,..;.,Of ~Ill 111 f1cl1ry it•M1rcl •C!lli'1'1•"f, 14 MONTH OftEN END LEASE. $110 PER MONTH A QUALITY LEASE AT SEllSIBU PRICES • BAUER BUICK COSTA MESA Ill 234 E. 17~ ST., COSTA MESA J 541-n's • -- (1) Choose ~·ilh care a fami- ly doctor. preferably one on the medical staff of a good hospital. He will save you money just by keeping a permanent record or your medical history and thereby helping yoJ lO avoid dupli ca· lion of costly diagnostic tests. treatments and imrrunizations \\'hen something goes V.Tong. (21 Have a thorough physical exain at lea.~t once a year. no matter \\'hat your age, and by so doing. avoid the steep cost of rris1s care. Medical emergencies a re always far more expensive than lhe modest cost of preventive mea sures lo avoid such emergencies. (3) Discuss fee s when you first visit a doctor. especially a high-cost specialist. If yoo COlllllder a bill too high, go back and negotiate with the doctor. Chances are he'll N euro-Psychiatric Reports Earnings NEWPORT BEAClf, caJif. -(BW ) -Neuro-Psychiatric and Health Servi~s Inc. r!:ported a 2S percent increase in·earnings per share for lhe sb months ended Nov. 30 over the Ute period last year. ln his me1Jage to shtrtbolden, Neuro President DooaJd W. Wright said the compPY earned 21 ctntl per .................. ol 12,313,000 for the period compared with 17 Cft'lll last year. Rt:venuts were :up 14 perctnt. Shares outafandlog incnued by 12 perc!:nt. Neuro's erpilnslon program tn acute alcMolle a n d Pl)'Chiatrk hospllals. which accounls for most of lhe com· pany's income, i~ on sc~ule, Wright reported. "Virtually all the company's financial and management re!OUrcts are dl~led toward cau Uous. solid expansion 'in these two areas," he said. Wright said Neuro Is little affected by recent cha.nge!'i in medical and M~lcare in that the acute hOlpttals rwelve payment prlma.rUy from. in- dividuals and private tn: suranct companies. ..,. ............. & ....-...... -. -·-·---~ ...... 1m ,,., 11....._, u.m.• 11.t11AOO llKOll'M bttort t~lr1• on!1Mr? 11wm5 11 .... e1t1._01n1rv n1m•~ Hl1 O•ln lrom Mlflo .. dhPOtllloM Of wti. 11dftln d .004! l'l!Oefal 1-"~ ··-~'°"' ''"" -1'$11nt loo u•rv~w•rll .. ,, l-111.000 Ettnln1• Mr otiato: ,_ ............ ~. .. .. ' .... 112.000 ~n.ry llflnl 1J t tntl U c1nl1 E•trlOlllllll,., ·-· ... _ Av1r1_. 1MrH O\lrtlll'Od'IM ' ''"" 11 c.,,11 Complete-Ne\¥ York Stock List Centinela ' ' I • I • 1 • DICI TRACY .. TUMILIWEEDS Ll'L AINB By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS ·-·· -·-.. --···-~--------- Molldil)', Jtnull'Y 18, 1971 DAILY PILOT ,, 7 l'U.~ GETTO Ml.I ......... LIKE I DONE ALL TI-IE. lit.UT.'.' flCJT I Al.'WltlS 00.rr-1·~ "fWLI CH/- ly Al .Capp 9itJRE. 'OJ ARE, MDi- l>UT wt:RE G!rnlNG SOMETMJW'F"P.OM DOGPATCH, TO F1)( THAT.'! -- By Charles Barsotti •' 1\lEl.AST TIMEI L.ETYOU PAa A GUN , YOU SHOT MY RIGf/T GOL~! YMD THINK HE \\\?RE EARRINGS! LOii!; OFF! .· wow! \IMATs "1!-IAT ~ll 'RE WEARJN<.;, MllTT? A WIDETIE~ "T'HEY'RE THE L.ATEST "1'!41NG! JUDGE PARKER uPs.r "' 5AM OKIVER'S. MO MATTER WHAT YOa SAY, JUDGE •• 5AM WA.5 Pl.A.IN ME M.AY HAVE HA.t7 A VISITOR .• INPl~ERENCE TO MER VISIT, l&&EY SPENCER COMP\.AINS ~ITTO nlt>GE ~RKER! PLAIN JANE RUPE ! .. ' 0 •,.,M .. -· ... I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS 1 Crnt,st 5 Con ttndtd 10 Kind of sign 14 Athent1 lS Color l• Optt'" 1.7 Assr111bly place 11 US Pott 20 Form of potlutio11 2Z Confint wlth in l imits 2J s1 .... , 2'-4 Riga ' cllll t'ft 55 Elt11!t1l used h• 1 lloys 59 Su\tablt for usr or: r ilher s klr !.l ll)' by &Z Across bl Wipe off tht facr of !hr 111p L4 En l1rgt"'!.: Archa le 65 Vinous !ob Thinner ti7 Small l rti1111J OOI H 25 Fr l11ht1Md 1 8ro1d•<1y 28 Thill •hich i un t ... akts le ss 2 European St¥tft klnljl jZ flllot well J Ego jJ Wall parts <4 Mort lollr lS Sugr show 5 Clw lsh111s 3• Poller ad'f'trtislng action \tr"' 3' Bound L Gas 40 Dt~rwt 7 r ootlwi 11 ~: l~11lrtd play .()Ciphers I Un it iQ -4'5I1•:Dl1I. pl!Jslcs •Behind --: , Challrngtd i 2 •ords 10 large Asl.,_ ,, Cttt•I sttllJ: 91'11S'S 2 wll'dS !" lllaR's •• 11 011 a 1 51 Jttt floorlitg SlS,k~ Job 111an1 J 2 Smr I! 4l Olympic ]} Pl,dge 911 mes l'I Join con!es!anl 2 1 Erpl'ndPd 44 PttfOf"' 24 On' who m<.1s ic.l !ly fails ~7 A!r •t.ln 25 A.I ---· VIP Bddg' 1n -'9 ·-·Ant illes Muslin 51 Th'ob 1e ligion 52 Bird 2fi Coltlde 53 T1ibe of 27 V"y moc h Israel Ille S.JlllP 54 Kiln 28 A.els 55 Steel mill sullenly rw oduc L 29 To no .-Sfi A.tha p.113.Cil JO Look allrr Indian in s ickne ss 57 Ti m' of .)1 Belief diy: Poet. 34 liefchandlsing 58 Struct~e onit of twigs 37 The "'tl" 60 his h of "COO" Rrpubliciln J9 Boss A.riny: Abbr. , .....,......,,.....,.,_ T-V"Tl""Ti".,..- r 1/18i ll ..... i NO, I OON 'f THINK PERKINS OM , YEH, 5llRE- I By Al Smith By Harold La Doux I'M GOING TO PRIVE P0WN ™E ST£EET lO A PHOWE 600TM ANO I WANT YOU lO CALL SAM ~ By Frank Baginski MISS PEACH '1<;E l..L"r ScHOOL . I AM TAU... r AM GOOO·L.OOKNG. GORDO OE~ JAS'f, eAS';f KITTIE& 1.-IKE TO eE' PETit;D NIGi! AND li:AS'f! MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS 600D 1.16Hl; DODO-~ DID 'lOO IOJ()UJ1 'lflAI" I llJ SJ!Ae A~S -f ------. -AIR POUUTIO.V JS :SO SAD, THAl" ill1.;T ~llM;I S EQOAL 'J!) SllOIWJ6 A P/!C.K OF Cte>Afl· erres Pel: AMI ? By John Miles By Mell C OMPUTER. DAT6 ~~V'l~f- ! HAVE NO PATIENCE: FOR 5155Y STUFF; E'ASY. HE/lE COMeS YOUR OATe • TJLC vs You/I. 't>G:SUlfD P~EFf~.-NCE{', """'°' kJf'''L FllilD You ~ COMP"TIYt.e' t\A~. · .. STEVE ROPER Bl.rt' I LJl(E: ~LL, 6ASe84LL, 1-/0CICE:Y ANO O'THeg MMll.. Y ACTIVITIE5. r~<:? ··--~-.~ ~ T~E NUllSE SAID f SHOULD OW\.. V STAY A MIMUTC, DADDY/ S'OKAY, HONEY!-~ -CAW GO AFTER l .. GrVE ')OU -IMPORTN.IT MESSAGE FOR STEVE! ,,. . ... ... . ,. HEE ... ;-~ """"'"'··· . ,,,,_,.~ .... ~ ........... - i; _, " Ii ff II ,[· .• \IW:r Af:!!ll)E 60~ "1'0 00 IOtEJJ ff a>nfa! IOOfZU> IS LIK!! 'THAT? • ·By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson ,_..,...._l Wo1<• JT ouill By Roger BoUen THI STIANGE WOILf('" MR.MUM -- I I I I I s OAJL Y PILI"' 3 Trash Program to Bring March oll~~: ~ ity Hall Prcr-environment People (PEP) or Laguna Beach agreed Friday to organize a march on City Hall Jan. Z1 to demonstrate to city councilmen the local roncem for a proposed trash recycling program. The group's firsl meeting. held at the House of Hyun, attracled a much larger turnout than had been anticipated by Mrs. Luisa Hyun, prime organizer and chairman pro-tempore of Lhe grOllp. Duck Season In Irvine's Marsh Ends Duck hunting season ended Swiday, and UC Irvine officials expect a tally on fowl bagged in its San Joaquin marsn from members of the private gun club allowed to hunt there. Dr. Gordon r-.1arsh, chairman of the UC! marsh committee, said he would wait "lwo y,·eeks'' for the total of ducks bagged by the seven n1embers of the San Joaquin Gun Club, before writing them. An agreement between UCI and the ('!ub allowing use of the 200-acre "ecological peserve" for hunting in season, requires the club to list the numbers and kinds of birds shot. Marsh contends that the gun club ar· rangement was necessary lo provide fund s to maintain the marsh for educa· lional uses. The club paid $3,000 to liunt the marsh this year and will pay $5.000 in subsequent years. ft1ean•Nhile. a proposal seeking $12,000 from the University to develop the preserve will be introduced at the next Regents' meeting, ~larsh said. "I'm curious lo see what the outcome will be." Among maintenance and development needs before the marsh becomes 3f1 educational asset are the provision of a water supply, vegetation control, v.1alkways and fencing. Localed just north of the UCI ca mpus near Culver road. the marsh is home for more than 80 species of coastal and migratory birds. Cool Hand Lu.ke On the Loose? A n1olorist "'ho may have been seeking revenge returned lo a Laguna Beach parking meter dur· ing the night Thursday and demolished il, laking the money il contained. Police said the victim. a n1eter on Glenneyre Street al the corner of Mountain Road. '''as struck with 1vhat may have been a hammer. rhe crime Y,'3S discovered Friday by a parking patrol offi cer. Police could not determine how much money \Vas taken by the thief. The Jan. 27 march oo clay hall comes on the night of a city council study session of a proposal to recycle much of the lraah collected locally. The members, motilly women, plan to bring husbands and children to the council session. Friday's organizational meeting was given a pre-meeting boost of support in the forn1 of a telephone call from the Dean of the Biological Scie~ at UC Irvine. Dean Howard Schneiderman called to tell Mn. Hyun that "it was about time" $UCb a group was formed. The educator then offered the services of UC! Professor Phillip Runde!, a nationally· known speaker on the subject of ecology. Runde!, a member of the population and envlroruneotal biology division of the department, would be available at any time, Schneiderman told Mrs. Hyun. JU!atlng the phone call to the group, Mr&. Hyun noted PEP needed all lhe support it could rnmter. "We have no mc>11ey aDd no cbartfr." she said, '1J ut we do have quite a few angry conoemed people. With a beginning such as that, the moaey will come I.Jong soon enough." "Our fir'!t project Is not easy," she ·added, "but It wlll probaJ>ly be one or the easiest we are going. to have This $3 .5 million shopping complex is.taking shape in San Clemente where it will be the first major merchantile center. At top is the architect's render· ing of how completed complex will look. DAILY PILOT photograph at bottom shows progress on the complex at 400 Camino de Estrella. San Clemente cit y officials are looking forward to big surge in sales tax revenue for city coffers. The center is to be completed by June 1. Largest unit in the Grant's Plaza is W. T. Grant's measuring 150,000 square feet. DAILY PILOT llllf P'Mt. LONESOME CONTESTANT Jill Greenwald Laguna's Beauty Pageant Has Only 011e Contestant .... J ill Greenwald. 20, is the first. and so far the on ly entry in the Miss Laguna beauty conlest, scheduled for Feb. 12. The contest, sponsored by the city Recreation Department seeks a youthful beauty to reign over ths Winter Festival, Feb. 19 to March 7, and other Art Colony events during 1971. Jill, daughter of Rober:t and Elizabeth Greenwald, lives at ?GS Fairview St. in Laguna and is employed by a local foreign car dealer, She is 5 feet 4 inches tall. weighs 102 pounds, has light brown hair and hazel eyes and is in· tcrested in golf, gymnastics and making collages. The Number One (and .only) position In the contest is rather lonesome, a Recreation Department spokesman said Friday, urging other winsome Laguna lasses to register for the contest, which i:o; open to girls 16 and older, living In the Laguna area . Application form s are available at the Recreation Department, 175 N. Co a 11 t Highway, and at City Hall and the Chamber of Commerce. U Thant Claims 1971 To Be l{is Last T erm UNITED NATIONS (U PI) -U Thant said today he has "no intention whatever of serving beyond the present term" as U.N. seerelary general. Thant's term as U.N. chief executive expires next Dec. 31. At his first news conference of lhe year, the Burmese diplomat who has been secretary general since the deattt of Dag Hammarskjold In 1961 said he had "cautious optimism" about the out· come of peace talks concerning the Mid· die East. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! WlllE ~ WIEAT ••••••••••••• The st.aft of life -•. baked by Lengendorf •.• sei:ve sandwicltes ..• toast it., •. enjoy it! Reg. 27c size loaf. Buddig' s Sliced Meats ...... ~! ~!1~.~~·!~~t.~~~1! ...... 29~ A "'·ide variety of f avorites from which lo choose! .•• Reg. 43c each •.. enjoy the val1.1e u well as the flavor! 3 oz. Pork Chops .......... ~.:~....... 99:. Lean ••. from selected midwestcrn grain fed pork! Pork Roast ........... ~ .. CIJ!........ 79:. For a. memorable main course ..• so flavorful! Stuffed Pork Chops ............... . Lean choJM, filled with Mrs. Cubbison's Dressing! Stuffed Flank Steak ......................... S14! \Vit.h Mrs. Cubbison's Dressing ... delicately seasoned! ARCADIA: PASADENA: Bananas ........................................... 10:. Central Am·eric&'s finest! .•• add a banann to thei r lvnch ! I Pritts in effect Jlott., T11.u ., IVec!. · JOJ4., JB, JS, 10, No .aka to deakr1. • • l. SOOTH PASADENA: llllHTINGTUil BEACH: to tackle." Mn. Hyun .. id l'EP '-' to .,......... the city coundl toto lnltlaitng r~cllng of newspapera; cins and bottles. U tbe&e items could be sorted from ~ reat ot \he g.arbqe on a citywide basis, Mrs. l:fyun llUd, each category of trash could be collected aeparalely and sold to reclamation centers in Tuslin and Santa Ana. Such a project could financially abpport the city's trash col· Jection, one member-noted. Simple Solution AnOOler mtmber, Bill Leak, said one problem that could be encountered with :such • plan would be the swampirut of the· lrash reclamation centers with more than could be bandied. He said that San Francisco had been forced to cut back its recycling program becaµse the reclamation centers ~Id not handJe the load. The Jan. 27 city hall march 'flli begi11 at the House of Hyun at 1 p.n\., lhc · gr<l<lp decided. ' ' Nurse Tells How To ~~ght Disease By BARBARA XREIBICH ot !Ml 0.111 P'l .. 1 Slllt Protection against such Infectious diseases as influenza, hepatitis and tuberculosis is so simple most people don 't believe it. "It's as simple as regular sleep, a v.·ell-balanced diet and c a r e [ u I handwashlng, but people find that bard to believe," says AJice Brumage, Orange County Public Health nurse whose ter· ritory, the largest or any nurse in the county, extends from Thalia Street in Laguna Beach south lhrOugli San Clemente. l\1rs. Brumage, a registered nurse who worked in hospitals for 10 years before compleling her B.S. degree in public health nursing, joined the Health Depart- ment four years ago and plies the South County area daily, spreading tb.e message of good health and disease prevention. It was ironic, she says, when her husband, Laguna Beach police officer Kenneth Brumage, made headlines when he was stricken with infectious hepatitis shortly after Christmas. "I'm supposed to be the one who knows about escaping jf\fectiou§ diseases, but all I coold do Jar Ken.·lt'!l!'.·,make a pretty accurate diagnosis of what ailed him when he got all the symptoms," says the attractive blonde nurse. However, she adds, his illness confirms her beliefs on disease prevention. "Peo- ple who are frequently exposed to in· fectious diseases -and ·that Includes nurses and police officers -have to be extra careful about maintaining the level of their own health," she explains. ''In Ken's case he had been working long hours involving irregular sleep 1nd meals when tie w~· ~ed, -so he was especially susceptible." The officer, still confined to hi s )lome, ts rriaking good ·progress t~W·A'l-d recovery. she said". The rest of the family, including four chndren aged nine lo 17. were protected by shots of immune globulin ai; soon as the disease was confirmed by lab tesls. Sim11ar protection was given to all members of the Laguna police force with whom Brumage had worked during the \Veek he was developing symptoms of what turned out l<l be hepatitis. "Actually,'' says Mrs. Brumage, "we are all exposed to Infectious dise8:se when we go Into public places. but we don't have lo catch them if our own health Is good. People who regularly work around these diseases do nothiag DAILY ,.ILOT Ir.ff..... - NURSES BIG AREA Alice 8rumm•1• special to protect themselves beyond adequate rest, a good diet and scrupulous handwashing. , "For exan1ple1 don't eat an ?PPle until .• you _Wash bolh , jt ~and y.our hands.,, ' ,u O • Unfortunately people don1t be I le v e ~ anything that simple. They'd probably like some more compl.icated rlJ\es." The _advent•'Of • woft&r .~drli~, kays · fl1rs. Brumage, has resulted in some carelessness about basic health habits, but the fact is these drugs don"t offer : mu.ch help for such diseases as hepatiti:o1 and flu . Tuherculo.sis, once diagnosed, can be rendered noncontagious sooner : these day~. she says, but the problem • of identifying il remains. "Both tuberculosis and hepaUt!s can .• get a good hokt before the victim realizes what . the symptoms mean," she ex· plained. "This can be particularly dangerous ir. ror example. a person working in a restaurant or otherwise handling food Is involved." Miracle Whip ............................ :Aft For aalida ••• and a sandWich 11Pread, too! Quart. Slliucker' s Goober .................. 59' P......t'bulter and· jelly .•. in the wne 18 ounce jar! Strawbetry Preserves ................. Ste Heap lt high on Ireoh bread W""8 ! Smucker'• ••• 20 ounoe jv. ~ Brownle Mix .. , .................... 49' Betty Cn><l<er mak• it eUy for you I 23 oance patkage. SllllSel and H1ntioflon Dr. (D 11.i.o c.ter) 320 Wal ColDllllo Blvd. F-.! Ind H1:r'ict-Dr. lhmet lld Npquill ( ..... Ilk C..) NEWP.OllT BEACll: 2727 Ne!!pOll ¥ .. 2!i!i6 £_...,. Dr. (Ellllllldf Villlct c.llr) f '~V PILOl Monday, J.111ttll1Y ,, 1971 Strikes Multiply, Paralyze New Y orl{ 'I've decided to qait amoking •.• ciga rettu , that -ur· .-.___ _________ ...... Tea rs Ta ke Spotlight By DICK WEST WASlilNGTON -As Is apparent to anyone over the age of 1.37 yurs, Amerie1 is in the midst of a cultural period tliat atrongly emphasizes au. Book! about sex dominate the best- aeller list.a and "X" rated films have taken ewer the movie theaters. But aome studenta or tbe arts think that cycle is about over. They arc a new trend emerging, bell..euieftd by "Love Story," a highly succel!rw novef that moves reader• io tears ri~ than appetiinc to their prurlent interest. lf that prediction proves correet, then bert are • same of the things we can look for:ward to In the coming montha:: -A team of medical reaearcbeni, bead· ed by Dr. Aln.d Maudlin, will bring forth a book UUed ... 'Lachrymoae Behavior in the Human Male," popularly known as the "M6ldftn·Beport." Based on interviews with more thin '47 men, the study will show that lachioytM~g Amtrican males ii: far more frequent and widespread than previously had be.en suspected. These findings will create a sensation, for in our society there are strong taboos against men crying. -A medical team compol!ed of Dr. Elegiac and his aS!islant, Mrs. Mewl, will publish a controversial paper on ''human lachrymal inadequacy." In their investigation of why so many people are unable to have a good cry, Dr. Elegiac and Mrs. Mewl will invite couplei. both married and unmarried, into ·their laboratory and observe them in the act of weeping. From this they will recllmmend ways of helping people overcome dry.eyedness. -A psychiatrist named Dr. David Snivel v.·ill v.-rite a book I i s ting '"e\'erything }'{)U always wanted to bow about v.·eeping (but were crying too hard to ask)." ll will explain in terms the layman can understand how the tear duels work and also clear up such mysteries as \rh.v teardrops run down the cheek3 rather than up over the forehead. The su bject of premature sobbing will be discussed fran kly and humorousl y. -Someone using the pen name ''K" \\'ill v.·rite a book called "the tearful woman." It wi ll encourage women to go ahead and cry their eyes out any time they feel like it. And what is more, enjoy H. -UPI NEW YORK (AP) -T&!ks almtd at ending the strike. by 20,000 city patrolmen were reporled • ' & r av e 1 y deadlocked" today u 1 wildcat sympathy walkout conUnued to spread among tranait patrolmen. To add to the city's labor woes, 1,500 leamsler1 struck Sunday, cultin& off most of the fruit and vegetable supply. A strike by telephone repairmen and instaUers entered its second week with no sI&n of a break. Copter l!leet The Transit Authority said that about 2S percenl of the transit police for ce, which patrols subway statioru and trains, refused to work Sunday in a show of :sympathy with the walkout by city patrolmen. 1 Detectives, senior uniformed oflicers and probationary patrolmen continued meanwhile to work 12·hour shifts to provide e!l.!lential police services. Pollce Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy said they could probably sustain the effort U.S. Picking Up Cambodia Pace SAIGON (UPI) -Cambodian and South Vietnamese troop11 with heavy suµ. port from U.S. Army helicopter gun.ships entered the Pich Nil Pass on Highway 4 today and were heavily engaged in hand to hand combat with Communist troops on its mountainous slopes, the Cambodian high command reported. Although no U.S. ground troops were reported in action in Cambodia the United States bas greatly increased its involvement there. Vientiane dispatches reported increased use of U.S. air power a g a i n 1 t a Conununist of- fensive thue and the U.S. command in Saigon reported new ·protective strikes in North Vietnam. Pich Nil PW is 60 miles southwest of Phnom Penh on the 138-mile long Highway 4 linking Phnom Penh wilh lhe deep water port of Kompong Som. A South Vietnamese tank force was driving northward from Kompong Som and a Cambodian and South Vietnamese unit was driving aouth. The Cambodian command said the IOOthern t.u.k force had reached the isolated outpost of Kompong Seila, just below the pus, and was batUing to Jink up with the northern task force only I21h miles away. The command said the northern force had entered the pass and v.·as fighting to dislodge Com- munist troops from its slopes. Tbe U.S. Army Cobra Helicopters were opei-aling from a U.S. Navy Amphibious Transport.. Ship. (LPD) cruising in the GuU ..of '!'Uu.t olf Cambodia -the first known ezample of such Army-Navy ~ailon. ~J"'-addition, a U.S. Navy "1!!11t<ipt!I-earlier (LPH) ol 18,300 to.u was operaUng nearby in support of the LPD. The LPH carries 32 choppers. Wbile South Vietnamese and Cam- bodians battled to reopen Route 4 and restore Cambodia's ga.soline and oil sup- plies, a heavily guarded South Viel· namese convoy arrived in Phnom Penh Sunday night wit h fuel -plus cognac, Big Bank Lowe rs Loan Rate to 6% NEW YORK (APl -Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. reduced its prime lending rate to 6 percent from 6·~ percent today. Major banks · had cul the rate to 6~4 from 61h percent last Friday. The prime rate is the interest charged by commercial banll on loans to their biggest corporate borrowers. It has an ultimate. effect on mortgage and personal loans. If Morgan Guaranty's move becomes general. it would be the third limo:. the prime rate has fallen this month. Morgan Guaranty is the nation'• fifth Iarge11t bank. A spokesman for the bank said it bad no conunent on the reduction. The reduction on Friday was i1Jltialed by Fint National City Bank of New York and wu quickly followed by other major banb throu&bout the country. beer, cigarettes and Citroen cars. UPI field dispatches said it had full U.S. air support during the trip up the Melton~ River. UPI front dispatches said the U.S. Army Cobras were working three at a time in support of the ground forces and that the airwaves crackled wilh English-speaking radio operators calling in coordinates and were answered by airborne Cambodian interpreters iJI French in heavily acotnted Ena:lisb. Russ Promise To Maintain UA R Mi g ht Unittd P ress International Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny held their second and last strategy con· ference in Cairo today· on Egypt's stand in the Middle East peace talks against a background of Kremlin pledges to maintain Egypfs military might. In New York. Egyptian Ambassador Mohammed H. El-Zayyat announced he was meeting today with U.N. Mediator Gunnar V. Jarring to discuss Egypt's replies to Israel's recenl peace plan. There were growing indications Egypt would ask for a Security Council m~I· ing before Lhe current cease-fire expires Feb. S. The Sadat·Podgorny talks wind up the Soviet president's sis-day vtstt during which he pledged to keep Egypt strong. lo help it with rural electrification pro- jects. and inaugurated the $1 billion As wan Dam, built largely with Soviet help. He returns to MoSCO\V Tuesday after hosting a dinner for Sadat ton ight. Egypt has said there was nothing new in the Israeli proposals but political sources said this could not be cons!rued as outright rejection of the Israeli pro- posals. Sadat in a speech Sunday reiterated Egypt':; interest in a peaceful settlement but said Egypt would never give up one inch of land. 'Itle refusal to cede one inch of land could make for long and difficult negotiatons. Israeli Deputy Premier Yigel Allon said today in Tel Aviv, ''We should have-steel nerves because the negotiations are not likely to end in a hurry." One complication could be a security council meeting. These mi-off i c i a I ne"·spaper Al Ahra m indicated today Egypt would ask For such a meeting before Feb. S although Israel had said il did not want one and that such a meeting could bring 1 brea kdown in the talks. Egypt moved meanwhile to strengthen its relations with Libya , the udan and Syria. Official sources in Cairo s a id the higher defense council of the four-na· lion federation would meet in Cairo Tues- day to prepare an agenda for Wed· nesday's summit meeting. From Freezer to Oven R attlers End Hibernation in Sizzling Southland Califor nia A ft Oo•r" '119~ 11 Tiie l • Al\teln cn.1e Clftllf Sur.I•~ b'Ok• I S!·Tllt .. lol tKonl '"" "'' M"mtt !~01r1twrt Wf t t~-'9d ... 1~ ...,.~ •• S&J!Mrn C1l- lhlnole t""tlnwtO 1 mlo.wmmtr worm 11...-lfl Juiu1rv. PltYllW•llOll lllTIOfW. Wl•TMU Sl•vrcl TO 1:10 P.M. [ST I -·•·71 .. Temperat urf!• l y VIOT•O l"ll•SI INTl.JllllTIONAl lem""""''"' 1f>d _r,11111e11 •or 11!1 1i.1'Qur ,er~ 1""1"' 11 f 1.m. Jr.l~""ve...,v1 A!l1n•1 "ncha••v• -·~ auth le (/lltl VO c1...,1...,.11 Clt\11l1nd 011111 Hl•h L-,rK, ~ " " " -'JI ·17 II 10 11 GS '' 10 tt • " for ''several more days." SOn1e help was provided by a force or 63 men from the federal t:xecutive Protection Service in Washington. Th ey v.·ere deployed to protect Soviet offices. a measure netessltated by a series of recent anli·Soviet incidents. •t here continued to be no a pparenL lnl:rease in crime. Mayor John V, Lin dsay said ··the city i"s securt, tht c11y is safe ·· Public schools, which were closed for Dr. t-.lartin Luther King's birthday Fri- day when the \\"ildcat strike took full c::rrect, ~re open today despite the Jack: ()f police protection, Lindsay announced. City negotiators continued talks with representatives of the pat r o I men . lirenten a nd sanltationmen, all of wti.om have been without contracts 11ince Jan. J. The settlements are interrelated. i-~iremen and sanltationmen received and promptly rejected a new cily olfer of a 17 4 percent wage increase over a three.year contract: AMBA SSADOR BUCH ER TE LLS OF 40 DAYS OF CAPTIVIT Y Pl1y1d C1rd1, Wi tched Television, Suffered Cl a u1trophobi1 Fr eed Envoy Describes Time W ith Tupamaro RIO DE JANEIRO <UPI l -A small room, a hard bed, a bottle of gin . cards, radio, television, books, records, temperature that hovered around 90 degrees, and claustrophobia. . Beller than a medieval dungeon, but it v.•as a miserable 4-0 days (or ki d· naped Swi ss Ambassador Giovanni Enrico Bucher. "I wasn 'l too keen on television." Bucher told friends .after his rt.lease. Leftist guerrillas Jet him go Saturday after the Brazil government freed 70 political prisoners as ransom. Bucher. according to his intimates. never felt that lhe abductors would kill him. His fear was that he would "become another Ciomide case." Brazili<1n Consul Aloys10 Dlas (~uinide has been in the ca ptivity of Tupa· m<1ro guerrillas in Monlevideo since July JI. Bucher, who suffered from claus· lrophobia, said. "I do nol kno"' how long I could last.·• , Bucher was quoted as remarking lo one dip lomat. "I was never really scared until they started cleaning their machine guns in my room.'' Bucher gave some advice to diplornats: "If you really want security you should have two machine guns, one_ in the front and one in the back seat of lhe car. If not. it is better to have nothing at all . One man with a revolver can nnl dn anything. ~1y case proved that." Bucher's Jone bodyguard. fede ral agent Helio de Carvalho Araujo, was shot to death defending Bucher during the kidnap Dec . 7. He never had a chance to fire a shot. In his press conference. Bucher said his kidnapers always wore masks. He described the kidnapers to friends as ''mostly young people. mtel· !ectuals o rsemi-in1ellecluals. f\.lost v.·ere well educated." Bucher told friends that as the days passed he and the k.idnape rs "wa rm· ed up." l1e played a Brazilian card game called ··euraco"' with the man as- signed lo guard him. . "There .,,,·ere political discussions but never any attempt to brarn.,,,·ash me," Bucher said. Fi ve Cowles Sullsidia1·i es Namecl i11· U.S. Fr aud Suit \VASHINGTON !AP) -The Justice Department today filed criminal chargel! nl mail fraud against five subsidiaries of Cowl es Communications. Inc. ·1'he SCkoont criminal information was filed against the subsidiaries in Des Moines, Iowa, whf're they are based, Alty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said. A civil suit also v.'as filed against the ri ve subsidiaries on Lhc sa me charges in connection with sales of magazine Russ Moon Robot Back to Lun a 17 MOSCO\V (UPI) -The Soviel Union·s rolling nioon robot t o d s y drove back 10 its Luna 17 mothershlp to complete subscriptions, Mitchell said. The civil suit also named as a defendant the parent comp.any. The civ il suit seeks a permanent In· junction against the allegedly fraudulent sales and collection practi~. Named as defendant:; in the criminal Information are these Co w I e s subsidiaries: l lome Reference Library, Tnc.: Home Readers Service. lnc.: Mutual Readers League. Inc.: Civic Reading Club, Inc.; and Educational Book Club lnc. The criminal Information charged the subsidiaries had engaged In fraudulent and deceptive magazine subscription practices for more than five years. Justice Department spokesmen said filing of the complaint caps a three-year investigation of the selling pracUces by postal inspectors. S~I• -.. ''"' 11111 lhJ "''"'' l't!Tt-1t1t1lwr11 mtllld 1r.o... 11tt-• on !M ,,_,.,,1... INI •~rn 11\odiM - •t ilt--" our ot /11M t11t1lo.1. ,..DI.Ir ¥-..iitn ""'' bllton 111 I.GI "'"'•let ,,,. 'l:IWnldl counlle1 Swndt Y. Tllf -ltu• l.•1 AnM l•I Jon..o•Y f\1'11, .... ~ -Ulh lf'I !'11, Thi lllW-.,.;c+liil) t.i.fll ..... .0 Incl ttil 11i,11 "'""row. • ,. Oti Molf'll\ 0ot1rel1 f'1lrbflnl<J "tnolulu . lnd!IMPNl!1 JotklOf!Yltll" Jwn1•u il•n1•1 Cltv lt ~' • " " .. " ~ • ~. ·J1 T "one of the planned experimenlo;" of llll moon explora lion . Tass said . The complaints said the fi ve compenieg entered Into franchise agreemenll wilh dealers in hundreds of communilie.o; throughout the country to sell magaz.iine subscrlpllons by contracts requiring monthl y lnstalhnen\ payments for a period of years. TM,.Jtiit 1"0U11llclol Cont,.1 Dl1tr~l ....... f)lihl ""°' IPI !1>t b111fo In l'l'lf t~ wt vltl&Ulry tltflll'IW'ld lllt n.. n.. ftn ..., ........... wr1oo11; •h1w111 illrtdn frwtt !ht Ntllerltl WMl~1• ~ qin.f W 1111" "'llfl Ylfllltle <*""'-w+ttt • d\tflC• .i • , .... .,_ M fM 11'1111 <NII" ''"'· "lFI• -• .. '"'"' l'OI lfl !tie d•-" Iii Ilk lfl fM "*'"'llPIL hedl -...., _ ... "' "" 19! •llfl !I'll Wile!" U. M9\lflllfll ,._, ,,_ ,.,.,,. ~1-111 1'1 fht Jllt e1 1M •-tdtl ,,,11114 ........ '° .. ,.,., • foet ef '"''"- "~ """"" ..... ..,-Hlc!fljl ~'-"* 16· •• .,. ·~· ......... h9(ll 7'.U. "'"'' MMk• n .11, l 11r .. l'lll. ...... Mt. Wll· -1~ 1"11me.11 '5.tt. 11 rv~1i.t •i. ,,, """' ..,..,.., u.•s. 11k1r1n.11:1 10 .... l1t1 D'-o n.n, Jl'!lle ttra.r1 T.\ol1. OrtflM C-tr tMI. --' 4 Cewtal MMt!W ~ ..,.,,.,. L\tflt vt rltiMt WfNI lllttrf l'M ,,,.111,.. -.. -Jone _lt11, J II II ~l'IOtli In .n .......... . IMt'I' Nill ~ .... Mllfl ...., _, .. . c.Mtl! ....... ""' "'"'" f\'Wll • 19 n. 1111 .... ...-~ ,._ ....... 4 .. U. W•lw *"Hrtf\"9 ... s.., .......... TWn MONDAY s...-. flltl'I ......... l:M '·'"· 1.1 Mcond .... t :M 11.m. 1.1 T\lllOAY ,lrlf flltll ........... l :U '·"'· • • J'l,,1 .... •• 1:$4 t .111. I.I Si em'!! ~11~ . , , ~: .. 11..rn. 1 I h<DINI i-, . . . 1:11 I .In. 1,1 •v~ •t.., l :U t .m. Ith 1:10 1.m, MMft llMI 10:» 1.m. rJ.S. Summary t r UNITI ., Hil ls 1NTlltNAT101Ul ..... l!\to11 Ct lltllr!llt ~trlt<ll lht "'"" "'ltll tlrlltoH"l lllNt M .,..,.. r1tt~ tlllllM , ... -IY fnim !Mlr ~llllr· 111lltft. WI~. H-Ytn; t1'ld NtW .......... ""' "''"" C411d. MtlW...,. *rvtftt "'l "'IMt "'f"t 1ft t nKI Ill IClllMI "'"" '°'"'W bt<IUI# ef -1t1o1 l•-lnt rtll\ •NI l'I "'" "" "'*•"'"' ,,.. ,....,. .... btc.v .. Clf kl ... on brldfft 1NI -••tHofl, lft Allftlt l' ltmll,f!U'I IOl'ed II • >KOfd JO fttfttl SwFMI•¥, l>r .. kiftt 1 SI ·Y~lr~td ,.,.,_, Al lflll lo.;r H•• ...,, w1•1 Dll!tt1 llw r111 ..... 1-r1 In ""m 1at111m1. lflclud!,.. ..... ,,,,.old """ Wl'lo .... 1111.ll ~ ···'-~· (O<JdlllOll. 1.itflt '"""' •nd C!lid dol!fll lllt fl!~ Olt t i ll>t lllllerl but lfllttl l!W ltlr ski• -• tlll rult .rH"'!ltJ't. L11 v ... , lM 11 .... lft Loulo...tlll> Ml•"'! Mllwf\AI .. .N.._ 0.1'1•1'111 ott11-Cl"' ... ,,,, ... i. .... l"fllllftlllf!l9 ·-· .... tllnO. 0... fl•11lll (Uy lllttt l lull .. ~ kcr1mlfll6 SI. l oult S1ll l1~1 (l!y Son Dit>ff !on ill••11r:l1(0 S11tti. S«ll!1n1 T1>t~m1! W11/ll111t..i ... " " " . " •. " " ,, •l " . " " " ~ " a tt • u " . ~ u • " u • • • • " " " " " " " " " • " " " • " .. " .. " " " ~ •• " The Sov\et news agency did not specify T why the eight-wheeled vehicle. made ilo; A way back to the lancUng stage or what It will do ne:x:l. Tht Luna 17 ship, carrying the Lunokhod machine piggyback, landed T Nov. 17 in. the moon 's Sea of Rains. "The apparatus turned in lta tracks about .hall a kilometer from tht I.anding aru," Tua said. •·For some time the old trick showed clearly on the television aaeen and the controllers of the .J• Lunokhod used It for guldanct." :~ The agency called It an hislorlc fc.a1.: ··For the firsl lime in the historv 111 of COlimonaullc.~ there wa s 11 solutiui1 01 to a practical navigatlonQl problem: tl1c return of the self.propelled appAralu~ ~\ to a preplanned poinl 111 a preplanned 61 time on the surface of a dlffcrcnl celestial bocly." •·Hundreds of thou!Mlnds of penom were contacted each year by telephone snlicitors, door to door canvassers and cilhe.r franchise employes who mlsrepre· sented the C'OSl a11d the terms of the pack· age subscript.ions," lhe complaint sald. Prospective customer!ll were told they hnd been given free 49-lo-£.O.month sub~criptions. the complaint said, and ·11 .. t to take advant~ae of the offer , rhcy had only lo pay bet"'·~en 25 and 11-0 cents pe.r "'eek for postage, cdilorial, wr11ppinp: or handing cosl~. Ai:luAl!y. the amount represented the full co.'il or all sub~cripUons a nd the con tr act the purchaaer had signed re· The offer would raise firemen 's :salaries by ,1 ,900 from their preaenl base maximum of $10,950. and sanita- lionmen by $1,71 1 from $9,871. The head of lhe sanJtationmeo's union scorned Uie offer as "pennies." Talks between the city and lhe Patrolmen's Benevolent Association were at an impasse acc:ordlng to the chier n1ediator, Matthew Kelly. Ile said the PBA wa s insisting there woul d be 110 settlement "'ilhoul a resolution of the pay parity issue. Bomb Hits Mission Of Arab s NEW YORK (APl -Three patrolmen have been agsigned to guard the United Arab Republic "s mission to the United Natlon after a fire bomb lhrown i nto lhe building shattered glass and scl fire to a door. Mission personnel using hand ex· tinguishcrs smothered the names before police arrived. No one was injured. Within an hour of the Sunday night incident, an anonymous male caller telephoned The Associated Press and said: '"The Egyptian mission has been bomb- ed. The Arabs and the Russians are lbe same. Never again." '·Never again"' is a slogan of t~ militantly anti·Soviet Jewish Defense League, "'hich hours earlier had staged a demonstration outside the nearby Soviet mission. Three protesters were charged v.·lth harassing Soviet personnel. "This city is becoming a place of terror for diplomats.'" declared r..1ahrnoud Amr, a spokesman for the U .A.R. n1ission after the fire bombing incident. fn Jerusalem. the Israeli government censured the JDl. Sunday, declaring its ''vigorous opposition to any form ef terror action in the struggle for the rights of Soviet Je\vry," A state ment issued after the weekly Cabinet meeting did not mtntion the league by nan1e but qualified informants said it was discus:>ed al length during the session . Al the san1e time. the government called for an escalatioo or "public and politica1 activity for the right of Soviet Jews to immigrate to Israel." The JDL. headquartered in New York, has called for harassment of So v I e t officials in the United States in support of the same aim. In Sunday's demonstration. a crov.·d of 80 protesters marched near the Soviet mission, chantinj!: "Let my people go -Never again." The three protesters were arrested af\er they allegedly follow · ed Soviet personnel along Third Avenue neRr the mission. shouting obscenities, City police assigned to watch the demonstration \\'ere assisted by a dozen federal guards sent here Saturday night at ~iayor John V. Lindsay·s request after city patrolmen began a wildcat \.\'alkout. Early today. pohce reported 11 threatening phone call lo the head· quarters or Tass, the So\'iet ne\VS agency. with a female voice saying. ·Your ntv.·s agency is ne11\ on the. list. The Arabs got theirs and you are next ·• Boy, 10, Finds Brotlier's lleart To Be Def ectivc \VEST BEN D, Wis. (A P) -Ten-year· old Steven Neumann became curious about hearl beats while reading a book on the su bject. His curiosity led him to compare the heart beat of 6-year-old brother Jackie and another brother by placing hi s ear aga inst their chests. '"They don't sound the same," the fifth-grader told his mother. Mrs. John Neumann, a nurse's aide. She responded that it was Steven's bedtime and urged hun to end the game. But he insisted she also listen to the "'sWishing sound in Jackie's chest." "It sounded like a wet sponge does v:hen you squeeze it," Mrs. Neumann said of the October experiment. '"Steve told me his heart book said the sound "'as indication of a heart disorder:· The boy·s suspicion's were confirmed by the family 's physician and Jackie underwent a series of tests this month a t University llospilals in Madi11on. He will undergo open heart surgery in a few weeks. Physicians said the &-year-old hes an tnlarged heart, a pinched main artery and a hole between thl'! lower chambers or his heart that should have closed after he was born but didn't. The condition went uoOetecled untll Steven's curiosity intervened. J ohnson Ends 3.<fay Stay in Hospita l SAN ANTONIO ( APl -F'onne:r Presi. den! Lyndon 8 . Johnson has left Brooke Army General l/05pit11l after 1 three-<l•Y slay for tre11tment of mild viral pneumonia. John~n . 62. went home: by car S.a !Uf'a day. DoclOrs said he Wll8 in good con- dition. -. ,, . , 1l.. ·.1 .... Ufll Te""'61• BODIES OF FIVE CHILDREN LIE ON FRONT LAWN IN DENVER Firemen Found the Children Huddled Togther in Tower Bedroom 23 Youngsters Lose Lives In Home Fires on Weekend F rom Wire Service!! Seventeen children ranging in age frnn1 si x weeks lo 14 years and the young 1nothcr of three of them died Sunday and early today in fires in New York.Colorado a n d Massachusetts. Six m ore youngsters and a mother died in a Toronto blaze. Authorities in La>1-rence. l\fass .. said a fire that killed seven persons Sunday ap- parently began when r.1rs. Sandra Yaun. 21. spilled grease <lnlo the stove as she "'as Frying a steak. The grease explodrd and flames spread fron1 th e kitchen to the rest of the apartment that she shared with her slsler-in-la\Y, l\1rs . Laura Bagley, who was asleep. l\1rs. Bagley awoke to hear l\1rs. Yaun cry: ;'The place is on fire! 1'he place is on fire~ Get Help~" Mrs. Bagley ran from the three-story tene· ment in her bare feet in eight. degree temperatures, Patrolmen James Kiley and Francis Landers found her standing in front of the building scr eaming hysterically. "Please God help me! Help me get my babies out!" They found the door had locked as she left but Kiley broke it down and they gol the other occupants out. Then Landers forced his \\'ay into the burning apartment and cr&wled on the floor looking for the children. He was unable lo find them. "\Ve did try, '"e did "'hat we could. We did get so me out but we just couldn't get !o the babies," Kiley said later, his voice breaking. ''Landers showed g re at courage. He smashed through a glass door and burned his right hand trying to get to a bedroom but it was com- pletely engulfed in flames,·· said Kiley. "No luck. What could \Ve do?" The dead were Mrs. Yaun and three of her children, Christy. 4, Barbra. 3, and Kim. 3 months; a nd three Bagley children, Tracey, 4, Larry 15 months, and Carrie, 6 v;eeks. Mystery Plimae Calls Five children. ranging in age from 3 months lo 9 years, were killed when names shot through their two -s tory Denver home. A fireman said the house "was almost com- pletely engulfed in names when we gol there." 8 Tow Trucks Arrive At House on One Day Kite Flown 38 Hours DENVER f AP) -for more t.han two \\'tt-ks. the Harold D. Rosenblatls have wa tched O"'ens Slaps At Athletes SALT LAKE CITY !AP) - Former Olympic champion Jesse Owens said Sunday it's a mistake to allow ath!etr;s representing the United Stales to go abroad and criticize this C<luntry. "Even with ou r faults, there Is no country like the United St;ites," he said. "Nobody Jorcrs you to compete in athletics, to represent your country. ' ' ..... . ~· ' 1 ) . " in amazement as fire lrucks. ambulances. tow trucks, and other emergency or delivery vehicles pulled up in front or their home -all in ans"·er to calls made in their name. Rosenblatt says he has no idea who has been placing the phone calls. In addition. on Friday somf'. one placed an ad in the Den\'er Post offering the Rosenblatl's car for sale, and prospective buyers have been telephoning lhe home since. On Jan. 2, an ambulance and a taxi cab were dispat- ched to the hon1e. Six days later, eight tow trucks shGwed up one after another to pick up Rosenblatt's car and tow it to an in- tersection some d I s t a n c e away • SARASOTA. Fla. (UPI) A Los Angelf's kite enthusiast v.ho designed his O\\'n entry in a kite flying contest con· ducted on Benjamin Franklin's birthday ha s set the "·orld's record [or keeping his kite in the air. Don Gel lert. his son, and three Vanderbilt University seniors took turns at the con· trols of Gell ert's double· stringed "Sunbird" kite for a record of 37 hours and 18 niinutes this weekend. The old record -37 hours flat - was set in Nantucket, r.1ass .. in 1957, according lo record- keeper \VIII Yolen of the lnternalional Kile F I y e r s Association . 50. I ,), ,-. ~ .~ .... ~ :~~!;..:.:.;.:..!.il:..tohb.2J ~ '~ :.: f .-_: (( 1 For one thing. most other jewelers buy finlshad diamonds. We buy diamonds in the rough. We cut, polish and mount them ourselves. The savings are considerable. To us. To you. Of course, you dcn't have to spend Iese money. You can 11lw1ys buy a larger diamond from us for the same amount you might pay someplace else. Think it over. Civided Payments Amn;ect. CM,... ~ 111'1'"911 A-1Un h...- l•llllAmtrk•l"lll MML MIH'tl' °'91"11. IM SLAVICK'S J~·eters Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644-1110 o..,n Moncl•y •nd frlday unrU t :SO ,,,,., Bizarre Kidnaping Spree • Thwarted · in S~ Carolina BENNETTSVILLE, S . C. (UPI) -The second of two gunmen who tried to kidnap this tobacco town's wealth iest families in a van and hold them ror ransom surrendered in Columbia Sunday night afler eluding a 15(}.-man posse. The Marltw:>ro County Shir· iff's Office said Grover L. Ben· nett turned himself in at the headquarters of the state law enforcement division in the state capital, about !IS miles southwest of Sennettsville. Bennett's companio n, Charles L . Scales, also of Charlotte. N .C., was wounded in a shootout with one of his hoslages, former State Rep. Jaimie F. Lee. He was hospitalized along w it h another hostage, the wife of State Sen. J ohn Lindsay, who \\'as \rounded in the neck, shoulder and leg by her cap- tors. Authorities discounled any political overtones to the kid· nap attempt despite its in· volven1ent of Lee and Mrs. Lindsay . "I don't think legislators were particularly inv-0lved," said Sheriff Jack Weatherly. "I think it was the rich people they were planning to hold for ransom." He said, ho\\·ever, dial the was "keeping a check" on other legislators In the area since it was the second recent incident affecting the families <lr members of the . Scluth Carolina General Assembly. The IJ.year-old daughter -0f Shoplift Action Set For Udall WASHINGTON iAPl Former Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall faces a court hearing Jan. 28 on a charge 0£ shoplifting that he attributes to a b sent· mindedness. Udall, now practicing Ja w in Washinglon, wa!I arresled by a guard outside a drug store in nearby McLean, Va., Saturday after falling to pay 00 cents for some cigars. He told newsmen later he had dropped the cigars into his pocket and then shopped for another item. At the ca.sh register , he said. he paid for the other item but forgot the cigars. Udall was taken lo the police station, mugged and fingerprinted and ch a r g e: d with concealment of merchan· dise, which carries a fine <lf up to $5()() and up to a year in jaU. State Rep. Jsmes OJttlno was killed by an abductor at Sumter a month •io while on her way to school. Weatherly said Bennett and Scales, a former Benneltl!iville resident, first drove their van to the home o( Wayne Chavis, a barber. They Ued up Chavi.!I, his wife and their four children and placed them in the van. Then they went to th~ home of Lindsay, who was away, and abducted the senator's wi fe, Frances. Neil they went to the home of another wealthy resident, who also was away, so they went next door to Lee's home. Lee, who belongs to a gun club and has "an arsenal at "Crumhlitag Antiques' Senators Map Attacli On Seniority System WASHrNGTON !UPI) The U.S. Capitol will become "an empty edifice of crumbJ. ing antiques," devoid of power, if the Senate does not alter its seniority system, Sen. Charles Mathias (R·Md.), said today. Mathias issued his call for reform at the start or two days of informal hearings he and Sen. Fred R. llarris (0- 0kla)/ chaired to spur their colleagues' interest In the au~ ject. The 92nd Session of Congrc:ss opens Thursday. Mathias sald his point was made by a constituent who recently wrote him, "the ma· jority isn't silent, the govern· ment is dear." Mathias and Harris primarl· Jy want to change the rulCll 50 that the position of com· mitt.ee chairman and ranking minority members are fUled by secret ballot ln party caucuses. Such positions now go automatically solely on the basis of seniority; lhe member of the majority party who has bttn a committ e e member longest automaticallY becomes ils chainnan and holds that post so l:ong 1s he holds oCficc. I See by Today's Want Ads e Get h~althy while you work! Position open at a JOC&I Healtlt F')()(f Store, ,/ Ck HELP WANTED. • The ~y Y.'ord1 "Q{ll; DR.EN OKAY!"'Jt you're ln the market for a nl~. larre apartment . Cle RENTALS. e Il'1 time tor yot1 to ''BOO- GIE" ln your new "BUG" Ck our autos for 18le cl11s NOW! Before 11'1 too late! STARTING DEC. 23 ~J. J111u1r1 18, Jq71 lNIM,llAgk ., _ • i DAILY PILDl g Wa11ace Launches 2nd Term Bills piling up? We say"yes" to 2,302 loans every week. We like to l'Nlke loana. So if you need 1DOMJ to pay oft plled-<Jp bills, use CUB. On approval you may borrow from $100 to SS,000 or more-with our Moms Plan "'°""'" back gu&rantee (lf you find you can do better, retum the money within 5 days at no coe:t to you). When you need money for bill oonsOOdation. major appliances, or any good reason, caU the friendly people at Morris Plan. ChanCM are, you'll have the money the same day "f04.lT loan Is approved. Morr,iS Plan 67:1-37GO Newport S.•ch-3700 Newport Boulav•nl NOWI LONG BEACH IS SHORTEP TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. ~GI•• ClDuntYI Tllll•-=~--11111111 -~ Now you cln fly PSA from Long tloach Airport to San Francisco. Four tlmss •day. More on weekends. More fllghts than any other alrllne. Connections to S1cr1- m1oto. Or. avoid the freewty,.and fly to San Diego. If you live any place south or , Lcng-·to San Froncltco •11 Including tax. leev• Long BMch: 7:'40 am 10:46 am 1:30pm 4:30 pm Mon tl'lru Tl'lurt & att More fllghto·Frl & lun. --- LOI Angelos (Ora,,go Cour1JY, P1loa V1rdo0, WllmlngtOn, "Torrance, .etc.), Long Beach la like ftavlng your own pr1vato airport You don't have to nght tho lreo- way traffic to L A. lntemat\of>al. There'• easy parklng.·And. the crowds haven't found It yeL Next time you head north (or aoU1h), head for Long Buch Airport by way of your travel agent and PSA. PIAIMIJlllll•lft. j , • QAILY PROT EDITORLU J»AGE . . Gamblin g Argum.ei;its 1'hose shock wa\les .fett ;~P and~~~ stat. ~f California last week ·emanateCl from ke,pers Qt the.P.'Wl· tan ethic. They had heard and read lhe>"unbellevable -mem- bers of the Legislature advocating wide-open gambling, Nevada-style, as a means of "giving CalUornia taxpayers a break." first, Sen. Mervyn fit. Dymally of Los Angeles, chair- man of the DemocraUc caucus in the state Senate, in- troduced a t>lan to establish a st.ate-operated lottery with proceeds goLng to public education. Then Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti (D-North fl ollywood) ,and Assemblyn1an Leon Ralph (D!Los An- geles), cha irman of the Assembly Govttnment Organi- zation Committee, said they Want to . explore off.track betlln E?. dog racing and jai alai in addition to a lottery. The three Democrats were joined by a fourth the next day when Sen. Alfred H. ·Song of Monterey Park called for establishment of a nine-member State Gamb- ling Com mission to explore the' feasibility of opening four remote. sparsely populated areas of the state to wide- opcn Nevada-style gambling. Song proposed areas .a~ay fron1 cities and to\vns to discourage impulsive part1c1pa· tion by those least able to afford-. it and to ease the poli· cing rroble1n. As though these proposals \\.'ere not liberalizing enou~h. still another Democrat, Sacramento Assembly- man Leroy F. Greene suggested studying the possibility of licensing and taxing prostitution. Jt appears California voters-may be called upon to do some soul-searching if a referendum results from !he gambling proposals. Among the arguments on which they likely will be called upon to pass judgment are: Apln1t: -Ready availability of legal ,gambling would attract patronage from many m"Ore persons of low income whose families would suffer ,{rom loss ot money needed for food , clothing and shelter. -Gambling is immoral and a character destroyer. To use funds from tb.4t sOurce to aupport educatil>n \vould set a bad example for our .children. -Government re£Ulat.ion would not preve.nt mu.scl· · Ing.In ·by •nderworld ganp, Corruption ~f-gov.,...ent oflicl~. inclu4ing law enfo~meot agencies, would .be as great at It Ii with illegal gambling. -Energy better spent oo constructiv~ work w~uld be diverted to dalliance with non-productive ga'!J~hng. Preoccupation with gambling would lower the eff1aency or the state's work force. For: -Gam blin~ has long heen legal at race tracks ao~ In some cities for poker. Bingo and other games. tf tt is ri1tht in one form and place, is gambling wrong in another? This is hypocrisy and an unwarranted intrusion by government into private affairs. . -Californians now soend some $300 million a year fn Nevada, more than half of it on j!amblinl?. California government, in financiaJ crisis, should tap this resource and use the tax proceeds for constructive purPoses - school aid, welfare. law enforcement, other esseritial services. -People -poor and rich alike -will gamb_Ie .. ille~ally if neCessarv. To the poor. it represents spice, excitement in an otherwise drab life. To the affluent, it is a challen2e. No prohibition of ,e:ambling has ever or \\ill ever stifle the impulse to gamble among those \vho have the urge. -The percentage of gamblers who are compulsive and as a result ruin their lives and hurt their families is abOUt the same as the percentage of uncontrolled a1co-- holics. It is a minority for whom treatment is available. For the vast majority. neither gambling nor use of alco- holic beverages causes any perceptible harm along.with the pleasure. -Legalization and government supervision would greatly reduee the influence of the underworld both on the conduct of gaming and the "take." Operations would be much more honest. · These are some of the arguments on both sides. A statewide referendum will be in order U and when the proposals now before the Le'gislature appear helded for enactment into Jaw. 'Keerful thar, fella'. That thang might go off and hurt somebody!' Drive to Beat Nixon i n 197 2 · Enabliti g Young Peop w To Gro w Vp Dear Gl oomy Gus: Hidden Angels Financing Democrats ( l ........ What do young people need to enable them to grow up? Most of all tbcy need to ex~rience situations in which they are ke'ld accoontable for actions and decisions in the. real world. They neffl respansibilities. Sd100l ~-Ibo real world. tt is pre- paration for life. not 1lfe itself. The mis- take a student makes in arithmetic class is of little mo- ment, but if a bank clerk m a k es the s a m e mistake he fouls up a deposi· tor 's account. If he is lucky he is merely rep rimanded. He is more likel y lo be fired. Youth in prosperous indu strial socie~ies ha\•e many privileges, many luxuries. from bl-fi stereos to sports cars. For many young people college :1erves as a rather expensive play-school for the prolongation of adolescence. BUT ALL \'OUNG people. including 1he serious·minded and studious ma- jority. are in a sense a deprived class. They are deprived by long years or compulsory schooling fthe compulsion is both legal and s()Ciall of the op- portunity lo exp c r i enc e adult re spQnsibllitJe:1;. And because of lhi:1; deprivation 1nany of them are. bored and frustrated. Some drop ou t. Some. not kno"·ing the rause.s of their boredom or fru~!ration, give vent to their rage by striking at 1heir parents, their col· leges. their nation. The Report of the Carnegie Com- mission on Higher Education . "Less Time. r.iore Options" (~1cGrav. .. Hill Book Co.l. is an extraordinarily important doc ument. because its recommendations are based on the assumption Utat prob- blems of higher edu cation are problems of society as a whole. and not merely of lhe coUeges and universities. WHAT lS CHALLENOEI> throughout the report are outrqoded ideals of educa- tion which still determine to· a aurprtsing degree educational practices -83 well as building designs and site locations -universities as "Ivy-covered hi.Us. 11 as finishing schools ror the cbildren of the privileged classe~. n sanctuari• from the world ol practical affairs. What is urged is that higher education ghould be directly Involved in the adult world. Given the:re~rt's suggestion U~at young. "le lnctUJO have the optipn 1fter bllb school " deferring eollele ror two • lhrlll years '1to get servke and wft trptrience." what will lhty do during that lnterv1J! HeN tbe l'1llJ0!1 calls on soctety 1• ...J';t_ • -• Quotes Roly ~ s.r-... -··-· young l'OOl'le i..t.y doo·t rapect avthorlly, IUll becau!e il II autl1ortty •. 'Ibey abould otop llJ1d rullu hoW I~ they an to have w?wt wt Mn toctay." L)'ll• "'PllJO. . ...neati ""'l<el wnauter for Cllpll1l9e elettl 9llcJ ftra -··wommf1 Lib! I'm for oqoal ulaty ond equ.ol job """'""""1· bot I doo' want any man to tre• me oChm' than as 1 woman. I don't want men ...,. to lt.f> _.1., -· or puWas out mi_ chair for me." I I J used to think the old Orange County .Board of Supervisors was a little flaky. But if these new guys teep on the way they start· ' ed," they're going to set a new all time record for flakiness and make the Old guys look like great statesmen! -H. L. M. ' WASHINGTON -With the Democratic national committee $8 million in debt there still seems to be no ahortq:e of funds for financing individual can- didates trying to beat Ni:100 In 1972. Surmise tra<:t!s some of the mone y to well-heeled anti-war elements, in· dividual business men, generou.s liberals. A!l tile senators seem to have selfless T1lll ·,..,II,. rmtllcf'I rt••~ vi.wt. Mt -tUr 111n1 l'f ""9 --""· Sfflf ~ Hf -" ,. • .....,, o-. tleHJ ,1 .. 1. Tbrtt United States senators have been able to find benefactors to pay the freight for Wash- ington campaign of. fices, foreign travel benefactors rivaling or exceeding in and other incidcnla1 generosity the friends ~·ho raised funds expenses of making for the polislting of Nixon's image when a whole to share with l.natituliom. ef themselves better he wu Vice President hiSber" learnlns I.he responsibll~ty for known to the gener-It may saJely be ·concluded that wlien bringin& )'CJl!,Ull people to maturity· al publlc. a .senator fa vored by .so few regular -~~ _.._I:'_,. _,__ "" , , ,A . .19Ut1Jii U.S. senator, with , fJJ'P!4!.i • t llemocrats as Gwrge McGo:v~n"*.~lh ~· .. ~~·n:1~~ nv· reioureet-ol"his own, will nol be (01.iOO ' DaJCot.a can talk of ralMg -. D:i111ton :special ,,nnrblan -auier IM(t the .draft rhort of funds shoWd he deci~ that dollars for his <Jwn political pr'omotion -f<r YOWll people who do not go the ootlook for his nominaUon and elec. In the next year there must be, to on to . college. The . report .urges .~ Lion improves with the passage of time. paraphrase P. T. Barnum . a benefactor e~p~ns1on of educat~nal op~rlunitie:s Still another, a fifth United States born every minute. outside or college . We belteve that senalor. shows promiJe or getting enough federal. slate aod m ~ n IC 1Pa 1 cash for a preliminary presidential run. governments, on _a Pf.l'manent . basis, and others may join the pi'ocession of should offer , service tipportunitJes to self-promotion before long. young people.' JUST WHERE ALL this money is coming from -it will in the end run into the millioos -remains a my&tery unless the senators depart from custom and unveil their hidden angels. They are under no legal compu lsion to do I myself have urged in these columns a compul!ory national service corps for all young men and women between high school-and college, but tbe report'• alternaUv"e version of the work-and- service idea is certainly acceptable le me. Whether in Vi.sta. Peac:'e Corps, Teacher Corps. Youth for Service or so. a new version of the Civilian Conserva- ANOTHER POINT is worthy of nole. Nixon's coterie of opponents ari ses ex- clusively from the United States Senate. Not a slate governor, nor any othe r national political figure in l h e Democratic party emerges as a .serious contender for the Democratic presiden- tial nomination. This lead s to another conclusion. The United Stales Senate is, in the next two years, to be the cockpit, the sounding board. there.verb er at lo n chamber, of the Democratic effort to beat Nixon in a degree and intensity never previousry equaled . The oncomi ng clamor cannot be compa red to 1960 wh en Nixon as Viet! President was the clear ly indicated Republican ric:ninee. and Sen. John F. Kennedy emerged as the pro- spective Democratic nomin~. In the present inS1 ance, rour and maybe six or eig ht United States Senators who aspire to lhe presidency will vie with each other ~Hi the intensity of their rivalry to derogate Nixon and all his works. THE FOUR WHO ARE certain to be in the fray are Senator !\iuskie of Maine, Senator McGove rn, Senator Hughes of Iowa (who has set up a mini-campaign orfice and hired former Senalor Ooode!l 's press secrelary), Senator Kenn edy. (wltose staff and personal adviser facilities are ready fo r instant conversion into cam pa i g n machinery). Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana and Sen. William Proxm ire. of Wisconsin are 11\so willi11g and getting ready, and, of course, Sen. Humphrey or Minnesota could he templed to rise above the scramblfng partisans tc lay on lhe healing hands which would qualify him as the Demoq'aLic savior once again. None of lhi s creates the conditions Nixon would desi re for his last chance to enact a constructi ve program. Ea ch of the contend ing senators will himself ~·ish to be considered the father of sonic constructive act as was the case v.·hen Sen. Kennedy preempted credit belonging as n1uch or more lo Sen Mansfie ld and others for enactment ol the l&-year-old vote. TIIE PRESIDENT HAS an . antidote and he evidently intends to use it. ll is the antidote of dimin ished partisanship which he exhibited to the nation in hls recen t conversation with television commentators. \\'hile the. Senate writhes with rivalry to SllCCet'd him he wou ld rise above partisanship and take Vice President Agnew with him, their only conce rn the enactn1cnt of new programs fnr the public welfare. Agnew . thus. is to be saniti7.ed and" Ni xon himself is to avoid the abrasions of the recen t campaign. His new spokesman in the Senate. Sen. Dole or Kansas. also promi ses to be poli1e . It will all be a hard act 10 perform. but Nixon has proved skillful in n1oving from one po litical phase to another. tion Corps, there is abundant work for young men and women to do -in restoring the countryside, making our cities livable, caring for old people and the very young, waging an all-out na• tional ca mpaign against illiteracy -to say nothing of service abroad wherever Cambodian Crisis Ma y Alte r Plans they may be needed. "INDUSTRY," CONTINUES t h. report, "should examine its hiring policies and em ployment patterns 10 determine ways in which it can provide short-term jobs for young people who \lo'ish work experience beJore ta"king further formal educat ion." Certainly not many companies are at present geared lo do this kind of educa- tional job, but If industry were to accept education u one of ill normal functions fas it already accepts training), and if government were to provide grants-in· aid and scholarablps (as tbe report sug- 1esti) for young -people in industrial and business "internships," a pattern of goyemment-lndustry cooperation can be workH eut towards a better and more functional education for everybod.v. LABOR UNIONll llready have a poten- Uilly ponrNI education1I tool In their apprentlC18htp programs. Instead of us- ing these programs to" limit opportunities fGr the rouni: can they not exercise educationaJ Jeadenhip and uae lhem not only to train future journeymen. byt 1lso to brolcttn U'f experience ind oaUook of ~ who will evtntuati, becomt tetcben or lawyen Ol'1 n· ecutlve1! Also wtthin very ftw Yt•rt. altbotlgh the r<pOrt doe• not m<nfloo Ulli, lbe military drift will be brouahl to an end and we 1re likely to llaye .~eel forces on an enllttly YOluiiterr J; Mills. The military 11 then likely to atnd many of ill tralnees to cotleae. under orders, la ....,,. '-'-· political ---~ inaibemotlcl, enpwtng. Wben thls happem the 'ROTC IUY ... 11 be :abcillahed, but otronctr U•• ,.m .....,. nect -enllla to the •orld ""tilde. I •nx 1!1.1 lhtt the rej)Ofl empbtsino tbe fM:I thtt hlpr t<b:allott ind lhl flllara ti """' an 1YOrybodf1 bllllotss. Efl!li~ will blYe le live 111'ith Ult Man tllot ,..U. mats. Ill I. I. R1yabwa .....- ... ~ .... Coflep WASHINGTON -Cont r11ry to Presi· dent Nixon'.s assurance lhe t his drive Into Cambodia v•ould speed the U.S. withdrawal from Vielna.m, there is now danger that the Cambodian crisis could slow the pull-out pace. Both Defense Sec- retary Laird and Adm. Thomu Moor· er have been order. ed to Soullleut Allla lo size·up ti,. Ca~ bodlan alluaUon. The President Is 1wait.- ing their rtP'>r1. be- rort he decilies to go ahead wllh hll wi11l- dr1wal Pft'lll'llD. He had· planned to ~ 1n May, on the aMlvenary ti the c.mbodian incursion, that the U.S. has ended Ila combat operations in SOuth Vitltnam, except. for .. air and artillm'y ~ He wanted to ~ • ~:fto .111 tliat Americon IJOlll1d "-:noid ooq fllbl . -"';def " ' lQ~ enst. • NOW ·HE IS WAmNG to find out wheltler 1 re-lnva~of. Cambodia NY . bt necessary to aAVfl' tbl1,;~lrf bun a Communlll tu..ovw. ne flu llO<in- tentlon cl eehdlnt AinerlGMi1 troopo,bod Into C.mbodia. But ia South Vtet:Mmetie Invasion force may be· needed to defend the Lon Nol 10\'.tmmen& froal a .arowina: c..\munln butlcklp. • The .,,..,_, Is .,....,,""._ South Vldna.-""°"" to ~ the American w1thdrawal. To, '91..n:, \J.L- air. 1rtlllery and serv~ units thst are being lefl bob lnd. e.t If the bat SOUth Vletn1mue dlvllionl are ardertd Into ~. -.... Amerl ... .---Bv G~.,,• •o Dear Georae: ' My hlllblnd driou -.nUy, can't hold a steady job, wobbles M'OUnd the bouH 1U dfy, or runs around wtth • bundl or bums. Why do )'OU think he lcil thb WI)'! M. I. Dear M. L.! H•'• drjsnk. combat troops South V~tnam. \VOUkl have lo Footnote : Laird and Moorer will also report to the President on Communist build-lip in Laos and the northern part ol South Vktnam. THE DIPLOMATIC chill Jn MOICOW b11 left more fro.st on the. AmericaD embassy than the blustery .RWllfln winier. Not since lhe cold war ha\•e Soviet officials been so harsh in attitude toward the U.S. their Soviet Foreign r.-linister A n d r e 1 Gromyko used the excuse of anti-Soviet acts by Jewish ex tremists in the U.S. to deliver a blistering protes t lo American Ambassador Jacob Beam. The dour Russ ian warned ominously it would be hard to restrain angry Soviet citizens from retaliating with anti-American acts, A State Department analysis ha.s at· tributed the cold cllmale to an internal struggle over economic policies. While this i.s going on, according lo the estlmate, neither side w1nts to be too V~S. Shipping: New Er a • ' . . M'"Y thoughUul people •re deeply eon- cemtd by the steady rollback of U.S. leadership in many area involving what \her feel to be the · 1tCUrlty of the naUon.' There ti•• been one bright ex- ception to the treml, however, ill the approval of Consrea of 1 program to rtltore the United Stites to a po!'litlon of slttngth~ •Iii a most ·important phate of over,U n&lhx\11 security. The nation b • now·· ·on Ill way to the rebuilding olill merthont marine. IN COMMEN'ITNG on the signing by President Nixon of !he lsw tc r'v\taliie the u.s .• nag shippln1 fleet , James J. ~. prttktent of the American I-of Merchant Shipping, declares. ""IJ-Merchant Marine Act or 1970 wiJI uahlr In 1 new 1nd revolutionary era In Amulcan·nag shipping. Not only will it j>f'Ovkte tile necessary means tc rtttort t~ Industry and bring about 1 rt.birth or the American Merchant Marine, but It will 1lto l•unch the mosl dl,·eralrled 1Jhlpbuildlni progr1m In U.S. maritime history. We commend hlghly tht .etlon or President Nixon. tM Congrw, con- cerned 1ovtrnmeot qeocles, a n d maritime labor ind management, who forged 1 link of unity • • . to work toward passage of this creative legisla- tion that will beneflt all stgmentl of industry, the taxpayer and the nation. ';THIS COOPERATIVE working rrl11- tlonship must continue for iLs succes:;ful implementation. As we now go forward with the 300-ship building program . our n1tion will have the most technologicall y advanced merchant fleet on the high seas , .. " One or the ~t enCOt.1r1ging upectr of passage of the shipbuilding program w11s, a., Mr. Reynold.s nb5erved, the unity with wh ich leaders In and out of g'ovemment recognh:ed the Imperative need to restore the marl11me strength of our country. The ~me unity and cooperation shoulrl be extended into othtr are.as invol ving U.S. lnter111tlonal leadership and sec.urlly . lnduttrl1t News Revlew frie ndly to the Americans. THE TECHNOCRATS of the C:entr11I Committee are worried over the kind of economic di sco ntent that erupted in to a wor kers revolt in Pola nd and "·ant to divert more of !heir national effort from strengthenin~ the military to in1· proving living Cfinditlons. The Slate Department's Kremlin v.•atchers arc uncertain at this time v.·hettler party technocral, v.·ill triumph over the generals at the War Mi11istry, The possibllil y has even been suggested that the Breshnev-Kosygin Jeade r8hip could be overthrown in a power struggle, PRESIDENT NIXON'S foreign policy adv isor. Henry KWinger. is more in· clined to attribute the cold Soviet attitude to a deliberate anti-American policy_ He suspects that the Kremlin is rourting • Western Europe and cold shouldering the U.S. in a conscious effort to drive a wedge between the U.S. and its Euro- pean allies and to fret.le lhe U.S out of Europe.. No one, however, believes the KremJ in really wants to abandon ttie era of riegotiations and return to U1e era of • c.onfronlation. -----iiliillililai.. Monday. January 18. 1971 Thtt rdi.torlol pog1· oj th< Doflt1 • Pilot se1kl to inform ond ,um. ulatt rtadcr1 bu prnmting thil Y MW&paper'r opinit:m.$ and com- t'Mnkz1"1/ cm tovitt of interest and signific ance, by providing a forum for the expressio-n of our r!!a d,.rs ' opinion.!, and b11 prt stt1ting Orf' diuer.~I! vitw- 1>oi11t' of Informed obseroer.t n11d spokrsnien on topir..S' n/ tile daw. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • B Ct F HA -\\'h opened hi~ .s hnirtu ;, "I'm ret1 rc1 e,1nOOt c111y r pnces ;ind ennug On s lnwns barber modes doah he rai ''Th merce "Othc I \VCIS of 1h organi pay m On ginbol and a of sh<t He price 11ppl'd ccnls Me a hai of th for 65 thi s h mflny works. Bot dnwn . • FI R p to Acr11un1 ot \ID C.ORPOR voCrd on f< (Ofl1 Acrnunl tmanC•d • "' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ( ... ' ' " D " world' lo I um PILO Barber, 62, Cuts Hair For 2 Bits HAR RISONBURG, Va. (AP J -\\'hen Strode Higginbottom opened his barbershop in 1938 his specialty was a good haircul for 25 cents. It slill is. ··rm just a few years from rct1rc1ncnt, ·· says Hig· ginbottorn. 62. "I don't see a11y reason to go up on my prices now. There's just me and n1y wife and we make C'nough to get along." On several occasions, fellow lnwnsmen, especially fellow barbers, have called at his modest shop in this Shenan- <loah Valley ci1 y to urge that he r;iise his price. .. The Chamber of Com- merce came," he s ays . "Others ca1nc. They told me J wasn't being patriotic. Some or them said I.hey would organi1.c a boycott. I didn't pay much attention lo them." On a good d a y . Hig- ginbollo1n gives 60 haircuts and c111 ind::lcrrninate number of shaves. He has "'cakcned on the prtcl' cf shaves -they were uppC'd rrorn 15 cents to 25 t:e111s a while back. lie offers "the works" - a haircul. shave and tonic of the custoiner's choice - for 65 cen ts. As a result of lhis hit or sort sell. he says, mHny custorners get "lhe works.·• But he concedes he's slowlng dov.·11. •v •o • FIRESIDE ACCOUNTS PROTECTED 10 $10,000.00 Accoun1~ p<o1ec1eo llll 111 ' rnd11m11m 111 SIO OOO OO by IHlllll GUARANTY CORPORA !ION o1 C<11!!G1n1a only ii~ pr11 v1dtd +n 1he Cahlorn1a f in.tnto ;tl Codt A tOPY o! Ch~pte1 8 •Ct1dldntr of lhril! Accounl~)o! D1v•~•Ofl 7 o! 1he C;ihf111m.1 findnt1al Corje mdy ~ ob!;11ned upon re111'~~! IHRlf I GUARANfY CORPORA· liO N Of CA!lf ORNIA IS NOT AN INSIRUMINIAL!n' Of IH[ Sl "TE Of CAllfORNIA ••••••••••• • SIOll lY ST!R ll 1.,.,.,.p,.,;,,.,. : FIRESIDE pays : : HIGHER RATES! ; • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • PAID • : MONTHLY ; • • • N O LO NG-TERM • • REQUIREMENTS • • YOURS EACH 6 EVERY • • MONTH.• $21.0S CHEC!( = • on OllC h ssooo C••l•li· • t ile. II r>c ld under 6 I • months, IHinclp1! re· • • ducod by check• ••nl • vou Funds In 1ale IS • ~S!h ctun hom 1st. Woll'I· • • dra .. als ha,,..1lwaysbeen • • Pil•d on dem1nd. • • m PAID • • QUARTERLY •• • • • o" ~A•••ooic.s • 1ny amount. Funds >n • • 1111e 11ll th1ny rnontl'I • eJ •n on1••11M lrom 151 • . ~··" ·: ..... ~ .... ~.. . • O•c• ~o t1U11r1i1 Ollict1 • • .. ....... ti • '-'"''" "''"'' •• ,. • • MORE THAN A BILLION • • DOLLA"S In ASSETS • FIRESIDE Thrifl ~ STARS Svd"tY Q..,,., ;, on1 of lh• 'fO•ld'o 9r11I ••ifo!og1n. Hit i!olomn :, on1 of th• DAILY PILOT'S gr11t f11h1•11. . ' ' . ' . ; r ' t • ' ' OAJL V PJLOT l . -• ; ' Storewide clearance ., .---.------------·-- 3as Speclot pure-(lflce on pinch PINI dnperieo. Rayon/ace~te in a ~ich. nubby homespun texture. DexoratorootOrs. 48'' w1de. Choice Of45" or 54" lengths. ' Clearance on 'Culver' foamback furniture throws. Te xtured woven fabric throw permanently laminated to color matched foam. Non-slip, Dustite, machin e wa!hable. Brown, green , gold, turquoise, rlchty fringed. 80 X 70", Rog, 6.49, NOW Value. Boys' knit shirts of 100% acrylic. English crew neck in assorted stripes. Long sleeves . S-M-L. 222 Smart Continental styling. Penn Prest• patye1ter/cotton In aS10rted plaids. Sizes 28-38. Otfo, 1.81, NOW 499 ' ' Electric bl1nket sale. 1 · Full size, single control. /_ --· Pink. gold, moss, green. ~--.... _ blue. Reg. $20, , ... •1·! NOW :../. 1311 Value. ~I~! Infant&' long alNY• piltterned polo shirts with reinforced anap ahoulders. Sizes 1-4. Boys' Orlon• acrylic/nylon 1tretch crew socks Jn white. black, Ivy, navy, )leather, dark brown, whiskey. Sizes :s-M-L 2 for $1 Men~s shortsleeve sportshirts. When did a $10 ·bill buy so much? $10 buys 5 Polyester/cotton ~enn Prest~ sport sh irts for never-iron ease. Short sleeves in solid cok>rs. long alffve alao available 4 for $10 .. -'" Closeout! Girls' jeans frOrrrone of the leading jean manufacturers. 100% cotton in assorted stri~s. sizes '7-14. . -. Or1Q.•5;Now 2 for $7 ·'~ ·~~ ·.-Cott~1nelHned cotton corduroy pen ti:: for toddlers. Sizn1T~T. Women 's dresses in va.riOus styles and fat>rics. Broken size5 ... tremendous values . Orig.$910$13, NOW 5ss Value. It still means something at Penneys . . . ~ ' . " ~'~, '..J ,...,~ .. • ·-'I -. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! ' ' -' . .. : . - i J I I I • I I I 8 DAJLY PILOT I Wires Mixed Computer Dating Complaint,s ToW NEW YORK AP -One was a lame girl, one a traveling salesman, anolher a midd le- aged ~·idow . Lonely , seeking companionship with the op- posite sex, they paid hundreds of dollars to computer dating finns. And what did they get for their money7 unsuitable religion. Their stories and others like them came at a public hearing Friday by the state attomey general's office inlo dating finns, to determine if the boooling industry o( com- puterired matchmaking needs state regulating. ''Sometime.a it seems that lhe matches are made ooly on the basis of "You're a guy, and I'm a girl ," !aid Asst. Atty. Gen. Stephen 1'1inde11, whose office has been flooded with complaints that f'A llfJLY CIRCfJS ,,., ........... ... • u •.... ·~ "It's not mine." "Not mine ." ''Not "Not . " mine. "\\'e thought because she's hand icappt'd it \\'ould be a good way to meet people, but she ha s not had one dale," said litrs. Doree J\.1itle r of Careret. N .J .. whose daughter walks \\'ith two canes, and paid $395 for dates that never materialized. the dating firms failed to --------~-------------! match couples even in such •·J could have dooe better by taking names out of a phone book ," said the sa lesman, Stanley Pekarsky of Brooklyn. He paid $~ receiv- ed fil·e narne s, found all five v•om~n unsuitable. "Ile "'as old enough to be 1ny grandfather,'' said the middle.aged widow. Harriet \Veiner of Flushing. Queens, or the first date she got for her $395. She tried again and came up with a man of basic areas as age, rtligion and height. Dr . J.R. Block. chairman of psychology at Hofstra University. said firms that claim to match couples on the basis of 30 separate Ques- tions v.·ould need a file of at least one billion persons to accomplish this. However, he said he believed there was a place for properly-regulated dating firms. '"Iben! .eems to be a need for people to extend the number of people they know .'' he testified. "We're living in a world that's rather im - personal." About 50 veterans of com- puter dating were in the hear- ing roonl, most or them "'omen . Bemadelte Ciscie , 24, signed a $500 contract. specifying that she wanted to da le col - lege-educated men. Instead. she said. all she drew were dolls. Byron Hoss, 2~. who lives in Brooklyn. paid $500 and found himsel f matched with a woman who li ved in Con· nee Lieut. And V.'altcr P. Gordon, over 6 feet tall and ve ry thin, paid $500 to a matchmaking firm. He said he got one date for his money -a girt 5-.feet-2 and 180 pounds. Our carpet prices just hit the floor. Sale4~~ ' \ ..... 6.tll 'Legion' 100"Xt continuous --nyton is ol tutted oonstruc:Uon tor long ..... Tweed level loop goee with ""I 11n1ornW decor. Great color cl'lok:e. Sale6~~ Reg. a..501 'Majesty' mulli--level loop• randcln aheared for rich, sculptured effect. Kodel • polyester pile is easy to eve tor. Decorator solid colors. Sale6~~ Reg. 1.a 'Echo' "sptuah" COl'hbines the informal lty of ahltg with tttt IUXUfY ol plush. Kode1 • polyeelet' makee ft bounce back. clean easily_, A new decorator k>ok in tMhloncalors. Atk 1bout our expert carpet inttanation •Mee. P1nneya ha a compieae oolocllan ol value-9flcod °""'°' poddiog. Value. It still means something at Penneys. l\nne111 I • For cerp•t •stimat• cell tedey: FAS HIO N IS LAND , N•wport C1nt11r l 644-23I l 1 HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunt ington l•ech 1892-7771 l. U1 • Penney1 ,im• peyment pL1111. Bli11d Virgi11ia Scout Awarded Eagle Rank HOPEWEU..., Va. fAP) - ··1 don't want anybody pitying me. l wanl lo be just like anybody else," says Ralph Conrad, a blind hlj;h school sophomore-who baa j u s t received llie highest rank in Boy Scouting. Ralph, 17, who has been blind since birth, moves freely in a sighted world \(:ith an independence that allows few concessions to his blindness. He doesn't have a guide and shuns use of a white cane. Recently, Ralph reached a piMacle of achievement for boy Jiis age. "It is our privilege lo con- gratulate you on achieving scoutihg's blghesl rank,'' Boy I could have accomplished "But don't forget,'' Harvie Scout headquarters read, in-_w_hC-'a_<_l_d_id.:..'_' _R_a.:.lp_h_csa..:Yc.'_· ___ •_ddl-'-, _"h_•_dl_d_it_a_ll_blJMo __ U_.'_' forming the youth that he had won scouting's hi g be st ~!be Eagle badge. "NeveT forget,'' the letter cootinued, "that .IJUUlY people helped you along the scout trail." "I have so many friends I don't know how to coWll lhe1n, "·Ralph says proudly. One of the most important is William Harvie, a former industrial chemist wh-0 ha s been the youngster's friend, tutor and scout advisor for the past 10 years. "Without him I don't think Artificial Teeth Never· Felt So Natural Before Now ••• Plastlc Cream Dlscovtry Revolutlonlus DentuN Wurln1 For the first lime. Klel\ot olfen I ... 9"' -• tt"lfMWly. You NJ' pla1tw: cream that holds dmtura bite hards, chefJ bettu, Ml 1110r• 11 tht:y'vl! never been held beicn-n1ti.an.lly. lormtan ela1t1t rnembrvie th1t.lodJ>1 f lll00&NT l11lt lot houn. RailQ ltoU :Yotn ~111vr11 /1 I.ts u)l'1o/ Ju-moitture. IArltunt that fit .,. ,.. IUIJ of )'{>I" -W•. lllllial to health. 5es your denU.t It'• a revolut ionary d it.eo•ctJ' recuJ,.arly, Get llhJ-to-ua F1:lOOQIT c.aJJe:d F1xooEN14 for daily home Denture Adhe11•• Crea.Ill et I.II u11e. {U.S. Pat..ent fJ,003,988) druc COW1ttn. F1xooeNT boldt dlnturu 6nDcr Shape-up sale! Let's reduce together: Your shape. our prices. Sale 4999 Reg. 59.99. Pro-Am3 W•"/ exercise cycle. Pedals, handle and seat move for 3 way exercise. Chrom e plated st eel construction. Sale 9999 R•U· 119.tl Vll•mastsr bell meuager. Y~ HP molor~ variable speed control, 4"web belt, all steel construction. Sale 3499 Rs;. 39.H. Blcycl• uerc!Hr. Full chain aciion drivt. Adjustable handlebar and seat. Sale 6999 R•;. 711.tl Vitamastar doub'9 post b•lt mauag•r. Augg•d st.II construction, 4" web belt. 2995 Sllm-n·Trfm exerclMr Gre1t for toning up, slimming down or just relaxing. Eapeci1lly effective for waist, hips. thighs and back. The lightweight tubular aluminum Slim-n-Trim comes fu lly assembled, has vinyl cover, folds up for easy storage. u •• "•"~•v• 1 ..... J>•v"'•n' plJ" FASHION ISLAND , N e wport Center •' '"' •' "••• ,,,. • ., HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Bea ch S~ep Sw~d •y, + .. 12 t• l l'.M. r , r , ~ Angela's Lawyer Blasts Indictment \ , SAl'I FRANCISCO IAP) The chief counsel for black militant Angela Davis con- tends the transcript of the grand jury indictment link- ing her to a court house shoot- out amounts to "guessing and conjecture of the wildest or- der ." Attorney Howard Moore Jr. of Atlanta declared Saturday the 14J.page transcript, made public Friday. contained "un- circumstantial evidence invoJv. ing totally legal conduct." The defense has filed a n10- tion to dismiss the indictment on the basis of insufficient ev- idence and to have the avowed C-Ommunist and former UCLA philosophy professor released on her O\VTI recognizance O! on reasonable bail. She is char- ged with murder, kidnap and conspiracy in the ~farin Civic Center shootaut in \\'hich a judge and three other persons wtre k.illtd last Aug . 7. Moore told a. ney,·s oonfer- ence that argum ent on the dis. mi.ssaJ motion "will establisb that the prosecution's presen- tation to the grand jury con· sists of allegatioos of wholly lawful and innocent acts on the part of Miss Davis which are sought to be con~ted with alleged criminal conduct by conjecture and specula· ti on." Arguments on motions prob- ably will be held in t.1arch . Miss Davis is charged with furnishing guns used in the shootout. She is nol accused of actually being present. but under Callfornla law an acces- sory is as guilty as a person who commits a crime. Moore said the transcripl "convinces me beyond any doubt that Angela Davis is the target of a vicious political frameup . ''No responsible and fair minded prosecutor would ever bring three capital murder charges against a person ()n the basis of this k.ind of .. evidence.'· Forger'''s Fun Gal Writes Out $50,000 SAN FRANCISCO IUPI) - A pretty, yo_ung blonde who claims to have forged more than $50,000 worth of checks in four months says she "en- joyed every minute" of it. Janice Long, 21, jailed here for fo rging checks at various Bank of America branches, said, "I kno\v I'm going to have to pay for what I've done. But I enjoyed every minute. God, I couldn 't stand being a housewife with 10 kids doing the sqburb bil" Miss Long said she had an accomplice who supplied her with checks punched with a victim's name and information from confidential bank file s. including a copy of the signature. She said :;he then practiced the signatures, visited several banks in a day and headed back to her $38ft.a-month hillside a pa r t m en L in Sausalito. Her operation ended when she aroused suspicions by a1 - tempting to cash a check of a woman in her 70s. The ac- count had been with the bank since 1956, .when Miss Long was 6 years old. Police suspect that a male accomplice in the e>peration still remain! free. 3 Cops Save 13 Persons From Blaze LOS ANGELES (UPll - The lives of 13 persons were :;aved Sunday by three police Qfficers who led the1n from a burning rooming house in Highland Par.k. Officers Forest Wilkins, 24, and Gerald Manske, 29, saw flames leaping from the two- story frame house early Sun- day morning while on pa trol. They radioed for firemen and ran into the house to carry out Angela Leland. 72, and Mike Alvarez. Police Sgt. Robert Green. 47, arrived and 1he three went back inside to lead ll Qlhers to safety . None of the rescued was injured but Wilkins had to crawl out of the build ing on his hands and knees the last trip when he was overcome by smoke. He and Manske were treated for smoke in- halation at Lincoln Heights Receiving Hospital . School Burned LOS ANGE LES (UPI) - A blaze firemen said was starled by arsonists caused $5,000 to a classroom at Markham Junior High School Sunday. The classroom was gulled and smoke al.so caused damage to several other rooms . Call Collect (714) 523~'6511 Call now! We'll save you up to 1 /3 on custom draperies. Select f1bric from a be1utiful collection of fabrics specially choeen for this event. They include: open weaves, cuuala. •II cottons, slub weaves and sheers. Our decor~tor will htlD you make your decorating ideas 1 reallty ..• at reallstlc prices. Rogul1r low Pennoy pr-fol' flbrlclllon. "1onday, Ja11uary 18, 1971 DAILY Pitt': !J Democrats Map Review Budget Facing Challenge Tormenting Rectal Iteli Of.Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved i SACRAMENTO I AP) Publication ot Gov. Reagan 's 1971-72 budget proposal is still more than t;1,·o "'eeks away, bu t the s~nding plan -ex- pected to total nearly $7 billion -is already facing a serious cha Henge. Led by Asse mblyman Willie Brown . Assembly Democrats are putting together a special budget task for ce that is ex- pected to conduct the most detailed r evi ew or a Rovernor's budget in Ca lifor n:.,·s 120.year legislative hl!tory . The Repu blican governor and Democratic leaders of the Assembly are far apart - despi te a public show of coop- eration -on s u c h budget basics as spending and taxing prioritie:;, tax and welfare refonns and even the size of the budget. Reagan has said he expects lo submit a balanced budget y,•ithout new taxes by means of belt-tightening and reforms. particularly in welfare. That would indicate ai budget proposal close to the current year·s $6.59 billion spending program. depe nding on how inflationary factors balance out aga inst the state 's economic slowdown as they affect the sta1e·s hundreds of tax sou rces. But if the governor ·s budget also counts the extra money In many cases Preparation H ai Vet prompt, temporary relier from 1uch pain and itching and actually helpe shrink swelling of hemorrhoids.I tis- aues caused by inflammation. T•t.a by doctora on hun- dnida of pat~t.a ahowed thia to be lrUe in; many CUM. In fact, many doctor•. &hem· selves, use Preporotion 118 or ,_,,,,,.nd it "" tboi< Wn- iliea. Preparation H ointment or 1uppoeitoriea. which payroll withholding ofl;=====================, state incon1e tax wou ld bring in -an issue Ra;igan swit- ched on and finally supporls -then the budget c™ld be I based on an income f i g u r e t·lose to or abo\le $7 billion. Fastest in West Buy It. Stll it. Try tilt f;i.stest rtsponsr In tht Wtst against )'OW' own clock. Ttst 01mt-.a-line Ads, whtrt tht action Is, in Saturdaf s DAILY PILOT~ Furniture clearance Contemporary 7 pc. dinette set has white woodgrain table top. white and gold paisley design chair upholstery. HURRY I QUANTITIES ARE LIMIT!D. Handsome ciui lted Jacquard sofa. 83'' Jong, covered in cotton/rayon mint green jacquard. Versatile Lawson style . Latex foam rubber cushions, hardwood frame. 5 piece dinette set Mediterranean style . Oak laminated tabl e top, floral print upholstered chairs. Contemparary Herculon<1 vinyl recliner. The no care features of vinyl upholstery have been combined with fashion look of a best selling Herculon• olefin tweed fabric. In black or green with 3 position mechanism. Full afzt only Firm innerspring construction with scientifically engi neered box spring. Quilted top construction. 'El Royal•' family room furniture. Spanish styling is distressed dark oak finish over hardwoods. c ·ushlons of shredded polyurethane foam covered with black vinyl. Sola. Orig S249. NOW $199 Love seat, Orig. $ 199, NOW $16 9 Rocker recliner, Orig . $1 69. NOW $139 Value. It still means something atPenneys. l\nne111 Av•il•ble •f the following P•nn•y 1fort1: FASHION ISLAND. N.wport C•nt,r. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington 8•• c;h. U11 P•nney' tim • p•yment plotn. I I I • l I ' J• DAllV PllOT For The Record Di••olution• Of Marriage Lewl1, ....,"1\.':. J:.:'rJ:,!' lrwln 1-1uv, ~ ... rr. 1fld 11:1c111rd '· ~:;.,~~:~'M.·:~,~~t.' Seib«!. 0.1n1 Ann •fl(! C.••• E Jelft 'IOtl, VIMUI A, 1r>d 11Dt111d !ft~,, F11u lfld M1t1v11 ;:!~.t.~·"~.~l~r: ·r:. ·~~ .. ~~:~ ,,_ O'Ht1rn. Pl'l•llli lreri• I nd J i m•• Joi.on J<>N11. Ev• SflUon I nd B\l!Y HoWlfd MllhOll, lli<flHd lo. •J>O Sondl L. Lotll1r. Trvd• Amell• 1nd J•mm M!fllft Fro~l\r, Wtllll,... '"" Owlohl Wllllu" "'°'"· Tll....,11 lllcll1r11 1n0 Cl'lerlollt Lou\,.. }'!'l~:i,f n"."~~.::"F ~':,./j~1!° l J~h ST•le. Peoa• J. Ind Gtroot 0 . Ft11.,n. l'l•Hl•m E~rt 1nd Mtt Vi ra•nil l.'CC-1-. (h4'N1 l"" I nd M ltl\1el K. l'l1l<on. Jove• 1nd O•tn E. "°"-· 00111111• All•P'i end Gt•dv' J. Tet<ile, Ontotnv Je1n Incl Lttll NI ... E•Cltlllimt•. V1tonl<.1 Mlt I " d Howtfd 0111 H1vne1. £••"'" L1ro!11 1/ld Jt"'8 II. l t ... t , (lltrvl JK-llM Ind 011"0ll C!lf\Ton Marriage Lice1ases 'l'~•T-&ROWN -J~~n R: .. 1', Of J~9 RGbln Hood. (Ol li Mto.f •nd l'lebra K., 11, or J04 llrd S1•~H. Nrwoor1 fO-~cll. H•RR:O'NBV-TOMPKIN.~ -G'c!l•ev 0 .. 21, ot 1500 C•rdbl)-8n. L••nnl Btac~ ar>d M•"I o .• :IG. ot ltlt1 Hollv Orlv~. S<>'•th L.,v,,.. l'llLSON-ST.O.NTON -ltebtrl E .. :!Q, <A 711 &•ontwood Pltcr, C"'" M•~• •r.d Su!ln ,,_, n, ol 63' Clm"O Hl~~l•llds Orivt. Coron• dt!I M••. TARVI N·OAME -• R1lph A .. 1!, .of 30,. G•rll•ld. Cost•-..... Ind susai, J., 11, DI CMll <Mf'Je. ' ~OLVERSTOTT-~S -Wltllllj'n J.. ,5, Of ]1'11" ~ICOVt ~ .... , S<>vlh LitOUn• l'"lf Aml'ldt C., jlC, of ,..,l Vlctorlt Olive. LH...,. &11th .• KOPF-LARA -PM'ht W., S1, fll 110 Crtslvr.w Drln, LI••,,. &um 1r>d 81rNr11 E., ;ie; of L11tu,,. 8,..ch. CARPENTER·lEE '-Ron11d R .• 15. of USOO Tu$tlt1 VlllA9t W1v. Tut1111 •NI LINlll L; 17,t ot ff37 Chu>nl111 .............. ,.....,.,_ WASICIN-H08SON -'l'••rtnc~ C .. ll, ot 4!0 Vl1t• Rome, Ne-rt Bud> 1nd 1t;1t~lttn 0 .. 15. ot NewPo<T Be•ch. s •• ' Pay Your Lawyer I I Via Credit Card? ' By TOM BARLEY Of tfte Ololfy ~Ii.I Sllff It your friendly la}¥yer doesn't become less friendly when you timidly point wt that the biggest obstacle to your desired litigatton is the size or hi• fee, don '! be too surprised. ~ For your happy advocate is abouL to tum you over to hill friendly banker who will -subject to your eligibility -rin- ance your legal fees in much the same way as he'll process a loan on your home, t, your car or your dental bills. :;. Wha t the lawyer gets, acc<1rd1ng 10 -.,.4 Orange County. Bar Association president Sam Barnes, is freedom from time ron- ~ surning and costly credit investiga tion ~ and documentation." \Vhat the bank gets is a percentage of the legal fee, deducted by them from the lawyer's check after approval of the client's credit. Mr. Barnes assures his members in the bar associa- lion's December bulletin that the plan "satisfies the stand- ards established by the American Bar Association and the California Ban kers Association in their canons of profes· sional ethics." : _And an association member has vehemently denied ~t the plan is lhe forerunner of a pilot prog ram devised by attomtys who hope to open a drive-in division where your friendly lawyer vt'ill quickly emboss your credit card on • divorce filing, personal injury lawsuit or child support act.km as you glide your 35-months-still-lo-pay Pinto through the premises. Those \\'ho look back to a sullied past when a lawyer never really kifeW if he'd collect his fee should remember ttiat this move will free our legal advi3trS from such wor- ,rje,s ,il.!ld. fJ.low them .to concentrate on. the successful prose- cution ot our affairs with a new vigor and determination. "Credit cards?.'' said the association member. "\Vher- ever did you get that idea? It just wou1dn't be ethical. '' (OllOER:Y·Fll.EEO -lllcMrd E .. .U, or ?!.Sil Vt•uvl•, Ml!SIOtl Vlelo Ind L1Von s.. 14, o' U U Wr't Nort)'I St,, Anaheim. ·~-.. .,..._...,_.._.,..._,.._,...., .. .,.._ ... ..,..,.,,..._...,_-.i j (;ULOJORD-REEQ -Gt t"Y T., 11. r ol 47' Slln 61rn1rdlno Ave .. NtwP0•1 llt•Ch llnd Mli<llllret J ., ,1, of 191 E. 1111'1 st,.et, Co1t11 Me••· TA VLOR:·TAVLOR: -Rlcht•d A .. 3', ol 1n? Alh•mbr• Ori,,., Hunlln,lon B••ch •nd Gl1ela, JS, of '-112 H11m- bol<1! Ave .. W1slmln1ter. GERVAIS·BERR:Y -Ro~ri J,, 25, cl 6611 lluen• Vl1!1 W1v, l 111u,.. Bt•ch tnd V11ndl~ J .. 21. of •II Fo•d lloed, CCHllt M111. l[AUSCH·O..VOllE -l••"I M .. '1. o! 955 C•nvon Vlew Drive. L111vn• 8tach I nd L111rece M .. lf , cl •JO El Cimino d1t M1r. l•o11n1 Btllch. HERlOG-FINOLEV -Ol1m11• W .. ''' cl 1114 P1vmc,1th, Lo1111 lleec" •nd Jover l'llnlrrP<I. 11. cf 1'701 llllont luw•, H~nrin91on 8t1ch. Denlh J\'otice• Bof A Branch Gives 'Grant to. UC Irvine IRVINE -The Bank of America has given $500 to UC Irvine for undergraduate research projects as a direct resull of the burning of its branch across the street from university is in <1 monelary crisis and runds are being cut back for undergraduate science research,'' Swarz told Jackson. ct. viri\I w. 15,::,:::.:i."' 1111 M""""'••· the Irvine campus, last fall . The student chairman of the dean's council of the biology school at UCI. told the bank official. "You could be stimulating students lo some· da.r become Nobel Prize win- t.1wn1 H1111. 01i. o1 <1Q111. J1nu•"' 11_ 1be grant grew out of an S...rvlVICI i... wlt1, Vl••lni1 F. i5fl)'""" '°"' I b b nk KlrctMU, 01 P11o Alie• a.,.Mef", • M~. a tempt Y the a to say C'<t.-.1 o. Gr1n1. •1oom1nt110!\o 1r><1i1n1; thank you to 500 UCI students 1l1t1r, M••· Svlwlt Sct>~l Ashll nd .....,, of'-•~ ~ Ohio. s1rwlct1, Tu11<11v. l .1....--: l'•clfU'""" ''¥"":'"'° belP;...,ean up v 1ow Ch•"''· 1n1'"""''· P1t111c v1~ • after the fire. Thefr offer ~=:1:~. P1rk. P•clflc "11'" Mortu•"'· necessarily was turned down, ners." In a matter of weeks, the Bank of America approved the grant which will be distributed as five awards of $100 each. Dean 1-loward Schneiderman ct.1Ml!Hrs since the bank reopened within G'IOf9" Thcm11 Cl1menl1. Age SO, of h r 1n 41 Ac1cl1 T•1ll t •ne. 1rv1n1. 0111 01 24 ours a ter the blaze. dN!h, Je<'l\Jln' H. Survlv1d bv wilt, F • • n c t • Cl1m1nh; son G. Thom· 11 Clement>, P Oio Alie; d 1 u 9 h ! •,. 11. F1!her ot !ht 1•t• Wllll1m H. Long. ICllhl"" Cl1men!1, lrvlnt. ltourv, T~e1- (t1V. I PM. Re<iultm Mtn, WHtneuj.y, 10 "-M, bc>Th el O"r L~v O~Nn o! An9tl1 C•tllo!lc (""•ch. F1ml!~ 1<11111111• lho11 wl•hl"9 lo ml-t memo•lll tOnldC.Ullcn1. ol~••e ccn!rlbult !o !he Hee•! 1=.,nd. e1l!I (oron1 dtl Ml• Mort.,•rv, Dl•1c- 1c,,. Cn••lu llobert F""· A111 19, ct •11 O•· '"9e, Hunlln1!"" &t•c~. Fcrmtr C o!v Clt r-k>r Hun1l1111on 8t1cl! lor n vetro. 0111 of a11!h. J1n.u1rv l•. Survlwtcl IW wltt . Fr.onc•o; llrclh1•. Fullen; ''""' 1\1- h ,., M,.. M•vdt! Mlllor. Mr1. !•1 Wil- 1;1m• •n<f Mrs. J. F. Brewer. Servi•-•· 1'uro<11v, I l'M, Smit"' (h•1>t1l. lnlermf'l1. w .. tmin"•' Mtmorltl Ptrl<.. Smllh• IM•· •u•"'· Ol•t<lorl. l(Allllt (htac •m1uou K1 l-.r. A91 7'. of n ! "venlat Mtlccct , l•1un1 Hl111. 011• c• cea•h, Jan.,••v 16 Memb<!r Ame•lc1n Lnicn l'ost 1•5 o• Co1t1 Mtlfi Mt•cnic &lv• LO<tot: Sccnl1" Rlttl J2nd Onrer: Shriner Ttt>ll• Temo!1. Su"l"vlYtcl bv wlff, M••lon: <111111httr. M•rlon K. l •rdol. Coo!1 M"'" or1n(fd1110Mt r. 81•1Jar1 Ann H~t>tr. l•wlno; <1ro1•<11•1nd<M119Mt', C1rol Ann """"'' .ci•o•he•, O•. Ct•I J. Kal••n ,1.,,c, M1•trtll1 W•l1M. ~trvlcu, WM· .... a ••• 1;10 PM, Bll!f Coron.a dtt M1• C"•ool. ln•ermttl!. F1lclllv1n M<!mcro1I Por-. 81111 (Of(ll!.I "'I Mlf M~f!uarv, CitK IOtt. lONe Chl•lt• W. LDnl. 16477 S~lntdti. SI. Hunllngton &etch. D.llt ot tk11t1. Jt ""t•Y 11. F•Thfr Df lt>e lilt Wlllltm H. LOf>t. S11rvl.,.., by .,Jft , Elll•b<fl~; d•utMer, M'1, Helin l'MMr: 1r1..aoon. llon•ld Nthtr: lour 1re•1 .. r1ndctillcrren. S.t"Ylc1• win bt hold 1,. Ch1C•9D, 1111nct11. l'eolt. F 1mll• c.,1..,.111 Fu...,•I Homt, F-•rd· lt11 Olrteloc1. ARBUCKl;E • SON WertclHf Mortuary m g_ 1'1tll Sl, Cost.I 1'te11 -• BALTZ MOR1'JAR1Ell Corwa del Mar . , OR S-"511 Colla -. . . .. 11!1 "°' • BELL BROWWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadw1y, C..tli Me11 u....,, • McCOR~11CK LAGUN A BEACH MORTUARY 1711 Lap na Canyo1 Rod. 484-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ce..tiuy M•rta1ry Qopol -hdflc View Drtvt. N"'9'1 llucll. Callfenl1 -• ~.~--y mLO ... _ PIJIWIAL ' --.... ·--··-• tlllRllB' MOMUARY •-1 _ .. ~ ..... -- So, bank official s decided to send a signed thank you letter to r.!lch of the 500 students who'd sig ned a mis- sive offeri ng their help. The 1.ast se ntence _ said "If there is anything else I can do please let me know. Sincerel y. Harold H. Jackson. regional vice president.'' Jeff Swal"l, 1 2:l·year-0ld st11ior in biology, responded vi'ith a call to Jackson. "The Se a Science Head Cited By Texans IR VINE -An Orange Coast man has been cited by Texas legislators for his achievemen t and interest in the promotion of oceanography and marine development. Louis F. Jobst Jr .• Ma nager of Marine Development for the City and Port of Long Beacb .was comma>ded by the state leaders on the balls of his national acrompll!hmenl.s. Director of Long Beach's ocean _science activffi~ s~ 1966. Jobst is immediate past president of the American Society for Oceanography. 1 national dirtttor of the Na - tional Oceanography Associa- tion and other organiuUons. He and hiJ wilt J ean, 1 membe r of the DAILY JttLO'T staff. own 1 home at 1790'l Hopkins St., In 1.Jqiversity Park, Tax A:ssist said. They 'll be made a ft e r review of written proposals by students to the school's research grants committee and will be based on merits and financial need. Although u s ually as sophlaticaled as g r a d u a t e research, the work of un- dergraduate researchers fre- quentl y goes unnoticed. Current undergraduate proj- ects include experiments on the basic function of the nervous system. the chemistry o( the nervous system, animal virology, immunology and the mechanism of m e m o r y , Schneiderman said. Ali ens Must Register In January George K. Ro se nberg , District Oireclor of the U.S. Naturalization Service, has rt'mindet! aliens living in Orange County to report their addresses during the month or January Ro.!lenbera: said that non- citizens are required to file Addrtss Report Ca rds each January as part of the Alien Address Report Program. lie estimated more than 600.000 aliens In southern California will report their ad- dresses this month. He also noted the alien s ;.'o'hO are temporarily out of the United Slates durlng January mu.,t report their ad· dress to the Immigration . Pro!!ram. Set s.rvic;c •llhln " d•Y• ,1 •h•fr u return. Addresg Report cards a~ SANTA ANA -A program available at the Immilfrat ion to U&ill taxpayers in prepar-Servlct office at 300 N. Los Ing their lt'IO Income tax A I S1 Lo rtturm wDl be -ted J an. n«e n .. s Angeles. r ~-·· Calif., 90012, and at all local ,ZI -•·iv~r11-.111e Sa nta Ulillod SW.. Poot Ofn .... .... 1111111:1Cboo1 -1or1•m, r========~I ~ W: Walnut St., Sant.a Ana. A pone! of CPA'• wt\\ --... -· t~empUc:m and tax uvtng .~as at tbe panel pretenled \¥ lht Lona Beach-Orange P.xinty branch ot' I h e ~,C.Jlfomla Society of CPA 's. 1'.fte program Is frte to the KIDS -LIKE UNCLE LEN )IOblle. ======== DREXEL "YEL!RO" 68" oval table witl1 two 18" leaves 329,00 Can& arm chair .......•.• 129.00 Matching side W it _ ...... 110.00 64" china .. . .. ......... 869.00 DR!l!l "WElllNGTON PARK" 76" oval table w1two 18"" leaves .. . Slat back arm chal1 ...... . Matching side cl1ai1 Cane back arm chai1 ••• , , , . Matching side chau •••.•.. 62" bullet _ . . ...... . Mobile server 78" credenza .FANCHER "URBAN!" 329.00 99.00 89.00 119.00 JO!J..00 399.00 ~9.00 539.00 25!1.0Q 9!.0D 79.00 H!l.00 25!1.00 79.00 69.00 95.00 15.00 319.DO 239.00 •29.DO 64" oval table l will'! two 16" leavts Two arm cl'lairs . Seve~ piece st!, 1,125 00 &95.00 fouf side chaus Matching 75" buf!el ... 509.00 299.00 FANCHER "DICTATE" Mobile servei 3~5 00 199.00 China ba~ ind deck • 858.00 •29.00 PARTY SETS FANCHER "DICTATE" 44" game t~ble 21\6" leaves J4gQ[} 199.llO Matching 11ame ctiair 145.00 19.00 B\6GARS SPECIAL 48" round party !able and five pitce stt f(}tJr black vinyl cha11~ 4Sl 00 399.00 LIVING ROOM UPHOLSTERY SB" Biggal'l own con1empo1a1y ~ofr--Blue and lim e slnpe 669.00 96" Big1r1 own tinulo style 50!~ lemon ll'ld Lime te•tu1ed dam11l . 819 00 90" Bigpr5 own sola lulled bltck w1nyl 629.00 T Umptweds Sol1 Moss Green vinyl 369.00 7' Umptue!h sor1 Blue print lab1ic . 365.00 100" Heritage sofa 8ei11 wolh contrntlne welts 1£6,00 100"' Heritage contemporary 10!1 ltmon Yellow chenille .. 869.00 100~ Htrit11e soh Cruslll!d velve! , ....... 899.00 Heritage loose pilow btck sol1 Tan111lnc ptlnt . , ....... , . 995.00 Bi&&•rs Own velvet lulled !Itek chair 34!'1.00 Bi1111s Own upholstered ch1lr hi11h bttk Blut teal M1tellne.... 299,00 BIUJ1rs Own win1 blCk ho1t cllli1 RllSI velvet . . . , , 26!'1.0D ANNIVERSARY SALE This is the sa le to believt in-Biggar's Annive rsal)' Sale. Don't confuse our sale with "clearances" or month-tnds-because what we're oflering are selected pieces (and collectionsl from our regular display of what surely must be one of the fi nest designer.quality home furnishings to be found anywhere in the west ... at genuine and substantial savings way beyond the ordinal)'. If you've ever yearned to surround yoursel l with the beauty and quality ol Heritage, Drexel, Henredon, Fancher- the truly great lines of Furniture-this is the sale to believe in, our sale of sales. Now at all three stores. HENR!DON "DU URRY" 56" doutlle dresser , ... , •.. 279.00 !Aiuor . , . , 99.00 Open night staNI 139.00 Cane-back he1dboa1d Kina size . . . . . . . .229.00 Queen sizt ............. 164.00 Twin size _ ............ 150.00 Five drawer ehest ....•..... 279.00 DREXEL "TREY\" 7't' tr!ple dresser . 3Jg_l)() 64" triple dr esser , 249.00 MirrOI' . .. . .. . . . . . . 60.00 Open night stand ....... , .. , 85.00 Door /drawer niaht stand .. , 109.00 Open headboard l<ing sile . _ ...... , .. . 125.00 Queen size . . . . . . . . . 85.00 HENREDON "CARMEL" 17' t1ip!e d1esser . . . . . 455.00 Mirror .. . • . .. . .. .. .. .. . .. 99.00 Night sta nd .............. 139.00 fi't drtwer chest ...•.... 299.0D Panel heldb01rd O\Jeen size ............. 210.00 Kina size .............. 289.00 DREXEL "YELERO" 66" trip!• d1esstr ••• __ •... 425.00 Gilt miiror . . . ........... 120.00 Nililt s!lnd .............. 159.00 Chest • . ., ............ 339.00 Scroll headbo:ird Kine size .............. 199.00 Oueen size , ............ 135.m> 235.00 '"" Ill.OD 119.00 134.00 124.00 235.00 249.00 199.ro 4'.00 19.DO 19.00 !19.00 i9.QO 379.DO 79.00 115.00 241.00 1&9.0I 229.IXI 339.01 19.DO 119.00 ,219.DO ISS.00 19.00 HERITAGE "MADRIGAL" 14" triple d1esst r 419.00 8{)" trip Iii dre~er .•. , _. , . 489.00 Mirror .. .. ...... , ..... 109.00 Night stand ........... 159.00 Scroll headboat d Twin !ilt ......... , ... 129.00 . Queen size .. , ......... , !39.00 King size .. .. . .. . . 179.00 DR!l!l "WUL\HGTON PARK" 78" trip!e dresser .•........ 439.00 67" tliple dresser .... , . , , . 379.00 Mirror ......• , . 110.00 Night stand ISS.00 Man's che~! 459.00 Caor-bac~ headboard King size . 189.00 Queen size . • . . J 29.00 H!NR!DOH "OFFICERS CHEST" 72" triple dresser . . • . . . . 435.Drl 62'' double dresse1 . • . . • • . 339.00 Mirror . . . 95.00 Open nigh1 sla"d ...•.... , 139.00 Pane l headboard Twin size .............. ll0.00 Queen size ............. 124.00 Kini sire .............. 179.00 Chtsl . . . . . . . . . . 339.00 HERITAGE "BARACINI" 74'" triple dresser ........ ,369.00 Mirror . .. . . .... , .. .. 99.00 Open night stand ...•• , •.. 139.00 Open headboard \ King Silt Queen size . , . _ •. five drawer chest . , .•. 179.00 144.00 279.00 STANL!l "DECADE" DINING ROOM 64" r!ctan1ular table w1two 18'' leaves 239.00 Cane-back 1rrn chair • , .... • 79.00 Matchln1 side chair ..••.. _. 69.00 44" round table wilh Oil! 18" ltlf ...... 199.00 Slat-bacto. arm chair ... , • . . 69.00 Matching side chair 59.00 Buffet • . • .. .. • • .. 239.00 189.00 "·" 59.IO 119.0I 51.00 49.00 195.00 HERITAGE "BRENTANO" 74'" rectangular !able IWhH t base) with 2122" lea~es 435.00 White can!·batk arm chair .. 155.00 Match1n1 side chair . 139.00 52" ovat ped!slal tible fWhit! base) with 2122" leries . 459,00 62" credenza 535.00 (Wood top, white ba~) 67" <Nal table W/2 22" leav!s 369.00 Cane·bacll arm chair . . . . . . 139.00 Matc.hing side chair ...•..• 125.00 74"" cre denza ......••• , , . 559.00 58"q;hina . .•. ,"':". . , , ••.... 479.00 Mobile seru1 . . . ... , .. , . ..369.00 369.00 Ill.DO 105.00 JH .DO 431.Dt ...... 111.• IDS.Ill 471.00 141 .• JOI.DI HENR!DON "CAPRI" 549.00 595.00 561.00 321.DO 271.00 511.0I 135.11 llS.111 145.IO 241.0D 171.00 215.DO 12" double pedl!stal recliMIU!ai table with three 22" leaves ![xtends to 138""-seats lZI 545.00 Cane back arm chair , , .. , 129.00 4IS.OO 109.00 ..... HERITAGE "TRANSCEPf' 72" rectan gular dining table with three 22" leaves Matching side thair ....... 10!1.00 42'" round pedestal base table with two 20" leaves . , .. 455.00 o~al-back arm thai1 , .. , ... 175.00 JU.OD 141.00 121.DO 311.0D (Extends to 138"-seats 12) ..... , , •....... 469.00 Cane back arm chair .......•.. , . , ••....... 169,00 Matc.hing side chair 155,00 Matching side chair ...•......•....• , ...... 149.00 S!rver-Flip Top 375.00 78" credenza , ........................... 619.00 ' ; . - HENREDON FOLIO VU 48" cocktail table !Wood top, painted basel 455.00 HER!TAGE "!NCINADA" .W'" oc1a11on1l s11te-lop cocktail tablt . . . . . . 389.00 &!l" rec!angu l1r coc~!ail !able 21900 He~agooal commod1 299.00 Square commode 299.00 Cocktail chest ... , , , , , ... 27'100 Cigaren1 11ble , . . . . . . 19.00 FOUNDERS "PATTERNS 21" 47' squ1rt ci:Ot1il t1blt !99.00 Oct111on1I commodt ...... 175.00 limp table . . . 119.00 FOUNDERS "COP" SERIES 60"' coffee liblt .......... 159.00 Twin cocktail tabl1 .. , •• , . . 75.00 Square commode ...•• , • . 235.00 Octagonal commodt . ·-···. 169.00 B1ggari Own contempOlary chair Tawn1 1ellured fabric . . 239.00 149.1» Woodmark Bedroom thtif Combed cordu1oy fabric l t9.00 121.• Woodmark loose pillow b1cll loun p chair and matchifll ottoman {Two Piects.I ........... 277.00 211.M Henredon contemparary chair black vinyl ....... Umohreds Mr. ind M11. ch1i11 l•mt flb11c-e itlltr s1zt SLEEPER SOFAS 355.00 1H.• 1&9.00 121.• t1r1t selection of l1mou1 Simmens Hldt.A-a.ds •• well as sleeper 10!11 from otMr mlktf1 It ule pfiees. CUPETING t1rge selection of lfmoua maker quality C11Pttina IR • ~111e1, of te~turn "•lld colors. Luxurious c11pet In 1 plu!h wool IK1 f1om 1 flfTIOUS miler. Ree-$21.00 per squtr1 ytfd. Stl1 $15.95 per squirt y1rd. 30 .00 299.00 175.00 239.00 239.00 219.00 59.00 149.00 129.00 19.00 99.00 49.00 159.00 lOl.00 HERITAGE "BARACINI" S4" codlait lablt ....• 179.00 44"" oval coc~t,i! table .... 169.00 End table . .., .. 129.00 Lamp table , ...... 129.00 (22" wide or 26" wide) Nest of tables . . . . ..... , , 129.00 He1a1on1t commode • , , ••. 279.00 H!NR!OON "CAPRI" 66""coektai1 tab le 285.00 Scalloped edge round cotktail !able ....•••. 285.00 26" 'nd table . . , ...... 175.00 22~ end table 165.00 li!~ago"al b~ tablt ......• 259 00 Two drawer commode •..•.. 215.00 52"" cocktail table .. JJS.00 Book table 175.00 BRANOT "LORENZO" 4&" cocktail tabl@ 62"" cocktail table ..... ,. , [nd table 128" wid!h 01 22" width) Hexagonal commode "C'J 105 01} 89.00 179.00 AIRUOOM "KENSINGTON" MATTRESS ANO BOX SPRING SETS Mtdium or firm tension Twin & foll sizt .............. J 79.00 Outen 1lz1 . , . . .............. 249.00 Kint size ................... 339.00 AIRUOOM "CLAREMDNT" MAITT!SS AND BOX SPRING SETS Twin I full •~le .. . .. 139.00 Quetn 11U . , ...... , , , ., 199.00 Kln1 sile .. .. . . .. . . .. . . .. 2fi9.00 "PATllCWI" LATEX FOAM RUPU llATTl!SS AND IOX SP!llltl SETS Twin sire ...................... 159.00 O\Jeen slrt .•....•.••••..•••.... 239.00 Kina. sirt ..... , ................ 329.00 llllCAR "GRllN LAIU" MATTRESS AND IOX SPRING SET All JTEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. 80DG£T ACCOUNTS AYAILABLL SANT A ANA Main at Elevtnth 547-162T s-te ... """-°'" .. ...., ...... PASADENA. Colo rado ot Et Molino 792-613d POMONA Holt, Eost of Ga rey 629-3026 • • 331.111 399.0I 19.00 125.0I '"" 211.00 245.DO 245.00 149.00 139.00 21 9.DO 185.00 115.00 149.0D 79.00 19.00 79.00 •, 7-second Wedding Ceremony JN IOAHO, I'm told, there's an old boy empowered to of- ficiate at weddings who will marry you in a seven-second ceren1ony. it you request it , .• WHEN YOU TELL a fello w the numeral 1 appears on a U.S. $1 bill exactly nine times, he almost invariably examines such a bill at great length, then stiJI contradicts you . This is peculiar . . . YOUNG LOA Y, DO you have any idta how muc:h you owe to Paul Baudecroix? A lot, certainly. He's the gentleman v.'ho invented indelible lipstick. AT lfAND JS the report of an eyesight specialist who says brunettes on the whole see better, though not much better. than blondes. Could that be why blondes tend lo be slightly less discriminating in their selection of gentlemen friends? . . . NOW JIAVE A READER in Troy, N.Y., highly please d to report. Fine to\vn, Troy. Been t h e r e several times. That"s where Mrs. Hannah l\lontaguc 145 years .ago rirst invented the detachable shirt collar. which ls abaut to come back into style. IF A.LL THE SNUFF-DIP· PERS nationwide met in one spot, they'd make a city twice the pop u 1 a t ion of Los Angrlcs . . WHO WAS IT f.rst defined a f'ring- ma ster" al! a boy in a bathtub? f\1ost Apt ... BEST· DRESSED GI!tLS \vhosc work requires them to wear a white un iform are the den t a 1 assistants CUSTOJ\1ER SERVICE -Q. "How o!d, how tall and wha't weight is the average girl ac- cepted as an aJr Ii n e stewardess?" A. A(e 21. Just S..feet-51h inches ta!\. And 125 pounds when clothed . . . Q. ''What proportion of the women who go to those reduc- ing salons actually lose weight and keep it off for es much as two years?"' A. About one out of every fiv e. TllE GREAT Robert Louis Stevenson claimed he coli!d · carry over a dream in his sleep fTdm night to n i g .h t like a'"1tiotf4! !!E'l1at.-Qdite. ii · knack. That"s how he says he produced "Dr . Jekyl and fl1r. Hyde," you may recall. If he didn't like the way a drean1 turned out, he said. he just redreamcd it until he got. the endin g right. Keep il in mind. young fellow, in case ~·ou wake up in 1he mid- dle nr a drcarn about Julie Chris! ic. Your quesrlans n1ui com· me11ts ore 1velcomed and tvil! be useri in CflECKING l ' P w/1e rever possible. Please address uour letters to L. !If. Baud, P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach. Calif. 2 Colleges Give Credit For Work Tf you arc t:<king some courses in the evening at Orange Coast Collcgr. to help you advance in your job, you may be n1issi11g a chance l<l pic k up some extra college credits. OCC, along with Golden \Vest, now has a \.\'ork Ex· periencc plan which allows st udent s to earn college credit for jobs Y.'h1ch are related lo their major F-0r example, a working secrel.<lry taking courses in the evening in secretarial science can earn work ex- perience credits for her-day job. One unit a semester is given for each fi ve hours of work per week , Students can earn up to four units per semester lhts way, and a max- imUm of 16 toward an AA degree. Students planning lo register for work experi ence must reP9rl to the work experience cootwnator on I.he appropriate campus during registration. The OCC coordinator is James Garmon at 8.14-5628. At GWC It is Karl Strandberg at 892- 7711. !AdYtrtlt11n ... I) _M..:_oo..:_d.::''c.· ..:_J;_"..:.""':.:....:_•B:.c'..:_i..:_"7..:_lc_ ______ o;_AJ_L;_Y_,,t.O!_ll ·-- ' ·. all may co stores open every Sunday 12 l • • • • noon to 5 p .. m. ; .. I t ' 1 I ' .. .. ,, > , \ • ~ • ' .. --· ' •• • \ ,,, ... -. ' (' ' . • I ' .. ' ' I' , , :" r • ... ~ ·:. ,! ,. : find a wealth of savings on atl your · ~ome· needs use one of our convenient credit plans Save 150.00 on contempor.iry molded Walnut chair and ottoman with top grain leather uphol stery. Back is comfortabl e button tufted. Affords man·siz e lounging. regularly 499 .00 3 4 9. 00 11111\' 1,.11 llHl'lltllf-' ! ..$1- Save on Simn1on~ Cen lennia.I mallress or box spring with Scotchgard& stain protec- t ion. Com fortex cushioning. Attractive multi-color design l ick in~s, IJorder ~upport. f\.vinorfullmattressor 44 90 box spr ing.reg. SIJ.95 ea. • Save 24.95 on Si mmo ns Anniversary mat - tress or box spring With Ad justo·Rest in· nerspring coils. "Bed of Ro ses'' S a n i ~Seal licking. Slim.Guard border l1r;ice"- twin or iull'mattress or s s o o box spring , re g. 79.95 ea. • 111.1\ t (I •ll't'll ~1i11p J4j - Save 170.00 on Simmons Hide·A·Bed lhat ma kes into queen-size bed. Soli d color cover is wear resistant Vectra-!.! oleiin fiber. Innerspring mattress. 3-cushion. regular!~ 509,00 3 3 9 • 00 maycosleep shop l.4 5 - Save 50.00 on versiltile etagere-room d ivi· der. 31" wide, 13" deep, 80" high. Fin - ished on back. Choice of three finishes ... pecan, antique v..1hi te or antique gold. reg ularly 149 .UU eac h 99.00 Save 130.00 on 7-piece di ning group in - cluding modern 42x60" ova l lab le lhat extends to 76'', two cane back arm chairs, fo ur side chairs. Easy~care \.va!nur finish . rcg ul•rly 560.00 459.00 rn ay en i11 r1 Save 176 .00 on 5·piece modern bedroom group \-Vi th 72" tri ple dresser, mirror, king si ze headboard and two night stands. W ipe clean walnut finish is easy-care. iegul.irl y 755 .00 5 7 9 o 00 111,1\ tlJ 1urn1111rt 1.i1 Save 7.00 on classic co lunln or contempo- rary ginger jar lam ps. 3·way lighting . 30" co lumn lamp in beige, rust or blue. Jar in green, turquoise or lemon. reg ul orl y Ji.OU 24.99 m•y co south coast pl•H, ... dit90 fwy •+ bristol, co1t1 mt,., 546-9321 shop mondoy thru .. turday I 0 •m to 9:30 pm, 1und1y noon 'Iii 5 pm ' ' . Save on four distinctive wall mirrors with antique go ld finish•d frames. Grouping in- cl udes Chippendale, baroque, oval and rectangular deiigns in versatile sizes. Save 3.00 sq. yd. l>n ~6del ® 'POiyester pile shag broadloom comp letely installed over rubberi zed waffle or sponge padding. May Co. ta ck lcss inst allat ion. ln twelve colors. rcgul•rl y lJ.OU sq. yd . 9.99 ni.iy LO 111101 lUV Crin~ 32 - Save 25.00 on our excl usive rayon pile area rugs with hooked constr4ction for years of wear. Use with almost any type of room decor fo r colorful accents. In S colors. reg. $125 5'6"x8 'b" 99.99 n1.iy co area rugs 1 J7 - Save 30.00 on our exclusi'°"'· Empiro Orien- 1al des ign rug s. Imported from Belgium. ·In eight colorful dosi8n s. Other sizes a,. priced for similar savings. Wool pile. ' ' ... ' . eg. 160.00 6'J':x9'7" .129 • 99· ' n· .. • rri .1rc'.1 1~,~~ 117 • • • • 3 • • • • . • :j { $) MAV'·CO \ I I ' ' • • DAllY PILOT loins Firm Frank J. Keenan of San Juan Capistrano has recently joined La· guna Nigue} Corpora· ion as assistant con· .roller. Keenan will be assisting Kenneth P. Kester. controller, in the accounting and budget functions of the company. 3 Copters Downed Each Day WASHINGTON (AP) -The United Sl.<ltes .iJ continuing to lose almost 15 rft 8 D y heliCOP.ters in Indochina - about thret a day -as it did in pre"(idus years despite a lower levt] or fighting and America n troop withdrawals, Pentagon statistics showed Friday, Pentagon officials, by figur- ing the average cost of a new helicopter at $230,000, put the loss for just the past three yea rs at about f700 million, enough to field a fully Army divisioo for a year and a half. During the first 11 months of 1970 -the December figures are not yet available -the U.S. CQmmand in Saigon reported the loss of 828 chop- pers. Of these, 385 were shot down over South Vietnam and 138 in Laos. Included among lhe remaining 430 lost to operational or nonhostile causes were a small but unspecified number showdown over Cambodia. In 1968. which marked some of the bitteresl fighting and 11i•ith U.S. forces in Vietnam al their highest level.!! during the 10 years of American in- volvement a b o u t 1,000 helicopters were knocked out of action. The losses were almost evenly divided between those downed by enemy fire and those left to operation.al causes. Another t h o u s a n d were lost in 1969. Operational losses are those attributed to such things as me c h a nical malfunctions. midair collisions Ol' fuel loss. Pentagon spokesmen said that even though the war has been winding down, the United States still has been flying almost the sa me number or helicopter sort ies over the past three years. Last year more than seven sorties -one Flight by one helicopter -were flown. com- pared lo about 8.4 million in 1969 and 7 4 million ln 1968. "Tha1'5 a Jot of flying when you're talking about seven or eight million sorties," the spokesm11n said. "When you're fl ying in all kinds of weather, night and day, around the clxk, you're bound to have losses." Aircrart crashes due to operational causes, Including both helicopters and fixed wing planes, have killed 2,344 Americans si nce the be11:inning of the war in 1961 aDd account fC1r the biggest share of the 9.069 U.S. fighting men who have died in the war tone from nonhostile c a u s e s, which include illness and all types of accidenlS . The new year is expected to bring a decline in the number of U.S. helicopter losses now that the South Viet· namese are taking over 11 greater share of the missions. The need for American chop- per pilots has so diminished that on April I the Army plan.!! to disc harge about one· fourth of il.!I ZS.000 helicopter pll<>i.. Ship Collision Leaves 25 Dead SEOUL (Al') -About 25 Korum"'" hi'' ... ....,. <d .....,. Ill Ill -"' a i.n, .-· a fllilllll boot off v., '"'a. mrthem <OU!, Ille nalloall police r~ llld two pjlcit boa"la -mor< -38 -·· ,,..... ~ 24-ton rury. 1lbkb .... an d ..--Illini boillea. About 20 othlt ~'•ere ,mlUlal. 1 ·British ,Po.werless., in • I· • Sport Disasters LONDON (UPI) The Brit1sh 11:overument llmlLs the number of dancer• on the Door of a discotheque. lt has no such power to control the- numbtr of fans at a soettr match or to impose minimum safety standards for sport stadiums. !~~~.::m:: ,;: ;,~Glasgow Soccer Tragedy Studied they thrust their handt up over their heads; there was no room to clip at chest level. M they bcgart to leave, cheerl1g and pushing, some.. one fell, and the avalanche of bodies begti:n. added seal!, cutting down standing room and had redlK> ed the capacity from the 1111,000 that watched the 193t Celtic-Rangers g a me to Saturday'! eapecity crowd of 80,000. Willie Waddell, manager ol Rangers whose home park lJ lbrox, said the· metal crowd barriers snlashed down by the pushing, falling crowd "were tborou11h1y inspecied at the beginniftg of the season." That may have been one of the C&Ule3 oI the Jan. 2 tragedy in Glasgow 's Ibrox P a r k . Sixty-six spectators were killed and 145 injured in what WA! Britan•s worst sports disaster. But similar incidents had oceurred before. Hundreds of men and boys crammed lOgether .shoulder to shoulder on lhe east terracing of the stadium in numbi11g 26 degree cold watching their Rangers team snatch a l·l tie from the archrival Celtic One Brillsh newspaper said the full-scale inquiry ordered by Prime Minister Edward Heath into the tragedy could expooe "persistent neglect by Parliament ol the safety of spor:t.!I crowd stands." "The record of the home office is so near to public scandal that the suspicion is that it does not want the leglslaUon," said one colum- nist. One year ago, in an ex· tensi've committee report on soccer crowd behavior, Sir r ... -::". ; ' . , .. '., .,. • -• • • ....... . .... ...., ... ··""'- S,ears ., \ ,. ' ' . ' .. A1kAbout Sears Converarent Credit Pl am '· 1 \ : ' John Lang, Brit.aln's principal advisor on sport, recom- mended leg.i11.atio.n be passed to Inspect and certify stadiums !or safety. Lang said this week , "I thought the lbrox Park set-up was good," but In his report a year a'go , he r'ecommended crowds be broken up into see,. tions, standing enclosures be divided into pens and young fans be segregated from other spectators. The government decided then, as it had previously, to leave crowd safety to the soccer clubs. In 1924, crowd problems ln the Wembly Cup final ' pro- mpted the first comprehensive study of soccer crowd control. If recommended the sport& clubs be respqnsible fo r safety unleu further di!ordcrs took place. Jn 19~ at Bolton, a crowd barrier collapsed, killing 33 and Injuring 500. An inquiry into the Bolton di.!laster . recommended that the home office issue• I I c e n s e s to stadiums. No legislation was 11ntroduced and follow-up ac- Uon w.as left to the clubs. In HHS , Stanley Rous , secrei,ary of the football assoOation wrote the home office saying ••the majority ol clubs agreed some provision for licensing should be made" and targed the home secretary "not to ignore this sug- gestion." The p,Oposal was rejected . ln 19M, home secretary Henry Brookie told Parliamient "lhe law required strengthen- ing and the urgency wat acknowledged," but no leg:lsla· Uon requiring licensing was passed. Scottish officials said an in· quiry into the latest disaster, similar to a coroner's inquest, would convene T h u r s d a y before a sheriff and jury of seven in Glasgow. The of. fic:ials said autopsies had been conduc\ed on six lbrox victims in preparation for the inquiry, whose findings will be presented to Parliament in February. Extensive lbrox Park renovations to since 1965 h a d Glasgow member of Parlia- ment Dr. Maurice Miller recommended using officials as spotters to watch the crowd. "I don't think a reduc- tion in nwnbe:rs would make any difference," he said. "Clubs should make civilized accommodations available for their supporters. Give them seal! under cover instead of herding them into areas where tt.ey are pushed and jammed like animals." Officials disagreed whether legislation would have affected the human eXllberance that led to the disaster. • ·' .. "I think it was sheer popular excitement that caus- ed this disasler," he said. Until that point in the final seconds, the hotly.,contested match had been remarkably Incident-free. Ill will between the clubs, rooted in religlou.s differences between t h e P r otestant -backed Rangers and the Roman Catholic sup. porters of Celtic, always ran high at matches between the twQ, and 50 arrests a game for rowdyism were common. During this match police reported only three arresl..!I for minor offenses. 2-Speed, 8 Cycle AUTOMATIC WASHERS Regular •269.95 $ • 8 cycles inc1ud ing pre-eoak pre-wmh. Permanenl Press cycle; optional 1econd r inse e Self-cleaning lint filler • Aulomat.ic wa sl1 and rinse tetnperature •Safely l id switch. Porcelain top, lid and tub. Model 20700. SAVE s50J Kenmore "Soft-Heat" ELECTRIC DRYERS Regular Sl99.95 •Automatic '"Soft-Heat'' wi th wrinkle guard that end ~ baked·in-wrinkles • End-o r-c ycle •ignal. Model 60700 :~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~!~~5f""""' e Convenient lop mounted lint sc reen •Full width load-a-door for easy folding I. i nd etacking \ $229.95 Gas Model Dryers #70700 ____ 1119 ... -- Se c-trs •Ul lOIL Nlltllt T .. 1.-, 111 .. 1 .. LOIOO OU.CH HI l .. 1U SANTA ...... IOI t..Jl'1 C:ll-A ,. ..... --· .. OllWALIC UIO .O•J'NI .... T. ,.. l•llllMll ......... .\N )(Afltp ~ ••••I I ••111 ... 10 Mt.1'11 •0tot 11n.LO 1 ... 11. OO>t l'I ......... .. C:Ol'IO'TO .. ,.. _,,IOI[-· ~v-~c . IOTO .... •·H l l .... ,. ... ,,.., ... c. I ll ... 711 "'''II"'"'"' ALOt••••• ··-COVIN• __ .. ., ......... 111-11.. •OU'l'H co••,. PU• ........ ,. ,,,.,, .... ., ... •ite•M • -.. .. •L l'llONTll; •I l •Mll •••4 KN .. 1'111,1 l •J.l.11. ft. 1 .. 11 1 ""INOUIANO 0111111 •t 1 .. IU !Wion (:..11'-c 9\1 .. A .. ll ...... . lllAllt JIOll"tlCIC J.)ID CO, OLI NDALll; CH f•I-. Cl -11 ,.tCO •I ...... .,.0, ...... c. t•l •lfl I \11111 ,\•-'J.MI l--- .. OLLY ... DOO ...... -. PO l'llONA 10 l•llft ........ uo, YU ••• ,,. v .. LLIV ltO ............ ,.. • ,.. c.111.w• .,, -···· •N•L••-· o• l •HU ..... , ........ " '"' ,_,,,, Vllll'llONf PL ..... , ,s,..,.,.. c .... _ -·- Shop 6 Nigh!! Mo nday through Salnrday 9:30 A.M. lo 9 :30 P.H., Sund ay Hour" 12 Noon Io S P.M. ::;::::.:;:;,. •••M• O .. VC ••·•'" ........ '"'"'' ... '"' ••c111••• _, .. ,,.. ... , " ................ _. '"""L•••1to1t1tn•·-t "Vllto-T•1'1 •1•c11 .... , .. , l ........ IOILL•••·- t,.altO_ ........ .......... 11.1111 ........ o... ........ • ......... 6••• .. ,._ OMTAltlO ..... ,. lllMLUI• Hl-"11 "•lff.Vl•l>U 111 .... 1 U"'-•••M l •lft1 ............. ? .... ,,.. • •• ~ ............. u._ "'"c'"~'" '"·'"' "'•tt<:Mt.tn1t IN--•fOo•-1tt •c .. 11t.1u1 ... n •"••?•• .. , ..... ....... ........ .. .. , .......... - .. .......... MtltMtlMl•9'\I "''~"'!•6Mf1 0- -~ . r ... ,. " .,. -,. . • BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 ,,..,...,., J_.,,. II, 1''1 I 1'1 .. U Rummaging Around Club Eases Into Sale Members of the Ebell Club of Laguna Beach no sooner departed from a· "let-down" party this month than they \Vere busy making plans for an annual rum- mage sale. With a large selection of items on hand including books, art objects and handmade items. sale dates have been set for Thursday,.Jan. 29, from 9 a.m. to-5 p.m. and Saturday, Jan. 30. from 9 a.m. to noon in the Laguna Beach Woman 's Clubhouse. Co-chairman of the _sale are Mrs._ M;tcCauley Ropp and Mrs.-William Hin\Yood who will set up a varie ty of sale departments for the benefit of the club's philan· thr~py fund . Assisting the chairmen \vill be the Mmes. Richard Racich, Arn K. Youngman, Herbert Burridge, An thony Orlandella. Richard CBrlson, Gordon Forbes. Larry Hunt, James W .. Decket, John B. Enfield Jr. and Douglas Ken- aston. Also serving as department :beads are the Mmes. William Thomas Ul, Lewis Gillette, Wallace T. S_cott, Carl Rlnkin, Winfield ShiriSIIl, "'Edmubd Van DeuSen , Alfred Kress, Harro M. Groettrup, Norm"'a.n DOiby, Gor- don Dahlquist, Clarence Carson, Jun Chino, Keith Kin· ner. Stanley Ei chstaedt, J. R. Townsend and Howard Wilson . Miss Carey Forbes, daughter of Mrs. Forbes, will be in charge of teenagers serving coffee. ·~ ' -Cl ., ..... ,_ . JUST RELAXING-Laguna Beach Ebell Club members (left to right) Mrs. Am Youngman and Mrs. Herbert Bu rridge t ake a reading break before the annual rummage sale this month. ln addition to an art boutique and bandcr8fted items. club members are co llecting book s for an extra large boo k department for ~ browsers. . \ ~ . ... •'-. ··-.' . ·-.... .... -.. . I ~. ' ' ........ ' .. _.;~_"' .. ........-~. ,,·_1·~ .. -.-,4'-~-._ .. , ' --.. •. Look Out Leos! ' • '.•,• " ·"1 1 ""' l'I' Astrologist Reveals Zodiac Personality Bring your Scorpio grandfather. Cancer 1nother or Leo self to !\-fontanoso Recreation Center in Mission Viejo on Friday. Jan. 22. for s special presentation on astrology. Noted astrolog ist Burton t-.·Ior~c of Nev.•port Beach. a protege of the late Geraldine Churchill Davis and a member of the American Federation of Astrologers and the Astrological Association of London, England, will provi de fa cts and fan cy on the influences of the stars for members and guests of La s !'vlargn rilas Woman 's Cl ub. Adul ts and students are invited to attend the 7 p.m. session to hear an in-depth study of astrology, financial trends and chart read- ing. Reservations may be 1nade at the Montanoso Recreation Cen· ter, 837-4084, at a cost of ~l for guests and 50 cents for members. Re- freshments will be served . Coming events planned by th e club include a Headdfess Ball on Saturday, April 17. This spring semiformal event is open to the community and all accepted entries must be original and non com- mercial. Fµrther detail s will be announced in the near future. SIGN OF THE TIMES-As trologer Bdrton Marse ex- plai~s astrological influences to members of Lis ·Mar- garitas (left to fight), Mrs. Robert P. Fleckensteµi and Mrs. Andrew Kless. ~~·MiWo~~, Viejo, club members invite adults and students tcJ attend the session on Fri- day, J~n. 22, in Montanoso Recreation Center. A spring Garden Tour and Buffet is in the planning stages for May 31. AU members of Las Margaritas are invited to participate in scheduling spring events for the Mission Viejo community. Ann Turns Thumbs Down ··0n This Solution to Pollution DEAR ANN LANDERS : We ol the University of Michigan Environmental Action group are greaUy upiet at your anUhitchhiking philosophy. Pr i vat e automobiles are perhaps one of the most ecologi~ damaging factors in our society. When a person rides alo~ in his car he contributes a great deal more to e11vlronmenlal destruction than a group of people who ride in one car. Your column is doing a serious disservice to tll06e of us who feel atrotigly agaJnl" ca rs and have decided not to owa one. .fublic trartsportation Ls an altemaUft but It la often inad:equate: · It seems unfair that the people who O\\'n cars will benefit from our decision not to own cars (thry, too, wlll have .. --.. cleaner air) but tha.nkt to )'GU, they wUI refuse to auial UJ in our iransporta- tion needs. We sugest that )'ou en. courage the ooclal ac<eploblltty of hlkh- hildna Jqot<lld o1 ~il -J,w,i:., . ANN AJ\BOR, .MICH. . ~ .. DEAR J.w.i:., I, loo, am du.....o.ci •bout alr pollution. The ti.hiatt IToia elin dtn ~ · prtM:ltt ,,• 'tbre~ IO tbe eeologlcal state of oar oomitry, bit there ·•rt othe'r 'thre•I• to lociely · - 1ucb at drag abuse wbJcb bas 1eceler11ed " vloifftt 'llld cdiae and produced 1 fl11htntn1 dl1repni for, If ' you will pardoD tile eqireuJon, l1w ucl enter. llnlJ addidl will do aaylWDJ lo &<I .... ,. t • '~ I am not abowt it .NCIVlll my rtliler1 to pick up, 1tr1111er1 wben 'I know th8 maaglap ud bur1larlt:1 are at aa 111-tbne blglL Ia f11et, bllehbltln1 It 1galnal tbe law la D.llnolt Ud m~1 Olher 1takt. A better 1olutlon to tbe problt11 11 commaatty • or1uJHd car , • 1 I 1 - worken dri~I frlendl, llememabn drlvlfll ntlghbon &o do tltel5 Dllr'ketlng, ......... takloJ •llo<!• .... "'"·1-to school, along wUll tbefr .... Alld better yet 11, the bicycle. U more Amertcant got off thelr dufft and llld aome o:erd1in1, they'd Uve. loqer. DEAR ANN LANDERS' My neighbor ls 'in her early 30s, .a nl~ woman and the mother of three weU behaved children. She diet. oomelhlnf' ille' Oilier day · ·that I thought was absolutely ridiculous. l told her so and she said I was out of my mind. PteW be the referee. Martha's 7·year-0ld son g<>I Into her cosmetic dtaw'ef" and scraped out Ole eye makeup with her tweeiers. He said he wanled tbe case. When Martha saw the mess she told him he had ruined something that ~longed to her and he had to paf. fo~ it. Sile did. not let him keep the case and sh'e mad~ him wip.? up· the floor. . I told Martha It wai foolish to charge a child $1.25 for rulni111 something. She said, "He has a piggy bank and a sa vings account. I will buy him, an extra &,ifl for his birthday wllh Ibo,.~. 81lt' l want him to kDQW . 1'Jia tie'.datroya property· that he bu to &ta1 fot St.•• .; , Isn 't this weJrdT t believe anorher kind or punishment, such as no dessett or going to bed early, or even a spanking would have made mote sense. To char'e a 7-year-old kid Sl.25 is nutty. What do you say, Ann? - QUESTION ' MINNEAPOl:.!3 ~, ' , .DEAR MIN: l say llooray lor Martha.;: lier apProacb ; nfake1 a lot' ·of teDH; lo m+. Yot can bi: sure, the, bpr. learne,d : a lellOll ftom ihat-experi~ aJ!d 1M •1 wll~ rtmem~r It "ell. Kkb otten de: llOt u'41e11tud thl tbingt Cfill ,motef _ until THEY have lo (JOY far -W.C'. tlltn:i.e'lvea. · • : -. When romanUc glances turn to wam : em-It<=-" is it love or <;hemlatry'? Sedd . for ~ booklet "Lov,e or 81;1 aP$I How .. to Tell the Diller...._" by,iA'o!>i,.pders. · Enclose 1 Jone, stamped. .aelf:add'rtsaet: envelope al"ld S$ cent. ·in coin w(th year.: request in care.of the DAILY PILOT. • .. • . ' • ' ' . Monda~, Ftbruary l, 1m .. Your Horoscope Tomorrow • Cancer: Understand Emotions TUESDAY, JANUARY 19 By S\'DNEY ()HAllll AltnlolJ II I stitlllUlc art ... ~la of 1l!o 1)'11- -alclly ,-... ,.a1e11ey , '' pililltlf;lil ud maed1v eveDJI. 1'roqllool lllatory tll0abJect ... ~ .............. lotpeil ....-of I~. Atfr1locy W bttn usodated wttlt m~ and maUtemaUc1 ; tt attract1 lt1 oUre of charlatau -bot also bas lllrawn to It 111ch creata as Aldous Hm:ley, Henry Mi 11 er , Pytha1or11s, Newton aad -Coperalcus. Controversy 1tt:m• alway• to swirl about astrology, a subject wblch can be 1r:rlou1 ud also ~an be fun and camea •. You m111t. take your choice -or combine both, the gamt aspect and the 1erlou1 study. ARIES (11arch 21-April 19): Check tax records, policies. lf married, finances of mate command att.entloo. If single, you may be contemplating money requiren1ents f or special associ ation, including marrlqe. TAURUS (Aprll 2'>-May 20): Lie low; let others can stwls. I m p r o v e communications, public relations. Check details. Legal loophole could create havoc. Know th is and be on guard. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Jlealth requirements should take precedence. If you nealect essentials. be ready to pay price. Keep recent .......... _____ .,., ,,.Jl ... ~---., .J _! ·-resolutions. You can make solid gain . Associate will aid cause. Design Becoming • CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Good lunar aspect coincides 1' with time when you can ~.; understand your own emo- ._. lions. Nothing halfway here. Enthusiasm builds; you make constructive decisions which lead to needed changes. and act accordingly. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): fl'looey or v.·hat to do about it -that 111ay be question of the hour. Key is to comple te rather than begin project. Rour.d out theme. Look ahead. Don't be goaded i n t o premature decision. SCORPIO (Qcl. 23-Nov. 21): Cycle high : circumstances turn in favor of your desires. efforts. Take initiative : lead the way. New contacts will be beneficial. !l ighlight in- dependence of thought, ac tion. SAGl'M'ARIUS (T-;ov. 2Z- Dec. 21 I: A secret agreement seems to be on agenda. No need for fears, doubts. Sell· esteem is essential. Your in- tu ition serves now as reliable guide. A former teacher makes appearance. This is good. Westminster Club Draws Plans for Las Vegas Party LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Prepare lo ove r co me obstacles. Older pe rson may go back on promise. This is a lest. Be read y for it. Accept on security, basic domestic situation. Take off rose-col- ored glasses, CAPRICORN ! Dec. 22-Jan. 19): No\v is the Un1e to make friends, influence people . Most pe rsons are receptive to your ideas. A Scorr)io individual could play significan t role. Share knowledge ; exchange ideas. • Giant playing cards Y.'ill provide the decor \Yhen the Carousel Section of Westminster Woman's Club opens its season \Vith a social at 8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 23. in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Mc· Shane. Carrying out a Las Vegas theme are (left to right) the Mmes. T. M. Brewer, Donald 1\ifdreaSen, sect.ion chairman, and Mrs. McShi.ne, club president. !vlembers will provide entertainment and a buffet will be served. _,..__,.,. \ (l AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Feb, 18): Accent on standin g in co m m u n i I y , professional endeavors. Key is to give full play to intellectual curiosity. Read and write; don't be satisfied w i t h superficial knowledge. Accepl invitation, VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Oakland Home Chosen By Newlywed Reeces Dail~ Pilot DeaJ.Pi,+WJ,, ,c:,:::----~·-'-:r;:.; /, _\ -,_: \ -, '1 ! r \ ('1; f l.\j ,,---"'GI'-, )(~~-\ i~;! Stress on short journeys, ideas, special visits. A rela tive who makes numerous claims may be covering up financial embarras.sment. Know this PISCES (Feb. 19-Mareh 20 ): Personal awareness earns you respect of associates, relative. Avoid making extravagant claims. Heed words 4l f spiritual adviser. Be true lo yourself. A journey may be on tap. St. John the Baptist Catholic i;:hurch, Costa Mesa was the setting for the double ring nupt ials linking Di an e Newland and Stephen Reece. Parents of lhe newlyweds are J\lr. and Mrs. George ~ewland of Costa Mesa and fr. and Mrs. Willard Reece Newport Beach. . Given in marriage by her •lher, the bride was attended ~y her sister, Miss Barbara Newlan d as maid or honor. Bridesmaids were the Misses Nancy Livingston, Rosemary Kelly , Anita Newland, another ilster of the bride and Jan k eece, the bridegroom 's To avoid diJappolDtment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white ~lossy P.boto- graphs to the DAJLY PILOT Womens n .. . Partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time wilJ not be used. For engagement announcements it · is imperative that the story, alao accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be oub- m.jtted. six weeks or more before the wedding· date. If deadline is not met. only a story will be used. ... \. • ' 1·· I I ' . •11 I 1 / I • .._, :""\,..-' __..':-/ '\'----' i Iraie \' Gilbert \ 72990 \ I TT Irene Gilbert cut and shaped this divine dress with the front curving around and meeting in the center back creating a flared skirt Fashions On Parade The nimble fingers of 7th and 8th grade students at J . fl. l\-1cGaugh School have pro- duced a parade of fashions to be modeled at IO a.m. in the Marina Community Center Wednesday, Jan. 20. The fashion show will be prese nted to the Seal Beach Woman's Club as the climax of a contest sponsored by the group. More Lhan 40 girts have participated in the contest under the direclion of Mrs. Nell Sharp. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY ynu are dynamic . aggress ive. b r i g h t and creative. You need an outlet. Without it, you b ec ome restless and pugnacious. You Jove. deeply ; your emotions often rule. You recently met indivjdual who made you aware of assets as well as shortcoming s. You can develop now. Currently, you are co nfused. l n upcoming month, however. you will know where you arc going and \rhy -this is all t& the good. llstec. MRS. STEPHEN REECE loale Ree ce served his __ Recite~ P~edges To help !ill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, fonns are available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by \Yemen 's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. A most becoming design ideal in soft fabrics such as wool or silk crepe, silk jersey. synthetics. fi ne linen or lightweight \\'Ool. 72990 is cut in Misses . s;zes 6-JS. Size 12 requires approximately 21/11 yards of 54" fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better fit. Gift certificates v.·ill be awarded th e outsta111ding dressmakers. J\.frs. 11 en r y Schadec will presi de and a luncheon will follow. J\.1rs. Allan Denton Is hoste ss chairman for the day. To find out who's luc~Y lor "°" In mo<>ev •nO 10.,e, oraer Syd<>e• Oman'• bQok1•1, "SeCfH t11nh I"' Men and women." 5..,a blrthd•I• a'l(I '>O cenh lo Oma" lt.•lrolOp• Sectel•. 11'1< Olt.ll 'f PILOT, Box ll"<I. Grind. C•n1t1! Sl11lon, Hew York. H .'f. 10011. ~other as best man. while l!olJer duties ~re assumed by Bill Redding, Paul Le· moine, George Newland. the bride·s brother and J e f f lleece. th e bridegroom's brother. Flo\ver gi rl v.·as Colleen Gibbons :ind ring bea rer was Michael Kiznes. The bride is a graduate of \\lcslminster High School and attended Orange Co a s t College. li er husband. a Kl!wport Harbor High School graduate. also attended OCC and now is a student at the l:niversity of Ca Ii f o r ni a, Berkeley. The newly\\·eds will reside in Oakland. BE FREE ... or ,.ACIAl.. HAIPI l"O"CVEPI. LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY IT IS TO flEMOVE CXCtSS HA.11' Wint MOOE1'H l\.llCT,.OLYSll, MDICAL.LY A~~JtOVCO,,, SN'll, P'A9T, G,.tn'L£, COHSUL T WITH OU" Uc&HICO TICHHICIAH Jl'.I OUJt •IAUTY IAl..OH. .ROBINSON'S NEWPORT Anecdotes Calendars Crammed Order 72990: give size. name, address and zip. $2 postpaid. Addres,<; SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX·l 5, Milford, N. J. 08848. WE LOVE TO NEEDLE OUR CUSTOMERS Presented Panelists with five different ethnic herit ages will relate personal anecdotes and ex- periences during a special pr<r gram presented by the Hun- ting lon Beach Branch of the American Association o f Unive;sity Women. Taking place at 7:30 p.n1 \Vednesday. Jan. 2tl, in th~ Lake Park Clubhouse, the pro- gram will be open to the public. January ca lendars are filled for members of the Navy Wives Club 217, who niet recently to make plans for the month . A visit to the Cerebral Palsy Center. Santa Ana, is planned for Wednesday , J an. 20, with members taking ice cream and cookies for the •ludents. Punch and ho ni-i-m ad e Club Honors Past Leaders Panelists will r ep res e n t Past presidenu or l he cookies will be distributed throughout the wards of the Long Beach Naval Hospital Thursday, Jan. 28, and fresh fruit will be given lo the tuber culosis ward at the Orange County Med i ca I Center. The club also is dmating $2:> to the .NaUonal Navy \Vh'cs Scholarship Foundation· and collecting. food coupons for the Gulfport Club in ~fississippi to help in obtaining a kidney machine . A farewell social in the Enlisted Men 's Club. Naval Air Station, Uls Alamitos will lake place Thursday, Jan, 21 , to hono r Mni. Kenneth Truesdale and 1Jrs. Gus Holstius, whose husbands both have been transferred. Pattern Books by Classification: Coats and Suils -$1. Course Begins New Session STARS Sydney Om•rr 11 one of the W• ere el'9fh I• •vpplylltlj all of yo11r knlttllllJ ...e4s. edwlce teo, If JOIJ Ned Hip. Com. i• eitd t•t .cq11allltedl world'1 9r••t •1trolo9•r1 . Hi1 The KNIT WIT c:olumn i1 on• of the DAILV SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA PILOTS ,,.,t f••ture1, P"°"9 JU..2112 A class on preparaUon for~'.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:::i:iii childbirth will begin· at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, JJ.n. 20, at the Santa Ana YWCA. In~luded ln the IO.week session v.-111 be dl9cusslons on physical and emotional preparation for pregnancy and ch.ihibirtb, breathing methods, exercises and hygie ne. .(nyone wishing lur1her In- formation may call the· Y at M.2-3677. AN EARLY LOOK TOWARD SPRING Protestant, Jev•ish, Negro and Nev.·port Harbo r Business and Mexican-Am ericans in an at-Professi<lnal Women·s Club tempt to erase prejudi ces. A will be honored during a Gold queslion and answer period Braid Night in the l\1esa Verde will folio\\". and further in· Country Club Thursday, Jan. formation may be obtainecl 21. liiii _________ ~~~S~::~----1 by conta cting ~1rs . 1\1ichael The 7:15 p.m. dinner wilill BONDED KNIT JERSEY Roa ch, prog ram chairman. be preceded by a 6:30 p.m. These Portraits of American social hour. f\frs . W, A. Women arc sponsored by the Rosenfeld v.'ill conduct the Communily Relations Con· prognim, ference of Southern California. -:'iiii;;i;:ijn,;;..,;;--,c;jl Grandmothers :"'1::--,.io_ ... ~14 A-4'\ \~· 1,000'1 OP: OIL PAIHTINljS WHOLESALI WARIHOUSI At noon ev ery sec 0 n d ,j OPEN TO THf l'UILIC ' Thur,day the Newport Harbor l 50°/o OFF •. Grandmothers' Club meets In · 1119 1. 101No••· t.ll>ITA A"" I the Cost.a Mesa Golf and ""-•J.M60t Country Oub. 1Jlel Dllt.Ll!•I WANTIO • BLOUSES-SWEATERS- SKIRTS-DRESSES-PANTS PANT SUITS REDUCED 259/o to so·~ ALL TENNIS DRESSES 50°/o OFF JEWELRY-SCARVES- HANDIAGS-IELTS- ACCESSORIES-BELTS UDUCID BARGAIN TABLE PRIZES-LEFT OVERS-ONE OR FEW OF A KIND $3-$5-$1o-$15 ~J..... BIDTIQUE l4b7 Via RICH GIRL HAIR FOR JUST PENNIES! Shampoo-.S~t Stylecut '1'0 ~1rn.m ,,uc•1 M.llMTLY " ....... '2000 Holiday Perm 112" Hollday Frosting $1591 Complete with H•lrcut 2 COST4 Mls.t. 5"LOHS .' . CPoWl!ing Glory UOl'mtrfy Clorlu C•l"IKWI SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 I. 17" IT., COITA MISA Lo••r L•¥tl-N••f io S•trt p ..... W..71'6 ,. ... 141-ttlt •cryl ic •nd wool in • wid e ran9e of solid color1, bonded to I 00 I'. ac etete t ricol . 58"/60" widths AU WOOL FLANNEL for a new sprin9 . dres1, pant su it or for 9•ucho'i. edd a bit of braid or trim. 12 solid colors 54"/55" widths IONDl!D COORDINATES 0 PLAIDS 0 SOLIDS beautifully fe l(tured in match-mate colors for uJif1, jackets, skirts, pants. ac1tat1 1nd nylon .5411 wide .a House oF F1tBR1cs s..eti C.-,,.._,,;1101 •I S•11 Di•t• fwy. H ..... ,._._17th tt lrl1tol Cede M..-..141·1 tl6 S... .__.4J.lltl O,..,....r Mel-Or•"9•1k•rP• oMI H•1"•r IMH P.t ea.ter-l• P1!'"' al St•nlon hAett11 121·23)4 ..... ,_.-4Jl.6lJI Htdtl .... 1t c:..t.r-Edi11901 •I l••ih ll~d. HltllflllffH leac._,t7-IOIJ I Mondi!!)', Frbruary 1, ]q71 DAILY PILOT Jf Doctor's Bag Filled With Prescriptions for Success By JO 01.SON 01 lllti 0•111 "Ill" 51111 Dr. Barbar~ J'ssen has eve rything she wants out of' life : a husband, a career and children, and all lhree are intcrtwin«t into a sense or complelcness and fWfilment for her. The Newport Be a ch neurologist, whose fifth floor oHice looks out over the harbor 3Jld jus t misses a view of her \\.'aterfront home, Is frankly exuberant about life <ind considers herself very lortunate. The key to her success in melding home and office is her husband's unde rstanding attitude, she fee.ls. "We have a very unusual marriage," she ·explains. "\Ve ha ve tota l freedcnn." -"""'...' Dr . Jessen and her husband. Bob, a general manager of the administrative strvices for \Vestgate California Insurance Co., both arc extremely busy and both make room for th e other's aclivities. Bob, for example, ls very ' . busy with Sea Scouts and sail· ing, and Barbara doesn't com- plain when he is gone for a weekend or a week or two at a time or doesn 't show up for dinner. Barbara is busy with her work, her children, her post~ graduate courses and her pro- fessional meetings , and Bob doesn't mind if she jets away to a conference or meeting. BECOMES INTERESTED The slim, attractively tan- ned doctor be<:ame interested Jn medicine v.·hil e an un- dergraduate al S tan ford Univ ersity, where she received her bachelors degree i n biology. Many c.f her fellow students were planning on going to medica l school and it was ~rough them she saw the possibilitie s o( becoming a doctor. She attended the Stanford University School of Medicine and the University of Illinois School bf Me<licine, interned at DuPage County Memorial Hospital in Elmhurst, Ill., Baptist Ceremonies completed her residency at Long Beach Vetera ns Administration Hospital and held an 8!1$i!lsntship at L<ls Angeles County G e n e r a I Hospilal. 1be Je ssens moved jobless to Newport Beach after deciding that the west coast wa s where they wanted to make Ulelr home. Newport captured their hearts as "the only pllict to live." Their boat-shaped home l.s a natural for them since the water is their first love. Barbara hopes to he lp her husband realize his dream of a 40-or 50-foot boat, and meantime the family enjoys sailing a flipper and .swim· ming together. CHILDREN FIRST Barbara's main a ct Iv i t y outside Ule office is spending as much time as J>06Sible with her children, Erik, 9, Blake, 8, Leif, S, and Kristen , 3. When she finds time she squeezes in gardening, gourmet cooking and sewing. Or. Jeatn · is not a "Woman'1 Ubber" because she fffls that everyone, can be the~kind of a penorr he wants to be. She ~Id not find opposition )n ,medlcal· tchool beca~ of her ae1 and doe! not feel that she I 1 discriminated agalnat in her practice becauee· 1be is a "woman doctor." "I am a· human being who is a doctor, Vi'.ile and mother, not a •Woman doctor,' " she related. "I 1just don't look for: dlscrimlnatlon." · The hartlest thing about becomh.g a doctor was the long hours in vol ved in study and work. "My husband en- coor~ed me because be knN l needed a challenge," she said. "'r.le most difficult thing about medicine is how hafd it is on your husband and your marriage, and whal . a long streteh the total length of time is." lJ'ITER DEUGHT Why does Dr. Jessen love being a doctor as well as a wUe and mother? ''It I! an ult.er dell&ht. Each person ii a new eh&llence, every day b a new day." Dr. Jessen alao loves to work in her comm uni ty, teeing her patients as pt(,pie as well as cases. She tries to relate these feelings to medical students and en- courage them because she feels that this part or being a doctor is not passlble to see in medical .school. 'fh9ugh Dr. Jessen feels that doctors should be doctors, not men or women doctors, she lbinks that women do well in medicine because of their tendency to be supporting types. "Emolklnal i 11 n e s s ~·t disturb us, either." she added . "Women shou ld be physicians from that stand- point -we can supoort pa-tients." ) Whil e Wo men's Lib members cannot count Dr. Jessen as one of themselves. they certainly can depend upon her for enthusiastic sup- port of women as people. Patterns Shaping Out A HAPPY MARRIAGE Or. Barbara Jessen ' r. Couple Recites Vows Hardships Explored Women Inching Into New Sizes SUZANNE HERRING Batrothed Herrings Tell News First Southern B a p t i s t Church, Costa Mesa was the setting for the dc;ub!e ring nuptials linking Donna Lynn Thorpe and James Ca r I Hurtado. The Rev . Herberl G . J ohnson directed the vow ex. change for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond W. Thorpe Jr. of Costa Mesa and the son and stepson of Mr. and Mrs . Carl R. Feldern, also of ~sta Mesa. Attending as matron of hono r was Mrs. Michael titalheron Jr .. while Robert Rodemeyer was the best man .• Ushers were Merle D , Peterso n and Malhe ron. and candlelighter was Kay Hem- mer. • • "My husband has gone to prison : what will I and my children do?" Mrs. Rosemary GoodelOUgh, founder of Friends Outside in California, will sPeak during an informal meeting at 10 a.m. tomorrow in St. Anselm's of Canterbury Episcopal Church, Garden Grove. The group, working with families of jail prisoners, is co n d u cUng organiiational meetings in Sout h ern Calilomia counties to discuss and find solutions to meet the needs of women who mu st face poverty, humiliation and the problems of bringing up the children alone. Those inlere~ted in learning more about the problems of families in Orange County and what can be done are invited to atttnd. WASHINGTON (AP-) -Ah And what's made women woman, slender aild 'fair, you so much more ample? are no longer as slender &s "There's a gener al increase ontt you were. Say about 30 in bust , hips and waist," said years ago. a 1qualify control manager of Then, you shapely creature, a large mail order house, your size 12 dress meant that sagacious enough not to your measurements were 34-permit use of his name. 25-36. Today you call yourself "We find women arc gell ing a size 12 if you are 35-26-.17. heavier. Some say It's because That's a full inch aeross they 're more sedentary. They the ... er ..• board. sit more and their hips The National Bureau of spread." Standards, an u n e a th e t i c Industry designers say the crowd as you will find , has dictates of fas hion that are come out with t h e s e causing the sizing changes. wigentlemanly findings. It is "The change ln v.·01ncn's updating the sizing of women's bodies Is essentially due to apparel to fit the Today ,,.,.hat fashion says they should \Voman. look like." said Barbara "Body landmarks" is wh at Hulse, director of the design the NBS calls it. department at Simplicity pat~ The 1939 data -u!ed as terns. a reshaping." r·or men, there is no new standard sizing. There-wa sn 't even an old one, says the National Bureau of Standards. \Yhich just goes to prove that Ambrose Bierce. the wordsmith who live d earlier in this century, was right when he wrote: "To men a man Is bul a mind, who cares what face GRAPEFRUIT DIET LOST UP TO 20 LBS. IN TWO WEEKS lat ttirH 1MGl1 • dey. 5"d Sl cM<.k •r "'°"' ordar .. d 1hlmpM .. lf·oddrMwd OllYO· la,. t•: hfit, CMC-ZO. llil &'arulerd 1or 12 years ---"Now women have gorw! DIET showed a Misses size 10 with back to the natural look ; bras an upper arm elrcurnJerence used lo, be poinled. Now •••N.-Dlnl INTllt'ltlSI he carries or what fonn he wears? "But a woman's body Is !he woman. 0 stay thou, my Sll'Celhcart. and do never go.'' SALE ... piccolino danskln johnston etc ~- II!<! u:o~I deliirhtfully 1lflll•t1•1 d1il,lre11'• •lore in 1be toulhl•.d 16877 Al;conquln St. Hl''l"ff,'lt;Ttl,'I •Ul".tl (71') 146-1666 A family dinner in their Newport Beach home was the setting ll'hen ti1r. and l\trs. flu sh F'. Herring announced the engagement of t h e i r daughlcr, Suzanne Sherwood Herring to Dan Rudy Bugay. The bride, a student at Golden West College, is a graduate <>f Estancia High ii School where her husband was graduated. He is serving with '~ the U.S. Air Force. The newlyweds wilf reside in Costa Mesa. CM Home Chapter Meets l'.O, ••~ UJ, Cllllo!I, H.J. 11Gl2 of 9'9 ind>es and a thigh' -~th~•!'_Y':'.:re~rou~n:":dcd~_"'and""_~"~ll:_.~l.'.l'~s~~~~~~~~~~~_::========:::_.,:·' of 19'4i·inches ••at maximum! Members Recruited Hrr !lance is the so n of Charles Bugay of Chicago and A 1nembership drive now the Masada, Harbor and Santa the late Mrs. Bugay. is under way for three Orange Ana-Tustin. Those interested Miss 11 er r ing graduated county Hadassah Chapters may call the Mmes. Frank from Newport Harbo r High and will culminate with a Krohn, Hewa rd Geller or School. The benedict-elect was Harold Travis. Ch . sch 1 glamorous social affair Satur-cducated in 1cago oo s Hadassah is the sole support and attended \Vright Junior day, Jan. 23. in Temple Beth of the Hadassah Medical College, Chicago. lie currently Emet. Anaheim. Organization and Youth Aliyah Mrs. Keith Kleppe will open her Weslmlnster home whe.n the Beta Alpha Pi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi meets al 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 11. Sweet Adeline• girth." The Now Woman's dimensions are JO'AI inch up- per ann and a 2011, inch thigh. Three decades ago a Juni or size 9 measured 32-23'h-331f.i. Today she Is 33·231,l,-35: Blue Star Moms Huntington Beach Blue Star Motllers, Cbapter 2 11tage mti!ltngs every Monday at 1:30 p.m. in Lake Park aubhouse. is a tifarine Corps sergeant , Participating chapters are of Israel. stationed flt El Toro. ,_....'..:'..::::'.::::».._:::::::::::::....:::.:._::...:::_:::::_ _______ l·---------------------1 The couple has selected Feb. Harbor lites Chapter, Sweet · Adelines convenes e v e r y Monday at 8 p.m. f or programs in College Park School . Costa Mesa. 26 for their forthcoming mar- riage. the b r 1 d c · e I e ct ' s parents" anniversary. Th e ceremony "''ill take place in 1. St AndrC\Y0S Presbyterian '!!\. Church, l'\'ev.•porl Beach. ' SEMI-ANNUAL SALE Etchings Detailed Li!hograph y \\ 11! be di.~cuSS· cd by \Valtcr Reith when the Art Seclion or Lhe San Clemente Woman's C I u b meets at 9:30 a.m. Wed· nesday, Jan. 20. ln the home of Mrs. Martin Campbell. i [pllO@~@ .A Now retired. Reich, a graduate of Co r nell University, fonnerly wa s associated with one of the largest manufacturing OO!fl" pan ies which produce equ1~ mcn t for the graphic arts in dustries. lie will detail the lnlricaeies of the lithographic process and show examples of etchings and mod em litpography - Co-hostesses will be Mrs. Joh n Colteax and Mrs. Reich. Husbands Hear New Projects Husbands were h o n o r e d when members of the Irvine Junior Woman's Club gathered for a cocktall party in the University Park home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cross. . AssisUng with the Ont husbands' nigh t Wert . Mia. Gerald MlllZY •nd Mrs. Henry QUigley. rnmTI arn&om ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 8.99 to 10.99 QualiCraft Shoes NOW 0 0 s.w cmr ~on Amerk:m.'t 1eec11111 tuhkwl lhoeal Hurry now to .nJoy thna trtmendova nlun. Still a lln• Mlactlon. •lttiovch not ...-.ry styte In al .aies. IOUTN COAST JiuZA c:-.- Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Start the new year with a new look .. Fashion cut for just2.24. Or get a 'Festival' budget permanent. Price includes shampoo; cut and style set. Only 8.95 • . - Mrs. R. Lee Ptncneton. ••t.••"* .. ..., ,..,. NAO Junio~ "president, ell'.plalned HUNTIN ... TON CINTI" fA.SHION lfUAll :. A!.~= ~·i::r. = PAIHIO .. llU.MI -c.. ..... ----------------·-----··-------········-·····-···········---:i Breakthrough in color photographyli • I I LIMITED TIME OFFER AT 99c Plu1 .50f handling. This very special oiler a presented as an ex-~=~=~====:!I pr...ton of our thanb for your patronage. * IEllllE FILL IATllAL COLOR POITUITS! Not the old style tinted or painted black & white photos. * SATISFACTIOI llAIAITEED or your money refunded. * FOi ~LL UESI Babies, children, adults. GrQups photographed at an additional 99c pe" subject. * LIMITED OFFEll One per subject, two per family. AT THI FOLLOWING SIARS STORES THRU JAN. 24: lo NG BEACH OLYMPIC & SOTO COMPTON COSTA MESA !Sears I ----- IUENAPARK TORRANCE PHOTO HOUll1 12 NOON TO I l'.I(, DAICY 5UNDAY12NOO T04P.M. • • • : • : • .' .. ... the phllanlhroplc projeet.s the H••l*f'• ..... s.... .-. club h11s undertaken for tile ~ """" C:"1"" ...,.., !---------------------------------'" rnrning year. 1----------------------lll...----------~~~~~~~~--' ! ... • ' ._....... ... . . . . .. ---.. ' . -- DAIL~ PILOT MotldaJ, Janu1t1 18, 1971 . . Family Table Talk: Food for Thought By ERMA BOMBECK the scissors In their room. "Anyone nolice f defrosted GOI into it ~· ~sked another. ''Our dinner hour with the AT We've got to stCJp criticizing the refrigerator"?" l asked "Absolutely not ," said my children hu all the w1nnth them while they eat or they 're '"Hey, has anyone heard husband , "Thl.s 1s no llme to and JeUowahlp of the peace WIT'S going Lo have ulcef'li." what a five-year-old Chinese dL~l'uss uplc as<1 nlr1cs." talks at Hapoi," sa.id my huS· At dinner that night things child said to Art Linkletter "Aren 't we l'\'fll going to band. f ND v.·ere painfully s1JenL v.·hen he asked v.·hal animal talk abQul v.110 traded who "I know," I said sullenly, ''We had an a 1n u si ng she wanted to be when she on whal night and whose turn .. Why do you haYe to JMck speaker al Kiwanis today," grew up?" it is to clear?" lbt dinner hour to read off , N said my husband , "who talked Finally, one of the children "Nol during the 1ncal ," l ' o ('Ofl(rontalions abo ut the li!t or your toola ttlat on the birth of the ball bear--spoke, "Don't you wantii know said so(tl), are missing from the report cards, dirty rooms or ing." who broke the storm door win· As if on cue, all three of garage?" bringing the car home with The kids chewed in silence. dow?" Lhcm pushed themselves away "You should laJk," he said. the lank empty." "You'll ne ver guess who I "No dear, eat your dinner," fron1 thei r half·eatco dinner. "You bring up stns they com-"No harping about lhe met in the Cereal and Spices 1 smiled happily . ""Whllt's the n1atter'!" I ask- mittecl in their playpens.'' garbage stackfd up on the aisle today." They ate slifny, "Aren't we going to talk ed. "We are both at fault,'' I back porch. whose turn it is only occasiona ll y exchanging about who lert the lids off "V.'e can't cal v.·hcn you're .said, "Why don 't we both to do dishes and who has glances with one aoother. the garbage cans and the dogs sore at us," they said. resolve to Jmock off pieking1------------''------------''--''------''----------- at the k.ids while we eat. No chewing around about bicyclet left out.side to rust." "No nagging about how they have the tabl.e manners ot a weak king." Fashions Produced AWAITING LADY LUCK -Wondering if the wheel of fortune will spin just right for her is 1.1rs. Donald Hoover. ABeta Sigma Phi princess. she will be among those competing for the crov.'n of Valentine Queen of the West Grove Area Council. Illustrating the c u r r e n t trends in the couture wo rld, the senior homemaking class at Newport Harbor High School is staging a rashion shov.•, Freedom of Fashion. The show, which will fea ture students modeling their own creations, will be at 9:30 a.m. \Vednesday, Jan. 20, in the school auditorium. · ONCEA- Crown ol Stake Mm SaJldy Albers i s Princesses • Spin chalnnan. She is b e Ing assisted by the Missel! Llsbet White, .script; Michele Lit· tlejohn, models: Joy Orstad, publicity, and Nonna Schmidt. staging. It is open to the public. The wheel of fortune will spin good luck for one Beta Sigma Phi princess al 9 p.m. on Saturday. Feb. 20, du ring the annual Royal Coronation Ball of Lhe Vi'est Grove Area Council. A. new Valentine queen will be crowned when the wheel stops, after being put in mo- tion by Mrs. Jerome Collon. council president. and a mid· night buffet wlll br served following the ccre1non1es. Mrs. Ray Smock, b a 11 chairman will in trodu ce pr incesses from each chapter and Mrs. Terry Faff, Mu Upsilon Chapter, outgo Ing queen, will place the crown upon the head of the new queen. Club Seeks Members Decade of Art Works Displayed 1n Museum Awaillng the turn of the wheel will be the Mm~. Tom BarreU, Phi Iola Beta; Jerry Chouinard, Beta Alpha Pi; Sidney Chappell, Beta Alpha Xi ; Denise i{uish, Delta Beta Epsilon , and Guy Hammer, Gamma Alpha Nu. ~tore prin cesses are the i\imes. Steve Humphreys, Mu Upsilon: Mark Du Bourdieu, Pl Pi : Tim Rogers. Upsilon Omicron: Donald Gardner, Xi Eta Pi: Larry Zaruba, Xi ?-.1u Mu ; Donald iloover, Xi Mu Zeta; Kenneth Moore, Xi XI Pi ; George Hamlin, Xi Xi Rho: Don Parsons, PreCl'plor Apha Theta, and Miss Peggy Galley, Delta Delta Epsilon. Seeking to bolster i t s member!hlp is the Orange County Chapter Of the Society of Milil'ry Widows. SurviVing wives and adult children Jf mllllary personnel who died in active duty, from service-connected causes or while receiving retirement pay are eligible for membership. A rol\eclion of more 1han 30 paintings. graphics and 5CUlpture by some of the most important American artist.! of I~ decade will be on view to the public beginning \~'cdnesday , .Jan. 20, through Sunday, Feb. 21. in the Newport Harbor Art r.1useum. Titled A Co rporation Collecls : The Avco Collectlon of American Ari. the exhibit will include Lhc works of Josef Albers. Richard Anuskiewicz, Franz Kline, Kenzo Okada, Adolph Gottleib, Ha rr y Bertoia, James Wlnes and Miss Louise Nevelson. The museum ls open each \\'edne1day through Sunday Two Acts On Program A film and three-minute Pas de Deux will highlight the Tuesday. Jan. 19. mettlng of the Orange County OA..NCE , a rupport groop of the Los Angeles Dance Theater. P.tr5. Paul O'Shea will hoSl the 10:30 a.m. mtttlng in her Newport Beach home and special guests will be danCl'rS t.tLu Susan Bormrar and Tom Stanton. The film to be shown 15 "The Birth of the San Diego Ballet Company.·· Also Included oo lhe agenda will be • dlSCUllsion of plans for the next DANCE benefit, a fu ll evening of ballet In the late .!ipring. DANCE brings several hun· dred chi Id re n lo all performance! of the U>s Angeles Dance Theater. Altrusans Go Hunting Members of the Altrusa Club of Laguna Beach will be treated to a 'Jnaaure Hunt Abrold al 7;30 p.m. tomorrow in the OUtrlgger restaurant. '['hrough the \lie of slides ind dJlcusston, W i r re n Morgan; former manager of the LogUna Beach Chamber of Commerce, will t 1 k t members Into countrlts throughout the workl with apteial e:rnphull on products Ind customl peculiar t 0 v1riou.s cul turet. The world travtler not only y11Jt.s countriM bul I I I o ltUdla their creattw 1111. tndit.IOf'll, music and dance ....... Ho will _.. 1111 lecture with 1 oollocUon or •lldft from bi. •'rrea!ures of the World" wlt.1. bctvtttn J and $ p.m. and i\1onday from 6 to 9 p.m. ll is closed during the day on r-.tonday and Tuesday. Now in the process of niov· ing its corpo rate offices to Newport Beach. Avco Finan- cia l Services, Inc., will use the museum as a nucleus for its permanent collection. The museum's art rental council in collaboration with the Comsky GaUery of Los Angeles is announcing the publication of two n e w lithographs by graphic artist Tom Fricano. Southland print· maker, teacher and recipient Of both a Fulbright Grant and Gugenheim Mem orial Fello~'· ship. llis work is found in many major publications including the Library of Congress, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago and Los Angeles County f.1ustum or Art. Each print Is from a limited ediUon of 120 numbered and hand-signed impressions printerl by Atelier ;v1ourlol. riew York . Artist Clowning Around Abrams Town and Country Club. Orange. will be the ball selling. Anyone interested i1 invited to attend the nert meeting al 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 20. at 615 E. First St., Tustin when Lloyd Simon will speak on business manage men I services for the average family . Add itional Information about the society may be obtained by writing P. 0. Box 11669, Santa Ana. Seo Siren• Honorees Disclosed TOPS Sea Sirens meel in Killybrooka School, C o s t a Mesa. Programs ~111n at 1 .11 p.m. every Wednesday. A major phi lanthropy w1 ,.;; ...... ::=:::~:::::--ii be stlecled when members of JI the South Coast J u 111 i o r Woman's Club meet 1\1esday. Jan. 19. In the Fountain Valley Commun ity Center. Clubwoman-of-the-yt'ar and cillzen-o(-the-ycar forn1s v.·iJJ be distributed ;ind results of the recrnt mcmbPr valuation rejXlr! \1·ill hf' dis<·ussed. !'11rs. Hobert Snrnm;1. presi- dent nf I .os Ccrri!os District. wHI .spe;.1k on dis tr ict. state and gener;il feder;lllon . Husbands nf members will have an OPJXlr?uo1ty to get l acquainted during a husbands" fun ni~ht card party being arranged for Friday. Jan. 22, at 8 f).m. Costum• Jewelry News '"" NOW HAPPENING AT sa'llna's f.!r. and f\.1rs. Robert To-c~'"' ........ L<>• y,,,. J•wtory meoni will open their home -All•1111 -"""'""'" INcll ;c~f~.'.'h~'~?.':':~·ll':_ ____ ~~,~·~"~·~,~~~··~·~·~·~·~..,.~·~,.~~11 or as1on. Clov.·ns will delight members of the Orange Co unt Y \.\I //./ Phannaceulical Association . '~\I\ I / • ;/ ~ ?/ Woman's Auxiliary when they ~ ASTRO ~ ,.,,.. -~ gather at 11 :30 a.m. for a ~---SCIENCE -~ luncheon meeting on Wed-~ --ClNTll ~ - nesday, J~, 20, in the home 'i; ~·~ of Mrs. Peter Ptrek. Santa i'}'I'\\'~ An:;,. Mustard wm present ASTROLOGY - a slide ahow of his clown WE Al':E CONTINUING OUR S,ECIAL INT.ODUCTOR'f drawings. Illustrating t b e OFFER I FOR A LIMITf:D Tl ME ONLY YOU MAY STILL techniques used in de veloping RECEIVE.: his art:. He 11 currently In· YOUR INDIVIDUAL PERSONALIZED HOAOSCOP&. volvtd in a proj~ct for the YOU R IN-DEPTH 1971 FORE.CAST Crippled Childml'1Borptta..1 of COMl'LElE WITH CHARTS AND A CASSEnE Los Angeles. l APE Hostesses for I.be day wlll bf: •••• OR A PERSONAL APPOINTMENT fOA Mrs. James Mullen and Mrs. YOUR ANALYSI~ M .ll • •.. OR IOTH I,_ YOU WISH Donald t er. All DONE I Y A NATIONALLY ,AMOUS Buds Bloom For Members Leaminl bow to arrange flowers JIJc:e expertl wlU be members of tht A~utronlc \YI Yes Club when they gather for a bninc.h and metting at 10;30 1.in. Wedneldtiy, lan. 20. The proarom. Flower Ex· travapor.a wtU talc! place In !he Royal Coach Motor Inn. Anaheim . Mrs. William Gl'ln· .ASTROLOG ER • ,ws • A COlrilPLE.TE HOME STUDY COUJtSE IN ASTROLOGY MEMIERSHIP IN THE ASTRO SCIENCE CENlER (meeli"91, lechlfl~, 9we1t 1pe1ker1, etc:.l TWELVE MONTH SUSSCRIPT ION TO THE "ASTRO SCIENCE NEWS." All tlli o •I owr :"hodwclory offer of o"lv S4•.50. IY011 would 1Jpo~t to P•Y ti.ii muc.11 1IMI mo11 for • 11114 Horo1Gop• 1lone!I T 1nn1 1r1 1¥1ll1bl1, •• , p1y 11 yo~ l11r". ..... w,,.;: ASTRO SCllNCE CENTIR 11141 S4Ufoo 1100 N. IROADWAY •111 SANTA ANA •210& non is accepUng reservations. i__=.._.:..__.:..__~_.:..__.:..__.:..__:.._ _ _:_ _ _::_ This is the sales event that rm.art buyers have bee waiting for. Now, for a limited time, you can get all the quality and engineering excellence Sylvania h ome entertainment products are famous for ••• and with up to $100 in savings. But don't dclay, if you miss this opportunity you may have t.o wait a whole year for another chance at bargains like these. ALL THESE MODELS l!AVE SYLVANIA REMOTE CONTROL-LETS YOU 'fU~E IT FH01'.f WHERE YOU WATCH IT! Sylvania slinal seek.in& Chairsi.de Color Control p ro Yid es the 1 finest color tuninr; right from your easy chair! Seleda your fnorite UHF channels a.s e.asily as tuning a radio! !Us push-- button on-oct and VHF tuninr; continuowJy -n.rlable TOlume color and tint control£; reliable tntwfstorlzed ..... ation .~ ult.ruonic sign als to prerent. raise triU:erin'- SAVES1QO Plus Three Feature Pack Color TV model CL883. 1'he biggest coloracrel!n availabl e: 25" (diae. meas.). lost.ant Push-button Tuning gives a perfect. t'Olor picture instantly. Solid U..t.e [CJ!ffilt.ar 1~ chaaW;, the ultimate in rehabilHy. Now Only TV RECEM'ION SIMULATED ~-~.,..,..... £1.cM< ,........,.. ...... SAVE s50 on Sylvania New Dimensional Color with Cliairside Color Control Ch00!5e from three autbenLically desie;ned fu rnilure styles lfitb all the most looked·for feature&. 25" diagonal measure • picture tube that combines. brightness and contrast ror the &b&rpelt picture a-n.ilable .•. and there's morr _ .. 1'he SylqnLa GlbraJta.r,,. cha$is with 901\d copper circuiU and phtl-in Lranlistol1 orren unusually reliable performance. J ~Lant Color'"" gives you sound instantly ••• a pi cl\JTe in less than 5 seconds. Automatic fine tunii.g assures yo u or a pcrfet:Uy tuned picture every time you Lum on your ~t or change channelL New Dimensio nal Color by Sylvania. It's a sba.tper way of looking a~ things. And iL-; sale priced at your Sylvan la dealer now. Elopht llallan Prari~ styled ... : --CL83li. Superb Frencb Pnrrinclal styled color console model'. CL833 with ra&ell.e ornamented b9M nil and CUTed cabriole lep. Pnp ulllr Spanl~h stylC'd c11b1nr! Big 25" dia£'.. meas. scrren 1'1odrl CU:!l3. YOUR CHOICE Now Only 5599"* • lltrn.!• otti..I UI<• HURRY! QUANTITIES LIMITED AT THESE LOW SALE PRICES! lntegrlt11 a11d Dependa•U1t11 sho"" 1941 COSTA MESA 411 E. SeventHnth St. 646-1614 dally 9-9 Sat. 9-6 EL TORO Laguna Hlll1 Plaza (neat te Sav-On) 937.3130 dally HM M F ffl.9 '529 DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER UPSET r;1 SAA Dli:IVEl(S llJDIFFESC:ENCE TO HER VISIT, Ati5EY SPENCER WO MATTER WHAT YOU. SAY, JUDGE •• SAM WAS PLA.llJ HE MAY HAVE \.!AP A Vl51TOlr .. COMPLA.IN5 At.OUT tT TO JUIX:>E PARKER~ PLAIN JANE Y~CCH! HtRE. CO!-'!~ RAq>UEL!/ RUC>f~ . '• ... I DAILY CROSSWOllD ••• by •. A. POWER I ACROSS 1 Grea!est 5 Contende ~ l O Kind of s ign 14 Athenea 15 Color 16' Oper;1 1 7 Asse111b!y place 18 US Poet 20 form of . pollU\1011 2Z Confine wilh•n l1m1ts 23 Sla ve 24 Riga ci1 1zeit 55 Elemttit used in alloys 59 Suitable for use or: either side 61 Lay by bZ Across bl Wi~off the face of the mp li<t En!atQt"S: Archaic l>S V irio1rs b& Thinrirr b7 Small an im~! D0 1N 25 frightened 1 Broadw~y RS Tha t which a11n! make s less 2 European severe king '2 Not flftll 3 Ego .33 Wall pa/ts -1 Mort lofty 35 Stage $h ow 5 Christ~s 36 Polit e ad wtl'llsinq :act ion iltll'I 3 8 Bound b Gas .tllO Ot~IWt' 7 Foolba ll ,..1 Inquired play .3 Ciphers I Un it in 45 I am:Dl1I. ptiysits 4 Ei Bthind - -: ' Challe119ed ' 2 WotdS ]Q Large Asian •a Cereal shfub: '. grass 2 w01dS 1'0 Man's narne 11 Do a Jl Tree floor ing 1D2 Spice job I '., Saturday's Puzile Solved: l /1Bn l 12 Smell 42 Olympic 1J Ple dg e games J ~ Join contestant 21 E1 ~nrled 44 Perform 24 One wt10 m11s1c~ll y fa ils 47 Alr icari 25 Al ·--·· VIP Btidge ul 4'1-· Antil lt > Muslm )1 Throb ltligiori 52 s ·1rd 21' Collide 53 T11be or 27 vrry lfluth lsr~el the same 54 Kiln 28 .6.cts 55 Steel 111111 sullt>nly produt l 2~ To no -·-·-56 AlhallaSt~ J O Look alttr lnclian in sickne>s 57 Timt or 31 Belif:f clay: Poe t. 34 Merchardising 58 Struc_lure unit of twigs J 7 The "O'' !iO Irish of "COO" flt1lt1blican JC! Boss Army : Abbr . " 1/18/1 1) · By Tom K. Ryan GOL~! YPID WINK HE \\\'.)RE EARRINGS! By Al Smith ·BUT DOES ITGO WITTl'>OUR NARRoW MIND? By Harold Le Doux I'M OOIM6 TO PRIVE POWN Tl-IE '5TlrEET" TO f4, PMOIJE &earn A.NP I WANT 'flOll ro CALL ~M '. By Frank Baginski ANYBODY OUT 11-\ERE GOT ANY qu1C.K coME.BA.oa; FORil-IAl~I PERKINS ... ~.~,;.i;:;:.,J ~ J 18 MISS PEACH '1<El.L 'f ScllOOL. • CCIMPUTER. • DATE ~~VICf. TllLL US YOUil l>ElUlED Pll-E s:'f'ilENCfS",. ,,.,..o WE'LL f'""O 'fOll A. C-OMP-4TI1Lt" ~~. .. STEVE ROPER · .... _!_ .... ---------, S'OKAV, HONEY!-')t)U -CAW GO .Al=TER J-GCVE YOU -IMF'OR.TMIT MESSAGE FOR STl!V! I THE NURSE S41D J SHOULD ONI. Y STAY A MINUTE, DAOOY/ MO!ld.iy, J.1n11ary 18, 1•11 DAILY mor .17 Ll'I. ABND ly Al Capp llUT I l'Ll. HINlll G£Tl0 -M"U.C UKE I DONE AU.THE. 9'1ST!! ALW/t'IS 1~11 . - SALLY BANANAS GORDO H6 MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS • ,..-------600D IJ6Hr, DODO ·· I -All<'. ftUU110tJ IS DID (,1()() l<'IJOU)1 lflilr &J B#d)1 THAT ~T 11.l WI.le A~S •• { 9"AlllW. IS • ~lb SIJO(IAJG. CAN \OU Gf>T ME ;\ DATE ? ~ A PACXDr'Ctl!?Afl· ems PU lWI ? Q • eASV. ~EIZE COMES YOU"-DA.Te NOW ••• By John Miies By Mell By Saunders and Overgard --'/. " DO!f-11M Yau.ow- !l " ii f! !I • ~:~·r;.:;1.::.::.:- .• \lllll:f" A~ illE EiCl~lil -ro DO IOl*'.O n El)1lJZI! JOClZL t> IS UICI! 1\IA'I" ? ~ MR.MUM Br Charles lanotti By Gm Arriola By Ferd Johnson ~....--1 WORfi IT OU-ill By ROC)et' Bollen -:i: DOl)OO I BUr. we1u. ALI. HAVIO 't!IQ!.t!MUS CQU6H" - ' j 'i • " ' I • ..~ ....... -(' ....... ~1-..___ ~· JI DAILY PJLOT 'Executive Meeting Scheduled s C-Ontmuing a fourteen year tradition, the Orange County Oiamber ol Commerct is scheduling the 1971 Orange Co u n t y Management Con- ference at C'hapman College, Orange, on Maret. 27, 1971. Vscvolod B. Von Sonn, general conference chairman, slated. '"f'he conference offers an opportunity for the rising Ne-iv Fountain --. -·· young executive to polish t11s The sixth Union Federal Savings Office in. Southern management skills ln a setting California opened this month in Fountain Valley. \~·here he meets and co1npares The new bank is located at 17400 Brookhurst Street. problems with fellow ex-An open house is under way for the first thirty days of January in which free gifts, prizes and refresh- 1nents are highlighting the bank's opening. A draw· ing "'ill be held on Jan. 30. ecutives." _.'.'.'.'...:'.~::...::::=..=..:::.:.::::....:.:.:_:.:.:..:.:. ____ _;._..;... ________________________ _ Industrial and bu si n ess or ganiz11tions. 1nanagcn1enl clubs, and other individuals and groups interested in personnel development arc now reserving tickets for the event. A roster of profess.ionally expert speakers in many phases of management techni- ques will share their expertise \vith the audience of ap- proximately 1000. Those interested in at- tending can secure tickets and information from the Orange County Chamber or Com- merce. Beacl1 Man Appointed Manager Kenneth R. Hanour of llun- t1ngton Beach. has been ap- pointed general marketing manager of Casually Insurance Company or California, accord i n g to Roberl E . Bennett. executive vice president J·lanour \\'ill be responsible for developing the agency f.ie!d force, appointing new agents and introducing new product lines, Bennett said. In High Gear New Subcompact Plymouth Goes on Sale Wednesday By CARL CARSTENSEN Chrysler-Plymouth Division has anounced the suggested retail price for its new sub- compact, the P 1 y m o u th Cricket. is $1915. The new Cricket goes on sale this Wednesday, January 20 at C-P dealerships in the top 80 metropolitan markets. Both Atlas C-P in Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach C-P will offer the new car. Built on a wheelbase of 98 inches, the Cricket is 162 in· ches long and is powered by a lour-cylinder , 70 hp engine. It is available only as a four· door sedan. The only optional equipment offered: automatic lransmission, \\'hite sidewall tires. air conditioning and radio. BRITI~'H IMPORTS SET NEW RECORD zone manager. succeeds Robert f.I. Stephenson. who recently resigned. Gary E. Cooper. previously manager of sales promotion in Detroit 1s the new assistant. • • • ONTARIO GETS BIG NEW RACE Ontario Motor Speedway wiU be the site March 28 or the world's richest road race, the Questor Gra11d Prix. F'or the first time. F'ormula I cars and drivers of in- ternational fame will be mixed with a rield of North American Formula A road racers on ' the demanding 3.2 mile road eourse at Ontario. They'll be competing for a purse of over $250,000 -highest ever for road racing. according lo Dave Lockton, raceway presl- dent. Tbe invilation list represents the best from everywhere. both in drivers and racing machinery. Former w or Id champions Jackie Stewart, Graham Hill, Denis Hulme. and John Surtees and Indy 500 winners Mario Andretti. Al Unser. Bobby Unser and A. J. Foyt are included. The foreign contingents will be driving the Formula I cars of the Grand Prix ci rcuit, such as Ferrari. Lola. Lotus, ti.1cLaren while the F'ormula A drivers. with similar looking cars, will be powered by stock- block American engines in contrast to the smaller, bul more exotic racing plants of the Formula 1 cars. Your !Honey's ll'orth Air Cal Reveals Earnings During calendar year 1970 Air California carried a total of 799,702 passengers, ac- cording to Robert W. Clifford, vice president and general manager for the a irline. Available seat miles during 1970 were 550,893,200 and 290,712,500 revenue passenger miles were flown. Load factor for the year was 52. 8 percent and an average of M passengers were on all flights. On-time performance for the year was 97 .3 percent with a 99 percent schedule com- pletion factor. Traffic for December 1970 resulted in 66,056 passengers being carried for a load factor of 45.5 percent. Available seat miles were 5.1,7.80,800 and 24.234,400 revenue passenger miles were flown . On-time performance, for the month v.'as 93.3 percent with a 99.7 percent schedul e completion. Previously, Hanour \1•as a regional agency manager for Glen Falls Insurance Co. in Los Angeles and, before that. was a rield supervisor in Buf- falo , N.Y. for Traveler s lnsurance Co. Despite strikes in the United Kingdom which resulted in heavy production I o s s c s , British Leyland's V . S. subsidiary. British Leyland J\lotors Inc.. today reported that 1970 retail sale s ror ii~ Aust in , MG. Jaguar. Rover and Triumph models were the highest in 10 years. You Ca11 Slash Medical Costs A graduale of the University (If Buffalo. Hanour has com- pleted advance studies in management and supervision. He is an Air Force veteran. married \\'ilh five children and lives in Hllnlington Beach. OCC Offers Lecture-lab l' ou may have the best pro- ducl in the world. but it \\'on't sell if it not presented cor- rectly. "Display and visual prn- motion" is the title of a new rourse offered in the evening this spring at Orange Coast <.:ollege to help you solve those prob!cins. The class \\'il l met\ r<lon- da~·s from 6 p.m. to 10 p 1n jn .a lecture-lab format. 11 1s tlcs1j!:nt>d for those \\·orking in nia rketing, for the on-the-Job tethnician or beginners. 11 y,•ill cover total store planning. events. budget planning and other prol:ilems. F'ield trio \\•ill r ec e J v c. professional criticism or their work. Instructor will he .Jarnt'S B Garber. fie ld display and presentation supervisor or the J. C. Penney Co. in Southern California. Registration is under The fee is $5 per class. "!:'""--., I •. 1, 1.000'• OF OIL PAINTINGS WHOlE5All WA-EHOUSI r OPIN TO THI PUILIC 50°/o OFF 1.it 1.. EOINOEI:, SANTA ANA I ,_.,,._ ~' OE.t.LEl:S W.t.NTl!O IJ ~,-- Graham W . Whitehead, President of British Leyland. forecasts sales of 75,000 units In 1971 which would again be an all·lime high. "Our stron~esl card." he said. "will be our sports models. Overall. our sales pic- ture will be more affected by what happens on assembly lines in England than It will be by the Detroit sul>com- pacts. ·• He said they would be able lo meet the requirements of "ao expaoding imported car market in 1971." • • • Af\1C PICKS NEW L.A. ZONE MANAGER C. John Brutus has been appointed Los Angeles zone nianager. America n f\1otor<; Sales Corporation. \Yillian1 G. J\1organ. general s a I es manager, has announced. Brutus. formerly assistanl Occidenta] Aide N a1necl Hich<ird R. Shaughncssey ha s been appointed assistant manager of the Newpor t Beach branch office of Oc- cidental Life of Califom1a Shaughnessey has more lhan four years' insurance and sales experience, most recently as a representative in Santa Ana for John Han - cock Life. He is a member of the Orange Coonty Lif(' underwriters Association. He and hi~ wifP , Pat, liv e al 12051 Winton St., Carden Grove. They havt t w o children. WE LEASE All MAKES & MODELS EXAMPLE: 1971 BUICK SKYLARK 2 DOOR HARDTOP Alf' coriditioni11o;, A11to111atlc lra111111iuio11, powaf 1fa1r. l119, 1HWat di1c brak11, WSW, radio, fiaattf, remota 011 ttida 111:r10• plw1 •ll factory 1ta11dard 1q11ip111111t. 24 MONTt--1 OPEN END LEASE. $110 PER MONT" A QUALITY LEASE AT SENSIBLE PRICES BAUER BUICK ill IDSTA MESA 234 J. 17,111 ST., COSTA MESA . 541·7765 ' I ' By SYLVIA PORTER Although n1edical c a r e services are climbing faster lhan any other major category io your cost of living and there's absolutely no hope for more than a slowing of the pace of rise over the years ahead, YOU CAN SLASH your medical e<1sts with com para- tive ease. \\'hat's more, you can cut your costs not only while maintaining the f!Ualit .v or the medical care you gel but also while actually im· proving ii. Here are your 12 basic money-saving guides in !his area: (I) Choose with care a fami- ly doctor, preferably one on the medical staff of a good hospital. He will save you money just by keeping a permanent record or your 1nedica l history and thereby helping you to avoid duplica· lion of costly diagnostic tests. treatments and imrr.unizat ions y,•hcn son1ething goes wrong. 12\ HavC' a t ho r o u g h physical exain al le<1st oncP a ~car, no 1nattl'r 11·hat your age. and by so doing, avoid thr "Leep ens! oi crisis care. 1'llcd1cal emergencies a r c always far more expensive than the nioclest cos! of prrventivc measures lo avoid such emergencies. 13) Discuss fee s \\'hen you first visit a doctor. especially a high-cost specialist. If you consider a bill too high. go back and negotiate with the doctor. Chances are he'll reduce, lhe charge and stretch out the payment to fit your budget. ( 4) Save physician house calls fDr major emergencies. These calls are always much more expensive and often must be followed by office or hospital visits anyway - leaving you with 1wo or more fees instead of cne bill. And use the telephone for minor complaints: this saves n1oney and makes good medical sense. !5l Choose a family dentist or dental specialist wilh the same care. Doo't deal \\'ilh a dentist who refuses to discuss his fea frankly In advance of the treatment or care he propOses for you. Check into group dental and prepayment plans which may be offered by your employer or by the local detital society. !6) f\1ake sure your health insurance -medical. dental and hospital -is adequate for \•our needs. Concentrate ycuf health insurance dollars on major medical insurance. covering catastrophic illness. 1<-:xamine your present health insurance policies, group and individual. to see \\'hether vou're overloaded with "first dollar'' coverage which 1nay have limits of only $5,000- $10.000. Consider trading a higher deductible (SlOO, 5250. $500) for higher overall limits without appreciably changing the basic premium costs. f7) Make surt you don't have overlapping medical in- N euro-Psychiatric Reports Earnings NEWPORT BEAClf, Calif. -(BW) -Neuro--Psychiatric and Health Services Inc. reported a 23 percent increase in earnings per share for the six months ended Nov. 30 over the .like period last year. In his messa1e lo shareholders, Neuro Prtaldent Donald W. Wright said the company earned 21 cents per share on revenues of $2,383,000 tor the period compared with 17 cents last year. Revenues were up 241 percent. Shares outstanding. increased by 12 percent. Neuro's expansion program ln acute alcohollc a n d psychiatric hospitals. which account.II for most of the com· pany's income, Is on schedule, \Vrighl reported. "Virtually alt the company's ftnancisl 6and managcme11t resource! arc directed tow11.rd cautious, solid expansion in these two areas," he said. Wright said Neuro Is little affected by recent changes in medical and Medicare In that the acute hospitals receive payment prtmarlly from in- dividuall and private in- surance compan;u. .._.,.,,.....le .. ........ lw'rtcw hie. Stah!Mllef,..... ·--"''· ,. 1f1t "" R1·1~...e1 IJ,Jl,J,Ol)O ll,tll.000 lncorn• DefOlt •~t••· -11\•rv llaml 11•,000 t•l••..,dlnonr lltll'll ~ Nee o•l11 ••om 111t. & <11Jao11tlon ot wti- 11c1<1!'1tt 4!,000 Ft<lff-.1 Inc-I•~ ••· Jll'Ctloll '""" -.. 11,.. IOl4 carnforw••d -Ne! lflC-lfl,000 E1rnl11C11 "r Mert: lflCor.... tltfort ,~ .... 11.000 ~, .. llJ,WO ;N'lllM"' II""' lJ Cftlh 11 ,p11t1 E•·ltNfOI"''' ;i...,~ N1'1 l"(O)fftt ... ~'"" !~···· flYll !t..cllM . , ..... 11 Ctllll Ill .ti! surance coverage group and an policy. through a individual (8) Use the free ar low-cost health nervices offered in your community : chest X..rays, glaucoma testing. im- munizations. family planning services. treatment for mental illness, alcoholism. d rug pro- blems. Your local public- health department will tell you what's available and 1vhether or not you are elegi- ble for the services. (9) Take all your allowable tax deductions: doctor bills. hospital bills and drug costs beyond a specified percentage of your income may be claim- ed as deductions for federal income lax purposes. (10) Ask >'our physician to prescribe drugs you need by their generic names at possibly huge savings and ask your pharmacist to fill your prescriptions at lowest cost if your meditations a r e prescribed by generic name (11) Ask your physician to steer you to drug stores in your area \\'hich offer quality drugs at the lowest cost. The American Medical Assn , recently surveyed a sampl ing of drugstores in a 1'11idwest city, found prices varying as much as 1200 percenl from store to store and oft~n dif· ferent prices charged for the same prescription in the same. store. (12) Check the discount stores and the. c o -o p pharmacies where you can save as much as 25 percent on health and beauty aids. Centinela Earnings Cenlinela Bank ( O T C ) . headquartered in lnglewood and with branch offices in Los Angeles. Hermosa Beach and Newport Beach, today reported record e a r n I n K s , resources. deposits and loans tor 1970. President Rowan Henry said net .income last year climbed 8 pem!nt lo $91.030 or M .cents a share from $84,572 or 78 cent.s a share in 1969. adjusted for a 3 percent stock dividend paid on Dec. 30, 1970. Shares outstanding at the end of 19711 were 107,938, com· pared with 104,79$ a year earlier. Resoum!S at year~nd llt70 advanced 37 percent t • 123.005,504 from $161781,054 a year prior. while deposits eHmbed 48 percent t • $19.523,209 from $13,191 ,793 ' .. Finance Briefs NEW YORK -J . C. Penney Cc. lnc.'s "good but not great Christmas" resulted in a 4..8 percent sales increase in December. Volume for the five weeks ended Jan. 1 amounted to a record fl00,889.729 against $&68,480,493 for the year ago period ended Dec. 27 , ac- cording to chairman William M. Batten and President C. L. Wright. December was the biggest sales pe. iod ln the company's 68·year history. NEW YORK -MikrDpOI Division of Slick Cci-p. has obtained a multi-million dollar a contract lo supply wet-type eleclro6tatic air pollution con- trol precipitt.tors in the new primary aluminum plant of Harvey Aluminum Co. at the Joh11 Day Dam site in Washington . WILMINGTON , Del. -All American Industries, Inc., said its subsidiary, lntercon- tinenlal Manufacturing Co. of Garland, Tex., has obtained two Air Force ()rdnance con- tracts totalling $11.9 million. PHJLADELPHIA -S l . Lawrence & Adi r ond a ck Railway, a member of the bankrupt Penn C e n t r a I system, said it will pay the interest on its 5 percent first mortgage bonds due Jan. I and interest on the 6 percent second mortgage bonds due since last Oct. l. ClllCAGO (UP!) -Com- monwealth Edison Co. has fil- ed for a 10.4 percent rate increase designed lo raise its annual revenues by about $95 million over current charges. Commonwealth Edison said federal and state income taxes will bring the net gain down to $44 million. The company filed its proposed rate hikes with the Illinois Commerce Commission. WASHINGTON -General Electric Co. re c e ly ed1 $14,700,000 additions io Air Force contracts for J · 9 engines for F-4E aircraft, and for development of an ad- vanced engine gas general.or. General Molars received a $6 million addition to an existing Air Force contract for T-4. · turbofan engines for A·7D aircraft. NEW YORK -RCA Corp. announced receipt of an Army contract calling for production and dellvery of seven Spectra 70 computer systems with a sales value of $11 ,700,000. RCA said the contract provides an option for 14 more systems. NEW YORK -Johnson Products Co., Inc. bas become the first major black-managed firm to be listed for trading on the American Stock Ex· change. Ticker symbol for the firm. a producer of Hai r Care Preparations, is JPC. \VASHI NGTON -tl-1ississip· pi River Transportation Corp. has asked the Federal Poy,·er Commission for authority to boost its natural gas rates by $10.600.000 annually. begin· ning F'eb. I. 'l'h<' proposed boost y,·ould affect g a s custon1ers in A r k a n s a s . Illinois, and flllssouri . NE\V YORK (UPI ) -A General Telephone & Elec-1 tronics Corp. unit. G T E j International lne.. has been ay,·arded a $3 million rontract for a nationwide telecom- munications system in British Honduras. CHICAGO -United Air Lines will petition the Civil Aeronautics Bord for fare in· creases on selected route segments of less than 500 miles from the Chicago, New York and Ylashington airports, WASHlNGTON -Braniff Airlines said Wedne!day it has met with the Civil Aeronautics Board for additional routes lo Australia from New York, Chicago, and Dallas. with In· termediate stops at Hilo, Honolulu, American Samoa, Fiji and New 7.ealand. . The company said It also applied for new routes to terminate ln Hiio and Honolulu from Boston, New York, \Vashington. Chic.ago, St. Louis and Dallas. M[l.WAUKEE Allis- Chalmers ti.1fg. Co. has receiv· ed more than $5 million in con- tracts from two Athens, Greece companies for con- sLruction machinery. WASHING TON Tex.as International A I r 11 n es an- nounced the Clvll AeronaU1k:s board has awarded ll an ad- dition11I Sl .600,0l"IO subsidy for 1970. This puts the company's ann1111l subsidy to over $7 rrtllion, the company said. . . . . .. ' . Wbo listens To laniers? • • --- SINCE SHE'S ONE OF THE TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA • • • • • • Just About Everyone Does You Can 'Listen' to Ann Landers Doily 1~ The DAILY PILOT .· .. • • • • • • • • • • . • • . • • • • . • • • l • • • I • I • l • • • • • • • . . • • . • . • • • . • : • • • . • . • . . . . . . . . . ' . i ' ' . ' • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . • .• . • . . ' ' . . • i . • . . . . • . • . . • • . . • • . . . . f t .• ' • • . . . l . • • ~ ' . ' . . , • • ·, . ·• :: . . . . ' • ' • ' ' • ~ ' ' . ~ < l ! ' ~ • • • • ' , • . . . . • > . " ... . .. . . , .. • ' • • . " • • • WHAT'S Y~UR HANG:UP? If mou ntain cl imbing is your thing, we can't help you much. But if your real "hangup" is looking for a broad view of th e news that in· elude s a goatJ, hard look at what's happening at home, the DAILY PILOT has the line you should grab. We give you a broader view of th e world than you can get even 12,000 feet above Chamonix in the Alp s. Mont Blanc, over there in the backgrou nd, is the high est peak in Europe, which reminds us .••. I • ~ • Our loca l coverage is hard to top. When it comes to piling up infor· mation about local schools, sports, social events, entertainment or crime and calamity, we're king of the mountain. We're your home· town newspaper. We make keeping up with the world, the nation, th e state, and the county, your town and your school a lot easier than climbing a mountain. Just grab our line. No more hangup: The DAILY PILOT will take you where you can see the view from the top . ' DAILY PILOT ·' l . I """7 •I 1 l l I ~ I J • t DECK HANDS -Or would it be legs as displayed by these three pretty teenagers who call attention to the 15th annual Southern California Boat Show which opens at the Pan Pacific Auditorium Jan. 22. The three attention callers fro m left are Cheryl Smith, Kathy Nodler and Janice Keefe. Boats Arrive LA Show w Open Friday The vafWUll'd ot .more than 500 'boats lbat will be on display al ,the 15th annual Southern California Boat Show J an. 22·31 ha,, begun arriving at the Pan Pacific Auditorium. The SCMA boat show is the nation's second largest all marine extravaganza, ranking only bell.ind the New York Boal Show. . 11ie"re will oe '1nore than 90 manufacturers displaying their lfll lines. T b e y represent a who's who of the pleasure boating industry. Also in the !how will be 140 booth exhibits representing just about eyery imaginable type of accessory for a boal All the major mo t or manufacturers will havr: ex- hibits ranging from t I n y fis hing motors to 13 5 - horsepower racing jobs. The Pan Pacific will be decorated with buge amounts of bllnting to ·rr:flect tbe boating a tinospbert. Breezes Make Annual Winter Meet Fluky Vagrant bl;\'<ZOI ),hat ranged Fundl"'!><rg, NllYC; ( l} from eight knots on Saturday Adalanfe. Barry Fenn, VYC. to zero on Sunday result.ed SIDELOS (5) -(1) El1er:n, 1n ~me dult, fluky. Competilion ' Mark: 'Evans, VYC. for the 194 bo:al3 in 18 classes ENDEAVOR (6) -(1) which tumed out ror Balboa Aphrodite, Bill Lang j a h r, Yacht Club's annuaJ Winter SSSC. Regatta. P-CAT (15) -(I) No. 229, The absent winds on Sunday Bob Baker, CBYC; (2) Dead prompted the race committee End Kid, Paul Allen, BCYC; to call the race for the Ocean (3) Hustler JI, Ted Mosher, Racing Class, resulting in a KHYC. prolest against the committee. FINN (8) -(1) No. 496, Results of the single race sail-John Weiss, ABYC. ed In OR were hel~ up pending CORONA.0015 (11} -(1) th.e pro~st hearmg. Trophy Tortuga, Tanton, B. Martin, winners tn other classes: MBYC; (2) Dena, R. Dugas, PHRF (27) -(I) Nike II. PMYC; (3) Too, G. Eas~ J ohn Kinkel, BCYC, ( 2 ) PVSA. Bonita, Goldie Joseph, LIYC : JNTERNATIONA1.r14 (7) - (3 ) Lark, Paul Holmes, BYC; (1 ) Fox Tim Murison VYC. f4 l Sail de ".°el, D. ~Bose. Ltoo'.14A (2.1 ) _ (t) Magic, VYC; (5) Big Maggie, M. Dave Ullman BYC· (2) Ditto Harvey. PMYC. Bill McCord Bvc · 'c3 LowleY A10RF (5) -(I) Si Bon, Rom.ah Roliy Lob BYC· Doo ra1madge, BYC. ~ I PoUy. T ••. Mart). RHODES·33 (It ) -\ Lockaey · 5) F°'. Mi.stress. Bill Taylor. BYC; The-Road Jim Tyl YC (2) tie between Fircny, Joh.n LIDO-t.4.s (17) _ (1) F';ng, Kewell, and folly II. Blair Don Stoughton, BYC ; (2 ) No. BameUe, BYC. 3235 Dudley Johnson BCYC· PC (61 -(1) Belasarius, (3) f:ocore Jack Scrn;lz eve'. Larry Pinching. VYC. ll'TTE ' ' LtiDERS-l6 (9) _ (I ) p . ""' A .(7) -(1) Duke, t re J ohn Dalgh. NHYC: 12) E rnp · Lt: r? Y Suthe~l~nd, Fugitive, Terrlanne Parker, NHYC; (2) W1ndsong, Wilham NHYC. Dan Cohan. Hol.ds Lead • KITE B (7) -(I) Yellow Bomb, Cody Small, BCYC. FLYING JR. (8) -(I) Greased Lightning, L e s 11 e Armstrong, VYC. SABOT A (13) -(1) Breeze, David Sigler, BYC; (2) No. 5$411, TID\O:Reiily. NHYC : 13) Deb, Debbie GDcbrilt, LIYC. SABCl'I' C (t} -(I) Bill"s = !1 111 .Blllaborougb, , WfOmanDies mt OXnard . ' ----. Compact Car Owners un~y· Volkswa· f'ts i• ..... • 4-Ply Tubeless Blackwall ' l Ca111aros, g ens, .,... Buick S~ia\ll, iuu,s- Chevy Il s, tangsi·ns Coinets, SQ.,! ., • ' t~:irs: Falcons, nodge Darts· SIZES: 6.50113 1 35xl4 6.95xl4 5 (iOlllS 7 .35:d 5 T" . . •4 More Per u c Whitewalls •3 or Plu• F.E.T. And Old T.r• Fits M , -pr • . <. -any: F o•-" •J'lDonths Ch °""s, l ets D ' evro- T 4-Ply . obeless Blackwall ' odges 1lK cury8 OJ ' "~er-e ' d smob"J utlass I e SIZES: 8.25x14 7.75x J4 7.75.•15 Whitewalls ,3 • or 4 More P er T ' ire , c owners Large ar 4 .• r1y . cbr)'slers, Fits Many. OldsJilO" M~rcur\:~ntiacs , biles , d Station Buieks an Wagons s1zts g.ZS,.15 s.55114 s.ssx\5 · Plus F.E.T AndOJdTi;e all •3 or •4 More WbiteW 8 Per Tire A.k About Sean Convenient Credit P lan• _. ,... n. ....._, .......... • ........ a.aottt , ____ , .-...0 .. ,....a .... 1' -.... , •• ,, .. s.tnt -.i7--..-1 1. -.,a.a<111KJtt:ANnt.1r. ~ ~Ml1 ...,_ -Wd1 I~ ...................... ht, .. aOA.aL ~t&JO P.M......_, 12 ....... IP& '°""' -..... ,,, Ol.T-.C • -_. W 111 _ .. ,,.,, .. NI,.._ Ml~ll, Nt .. Jll .............. NO"' 14 111 '""'" ...... WI l'•Ufl . . ..,.,. ................ .. • ..,. ... .--cA ...... , .. IOUN COIJI fUIA .... UN fl!Ol.l'll ... 0 1•1 417-4j .. ,_•l>+C:• ••1•1111 ..,...,,._ 111.1n 7 WAt,U't N l4'11, ....- 'WllMOM' K .. 1111 ' -; . ·: . . -.• • • M"""', .-.iij j4: 1971--DAl'Y PILOT .J;t . CJ ... . ."' • • '.~Don't ChQke!, Don't Miss It!--And He · ·Didn't . ' . rSliaw Spell ff'Over,· Arnie ·( . ' ' i Still Suffers PEBBLE BEA C H, (AP) - ''You can hear those Arnold Palm.tr yells all over the course,'' said Tom Shaw, who overcame the din of Arnie's Army and won the $135,000 Bing Crosby National Pro-Am golf tournament. Shaw's victory Sunday ended a year- long slwop and left Palmer, the eame's biggest name, still looking for his first tournament victory since 1969. The 28·year-<1ld blond from Oregon rinished with a two-under-par 70 on the 6,777-yard, par-72 Pebble Beach course, and a 72-hole total of 278. Palmer shot 1 71 for 280. ·Shaw began the final round with a one-stroke edge on Palmer, and as he 1Stood on the second fairway he heard that he was one stroke behind. Palmer holed a chip shot from 40 (eet for an eagle three at the second green and momentarily took the lead. "You can't help but know what Arnie's · doing. You can hear those Arnold Palmer • ye Us all over the course," Shaw said later. "I knew he had an eagle. 1 just ~"'\Tied to blank it out of my mind. "I almost got an eagle there. too. ·,But I got U!ree straight birdies. I'll :Jake three birdies for one eagle any pay." Shaw reached the No. 2 green with )ti.; second shot and left his 20-foot putt for an eagle about five inches short. He had birds at the third and fourth holes, also, and took the le.ad for keeps when Palmer three-putted for a bogey four at No. 5. "I felt like things were going pretty much my way until then ," Palmer said later, and added, "Second -it seems to be the story of my Life in recent years." Third place Sunda y went to Bob Murphy, who closed with a 69 for a 282 total. Jerry Heard with a 67, Tom Weii;kopf, with a 72, and Howie Johnson, who shot 74... tied for third at ZM. Shaw got S27 ,000 for his victory and added $1 .250 for a fifth place finish, with partner Edward Crawley of Los An geles, in the pro.am competition won by Lou Graham and the Rev. John • t>urk in of Scott Air Force Base, Ill. 4...-;(Mt. year Shaw toWed only 134.004. ti, winnin~s.' Becaw;e he failed to make e lop 60 in the money-winning list and didn't win a tournament, he lost ••ftis non-exempt player status. "I was a rabbit for two weeks," h@ faid Sunday after the title thal '1ufum'alically quallfies him for all other 1971 tou rnaments. · The 30th Crosby was blessed with fts best weather ever, including a record hi'h temperature or 78 Sunday. And , with juBt a light breeze blowing on the oceanside cooree, golfers had nothing bul themselves to blame for stray shots. Jack Montgomery put one shot on the beach at No. JO Sunday and took 1 15 that contributed to a closing round of 89. FfN I )(O'e• 8"!1 ... .,,,..v wlro~I... S....d•v I~ f!>e Crmtnr vol! lourn1-~1 '*-' , ..... 111--71 • 1'1.41~t·11-1'0 11./tf.1J.4'-21) ... ,.11.1.t-2111 17·1f.11-41-HI 11.1u.n -11• '8·1J.1!·7 .... 'llJ n .11.11.1t-71111 1}.lf./1~1-2U n~•·11·17-'M ,. ........ 1s-111 IJ.ls.+6· ll-181 n.r-..,.n-l1' l t.IUl·l.t-31 7f.J'0.61.1.t-2U 7}.7\.Jl.l.t-7" 1l·1J-4f·IS---'31 n.n.11--'" n-n.1-....m IJ..72·11·11-m 11 .... 11.n--m n.11.1-.n-m 7}.IS.J0.12-:M n .11.1-.M-na l).l).)}.11-190 n .1Mf·11-7'0 IS.lf.11-~:ltO 14-10.1}.ll-1'1 n.1i..n.11-:rt1 1J.IJ.1o.1o.-l'lll 1'-77·1J·1l-1'1 1'1·1f.f7.ll-1'11 lf.7fl.11·1'-1tl 1Hl·IS.l.....m 1;1•1•·lt-l?l n:,Ut;;::m ~l .. 1Q....4tJ ~n:H:U=ID n.,._, .. ,,_,., l).IJ..7fl.l'-2'f,( '°'"_,,.._,,, »~n.n-1'1 ~~ ~·~19) i• ' ll;:m i!t, .~Eit " ~ • .! •l • , COLT ROOKIE JIM O'BRIEN (80) KICKS GAME-WINNING 32·YARD FIELD GOAL. Cowboys R~p Officiating This Hurts Pretty Bad--Lluulry MIAM I (AP) Ear I Morrall, of college could have caught it." That's how player-coach Dan Reeves of the Dallas Cowboys explained a tipped pass that turned into the game-winn ing interception for Ballimore in a 16--1 3 Super Bowl victory Sunday. "I went as high as I could for the ball but it wenl through my hands," halfback Reeves said. Dallas quarterback Craig Morton's pass was intercepted by linebacker Mike Curtis of Baltimore to set up a winning 32-yard field goal by rookie Jim O'Brien with five seconds to play. Reeves said "I don't take lhe blame for the Joss. We lost it as a team. O'Brien did a great job. I didn't think 11 rookie could make a kick like I.hat under such pressure "It's bad enough to lose, but to just give it to them -well ... " Actually. three key ricochels went against Dallas. A tipped 76-yard touchdown pass from Colt quarterback Johnny Unitas to tight end John Mackey drew the fire of free safet y Charlie Wa ters. Officials ruled that Eddie Hinton of Baltimore lipped the ball which w a s touched by a Cowboy and fell int o J\.fackey's hands. Waters said "I touc hed P.fackey·s arm but never touched the ball." Dallas cornerback Mel Renfro u.ld "I never touched the ball." However, Hinton claimed Renfro did. Morrall Tired of Being Colts' No. 2 Quarterback MIAMI. Fla. !AP) -Earl Morrall , the Most Valuable Player in the National Football League just two seasons ago and a hero in SWKlay's Super Bowl, is tired of being a bencbwanner. "I don't want to leave this team," the 36-year..okt quarterback said after the Colts edged the Dallas Cowboys l&-13 Lo win the pro football title, "but I want to go where I can play regularly." With a 37·year-old John Unitas just finishi.pg lhe first ieason under a three- year contract wor!Jl. in excess of $100,000 annually and sigiled to work in the front office 10 years afler his playing career ends, the Jog jam at quartertwlck is quite apparent. Unitas was injur«l and on the sidelines when Morrall directed Baltimore 'to the National Football League championship in 1988 before fallln& in Super Bowl III. But Unitas returned In I 9 6 II to lake over the starting job again. In addition to the two 15-year veteral\ll , the Colts have twC).year player Sam Ha vrilak due for a trial at quarterback in training camp and coach Don McClf- ferty says Baltimore's first objective in the upcoming draft will be a yoong quarterbactt. Morrall was used sparingly during the regular season -tossing four touchdown passes in his longest stint In the final game -and was on the bench when Super Bowl V began. But after Unitas departed with a rib injury in the second quarter, MorTall car:ne in to complete 7 of 15 passes for 147 yards .. He also acted as a calming lnfluence and ball holder on rookie Jim O'Brien's Winning ·32.yard field 1oal with five 1eCOnda .remaining. Cowboy defensive tackle Bob Lilly said ''I thought it was illegal for two offensive players to touch the bell on a forward pass. Didn't you?'' Another pass tipped off the hands of fullback Walt Garrison into the arms of safety , Rick Volk set up another Coll touchdown . Dallas coach Tom Landry sa.id MQrton made the decision to pass in the last minute of the game because "We were going for the win, not sudden death. We beat ourselves, but l hate to lose that way." Landry has seen his team lnse two National Football League title games and now the Super Bowl in the last few seconds. He said red-eyed , "This hurts pretty bad. It was a shame to be denied this one." Landry said the key play of the game was 11 fumble by rook ie Dallas fullback Duane Thomas on the Balt imore one-yard line in the third per iod. Thomas, who dressed quickly and left the Oallas dressing room without waiting for newsmen. had the ball hooked out of his hands by Curtis. Dallas tight end Pettis Norman said. The Colts' Jim Duncan made the recO\'ery. "That would have made it 20-ti and wruld have been 11 lot of catching up to do," said Landry. "But what can you say. It wa s all there and we Jost it. We did a remarkable job to get here -but I'm disturbed and disap- pointed." WateN 88:id Dallas got the raw end of t.he·officiating. , "We made our breaks and the offiei1ls. 1nade theirs (the Colts)," Wate.r·s said. "Everytime we would stop .them we would get called for interference; Everytime we slar'.ed moving we would get called for holding. I just can 't tocepl that.., Renfro said he was called for .lf\. terlerence once and "l Couldn't beU.ve · it. I never toucbed lhe ·guy. ], .qid everything J could do to avoid him." Winners~ .. ~urlis·•F9rgo11eu. Hero ' . MIAMl (AP) -For almost S9 minute9 . the most elusive of Super Bowl UUea ticked off anxious finJerl.lps and alipi thrOOJgh desper•i. hlntll ..:. belou~ settling in the vise-like emhnet of Mein M.iJ;e Curtis and the relentless Baltimore _ilollll. -Curtis' tntercepUon, fifth of six pass thefts in a gut.grabbing struggle replete wit& errors. aet up a 32-yard rield goal by 1ookle Jtnr O'Brien wlih five NOOndl to play SUnday th.Jt gave the Colts tnstant absoluUon In the form of a 1~12 cordeback vic&ory over the ·o.tlu Cciwboy1. "1 grabbed that ball 110 hanJ 1 11lmost squeezed tbt air out of it," said the hard-rock middle linebacker, who picked off a def1ect.ed paa wl\h a seconds 'iftidulic and a record ~atlaienoe olltil:lpatmg a ..-n death windup to Super Bowl V. "l didn't even think aboUt running with it rigtl\ eway,I' Curt.Ill aa ld. ''I felt maybe L J' should just fan on the ground llO I trOUldrl't fumble it away." He bMI 1 jurt cause for concern. f"umb&et had given Dallu 10 ~Intl and oott~tbe Colla atVest-more. Despite bts meunaoon. CUrtls rambled 13 yards to lhe Dallas ZI. Dallaa' Dan Reeves was the target at the 13:51 mark when Craig Morton'• pass earomed off his outstretched ha~ ~ SUf.:i1 made tho blqest lnterceptkin of 1111 Ille. • . • "It was right in my hands," CUrtU said. "ll I had dropped . it, I would heve been the 1oat. Now l'mecatatlt."1 Curtis had come up with In earlier save aJter Duncan fumbled a w a y the second hall klcl«off to the Cowl>Oys deep fn 'Baltimc:i-t terTitory. Wlth 1 flrst,.aad- goal from the 2, Curtis jarred 'the ball away from rookie Duane ~s., who was held lo rt rushing yards, and Duncan rmvered the fumble. "That undoub~ly wa11 the big play . . of the game," aeid deeply deject..i Tom Landry , !he· Co""°fs' coocb. "If be tcere1, they , have a lot · of catcblng up to dO." • "The Mad Dog (Qirtb) b the best middle Unebtcker in the I~~}', :t Bliiy . Rar llllllth, !he rugged - tock!< who played his last g-fir the CoUI 'Sunday. "And !hey c0n llY what they Want about lhil ban e!Ub, but we didn't etve up. Thia club doesn't have. a give-up bone in lll body, . "We did everything we could to glve It to them, bul we hung In when the pol"I was tough, and in the end result that's W'hlt counts." I Baltimore Rookie Wins It . ' With Five Seconds Left MIAM'I (AP) -"We made so many miltakea," Earl Morrall said, ''for a while it looked like a rerun of 1959." The veteran Baltimore quarterback, • goa\ when lhe Colli! klsr to the New York Jets in Super BOWi DI, came off tbe. bench Sunday and helped direct the Colts to a 18-13 victory over the Danas Cowboys In Super Bowl V. Morrall , a sensitive IS.year veteran, his been bothered for two years by the loss to the Jets and bad. answered numerous questions about It during the past week. With John Unitas again healthy, Mor· raU didn 't expect to see much action against DaJlas, but he was~·inserted in the 9l!COlld quarter after µnitae: 1uffered. bruised ribs. . , . Morrall completed 7 of 15 ·~ ~or 1~7 yards , and held the ball for Nb'ltie Jim o·~rien's wlnaing fif1d ·-eo.l' with five ~ds to play. ' ''Thi:I was_ a great Uft· .. lo me personfl:lly," Morrall said. "I can't forget the Jets' game, but this one wW slay with me forever." Co8ch Don McCafferty pleaded with Morrall during the time-out prior. to the winning field goal tO calm down O'Brien. "I told Obit to take his lime and not to '!VOl'l'Y," Morrall said .. "I to,ld him we'd get the ball Into place, and all he had to do was kick it ln the middle because there waa no wind.'' The Cowboys tried to can a time out u soon a! the BalLimore time out had expired, but the officials disallowed it -saying two in a row were illegal. "They were trying to make me nervous," O'Brien sa id, "but I guess it didn 't work." "When we finall y lined up" Morrall said, "the Cowboys were yelling, 'Hey hey,' flld things li ke, 'Oon:t. choke,' don't miss lt.' " MoM'ill said the kick at.arled to fade to• the right about 10 yards from the goal posts and then came back in . "It was about six feet inside the post ,'' JIM O'BRIEl\f WHOOPS .lJJJP. Morrall said. "If we had lost, that would have The Colts eave up the ball seven been the biggest play of the game," times on th ree interceptions and four the rookie head coach said. · fumbles, but it was an inter~ption by "l can't believe it," wide receivtr Baltimore linebacker Mike Curtis with Roy Jefferson kept repeating. "AU 59 seconds remaining which set up the through the game we kept trying flO tie·breaking kick . give it to them." "I was dropping back on the coverage • "But then we took it ba:k," ti1ht to hdP with the t.aclde " Curt~ said· · end Toin MitcheR inter)~ · "IJ\d "1 wound up .?a.if ht~·, Tue ~~~· '. . · "It,'~ ~n lhif _w8y ~II y,e~1 "_~fens.Ive D.lh 'Reeves was .jUst barely a5{e lo t.ackle 'Billy Ray Sm1U. s11,1if .. "'we 10 get 'his hand~ on the ball, but he ebuldn't out aod give lhe game away and then hold lt." ' _ figure out how to win it." "I was very disappointed th"e way Then Smith, a 13-year vete ran playing we played," said offensive tackle Bob his last game, picked up some hair Vogel. "But then I got to thinking about clippers and yelled for O'Brien - some we've lost ih the past while pla ying threatening to cut off his long locks. be tter than the other team." "You si t on the bench the whole game .. We outmuscled them and outhit and come in for the last five seconds them," Cu rtis said. "But we were making Bnd kick a field goal," Smith yell~. so many mistakes we didn 't know what "Hero, hell!" wa1 11oing on." . , "Dallas had a Jot of breaks in the flrlt half," McCafferty Mid, "and ,we gol them in the. second hi.ll." Trailing 13-6 near the end of the firM half, Baltimore falled to score on four plays from 2 lh yarda out, .and McCaf- ferty said he made hlg worst decision on fourth down In going for a touchdown iMtead of a field goal. Fl.,1 <low..1 llcnllif!O Ylt<:llOI Pau lnv v••<leve llt!Vrn yar~ p ..... ·-f'"umtll .. lest Ytrcl1 PMWllHd l•ltlrnere " H "" .. 7J.11'1 lo41 • • llMffvlNt l tltllttlu 0-IHM ' ,. "' " 7t.11·l ,:. ' •» lhrslllflf -Balllrno.-t. 8ult kll !a.JI. New111l1 111-J:l, U~Ht1 •·•, Htwrli1k \.J, Morrt ll 1·11 0.llu. G.rrlolltl 11-45, T"""'8i ll·ll, Mor!OOI 1.i. l'tMI,. -lltlllrnort , Uril1e1 J..~t. ~rtll 7·1S.1, H1wrll1I:. l·l~; Dt1i.1, Morton U·I"-'- .,. ·""·,....., . O'BRIEN GETS HUG PltoM BALTIMORE TEAMMATES. - < Mofldc1, .-a., 11. 1971 MVP Vote; Mesan 4th ~AMl -A member of the losing team was named most valuable player in the SUper Bowl for the first time Sunday when the annual award went to llQeba~er Chuc)t Howley or Dallas. But it WIJI a hollow victory. '"J'be award is tremendous," Howley sail or the car given by Sport Magazine. "But · j wish JI were the world ~ pionship. They g9 hfnd in hand.". Howley intercepfed a pass -Y Jcht Unitas in the first quarter -setting up a Dallas~Deld ~to pm the..cowboyt ahead~ . . On the first play qf the fourth quartet .. wita -Dau. in front IH, Howley picked off u Earl Morrall pMS in tbt end IOne.. • . ' 'I • . , DENVER -Coata Mesa 's Barry A.sher la $1,IOO rJcher todl~ Lhanks to a fourth place .finish in the .$50,000 Denver Open bowlia« tournament finals Saturday. Asher lost to Jim Godman, 236-216, In a match for lhlr'd plaee. Die~ . \V~ber · ol )it.' Louis won the tournament .and $41.000, defeating Tim Harabao .. 4Canoga Park) in tbt final game.• Weber· edged (;odman <Hayward) in a su~n. · death 111•~off to advance to the Ori~ 'llgaih!t Aarahan. • MILWAUKEE -Coadl AJ McGuire, whose Marquette Universi9' Warriors an the nation's second-r~ team (in AP}, aays television's ~nsuming bi:eab for commercials are 'becoming too ~ti-~ to ~~~ governed the game, i ~6. ~ marathon out there," Wfrcmnpfatned after Mat· quette defeated New Mexico State 6&-53 in a televised contest Saturday. "Television kills the game with com· merclaJs," he said. "There Is no con- tinuity." He 1uggested the disruptions might be reduced if broadcasters would ••t.Ut their station bruk.s when timeouts normally come." ;;; ..., • I~ I~ Chaffey Falb, 75-74 Gaucho Five Back In Title Picture ., cla.UG....., ............... Bid ia )IJ II 'to B Calfwwww title caaterrtlmnrttll a tbrDllDr ft.H OMtime 'fk:tGry 09• a.n., o.Dt,. lltm*y qbt. ~ Colleft'• ....... 0 te.m travell to Palamar W._.ay. C09Ch BOJ a.en.• la dcl hbaek G111Cbot wt their tldrd cin:uit will Jn five Jdea w-...,, U. nlurn home Saturday to bcJllt tbt UC Bltel'llde FroU tam at Mlaloe VNjo ~ ~ nicbt'a YicWy Oftt amt.)r wu a wild affaJr. to 111 ta.e 11& Saddlellect 1t'Oll tt la tbl &Ill two MCODda ., the ... tlble perW .. • ~vine 1.y.U. by venatilt IUf-4 Eric Cbristemen. And although OtriJt.enlen .... the bi& hero In the victory, then were man1 others. There WU IUatd Steve Minton who sparked the Gauchoe to a 15-21 halttlme lead with 15 point. In tht openirli 20 minutes. · There wu M center Pete BendenoR who blocked a lhot with five te<mds left In regulation that could have pven Chaffey the win -and then bJt on a pair of clutch free thron In overtime that set up Chriltenlen'a ftnaJ heroics. But Christenaen Wll tile biaut star . Down 13--51 with 4"' m1nutea to 10 in regulatioa play, Chriltenam apmed the Gaucbol with aggreaive defensive play that enabled hJm to ateaJ the ball twice in the waning minutes. Chrl.stenaen hit a free throw with 51 lecoodl to p In the regulatioll play to put the Gaucbol blct by one (IM'l) and canned two more gratis throws six seconds later on a cmtroverlial call that had Chaffey coach Barney NewJee pacing up and down the CGUl't In qer. Newlee got a 1 I t t I e unhappier a few seconds later when the Panthers' Gary Croumu hit a bucket ju.st after the final buzzer aounded. marpa to one (74-73) end alt 1p Qiriatea.Mn ·" wilminc lhot. The loll WU Chaffey's ftnt la four conference game1 and put the Pathen into a first place tie with IUvenlde and Citrul. Saddleblc.k ta CIDI lllM '**· Pirates Face Mounties Next After Setback A pair of touch South Cout Conferlnct road games face ON.Die Cout Collep'a basketball team this week after the Pirates fell to <»circuit leader Cerrltoa, fl·.59, Saturday night on the OOC court. Coach Herb Livt1ey'1 Pirates, now 1-2 In conference play, trek to Mt. Ian Antonio Wednelday night and then travel to San Diego Meaa Saturday nlabt. Alai.mt Cerritos, the Piratel jult eouJd not cope with the talents of the Falcom' 6-1 sophomore center Erv Fopma. Fopma tossed in 31 point. and trabbld 17 rebounds to domtnate the ~· "He played very, very well." uid Livsey of Fopma. "We doub~teamed him, but it didn't make any differeDce. He is very, very atronc.,, Livsey felt that hia club ,a.,ed a good game against the Falconi. bat in the fmal analy1i1, the Pirates just couldr)'t match up to Fopma, • unanimous all-South Cout Conference first team choice Jut IUJOft. The two teams fought on even terms through most of the fll'lt hall of pla~, bemre Cerritos ran off 10 points Jn a row in the wanin1 minutes for a 11-21 advantaae. "I think I called one or two timeout! myseU," he said. "The opponents "may have caJled a couple, and the rest were for television." SADDLEBACIC COLL!G!'S RICK EDWARDS DRIVES THROUGH CHAFFEY DUO. But after aome dilcuaion, the officials ruled that the shot was attempted after the buzzer went off, sivinl SaddJeback new life. OCC cut the margin to iii with four free throws and had a chance to trim it even further when Falcon COICh Jim Killingsworth had a pair of tecbnica1s called on hbn. • MILWA UKEE -Commissioner Bowie Kuhn said Sunday he sees further ex- pansion of ma1or league baseball and )>OISibly a true W o r I d Series w I l h UCI Duels Chapman Next In the overtime session, Crossman and Christensen took turns playing hero. A bucket by the Chaffey ace from 18 feet out gave the Panthers a 71~9 lead as the overtime got under way. But Christensen stole the ball a minute later, feeding to Rudy Holmes for a two-point.er. But the Pirates missed tht two free throws after the technicals and allO couldn't hit on a pair of ahota after taking the ball out of bounds. Cerritos then zipped to an tisb~ lead al tbt haJf (3'-27). American teams competing against thoee ~ LJ _ ..J _4 b from Other nations. I • teaters pena~ "lt is perfectly possibl.tfthat ~ 1 ,... t • .... will develop In ot.he~triea ~-.Jl.le ~--~-1--~ V aP,ey State, 93-78 , -. .,· . Chaffey took a three-point lead with 1 :40 to go when Crossman hit 1 lay-in and folloftd wtt.b a free throw. Hen· derson's two charity ~ses cut the The closest the Pirates Sot to the Falcom ill the second half wb ttpt points on four occa.sions. ~ OCC rut on 26 of 85 thots from till field (37 percent) whi» Cerritos canail 25 of 51 (4t pe~t). ~t w~re we could.' . ve J # W"'ld ., tAN".JQIMMIJIO -UC ~ne .returns Series with those c • " Kuhn told to ti'* eometlmes friendly confmes of a news conference. Crawford Hall Tuesday night to face "Japan and Lati~ America come . to the Chapman College Panthers afler mind, and baseball IS the fastest growmg droppi.og a 93-78 decision to the San sport in Europe. It is possible that Fernando Valley State College basketball at some time we could have a world team Saturday. aeries with those countrl~, or take in Chapman, one of the top independents cities from other c?~nlrlea into o~ s.~uc· In the area, year-in and year--0ul, will tu:e through trad1t1onal e.:rparunon, he attempt to hand coach Tim Tiffs aaid. Anteaters their fifth defeal in the last . ~ e ~.~.. . aix oaUogs. LOS ANGELES -T~~"t ... ...;.-J'Olld ' After' t:Jie Tuesday night tklrmish, UCI ·~~· a-toes on the road to participate in the trip of the Los Angelef"C\ngs -lonpst All-UC tournament at San Diego on the t.his National Hockey Leaaue seuon -weekend, journey to Occidental a week ii finaJJy over and Denia Dejordy must from Tuesday and travels to New be tired. Orleans, La. and to Florida Stale before The goalit of the Ki ngs had a 2-4-2 returning home Feb. 2. road trip, not bad, not good. But for The loss to San Fernando brought Oejordy it must ha ve been rough because the season record to 8-6 and the up- the Kings' defense looked at times like ,,,,,,,ino schedule ck>esn't paint a bright 1 piece of swiss cheese. -~....._ the trip came to a close encouragingly picture with tivt of the next six games ~ugh when the Kings turned back on the roid. Dhiladelphia 4-1 Sunday Diiht but prior "It is a mystery to us how we are · o that, Dejordy took a licking but suddenly being out-rebounded," aulst.a.nt :ept on ticking shots away from l he <:oech Jerry Hulbert said alter the S.tur· Cing goal. day night encounter. Trojans, UCLA Win 2; Mackey Comes lnw Own By THE ~TED PRESS Did you hear an explosion last weekend · 1 the San Prandlc:o a., area! If so, i may have been University of Southern alifornia forward Joe Mackey coming f age. It wu less than a week ago that • :SC basketball coach Bob Boyd, com. tenting about his forwards , said: "Joe is i extremely good outside ·looter and ~ tb the basket very Jtll, too. 1 fie~ , goal percentage '!CenU)' hu been IOW. than What we ould anUdpate from him. He's not 10 far away from being explosive." The · 1-fooW corner ma1 f r o m ~le. Artz., an alktate player for '° ~~. b-4 a tot.al • rt PGt,p • 1 !delt of Impre.aite · rojan VI -c.: :"!<Pt and ~aturday ,...... . Be teored 17 polnta the f~st n~ l USC whipped Caltfornl1 ~ and • came beck with 10 against Stanford t • easy 71-51 Padfic-8 111nt which Jiil USC apece with the nallon'a top mllld team, UCLA., which aJeo won ... 1111 Bruin victories, 9"' ov• Stanlarl : :111 M-71 aver Oallfanll, pve the Brutnl JN record to lU,... tbe TroJana. lll*ey'a acortn1 total for two Ptnee -1 ., much • " UCLA'i Sidney •lclll 1ot In one pmt. The f.fooW ndl tenlor ICOrtd bJI UCLA ~ r ... ol 11 aa•inlt Cil and waa M ....,. from ll feet out u he was • # • • • • underneath the bucket. But Mackey hJd never shown In 1111\0 what he indica~ in practices: that ~ was a sensational shooter, one of'the best on the coast according to IO!Jle wf\o had 1ee11 him in prefamt warnwps. The expl osion , OI at l ea st the ignition, may have come over the weeke.od. Not only did Joe conned on eight of 13 on Friday ni&ht and five of six Saturday -for a combined weekend of 13 of 19 -but bt 119o played his finest defense for use. "He has had a tendency to foul a little too. much on defeme," ~ said and tberi bia Junior fGt wad ed by · being charged wttb cat one personal foul in both gamee. And both bing CIOIChel. Bowte Daltm. ot Stan.ford and Jim P'41eu of Cal. admitted It WU USC'• &cMillt> defenM and lack of fouling tbat led to the two easy Troy victories. In the only other games played by Pao-e teams on the abbreviated weektnd schedule, Waablneto'1 took bott Aluu twice, 15-73 and .. 'l'h1s week, inteneeUonala dot the Pac- i aaJtndlr' db UCLA traveltna eMt tor ""* ,nttt l.o)"Ola of Chkqo and Nolle u.me. Cal ptaytnc Unlwralty or San Frandlco and Utah movtng into Stan- fprd. USC is Jdle. ln P1<>1 games, <Xeaon la at Wuhlnaton State and Oreaon State vlalt.1 WflhinCtcn In Saturday n1lbt sames. '"1e two traveling Oregon 1chool1 1wttdt opponen~ a week from tonight . . . ~ ,.-"San Ferneao bbt .. U5·~ ~ '*rds at both ends and fllhft (Rhyne) had an off-nigh t in shooting qainst them. Richard (Clark) played bis best gaJlle, though." The game was close until the final three minutes, of the first hall. With 3:05 left to play before intermission, UCJ held a 28-27 edge but the Matadors ran off a string of 12 straight points while holding UCI scoreless and the outcome was never again in doubt . While Rhyne was ~ held to four poin ts, his lowest p0mt total of the · year (he's ave.ragiltg lt.5 per game) by the collapsing diamond defense of UC trvlM 171) ''""'' Rhynt 1 2 1 4 MO/Ort 1 • ) 20 Ci.rt 10 6 ' 2' 11ur11n;ham J l J t RotPll 0 0 ! 0 G-v• > O 5 ' Malflt w• 1 0 l 4 Fo• 1 0 t ! Baker o O 1 0 Fuwt ll 3 0 0 6 l l•Cll 0 1 0 1 San Fenw• CUI McCrack.,. R~t1 Shew C•rr ICtl'h Gelne1 p.,.,,,.,. Wllllems Lewi• ,, " "' ,, ' • J 11 ' 1 , u 7 • J 14 • 0 If I 2 J ' ' 1 10 , 0 • ' 4 j ' u , • ' 4 Tot1l1 .JO 11 f7 71 Totals l6 21 19 tJ Mallllme: ~n Ftm•ndo Jt. UC Irvine 21. UCt FrMll (71) SFVS( ,,_. 1701 Mawlc i"J Denton LlllT'lpl(lnt Motltr MtnH n llOX Bunch H100ln1 ~ " "' ~ ~ " "' ~ I 1 1 ' J, llCU 1 t 4 I 2 1 3 J A~e~ l 1 l 1 S 1 1 17 Chrh .. n~ I J 2 1' I 4 20 $Cye>l>qrs l l 3 9 1 1 It Millt r I J 1 19 o 7 1 D. Bou 2 o 1 4 0 1 1 Ntll\a<'1!MHI 0 0 I 0 J O t W1rr9n 0 0 1 0 Robin• 2 0 o 4 Tot••• ,. 111 II 11 Tolllt 71 11 " 70 Bus Trek Set For UCI Clash The Big-1 Booster club at UC Irvine Is planning a bus trip to San Diego Saturday night to attend the final night of competiUon in the AIM.JC bultetball tournament with the public invited. Tile bus will leave Mold's Volcano House Restaurant in Costa Mesa at S Cl'clock and will return hnroedlately following the championslilp game In the border city. Two gamts will be played, the first at 7 and the tltlt contest at 9. ucr will be playing ta one of the pmes depending on · the 09tcome of Friday's game with UC Rfvetslde. A win wiJI place the Anteaten ln the t o'clock encounter and a lols at 7. The bus trip, admiaaica to &he game 41nd rerreshments _..,,. the way are Included in the price of• Slt Jter pemn. Jn addition. hors d'oeuvres will be served on the trip to the sames. For rurther information and reserv• Hons (due by Wednetdly), all DeQpif Hoag at 557~00. Title to Mrs. ~ LONG BEACH -BUlle Jean King uaed a smuhing o~ etrVe and an aggressive nel play Sunday Nttht to defeat Rostmary Casals of San Fran· cisco, 6-1, ... 2, for the singles tiUe of the $14,000 BUile Jell ~ IDvitatiooal Tennla Tournament, the Matadors, ciart fut 26 polnl:i. Clark's "'tal was his highest single game mark of the yem-and in addition. he had 17 rebounds. o,....c .... (J" CwrlM <'71 .. ft ... CMlrey 4 0 I I l llla Lacllw l • • ' Wt!WY Olffle s t J 1:t ~ Getwll~ 4 e I I Mataer- Md9nClell > J ' t Crwlo H .. met ! 1 J I Wrlltr Sfltfrf 2 t 1 4 Austin I I 1 3 Walter• 1 I 1 2 C:.tt 1 0 > 2 .. ft lllf .. ' ' 1 • • t 1 11 ltll 2• ' I 1 • ' 1 1 .. 0 1 I I Hulbert's freahman team won its loth straight without defeat, stopping the Matador frosh, 72-70 In overtime. UCI scored the first seven points in overtime after being knotted, 66-66 in regulation play, and hung on to win. hflt. 2' 7 1' " Tttelt .,, ,,, Halftf-: CtrTltea M, OCC rT. Diagnostic Center for car check-ups. Penneys Scientific Testing Center can help to point out weak spots in certain vital areas of your car. In leN than one hour we put your car through a ffries of 1eientifle testi (212 of them). StHring, •noine. brakes, tranamilllon, electricaJ and cooling IYltemt. You watch the result$ come out on an electronic typeM tttlf. The written rePort lhowl the reeults of the tests. It indicates what teeted parts of YoUr car art weak and what perts are strong. A trained di1gnoltlctan will go over the report wtth you. If yau wtsh. ~11 give~ an tttimate of any neceaury repelra COlting big money. There's no oblioltian to have any of th• work done. You decide what to fix and where to fix It. The coot? 0...,. 9 98 Not bid tot a cr.tk-ui>·"*-... <\ Penneys Scientific Testing center Au'.!£111 . I' ·u .. 1 .... . " . •'Y• . '·' r • Charge It at any of theM Penney Auto c.ntera: BUENA PARK (Ora~•V*YYW> CAlltLS8AD FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT IEACH ORANGE ''THE CITY"' l..----~-------2D!!e~°"'!~~-~1tl~~op!•!!!.!!!!!!!Z.!~e.!~~:....------------.J•~ >~ Mond"1, Janult)' 18, 1971 DAILY Pilot f3 Pro Cag·e,· Hockey Standings 'FV Wins Coast · Mat Title ••• ..... ,. C.llfttffl(1 Wiii L .. 1 f'(I. J2 li .661 New Yor~ Phll1df!lof>l1 OM- JO 21 .)18 l'1 H 10 .Sl.3 I f'~ 1 ... 11.1, • ll ~, .:160 21> Cflllrt"l Oi¥hlol11 W111 'Liii I"(!. G• • 111111more 11 n -'" ' CIM:ll'll'Ulli :IO ts ,'6ol 1 t ""'"'" u ll :ns -in.,, Clt~tl•tld ·' -16 .l]S .11'1 f.: Wtt11111 C--.e J , ·Mi.-t Di"'"6M Mlhv1u~re Otlrol! Chlc11><1 Pnoen•~ WOii ~" ""· Ga JAi I ...... l3 16 .lll ' )I 10 -~'· 11 11 11 .sn n l'tciffC: Dl~hOta Lo> Anvtle1 San Fr1ncl~co S•n Dleto Seolll• Port11nd W'" Lill Pel. Gol 2~ 1(1 .!16 16 13 .lll ,., n 16 ."6• l '1 12 16 -~· • ,, 11 .JJJ 11 SuJMll ''• RnUll1 Hd!Wtllletf )jo(I, &osl°" 11, PhlllodtlPl>lt \tit.. San Olf'llO lD.\ Btlllmote 111, s.an1e 96 Cini~ 111me1 •Chedule<I. s. ... ,..,., Jlftlllll Phll1~J1>11lit 115. Cltvtlar>d U Mllwau~H 110, (ll!ClllO 90 Ot-lrott 111, Bo•ton 111 • All1n11 111, lot A.Miiies IJ) Clnclnr,1!1 JU. 8 ul!alo Ill ; Pnoenl• 117. 81111morr 100 Sen F .. ncl1co 102, Ntw York tl Only l&mff. IChedVled S.,,M1y'1 ll•Ulh Mllwtul<ft no, Botton in Phll1.,.li>hl1 106, S•n 01190 105 t 81lllmor1 111, Se1111e 9' f, TM11r'• G1'""' ( P~11111lk vs. Clnclnn.H 11 Om1h1 A!llllll 11 11""1!0 Only tlmfl 1dle-dUh!<I T ....... r'•O.IMll <.. Se1ttl• 11 Otlroll Sin Oleoao u Ntw York Portl1nd 11 C~lClllO Phll1<lllPhl1 11 LOs Alt9tle1 Clnclnnerl vi. Sin Fru>elsto 1! Oat· """' Clt'Ve~nd .vs. Bull•!O •I SY<'tUI' 1 Only v1m11 1che<1ulfll . ... .... 1!:111 Olvl1loll -'VirvTnl• KeonluCkV _New York ~c.,.,11 ... :1P1tt1buri.ll 1.F1«i<IT1n1 W"' lei! l>CI. 0 1 )J 15 .01 11 1l .551 10 lS ,04 6''1 11 lS ,09 11' > 21 :l(I . .n? ll'" If :)(I ,381 14' > WHI Oivllion ' WOft lesl l>el. GI , lndl•n• Utah M'mptols 31 15 .601 JO 1J -~ 26 Z> .~2 ''I • • ,, 28 ,3'11 ll 11 Jl ·™ 15 S1tvrAY'1 JI Hlllll New Von< 111, K.,,tucwv ll& Vlr'l!ln11 Ul, Oenvtr 131 1n<1t1n1 115. Plt1'burot> 101 Flo•ldl•nl 1'3, Utan 111 M•mi>111• lU, Tex11 112. overt!Mt , ...... .,.. 111141111 ·. New Vc•k ·J:!O, Caroll.,... 111 tndi1n1 lJ), Kenllld<V 11' Memphl• 117, Utatt Ill DenvH 129. Tex•• lll , Onl>' vames \Cheduled. Tlftltllf'I G1mt l 1':•nluckV 11;. Virgln!<I .i H•mPlon Only tl"'e tc!>edult<I. Tul'WllY'I GIMIS '"1ew Vorlt vt. f loridl•n• 11 PitlS· .. ,., C•rcn,.. •' "lt11buroh M..,,ch1$ 1t K..,,,Uti<Y Oe-nvu •I T~x~• 1nol•n• ,1 U1•h Boston 411~ York c:,11 V1.w;ou11er Detroit Bull•kl "" E11t D!vl1!1n WLTP'l1Gl'G .. ll I S 61 1U 118 19 t ' 6• ,., ' 5 10 !J 1n ' so lSO 11' '' 21 'l •S '1Sol 131 u1s •µ1~1s1 !l 15 J ll 111 in ' 10 15 I 11 t7 lt.3 Weil Dl11l1J1n ..:nic100 1' t 5 • 6J 165 ti St. Loult :IO •11 12 51 118 106 'l'hfl•dt!phl• 11 :IO ' 41() 101" 11'11 fo\lnntt0t1 IS l"O t 311 96 ll"O ?ilhbutgft 11 1(1 lt 3' 1:1:1 111 LOI Angeln 11 ll I 31 U7 14-1 c,111orn11 n 2• 3 2t lOI US S•fllr1l•Y't llnvlh S!. Ll)UI! 3, Chico~ 1 PftlllCl!ll>llla •. O•!rolt 1 ·Pltt11>Urvh •. Vancouver ) 8u!falo '• Mln11es<>I• 3 Mon1....,1 l, Bo.ion l Toroolo I. LM .. l\lltlt• I SUftcllY't ••Ill Cnlc10"0 .t, N.W Ve.-. J !lcslcn t, Tbronto 1 Montrtfl I, Bullelo I (tie) Mlnnti01• ?, Oetroi! f LOS A,ngelH '· Pnll1delpnl1 I V1ncouv1• 3. Ca!!fornlf I Onl'f g1m~ stheduled TfdaY't Gflflel No ''"''' IC~eduled Vangu~ds Now 9·3 Southern California College \Viii be seeking Its lOlh v.·i n Jn 13 starts Thursday night v.·hen the Costa Mesa c re\'J treks to Stanislaus State CW- lege for a no11-confert!nce bas- ketball game. The Vanguards n i pp e d visiting UC San Diego Satur- day night, 82-77. '•flllnl C•ll....,,I• Ctl-.. " ... "' Jftob5 0 0 ., 0 8rockm1n J J ) ' Pll'ne lS • l lt A!nllar • • ·• I ll !1::.:.n : ' 'i · } .,! W1ldtlP l J J 5 .Al'ldHMl~ • 0 l 0 Toltll n "H -a. 12 H11t'tlm~: uc. S.n _E?fl'lli' •4-si:c '2. KAYAK CUTIES -Jo Jo Perrin Oeft) of the Newport Olympic Kayak Club i~ embraced by coach Tony Ralphs of the Newport group while partner Lori Smith displays a trophy \.\'On in recent con1 petition in Newport Bay. . Area Canoeing· Enthusinsts Form Oly1npic Kayak Club By PHIL ROSS 0 1 tht 01111 f'ilot St1H are numbered evenly after K-to pop out a basic mold and l six to eight hours per boat It's quile a hairy sight tn-'"\Ve actually have plenty after finishing the mold." deed for the skipper nf a of boats ovailable for both The club has competed on cabin cruiser to be beginnin~ recreational and l r a i n in g all levels (mainly beginners a normal weekend outing and , t~en. virtually wi\.hout notice, purposes. It's ju:sl thal we've and advanced) since its in· to see a flotilla of kayaks had a hard t1n1e trying to ception but the group is trying racing practically into h i s find peoplt: to get involved," lo build into an intermediate course smack in the middle he adds. class. much like the type of Newport' Bay. Leon Montapert. a former \vhich exists in more Ne\vport Harbor High swi1n-established cl ubs on the East However, there ·s nu mer l:ke Ralphs. aided con-Coast. belligerence involved on the siderably in constructing the Ra lphs says. '"we're very Low ScNe l•IHot • part af the gregarious ('haps current fleet of Newport interested in developing local GOLF TIPS irside those kayaks. Ol yrnpic kayaks. interest. su ppor t and Good Skrt •••. Fo r the kayak racers are "We bought some fiberglass membership and we know we P1W:tko "' tNe. • · more than likely members of and a mold and we made can do it in this area NEWPORTER INN the fledgling Newport Olymp)c all of the boats toge!her at especially." PAR 3 GOLF COURSE Kayak Club. an unofficial ban· once," he says. Interested parties are urged $l.t0 wllll *" w .... ffyl die for a group of 12 lo 15 -~"~ll:_'l~ak~e':s~a~bo~o~l:_iJ:2-"h~oo~'~'-~'o~e~o~o~la~ct~Ra~J~ph~s~a~t~6~7~5-~l~82'l~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~! canoeing enthusiasts who are ;- trying to promulgate the ex- istence of their favorite sport lo their aquatic-minded neighbors in the Orange Coast area. The club was formed just a month ago and nutnbers at Jeast tfirt\C' fo.rmer Olym- pians and a . pair or \\'Qrld championsfiW \ciYn'~-tj\o~~ · iri its" ranks. ~, · ' : Brothers Andy al)d Pete We igand were a finafist and semif).nalist in the 1968 Olym- pics at Mexico City while Tooy Ralphs -. the club·s coach -·was the top U.S. kayaker on the '64 team i'n Tokyo.' ·Felkiw club m.embers Mike Johnson and Art Vitarelli participated in the World Championships last July at Copenhagen, Denmark. Pete \VeigaOO expfains · the basic purpose Or the Newport confederation, "\Ve ·re trying tQ ·develop our sport on a b~er basis in Southern California. ""The format of the club is basically lo train com- petitors for future cham· pion:sh ips." Ralphs in~erjecL<> '·we·ve been working with some girls \\'ho :ihow promise and v.'ho \\IC think can niake it to the '72 Olympics li11 , f\1unich. Ge rmany ).·• · He singles out ,. NC'>\'port Harbor High students JoJo Perrin and Lori tmlth. a Tar cheerleader whet s'he's not rambling down thl-bay in her kayak. "JoJo and Lori are m.lural . K-2s,'' adds Ralphs. K-2 is th'! classification for a two-rider kayak whi le the shorter K-ts {17 feet) and the longer K-4s (36 feet) have capacities as 'indica ted by the ; number s ··(n lhe i r nomenclatuteS'. • Ralphs elaborates. '"there's TlQ. sitch thing as a K--3. for . instance, because the boats TUESDAY·WEDNESDAY PRICES while they last ••• Special Purchase - Slight appearance blemishes* UNIROYAi. • ~1J11hl opp«1ront1 bl9111;1he1 w~;<h 1~ ~o wcy oll•cl p ... lormonc•. Reg. 2 ' 156 F78-J l./7 .7 5-11. 'G71·1:4/8.25-l l. F78-15/1.75-15 Reg.2 •, 160 H78-IA/B.S5-1.( HlS-15/8.55-15 078· 15/8.25:15 J78-I 5/8.85-15 Plus Fed. Ex·. Tox from .$2.55 to $3.08 .Every tirt carries 1 Uniroyil coast lo COISI Wm'llllty::::;:::;::;;l UNllO'TAl COAl110 coASf •• .-.. ... WAllAtn"f ...... -___ , .... II -1.1111ttYol :;;;;,.-''N"" er .~--.. --··MO N>J," t111t """"' ....... .... ·-·-: ....... -....... wlll...., ~"·-... 11•:.:e;-i!:. N ... ~ • ·:.-....i--:..,,-;r .. ---. u.w::: ... w. -"""':.:: .. ~ • ..-i--....... ~-................... DUAL WHITEWALL · ONLY'$2.95· MORE MOKl'S THE NIXT HSf.. THiNG' . . TO VISITING THI 1$U.NDS' • MOST SIZES IN STOCK :.;,......,........ YO LC ANO HOUSE • naTYAKI STEAK • e HAWAIIAN UH e IEEF TOMATO ~: i .. ' Friendly Aloh• Dining In A Cesual Hawaiian Atmo•phare For The Entira Family ' .. " Tlf OUI HOUSI SPICIALTllS Liii •VAYA 01 MACADAMIA SP~I Ill.AD e FU.Ml-PINUrP\JI e "APAYA DWGHT PU.MIN• ~I TA:' ••j.tll~ IOMI Entert•lnment In the : TIKI LOUNGE ' I IANfun· MCIUTtll ... b400 PALiSADiS , ID. ......... ,.. .... ,. '"' COSTA lrillSA 117-1466 --" Of9elO ~-""-''"'°" . } ! ... "' ...... ........ ...:. j z:-..- ' . FIRST INTR ODUC<O rn7 [~tr !i f ~ & TIGER P AW -- -- ----- Why It Pays to Know BOB PALEY i-1 Closeout. Save now on fiber glass , belted tires. plu11.80fed. tax ondoldllla. Orig. 30.95, 700-13, -Mii II Foremos{'EI Tigre' 2+2 with 2 belts of fiber glass wrapped around a 2 ply polyester cord body. Fod • Fiii. Sile Orig. tu Now 5111 O~g. IU: Now C78·14 30.95 . 2.15 123 G78-!5 36.95 2.77 •29 560·15 29.95 1.58 '23 H71H 4 38.95 2.83 •as E711-14 32.95 2.35 '23 H78·15 -2.11 •3.5 F78-14 34.95 2.55 '29 J78-!4 <I0.95 2.11 '35 F78-15 34.95 2.81 '29 900-15 40.95 :uo •3$ G78-14 36.95 2.67 '29 L78-T5 .~95 · 3.22 •35 3 Day Service SpeclaH Mon, Tuel, Wtd Onrrl Premium Brake Speclall . 3618 • IMta!I Premium brake linings • Rebuild _, cyllndn • Turn drUrna. ire Onlnga • New grlae ... 11. peck be1rings • Adi Ult •tnlfroency brake • Ch'eck mater c)1inder • Breed brake line • With 40,000 mile gU1:rantee -~ Wheel AHgnment Speclall 4" Wt ut CllW, c.nlllt, ......... ' out. We edltllt'_... ...r. __. complete. fronljend. Pft11 '°"Ilk a ' free Pit Bou lftlplellon. y .,, you C•I\ 1h1p 12 .. I S11'!"•Y/· .... •t •ftY·•' Hl8" , ... ...., •• e..t.r.J FASHION ISLAND, Newport Cent~r, ·' HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunti ri9fon Beach ' ' ' U1t , .... ..,. tfMI ,.,..,."' ,.... 14 DAILY PILOT MMU7, ~ 11. 1971 Rustler Jaycee Coast · Area Mat Results Foursome Tri11mphs ('.olden West College ran a vuy crtdltablr early season indoor mile relay to win lhe third seclion or tilt' 12th annual Sunkist invitational me e t Saturday night in the \..os An£eles Sports Arena. The Rustler quartet of \\'alt Ankerman. Mel Hobbs . Brian Strough and OeMis ?<.laas 1o1·as timed in 3:28.6 in ~·inning O\'er sect1nd place Compton College f3 :37.0l and the lime ...,·as the third rastest of tht' II schools eompet 1ng 1n the three races. Los Angeles City Collegr 13:~.2 ) won the fir\:t section and Pierce College (3 :24.&J the second. Orange Coast finished fiflh in the first race but ""·as disqualified aJong wilb fourth place finisher, San Diego Mesa. Marina Jiigh School's De\'e Lockman placed fourth in the second section of a high school t1o1·0-mile racr in the good time of 9:39.6 for the multi·lap in· door race. Lockman ran in the second. third and fourth positions throu1hout the race bul tired a bit at the end and finished in fourth position. Baskelballer Doug MacLean of Costa ;\lesa High finished fifth in the sa me race with Lockman in 9:it4.8. Randy Spotts of Orange High placed second in the race in 9:33.4 with Jo~ Amaya 19 :10.81 af LA Wilson High and Hector DtAnda 19:33.41 of Ban~ing High the individual race v.·1nners. In !he seniors mile run. Ov•en Gorman of Costa Mesa finished a creditable fourth in 1:49.2 while representing the Seniors Track Club or Southern California. Gorman barely missed a third place finish by tv.·o- tenths of a second as team- mate Bill Fil.Zgerald grabbed the spot in 4:49.0. The race was won by defen- ding champion Peter Mundie of the Santa r.1onica Track Club 10 ~:33 .3. "TRIGGER" YOUR 0111P WITH YOUR RIGHT fORHIHG ER On• of 1olf 's most common faults is holdtne the club too much 1n the palm of the right hand . The fingers should dom- 1nalt: tht Ktip, not the palm. Hold tht club so that l he right forelin1er wras» around the undersKje of the .5halt. As 1f you are trigerin1 a pisto_I. By assuming lhis position. rt 1s likely that the rest of your ri1ht- hand 1rip will be sulfic.ienlly 1n the finaers. Th• left hand controts the club and hokls it more i n the palm. But ti'le role ~f. t~e ri1ht hand is more uns111ve. Hold !he club aently. And remem- be r. never tiet your forefin1er ·•squH.ze the triaer. ·• •o •-.... .,__...,._ Collegiate Basketball WIST UCLA u. C•lifornl• 7' use 11. Stonlort s1 lorolo F roi.n II, Hor!IOr JC " Cel Sf. ILI J 11. UC Son!e l•r~lro I' l""ol• 11. S•nlo Ctoro Ol lJSF 17. lltoD4!rdlno Of (OI S: (Fwllt "Ol!I ••, UC 1t1ver1;d1 Ml (JI 11 IL,O.) f J. S.." Ple9o S•. 11 C•• Pol• t!LO) u . Ch1~n H (t i 'DI' IP-M, lJ. Si n Outvo 11 U I Lwr ...... '1. F-PKifi( n 11i.i. 11. Wt1rmon1 n St. Mln 'I II, Nl'\I..,. ll.11 VHUI ll Ei,IT TtmPlt O. ForOl\lm U Llff ytflt 12. ltlett Mt Wn.'9•11 !Mou.I IOI, °"'""'St " l •Sl llt "· War..-n IC"'tlltt.• 1' llittiourt " IS, PtM SI. '' s• Jot>~·, 1110. Weil v"''"'' n Sotl"tlitl<I IS. Cot••'• fl ~V.llnd !>I, frte10t1ll SI. ll Mln...,rl to, 1t1n101 ii. n D•VIOt't "· DIP1w1 n Onlo U. 11. T11-SJ NelH"oU t I.I. lfte SI. 01 K1n111 1fl, Okl111om& City 11 S....1hern llllnol• •t. 1,,.,11111 st. to SOUTtt W•~• Forest N . Nortll C1r1llM M (lledtl 66, VMI '-4 1-llfr>tl rtflMI-1s. ~lvdl• n Fi...ldo 11. 1n. S..mtaf'"ll ,. Mf ...... 11 IJ. 11\wrb. tt•NtY 75 Vlr1lnll "' ~I• Tocll 14 lllthn>Oftd 74, Vl,,11!1 Tt<ft IJ OY•<llmttf S11on H•ll J.i, GM<"l tltwfl (0.C.l If Ttn,,.. ... ICl'llt11-1) 111. Soull" "n Mlu ltti,pt n OUke n . Cl.m10n 5' Ml1m1 iFl11 11, Tu11n1 I\ £ elt Ct roUM 61, furm111 SI Ne .. Hln>Pl•lft H, MoiM '1 1,.,11.,..,.., t!, Nl•t tr• 19 (t...o O•t• ''"'") ~ £111 TM1nHJM PO, l!tl!t1t1 lttn•uc•• Tt11M1 ... Tt<h 11. Mertl\ltCI St Of How1lon It, c..,,_...., " " '"'"'V "· O•rlmou!~ U s ... cw o1 101, ll•c•u,.11 1' M1,.1r<1 "· Navv n P..,n t 1, M1n111111n 61 ><clV C•o .. /l, ft OllQll Cotl111 " ~•1191 IT. SI Fro"t•I (N.'I".) to ST Front•• ll'•.l 10. C•t1ltlut 0 Yo'"'''"'"'" JO. w .. in,.,,.,., 1P1 l 11 PnllodtlPll•• Tek"ot "· su ... ~l'l1nn1 MIDWEST l!ltoOlry II, LDi>,>Y•llt II 1111,.,,,,1 09, Mfc.,l11an SI. '1 1111,..,.uttlt tS. N..., Mt~lcf SI, ll Mlchl~ln '1. l""ltno ll p,,,_ '7. Mlnnuel• t1 fo~erl•.ntl Ol'tlo ~I. U. w i1con0<n '' ll1vi..r (OliloJ It. Ottrtit 11 e.,.-u,,. GrHn 71, Ml•ml IOll!ol 61 Wn,t.,11 M!c~lton 11. lt.t 111 S•. 1t Ct1>lr•I MlclllN n tl, lfll St. l.J " Gt11rflf SouT!'ttrr1 1111, Orol ll obtrh 1' ~I Jn•llll'• (P•.l "· Ot Yld1•n •• IOUTMW•ST ""'"' Mn.Ito l.S. Ttx•• 11!1 Po1of ll II.let I!, Ark1n1" n ••Ylor n. Tftf1 1' liO'w1rd l'IVllO H, Etll ltX01 SI. 11 A,kf.,, It. CMlh"l l Conntclk:"I '1 T~lu ... M1m11hl1 SI. IS Olo:I•"-"'• U. Co•oroOCt 1J P•n •...-rlto11lll, T11u !"'""GIOI!) "au"'' Chl11ll•11 1i. O•ll•• !l1D11., o St m t1.,1lon !OS, ''''' Ail IS ~''"'.., "· Ain!ln 101. iw •t•ll ~1 . ltOCl(ll!S f!V lJ 11, Wyomlnt H D1nvr• t s, Air ~or<t J• lJto" Ml, Cotor1<11 ~· 11 V••n S1 10" Srlltot II Sears SAVE20%! Vohage Regulator SAVE '2! Rec. 11.19 6~.? Basketball Standings MllSIOfll COfOl,•1t•111Ca • ' .. .. """" ' ' "' "' Cllnu ' ' •• .. iltl~ff:f(I• ' ' "' "' ~......, ' ' "' •• ,, ........ , ' ' m "' Groq.._l ' ' "' »> .s.... ae • .,.,.,1,,. ' ' "' "' SouW'lw.1te•11 ' ' ,. "' lM-'I"• Scow.. )•ddi..NO; J5, Ch.tlev J4 (fY..-tl""'l Cl"""' n, G.--1 1! ,. .. _, 11, !.eu~r..-11 .. 1 1•.,slH I&. \•11 8 trN•lMno 11 ,. .. _,.., 9-ft \H<llM..;11 •I P,....,,., C"''" fl 11.IYff"\!Cle , ....... ,.... ee- uc ll.1Yff"110e f"'lll ..... SINlttaK• 11 Mh•lon Vi..lo 1-1;~1' .SOllTM COAST COMl'•1t•N<:• • ' .. Ct<rlloo. • m l'wl-' • •• \fnl• AM ' ' '" Or•-(Oltl ' ' '" S•ri OI-Mf .. ' ' '" Mt. 5fll AAIW\io • ' •n Slri D~ ' "' __ ...,., ~ Ct rrllM 61. Of•-COftl Jf l'ullt....,. 1'. Mt. Sill AM ... 1-41 S•nl• _..,.. 15, $.In Dlevo ~ w ......... , •• o ..... , Ot•f'O• C011I •f Ml. S1n AnlOf!lo S•nlt _..,.. •• Ctrrllfl S•ll DI"° Mn• •I S•n Oit .. Fwlltr10I!, 111• , ..... ,., ... _ Or•"'4 Co.II •I S..11 DllllO °'>t>I S." Die'° ti Ml. Son AnlOnlo c.,..rl1'a1 •1 f v11..-1on .. "' "' .. "' '" "' ?::J ff), 11-J. 5 13.99 Top Carrier SAVE :.11. 12~.? S11t 0 .0. 42.i li-in , I. D. 411lri.in. Sup e r Spark Plugs Seat Co,•ers 47EK~ Battery 18~ 2295 • He~vy vin~·I b;ist~L WCJWt pilttnl • t:.a17to hal.111 ·:a.·av.w:1 Long-Lasting Muffler Low Pri<'t 1499 • We/.s..d lubes fOf" Ml.)' IUUillllU09 autNA PAU rA ......... 111-4110 CANOeA PAllC ....... , ll ¥0NTI el .14911 Sprci•I Full 4-Ply Nylon Tire , .... , --· Phu1sa.nr.E.T. Aflll Old TIN UHM .,,(ff Ml 'a .. llt Gl.TWk' • torO .M t .1111 GaAM1~7·21IO 1$1 -Cu.Ille ICI Mc. J-l l!). »- , .. -Cl11u ll!J IMc. C...,. ICI, .... 11'1 -11,.,.1 (C) ,....,,. Gr•v•• i£J. l :IS. 194 Tim...........11 IEI ._ Gr!""""" IC), 1•2. M~r -tclloon -Dr tori.11. ,_.... V•ni!Y ... _ f»J OJI C.-• ~r ......c-IE J -br iorq.11. 10. -·-(um u:i -wll~ Morrl,..,, !CJ, J.l. 115 -ll•fll:lll...., (£) 111nMCI J_. !Cl. l:ff. 17:1 -C•Pltn ff l diK. Hllll•fd IC), +I. no -••noel CC! "'"....., o.,,...1ocr (£), 1:ff. !lit -Gr•t..m fC) OK. Gl - Cfl, s..4. Ul -Ploff lCI plnntol Ir-.• (f l, J;st, l oll J_, ICI lll""td P..:k (I!), l :'9. 1$7 -JIHbon CCI dee. Do.lno ll!J, ... 1 .. -JO~I tEI O«. G1r11 ICJ. >H 11'1 -...... 11!1 -tr. fo•lfll. l t-o -M•1Z !£) -tr,. lortorll. 1-e ...... -H11! (El _, ll'f' torM•I. ,. .... M.trlfta 1211 CU I "'--' ti -c-(N J lllrtw I . Gr!nem tM1 ...... 10. -Ertdrf IMI olnMd Cfl,MfMI '"I t ,!1. 1 s -It. ••ow" on cite c-u! l~JlJ-~ Sd'tlcll !'0 Ill« l(tltr (Ml ... 11' -Jt l'll\UIOi (II\) M (l'U l1·l. l« -II\.._ J, ··-00 ,It, .. 1111) :.w. "'l -MfW1 IHI '"llld (II\) ·11. J•Mtr "1"" ,..,._, IUI I) -•IM Mff!N ~~t.r ........... VW BRAKE SPECIAL lellM 4 Wh.911 MathiM 4 Df'uml Overhaul 4 Wh..a Cy1JM1rt l4."' MU. Ulldlllf"'91tal 0111r1Mtw fNOT ,1110-ltAT•OI $39.95 VW SHOCKS -············-$7.'5 lo1tded 100.000 mile guarantttd (not pro-rat.eel). \VF. 00 ALL FOREIGN CARS. e llK llAU SHCIAUST e CC»TA MESA STOIE ONLY J111 H_._IM. '4t-41U ., Mf·Wf You Work Less Keeps things cleaner without effort , eliminates bath tub rings You Save Money Soap and clothing last longer ...... "'"" Fttlfredl •-' ac.u Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Complete lnsrallation Available! Just Ask! ISearsJ So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bri•tol St. Ph . 540-3333 Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave . Ph. 8Z8_.400 Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Pb.. >'7-3.371 ....... ___ _ Radio Side-View Mirror SAVE 16%! 2~-9 • ~·or 11! V.W. Seel.an models •. Mount on riihl or left sule ... non-1fare 29~9 Floor Mat~s 9 9 Reverse 1999 "CO WI .... Ht IAHfA ANA IU 7-lJ7t Front OaJy 111LITDI Heavy Duty Shocks R<ralor S7.n OUNIAU CH ..... , ... ,a ...... 11 HOU TWOOD NO f•IMI INOlfWOOD 01 l-2tll , ............ 14211, 111""4211 '0MONA NA 9°11•1 '""'" n ,....., 944.ao11 SANTA MOMCA.IX .... 711 ~ SOUTM COAlf PU.IA 140·Jl3y TMOutAH9 OAICS 497_.I .. 1'0llUNQ Nt0 1111 UPU.N9 tll·l927 VAWT PO .l•M6t, 914·212,0 VlltMONT" .. tt11 .. .. '• LEGAL NOTICE I Miss Ties Francis the Knot D.lllY PILOT 15 'See How They , Bun' Fleet Footedness Lacking In Santa Ana Production By TOM TITUS Of TM 011,.,. ~1111 1h tt It ls implicit In t~ tiUa of the English farce "See How They Run" thal the casl members be usually fa ~ ~ on their feet. and on their cues as well. Neither virtue , wi- fortunately, is to be found in the version currently being ''llE HOW THEY I UH .. A ~om.av U• Pnil!o K1n11. lllrlC'll<I tov "'""'" Wln•klw, ,,.,... m •n•9'• JOll Wlnl•t1, >OUM uv Jun• Wln1klw, ur .. i.e<rt!<I Fdo1v• '"" S1turd1r1 lllrOUGll J11>. 30 bv Ill• Stnll An. Commun'•• Plt V••> I t 11\o Pl1vo" TllM!lr. MIO W, un $! .. ~ • .,,. """· THE c ... s t P.n.l<IP• li»o Cllrl1tln1 C1ro1n Clive Wln!o" Rat1 L11>11•t1n Rtv, Llorl•I TOC>P , ••• AOl>llrl P1v1r l(!a '. .N1n<• AtlO•I" Miu Skll!"" .. .. 11•11• MCCiure 1111 ln,.uoor ...... , Al(h1•d t11111Htll Bl•hoP ft! L•" .... Ruu1ll A!>d1•1Cn Aov. Hum,.,,rov ,, Cn1rle• Poll ln1P1c1or A. J, Homll!G<> presented by lhe Santa Ana Community Players. e v e n lhough the show spurkles with some rine i ndiv i dua l in- terpretations of Philip King's dated but delightful comedy centering on an overabun. dance of clerical collars dur- ing a wild night in a coun- tryside vicarage. partner before they went their se pa r a l e ways . Hi s performance ls generally well coruitructed, except for a broken-record bit during which he bemoans the Joss or his uniform. A3 ihe vicar who spends most of the play in his un- derwear chasin~ a Russian spy, Robert Paver captures the bearing, if not the com- plete speech pattern, of the stuffy Brilisher. His outrage at lhe sighl of his wife cuddled up with a stranger is hardly b e I i e v a b 1 e . but funn y nevertheless. In a role which could steal the show given a little more thought, Nancy Baloyan plays the back country maid wilh zest and style. She would. however, be far more effective by wielding a broader ac- centual s word. Belly McClure brings more lo the straight laced spinster Miss Skillon In her staid first act scene than she ac- complishes tater upon falling victim to her first taste of spirlls. The escaped Soviet prisoner is done with authority by Richard Langseth , whn takes a fi rm grasp on tDe intensity of his character. Rwsell Anderson movts through his role as the bishop with a regrelLable lack of af- fini ty, whlle Charles Pait doe11 far more with a good deal Jess a.s the timid visitini.: minister. As the Scotland Yard inspector, A. J. liami\ton is the only cast member lh take a stab at a proper accent. but is even slo wer afoot lha11 the rest. There is a good deal nf potential in the Santa Ana production beyond that ..-.·hich was exhibited on openin~ night. An overall lightening and famillarization could ac- complish wonders, and coulrl eliminate empty mom t: n l s ~uch as those encountered by certain cast member!! who played a miniature version of "What's My Line?" "See How They Run" con- tinues for two more weekepdi;, wilh performances FrKlay!i and Saturdays, at the Players Theater,, 500 W. 6th St.. Sant a Ana. 2 TV Programs· Stres s Wildlife Con servation On the contrary, the pace established early on in the proceedings -and heightened only slightly thereafter -is dis com I Dr tingly slack, minimtzing the effects of a pottntlally hilarious c h a s e Children's Workshop Opens in Costa Mesa By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YO RK (AP) Television has rome a lo;ng way since the days when Marlin Perkhts used to stroll eround the Lincoln Park Zoo. pelting the animals and urging children at home to handle their own pets gently. It has become a loud and powerful ally i11 the con- servation movement, calling altention dremalically Io disappearing or endangered species and e:iplairung in con- crete and easily understood sequences the weaknesses and breaks in the vital ecological chain. Over the weekend then~. were two such programs. On French Song Recital Set By Allard Baritone l\.1aurlce Allard, associate professor er music, will give a recital of French songs in the Village Concert Hall at UC Irvine at 8·30 p.m. Saturday. The program is open to the public without charge. The concert will include songs by Ravel choreographed and danced by William Couser. lecturer in dance. Laurence Gordon will be the painist. F 1 u I is t Kathy Monahan and cellist Ali ce Ober will play for the Ravel liOngs. Allard is direclor of ttie University Cborus and the Irvine Master Chorale. Heh•~ appeared as soloi~t "-'ith the Roger Wagner and Roberl Sha w Chorales and has given concerts in Europe. He wlll be heard in recital In Lincoln Center's Tull y Mall in New York City io April. Friday night "Elephant Coun-scene in the closing act. And each performer onstage. along try " on NBC reported on the with dlrt'clor Arthur Winslow, A creative drama workshop Third and fourth graders dwindling herds of Arrica. On must share in the blame for for children gets under way wi ll be instructed In looking Saturday, "Arthur Godfrey's some embarrassing lapses of today in Costa Mesa under and listening games. along ' . · h h with beginning improvlsatiun, America: the Everglade!!" on 1m ing t roug oul. the auspices of the Children's fro m 5 to 6 o'clock, Seventh ABC was concerned with that N:vertheless, some pleasing 'fheater Guild of Newporl and eighth gr aders will learn vast Florida swamp land. per ormances emerge from Harbor, vo ice projection and use o( what essentially is a sluggish .Despite a dif(erence In subject production noticeably lacking The sessions. scheduled for emltions in building a scene matter and the fact the JDca-in overall cohesion, MMt im-Mondays and Wednesdays al from 7 to 8:30. lions were thousands of miles pressi;.>e is Christina Carden West Bay Pre-Schoo l, 277 Directing t he children's h A · 1 Monte Vista Ave., will involve ksho 1·11 be P t Hurn apart, there were remarkable as t e mer1can wi e of a wor P w a e, , Engl.sh cle gy h youngsters from the first who has wo rked with the similar ities and a sen!le of ery 1 r man, w o h plays her character to the I roug h eighth grades. Goodman Theater children's urgency. happy hilt. inserting some First and second grade department in Chicago and "Elephant Country" Y.•ith pieces of inspired business students will a!lend classes has appeared on Broadway aclor Cliff Robertson serving particul;:irly in her scenes vdth on t<.1ondays from 2:30 to 3: 15 and in summer stock. as narrator and participant the anxious maid and the biif· and 3:30 to 4:15. Emphasis Classes: are nearly run for in a camera hunt, told -0f fled visiting cleric. will be on acting out stories. the current session, which will Lhe herds decreasing because Ron Lanselh w a rm s On \Yednesdays. fifth and continue through A p r 11 • gradually to his task as the sixlh l{"adcrs attending from Jfowever, information o n of a year-long drought in the soldier (in Air Force blue. J:U to 4:45 will be jnstrucled future openings may be ob- area and of so many animals his chevrons upside down) in IMli"'9is.aUort ;.and ln-tained by calllng Mrs. G. C, crowding into Kruger National who was Mm Carden'.!! acting troduction of .i bi faeferization. Hayl§"i?''IU-4711 -.968-5632. Park that the sanctuary was.--------------------------~-.,~~----- unable to feed them. Man was al the heart of the crisis, draining water from rivers vita l to the herds, severing one big river with a dam thus permitting only a trickle in t he' w ater holds. and deliberately burning o v e r acres for agricultu re and driv- ing out or killing the animals. Man wa!I also the villain in Godfrey's special, diverting water from the swamp to other uses. seeking to cut a canal across the s l a I e , draining and d evelopi n g swamp lands into building sltes 1-lls st at i s t i c s v.·ere awesome· .. \Vhen water covered lhe Evergladfs. !here v.•ere I 1':1 million birds here; now there are 50,000 birds left -one for c \' e r y 300 berore." Total effect of these nature progra m~ J a c ques Cousteau's undersea series , Rill Burrud's "Animnl World " and Perkins' "W ild Kingdom" -has to be important in the awareness of viewers to the prohlem. EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY FROM 4 P.M. TO CLOSING IS 'BUCK' NIGHT AT GRANTS PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • .l RD RECDRDWEEK · ACADEMY MIMBUS: YOUR O.RO ADMITS YOU .-,No A GUEST TO ANY PERFORMANCE MONDAY THRU THURSO,_Y PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT M,<tl()I ,; •O ....... <Xi'l4 ..... -''' l•'I .. _ ....... --···-.... -..... - ,...,,. l't!\llS l'lla•li Ali lldmr • lyu O'Mlll f\~~~ ·~ ·· ... ·'· ' r_;·. Tio1w·1 •1 ........ . f ;; ' , .. John llllley' lay ~d lllfl • aaa ·a,...., Pmll' llOlfRT mlCHAfl. J. lltDFOllD POl.l.AllD ,.TEo (R) UTTl.f FAUSS AnD llG HAI.SY Aho. flcrl:w'll Strti1and · bCk Nichohon In "ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER" PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT 3rd GREAT WEEK ELLIOTT GOULD •~ • U•YIO L WOll'l~ "Od•<T•O• "I LOVE MY ••• WIFE" ••dford '" "I l IHEM WILLIE BOY IS Hu r· "'" A MIKE NICHOLS FILM ci'Cil=i2' FAMILY SPECIALS $ YOUR CHOICI: * Roast Turkey DI-, * ·Golden Fried Chlchil * R._t Beef A1 Jn *'Ham Stec* Ha-llan . . -.r:.:-....................... c,_y .... ,,.. .... ......,, Mondrt _. woc1-.1_ ,...,,,... of.1y lllADfORD HOUSI STIAK DINN*3 _ .. th,__ ...... 2 • ,.t&IW. het NII eM ..,,,_,_ fw IROOICHURST & ADAMS HUNTINGTON BEACH • I N M t N l!DWARD CINEMA VIEJO SN1 •eo ,..,, lit U Pit.I TVnOff uo!ttto ;ti---~. TECHNICO'LciA"' ,. · llltut4 ~ IUIPIA 'l'ISl • !lo•tttt~llol> ta., 1111; • ~ ltlO W•I! 011.r••'f ~111<1..:11,... "NIOK""'' 0 '"' .. • 1 El hon1 No DATLY PJLQT • :: ·~~ JI; So Tlie1·e! -•· ._ .. Lily ··ro1nlln plays 5 1 ~·yrar·n!d Edith 1\nn. \vhn •·hates l'andy and ice l'rc11n1. and that the truth" on :na~•an and ·J\1artin's l.;iugh·ln tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4. ' .~ '•'"' l;lV DAt~-!r•{~P$: MONDAY JANUARY 18 V (Nlr~G I . 0 @ (1) (£)PREMIERE Tiit Rttl '11ne fC) (30) JIU Barry hosh : tlm QOll sl'Jow !n whith contest· I ants lest lhtl1 knowledge and chttk !heir ~nswtrs 1a:alnst-ntll'S· 1eels and othei lilms of lamou1 p~ople and famous ewents. m D1vid frost S~ow IC) (90) &:00 tJ Bit Nun (C) (60) l&rry Dunphy G1.1tsts: Herman llahn. GtorRt ft KNBC NtwS!!A'itt (C) (50) Barnes, Buc~y Pi1arelh. Tom Po~· 0 The Alltn Show (C) ~01 Ion 0 Si• O'Clod: Movie: ((;} ''C rt1.' @Felon1 Squad (C) (30l a:llis llban~ Part I (advenlufE) '6S' m Pattern lor Uvlnt (30) --Omar Sharri. Stephen !oyd. Ad· CB Miguelita Ya1dtl Show (30) ventures el on1 fl history's greal· !:GO 0 ~® M11be1ry R.f.O. (Cl (JO) est leaders lrom his bo)ohood rn · Sam's son Mike acqui1~s 1 "fos ter Jlavement. · daughter" in Hong Koot ind wor- 0 lidr Van l>yte (30) ries about her making better 8t Tht Flinllltonu {CJ (30) grades than he does. •@@St&1 lnt (C) (SO) 0 tf3f{J m W9rld f'Terniert MOY· fB ICBUT lrt stut": "P1in!inRl • le~ {C) "Dt Yoo Tlke This Str1ngt1?" Br•" Simp!e w.Ys are ~hown 10! (Orama) '70 -Gene Barry, Oiar11 Mille bird prints using common Boker, Joseph Collen, tloyd 81idgES. h~o!d Hems. Und1 Schmid t; Sodn~y Blac kmer. Sulin Olivet A hoJl:e;s. man ~cheme~ to come into 1 moll ion. !fl (!) CBS News (C) (301 dolla i inhentance by ''••1lchin1 fi! fid!•r F1mil1 (30) 1~e~l1t;~s l'lolh ano!her man who iI) Notic:iero 34 IC) (&0) hos a l1mi1ed time to live. m Wini! to ~llYentlrrt (C) (30) 0 The Fugi!ive (t) (50) GE l1 Hof1 F1miliar con P1tr1ti1 0 (}7i@ m ABC Mood1y Mov· Cl) KF'LM·News (CJ (JOJ ie: (C) "Cit Ballou'' lcomedy- l:ISIChlrlil's PH (C) western) '65 -Jant Fonda, Let 1:90 Citidid C...ert (JO} Marvin, Micf\ael Clll1n, Dwayne "·~·~"6·.e-f)Jiq~·,•,",o·~~) ,c330m1 fl'Bj;-~ 1"1 u1 • ~11. Nat Klnc1 Cole, Stubby .~,J!.,,~tf felfl!S Uj! · i-Pocf P LOifce <C> i101 ... -.Wt.IJ~i(iW:ald hi~ drunk; 9 CIYkY-Fal'frif• M11Uu (30) ... u 11•-IOlie«·" ~a-prt1cher; Ui) SKiii Setu1ity (C) (lO) ~nd alter her ltth"'s death. I hey @:GThittewrt Repo1f (C) (301 ~!age a !fain !Obbery, ml LOi Ofritbdo1 (30) m I IJIC1AL l Swincin' ni111 (Cl CD ABC Emiln1 News {CJ (30) (60) Higtili2hls include musical 5:il5 El!) Musiule numbers ptrforml!d by 1 ne•ly 1:00 tJ CBS Even int News (C) (30) discoverad JS.member 2roup 1t Waller Cronkite. Sea World and !ht San D•ego Zoo. 0 iD NBC Nightly Ntw1 (C) (30) ffl Rulilin· (CJ (90\ "!1h rathon," Da1id Bunkley. John Chancellor Therapilt Or. M11k Goldstein leads ft ank McGtt. 1 maratl'Jon 1r01Jp ther1py StSliicn D Wlllt'1 My l ine? (C) (JO) involvin1 II pet1ple. 8J@ (il I Lott I.lie)' (JO) Q'il 30 Min11tp DJi})J!~~et (C) (JO) €D Koy (~Cl) ii@ Juijl (C) (30), ail·tblldl1 (60) EIJ ~!!f~l!!,~•-JC) J6.0). (R) "The 9;30 fJ 5; (j) Doris Day (C) (30) Cubist [poch." A special look 11 Doris Marlin sets out lo rescue t th1 collection of 01()11 lhan 300 loYe·smltten friend, Duke f11en· Cub~t work.\ curren!ly on cl•splay tino, lrtilil the clutches of • blonde at !he L.\. County Museum ct Art ~cialite. (Re5thedultt) i:ij _(f) Jrvt~ •t Ccmcqwnttt (C) 0 Candid Camer1 (JIJ) £!:>thrill tht livint Word (C) (30) m Mu.iule @II Rou rit (30) g) Concierto dt Alm11 (30) Ciel Sinlplemenle Mar ia (~5 ) Q) Movit Gll!!!JC) J30) . 9:45 €ID P~ttor'1 Dr,,k 7a I) eff:ljlihrnsmokt (C) (6Cl) 10:00 I) ij9) (j) Carol 8ornett Show (CJ Muihal 01non t1ails ttie 1wo oul·I (601 Mtl Torme ~nd M1d1tle lee law R.1wl1n1 biotilea -~O M~•CO RUtSI. and h bi!fritnded by JJ.ye••·old l 0 8i£ 5 Nell's tC) (UH kc,m Paco. wllo :1tts OiHon a' a ma n, Sanders. Barney Morris who can rid hii v1llaie of 111 i!S 0 B1rter W1rd Ntws IC) (601 band1dos. including the one "'ho ID l'Mlll (C) (&0) George Pulnam l:i!ltd the boy's la!h~r-@ T~asure (C) !30) '')'a~ l• 0 RED SKELTON GREETS r.tt ~Puate Pat1io1" * CHAO EVERETI ANO €tJ Lucecit1 fC) (301 CASS ELLIOIT! cr!JT•lt·Clne1111A11entino 12 hr) 0 ti) @ a;, Red ~tllon (C) 10:30 @ Rill John1 News (CJ (30) (lO) Gu~sts-art Chad Everett and fD .I.Kent (C) (30) (R) (8SS Etliel, I m LI familill (30 0 NYPO (C) (30 ) ll:OO £1 ~@ it) News (C) O @ (J) (D L1r1 Makt A Dtal 0 Q} Ci) m Newt (C) (Cj (lO) Monty Hall .hosts. 0 Ca" You Top This? (CJ rJ Mlliloft $ Movie: (C) "Twt Rode 0 Cl) New! {CJ Toretbtr"' (western) '61 .:... James 0 Mcwit: "Tht ;eor1• ''-" SlolJ" Stew;rrt, Shirley Jonts. Richard (drama) '61-Ray Oan!on, W1dmrrlt, And1 Devine. Two ad·l m Movit: "Portr11t I" TerrOI" vtnlJJrtr1 •"empt to en!e1 t • (dr1me) '65 -W1ll11m Campt>tll, Coma!Kht Ulllll lo reclaim lost @ Movil: '1he Shldow" (mystery) -r1l1tift1, ,c1pl\neil lone !inct In '3~ llHH11H, hldltn 1a!1.f1. @{])Perry M11111 m TfllDI .,. com.q''"'ftS cc> <30) m wMd ~ <C> (R) tl)1t"rtka 1ftioef (C)(f>OI Jl:30 8 9([1 M1n 'tiffil (C) A -:;~ Cl!I '°""' .. "' fillll CC) (30) lwo·part salu\t lo the bit bands, ''fl) fh Cf~ .. In HM!bres {30) lonirht and tomorro>t night. !ta· 7:}5 .fm C1ution de _st11ndo1 t111in1 Le' 81own, X1vier Cugat. 1:111 D @ @ iDL.tqli·l•1 (C) \60) ftedd1 Mtttln, Tu Benekr. -Stan Guest st11 Joey .Bishoo lurns Ut ' l<entori, 'Wood; Hf rma n Char1it -as 1 lai!lli1d. 11 Ali .Baba and 1t Buntt,. f11nkit"C.itt &b Crosby ,, prft~ .or-The'LHe(s Cl11b. . 111d ~•uiih'n Monroe. ' ' _ -·&'"*"firHfll $11fw• (C) (60) CJ ~ (i) m JohnllJ CIOtR (C) Scheduled iruests Ill Rip T1)'I01, Bob N!'lll'hlrt subs IS llos! R11 Dennis Wholey, l1111rs Danen and stevtns. Je1r, V1!e aueJt. . Slllrtey Eder. 1J M0¥lt ;11MI (C} _: _g @ (})OJ "'W!Jwttl '-111t tC) · 0 flE Okl Omtt IC) GueJta: (~ Bob Ellb1nh t\ost1,. Richard Ch1mbtr1tln, Oltfldt Jtet· :Jl~wl'£.~· ~C) (~) aon, Michael T~to11 Thom1s, M• ti Niii ~) IZ:OO 8 Mnit: "hrilMI lltfidlJ~ ("'JI· , .... l'*""' IC) (60) ,telY) 'il6:-Pat O'Brltft. 1:15 _.,,.., .... (~l '31 GE_D~ ~ (C) Guests: uo D Qt(i) ...... ,.., (C) (3~ 12:".~~· lfl\I . , ~LOqi dtcidlJ to .bold lht ir own l:00 8Mftit: "'lrl,..... (1dvtnlut1) iafO.. to pij !ht t11n on 1 l1nq '4"9-Rod Camtfon. --cG"lam woil1if • churcti 111111. • O O "m: IC) l" . I" ' --------------- TU l~D AY • -·-----~ • Ne•t ~op Musi~ Qero~ Al1yho.dy's Gness ' . By JOIIN J. ritEEHAN LONDON (UPI) -Who will be the Beatles' heirs? The mulUmiJlion-d o 11 a r. questton is ask-td nttmberless times daily ~ in the suites (Jf recording company ex· e<:utivesL in the offices where managers and ,promaters vie, and by mffii<1m (Jf rock music admirers around the world. The answer -still unknown -probably lies, most critics agree. in the rehearsal rooms, ballrooms, clubs and o n university campusts where a new generation of musicians is exploring ne1v popular music forms. Beth 1he artlslir a n d business wings of th~ music pr(Jfession generally agree the Roll ing Stones. who show no outward signs of flagging, will t'(Jnti nue t(J be. irrefutably, "The Stones," a title that to the band's millions (Jf ad· rµirern signifies "the lx>st ruck 'n' roll band in the w~rld." Mass "pop" appeal of Beatie dirriefl9ioo! is 91J0thtr melter, however, anCI on this there iJ almost total professionaJ agreement: char'lces a.r ·e min~I th8t any musician or band will match in ·the snort term lhe 22 smash hit singles. 12 successful alhums arni 12 extended play records that e)[· ploded the Beatles to such global acclaim. in the '60s. "The dream is (Jver," John LenOOn sings in his· current and first solo album. And he·s probably right. Times have changed. and the "heavy" sound ol Led Zep- pelin's thundering ampliflca· li(Jn hammered fans int() the ballroorns. halls and record stores as the 1970s began. The turgid backing lclnalilies of bands like led Zeppelin, Grand F unk Rai lroad, Ten Ta1·zan Co11que1·s LA Public Library By BOB TJJOi\IAS TARZANA (AP \ -Last \veek the Encino-Tarzana branch of the Los Angeles Public Library was !he scene of an unusual ceremony . The complete works of Edgar Rice Burroughs wer'-' µresented to the library by the author's hei rs To mark th~ occasion. the I 9 3 2 "Tarzan. the Ape Man." star- ring Johnny Weissmuller and Maur een O'Sullivan . w a s screened. Sflid librarian Joyce Burgin . "This gift not only gives us :in extensive ccllecticin of \vorks by the man who gave Tarzana his name. but will also meet Lhe gro\\•ing demand for Burrough's \Vriting." To Hobert Hodes. gt·neral manager of Edgar Rice Bur- rough s. Inc .. the 1;>ven! had deeper s1gnificanee. "This is tbe first time." he remarked. "that a library system has recognized the value of Burroughs· works." Always before. he said. the books had· been dismissed for "no nterary v':ilue_" For that reason. the Los A n g e I e s library syslein had banned Burroughs from the shel11es until ·last year. Other libraries niav ha ve had ano ther reason. in J!l!il. the Downey school district banned Tarzan books because of lack of evidence that "Tarzan and his mate Jane w!'re married before they took up housekeeping in 1 h e trettops." "Not true," insisted Hodes in his Tarzana headqua rters. once the "'o.-king place for auth-Or BurroughR Hodes c x p 1 a i n e d that Tarzan and Jane had paned in the first volunll', "Tar7.ar1 or !he Apes " Rut the dem and of his publisher and the publ ic pro mpted him lo reunite the pa ir In .. Thr Retur n or Tarzan " Hodes quoted from p;ige 3fi.1 of the second book · "They \rere married by Jane 's fa!her. an ordained minister " Hodes see ms oddlv cast a.~ keeper of !he Burrolighs trad- 11011~. He v.·ears mod clothes. <i lnve·symbol necklace and full be<ird. He adm its having nev er read a Tarzan book and ~carcely knowing the name Edgar Rice Burroughs before he becan1e at\(1rney for the enterprises in 1962. Later, he waS placed in charge by lfu)ber! Burroughs, son of the author, \1·ho bought a ranch in this San f'ernando valley suburb in 1919 and died in 1950. Hodes sa1(i !hat the anti· Burroughs prejudice exists throughout the U.S. library system, but he plans to break down the barriers. His plan of attack begins rn Europe . "Afte r the 'Tarza n' serirs went off television a couple (Jf years ago. I couldn't sell anything." said !lodes. "I decided to see wh<1L I could do about making the Tarzans hestsetlers in Fra1K·c. H that \vorked . I "'ou Jd spread lo other countries and C'\'Cntuatl v tn the United States." · ·rar7.an paintings "' e r c featured in <HI exhibit of ii· lustrations at th e Louvre. ;11ul a scholarly book 1v;is published about the nature of the TarLan character. 11lc s(·Jl in4 <:am- paign <i imed a! 1hl' Jn- 1rellectua!s and ii "'orked - ·:we outsold t·vcrything i11 ·rrance last 1car includin:; 'Papillon. · " · ' Next Corne· !he Gern1 j11V c<irnpaign which .ilso suc·- ceeded. he s.iid. Each nalic1n has a different selling <rp· prooch. In Gerrnanv it v.•<is the Superman lheiiil'. The February push in Holland wi ll :.:tress humor. In Italy nexl April it wi!I be ''eleganza." "England will bl.' t h f· toughest marked to crac k ... !lodes observed. r •·Because of 1he movies. tht> Englis h con· ~ider Tarzan to be kid stuf f. So 11·r wi11 instc<id int roduce the Burroughs novels about fl-lil rs. v.•h1rh were far <1t1f'arf of their l 1mC' .1 ~ sC'iCn{'e f11 ·- tion ·• ThiJ target rl;itr 111r lh (' Cn11ed Slate:;., sununer· 197~ HOLLY\\'QQ[) 1\ Pl l -Thi'. Lennon Sister~ niny rrturn tu television 1n ;i show ti1ltd "Living with lh C' Lennnns ... a half-hour daytime s trip series starring Dianne, Janet. Kathy and Peggy. ' It's ~lappy Ne\v Year for Monty lfall and h i~ a!>sl!>I· ant., Car ol Aierrill, 1\·hen the ABC show "Let's 'Make " Deal" moves to a ne1\' day and new. time. begin· ning ton·lg'ht. a t 7:30 on Channel 7. Years After and o l h er s , however. has touched , oU i revolt agaiilst hea vy "down" sounds. A hunt is under way , across the classical as well as popular fields, for music that "talks to people again." • '"The Band," Bob Dylan 's (J]d backing group, led large numbers of musicians in the Uniled States and Britain spinning back to tl\e-clean sound of U.S. country and western music. The Grateful Dead -"What a long strange trip it's been," they sing on their lalest album -have backtracked from th eir sophisticated "San Francisco Sound " to the crystal clarity of _American country 1nuslc. No "country" style band, however, has shown t h e sl ighest Indications of ap- prr>aching Beatie popularity Eric Burdon. who Jed his AT UCI FR IDAY Jimmy Webb Songtvriter Webb Sets VC I Concert Singcr-songll'ritcr .Ji n1 n1 1· \\'rbb will appear 1n cunccrt r·rid<ty at Li<.: Irvin{·. \Vebb's rcpertoire lncludr~ his p:i.st hits as wp\I as his l ;l1e~l wol'k and hu;.., .in· 1crpretat1on or the' ft'ork ur other artists His v n r a I perfortnance is con1plcmentcd b.1· his O>'.'n p i a no ac- c:ornpaniment. Animalll from NewcastJe·upoll· Tyne to {he United States and .stan:lom after the Beatles' clilnb. typH~ a_ group of musicians atU!mpthig tq, re[n. ject into rock,. the dynamics they Jcel became drawned in heavy inslrumenl.ation · and noise. "A lot of really terlible sroups were getting lots. or' hype and bi& money," Eric Lold UPI . "I said t(J myself. 1 'Aha' time has t'Ome for the Lone Hanger to sky ln! So I got Tonto -Y.'ar -and started in again_" Critics who hean::I Burdon and \V ar. •·a bunch of Southern California blacks" v.·ith a Danish harmonic<i player, in the United States :tnd during a wet>k at Ronnie Scott's discerning jazz club in London believe the band delivers sorne or the most exciting rock mu sic since the or iginal Rolling Stoocs. "Spill the Wine,:' a single from "Eric Burd(Jn Declares War," tlie first Burdon-War aJbwn. S()ld one million. copies aJ m(Jsf, in)mediateJy and a ,591 cond album. "The Black Man 's aurdun." has juSl been released. The n1usJc oI Burdon a9Ji War .smashes intb the barriers where a large number of critics are belling I t. e breakthrough into "I.he S()Und (Jf the 70s" will occur. the hoondaries between rock and jazt. whose ~ separate pro- p!Xlenls have eyed one anol11l'r suspiciously since E J vis Presley sent tradtional in- strumentalists reeling l n dismay. The revolt against heavy rriusic has spa.nned an arr<i y of soloist singers whose lyrics range from s o c i a ! com- mentary in the mode of Dylan to the joy-in-living style of music! typified by former Television Notes Beatie George Harrison In h1~ current solo album ' ' A 11 Things Must Pass." , A oumbet (Jf first etas~ singers have swung int() ~lion solos, including James Taylor, attracting C(Jnsiderable ah tention , Van Morrison, Neil Young in, the Uµited States, and . in Britain. Elton John. Roel Stewart and Cat Stevens, v.·h<lse recent American tour was a considerable success. ''Fine. we name names and we calculate, ht.ii all we'r•! doing is still a guess," a pro. ducer v.•lth a key British rec-0rding company says. "Bui you kno~·. somewhere maybe in London. maybe 1n Birmingh<1m . maybe Lo ~ Angeles or i::ome small to .... ·n almost anywhere -there·s a guy or a girl or a bunch of guys nobody really heard of yet. Chances are, there's your 1970s superstar .-and even they don't know it yet.,. Old Pros Hold Their Fans By RICK DU BRO\\' HOLLY\VOO D ( t.: PI l an epi sode ... Dean r.tartin·s Jan. 28 i'\ffiC-TV hour features sons and daughters of famous Notes to watch television by: performers-includ ing rrank The headliners: Bob Hope Sinatra Jr., Dino ti1artin and and Bing Crosby. according the children of Lucille Ball to the key television ratings, and Desi Arnaz (Lucie and continue to earn I he Desi Jr.J. ren1arkably loyal support. (Jf George Plim pton , the aulhor their longtime fans . . . in ,,.,.h6 likes to try personally the national rankings for the the skills he writes about two 11•eeks endJng Dec . 20. !Football, baseball. golf !. and a I lope program finished first v.·ho recently did an ABC-1'V ;ind a Crosby Christmas special with John Wayne about ~DC{'ia l placed second among movlemaking-"Shoot Out . Al all shov.·s (\14) another Rio Lobo"-has another un i- oldti1ner. Hobert Young, came que hour coming up on the in third with his ABC-TV same network Feb. 2 ... in series. ll'farcus \Vclby, M.D." this one, he joins the circus. Crosby . by lhe v.•ay, stars and the show is entitled T11esday as a physician in a .. Plimpton ~ the Man on the suspense drams, "Dr. Cook's f''l -T " G<Jrdrn." on ABC· TV's "~1ovie ying rapeze · It is nf !he i\icek ." i1·ith the Lale also reported lhat he 1.1•i ll do a specia l in \1•hich he tries arlapted from a 1907 Broadv.·ay his hand at being a nighl pl;:iy "''riucn by the author clu b con1edian in Las Vc~as. of "Rosemarv's B<iby ." Ira The programs· CBS-TV's Lt'vin ''The Point ." a detective w h 0 w "~1annix" "~1nvie of the Week '' surprised the industry by ~n1n1ated musJ.cal f<rnlasy na r· finishing No. I in the national 1 ated hy Dustin Hoffn1an and Jan_ 3 . , the sa me network ·s created and sung by the _ _ _ __ _ hrilliant pop composer Harry !\ilsson. airs for 90 minutes Oii .Feb. 2. .-'!'he siars of NBC-TV's- new rvlary Tyler Moore stries cC1n1e in fifth . . and NBC· TV 's nighttime Orange Bowl foot ball game b et wee n Nebraska and Loui siana State University ranked eighth. NBC estimates that almost 64 million persons watched Suriday 's pro football super bowl game between BalLimore and Dallas . . . according to the network. the five highest. rated sports events of all time on television were: ! I l Last year's super Bowl game 12) Lasl year's Tcxas·Notre Dame gridiron contest in the Cotton 801.1·1 13\ The fourth game of the 1968 World Series between basl'balrs Detroit Tigers and SI Louis Cardinals ..• (4) La:>I year's Hose B ow I nir·eling between Michigan and lhe University of Southern California . . . and 15\ the Fourt h gan1e of the 1963 World Serie.~ betv.·cen the Lo s Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees. , ''Bonanz:.i." Lorne Greene. lhin Blocker and 1\1ichael Lan - d(ln , are reported set with lll'\I' 111·0-year contracts, with each gelling $16.000 a show next season, and $17,000 a segen1ent the season ;ifler that lhey curren!ly get $15.000 -IJICUTU . llAll mT1I AM 111111 .llCflll• tta£f ._IUllQf HWl.mS WU IUUll •IMlllO ITM'l.ITN ! KlllOULI Hesponsible for the Gra111· 111y-winrlln g "llp. Up and Away." or the Flflht MO'< '""'~.A .... Olll 1•1' •'INl•<I "'lllAY AlllF0-11·30 llH 600d0.~> !Al I Ii.ti All!'O'l l.JO l I .JO ..... J,! 10 •I D 1 mens Jon. and Glen1 eo""u' P~cinc co~ST ll!CnAY ~nri st. Campbell 's h.Cs By Che T•mc,~J?:l)b~ I (,e\ to Ph ocn 1x ,'')~J11YJ,\IJll\':._..,lllll "Galv~sto~.' 1and Wt ch i I a * HEY KIDS! * i1-~:~;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~:-L1nem,1n \I.ebb also pro-1 Big Pal Show Today, 1:30 dueed his one cotnposition JOHN WAYNE 'MacArthur Park.' w 1 l h ''HELLFIGHTERS'' Richard Harris. and the tll'OI Harns alburns. "/\ Tramp Shin ing" and "The Yard \\'enl l on Forever.·· Aller d1sappe<iring lrom tht• field for a year of l'reat1,·e 111 introspection and musical 111C'tamorphosis. he emerged with his ~·on album, the highly ANO AT 7:55 ONLY ix·rsonal ··Jimmy L. \Vebb : .'U1111.l"'uRi fO~"' .... "" ~\orcls ;ind i\1usic." I CORlv1o•vs Wflll:DATS • flAP 7 &. 10:)() DINGU S 1:45 SAT. I. SUN.· FLAP 12:JO · il:lS · 7 & 10:30 DINGUS 2:30 • 5:00 & l :.ilS t• KIUTll COAST 'lAlA "" ,AlllNG Tht' pt•rformancf', ~ponsored MYRA bv Che Assodofed Scud'"ts ot l BREC KJNRJDGE I/I'_'.:::~---..:::::::;;::::::::.. ____ _., UCL will begi n S .. 10 111 n ;·~~~~,~~~~ ~~11 .allTic~f~~et~~~;: c.::~·;,;~;.(X).:-=.:-=~~. L; ~·t '•"··•:;.o~ "Mi:·A,,'·,SA·,H;'m'er•l'~~;tnho outlets, at lhe ASUCI office.I'-----"'"'"-"---------------, and at the door, $2 for uc1 1 ~---------- stud en1s. others $.1.50. • BALIOA ~ ~s110E;:1 Dc:~·~:;1· s~::. ~~!~'d 673-4048 -•'""""'' _... Ao Given tl1e Ax ~~!: lngoP1eminger •IOLLYWOOD (UPI ) 01ristopher Connelly. con•·i p!eting MGM's "Going All Out" in Atlanta, G\l .. visitrd the state capitol v.• h e r e Governor Lester M a d d o x presented him, wit h a n autographed ax handle. 7" r . l•lka Production hlbo. hnln1ula NOW.ENDS TUESDAY ELLI OTT GOULD "MOVE" & "SICILIAN CLAN" e STA•T'S WIDNESDAr e ; ii:• •-HIG>HEST IA.TING . THE IEST COMID.J OF' ' . o\!!I -ALSO PLAYING- The story of a beautiful girl 's hfet11 n(' between rhe ages of 19 and 22 ' . I NATIONAL GtN£RAL f'ICMlS ~B . J . : llN ..... .,,_ .""-"''"'~ flllca Color by DE LUXE~ Panavisione I I t • j " • l I ' • I t I l • > ' . . . . .. ..... . . . . ... Monday, January 18, 1971 D41L V PILOT !Ji' Everyone Hai Something That Someo ne Elu Wonts ~IL~ PILOT CLASSl 'FIED ADS he Biggest. MarkE!tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You C•n Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Wont Ad ~29 llarOOr, C.1\1. 546-8640 Thinking of I SELLING? I~ I --- _,,,_ ' 1~1-..... ---1~1 1 --- \ Generel _,., .. Gener•• Generel General General I General i::.:*=-;*--;*~*~*;---:*~I==~ fl~fl=/J== TAYLOR Co ol..inda Jj(e • PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES WINDOW ON THE SEAi $11 ,500 Luxu1'ous custom Co rona ·d el f\;lar home ov- erlookin g fa mous ''Arch Rock". Ideal for couple. SparkJing close-ini vu of the ocean & the sound of the surf make for joyful living. QUIET CUl·DE·SAC Mammoth !iv. rni., isolated master s n ite, 3 bdrm. DR. Yard has rlom for pool. $69,950. 16 Linde Isle Drive Decorator furnished. 5 Br. 5 bath home fac- ing Harbor Jsland. Jacuz'Zi & sa una. Ready for immed., occupaacy. \V/dock $200,000 ' For Complete infGrmation on •II homes & lots, please call : BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8. 641-4620 WHO SAYS!! Distinctive Executive Home Any house over 1500 sq ft has * 3700 sQ. ft. of CHARM!! to have 4 or a Bedroo1ru. • J\olagnificen! view ot the WHO NEEDS 10 have a 1 Harbor llOU:le designed to sleep an • Ln11ded 11.'ith sprc1a1 lea- You Can't Live Anyplace For FrH But ~OU COULD purchase this 1\clJ located ""est.side rriplcx and live in a com. 1 fo1·1able 2 Bedroom u n It arn1y "'"hen there's only J tut"M I or 4 in the family!! Y.'HAT -Bu111.1n \•ac-uum system ""ith priva!f' y.11rd ar't'a tore. YOU NEED is LIVING -Elecironic o\·en 1 ed alr heating and btii1t-ins i;pate not sleeping space, -ltUef'COtn for appro.'1(1mately S50 per mo. l&sed on 20<;(, dO\\'Tl.) Like 1hi! r;pacious 11900 sQ -Prier-Includes "'3sher /11 ;: Bcrtroom 21,1 Bath ho me + dryer, refrigerator · CALL 6U·8550 YOR DETAILS 111th Jar~e ~parale fami ly frrC"zer 100111 \1'ith \VE'l Dar. forn1al I -El<'clric garn£:e door dining and huge easy care • l Spac1ou5 beifrooms TWO HOUSES 1 Bedroom & 2 bedrooms pl u..s den. R-2 IOI, over 1100 sq. fl . Walkinr di.itance to tQY.•n & beach. $47,500. Ca.ti :AO tan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre St. ~!H·941l 54s.mt6 EMERALD BAY ''Our 2sth Y•ar" . ~~ru~~~~~1·t;;;a;1·i:~rb~~ WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors G.,,eral I General full value. The only ad-2111 Sen Joaquin Hills Road LARGE end LIVABLE 1 ~-;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; r~ar yard, all in tip.top con. * Unique, Tri-l!!vel • Con. dition, trn1riorary design ONLY $J1,500 • Prier -Unbelirv11hle \o ·THEREAL ""'-ESTATERS '-. . ~ ' . ... 3 BR. 3· Ba., sep. Jiv. rm., din. rm .. fam. rm m .ooo. -'========-1716 Emerald Bay By App't. Retirement In BUI Grundy, RHltor ditione.I chargl> i~ I ~C or NEWPORT CENTER ...._.910 EilJOY one of "C OS T A A HOME the selling pricf'. No * * * * * * MESA'S FINEST" }ocaled Wini 10% 00\VN $6i,OOO_ 546-23.13 corona del Mar I S:l3 Dover Dr., NB 6t2-46Jl At a price YOU can affonl. I 100" View of ocean .l gimmicks and no add i-near \VESTCLlFF SHOP. tional expense. We nffd l lG '~.~.~.-,-.-.i-'-'-1--"+--1 ~G=•=no==r=•=I============ PING CENTER. A mp I e you can grow into-· ! Ca tal i na . Small but A channin~ one bedroom btiildable lot in Laguna. ho.use plU! tncome for only $5,950 full price. I.ow dn hou1e1I It dOl'Sn"t cost _ room for your large furni- anythini;:: to c11ll 11.nd find See Page 1087 Yellow Pages. NEWPORT HEIGHTS lure. Three GIGANTIC BED. not out of Here is a u·uJy grc11.1 family home \Vil li roon1 lor tvery. one. 4 Bedroo1ns, 3 bath~. 3 car gara.i:r. forniat dinin;:, fan11ly rn1. & Ill(' 111asl<'r bed rm is big, Big, BIG:! Lush shag crpts & n1anieur. ed yards only arid lo the enjoyment that can be youn in this 2 year old home. One mile from the ocean! 539.000. $31,900. , & O.W.C. w/ low monthly out • yo11 might even TiiAi\'K YOU . . . . . . . . TRIPLEX ROOr-1S, new golden harvest savc! ! shag carpet, Double LOG Macnab-Irvine BEAT THE COLD Swint in your own heated Anthony Poot. Bring some paint and steal !his 3 bed- rm home. VA appraised at $24 ,l~lO. 1'~HA/VA terms. CALL NOW FOR AN I payments. Bkr, 493-115J or APPOINTMENT TO SEE 494.66.12 eves. 673·8350 IQ "7'u"IET""'&'-'-,,,.-=y-. 71~B~R~c~herm~~. GET Exceptional 3 Bdrm. $161. mo. total pmt. Takt' 01't'r subjrct to e..xistfns:: loan, this is the cleanest homr \l't've M'<'n in a long: limp • O\\·n"r askini:; S23,500 • St'f' it nO\I'. or il \\'Ill be SOLD! ACTION Eastside 4 Bdrm., l Bath1 No money do11·n to vPts -1011• JO\\' do11 n to any- hody. Ynu ~pt 11. spacious ~ bedroom ho111r Costa ~!Ps;a·s most desirable ar('a, "''Ith 11 douhl" ~R rage · tonvenicnl huilt- in ki1t'hrn -O\'ersizC'd Jot. Call now you'll b. glad you did. FASTER 'I. Coste M.s• Fixer Upper \Vo nderlui people lor your Cute older 2 BR & I BR uni ts SIZE fireplace In the fam· loyalty in 1970 at my new on rorner Jot. J07a Down, I ily room. Fresh sparkling address. Every llsll,n& with call for appt. Only. , • whi te decor inside and ouL Qu intard Realty v.·as sold in $l2,SOO 1970 _ and all sellers receiv. Bright, cheerful kitchen Pd the ne t agreed amounts. NO DOWN TO VETS '''ith garden v~! $2!XXI. in. ltial F'HA Investment -OUR This Is a GREAT REX:ORD 'Large 3 BR v.·ith 20x20 rum- b t th'. new ,..... BEST VALUE ! Sl'l,950. -u no ng "' pus room, l\rd,v.·d floor!I_ Charles Quintard, Realtor -Rear yard co mpl bk>ck waJI. the name you can really ed with jumbo cement patio lrust, NEED NO\V • single area. VA appraised at .•• home also . 2 -to -20 \;nits. $24,600 . Stop in and chat 11ilh me .. -TI-IANRS AGAIN. CUSTOM FOURPLEX Serving • LA le Orange C.O. ~uintard ~REALTY I Since IMI I Downtown CIMt• MMI I 1171 41 HA .. Olt 642-2991 L!~t wi!h C.Q. Buy from C.Q.' NO MONEY DOWN Nonna! closing costs ot ap pro.'. S~50. \Vi ii move yo in this spacious corner Jo location. Nea1 . 1\·en kep tll"O beift'oom home w I t h large Jiving room. a ttractiv" kitchen wilh dining counter and cozy concrete enclosed patio. Detached Dbl. gara(t' I -plenty of room for boat or trailer storage, or build TWO I ADDITIONAL UNTTS, An F..xcellent buy at only S2l,IJOO : wi th Jow FHA PAYMENTS. Choice Newport 11rea, 3 BR &. 2 BR units. Ideal owner Evenings Call 642-7438 occupied & tax shelter prop.l--B=1G'°'~F~AM=~1 ~L~Y~?.- eMy. $9,120 Income. $12,000 Try th is roomy 2 story 4 Down_ bedroom family h o m e . $75,000 Shake roof. cory Iircpl<1ct'. OWNER ILL · PLEASE HELP • 1pe.cious JS(W) ~q. It. covered patio. Huge perk si.tl' yard. Short \valk to major :shoppini:. Sensibly pri{"('(! at 131.i OO. ASK FOR Ji\N BERTHA Colesworthy & Co. Reahor Nf"\•·porl Beach Offlcr- 1028 Bayside Dr. 6T"'49.10 iorne i.11 just too much lorcl•---------onC person. You 'll fin rt a huae family room. and 3 \ery largr bedrooms. idr.111- 1~· located in nicest ~C"Ction of Mesa VerdP. Assumable TRl-PLEX $39,500 VI, Joan at :l\41~ Annulll (3 1 2 Bedrm units. separa!P t>Prcentagf Ra!e. tll US T one for owner. Live in and S~:LL NO\V! ! $33,950 Asking try S600 down FHA. price:. Newport JC-... co:TS ~WALLACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • EUGIBLE VETS SELLER PAYS COSTS!! That's right! J ust furniture and kid• needed to occupy lhiii. ramblini;:, tree.io;h11ded 4 Bedroon1. F~n!erlainment· sized Jiving r n1. Bar and burning fi1·eptact . Spacious 1111 elc<:. kitchen. Terrazo en- try sliding glass lo covered patio. New ex1crior paint. Prol. landscaping. Conven. ient to all. liurry or 11tand in line! Call (714) 962.5585. FOREST E. OLSON Tne. Realtors 191.11 Brookhurst Ave. Huntington Beach Realty Company LIDO ISLE· POLYNESJAN STYLE Lounge In yuur f"Xclusive ba1hing pool ~neath a Ta- hitian \1·aterfall. ~ Be-cl. rooms J baths J&.'1(36 Jiving room ~ith Bay· Vie1v. Lanai partially enclosed, drn, eX· tra boat garag,, illl J'e. modelcd in 1964. One of a kind at $89.aoQ. Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 675-3210 1-oTHEREAL 10. ESTATERS FULLER REAL TY NO DOWN Owner most 546-0814 move. Assume rnA 11_,,,% ing apt in residential neigh. borhoocl. Close to be:ach &. town. Employed sincle adult with referenct!1, $1l$ incl util. 494-A392. VETS_ NO DOWN IOHn. 3 br + fam. Lrg COZY cottage 2 blcks from 3 BR. 2 baths. Eastside C.L\t. cul-de-sac Joi, 1 yr old. Crescent Bay. Larie front f-11A . 110~ Dowo. L\tesa \Voods. SJ2,9aO. yarJ(. tttes, ptltio, 1 llR. FORTIN ro 642.500) 5:17-76:iJ $15" mo. Util. pd. 22S c.Jon, e COLLEGE Park's most ~479~··~""'=·=~~~-~c--I ••'~ ACRE. pool, 2 Br. 11nique hou5e. 3 br, d~n., BY OWNER • 4 br, 2 ba, Horses OK. O\\•ner. S2l,500. J"-, ba. New Landscaping, 1 playroom, fenced ya r d, • 545·6!HS * rustic interior, remodeled bltm, crpts, drps, decb, Back Bay baths. 5-16-0902. ocean view. $5'1,000. f94.-Ml2 ;:.:O~P~E~N.::.:H~O~U-S-E-.-.-F-,-,-.. -,-.'co""~zyic.1i11-~s~id~.~.~,,-;&'F~.~m=--=,=-m. _al:::_t~·~~-~~~-~1 by O''·-,. N•w -···t. Lo .. ,_ On Onk. GI/FHA or whatever INSPIRING view nr beach, ExecutlvP Relocation "~ .. 1~·" • 2 l ty garrlcn. Good crpt~. 3 S2·1,!l!l:J. 5~ Quin tard 642-2991 3 BR. Lge .deck, 1paclous 3 BR, I, BA. fami y rm, 11ep. dinini::: rm. ·2()00 sq. BR. 2 BA. r /R. dble frpl, Fountain Valley mod .. $39,7:l0. Xlnt buy. ft. t,, tge dblc garage. Very servk'C porrh. 011·ne r will Moss Realty 642.!732 Clean! l yr old w/frplc carry 2nd TD. lrnmecl. oc-Yes, there's a bea utiful Span. FOR Sale or Jse/optlon by & plu sh w/w cpts. thruoul. cupancy. $:l:l,500. 230 ~ l!ib Condo in Fountain Valley owner. Ocean vu, pool,~ br Xln! location in Tustin Fairhill Dr . ~IS-6683 Iha! has 3 bedrooms. 2 den, 2 ba, $49,000. 494-692i !-.t<'11.do1vs. Xtra lge lot at I========== haths. all the recreational Lid I I end of cu!-<le·sat'. Lge -tio Balboa Island o s • ,,... lacililies (pool, clubhOui;e, & mature tree.o; in bac:k J Br, 2 bit + g~t hi-e, pa1io. pool tables. pitch and put ON STRATA CENTRO yard. Cuslorn dnis, e.'1(-c:ov"d, fnd. nr war .. lrpl. I and much morel. Assume a 4 B~rooms, 3-%. Balhl lrnsiv' decorativr paneling, 35 Fl. + Lot 1 uod 1 1 . & 1 . $10;\1 dn, O"·n, car ls1. $22.000 7!J';O:. F.B.A. Joan roug1" swv1ng . r1111 673-6267. ··'th to<" paym•o•· total Street lo Strata v.·ork. Close to park & com-"I • ~. m.soo rnunily pool. Dras!ically 3 BR, 2 ba, gar, paho, sm price $26.900. C a 11 now. LIDO REAL TY INC. reduced to $35.950. Assume lot. Sl0,000 down, carry Isl. 546-2313. good VA Joan. ~~7 138 Topaz. 673-025:.! 33n Vie Lido 67J.7l00 Assume S l/41 o;0 Corona del Mer ** 40' Jot • Clean 3 br, 2 Loan 423 POINSETTIA ba. Ntwly redecon.~. . Large patio. rn.~. . . Sh !\fay \\"p. sho1v you lhis nice I KI S-2512 after 6 pn1 4 Br·2 Ba arp d"''"' 2 BR. & •·""· DIVORCE Daily Pilot Want Ade haw Take over this existing FHA ' Ch11.n11>C'rs hit.in oven & , Forces i;ale or this immacu- 5'% annuRI per('entagc rate rangr; sci-v . porch, cov. I 1are near.new 3 bedrm. 2 llbal""ii'i"i'li'l'i''i,..~···••I MESA DEL MAR 1011.n. 4 large Bdrms, • 2 patio: dbl. gar, Newer bath, customized Ayres I .. A must sell .. own~r has ba1hs -tormal dining. just plun1l:l1ng. Only $43,2;}0 -Built l'lome. All bltns, rlrPs, ,.---------,I bought in Florida. One or remodeled throout . rxtra Te1·ms A1Tangerl. 1v/w crptg, trptc, shake , Classified INDEX largest one story honic!I in large grounds. Very f t w MORGAN REAL TY ronf, proft>ssionally land-Advertising lhe area wilh 2000 sq. Ir. 4 good assumable loans left • 673-6642 675-6459 1caped, block wall. bedrooms. 2 ba1hs. large Better hu rry Dial 645-0.~3 RUSTIC BEAUTY HEAT~D POOL . $176. total down pmt Illus nnrmaJ rinsi ng cost~. 11.nd this 4 bi>droom 2 bath home \\·ill be your"S. All it 11ccds is paint and carpct. But a t this price you can't misio; • Asking $24,000 •11 __ E_'~'~"~'"'='-C_•~l1_64_2_·7~433c--- make offer! d Gingerbrea - COATS " WALLACE et Fairview 646-1811 (anytim•) family room. Beautiful car-FOREST E. OLSON O~!!n bca.m ceilings, Sou!h ~;~Y $~;,: ;~:c~~o:ss~~:11;f; pt>ts. Jlome lreshly pa inted REALTOR side pano: great location f loan a sleal a t $32,990!! .__-_ ... _-~!~ FROM Reduced $2000 Owner Sacrifice Thi .... elegant 4 bi>droom home has 2 luxurious baths, a family room, time savins: built-in kit· chcn \\'ilh breakJast bar. it's lrn:ated fn one of lhe nicest areas or C~ta ;\lesa and must b<' sold thi.~ \\"~k · Srllf'r will cnn.~idrr payini:: all buy- Duplex Water· Front & Dock Picturesque best describes lilt.se t"-"O lovely units. Jdst remodeled by an owner with ex:ce.llen1 taste. 38 n. boat dock I-davit for Pcin1- mer. Located on Balboa Peninsula and Ideal inv~l ment or hidt>a~·ay. Better hum•. Dial 64:>-0303 FOREST E. OLSON I REALTORS 2299 Harbor. Costa Mesa REALTORS -54Ml41- insirle and out. CIO!le to St. 2299 Harbor. CO!!!a l\Tes11 only ~2 blk, to the lleach. 2 Call.for appt 968-2919 Bkr. Johns aod a[I s<:hool11 plus, ... ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.., I Bdrm., 2 bath. '54.!f.iO. " ~ Classific:a tion I 00-1-49 (0pt;n Evenings) shopping. C.U now M&-2313. NEAR HARBOR HIGH Delancy Real Estate I $] OOO OQ R••I Es111•, • lcP. M.lStic 4 BR J Ba. home. 1 2828 E. Coast Hwy. CdM t • t_ __ c_ ... _'_'1 __ _, EASTILUFF HOME oTHEREAL \('. ~STATER.S POOL HOME Zoned For Bus;.,.,. . Room for lo ts of kids \Ye c_ozy home a~ tro~ thriv. S6SO TOTAL • · 1ng ~w Builder'r; Empor-ha'io? ;, bedrooms and three . fl 1_ h S -is all yuu need to buy this baths. Want to swim~ \Ve c'"mt ''Mi.st 0 ..._.11 b '·1.,!~ 3 bedroom at nC'w 1 ~1 ':~ h t. .1 l 1 W 1 os a C'Sa. u1 1ve y """, FH \ 1 ~ 11.vr. a aull u poo. an Sa t A St &: C l\ f r , , annua percenlai;:e tn huy a boat! \Yt. have ap;'~ ,:a see ._ S:S.n~. I rate. WE SPECIALIZE in room to pa_rk oU !he street. FULL PRICE $25 000 low do"'·n payments. \\'ant 11. 1w1ng set? \Ve ha1•e ' · w lk & L ""'m for tho! ooo. ""' • a er . ee over 2,000 sq, fl, 8Jt.1n kit., I 64•1.72ill ' Total Cash. Vacant 3 bt>d· Claisification 150-1 14 family room, frplC'., hugc I SHORJ.:CLl f"f'S 0 n da-~m. 2 hath. fi~place, new ~ m str. BR .. dressin~ room, lly l'4: 30. 302 E~Pnin~ Canyon pa1nr. _ Close to Douglas, •--'-"'-"'_"_' __ jl • Greci11 n beth. 2 PattO!i. As. . , i;hopp1ng & sC'hOols. . ., P . Cahf. ranch ~tylr. Xlnt f111n. BRASHEAR REAL TY 5ume 5* ·· loan. nee llv hon1e. Li;r patio. 4 BR, • C lasiification 200.160 $36.500 I :i·BA. Don V f'rdnklin Rllr I S-17.s507 I ~ ..--.-... 6iJ.2'222 · ' · PRESTIGE home UIOJ model H<u91fr:rftlnt I fl! ........---............... IRVINE TF.RRACE Custom il?ol I _ p.atio .. 4 BR, Coldwell Banker 38 => 3 BA, family, dining 1mmed. C l ·1· 1. JOO J6S ..~,., , w & c' a ss1 tea ion • aaa ~ Charming 3 BR • 2 RA . occ., Nr arner raham. , -------, ............._ --~ ~ TED HURF.RT ~ASSOC By O\\'ner. s~~.SIXl FHA {iY. I Apar11MfllslorRent ][W} ._..__.. r.E:,\L TORS 11~sum. loan. :i.11·9770 Days/ _ _ rrs rinsing rostio; t.., ,.,..t~ 11----V-A~C~A~N-T~--I at lht> l)"lfl''"' m11rkrt Cine school district! New. port! . Co!ta tllf'.«a. \\"11nt a \-0 THE REAL '-0. EqTATE~S ~~"~t''' "'·"'· Pho~ 1~~e"'EA""c"'H~UN'"1"'Ts~= 1 Rral10fll 7682 Ed i/\ger ' · · l ,.-, .. rv. 8·16.fi706 eves &_ wknds. 83~0700 644-1430 .·ITT Via t.iin ..... ·""' • C!a,sif ication 360-370 'i~~:l~~~~~:; OCEAN·harbor vit>w, L1i;k Huntington Beach price nf .$29,950 • Hurry Ready to move in Jt•s beautiful. • rustm intcril:ir. 4 BR, LJ.: lam rm. 11·r1 h:1r. 2 !rr1c·~. The Hous• That 171 •0 8~241:iJ Or a-10-3140 FARROW V1e.,11 of lhc ocean trom al· mos! hal f atrp \vith sharp 3 twdroom amid Jols of trees on a. quiet cut d' sac. Car. pet~ and drapeii., O·n I y $26,500, O"·ner will help D~ ance wilh 10% down or ac. cept VA or F11A terms. MB-nn or 546-2313 TH[ Rrr,; ~ t:STA'l i.I<'._; NIW I I Just 1~i1ted tarae Republic UNITS only 7 yr~. old. NEWPORT HEIGHTS Ne\\'flOrt Rhores, cl~ to beach. Excellent lnrome or 2 Hon1e11 On A Corner Lot $1,570 f\.lo. No vacancles, 14 A Good Investment Al aaragcs. Sl35,000 $29,750 CA.LL e •••-1414 Roy McC•rdle Realtor Aw"lllL 1s10 Ne;::_~vd., c.M. 7:EALTV I ""~~~~~~~!""" Nt1r Nt•por1 Pe11 orrlc• REPOSSESSIONS 5eparnlr srr\·. p1irch. ::.r·11r Terry Built gHr, l'Ollt"ly1I, $ 7 4, :1 0 0. fi·H-52:,.'i 0\\11('\". Trn)' wa.~ supcrintendent ol --construction for Suburbia INCQ,\1E Cdi\f, 2 houses. 97,. return. Close to evrrything. Park !ract a.nd added m&ny 6 UNITS c1.ssific.1tion soo.sto $75,000 good spendable Exclusive with us -Eastside! ! 2 BR l BA each. Bltns, relrig.', crptg, drps, fenced w/complete privacy, gepar. $38.500, Phone 499--3622 L"U5tom features into an al· ready beeutltul Sp&nl!h 11ty!e , ______ __, 11 ,) home with 4 hr. 2 ba, tam-Ptr•OMI• ily room and formal dining room. Situated on a cornPr Cl11sific1tion 525-5)5 ale patios. 2 Blocks to 17th Costa Mesa Sr. shopping. Present Income 1---------- $850 J)e'r mo. but should be GORGEOUS n.lled, Good term.•. 3 BEDROOM tot with room for boat/ $37 .SO Moves You In If you're a V!!l stllcr "'·ill co11sldrr paying your eloslnll! costs. Fam- ily ('mt'rgrncy forced immcdlatr. vaca ncy. It'! a brautiful 4 bedroom 2 bath ranch style home ln Costa Mm fl\1esa d,111 -~====~=.,..~• Mor i. r;r.ptocc. b"llt· POOL Homt w/arttt Ooor plan in-EMERGENCY SALE cNdlfg m&alJve aunny kitch. Bring yoo offer on thi~ prime erillfuiily room arrange-Irv. Te1T. 3 BR. home w/ me,._ 4 Lari:e bednru; I; pool &. many extru for vie~ tut aoes forever: like choice livlng, Asking $59,500 livl1", in the country. Owners by anx.iou1 owner. Sparkling clean homes, 10me newly painted & carpeted. 2, 3, 4 &: 5 bdrms. Some with pools. f11A-VA ronv. terms, trom $17.000 to $40,000. Lachenmyer ~Rlf'y• with IBA Loan of 6% % an. c.an 646-3928 Evt ~5' nual pen:enlage ra!e 1nd • ' • total paymtn1s or $162 per !railer. Located In e:ccrllrnt Lott Md fOUlld jJnl liuntington Be1ch neighbor-_t..::i.J !ta. t:Y.•o car g&rage, shake root. family room In move In condition. See to bf.Hew. If you're looking for a bar.1tain this is It at $29,950 don't wait • CALL! We have OJ'.l@'nlngs for 2 lull lime salesmf'n to com plete: our profe11ion- al &ales «taff. If you wanl more: 11cUon, a fa~ter pace and more sales call now and ~e "71" a good year. ' 2626 llartaDr Blft. OPEN ms. 'Till 8:30 2629 Harbor. C.J\I. Sp11.rkling ii bedroom home [ with beautifu l Roman pool. Fully c:arpeted, all !.ilb. family rm., rovetcd patio, f!re pit and more. OnlY" $35,950_ Call 545-8424, CollinJ &_ Watti: Inc. 8S43 Adams Ave. 962-5523 Bayshores-Reduc~ ~· Aokina 152·"""· CORBIN- MARTIN 4 BR.. reduced $4.000. On BayAho~ Dr., only 1tcp1 IO the beach &: dock. Encl. REAL TORS 644-7'62 patio: 4 baths. Now $74 ,000 Tod•y'• a."larn Great new )isling ln Mesa Verde's popular Catnbri(!p. serle1, -C It Fa.mily room un. der 134.000. Ortt red et even no dn pmt to Veta, or low tllA tirma. WE HAVE RENTALS month; \Vhy Rent! Ready to move. C.!llfl't'bl and drapes throoul. ~luge bedrooms also cou ntry.style kltclltn. Over. sized fenced lot. GREAT LOCATION. Submit yoor do"''" payment after viewing. Walker & Lee m l~I"' C•nyon Rd. ' 1 "Armchair Househunttng•• ·511t ' '279J HArbor Blvd. at Adams $28 900 Hom• Sllow RHllort ~· Re•ltor. wou1.t YoU believe S58.0CQ In J Bdrm ..It Den •~""' E. "··•t Hwy., CdM -~-~• -~. '"! 9 PM .. ,.. T --,.REL ~-~. btllbtJru1 ShOrecllH!f 3 BR., Femlly rm. 67S.7225 ' ~·· ""'· rm.; "'· ~'· s .. ,lllul ,......, -..... ol HUltRYI HURRY! ECONOMY PLUS-al 1blck yard. Used brick dhiclnction, 'CtntnJ floor DREAM HOUSE H:O~.~H Thi. -"-"•1,,, 3 BR.-2 .~. , 1, bltn. BBQ 1n kHch. eat. plan. Parle like yard. Open New Wel11.Bulit home, 4 BR, ___,.~ ~-··.,.o·m··'•.1,_ .. ~~~~"3·t .. ~~ . .-o.o 1thl1 N...;::::' •··ch ,_. ~~ tes atta. to 9 pm. 540-11JD 3 Bl, J'Wdr rm., tam rm ·~. , .. M • ...... """ .,~·...,,,. -~.. am. o;--· ~ 111 C LL 67S.57211 /f I Unobstro !ed wt. to.' ihit.-tvacant'l bed-Uy rOom hQrue, Immaculate avail, 'iQr im:mM. ,oc:cGpan. A TARBI LL 2955 Harbor :a.y l'JIV~w front :reR. ur;:r room .. be:i.Uty .tlth FIR& land&caplng, C>Wner mu1t ey. Loe, In VI .ldttJ ertt, ' !-· BEACH SPICIAL a.cp di n rm & liv rm. couri Pt.ACt,-lil.iUt~rc, ipd mort, IN!ll fmmedla1eJy, Take ovtr dOle to all tchool•. $3.\.IOQ. f ~ • ii Bdrm1, 2 blU& ~ cond. yard pool. $10R.9oo. Roy J, Seller ~ "SJ.:12,, I'll P'Y ~enl• of $165 ptt mo Incl 67,S..3000 ... ,u;i;;,. 7,i; Slept lo OCN11.Jlllb $33,950 Ward, Rltr. 646-1550, open )'OUt ClOlts. $36,750! pfinc Int wees & Ina: Call . 1'"°'0 doll)'. mu Mari ...... "'· Walke"r '"lee ,.,.,,.., .P.n ...... . E'j 111' ,\ Ill II 11 Ill Ill\ l\t ' •-~ tr LMN-,.,.,_ CAYWOOD .. ,~TY _, --w ~-H NB * LIDO SANDS * I I t BJIL 2~ &... trplc, 2 Car -..v -"'.....,. ..,.., Real ton F ~ H 't 1 -1211 lmma•.. ..,,,.. ...... homt, en ........ • .-.r. Y .... o&d. -l;I;. Fl, · ' Nl!'W pelnt &: wallpt.per. 3 1m Eainatr .A"1 O:md. Vacant quick pot.-$24,500 BR., 2 baths. Prtv. commun., ffiil) tQ.4C55l or 540.51., -. : .. ~~:e,.~ SfS..2300 3 8drm +den, lfute famUy w/pool prlvtle~s. l Blk. fO SJ7,f5Q $1!,750 OR UE OPMON * OCEANFRONT * e 8111 Hev ... , Rltr. . nn. firtple.ct aablb.I wood ::-_ean. rtSM~. -L R I 4 BR + Femlly rm. Sp&elous &tild~ 2 BR, 1"9 DUl"'Ll!X 2111 ,E . Cmlst; CdM m.3211 eahlnett; boli'1-1ns. Opt" till r.ewpo 09•~ •• ty BcautifuJ h&me. IAJ11! rooma. Ba. townlw! condo. Like Comp. fumlshrd, J Br, uo. 9:00 PM. No down ltrm•.1 --,~615-,.,,~l-'4~'=•-ny~t~lm,,_'cc--llup ramUy rm, dining rm, nl!w, all biln1. p 11; t Io. i Bft. de'lwn. S7t.i j TJtlPLEX-NO DOWN 54(1.1720 ONLY 10-/. DOWN 4 1.vtn 1b:ed btdftioms, en-111ra11e. Nr pool A. clobh11e. George WllliemMn to vtil. Lg 2 BR unita, f:nc: TARBELL 295.5 Herbor 3 Bdt'TM., 2 ba. Pride or own. try hall, ttnh'al (loor plan. V11.r.anl. U n d er JI r l cc d . R•eltor / lfl1"81"1!. patlnw. Only p.:j,000. Sell kUe Items noW1 • r:tshlp. Corner lot. OJMon to 9:00 PM. M0-1720 Owner. !14~1 67~l50 '45-1564 e'f'fs I BROKER. 64&.8226 Call 642-fi61! Now! _,-_,H_i_o_0>_. ____ 01 __ •0000_. _T_A_R_8_1_L_L_295_S_H_e_rbo~r iWe'tt he lp yoo 1tl'"n"°6<T.2-<67=;;;-s hood near 1chool1, beach, and !hopping. Mu.rt be seen 10 be epprecla.ted! ! $39,!IOO. Phone 54().2313 for showing. •o · THE RF.AL 1 "\.. CSTATt:RS VACANT 4 8IDROOM $19,000, 2 BatN, lie living room, bltna. ele:c: range &: oven, family room, 1pa.cious bedn»m1 with private bath oft muter, cal'f)t'ta, drape&, dble aarace. fe~ ' Jand. tea.peel. iprlnklen. low dOwn Pf')'IYIMt, movt tmmedlattl)'. .__""_''""_""___,I~ C lassification 575-510 1-.... -1151 Cl11sificetion 600-•9' '-----...,._,,,_ •• __,l[Il] Cl•1sific:1tion 700·7 I 0 ·-·1~ l' • ~ 1 ' I Cla11ific.atien 100·136 ,.1-44,11::.1!1!tJ l -.... -. I~ GI /NO DOWNI Clissifi~tion'IS0.111 CAN'T 81!AT THISI ONLY $15,'90 LaTp ldtchen I: family room! Low FHA term, .alto. HAl'l'DAL REAL TY 142- Hunt!"""" Herbour l~I Clonlfl._ 900-tll >....-..:...r.,.:...._· .. _11oo__,J[i) Cla1sific&tlOn 91 l-947 --~ . . .. . ~ . . . , ... DAILY PILOT MonctiJ, .JMuMJ l& 1971 ~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~11 ~~~~ ~-;;;;; ..... ;;;;:;;I~;;;;;; i I -·~.. I~ :;;-I ;;·~ ... ;;·-·:i·;;·~I ~.--_.~11~ --~ .... ;;-~l~;;e:1 :;I --;;;---~'~~ Lklo l1le Newport Beach _ Condominiums Bu1lnes1 Houtes Furnished 300 HoUMS Onfum. 305 I for ••I• 160 Opportunity 200 I * $51 ,950 • '* • 4.i Joi • Sm 3 br, hltns, lum. 215 Ravenna. O"'fll'r 675--26-ll * On B•y W /Sli p * -L•!"!'" Buch Bolboo ltlond fittathtaking V1rwl VENOM , RENTALS 3 Bdrm -2 Bath Pool. B.llt'On)'. Elev, De·11a whli.1 ~ou·u ...... eon thla WHY WORK ' • UNf'URN • M•u Verde lu.\e 2 bdrru apt, lncon1par. • bednn, 2 bath with pool F R A 1~1~rl., ~.~~ l • 61.,.a721 &It 6 PM t~R SALE BY OWN ER I able value · only S:>2!.I. & recreation faclllties, Ex· 0 .t palh lead to bff.ch, Com-1 a.u;o; CovM Condominnun S P an is 11 • 1 ?-10.SS REALTY G-12-8732 cclJ'-nt investment -acr'Olls LIVING7 p!'-~1y turnlshed. F~lace. \11/w carpe:T,' drapl's. bltns, TAX DEDUCTION , lrom propoSf'd Fountain Val • Peggttl Door. Lease $215 Mo WATERI'RONT, dttor, 3 1irt.pl&.ce. 3 br. 21,.z ba. I Duplt'x; l Br., I blk, ocean I lt'y Miracle Mlle, 2. :i bdrm. furnJabed apt. a l BR. 2 Ba. Mo. to Mo. $350. &au1lful grounds & pool. & hay. No varany. $3600 $13,SOO full prlc• Would you !iii(. 10 rttltt, right Woods Cove. 151) yd!. 1< Bill Grundy RJtr. MZ-4620 Low nlaintenanct. Adults. yeat·ly 1n1·. $.13,500. I l arwin R•alty, Inc. now? And work only 10to12 be11.ch. Lee. tree shaded pa Coron• del Mar 5-1~. 11'12-1?7:.! owner/broker 961-6918 anytim• hours a wef'k at )'Our own tio, Lease 1163 Mo, 3 BLKS TO OCEAN Newport S..ch BALBOA COVES I Duplexei/Units pa ce? Then you're ready l. Lgt>. older 2 bdrm., un to considf'r becoming a UIJ furn. unit, close to down. 3 Br, hou~, 6 mo lease,$~/ WATERFRONT sa le 161 Distributor. town Fireplace w/w car. mo. lncd s stove & relng. NEWPORT HEIGHTS SO. OF 15th ST. $30,700 Prime Joc 3 BR 2 ba single I TRIPLEX _ COSTA MESA pets ' iota ot w~ paneling I FencN. yard, dbl garage. stnry Ne"IY decor .. Fenl·ed I ,... __ _. 1· .1 UIT Snack ShOp Vendlnr Ma. Le~ •'Kn. P.!o . Vacant now. 673.7499 alt S d "" f boa _1 ·-~ ~ '"-""' lllllrt('lng now ava1 . h"ne rov bu.sine ~ · · I e' ·,11 "" L . I ... ip, ,,i.......... Prl('('(f lo sell. Close to c 1 I ar.e a~ en. . SI r.USSION REAL'IY I LIKE new 2 br & den dining Grundy, Realtor I shopping & many other con-op~rturuty 1~4 S:'> b~~~ 985 So. Co.I.st llwy. l.a1Una rm, frplc, crpts & drp.s, Sll Do\'f'r Dr., N.B. 6-124620 ,enienees. m er, 8 m et in w JC Phone 494-07J1 No pets. Days 675-not: 1 :'\!US1' SELL BY O\\'NER I B1"\lkC'r. 2131789-87();1 80% ol the ~uainf'ss is done e.ves 671--6974 That's nght! Unbrlievabt(' in NE'"""JlOrl Beach. View. Lari;c BR's. For1nal (J1n1ng rn1 , Huge paneled farn. rm. \Vl!h cathedral bean1 ceilini:s. 2 fireplaces .J.. BBQ. Cherry kitchen. 2 baths. Lath & plaster custom btulL Terrnc. e-d rear yard. Bnck pa1io • \\lon't last, Hun-y and call (71~) 962·5.l&5. Rr.u1d ne"', fee 1>1n1plc, 1 by lhe grnajt independent OP· COZY cottag'-2 bib from 03'-iBoRc-"~2-'iba""--,c,-n<ed-~y-anl~ blk beach, l br. 2 b<I, 2 Income P roperty 16' erator. you can sla~t your Crescent Bay. Larre front N'-ar' beach' S25o mo 414 frr1Jt, IJCarn ceilings, \•fw TRADE Equity 24x60 O!ym· own busmf'ss lor as little~ yard, trtts, patio. l BR. Fernleal, ~7176 . t·;'l rpo"·!. huge dbl ga r . plan n1oh1le home. 1-·at-" 10 hours a Wl.'ek and build $150 mo. Util. pd. 225 Cajon, FRONT H 2 ""- • ,., -~"" "'" L"\.I profits , wilh hard ~'Ork ou5l', owms., 611-1'"'*" Jn heaullful Orange County __ _, ood, • . 494-8946 2 ba carp drapes • ..-..n I k ....... g Eel'VlCt' •• '• ' -•223 OCEANVIE\V Avl.' frir r<ir for rqu1ty duplex, · Newport Beach Month. Agent 675-no.1. sale by O\\'ner. View ol Bay 1riplcx, 4-p!ex, C.M. area. You need no experieru:e you Cott• Mete FOREST E. OLSON I nr. Realtors 19131 Brookhurst Avt. Huntington Be11ch WONDERFUL WES TC LIFF & Ocean. f.4&-7983. * 5-lj..l!241 * make no personal sales Call5. SHARP 2 BR/, cmpltly Newport Heights Lots for Sal• 170 \Ve ,,..·ill train you, rnUJll!el remcxleled. Steps to OCf:an. you and secure your Joca·1~2l.1_l_598_·4,""~·~---~= OCEAi'l view -4 br. 4 b.:i. lions. Your $6«1 to 11500 in. HouHS Unfurn. 305 l.t:e run1p11s rn1 \v/bar, lge M· 1 Half Acre vestment covers n1achlnel---------- liv rn1 , fl·p!r. 3.000 s!J ft ·f-Lt-vet lot ready lo build. Out and product. •. no hidden G•neral RoO .sfJ n unfinishf'd. $•19,509. of town ow~r will ~nance cost.'I or fees. l·W-H_E_R_E_E_LS_E_e_•_n __ Y'_"_U_nd_ ;i·IS·:'i766 or ,'i·lS.5::171. or n1ay cons1dl'r leasing, -PLAN YOUR PROFITABLE 8 large 3 bedrm home w/2 Santa Ana Heights I Phont' 646-7171 RETIREMENT • , WRITE batM, family rm, elec bltns, 0\1/Nl'.:R TRANSFERRED TODAY! • dishwasher, newly painted, big patio with BBQ, large $1000 assun1es 71~! G 11 fenced yard f(lr only $225 mortgage 5 BR. family rm., per mo? VACANT AND 2700 sq. fl 5-1~2992. 1 E-l "'ATIONALLY AVAILABLE NOW, call Brand new J1s1ing \Vlth sp11c-University Parle NO better view lo! in Arch .i~ agt. 546-4141. ious floor plan, Attractive Beach Hts, Laguna. Rt.as. ADVERTISED BRANDS ~~~--~-~---- tiled rntry hall, near new Xlnt fin. By O\\'nt.r. MIN. division o! Ull l BR turn mobile ........ 175 carpeting, shake r00I. A TENNIS ANYONE? DO\o,;N $2500. 546-8790 bet 1275 PROFIT DRIVE 2 BR vacant, fenced ••.• $115 truly comfortable horn; in I This beau.t. t.o"'·nhouse is n~ar ' lO am & alt 5. 1 DALLAS, TEXAS 'rJ2.47 2 BR C.M. kids/pets OK.1120 an excellent area. $4•1.950. thr !cnn1s els. & pool, CWer. l\10NARCH BAY am interested in more in· 3 BR bring kids/pets . -1155 W I k & L looking Jargl' greenbelt. Lo~ · . 1 • ~e. oct~n formation about making 4 BR kids/pets OK ...... $180 a er ee of ~r1vacy, Ve~ little g~-~:~h ~~~m:~u_sz;.:~~d mont.y in thf'. vending bU!i· 3 BR stalls ho~ OK .. 1~ dening. Have tune 10 en.JOY 121 f::iO '196-4819 ness. I have a car and 10 STAR.LET n•7330 Realtors yout"Sl"!f & thl!i 4 BR. 2,,~ . . hours Ptr "."'eek spare ti~e. $~2 8 w/ d Kids & 21>13 \Vestclilf Drive ba. honte. $3j,9;,(J. Quick LAKF. Elsinore: 3 11.d j D I can invest V.00 1n a 1 r. yr · &16-7711 O~n 'hl 9:00 Pr-.1 !1illside lake view to route pets \\"e come, EARLY AMERICAN occupancy. casino. S3000 ca.sh ~i«~r 0 J ~11.n invest $1500 in a Blue Beacon * 64S.Ol 11 fD d h•11 1 ~1&-1 100 ' ' route. 3 BURM. + family nn., full Channing J BR & fan1, rm. • re I R~nr~hv:s~ Farms, 180 ~~;r:s;·::::::::::::::::::::: ~~~nga ~~n~Ut~~-·~: Beam ceilings, wood pan<'i. City ......................... Newport, 54(>...1720. ing, old bnck !qilc. Ne"'' REALTY St11.te ........... Zip ........ $135-Huge t Br. w/lrplc. cpt~/drps. Elect kitchen. I Univ, Park Ccntrr. lr1"1nc Phone ( l .................. Stv/rel, ynl, gar. Child & 11Mek bar, dining area. Cal! Anytime 833-0820 S AC HORSE RANCH Dept, 2969C pet Large enclosed yard gar PICTURE: BOOK SETTING Blue Beacon * 645-0111 on alley. $31.900. ' Westminster Lovely new luxurious 3 br sh:i k~ rool. "'bite ff'nced, Busln•ss Wanted 210 $14~3 Br.11,i Ba. R/0. Cpts, CALL ~ 646·l414 $3,000 DOWN d ~ Chld I ~ ~ ample 11•;Her. Must sell $500 WANTED; Small bu.sines& In rps, Y•u. rn Wf' c. ........... ASSUME 60/o GI LOAN do11·n To reliable buyer. the Newport..{::O!!ta Mesa Blu• Beacon "!r 645-01..!._!. REJ\L~ Of'EN SUN: 1~2 King Cir, $2'9,!'(J(I 101111 . t714 ) 684-5555. area. Preff'r mail ortler $151>-Redec 3 Br. Nr heh. Nttr Nltwporl Po1I Orrlrr 12 Blks Ea~t of l\Tagnoli11 & Today or e\'I.'. electric fixture business fl l Stv/cpt~. Kirls &. pe1s ok. *NEW LISTING * EdingC'rl. Sh<1rp 4 Br/2 Ba manufacturing level 'Or akin Blue Beacon* 645-0111 I plus many xlras. \V /beaur r f oth ro-Brarh duplei1 : 3 BR 2 ha. br~trrl pool. On lg, cul-di.'· Real Estate Wantff 184 ines or open or er P 3 BDIL'1 Family rm., park each unit. l\.1int t.'Onrl. VII.'\\' duels .. Ms i~ 1~11 description like yard. Costa Met.a. Kids s11c 101, Hurry• \\'on't Last~\ to: Rile 0 Lile, Box 4642, OK brk 1200 a month NO from owner's living rm. Sun. deck ovf'r &lll'a gc, $67,500 • Including the land! Bkr. 213/431.~. 1\pt Units In good location Glendale, Ca. 91J'.>2. FEE. 54.ti-1?1.0. · \\'anted by pvt buyu, Cond Call: 67J.J66J 548--0lli eVf'S. not important 675--3511. Investment. R111 £51111, [.II/ Opportunity 2211 $135-2 Br~ \lo' I gar. lt'g tncd yrd for kids k pefii;. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 2025 W Dalboct 67l·l66l Gener.al ~---~ 158 1 ""'~;,, 11•1 IN~T.~~tt15 Property TENANTS-LEASEBACKS Blue Beacon * 645-0111 FOT' 1hal ltf'm under try the Penny Pincher $50. HERE IT ISi I Shopping Center Si te Busineit 4 Hoge Bedrooms -2 Luxur-10 ar. c.2 do1vntown San Opportunity 200 OFFICE COMMERCIAL & APT BLD'GS Juan Ca pistrano -or can be ,' ious Baths. $2•1.000 Price -~plit !nr tlevclopin cn t. Bier, -----------1 VA and FHA Tcnns. Car-'1ll,1.JIS3or-193-J706cves. *CANDY SUPPLY W. R. DUBOIS, INC. (R. E. Brokeni) 545-7lli6 CLASSIFIED HOURS pets. Br1 ek F1~placl'. Dou. I--------'--"-DISTR. * Mon•y to LOllln 240 bl'-Garage . f'"enced Yar. Condominiums (PART OR ruu.. TIME) CALL -;;;';"r;;;; .. ;1e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;160 VERY rnc11 INCOME 1st TD Loan W I k & L • Now av11ilab!e in Cos!:i l\1esa a er ee RECRl::A1.ION minded peo-:ind 1>Urrounding aroos. All 8 :00 11o.m . to 5 p.rn. :r.1ond1y thru Frida y 9 to noon SalurdRy Advl'rllsen; mar, place their adll by te ephone 7~~% INTEREST ReaHoni 2nd TD Loan COST A 'PolESA OFFICE 3.10 W. Bay 642-5678 Zi9(1 Harbor BJ11d. at Ad<1ms 545.9491 Open 'Iii 9 P t-1 OCEANFRONT pie move 10 "TIBURON" -locations arc commcrci&l or 1r you have !iv('(I "rondo-) factory furnished by us. n1in1u1n stylr" ;uxl k1vt'd it Qualirirrl JX't'!lon "''iU bernmc -move Ufl In TIBUT{QN I rlistnhutor for our candy Terms bued on equity. "'hel1' rral 1ownhouse 1i11ing •Nestles, Planters, Tootsie 642-2171 545-0611 NEWPORT BEACH. 2211 W. Balboa Bl11d. 642-5678 \Vith a sea & sail 111rw. Old l!> Jn lull sii in~. P.ol1s, "!Ilk Duds, etcl. You Setving Harbor area 21 yrs. Newport charm \\'f~pan1sh H ;.·ou haven·r 1r1e1t ii ~ in-mu<;t hll\'e 2 to 8 hrs per S•ttler Morflil•lil• Co. H\JNTTNGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. :>40-1220 !larc. Sparious 2-story, 3 \r-.t ~ 11111" r1mr l•i Jr~ik ll 11rt'k sp11rc 11me (dayg or 336 E. 17th Street br, l bn . fam rn1 i::!as~ c11 (•t. o\·rr. r\·r~1 CASH FOR 2nd TC'S \V/ a Jorevrr Cat;il ina \1r11, Cho1t"f• Rcsalf'S A\lll[ }.o'' Sli~Jli CASH REQUrRE O Mr. Fry, 642..J57l. LAGUt\A BEACH 222 Forr$t Ave. 49-1-9466 Si tuated on Aalboa Prn1n. I \\'(' ~pr1·1alize 1n sr.Uini:: ron-1 f"nr morr infnrm11!inn \\T1tf': M W ted 250 Assume 6'~ loan. Co1drl hr 0 dnm1ni un1s irv u~ for 1"1'111 "nJSTRIBUTOR nJVJSIONl:.:O°":::.;OoY!...:.:.;•:.;n;;.;:.;_ __ ..::;cc11 ' G . USed as -Unl!s. ond !d:>.: 11t:t1nn. Prnpl'rl1rs nrrdrd. =2:1. r n Box 17:19. Co11in11, COMMERCIAL STABLES shelter. Consider f'XC"hani:f'. I buv"r~ \l<1l!lnt:' · C'111lf, !\\i22 lncludr phone Corutruction &: permanent SAN CLEr.TENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492·-1·120 $59.900. Owner. &lf>-6300 nr ' __ 11un1bcr. financing nl'l?dtd. $35,000. 'NflRTlr COUNTY dial free 510-1220 644-8397. J 1·;\<>;!·: ''TIBt'RnN TO\\"N. •Ui11nd ~&!f Service • Owner 613-l2.i9. BLUFFS ht's1 bu~·. 1111h \·1r11 llllt.;SI:::" -1600 $!J, h .. 3 !11 n1;ijnr !'hopp\n11: center. Mortgeg•s, n! b<1y. J BH. 211 BA, ~ph! hl>d1'n1, 2',~ ba1h, only.ti nifl:< :.1c-~1 rlrl11x{' in arr.a 2 yral'll Trust Detds 260 !evrl, vacant. l'l!ovr J'l l~H1(! nld . All ["OJI anrl recrr~t1nr1 ~</uni:. Carf)('trfl. mlo1· TV. CLASSIFIED \l.'\11 s1>ll or Jr11 ~ S44.;ll')l'l. f;u·1!111f'.s. /\\·ail ;ipp1·11, ranf'l"d. rquipprrl by $35,000 1~t TD on l ac:re DEADLINES fSubml!l_ non V. ~-r;1nklin , 2.1.7 1 \11n·1;it;. E'\"1'r lle111 trade, at-estate pa.reel wl magn!!i· Deadline for f'OPY &. kills Rltr. 6.17-2222. Larwin Realty, Inc. tr nrl1tnl. Pricr1t he low cenl 11i'-w. 93 int. S yr i~ 5 :30 p.m. the day be· 962-6988 anytime rrplaf'rn1('nl ms!. See al due dale, ll~~ di8C'Ount. for~ public11t ion, eX'Cl"pt FOR SALE flY 0\VNER Rakrr f..· Fairview, Costa Bkr. •J93-llSJ or $-6632 f o r ?.1onday Edition 5 bt.droom11 or ? 3 ba1hs ~lrsa, lht'n call Betty or eves. .,.,·hen dcadij.ne Is Satur· funclional hfoar.h home. Pvt. TIME FOR I John. artf'r 5 p.m . 644--1307. day, 12 noon. eommuni!y, '57.000 By iippt. QUICK CASH CLASSIFIED only 642-TiSI: 67!Hl680. Dirt }"'OU ever think of swap-I 1~ REGULATIONS BELOW r.1arkct-Excep0ooal THROUGH A I lrii; lhat While :Elephant tnt:;;; ___ ... -•• ~EJ~ll!!l-~ll ERRORS : Adverllae!'ll 2 br, own your nv.·n land, DAILY PILOT the: llllic for !Ometh!Jw you should check their ads + quality home. 57;,.341:;. daily A: report errora WANT AD can use? Try the Ttaders Housa Furnished 300 tmmediatrly. THE Tum unu!ied items into quick Paradise column tn the Dal· DAILY PILOT a!t.1111mes cash, call 642-.i67S 642-5678 I ly Pilot Wllnt Ads. $95-~ Beach Bungalow. Jlabill1y for the first ln-turn correct insertion only. General Gen•ral General Utll pd_ Comp! , Pvt. 1------------------'--"-'=.:.:..------1 prden. CANCELLATIONS: S©~Jtl1A-LG£~S" The Puzzle with the Built-In Chuckle Lawyer: Did you soy the plaintiff w os ahot in the woods doctor? Doctctl I did not. · 1 told he wos &hot In the-roglon. 0 C..,,i.te tho d>...llo qoo!M bv filling 11'1 It. rni.lng word you d.wlop from ftp No. 3 betlow. •~s="is™ IN r r I' r 1· r 1 6 U ·•CtAMilf MIJVf UTIEllS 1 G£f ANSWEI -1111111 SCIA .. ~ETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 ------'--·---------'---'--.:..------ Blue Beecon * 645-0l I I When killing an ad be sure lo make a l'f!COrd 111~1 Br. Me.. E-side CM. of the KlLL NUl\.fBER Lr&. yd. Ide&! 1 or 2 adlts. given you by your ad Bl •--* 64• "111 taker 11.s TI'ttlpt of your ue -con ;rv cancellation. This kill B•lboe lslend number must be ptt-1=:::.:::::.:...;.;:c:.:~----·ll ~cnted by the advrrliu.r 4 BR. turn. Avail Feb l~t In case or a disputt. $315/mn yearb'. Gas • wt.r CANCELLATION 0 R 1 -.'pd.0.~ .... '-'-2!-='30'-. -~---11 CORRECT·JON OF NEW BelbM Penlnsul• AD BEFORE RUNNING: 1::::.::::;:;::...;.;;.;.;;;;.:;~.:...---11 Every effort It made to 4.5' BAYf'RONT Balb oa ki.11 ot" correct a new ad P I 5 8• 4 ea, I \hilt bas bttn or4ered. en 11, ... 'P ~r. but ""e cannot guaran· "°'8t winft or )"tar\y. tee to do 110 unUI the ad 1,;•ll-:::.;l039::. 7.------11 has appeared In the pa- Cott• MeM per. 1.::::::;::..;.:.:::::._ ____ ll D:U.1E·A·lJNE ADS: XLNT Location -Ma( shO~ Thl'Sc ad~ are 'trlctly Pinc -3 bedroom 2 'b a I h cuh in advan~ by mall encutiw home • bullt·lns, ()rat l'ny one of our ()f· dishv.·~M:I', dilpopl $285.00 fices. NO phone onl'-n· mo. water 119MI. 2 ycar TIIE DAD..Y PILOT re- leue with option lo buy aervts the right to du· a vailable. No pets. Rel. and sify, t'dlt, censor or ~ fl;e(', dep.ll!t nquittd. Tf'I. tu~ "'IY •dv'-rll-ement, !Wi>-8609. and to change Its ratn "2"-e;::R;::;tu::rn'--. ~Ff~,.-pla~«-. ~.,-,.,~1-,11 • ~Jatlona without pr!nr notlc'-· patlt> 6 yard. So. oL Hwy. ua ... Ad"'"-no ..... 1715 CLASSIFIED 1,;;:"'°:;;·..:6;;;ll-..:1'53::::..--~~ 11 MAIL I NG ADDRESS THE Futeat draw 111 tht P. Q , Box 1MD, West .•• a Delly P i lot Coal!\ Mesa Chl!mtrled Ad. ~ 9$26 $175 • l BR. Fned yd. Children ok. 3l44 President l l. 648-1.145, 646-6255 SAYE £ASH! c L A s 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 IRST llYS! Classified I' Advertising ~I -_•_Sale__,!~ I All ..... r <"llllk•lle11 l• fJH(lfy -,.,.,,, b•lewl C0.Mrll S•<.11 .... S.111111 Uw .. SllllO-t ......... ••!Ma l'•11i11t111i .......... •1rcnitt .. ,....,.. . ... Ufl •• , Ctl"illrlM ... Cfl Cltl ... l'lrk C•-•W M.lr Ctll'lo /1111 .. O•M "114"' O.vtr tfl- S:11t • ..,, IEI Tort 11'..,1111111 Vtlltr o.tnl• oni.,. Htrkr Hl .... lt .... HUllllllllH auc11 HllfllllltlM Ht rMur trvlM Tl'rlct L tlUlll S11c11 LtfllM Hllll ~1u"*' Nltlllt Lld9 hit LI"" lolol MeN -·MM M .. 1 vn. Mlolwtf City MlttlM Vlele H.,..,.,, ... dt HI~ Htltllll N...,.,I 5Nl'K St ll J11111 CHlrtr1111 ''"'' ..... St~l'I Allll Mel"'l'I S\lllMf StKll Unlventty 1'111 Real Estate, [JI] General ~___, A<rH• fW uole ............. ,.IM Al'tr11!1fftl lw ................ lU au.i-,.,........., ............. IM Cen'ttl_,., LI1fl/C~h .,,,..,,,.lW comm1rclet l'rw•rti' ........... lN DEX Smlcu and Repairs I~ All uld¥ tltHlllCltllill .. Cll!!d c.re C•11•r1rter Dtt lllnl OttP•rln Ori•IWIYI Et.c:lf'IU.l ,...,c1,.. F .. on l'llr!O!IU"' 01rd1nln1 G1ner1, St,.,,ICU 01111 Hofltll Cl11lo1 """'Ht11nln1 lnc11n1 T1.• llllUtlllCt J1nltwl1I LllMhU.pl119 M*ll lotn'icl M1fnten.enc1 M..,lnt l'1l11Unt & 1'1,.rlllntJftt 1'1lnlln1, 11111 "'''" ""'"'''''"' l'llHl'lllint l'Hl Stnolce & Jn111IL1lion •-•1 a lltt111lr f lit TrH S1rvic1 Tulerlftl Lt,,,.ht.-v Wlndtw Cl11lllnt c ... d .... 111111 .... ,., wl• ...... ut ou,11~111U11lh u lt ..... ·····"t Hou11• I• too "'9¥M ...... "" .111 lll<lllTlt l',_m .... , .. , ..... IM '--Emp-loyme_nt ___Jl [jJJ lndullrltl ,...._,,, •...• , ...•. II.I Loh l•r Sil• .. .. . ..• . .,Pll Mol>ll• -•/Tr1l1tr 1'1it1 ,. 171 MOwft!1l11, o. .. "' •-t ..... 11• °'""" c •. "............ ., ·······"' 0..1 "" S1111 ,.,_.,..,., , , ...... 111 R1nctt-1, 1'1rms. g,...." ........ !• ll .. I l.1l1t. l.1cll111M ¥ ....... 111 ltNI l.sl1l1 Wiii!.. . l M Joi> W1nt1d, Ml,. Joi W111!*11, P"ll!>I .. Job1 W1nl1d, M I I' H1!1 W1n .. d, M lo I' ., '" -.101 ... 101 .. 111 [~_· finan-cial __,J~ L__I _Mercha-ndise___JJ[§] A"l~llft .... ... •wolnn• D••9rtllll!TJ HO •u1h1111 W1nl., . .• l" !nvtst"''"' 0•"'1\lllllr no 111voo1m..,1 W11111• no M•nff lo L11n . ••. . .. , .•• 110 Mtnh' W111!ttl .. ..• . ... ut M1rt911111, Tn11t ~I ... lit ,__H_._ .. _._. 1_.,.._R'"'_' _] [ I~ l .......... hnl,,... .. - HIVI• ""'""'· 115 "-ftl'll. w 1111fW11.. ..... Jll C•lllNmlllhMll l11r1. .. , ..... , II S Ct-ml1d11m1 ..,,w~ .. , , , , , nt C1n4o. IWn .... ""'""'· ........ Ul T-n1'1Yh f\tr11.. , ..... Ull T..,,,_ .. ""'""'• IU T...-uJe, rw11, tr "'""''"· ,. Ml Dwplf• .. 1\1111, .• MS A111U11nc1• . . , , , ............ M1 Allcllon ............ , "°" Sullolin1 M1t1rl1t1 ....... , "4 Ct m•r•• I. E1v11m1n1 ...... ... "'"' ...... GoM• Mllcll!Mrv . , Mlte•l11nH1t1 MIKoll-.w1 W1nlt<I M1Slc1I lntlnrmtnt1 '" '" ... '" .. Ill • . f2t •• ()fftc1 1'11r11illl'l't/!:1vlt!. , , ., .. Ill Pll lOOt/0'11 ln1 . ., ... , 11' S..Wln1 Mec~lnn .............. tu s-11n1 G-• " 1H '"'"'' 1tnr1ur1n1, ''' _ 01 S•101 llJI TV, l•dJt, HU•!. Sl ... M .• IU Ow•lt••• ..,1ur11, lJI D""'l1111, hlr'I, tr ..,,.,.,.,_ . Ill [ Aportments for Rent [QI '--------' Pets and Suppl~s 11 ~ J A•h. lu•n. ,t,11. wnlwrn • .... , ... "''"'· ., '""""· "' "' "' .____R•n~tala ___,]~ ltoomt .. J. ·-& lNnl .,.,/ ...... . Ht11t1, M011l1 •••• ,,,.,.,.,, 111 Ollftl H-• .•.• , ...... I ll Slll!U•Mr a ... ll h .,;.,, ......... GI v:u11 .. 11 R1flf11o ................ es •"'1•1• "' ,,.... , ............. 4111 o ...... hr ... , ·~··· ......... ... Ottk• ....... , ... , ........... , .. Sw1/""t IMll l . , . ,, ., ., ...... Ml IM11tlf'l•I ""Ill 't'"''" .. IJI ' lllrlN .... ,. .. , ,.,., .. ,. Ill • .,. .. ,. W1nlt41 "····· . • MIM11!1-W1 ·--~ •. .. ..S '--A-n,_,,.k--;., ___,' ]~ I All_IK_t. , .... 't'.-': , ,. "' C1 ... IA Tlltlllu/lll ,.,......,.. .. JN l.•11 H.iln1 ...••.. ;--, ... ,. '''· ,_____[ _Penonlll--• ]~ A•"' ~·""' ............ m "-ti ..................... "' 1'11•, Gtn1r1l •. Ut Cito M1 ,., ............. iH ......... " "" .... , • , ••• Ill Boats and [ • JR I Marine Equipment 'C., G-11 IH ••tt. M1lnt,/k rvk1 ...... , .. "'1Mfrlno 1'1111•· ........... tol -k, ...... .... ., ....... "' ..."-•HllCll.9r1ff .. ,.. SHl'J, Sall .... ., . .,,..,,.,,. •• '" ... h. 11!111/09(«1 ........... •1• INh, I~ & $ld "'" ... , • • • tll ...... ........ . .......... tll c.__r_,_•_n•_P_o_r•_•_•i_o_n _ _J [~] Alter.oft flt cam--. "'lt/lltnl , . ., "' '""'· •"'-' ... k111trt ...... '11 • llrtrit:: Ctri • • , ., , ..... , .. ftt Mflllt. """"' ................. m """""'"""'" ................. ,.. TTll""' Trt•IOI ...... ,., ....... ffl Trtlltn. 1.nllllf .......... ,.. Ml I ~~:~~~ I~ [ I ,.------~ AUlos for Sale ] ~ \ ...,. '" .. .,. ~I~• Nil , .... , .... .. .... ..... . .... . ,,........,ci....iu .. , .... tn "-....... • ........... 'f<I ......,... ..... """ . . ...... "' Tr.Ir.I •. , .... ""••··· .. I Instruction I [I• ] Am '--1111 ......... ... A ... s-iu a l"li•" ........ ,.,. A .... ..,.. • .. • ••••••• ... Allh1, IM-llOll .. .. .. ,. , "' •<'-" .. l•tnoct""" • . ..... 111 11.•IM, Nn ,. TllMtrfUll ................ ,., Mf Autto. Ull'll .................... .. ' Mondly, Januvy 18, 1'71 DAILY ,llOT I [ -... -l~l -... -l~ I ... ··---lltJ1f-... --lltl J! -·-··-lltJ I ........... -Jltl I-"'-llY1l---l!tJI ---J!tJ :Hevtet::::::u:nf~u;r_n~.~~~;30~-5~1~~~Unf~°""iuir~iniluimi1iimiii320iii 1 •Apt•L•F•u•,.,••••.• Apt•. Fum. UC Apt. Unlurn. :165 Apt. Unlum. U5 I Apt. Unlum. 36! \plo., Aplo., Co1t11 MeN ---------1 c " Mela Newport &Mch Cost• MeM c-ta U-.. I Co st• Mesa Furn . or Unfurn. 370 ~~· o!Ynfum. 370 ·---------Huntington.Beech __ 0 _a _______ -----------------... IT1W ·-H untln9ton __ S._· _adt ____ H_un_ti_n_g""_ton __ Be_•_d'I __ 3 BR & ram, 2 ba, 450 RaARKAB.LY A New W11y To Liv• VILLA MESA APTS. •q !I bonus rm. Dream CONDO. apt furn, 3 Br, 2~ UNBELIEVABLY In Newport Beach FROM $135 2 BR, Prtv pa.tjo, Htd pool. kitchen, panelled 11v·i rm b11.. S~ per mo, 21251 E XTRAORDINARILY OAKWOOD GARDEN Spanish Garden Apta. 2 cu encl'd gar. Chlldttn w/(rpk. Dbl gar & Freeport Lil, H.B. <713J BEAUTIJ'UL APARTMENTS Conveniently Located welcome, no pets pleue! sprinklers, $270 mo lse 444-0056. Val D'iHre Garden Apts On 16th Sl!fft btwn l & 2 Bedroo.ma $165 mo. 719 W, Wilson. ~6-2344. HUNT, Continental, newly Adults, 00 pets lrvine and Dover Dr. Built-1.na 646-1251 M 0 V INQ..TRANSFERREQ... decor. 4 Br w/dshwshr, nr Putting green, waterfall & (714) .. 2-1170 Carpets & drapes ATTR.AC. Like new. 1 & Tirt d ot fighting w 1 th S<'hool & shops. 962-3831. stream flowers everywhere, ..,..OC.,...,£"'"A_N_FR..,..-O"""NT--3-B_r_,_2_Ba-. Enclosed Garares 2 BR apts. D1hwhr, crpts, tf.'nants? Call the problem DuplexH Unfum. 350 45• pool, rec. room, billiards. crpts, drps, dlx. Winter. Poot &: Recreation Rm. drpa, bJtns. Hld pool. All 8-0lvers -South Coast Real BBQ's, Sauna, f\lm .• untum, S250. Adults only. No pets, See: 160 W. Willon utll pd. Only $1SO & Estate. Property Manaie-Costa Mesa Singles, l BR, 1 BR + den, 67J.-8088. $165/mo. No children. Inq: ment Division. 2 BR. From $135. See It! 307 Avocado. Apt 9 64f>.-0984. 54>-8424 OCEANFRONT 3 BR, 2 BA. * 2 !:JR unt DUPLEX-Crpts 2000 Parsons Rd., 642.gs'lO From $275. Jan ls.June 15. 2 BR Duplex, a lt. garage. 3 & FAM nn, crpts, drps, & drps. Garqe, A quiet Between Harbor & Newport, 7'll0 w. Ocea.ntront. 675-1410 Clean, vacant on quiet St. FI A heat, frplc, lrg yrll rouple. 54s--04.22 2 Blk N. 19th. $125. Small child &/or 8Jll1 $265 lst & last. S50 clean'g Huntington BHctt • • • • • • • • • I 2 BR a.ptffurnd $175. Working doc ok. 64~; 548-4969; dep. Call 546-8222 eves alt 7. I $6 nit up $30.00 wk up man prt ' • Realton ~2--0791. Also 2 BR houses MESA Del !\Jar, 4 BR, !am 2 BR. 4te Yard, cl06ed STUDIO & 1 BR Apts Call • 673·2440 6 73-4400 furn & unturn. rm, 2 BA, crpls, drps, trplc i::arag:. $120. Ref'1 req'd. • Color TV, phone aerv, pool l BR furn, apt facing Bay, 2 BR DUPLEX & newly painted. $280. 847-2352 • Linen~. maid serv avail. aar. 1 person wh·ers. Util $150/ Id · l ~0'7 50 67~ " -• CORSICAN mo. Ref's. 545-7359. Clip Ad. • Good FOR $5. pa • win er ..,, · · .)-1;1115 Built-ins. Priv yard. 368-A 3 BR. cpls, (rplc, fncd yard. On Week Rent. PENINSULA PT. 1 BR. near New, l~. deluxe 1-2·3 BR's. t6lh Pl., CM. Children ok. Kids & pets ok. Nr schools, f l l 9" J 2376 Newport Blvd. 548-9755 ocean,_ bay, $150 per mo. Private patio living, only 3 54~.3fli6. Back Bay area. $250. \Vknds l ~ forRent • • • • • • • • • I Call 675-8990 ntighbors in your bldg. . & eves -5-18-4945 ACAPULCO Apts attractive, 1 BR apt turn 'til June 15th Bltns dwhr forced alr heat 2 B.R, garage + parkmg. $140 mo. 4405 ci...----• shag 'crpts,' drp1, ,_,c ln 3 crpt.a, drps, bltns. Adults 2 BR home. carpets & Pool, Utll paJd, Garden •wuu= .. .,. only 2Z1D Rutgtts Dr drapes. No pets. $145 mo. Apts. F urn. 360 Jiving. Adults, no pets. 2 BR Place 675-lOTI Br, gar. O• ml, E. of South 646-6st9 ' J or 2 small children. $175. 1800 Wallace Ave., C.l\·I. 1 BR turn. Near ocean. $135 Coast P laza; turn oft Sun----·------ 646-2719 Gener11I QUIET, studios $115, 1 BR's trom 1 / 27 to 6 ; 21. fiowtr at Ross.) Quiet Adult Living EXECUTIVE home -2 br. RENTINlf!.. FUaNITU•m: SUS. No chldm or pet.s. 675-6099 FROM $150 1 It 2 BR. Shae cpta, bltns, d l iv. b dbl g w 1\5 540-1973 or 54!'>-2321 beaut lndscpd. $150 & $170 en, ' a, arage, COSTS LESS 2135 E lden Ave, CM. SH Apt. Unfurn. 365 bltns, patio, gardener. $265. Mgr Apt 6. FAIRWAY Incl all utU. Adults only no Adults. 642-2755 or 642-0506. ---------G I pets. Sl'UOIO Apt. Furn. Gas & enera 241 A d St 646-0979 Fount•in Valley FAMILY home • 4 hr, 2 ba, bltn!. $260 mo. Avail immediately. 6.12-2264 Huntington Beadl Complete l BR. Furn. ---------· voca 0 · wate1· pald. 1975 Parsons, as low as S22 per mo. C.M. Call i pm 646-4205 VILLA APTS. $165 LGE. dlx. 2 Br, H~ I 00 i'. PURCHASE $lSS • SHARP 2 BR. ba. Quiel; adulls. G.E. Kit. OPTION Pool. Adults, no pets. \lef.'n RENTAL FINDERS 2 & 3 BR't Storage. 240 E. 16th Pl Ind. item selection ok). * 642_9520 FrH To Landlords Private patio pool • lndiv.1_54_8-64_3_2. _____ _ 24 hr. delv. Month to Mo. 645-0111 laundry tac.' 2 BR, 1~ ba studio. $m, CUSTOM Dl..X 1 Br. new. Frigidaire Uitl 1 1 339 Cabrill BEAUTlFU.L 3 bedrm, m Furniture R-tal 1. Qu bed Near Orange Co. Airport & ut es nc. o d G d ho ... app IU K'e. Hn sz . ucr. Adulta only. 543-8803 or 84&-3648 ba, Mere Ith ar ens ~e. 517 W. 19th, C.M. 543-3481 Comp!. crprd. Ctll 646-9278 ~~~~=--:--,......,-,.--20122 Santa. Ana Ave. 1 BR. up-r apl Cpt.a/drps, trplc, fam rm., form din., Anaheim 774.2lm evts. Just for Single Adults ,,.. all bltns. call Mr. Hoegee, LaHabra 694-3708 ---------SOUTH BAY CLUB Mgr. Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A bltns, w/ night-light view. South Coast R e a I to rs . '"iimiiiiiiimiimiimiiiiiimiiii Da na Point APARTMENTS 546-6215 Gar. No pets. 646-Q!JS aft !).15-8424 i • PROPERTY SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok. Newport BHch iiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiEiiiiiiiiiiiiil_s_. --------_..,..,- 4 BR. 2 ba, heated pool, MANAGEMENT $25 & up wkly. DANA 880 Irvine Ave. DELUX Dl..X 2 Br. Hi Ba Studio. HARBOR GREENS GARD!:N It STUDIO APTS Bach. 1, 2, l RR'a. trom $110. 2700 Petenon Way, C.M. 546-0370 SPAC. 3 Br. studio, 2\~ ba, Lrg kitchen w/ tlec bltna. New w/w crpt, d rp s , freshly painted. Nr schls & trwys. No pets. 54:>-48!1:\ LRG house-like apt. 2 et=: ram rm, frplc, 11, Ba. bllns, drps, crpt, patio. d b 1 carport. Adults. lnquu-e 558 Joann Apt A or C OLDER 1 br, vinyl floors, gar. Encl. rear yd. Prof. lndscJ>e(f. SIOO, $35 <l1>pos. 1 Adult, no pets. 252 B Walnut. 540-8600. BEAUT. 3 Br, 212 Ba studio apt. Bltns, new crpts, drps & paJnl. Av! Ftb. No pets, $19:,. 998 El C a m I no . 54&--0451 *NEW LUXURY 1 & 2 Br. dwhr, shag crpt, rarages. Pool & Rec. Quiet adult living 642-4470, $30 wk-1 per, w/kit 335. Maid ser, linens, TV It tele. Seal.ark Motel 2301 Npt Blvd. &16-7445. * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. Garden Apts. Blt-iTll, priv. patio. heated pool, frplc. Adults. $145 mo. 54&-5163. Dana Point OCEAN VIEW Lge 2 br, 2 ba, dining rm. balcony, crpls, drps, bltns. S185. 837-3927. East Bluff immat. 2 Blks f.rom Jr. SPECIALIZING IN Marina Inn 34llt Coast Orone and 16thl TOWNHOUSES Bltns, Cpts/drps. No pets. High. Vacant. S29j. 714-8393 HOMES & SMALLER UNITS Hwy. (714) 645.0550 ON NEWPORT BACK BAY Avl Feb. 1. $160. 546--0451 NEWPORT BEACH 3 BDR~ 2 bath fireplace STEPH ENS & KA Huntington Buch LRG 1 Br. apt. All new Villa Granad11 Aph . · • · · YE $175 New apt. 2 BR, b~tns, 3 & 4 BR-3 Ba. Frplc, tam crpts, drp1, tUe Ir. paint. 8~~~~· Evrs 833--0j,1() 64>0122 $15:> -NEW 2 Br. Crpts shag crpt.s, drps, patios, -room, double gara1e. Beaut. Bllns. $145/mo. 546--0451. •. drp ... bi'" gar. 356 E. 20th, CM 642-490a l p l Bllll d 998 El Camino CM ' BR N<>ar the ocean 1 Bed . . -°" s, swve, u•S, gar, ounge. oo . ar •· • . 1 • • room, util pa1d .•• •• .$60 balcony pa l. 309 Lincoln, QUlET bungalow duplex. 2 Adult le Chlldrens area NEW DUPLEXES $210/mo. Drps, gara&c & 1 Bedroom, util paid ...... $85 5.10-1824 BR. Bit-ins. Stt lo ap-Rivi Dr 64Ul300 Four bedrooms with balcon. ies above & helow. Gracious Jiving & quiet surrounding for family with children. Near Corona del Mar High cla Quinla _fJermo4a Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Hel'- mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree- lined walk ways to your apt. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED• 1 BR. Unf. $150 -l'urn. $180 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210 3 Spac. flr . plans, decor. furnishings: live within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun· tain. * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect lig hting. * Deluxe rang• & ovens * Plush sh•g crptg. * Bonus 1tora9e 1p•ce * Cov. u rport * S culptured marble pulrm•n Ir t ile b•tha * Ele9ent recreation roo m. FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego Frwy .. Goldenwest Collee:e. San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to ... LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847-5-441 I ==~::=;:,=======:===-===:=~f~====~3~u Apt. Un urn. 365 1 Apt. Un urn. V.;J -1 Huntington Beach Santa An• 2 Bdrms. • 2 Bath SlriQ MONTH • POOL cpts/drpr;/blt-lns, patio Kids & pets OK. lrg rooms 2620 Delaware, H.B. 642-2221; after 3 p.m. 536-1816 CHEZ ORO API'S 8~ Atlanta, 1-2 BR, pool, private i&.rage. Washers, dryers. 536-8038; 53&-2727 Laguna Beach FOR rent or lease year round 1 yr old 2 bdrm apt, kitchen turn., ocean view, w/w cpl, underground pkg, close to very nice beach. 494-9633 or 494-7447. Aak for Mr. Brack. Irvine VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. & Unfurn. DLiiliwasher • co1Dr coordtDat- ed appliances . pluab thaJ carpet • choice of 2 coloi scheme. • 2 batha • 1taJ ah>wers • Mirro!'ed ward- robe doors • indirect lflbt- lng tn kitchen • breaktut bar • huge private fenced I patio • plush l~ ·, brick Bar·B-Q'1 -larle beat · erl pools le lanai. : fenced yard. 536-0346 __ 1 BR, tot OK, utiJ pa.id •• $S5 predate. $l60. 54~ 3.10 era · 1·2·3 BR. Washer/dryer hook- 3 BR lam r m 1% ba 1 BP tot/pet OK t1 pd •= 1 BEDROOM, ne U' bch. $130 ..,:.........,..,--..,.-,--=-----.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!~~1 up. encl gar, patJo, trcd air. • • · ·• · u • ... ON per mo. Tradewlnds Realty, Balboa l1lend e MARTINl'-'UE • Mesa Verde area. 54&-1034 3101 So. Bristol St. · (%Mi N. of So.~ Plua' Sant• An• PHONE: 557.a200 School. Fireplace, wet bar & --------- built.in kit('hen appllanets. NOW LEASING.' !!!11!!!~11111111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!' Children & pet ok. Close l BR, tot/pet OK utl pd •• $100 847-8511 T to 1;chools. $220 mo. 545-2134 l BR col1age, uW paid •. $125 ---------COZY 1 Br. apt, yrly. No Perk-Like Surroundlnt• SHARP Le. 1 br, crpt/drp1, 8.35 AM.IGOS WAY 644-2991 Westminster Mesa Verde STAR*LET 776-7330 B ACHE L 0 R Un i l. pets. ~· only, Rd'1. DELUXE 1-2 & 3 BR AP'tS. blUns. Quiet bld'g. Intant F urnished. $100/mo. $165 + utlJ's. 673·1503. Also FURN. BACHELOR OK. $130. 540-97n o r SHARP 3 BR. 2 BA, quiet HOLIDAY .PLAZA * Call 646-2687 * Prv .,.tlot * Htd POOll 547·2682. treet Now vacant Sl40 per DELUXE Spacious 1 BR ------od---LSE 2 BR, 2 Ba unL Stove, r---------- s Call LARRY ·Heritage furn apt $135. Heated pool. $125-$135· LGE, m ern 1 br rtfrir. cpts/drpll. Heat. Nr shop'i • Adults ~nly 2 BR. deluxl clean, quiet, :e°itl Estate 54~1ist. Ample parking. ~o children ~ ~~i~. ~2Gldr, ;7_5~i~· Adlts only. $225. 6Th-0486. im Santa Ana Ave, Cpts/drps, b tns, beam ceil- -no pets. 1965 Pomona, Corona d•I Mar Mgr. Apt ll3 • 646-S542 Ing. Adil.a, no pets. From Coldwell Banker & Co. Managing Agent 541-5221 Twnhouse. 2 BR. 21,li BA. Bltns, trplc, encl dbl gar. 7'j2 Amigos Way. 675-5033. Fountain Valley Newport Be11eh 01. BEAUTIFUL FURN. APTS. 2 BR. DUPLEX $145. 1974 Wallace. 546-5386 U40.$165. Quiet, priv, patio. 3 BR 14( b Crpts & d......., ALL NEW 2 BR comp! re-mod, crptd, CHATEAU LAPOINTE 2 wardrobes, trplc, dressing Crpts drps blt!n.s. · • a. .,.... Steps to the watt-r. Yrly DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt. 1 k d p 1 ...... "'! Lrg. F~nc9d Yd for 2 Chilcinn OK. Sl60 mo. VALLEY PARK rm, oc e stp. gar. oo . ~ p 54>1!82 ARTMENTS or Winttr rental. Sharp. Ph: Pool. Close to shops. $150. Sauna. Rec rm "" Children & eta. AP 598-4969. Adults, no pets. 1T301 Keelson Ln. 11 blk W. ~-Prlv ra.r $150 LRG 2 Br, HI Ba itudlo ••. opens new doors !or 3 HOMES in Newport Shores 1941 Pomona Avt, C.M. of Buch Blvd. on Slater ). ON TEN .AClt.ES ru ~~Pa!!!ular!!!!i~!!' C~·=·M=·~Ms.!!17!46!!I ;e~· ;:u:tsmch~= ~: ••• YOUNG FAMILIES Ea. has 4 BR. S300 • $375 Balboe Island * 842-7848. 1 .. 2 .... -~ ... u-•-: LA COSTA $1SO 2 BR. A .. t1 $160 & $400 mo. on yrly lease DELUXE Bachelor Unit.I • Ano. z ... u • AL ... • -'----------~ ;:.-Caywood Realty 5'18-1290 FOR lease 3 Br, 2 Ba, Walk to Octan. Utll pd. FlrepU.cet I pri• • .-&. I NEW 1 A: 2 br. Bltna, 1Wim· OPEN HOUSE SAT .l SUN 1 BR. uerden Aptl $17.5 N•w. family and adult1 units with total recreation club LG 2 Bf!.. crpbl, drps, bltn~, d chool l 2 ... 3 gar. Child olt. $140. 839-460.: an pre·• . , , .. 839-2314 bdrma trom $150. Nr. 1hop. ...,.--------- ping, golf, schools. Just Apts., &0uth of San Dieao Fwy. on Furn. or Unfum. '70 Culver Dr., Irvine. 833-3733. Cotta Meaa PARK WEST -~--~~----- APARTMENTS Owned and Managed by The Irvine Company Mesa Verde NEW 3 br, 2 ba. trplc, bltns, 2-ca.r rar. patio. $ 2 so . ~ta colon NEW NEW NEW Luxury 40 Unit Adult Apartment Complex oc1 d 1 U NDBORG CO. 536-2:179 Poola. Ttallb • <»nen Bid.It. ming pool It gaTa1e. All 10-2, BRANO NEW Eualde 2 BR. Townhouses $185 1 BR apt lurn 'til J une l:llh m ern, re ecorated ower JOO Sta X.U., OUil 6'f.21nl utllltl•s pald. ••Ctl to $170 1 & 2 BR._ 1 ~ 2 baths. ha $140 mo. 4405 Channel duplex. s. Baytront. op. DEL . LAKE MANOR Lr. 1 .. _,., •155 t $19 C la dr s NEW 2 br, l~ ba, s I[, Plact'. 675-J07l. PQsite Pavilion. S500/mo. (Mac.Arthur nr OoHt Hwyl mo Adulta no pets 354 • 0 a. rp · P • Pre.school center. Adult pool, bltns. gar., encl patio, $185. 675--0116 or 673-4932 1 & 2 BEDROOMS FURNISHED OR 5•-211-Fra k st·! 11 BR, $140. Pool, patio, adults. A~ado St • CM 6-42-Mol dshwhr, aelf clean gas oven, Children's pool. Pr lv paUos. 67f>.-0116 or 673-4932 NWPT Bch, 3 BR, den, 212 ...:".>-.) n 1 we 536-6717 COROLIDO APTS · all t & p s pd Htd pool B Ibo p I I * * w r · · Elec kltchtns. Wall to wall New nort BHch BA. dining rm. 2500 sq. a a en nsu a BACHELOR -fret util. 2 2 Br . stud.Joa & street levels, ·NEW TOWNHOUSE 324 E. 20th St. ~9148 closets &: carpets. 2 play. ---1i....:."-------- ft.. landscaping. $'1j(). Delta BAYFRONT-YEARLY blks from b e ac h. $100. $185 le up. Penthouus $220. 1 1,. 2 BR 2 BR l~ BA THE GABLES • grounds. Carports & stor. PARK NEWPORT • care _6-1_6-4_1_H ___ .,.......-~-Duplex, lower 2 Br, 2 Ba. Adults, no ptls. ~1874 Dahwhr. f.rpl, dbl carport. Cl'ptg ru-Ps aeu' cleanln~ nJE SEVILLE age. free llvr overlkg the water. 4 BR, 3 ba. bltns, <lrps, Furn or Unfurn. Pvt beach Laguna Beach Pool. &73-3378 cas o~en, t~CI. ga.r. Patios. 2 Br, H~ Ba, w/ rar. Adlts, i pools, 7 tennis eta S750,000 cpts, on wattr Pools & & patio. No pets. $300 per _..;;:__ _______ 2 BR So f H N 548-~ 377 W. Wilson. crpta, drps, ranit, fncd yd, 17256 S. Euclid St. Spa. from $175 to $450- tennis crt, waJk to beach. mo. 673--0774 QUIET ._ 1 BR h hild · · 0 wy. • 0 · patio. 636-4120 Bach. l or 2 Br. Also 2 6-7668 ft 6 ---------• cory. c arm-c ren or pets. .180. NR new 2 8r, Hi Be., it3f.D Oranie Ave $155 (ju.st south of Warner In sty Townhouses. Elec. kl. 64 a pm. P EN INSULA Point Lge 1 ing apt in resident i a I Squares only. 642-7898 cpt/drps, atv/dshwhr, 1ar. 21>l9-E Santa Ana Ave $15S Fountain Valley) pr!. pat or bal Subtrn park&. NEWPORT lsland 2 , BR Br. $150 Yearly. To desir-neighborhood. Close t (I BRAND new 2 & 3 Br apts. Avl now. 7&6 W, Wlleon.1---------Phone (714) 540-4785 drp J firepl. sep. tam mi: ~, ba. able adults. 675.1358, l544 beach & town. Employed So of hwy. 322 Mariuerite. 642-7958 3 BR, 2 Ba dupltx nr beach. ~~t o~S:u~~~p~~I at sJa'::i.~ 2 sm. br. & ear. $29J Lease. Miramar single adult with rer('rttnces. 6~4-1342 or 673-2212. 1 2 Bft nf W Id Frplc, bltn11, crpt11, drp1, Huntington Beach 6i:r-0883 , ____ .______ S1l5 incl ulil. 4S4-8392 & n. u um, u pa. , encl gar. Yearly. 4814 Ntp----------borer & San Joaquin Hilla UNFURN . 3.he<lrm, 112 Ba.• $25 WK-OCE~FRONT -$-..,-0---W-.-K __ L...,_U._.,X,...U~R-Y-LG unlque brand new 3 br, pool, no pets, n4S. tunt. (2131 388 _5255; 2 BR. $155 Up .• 3 BR Rd. 644-1900 for lta1ing info. 1 door 10 beach. l06 Olive, Lovely Bachelors, 1 -: BR. ~ 21~ ba, bm cf ll, frpl all 642-2149 82)..9193 f180 UP. Patio, po o I , Charming 2 Br, 1 'h ba apt l\l d I P I UW B h I I I 1 bllns. best a.tta. 67~ OR KAI N.B. S225/mo. a1 s~rv6~~7: e · & up. ac e ors, s ng es. S90. 1 penon, non-smoktr . • • BIGGER. thin a honit . chlldrtn ok. M A In gn'at area. Newly redec. Or•ng• Bdrm, gteps to bch, all utll, Cott• Meu Stove, ~fig. Avail 950 c w. 3 Br 2i~ Ba 1tudio. $195 Apts. 18881 Mora Kai Lant, sm. Cali Us today! ------l BR. furn. Utilities n.a id. hid pool, Iineiu, tte rm. ------171.h. 645-3787 • N •· .,.,, c?70 s; blk E. of Beach off J S 'th Rlt NOHL Ranch view horn". 5 S12:i/mo. Adults. no,.....E. restaurant, cocktails, danc. S1 35 ·SHARP 1 BR ~3540 ° pe.... .,.._.,,~ 'I Garfield. 962~994 ean ml , f. br 3 h" din & fam rm, Balboa Blvd, Balboa ing. Pool, bllns, w/w, drpg, adlts, 3 BR 2 BA, crpu, drps, MODEl\.N 2 Br 1~~ ba 1 BR. near beach. newly w~ter fall. Many xtrar; PENINSULA _ 1 BR furn. Vtllage Inn Hotel Apts no pets. (teen ok). blt-ln nnae. ftnc'd. $225 on amon pines on 'cuJ-de-gac I dttarated w/pool .$140 per 400 E. 17th St., C.M. S:HO. 63i-;.,Q22, /\dull~ only, no pets. Winter ____ 4_94_·_9436 ____ Ea.stBlde * 642-9520 I leaSf' 54~529 after 5 pm. Encl '.:ar. Nr bus. Com~ mo. Also. 2 br., blln., & 64'-3255 San J uan Capl1trano rental. $130/mo. 675-2779 or Apt. Unfu r n. 365 Apt . Unfurn. 365 Apt . Unfurn. 365 ate many luxury Items. I t~trlg, :rt'u I: drps. SlSO I SEACLIFF Manor Apta. 1 6H-07:'i:l 1111 6 rm Adults. $155. Mgr. 124 E. Incl utU 11. • & 2 Br, ]1~ Ba. Sl4>Sl60. 3 BR. 21~ BA Span111h town.. Coronidel-M ar Gener11I Gener al Genen l 20th. I Tradewlnds Realty, 847-8511 $30 move in allowance + house, bltins, cpts, drps, AftiAC Studl t 2 BR I WALK TO OCEAN reg. discount. Crpts, drps, J100l, t-lec garaitr . meny Pvt. hach. rm It ba. 1, • 0 ap · · patio pool, infant ok, l.525 olhrr extru S~:i ka:.c. N•C'ely furn'd, Nn 1 ' !A. Crpts, drps, bllns, 1 BR, Crpl3, drpl!, some w/ Placenli11 54~2682 ~lri~. pool, No pc Is . frplc & patios. $130-$150 per ----·-·----- 64·1.226() day, 673-1028 rvr. cooking. 673-6004 i46-66lO mo. Adults. * BA YFRONT * tUnive rsity P a r k rm, nicely furo, harbor hook $170. 2 BR, n~ ba studio, LINDBO~G CO. 536-2579 111gh-risc 2 BR'w 'trom $295. ~ virw, no chtldren or pets. redfc. cpt/drps, adj shop'g. NEW 2 BR from $135 Cpls, I 3 sidr tie slips a vailable. 2 • $100. 673-2823 eves. .&.J .. •a'l.._• t 2 592-Sm 2 BR. 1 bath ........ · · $ 3;i 1 IlvlllfJ 548-830.., 13/ rirps, bllns, patio, lam ~r· &12·2202 l BR. 2 baths .......... $32:l Costa Mes11 iijVmft• 2 Br. Crpts, drt>s, 1613 San-tion, play area, No peL,. _4 _B_R_, -2-ba-.-2-po-rc-h-es-.-re-trl-g, ! BR. 2% baths · · · · · ·· · $~~ CASA d ORO ~ A • 5 ••• tA Ana Ave, CM, $150/mo. 846-7271 rrpls &: drps. near beach. UN FURN. ,. • SpadoUs Apartments 1 • Sped~ cabinet space • Lock garages w I lg ltor' • Bm cell • Lndry • Patios • Dwhr/dispJ • Gas 11Dve e Special IOundproofina • Shag carpets, drapes GAS & WATER PAID 2323 Elden Ave, ~ CM 646-0032 or 642-1121 1 BAY MEADOWS APTS. BRAND NEW UNITS an with beam ceUlni s, paneling, pvt patios, lrp.lc, all rec tacu. illes. Adults, no pets. • Bachelor • • 1 BR from Sll5 • e 2 BR lrom Sl65 • 387 W. Bay St ( btwn Harbor & Newport Blvd, ~ mJ N. of 19th St). CALL 646.()()73 Beautiful 1 II'. 2 BR turn or UJ\fUrn apta. OFFERING: self cltan. ovens. D/W Cln a BR. d\n rm. 2 ba •..• S32:i e 542-7279, eves &t~572. $155 -NEW 2 Br. Crpts sm. 3 BR. plus bU¥e bonus room. CASUAL Calif. Living in a HUHTINIJON llACH-Adulta QUIET i ai '"BR .. gar & & drps, 61')vt., bltns. gar. 546-7178 2 Br) dlapls, shag crpta, 2 BR, carpeted, draped, near drps. i acuut le sauna bath. 2 baths · • • · · · · · · · · · • · Sl.'iO wann Mediterranean atmos-peot. Qpta/drpa. Ad u 1 t ' balcony pal 309 Linccln. t BR., lam. rm. N ba • $.175 phere Spacious color CO· ..-9BW.-1 .... ,..~ only, n& £!ls· 6G-8042. _536-__ 18~l4 _______ _ 7 BR., 41; t>a lhs ........ $450 ordlnattd apta • de.sl1~ It CASA del SQL * 2 ati. el'° bltm. lock. 2 ATIRACTIVE 1 BR apta. WE HAVE OTiiERS furnished for atyle Ir com-rar. Mt,. Verde area. Big nr Huntini1on H a r b o u r • fort • Heated pool • Klich. .... ell_,.• Printl TlmCll •Rec lllM11• Saunas clost tll. $1$5/mo. No peu. $160-$170. 84&-9152. en w/ Indirect lighting • 2Pltts •lt'**•Qym•flllttlftlar.ndVoll1ytllU 557--3400 'li'lttW deluxe 2 Br It den. Dtl~RIO.Adulta ollly.No Built·ia!Otdlw •Dllltu•rrs•~·~ DELUX. clu n 2 !r, 1 ~ BA, Fireplace, garare. Near pets. Cllle tD 111....,,.. • P'riYltl MIC allit Storap atudlo. Crpt.a, drpa, peol. beaeh. Call 9iM544 1 BR.-$175 tum. Al.SO: 2 IMtlOll W/Rrlotlel fl'llll S205 Adlta, t child ok. 64i--0496 We'll help you ~ll! 64Z-S678 UTILITIES INCLUDED 21111•11Mw-. .......... llflCtl-(714) llZ.a m iii Apt. Unfurn. .-a Apt. Unfurn. ~ ('I l 11I1 I 1l'lld . -·--'J 11·1ill11r "SINCE 19'6" 365 W. Wilson ~.2-1971 1st We11tern Bank Bid& S:\iALL, clean 1 Br. w/w University Park elee bltn•. Feunteln Valley crpt.s, drps, Days IU-0101 Nighb ~ultable for worldnc adult Quiet area. Nr Frwyg. No LEASE OPTION avall Feb. pelll. 5-l;...4893 1 • 3 br, 21,9 l>a, fam rm BEAUT. Bach It 1 Br. apb. townhse on park. S280 mo. $35 wkly Ii up. Furn lncl Owntr 494-2335 or ~5-0880 ulll. Monthly ttrma av&ll. ---998 El Camino. 545-0451 Westmln1ter LOVELY 1 'BR fur. wt $230. 1 BR. 2 ba, pool patio. Nr. Storea. Quiet $135. w/11ervlce, lclds • peta OK. 1985 Pomona, Oi. 548-07'28 r;893-1868 2 BR. D~plcx. Bltna. Pv 1HouMs Furn . or yd. 368·A 16th Pl, CM. $1SO 1 Unfum. 310 mo. Children ok. 5t9-3668. a11lboa Island J BR $125. Pool. Spacious. -Adults. Ideal for Bacbelon. r'OR Lt.BM by own t!t'. 1993 Church. 548-9633 'Baytront hom• w/ pvt pl~r CLEAN. 1 llR: 2 81\ H. Cln Littlr Isle. l"urn or un-BA. Crpts, drpa, lrl cloeeta furn. 3 BR. 673-7138 Pool. Adll11, m pttl. UI f orona "•I Mer pd. 543--03.16. l HOUSE FUR.N/UNfURN FURNladMfor&l Ir • o1 HIW8¥ • near beach ixc~•"I nlal ,1 ror tease or "'"' 1110 Newport lw ., CA 2 11td.rin, 21,4 Bath, DAILY iifim "Alft ll>l fA.m'1y It dlnlna room But It-Sell II• Trade $300 Prr Month -leek It • It's au avallabl Lachenmyer Rlty. lhnl Da.Uy PUot OualJ.le ~1'11 616-392'1 !;vcs: 842-0IR:i i ada. .. Place YoUf a • t>Jme·A·Ltnr 642-:>GiS now .· call direCt ~ .Maap\11y: :J.ounlaiM If~ Seya. Lf£•"'1 111...,.__, ... .Malt 1"'81 ......... 11.,.,....... . , ... • O'' rut• . .... ~ .~,... •a-IC... ·---~ heach Sundt.cir, l'&ra.I•. Huge P ool. FOR ADULTS waatunr r..cU. Y ea r 1 y . only. &n-3978 eves • wlmds. MERRIMAC WOODS NlCE 2 fill pool, bltna, cpts, 425 Manimac Way d _..._... Adlt.s CO.ta Mesa rp1, su ..... _... , ...no -....-----=----pet.II, $150. 6 42·I001 , 1 BJi: tum. $1)). 2 BR turn 64~. Sl56. 2 BR unlum. ~. YEARLY, 2 hr. 1 ba. Pool. Bltna, crpts, ~.1 no Fireplace, builtlN. $~ a children, no pets. .s...,.., E . mo. 499-2128. 17th Pl. CM. ~2'138 .BA YFR.NT Yrl.y 1 bt'. New{y 2 BR. Crpts, drps, patio. decol'. $115 mo. Adult.. $150 uni. $160 tum. 2658 Utll'a pd. 60-4936 Orange Aw , CM. 54!>-1657 LAROE 2 br, 1\-i ba. crpta, bltLUXE l A 2 Br. furn drp1, bltna, nr. Hoag Hosp. A: unfurn, Sll>-$165. Pool. $1651$185 mo, 642-4381. 17'T E. 22nd St. CM. 642--3841 ~P!rt Hel1hfl Huntlnpn Be•dt $165. 2 BR. New 1hq. Blbll, ON BEACH! J-Ud Pool. Quiet adulta, no peta. 6G-2'1' Senta AM CAN'T BE BEAT StNGI..E STOJ\Y SOUth Sea Atmospbtte 2 Ill. 2 BATH CuJeta ' drpl Air <»ndltlontd Private Pat.SOI HEATJ:D POOL Plel\ty o1 lawn Ca.rpon A Stort\fe HIDDEN vn.J..\GE GARDEN APTS. m> South Sala. Santa Ana Q *"1$25 Dime-A-Line 642-MlS THE "Ytllow Papi1" of cluslfJed. • • DaU;y P 11 o ti Servtce Directory, Chec:Jt It for the Mrvlre you ~. llA!LY PILOT ,,,ond,1)'. J1nnt1ry 18, 11711 .. J[Il] .__I _ ...... _-·~lllll ;;;I _ ....... _ ... " ;;;;l[Il];;tJ 1 Af>t•., -.,, .. ,. soo~ncement1 5Gl. Scl-'lf. c.ntr--oclnnlntl HelplfW•-.M&Fn• .i.w.-,l'emalom HelpWanted,M&F711 I ... · .... -lf!l 1 ,,,_.,.,_ I~ I -I~ I 1~1---1~1-... -1~1 & ... , .... Furn • .,. Unfvm. 371liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --'"-•truct __ i..._. ___ 571_ Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 -------1-=====:::; 1-------1 -;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;! San Clemente e HOUSECLEANING a 11 HOW about an "All-Around ·BANK· -----1 WANTED COSTA MESA ROBERTS ThorouP I:: ftUONl.ble Girl'?" Yng, alb', a&:· 2 BR., • BA-, bllln _.. PRE.SCHOOL REMODELING •n.1867 ... 6C-7195 .,...., ... Sklll<l! In Writing, POSITIONS ,,_, I•und<y lac. Re<, OVERWEIGHT/LADIES I'""• MoOioY\&, \I day + CU.tom Remodeling Jenltorlal Co~ PBX, Sec'y/"<Pl. 646-37'9 Now iot<rviewing'""'w . nn, ~tully decorated. full 48¥ aesalons Planned For P&rticular People AIDES-For canva.lescence, 1 .. ,,. In N ' briiOCh ope11 .. ,. e\\'· Adults Only • $180. Jirogram, hOt lunches. Ages Balboa Isle 673.9282 QUALITY Janitorial a: clean-eldt>rly care or tamilY cart. :114 Calle Pa•~.,·. I U, hn 6:30 AM.fi:OO PM. Homemakers, 547-6681 . port ~nter in f'ebrua.cy, u" "!!!!!!!\!!~'!!!'!!!!!!!!!!l!!'!!!!!!!I ing serv. w/a price you Cua Contr:nta, 492.2259 For weight reducing program to establish 1 $18 wk-COMPARE! 00-4050 = WALKING DECK ca.o atford. Deptndable, iflll. DEPENDABLE Woman to • TELLERS e statistics for rapjd permanent weight loss, I or 838-5237. COATINGS Ba~r Cleaning ' Mainten. do housev.wk. 4 hrs per . requlred conducted by qualified physical culturists. PlANO Lessons your home Of all typei. Lee Roofing ance, 646-1082. day. Own II"llMP. M2-5539 Bank expcru.•nce · Must be a minimum of 20 pounds over-cerutled teachers. MU11ic Co., CM. &12-7222 for .tree Landscaplnsr t•mpor•ry Jobs Wanted# M & F 704 • PROOF MACHINE weight have transportation an d not current-Systems. Mr. Hathcock, e!t. I OPER e I~ R-..1 ly under doctor's care. All inquiries complete-646-1368 ROOM Additions. L. T. ~DSCA.P~G: Jncludlnc peraonne J-klusecleaning $3 hr NCR experience prefm"ftd, ly confidential. Con51ruction. Sina;Je story or patios, deck.in& & fencing. proud to be an and Plumbing Repair I I ~ 2. Estim., plans &: .la:yout. Reas. 837-9301. e 545-2929 e ROOM w/bath in Univ Park S.W.. Ind~~ 847-1511. Maintenance Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~ool!.~=a::;.l3,s~ut:~ ~~~~~~~;~~!~~~~~~~~~ Fencing llUSBAND BU6)'! Ca l l amer•1can 400 ASK FOR MISS POWELL -S37..S410 & laundry privileges. Call ~ Babysitting I REDWOOD F ENCE S MMoo"""t A ythiRepa.ir~~~~~aint. alt" 5, lm-1757 I ""'t•I• II &11 II*'-I --------Pa!Joo.O.dcing n "' ~~.,,.. VT entrance & bath, $18 . ,,,.., Per5onoil5 . • OCC College girl wants &G-0991 or 673""6809 Masonry glad you're 3 "'k or $75" mo. flllin intj ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;~/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~~ permanent babysitting job FUrnitur• ln yd v•ork $15 oft rent./1 \\'it h woman who wor~ I---~------BJUCK, block, concrete, lj"8-~"'6ji7';;;o;;;-;;;{;;r-ii(>irn;:l :B:u:•:':•:•:n:_:R~•:n~t:•~l-_:44::::S P e rsonals 530 nites. Responsible and re-FURNITURE sir i pp 1 n g . ~;:• ;:~!;~1~~ g•1rl?? !LARGE roon1 in pvt 0<_1n1c. I liable. Good !erms. Live-Alw, boat parts, "'.ood &. job too small. Lie, Contr, Working man only, Costa STORE or Shop avail . FULLY LICENSED * in OK. Call LyM 531--3885. metal. In our 10 vat. 962-6S45. ~M~e~~~-=are~a."-"6-'-c-7504_' ~~~I downtown San Jua1n1 ~ Renowned lHndu Spiritualisl Monday, \Vednesday & 642-3445. ~==-==~==-* NICE room for rent. Man Capistrano for s ma Advice on all matters. weekends only. Gardening BRICK & BLOCK WORK only. business or ofiice. $75/mQ. Love M•-••g• 8,,,1_,, DAY care exper mother. my MASONRY OF .ALL TYPES 493-1153 or 493-1706 eves. ' ........ • " "" For estimate 531 2852 Call ~S.8119 Readings given 7 daya a home. Fncd yd, hot meals, AL'S GARDENING • • PRIVATE ROOr-.1, KIT· E. 17th St., Costa M asa v.·eelr, 10 am .10 pm. 1 reas. Nr Whittier Sehl. tor Gardening & sman Ian.J. ?alntlng & CHEN p R J v J LEGE S, Store-office, ;60 Month 312 N. El Camino Real, ~"'~,...,.=='·=~~~~--11Caping services call 544)..5198 Paperhanging POOL, 549-4333 Realonomics Corp. 675.6700 San Clen1('n!e RE Sp O N S I B LE young Serving Newport, CdM' Cos. CONGE.i'ltAL empl. man • DRESS ghop for lease $150. 192-9136, 192-0076 Y:o1nan with own ta Mesa. Dover shores, PROFESSIONAL Painting. Share bachelor home nr 109 22nd St, Newport Beach. YOGA FOR YOU! tl'ansportatlon will babysit Westc lill Exler. 1 story, low as S200 d il kl 675" -20 • w/gd paint. .Avg rm. ;ix. Thurin Sl 646-15~ 531-5363 American approach. Demon.1 ,,c~0~Yc,c"';.-w~ee=~Y~· -"'~'-"''=-1MOW & edge avg lrnt &. Accous ceilings sp~ 2-* FURNISHED room. pvt Industrial Rental 450 stratlon & talk on ?t1on & Babysitting my home, day or bk yd SS wk. Regular maint. coat. Jis. Roy, 847_1358 entrance, kitchen privil. i 201----------Tues at S pm. CLASSES night, any age, fncd Yd. Hot imm 7 ed. serv, Re 11 a , No Was'"'"'- wk. 64&-2042. NEW BUILDING START Tu" at 2 pm Wed moaI, 646-3T.18 ,..._ 318. '* WALLPAPER ,.; * $15 PER week • up COSTA MESA nite at 7 pm. . e CHILD CARE e , NEW Lawns, re-seed. Coi:'pl ·'when l'OU call "Mac~ \v/kHchens. $27.50 per week 128() SQ. ft. at $167 mo. --W~~IL~L~P~A~Y~-· 1 Pomona School area lawn care. Clean up by job 548-!44'4 646-lnl • up Apts. MOTEL. 54S-9755 6500 Sq, ft. Jlc Gross * 548-5828 * or mo. Free est. For info ==~--~~-=- NEWLY furn room, $18 per lmmediata Occupancy Need ride dally to & from I ;w"1"L'L-"ba"b~y"•"it-my=~ho~m-e 89'1·2411 or 846.0932 lNT/Elcter painting. Free week & up. Pvt entr avail. U0.220 Power , private offices, work. Live in Laguna· work Bayview Sehl area. Any AL'S Landscaping,. T r ee eRt. ~ rel's. Lic'd & ins. Phone 546-0451 plenty of pa'klng, 18th and in Costa Mesa. Hours 8 to age. Call 546--0981 removal. Yard remodeling. Accoustical Ceillnp, Call 5. llome 494-5739, Chuck 64S-0809 * FURN room in priv. Whittier. Carpenter Trash hauling, lot cleanup. • · home, Costa Mesa. Kilch. 642·1485 Agent HELP NEEDED Repair zprinklen 673-llli6. PAINTING-Ext-Int 18 yrs. privil + Nr occ 549-1061 Food, clolhlng, bedding, hse· CARPENTRY EUROPEAN LANDSCAPER exper. lns. Lie. Free est · · · · '25 SQ.r FT. BLDG. ho:d items for 80 ornhans. MINOR REPAIRS, No J ob Cloan up • Tree ~.-,..., Acooust. Ceilings, 968-9126. PVT, rm &: bath, have own E. 17th St., Costa Mesa .,.. .., ... 5 •3 car. Ad!t Y.'Orking lady. $65 2ai Electrical Power. 8374768, 496-1662 or 196-4860. Too Small. CabillP.f in gar-Reasonable. Eves 496-3383 INT/Exler Painting. Free mo. C.M. area. 546-1300 $lll0 Mo, 6'J5.6700 _ Broko' ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. ages & ot h er cabinets, * Res'd tial _ ,\ t * est. Ref'1, lmmed. Servict. .. " ~75 U 1 1 en p s ,,.,,. ..,..0 "" ~14 YNG II kl · I Phone 542-7217 or write to ~....,~ no an11wer eave * Comm''''·a1 * O'tt>"'V•a , .,..,,...,., • co ege or wor ng ill' INDUSTRIAL bldg So Santa .,.,,.,,~ Balboa lsJ. Kit & TV rm Ana approx 5700 q, de-P. 0. Box 1223 Costa ?tfesa. msg at .....,. ,.., IL 0. Complete Care 646-9855 3 Bfl. EXT. $125. tele. $65/rno & up. 6'5-3613 luxe' air co~d offic:s.' 1240 :nJernon GEN Cleanup, tree & sprnklr Steve 4 BR. EXT. Sl~8-4S49 LRG room In pvt home, pvt. E. Hunter St. ownr 495.4349 '------~'lg] A TER.ATJONS & repairs. &erv. Rototll. Handyman,1'"c.;;=~~-~_ccc,C7' BA & $15 k N ' Loil and Fotnl Lie. & Insured-Res & comm. odd jobs. Reas. 64&.5848 I NTER/Exter. Specialists · · enter. · w · r. NEW bldg, 1728·2300 sq, fl. Door hanging • drywall I ~=""o-;,---cc.cc-~~-·I Lic'd bonded ins. Won't Warner & Beach. 842-4649 Nr .Baker & Fairview, 1 Paneling. 642-5872. EXPER. Hawaiian ~ncr be u~derl:rid! MJ.5085 Rantals to She r• 430 yrlse, SUilivan, 540--4429. ••••••••••i,.==.=;..,,--.,-,----·I Comp l eteGa r den1ng1~--,-~~cc-----Found (free ads) 550 Carpet Service Service. Kamalani, 646--4676. PAINTING: Honest, guaran-~'ANT fem! roommate, pref Rentals Wanted 460 .:.::::::::...c:,:.::..:::::':........:::::1 -0:::.,rm'::":o~":d~Ca;::--.,..=--.1-0:-,.-,~.,,-.-Complete Yard Carel teed work. Lic'd. Local rel'!!, age 30.45 !or 1 BR, Oakwood 3 BR house unfurn. llarbor tilALE German Shepherd, New Year Special! JIM 540-4837 Call 675-5740 aft 5. Garden apL D•y• -HS •. . f .1· f 5 & approx 1 yr old. Yellow P'"~ING/pa-n·"g 18...;. 1str1ct am1 y o ""--Mino' Rop••·~og G I S · , ...... • .--" ' .,.-54S-9038, aft 5-642--817;) s~~li dog.• Appn" l200. Schvoinn 011 Tustin & 17th w",.1=h Clea,•-400'"I~. •n•r• •rv1cas in Harbor area. Llc & & hlk color, Vic Sea -'6 .(II/ bo a-·• R f' f ~·" "~"" MID age cmp. \\'Oman, share month. 646-7070 Frtt est. 645-1317 Eldarly, Attantlonl n =· e 5 urn."".-~. bea t lg 2 B I Sl , C .. \1. fi.-16---2646 my .u · e. r. ap · HANDY young married COU· FOUND light bro\\'n n1ale CARPET layer has shag Will take you by car, any FIRST Class Painting & No dnnk or s m 0 k e' ple needs l BR hse \11 /yard , dog J'l>lcxican hairless/? carpet. Roll-ends. Install. errand. Reas lee. 536-2979 paper • hanging. Free est. 548·6432· willing to make repairs & Hol111wood Dr. Newport guar. Reas. 64J...t359 AM or RAIN Gutters I nst a 11 e d , Call 545-3459. MATURE Employed woman, Improvement, &1:'>-3709 Brach, &1&-Tl90 P!l1 Quality \\"Ork. Reasonable. * PAPERHANGING no smoking I drinking. \VANT to rent garag or t'OUND tan chi huahua_, Ceilings Free est. 968-2208. & PAINTING, * 968.2425 Assume % rent. Mesa del small room wtelt>c & even-Yashion Island Car \Vash. Hauling Plastar,. Patch, Repair Mar. 549-<M:il, 6--8 PM. tilation. for slorage & sculp. Al Coun1 y Animal Shelter. PAINT Accoustical Ceilings, ™£my watertront home ting. Cali 644-2521 evenings. 1/14. 673-8498. $10 ea or trade. 531-6927, \'ARD, Garage cleanups. * PA70I PLASTERING fvl dock. Man. 30.fiO years. M ' R t I 465 FOUND, Great Dane pup, or 636-3ll0 tree1 dirt ivy removal. skip All types. Free estimates JISO/mo. 67>-4331 isc. en a s Vi~; Orange Coast Collejte. Cement, Concreta loader, backhoe. 962-8745. Call 541).6825 WANTED ~ the l"ight woman Fenced storage i;patt 5'&-4071 • TRASH & Garage clean-up, Plumbing J> ahr NB Blullll hm. Pvt tor campers, boats. etc, YOUNG Siberian J{usky , Vic. CEMENT WORK, no job too days. SIO a load. Free esi.1----''------ ba, all priv. $8!), ~369 Call 642-6560 22nd iii Costa Mesa 536-3174 i;mal!, reasonable. Free Anytime, 54g..5031, PLUMBING REPAIR Offica Renta l 440 GARAGE for rent. 2,0-10 cu lo identify Estim. H. Stunick, 5411-8615. l\10VING, Garage clean-up No job too small SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY ft. Storage only, $50 mo. FOUND Brov.•n Dachshund Ceilings &: Hie hauling, Rea!!On&ble. • 642-3128 • I ,3 t 3 000 61&4TI6 aft Sunday about 2 yrs, 2 collars, Vic ---"--------1 Free estimates. 645-1602 Roofing ·v room, up o . sq. ee CONCRETE. Floors, I ut::::::::::o:c:::;=::------1---~-------tt. Ou,·-, .. ,.t,,, Imm-'. --Ogle St. C!ll. ~R--6708 . A . . b R Hou1oclean•'n9 u ...... u .,... ...... patios. ny -size )0 • eu. l----------·ILEE ROOFING CO; Roofing cupancy. Orange County: I If-) S.\1ALL whl poodle has lie. C:all Don 642-8514. HOUSE .. ~,k 4 h-fo< •··o or all type11, r ecover, I •-rt Irvine Co ' Announcement• Vic. 17!h & Tustin Ave irl "" "' ,,.. .~..... mm re· c 646-837 Contractor people. ~ transp . repairs, roof ~tings. Lie register with • amer1can girl Invest your time & talent wise~ & be your own boss! a t american girl J,,t# A Better Poaition Ti-P, I X, &IZ UINDU .f • 1..-wl A,..._ Oii C-,... Dr. • Nrql#f ._. ..... ,,,,_~CU/ ...... AGGRESSIVE, sharp salesman or Saleswoman. Must have knowledge of foods & lood service. Mlll"Velous opportunity for rjght penon. Call 6T;i-1002 AUTO POLISH I NG & DE.TAIL positions. Exp'd engine cleaning &: paint-bu!+ fini. Salary open. Growth ro. METRO CAR \VASH 2950 Harbor-Blvd., C.M. Auditor to $15,000. Fee Rd. (also tee jobs) De- gree required. Call Ann, Westclift Personnel Agency, 2043 Westclitt Dr. N.B. 645-27'10, Auto Service Cashier M lll!t kAow fact. claims. Exp'd. only, &al. open, Loni estab. GM dealer C.M. State qual's to Box #17, Daily PUot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Accnt. 3 yrs, exp, young co. Call Loraine, Westclitt Personnel ~ncy. 2043 WestclW Dr., N.B. 64S.27'l0. Applicants SERVICE CENTER Employment Agency *** Skilled Counseling Clerical Professional Placements Helen $chatter 644-4981 500 Newport Cenler Dr., NB Suite 535· A/RECEIVABLE TO $400 Auto agency background pref'd. 2 Yr11 exper, S.A. .,,, .. CALL ZENA ( 714) 956-1000 CAL·FA IR EMPLOYMENT AGENCY -APPLY - r-.fR. MORRISON 2859 E. Coast Hwy. Corona d(') Mar Crocker Citizens Nationol Bank Equal opportunity employtr "BEAUTY ls Our Busille!ls" Make it yours -become an AV ON REPRESEN· TATIVE. No exper. nee. Own hl'S. High earning potential. Call 1 m m t d . 540-7041 BEAUTY Advisor to . demonstrate exciting new products. No door to door. Selling required. new com· pany-lets grow together. Call 847-£324. BOAT CARPENTERS Experienced only apply. 1· \Villard Boat Works 1300 Logan Ave., C.M. I *BOAT CARPENTER and! FIBERGLASS. Perm. job W/fringe benefits. LAKE ARROWHEAD M A R I NA ITI4) 337-2501 CARRIER BOYS WANTED '"' ""' DAILY PILOT Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano and Capistrano Beach. Contact Mr. Seay lit DAILY PILOT San Oem@nte oU:ice 305 N, El Camino ReaJ -* * CASHIER. National Lumber, Huntington Beach. Call 962.55(;1 JO to 4 P.M. CASHIER TO $400 Beach area Auto Agency needs service cashier. Ex. per. warranty daim.s. Only auto agency background •P· ply. Interviews Sal! By Apgt, CALL ZENA (71 4) 956-1000 CAL .FAIR EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 6'25 So. Euclid, Sui!e 4 Anaheim Complex, adj. Airporterl •;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~ !\ii. 0 ----------1 Reliable. 541_9330 & 543-3626 .\ bonded since 19 4 7 . Hotel & Restaurant, banks. JI BL Ac K p u pp y • pa r t MY Way, quality borne 1 ->Hii'oitul!siiECLiO:iEANW<il~NiCG:-11;"~2-~1;m~ . .,,-,..-,--,..--,,,,,.~ SM Diego & N'pt Fwys. Announcemants SOO Labrador, fouod near repair. Walls, ceiling, floors EFORE y b all T you will find axciting t•mpor1ry positions to f it your schedule & needs. G25 So. Euclid, Suite ~ CASHIER For fine ladies Anaheim • UNCROWDED PARKING a!r-nort. 646-4522 By Day. O\\'TI Transportation B . OU UY. t · ·.-etc, No job too small. 836--0648 Guy Roofing Co. Reoover LOWEST RATES ACCEPTING New p iano LOVELY gold & wht male 547.0Q36, 24 tir Ms. serv. COMPLETE bo I . specialist. 6 45-2780, Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr. studenll to learn theory, Adult cat green/gold eyes. usec ean1ng 548-9•90 Rm. 8, Ne\\'JXlrl Beach sight reading elc. Call Vic CdM 673-5ro2 LIC'D Contr. Remodeling, $2.50 hr, Stove, retrig etc.l=o'=='=·~~~~~~- Sll-3223 Courtesy to Broken Bruce (U.CJ. music KEYS found at 15!h & Irvine, add~ns. roofing, painting & Ne\\'JXlrl-Bch. 67:'>-5583. EA~ERN Quality-\Vest.ern DESK SPACE bkgmdl 546-4478. Newport Beach Januacy repairs, 540-7858, 540.7664. HOUSE OF CLEAN Prices! All types Roofing. 222 ~ t A Legal Notices 510 131h. 642-6322 afTer 5:30 GEN'L CONTRACTOR Complete House Cleaning Lyle , 673-7980. , ores venu~ F"ounrt Poodle Vi cinity 300 Remodeling.Room Additions 642-6824 ROOFING . A·l Re~~rs. CA~r, L B h I \\'ILL ·not be respons ible Lic'd/itl!I &15-0991, 673-6809 "·I Cl . "'--kind. Rea s. pri..-..-u , = aguna eac blor.k 17th St, Costa Mesa. •v esa .ean111g .x:rv1CP. anytime 645--0188 4S4-94&6 for any debts othrr than &l&.1116 Additions * Remodeling Carpets. Windo,vs. Floors etc ' , r---~-~~-~--I my own. Gary 0 . Sanders, Gerwick & Son, Lie. , .R=';'~&:,..:C=o=m=m='~·=1-,--'54~J!.4:..:::l=ll:l-S-•w_;n_g~/_A_ll_•_,._,_,_•n_• __ DESK SPACE 7762 Speer Ave. llunt. Bch., lost SSS 67J...6041 * 549-2170 1' ca. 926,17 -COUPLE doing house \\'ork. e Dre$smaking -AlteraUOns 305 No. El Cimino Reil ------- San Cl1mente ~ sq, ~~und floor. I Pmo"11' ll'I prestige Westclll! Dr, Pvtl';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;~~ entrance. Util paid. Park.11 ing, $85 mo. li41 Westclifll.P_o_,_ .. _•_•_1• ____ _:5~3"0 Dr, 6.ff>-&13.1. FREE AlR Cond. crpts, facing Beach Blvd, Reas. Call 842-2525 or owher Basic BoatingCourseoff- 2131394-0015, ered to the public by the VERY nice ottlee In Laguna Balboa Power Squadron. Beach, w/w cpL drps. sail as "'elJ as power 494-9633 or 494-1447• Ask tor boating taught. Starting 8 k 7 pm Mon. Jan. 18. Every Mr. rac . M _, 1 Ouuay n le for 13 wcrkll. CORONA DEL MAR At Newport.Harbor Yacht .\IlNIA. brown !emale Pnodl(' Li c'd Contr. Remodeling 4 !'lour shift.! SpeciaJ On Hems since Jan 12 in Vit. ol Addi!ions, Plans, Layout 962·8506 Cal Jo * 646-6446 S p r I n g d a I e I l::dingrr, Karl E. KendaU 548-1531 Prestige Tract. SZJ Rr\~"ard . \Ve"U help )-'OU sell! &42-5618 A good \\'ant ad is a investment 8~6-4883 -· -·~·---------·· -- good EUROPEAN dressmaking all cuslom fitted. Vrry reason. able>. 673-1849 LOsr Siamese Kitten. Nr: * * Balboa Blvd & G SL Alterations -642-S84S * * * * Rrwarrl Call: 67~1276. r-------------------,\1~N~'~"~·~·~cc~·w-a~te'!!., ~2Q~y~'~"'~!<'~P~· FEMALE Siamese killi!n, 3 Tile mo's old. Tan & grey. Vic Trader's Parad1'se 62oo & Oc<.nfront, N.B. * V'""'· Tho Tll• Mon * &12-0719. CusL work. Install I: repaiJ'll. ALL black Labrador Re1r., 1 • No .)ob too smL Plastt!r female. Lost tags, Re\\'ard, Ines patching. Leaking shower Call 962-2!'.00 repair. 847-1957/846-0206. MIN. brown Dachshund lost t1' mes CERAMIC tile new & on Ma ple St. CM. "Speedy". remodel. Free est. Small SlO Reward, 54S-2354 jobz welcome, 536·2426 , WE NEED TYPISTS . CLERKS STENOS FLEXOWRITER SECRCTARIES PBX OPERATORS ~~~~!'!""'""!"""~"-"I clothin& slore. Part-time. BABYSITTER needed. Smith No phone calls. Back.street, d. 2 No :25 Fashion Island. N.B. Elem Sch 1st, H.B. :30 to 9:30 p.m., Mon thru CLOSERS ThUTS. YIJ\lr home. Those Distributorship Sales with !<Wing care only need Franchise and apply. 536-1855 Expe.rienced Only Babysitter/Hskpr, Jive in, $1 ,000/$1,500 wk. comm. children 5 & 7. Some Eng Qualify applicants. pref'd Ref's 893-7!ffi2 With Vending il.·lfg., Heavy ~===~-=---:--Travel. All Leads Furnished * BARMAID. Sharp ga1, no Thru National Advertisin& costume. Will train, age 30 Call Collect (312) 642.3757 •+ ... ,ti~750ir~5~17IOl .. a~ttioi12iaonoo&n.,. "'" Mr. Sanders, BF"C Su it.! 3121 ·JOHN HANCOCK Betty Bruce CENTER • Chicago, Illinois m JI 60611 i :Jj C..xec COASTAL AGENCY Agen cy Accounts P a yabla • 2 Yrs, eXpcr. Construction pref'd. Typing 50, JO kC'y adding by touch. S.cretary A member of Snelling & Snelling tnc, MGMT TRAINEE Sales to & servicing large wholesalers, \Vork w/inter- esting people. Adventure in short traveling. Start $5700. C&IJ Helen Hayes. ESCROW CLERK 2 Rm suite, pvt ba, pvt entr, Oub, 720 \V, Bay Ave .• Prkg, crpt/drp, utll ·pd, N~t Beach. Brina $14&/mo. Owner. 67J.6757 notebook & pencil 1.Jrat NEWPORT offices, c pt s , nite. Any questioM clill lnatniction dollars T=~ J!1•J ..... -----------------"'ITEENAGE tu toring & ASST. BKKPRS. To V.P. propeny develop. ment. Heavy typing & SH. Esttow eXpcr, good. Dicta. ........ Ganaral Office Prefer previous exper. Cd skilis, Start $500. Call Hden ·; Hayes. drpa:, ocean view, from S65 673-1855. ~· Onr Art G pm: l---'F::,.,R~E=E~-~- 600-1200 ·so. FT. H ti t ·-h Po--, Office CM 646.2130 un ng on ~•c "'"' 1• ' Squadron'• bulc boating 3'TID NEWPORT B'LVD, NB coune for aa.U or power ON THE BAY ' 6'f$.2f&4 or 541-5032 Claaees start: Monday. Jan. 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM uary 11th 35c: sq. foot Tlmt': 'l:OO P.M. ~ or 5U..so32 At: Hunti~i(:on Beach High * NEWPORT BEACH Clvte School, Room Ul =· ~~. ~t~i F~~tioll lele_pbonc: us:; Pu1r Ave, CM. 1,000 ADVENTURE ft. 4 Rms. Ah--cood. PhOne SAILING CRUISE ~eve. Ct'1 to Bkrll. 1.50 t1. 3 mut Squu. Rlger. £XECU11VE wile of of. Leavlrw 3115171 f or 3 fleet. 3345 Newport Blvd, months. Men A women want. .N.8'. Call M5-454S ed w/&!sJrt for a<lvtnt\lr't' HAVE oft!ce ~ to ahare, A travel &: abill~ to share O.C.. AJrpcrt artt., S75 mo. eXpcNet. For lnfonmtkln ';;;;iiij;;;iiijiiij;;;;·~~ c: o u nseling, Experienced, ~ Fully equipped fluU & fold CAPISTRANO C·ZONED crede.n tla lcd teadter. Schools & laundry, est 12 yrs, va1ue 4 + Acres, free & clear, 542-85U. CaU betwn 6:30 fnstructions 575 $10,@ : suit couple . Ex-$130,000. TRADE FOR in-& T:30 ----'-""----' change n)(lbile or motor come or 'T ?'? l,T;r~ .. ""~s~.-l'V-l~c-.----- Discover • Graa t Naw borne or sm house. 5'18·5640 REALTOR 548-77ll • Carpr With Tha '70 VW Squarebac:k, fully Have new dble \vide 2-etory TREES, Hedges:, Top, Trim, amer1can equipped auto. Will trade mobile home. Want smaller cut. re~, hauled. Ina. ACCTG. CLERKS SH 80, typing fiO, dlctaphone, phones, Front otc appear. Beautif'ul otcs on \\'aterfront. Asst. Bookkffper To T.B. Lite typing, JX!Sling, een'I Jedger. invoicing, AIRLINES for '69 or '70 club wagon. sngl wide mobile home, late 6A2--4COO B11 John E:vcn exchange, model motor home or wtlat I F /C BookkMper A nalural for young people 5'18-6089 have )'OU. 673·6809. 1 II I I) g•ir c .P.A. once a year. General who want excitement plus! 1--,--------Owner will trade SOM equity E,.to,l'Mllt ~ l~r. P l L's, tlnanciaJ Ticket Agent'!' Air Freight'T **&tui, 'ty I··, beal.ltiful In 1 c .M. tr1-plexe11 for ZI~· iiii;;;;;;;••.:;;;;1 stint&, A/Payable, Station age n tf Reserva. OCi!FO_an root ot n Mexico. :ir more units: In Oranacll liol'lll? Ramp or travel R Station wagon or ?'r Co. Principals Only. Job Wanted, Mlle 700 Jr. S.Cr•tary agent! We'll train you lor Cal 6n.0598 54S-OC33. needs YOU SH 70 up. Typing 50 up. lhese and more, day or nlle, ProfiL 36 A. orange grove, l'nde Lake AmlWMaci lot SCRAM LETS We include placement as. xlnt tax shelter, F&C. val w/lake & country club prlv. • Clerk Typist ' aistahct:. $93,IXKI; tor yacht Inc prop, lll!JeS, SlS,000 eq FOR beach AN. SWERs· (7) Productkm dept & Re· b11111.ness. McCrea, 1200 ruv. Jn'UP. mndo, apts, hOu!le. an.rch. Some cfc eicoer. ~!ie!e~ig~~!1:~uC:: 1-'-"-"'-'_v_,.,_s _url>a_"_k_.__ Jtone or Dick, 714/822-0569. fhbotn -Motif -Gulch -2172 Dupont, ~~~.for dept sec'y. SO. under the federally inwt'fd '65 Dodge 880, full power, HAVE 10 Unltl Ip Downey. Legacy -LUMBAR atudent lod.n p~m. cl I n..t...i WANT: Un!IS In Oranp l.awyt>r: Did you say thl Recept/PBX •¥--•· :itln ean n & out? .... ~ .. •• .---. 2nd Tnllt Deed S it 12 nal owner. $980 blue bOOlt ......,...,..., t'lr ~ s pl.tlntirt W\IJ ihot ln the U I Coqt .. boe.rd, IYPinl 50·60. M1. or submit. Lee PertYda woods, doctOl'.T tuit vel. Trade on 1mall boblt Realtor M6..1693. Doctor: l did not I aald IJ.1..)j6J, call Pam ReynOidl. (213) Mta 445 1,3="'~"°'=0,· ~---~-Alrllna Schools Pacific -FRENCH Leasona: Con-610 E 17th S •-storeU W. ltlh St., CM versationAI Frens::h. u!Ung , . • StUs!."1•, ~• Slll/me. * M6-7414 aud lo-v lau •J method. . .., . «IO' STORE, ...... ott1co.1,'= .. =...,="'=~~-~-i PIANO LE SSONS $95. 2StO Newport BlYd, SWINGER Oranp Co . Bofnnera, lnttnnf!dl3tea, C.M. ~ M&-'133 O\ildr, Free info OCSG P. Lieirn theory. 11igh1 reading .tutttt di:w in the Wat 0. Box %1lJ. AMhdm, ftC. CalJ. Bruce (U.C.J. mus- • • a DaMy Pilot Cla.ui&d 921).1. 539-S081. le bka:rnd) Mi-4478, MHB Ad. 64~8 f'or bt-st reaull5! 642--5678 _v_'-"'-'-·-------- equity. 841&84. lG Al:.. cleM level, on un. that he \\'U ahOt ln the LUM. Newport Beach Clo \Y. C01st Hwy. Whatdoyoohl.vetotnde~ lmproVf!d land in Nevada.1,e=A~R=""~·-"·=--~~-~ l ttewpert le.ch t.ist 1l here -· fn en,.. WU1 trade lor t'ar, catnpe:r, POSITION Dcaln!d as Ser. ly ...... .....,,,. County'1 kl.~tt rtad CnJI. ~. condo or r Rc:-p, 10 yn, exp. (')f] Ina pt.SC.5671 Cali S4(l.233J ~tth-OpUcal lnat. Write (Nr. Orange County rrs W'UICDERJlJL t he * Claaslfied Box No. 11 Dally Airport} mUI)' buya In •iaDCtS Pilot, P. 0. Bmt U60, Costa Y'O'll ftnd In the Oaulf'led l~M'!!"'!!:.:· c~•!!!ll~f._!!12626~!;.· ___ J!:!!~~~~~~~~ I Mt. C'!lwd thmt mwt * * * * * ----------- I RECEPTIONIST Lovely ofc. Ideal tocatlOn for gal w/typing. >.1n't room ror advancement. Slart $400, Call Linda Lee. 1. SECRETARY M SH & typing w/automotfve I knowledge will land thla one In desirable area. Lovely nc!W ofc. Start $450. CaJl Linda Lee. CLERICAL Will train. Litt lyJllng. Crnt nppor. for aharp Pf!""". Start s.~. cau Sally RArt. RECEPTIONIST Litc typtng, pleasant ~rson. aJ\ty. f'antA.rtic oppor, w/ Jt")wing mncetn, Start S400. Call Sally Hnrt 548-6855 2790 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa COOK • woman. ReUremen home, Lquna Beach. C 4!K-!M!58 j • • MOtlct.ily, January 18, 1,7\ OAJlV Pfl.O'r~ .IJ I f s'' I l[ll] "f ! ~.:...::· • 1lllJ I . : __ , l[IlJ I I ..... ... ll§J ~, ~.d~·. .~: ~I[§]~· =-1 -~.d~._,._~__,-~]l§J~ I_ ~..... ][I I~· -;;=;;=;;··~'~;;;~~1;f ·~-"•;;;"'";;" ... ~]~~I jHal;;;,;W;•ii.nliiOdjiiiii,Miiiii"~F~71~0 Ro'1fW.-._M'&~;llH!Jll,~.nJC;M&'7!0 ~lquos 100 Fumtfuro " S:llq'u;.,,llu,.. Ii~ ......,,,,.oidwhi.._ G•naral 9GO MobllaHom•• flS .. -• . DENTAL ASSISTANT eM!Mde, GP. Giri ~. exp req'4-5*-9519 14 pm * DENTAL • Sec:rela'ry !Reeeplionist 546-5613 DIS'tRiBl.Tl'OR, Man a i:' e )'OW' own bUSlneu w/in- ecome potenliaJ ot $1000 p.r mo, lnldai investment less tMn noo. Early retiremenl poa:slble. 66-2150. ---'j;;;;~;;:;Q;j';;---1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-iijiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:i;;;;;iiiiiii male cat. Alltt!(t lho" hax N"""Y School T .. ,h... llih ANTIQUE cL·o· sJ;l1·N· G ouT .. 1 ...... N ..... iood ..... [ Write &.'if. i qua!irs to SHOW & SALE ' lmll\fd, 6'4-0139 Oaallied ad No. 16 De.Uy LONG BEACH !ALE Pilo'· ".~Bo' 1"°. Coil& SPORTS ARENA DECORATOlt GETS CANCELLATION ?. • Ba"Yi'i"\ t:Kal.r.i., ' ~-" Bl d Ml TS tn-<"Olor 4 yn old, rood Mesa~. 92626 Vl'.ean &: 1.A>ng Beacb v . OF 18 LUXURY APART N wtchHdren. Owner movin&-* NU~ AIDES Thur. Fri. Sat, 1·10 P~t Spanish & MecUttrT•nHn furniture ol!b-4l9S 1119 * COOK 1TRAINEE Sun 12 to 6 PM-_ ALL BRAND NEW "TIPPY" lovMle blk/wh! Bayvitow~~valeacen1 Jfogp, AUTiiENTIC 100 )'ear old A decqrator dream house on display -sm breed pup, h9brk. all i • ~ Victorian hardware, hinges. 3 rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture shots, needs gd home l°'"NE PERSONNEL OPERS.SlNGLE N~EDLE door """"" ""'""' Pull•. (was reg. $1295.) !M;>--0481 1118 1''f'I Spec, macb. E.q>d ()n}y, etc. Sail Inn Motel, 2627 SACRIFICE $425 FREE to rood home. l.4:e ·SERYICES•AGENCY sportswear, rd. pay. N.B. Newport Blvd ., Sat thru • • ' • • • Gennan Shepherd I: am r;: .. 642.3'72. Tues, 4-8 pm. Complete Mediterr•n••n Bedroorrt Suit• coc k-a-poo puppy . Ever think k !'ART Tl~fE • Clerk/I'ypi!lt BRA.SS bed, mattress, box in Oe k. IR•9. $349.001 -····NOW $181.00 548-0166. 1/19 You'd be 9ood S.c'y/Book Hptr • bookt!:eeper, small in-sprinp & custm made Gorg•oui Spenisft Cu1tom Built Sofe"with BEAU. t.lale Basset hound ' .~FRf£ .. Buie Boating Course off· •red "I tho >'llt!i< by tho 1Sa!lloa Powet ~'On. S&.I! as wtlf' al power boating tau&)lt. Starting 1 pm Mon. Jan. 18. Every M.onday n1 te far 1l wWts. At Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Ta:i W. 88¥ Aw., Newport Beaeb. B~ notebook & pencil tint nite, Arty quesUons call 673-1855. :a•: t'11it?t:l•l•l!ll#l -by Irvine Oranps.I Rn.! nmtl Uvlnc Yet dole to ocean, •hoPPlnc M """'\Jon All EUCTRIC Ohoose ~m 105 floor plmis, you name It! Run the d!ow i~ busy~girl formal 1 girl ofJ1ee $1.75 ~::w Included. SlCO . metchin9 Lov• S•et-Cftoic• of beeutiful pup 7 mo. hsbrk ehots. loves at setling :_c. Gd ,ec'y ~sf:: ba:· JX'f hour. Cati lor ap-l "Appl~,.~-----~80~2 fabrici. !Reg. $31 9.951 .... , ... NOW $198.00 children. Ne-f!ds id botne f,REE Adults-Pets O.K. life insurance? 'i!.t!:I ~r;a· · · . poiptn1ent. 645-lOZl iances Spanish Din ing s.+, ... -.......................... $75.00 546-2216; 836--4493 l/16 Private Clul>-$l00,000 Mutual funds? ifOU ic pu . e PL A'S TICS. r.l UST' seU pertecr Span oak Solid Oak End Tablei & Coffee Tebles $19.50 I'M alitt~crangekitten,My Huntina-ton Beach Pc'>Yl!r R.cr9atianCtnhr Asst. Bookkeeper . . . j 8' ill!'roo, {rifidaire ropper T •II Decor•tor T .ble Lem pl nan1e ig Harvey Ir: I'm hani;. Squadnin'1 basic boating Investment Min. 2 yr& gen'J led&;er l"X'· fmecltCn moGld1ng o~ra!~!tr!I ref. $6.5. Ga.s dl")'!!'r S60. Dbl Sp•I ~.~,9-H$'\0;9.90.:91 5 .w ... , .. 9 .... L .... m ... p .. , ...... NOW $18.00 in'"~n till li'Omeone rJvts 11 me course for saU or power. 14 BEAUTl,ULLY -·-'f 7 0 C .,_ 1 f or trainees. raveyaru &hi oven rang'! $95. Lady Ken-... h .. .. a ,...,me. 494.5700. UI FURulSHED COUrn.1 IM"I per. · ....... _. oca ion. >1 "· t d nd bl l C">" °""" IR $'9 95 NOW $22 SO Cla:ise!I start: P.londay, .Tan. "' Or did y~ ..... ver Excitin(: 'irnwth co. FeU!t.111': p~~-d~ A~:iy 9" a~ • L:~ w~e~:=· "~':;"~~ 0 c~toiT . AVAi'l~:··No· MCiNEv DOWN. 5 ll~on~ ~ ~~. p= UM'y llth M(DeoTIU93ELS) l '" """" _...___ """ ·-' Bo h h ho'-Tlmt!; 7:00 P.M. · • h Id T ' t '"' '""' · w,.,,,,oo -Dryer, '""'vt11l elec. t ave s ...,, are Wll you COU ypts Xln't <Ond. ISO G'"''"'"d RD FURNITURE f•m'""· ~• 1119 .,, ll""tington ""'h Hi<h l sell all three 1 Top, .. :cy· ,...+ !~-~U~f!~C-.. Oran~ Coast Pla!lliCS * & dellvl!red. 8 4 7-811 s. 1844 N BL-d I A H bo Bl d I '1 l-IAVE Se\'eral be II. u 11 f u I FSco!'"',.,'·,,Roormamt .... :21.t·'•P~.... 14851 Jeffrey Rd, We'l'I! one of thtt ff!w wOO ls ~.. u,.-,.., ~ g50 West l8th St.. "546-8672""==· o---:c=-:==cl ewport 19' • f Gr f Y • old<'r kittf!ns with personal!-' ~· 1:1 •r.- now in all three, And ..... e're F /C 8ookknper Cosfll Mesa, Calif. h.!~~0~f. xl~~:0 a:dllll~~: COSTA MESA ONLY Z4-~~;2 need a good tx;n~ 1!36'4;;s· CracUrbox, h i-In Irvine '.· tt11.dy to offer the right man Mu t '--t 11 qualified to PRO J?UCTION WORKERS E NI ht 'T'I 9 W-• nd S t 'T 'I 6 • .'nd1~ u Y .:.. •-· .. .., El<""rienced .... ·omen !or day Gulll'anteed & del ivere\i. !!'!ilv~•1•yi!!!!!'l!!!!l!!!i!!!!' ~!!]!!!!!~~~-~· ~·!j!!!t!!i~•i!!!· ~~· !!!!!~ J ' 'lal 1 •• 1 G powered, 1mall block, Chl"v -J lll1 eXecutive sales opportun-,..... "' corpora.., ""':x nil• . & ';ight shifts. 847~115• ~7'2. • • ' amu e a..... ' V-8 inboard w/trailer . .see 5 ml. South Ct Tustin. and ( ity. Selling broad-spectrum Re d ' pnnl out !~==~~---~~ G •-1 112 Off' F 't / Shepherd purebreds. Free •I_,, Call• San •.t·-·. ~mt. S. of Santa Ana~-·. a compu er · r.Iarlna Industries lnr Au TO . he e. v y -du f y arege ~ • ice urn1 ure 10 qual homes. 897-5480. .,_, " ... ......,. "' .. :t finAncial planning to indl· figure in!ercst, l"tc. Co. otL 16131 Gothard St.,' H.B: \\•estinghse washer .'1 dryer. Equip. 824 1119 San Juan. Capistrano or call (l mi. N. o1 San Diego f'l'w}'J. I viduals and busi.nesse!I. ~P-ers xln't benefits. M2-Tl69 llOO ,_ 6~2692 1 7 THIS & Th Sal 493-4TI6 or 493-41fi6 $425 "f resenting a first-rate $.1.biJ. pau·. ,.,.... at . at e Bell & ----------1 '2 Puppies to eood home. Call 832 8585 lion company. With a train. Secret•rv PART Or full tl~e ambitious p.m. Howell lapt? r e c o r d er. Refin'd Mx60 wood desks, belore 2:30 p.m. 5'\8-4l)lQ Boats/Marine - Ing salary up to $850 a M fa . ha i.--...nd people. Let us. Show you REFRIGERATORS \V /LG r-.1agnav()X' Stereophonic $59.50 e Retin'd wood arm l/18 Equip. 904 '--==~===~-; a.nu ctunng c"6'"" !tow to make money FREEZERS. $~>$55. De walt radial a rm rotary chain, $29.50 e We i ~,,.,;;-==:--,;.:-::;:::~= " E S month plus opportunitie,; tor n~ss. + toP sec'y skill:i. 2!3/592_5039_ ** ti46-782J ** I saw/electric drill \>Ii." 3 dr h&ve the laf'IMl selection MALE Poodle, Cocker, Ter-**WARE AUTO PILar. TH IE TOP addhiOnal income. And pros. Pleasant husy ofc. 1.-~P~L~U~M=s=E=R=s-. ---.. -,-.~&' 1 ,-----~----t.taplt! drl'SSt'r. Cameras (3) of used o.ttioe furn in thia r1er. 8 Wttks o Id , complete, BOTH WORLDS ~cts hia:h in the five-figure ,,. .. LG Gas range, Roper, cop-Lamps (J) Slide trays {20) area. 54R-6931 1/18 PIO 968-8873 For a beautif\11 home. tow •! range. A/P Bookk .. per heating. Top wages. Licens-i:r~~nt cond. $150. 1 Records {many Luggage, Mc Mahan Desk BEAUTIFUL r.tale adult cat 78 WA'IT marine radio, new; maJntena.nce and archltecur. , If this ..ounds intere.o;ling to Min. 2 yrs currez;it A/P ('X· ed. Call G4!'>-ll.30 j jl'Wl!lry, sliver tea set, 1800 Newport mvd. gold & white, rold eyes, 2 &eta hydraulic trim·lab!I, aUy bnpres1ive des{gn, See \! yo..! call us at 542-5623, Ext. per. Handling a wlume sit. ROUTE Sales-$130 wk lo st. Building Materials 806 sterling, etc. (Much morel 6t2-8450 673-5652 l/19 new. 962-49&1. the exciting new ,.Village f.I 321. We'd like to hear lrom uation in man1,1facturinf. ~ak~ o~tab tiull:r ~r;ish 182 COlta r.tesa St, rear 1 MODEL 209 JM au io photo Small breed puppies, 2 male, NEW Col. 16 McGibblns House" by Levitt Mobile·f· ! you . Local firm. w~ :iso ava~a.542-~5fJ. ume DOORS 642-6983 . 1 t ,68 $1462 12 female, Very cute. 548-9439 spinoaker Ir: poll!. $260. Systems on display now at INTER/EXTER GARAGE SALE ~P1.'.','.· '!~ .. ~,', .. ~ .... m, after 4. BAY HARBOR I FASHION PHOTOGRAPH R 11•--' 2S3 Ch YB.. ru'"'"' • ....... -;=,,-;=c-:c=c:-:--w:-546-5388 day, 6?>-Mll eve 1.•oe1LE HO"ES -Exec. S.Cret•ry ec•p ~ Y l.OOO's To Choose: From evy parts; tools; misc. ~ blk "' m ERS N!f!ded I AG INC F t ~1 14~ + 14. inbo--' .__, "'th molo• if!ase 6 payments total 13 Small bred puppies, . Boats, Powe.-906 1,= Bak•r Sl ~.1a M.,. 1 · · · · ' Top sl!C'y skill~ together W/ °" ap ren ..... s. "' · l""' Daily, 11...f Sun. a.<u """ ,.., 1"8 = bl rt I 2 al -• 1 f al 7 -~ 835-3503 ..,...,, & trailf!r. Fri, Sat, S"n. . .... ...., paya e qua er y m es auu em e J Sou • . aptitude for "glamour In. Ml LLER-DRAKE 32852 Ca.Ile San Marcos. ~ ~l.41. For full e quit Y. weeks old. 646-2106 1/19 17' Classic FG Boat , ust th of the San Diego j FLOOR WAXER dustry." Capable, cha"11· Stat Typist 2408 So. Main St., s.A. J"an '·p'-oo 40,.716 644-5055 Young AduJI Cats Calico tiberglaas, fiO hp J'ohn&on. F'nvy. at Harbor. · Exper only. 546-53811 appt. ing, stable pe~na.lity. Pu.b-Under 30. CPA eX'per. $-125. <Next to Standard Brands) .. "" "'''d · '7oJ""'I =~-=~---~=I · ' lo mi's, cuddy cabin, 18 n4/So1G-6470 d rt N I GIGANTIC "'&ra-''''· Clos. Pianos/Organs 826 fluffy Grey and MUlti-co-_1 ,~ .. i. I hi ~-I GARDENER TRAINEE, no lie relation!! &for a ve rs. ewpor S4#r103l " "'-lored 546 73(ll: ..... ........, It w uu· Pus Tripi• Wkle Cornell exper. nee. X!nt opp!y. Ph: ing background a must. Top Personnel Agency ing out estate. Sale run!I Sat. CLEARANCE ===· =~· ==~~~~ 1 xtras. $1063. 269 Knox Pl. HilleJ'eS't e Flamingo betwn 1().U ooon only (T14) f!xec. nel!ds hedp. 833 Dover Dr., N.B. Furniture 810 & Sun 23rd & 24th. Qi Vista AFF~CTI01NATolEd Ma.le~ C.M. 548-9690. Paramount • Universal \ 494-5427 642-3870 Flora (Blutt~f N.B. SALE retriever yr shots 15""" 28' Navy whall' huII \v /gas Barrington • Bmadmncr I GENERAL office w/book-o188 E. 17th (at lrvine1 C.M. Custom Draperies GA RAGE sale · R.l!fr!g, Over 100 Pianos & Organs 10 childrt'n 642-6923 l/lS engine. Pb: 642-3629 or Qintiuental e star .I keeping background. Part 642-1470 SALES carpeting, lurniture. etc. Reduced !or lmmed, sale, AKC Beagle, female tri-642-3396. General e Hillcrest I time. Call betv.·een 8 & 10 STOPlll Decorator ddraper y l597 E. Tustin, C.M. (at Buy Now & Savel colored. 1 year. Mu st havf! 30' GLA.SSPAR t'>l-'in diesel. CHAPMAN . s.m. ONLY, 673-4782 MARDrlE Engine Installer I ••• ""'Orkroom dosing out 2500 l6thl n.....n o,,·1y 10 "l 9 renced yard, 540-8638 eVl!S. Comml • ........,lbilitier;. $6750. 1.•0BILE HO"ES GENERAL HELPE~ wanted. Expe_r i en ce d LOOKING & ACT yards ol drapefy fabric and M•chinery 816 NESaC~WPO,O~AlO·s'R~*~uSHARBOomS"lc'"'R KITTEN 4 mo to 2 yean, 675-2424, ';;s. T~rlploa...bWidoB!vd.Cmo•naG.Gll. "I Chemical Co. seeks reliable only/apply LUHR'S BOAT &lies minded person see lor ?1...,adelro·UP dr~es .• .':!-',".',· some spayed 836-449 3; Boats, Sall 909 *' nt~.2930'• CO. 1781 Placentia, C.M. .~ ........ ,,, , ·•al o•~--np. iais m '"" a Y 'u · 548-081~ 1119 worker kl assist in Jab pro-J"Y'"" • "'~"" draperiea from $5 pair . 3853 LA.THE, Sea.rs &mall Home jttts &: perform gen'! indus. MAID -Steady work. Retire-~rtunity, Xlnt future lor Birch SI. Nellllp)rt Beach Shop complete w I jaw . Costa Mesa * 642-2851 FREE AKC G. Shepherd CORONADO 35 Continenl&I • Paramount trial maintenancf!. Exp. not men! home, Laguna Beach. nght man. Earn1ng1 com. I 546-l~ll 'ad). to Orang'! mo1or. gears, drill chuck. male, to !!:ood homf!' without Order Now 1:1 _ _. _ _. • Un! _, . "'58 mod I h Id Xlnt cond, 1100 or best or-FINAL ohild~n °·''2-301!5 1119 .......... "",on v~-... ·1' req'd. St $3.25 hr. Call Mr. Call 494-:n mencf! 1m 1atey s ou I County Airport YEAR END '" CORONADO 27 011 display Flam.1--o e C.Mral A I I •• I or $250 -k fer. Aft 6: 546-0730 RU y I 611 w _, Yank •• AU "~ ' Evans, :>46-1990. MAJD-Exp'd. PP y n "" n 1!Xer11~ ,,,_r w . SPANISH 60" cocktail table CLEAR OUT C li-1M so a? euut ee JU -new 6roadmoor e Star • GIRL to live in or day care person, BALBOA INN, 105 N1 ',' ca~va11sibng or so~iciHng.1 _ matching end table _ Miscell•n~u• 818 of Pt'anos & Organs Terrace, Laguna. 497-1360 COLCHUMBIAR022Y-LEMak 1 •NCofr Hillcrest e Cambridge : for 2 yr old. Pvt suite, Main St., Balboa. n ervlews Y appointmcn carved ope ning doors -side 1/19 YA TS A . CHAPMAN t sa..111.lY. 642-9950 MECHANIC, serv ice station, only S.3 "''eekdays. 835-ml post, $95. Lge 72" rustic LARGE color TV $125: Blue Many at wholt!sale prices BASSET, mah~. 5-monlhs lo 2912 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. MOBILE HOMES ·~ tG.;.c_R~OO.:_,VY~~M~~~,~1.-_-~.---~-,-·,"' t!xp'd. Sht!ll Station, Ortega SALESMAN 'Vanted. Exp. 1'11!xican cocktail ta ble $75. vt!lvet tuxedo sofa f}SO; WARD'S BALD\VIN STI1DIO , good "-o .,2.3714 l /lS 645--0810 1._ N H ho S.A. uu ..,..., •n:=.io:u J King size headboard $.10; 1819 NewtX1rt Blvt:, 6f2-8484 """' .uo.1<1 • ar r, for cu!leltf! tUms. Harrison Hwy & f'reeway, San uan pref'd. r.f u 5 t be liClf· 644-1373 Frost.free relrigerator $125. FREE wood at 1644 Superior UP TO;» OFF SALE * 1141531-8105 * Con·, 213146'°""· Capistrano. .starter, c.ar essential . FOR sale: '1 Pc liv room "o" C S C CM Hammond, Ste tnway, Winches, Sails, Fitting!!", ek:.l---;;;;i:;.,;;::,.~ii;T---IU .....,.,,,., 1 tan• b ot ~ 1·1 d · · """' enter t., Apt ' · · Y·-·"·. N•w & ,, __ _, "''"'' 646-3231 l/19 YACHTS ROYALE INC. COSTA ME.e:.t. MEDICAL ~!\! , ac ..... rpets, 1 r. ra per 1 es, set, IOfa w/malcll chair. 64z...u8l ...,,.,..,.,. ""'°",.. ~ HAIRDRESSER oWCE", for b•,_ G.P. .• Must ~rum·· ooJ. ~hlghesilfJn l eod tbl• l ...,..,Uee tbl . o! most makl!s. Best buy! ln Found-Poodle Vic 300 BIDCk 29ll W. Coasl-HtVV. N.B. Cuua.I Mobile Eitata Uv'1 SOME FOLLOWING -J • ~ "" r -EVREST Jf!nnings foldtnR c.., CaJit ,t Schmidt ...... ,. 31th St. C.M. 646·W6 . ... -·->.la.1.•.t"" 'Ni.: 12, 20 . .t; Jt Wide Modds. . kno~ EKG; }~™··l d11w ~ :• 2 maJcb .l.vnps, S!Tzi. M Be UuJ ~ ~........ bi:MJll.lll 535-8929 days. 83S-l8l3 eve blood, give in~alons. ~-1-lf . '19bcein A\. 1, •MT'-7133 whet!\ ·c ir. $40. au! Co., 1~7 N. Main, Saota j iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SACRIFICE I Now 00 display In 5 Star I HELP wanted • Mon .-Fri., ary open. Mlssion Viejo Laguna Beach. ~· SOFA, never used, qu ilted ~~~Y !: p:~ :~~ •Accna-:-;.-..,.,--.-..,.-,--.-. 1 11 ~1 22• Flbe•!<'" Sloop • L'I GREENLEAF PARK 8 a.m 3 pm. to care for area. Call 837-7520 SARAH CoventrY Jnr.., full floral. acotchguarded $12'5. inslr"otion book, 140. Call Sewing Machines 828 Pits 1nd luppllH cockpit, 67S-4795, 548·1164, 1750 Whittler Avenue 642-1350 ) 4 month old baby .l keep 1 7 " TRADE uJ l house clean. Provide own MEDICAL OFFICE or pt-time he.Ip needed, no Matching loveseat 5. 557-7297 *REPAIRS* -;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiii Boats Slips/Docks 910 . eq ty 1970 :UX60 :. · M' 1 Need l: Front Ofc, exp, gd Investmen t. 557-6483. ~=~.T~'~-~-o;-=-.,,= COLLECTION of rare old • ' Olympta.n, located ln : =:.tabo~ine tn.ar e~: typist. Back Ofc, exp. know-Secretary TWIN Bed, complete with books (Art, history, pot!lry, Clean, oil&: adjUst your ma-Dogs 854 SUPS AVAILABLE 25' to beautiful (hnge County "j -• ho · nd -·t'--·· chine In your home. Spec. All' • Park for equ;ty dupl•• , S33-3295 ledge In a~. proc:cuures. You ng wilh good skills, call x 1iprmg& 8 """ u c..., etc). Sa.ii Inn Motel, 2627 "" ...,., 1 HSKPRS Emplyr P<IY!I fee.. Write, Ctess1tied ad #l5, Loraine Westclitf Pf'r.;on nl!I & frame $25 549-0674· Nt!""'J>Ort Blvd. Sat !hru ial 13·95• all work guaran· MUST SAC. Au!llt Shep pups. rn.sroa triplt!x, 4·plex, C.M. area. \ George Allen Byland Agney Daily Pilot, P .O. Bo~560, Agency: 2043 Weslcliff Dr., DANISH Te11k di.ning table, Tues, 4 to 8 pm .9 ttt7 d. ~5-S23SZ. I "-~ A Reg. Blue Merles, shol~. 508&· YSlip-saU or po.,,,•er, t.1ain J UST : ~~:~N*T'. '·U ; 106-B E. 16th, s .A. 547-0395, Costa Mesa, Calif. 9.<o..<u. N.B. 64:i.mo. 33'x48", xlnt cond $50. .. USED BIKES l 0 Singer i--. uto, Come see & make oU'. ........ INCOME TAX NEED 4 YOUNG MEN SE;l.LING MANAGER. Ex· 002-8983. 10 Spd. 3 spd Coaster Brake ~~u~~ bwu~~u~nbC:~~~e: 642-6400, 1-6 pm. 644-SHiO . 675-1911Q. United when you decide to Exp'd. or sect'y, Good %. . Age 20 to 30 cibng boutique shop in Lido. MOVING: Mi!C. used film. in all 1ize!I. Also, bave used overcast!! seamll, b 1i 11 d I ~1a!f! silky puppy. 3 mOI!., Bo.ts, SP"d•& Ski 911 :iii= °"~m"", ~~""YT!. P•n .lime ........... $}00 wk. ~, •--r,·1.• & •-th for saw. couch. chairs etc. parts 64:1 91167 $roll. 1 while male reg. toy J~ u """'"" Call .,;iknds or aft 6. 557-6536, ~ k "'•' "'""' ~ ., • .,.. · ' · hems, desitn~ etc. Guar. R 1:'"1.il~ z UNITED MOBILE HOMES Full time . · ...... · w , DOtential. (2131 796-3787 642-4984. FOR SALE $4-1.4-t cash, or rmall pymts. poodll'. 3 r1!os ., 646-0l.U or '67 GLASSPA ... ...,. ... ,g. ; ~?.~~~E!is~c~~.· ~ Car nee. ca81910ru101384 PM, · _ SEJ(VICE STA ~TT. all MAGNIFICENT dual br 300 ass U1ed doubll! tlt!r lockeri. Flllr !145-8238. CS.18-1022. 333 E. 17th St, 1112950~'. !~~200• oib. Like New 645-3140 £3.'.l.2961 :1 ~ ~Its open. App!y in penon. headboard, paid ovf!r $ · condition. Mr, Laney, Daily 's=po-r-t~in-g~G~ood-7s---1•3-..0 .M. ~~~· ~~~~~~~~~!BEACH house. Fam. Pk. 10 'I both. Xlnt opp!;)', Ph betwn NEW OR EXPERIENCED c ,.,.hi.Ir ll. 4678 Campus now $150. 644-5701 Po.lot. _ GREAT Dane nuppies AKC. cwitom 12x33. 2 BR, l BA, 10-12 noon only. (714) W!N _, ·-> SALESMAN. LA R Dr., N.B. .. SOFA .. SlJD""'OARDS 6'7" x 21" 12 v.'l'f'ka old. 1 fawn, 3 I l[i] air cond TV. Lie •GY 3788 • 494-5427 o· . good LOCKERS: l unit of 8 ...... .. Iii u TE . . • COMPANY Rf'Salc 1vis10n SERVICE Estab'd. Fullt!t 8' qu illt!d, very con-x 4" and 7''.l .. x 22. both brindle, both female. Eve. Tt'IMpOJtallolll NJ 0 MOBILE HOMES I' LP~ ~·K3 10L1i~300 P~lC s~i~~ needs i;evera.\ general real Bru~h r!e, ~12~$l7:l ii·k. ta dition $40. 673-8504 ::~~r~l~~~YY ;, 1~· ii~~: wi!h adjust. fins $10 & $30 only ~3708 alter 6:00 pm. ~;;~;··-~· :;; 645-3140 633.29fil VALESCENT CENTER. Ph: f!s1atl! ag1!.n!.o;, Ne.w off ice st., also pl. time 546-5745. I Sir.ffl-fON!\ ki!'lg bed $100. LY P ILOT 330 w. Bay, CM . 6'5" x 22" x 3%." fibregla11. OLD English She epdog, FUR..'lISHED lSM Newport lj · · H" n t 1 n g to n 1 do bl "·' 125 ro·n· "" R••nd ne\V 5'T' !•mat•, 2 -. Show q"atlty. w 55 M2-8044. opening in "' · .-,SUPERVISOR LVN JJ .7:30 u e =u ' E h h ~ ""' J·~ " Alr.;raft 915 X ~ W/8XJS screfn porch. Beach approx Feh .. lX!, Cal l 6-t.2-5757 CARP :'I' Layers ave 5 ag twin tin ool waxed Y'I $llO Ready to breed. $400. ------·----COs!8. ~lesa Adult Park.· f LOOh.lN G for morf! than just Listing leads, majo r a .m, reli~f shift, "''k ends. G S I 812 k cr:imm'I tweed crpts. Deal 7'9" iiquare tail S5. 646-3302. 644-4~. FLY RETRACTABLE. Full $4995 ·or offer. American another ,.. b? Join the .. New _ _, 1 'd by Park Lido Convalescent arage a• direct. Exper inslaller. Ca n ~~~~~=~=='°' 1 F R. 1 ~eo 24 ho ; Q'h;.,Jcal n~ra~e pai Center 642-8644 finance. 5.l9-8327, 827-8740 WINCWESTER.model 7().270. 7 Wks old, healthy, hea.utiluJ . . equ Pvc~ ne.nz.a. Mohil me Sales, 545-82-41 .1 Beautiful Ideas" Div. ol company. lncenti.ve cxi11testa _ 195R. Min!. $165. \Vinche!ter Poodle puppies, purebred hr scheduling, fully Insured . NICE 8xG' NIX'H' Trailer · GENERAL FOODS. Hel p and bonus plan. Gt!t in 011 WOMAN to 1vorl< 1n donut J UST lx>en burglarized, still ZI " COLOR TV, good picture modi!! 64-3()..30, 1954. Mint. min,. $2S. 4!:l1Mi2S5 644-4565 9AM-9PM. In adult park. $2300. N~ ! others to enhance their th• ~"nd fioo· '"" ,,......w sho,. p afte. rnoon hrs 1-9PM. ha\i'e house full of items & gound , $%. 1~ 54• ~23 C I Blk " ,,91 H ~ Bl d e•w" ' ... ~ "''· .,.....,.. REG . Collie, 1)1 yrs $J:i. ye es, es, pe . ar.,...., v, ; pel'!IOn'\I beauty while en-.·,h C 11 Larwin Real ty '' mchell 5 Donut House 2947 incl antiqu es. All must go. --.-~''ri"'~G-~15~25~•;..-.-l usiDi·"°'~·i7-f'i~lba-Ok"'"j;<'i<. Scooters 925 ·--61 . K•• 4, or"-. • · bl b · ~1 us a ' H bo Bl d C '' ~' K' Pl N 8 "'"1231 iver .s "' w ...,., pac · r.1,,,1 go lo good home ..,......-J u" .. joying a profita e usines~, Inc. !16:i.69S8 or 827-2221, ar r v · ·1 . <v-o ings ' · · ~ -* AUCTION * Tank & Calipso J regulator. wt'diildren . 968-&iTl. 8x3& l BR mohile borne , ! $25-$150 o,~:k up. No el!l) nee. conlidl!1lel".: kept. YOUNG l ntrrnaltonal Co. HOUSE Hunting".' Waf't:h the I Used 2 twicf' $115 or bcsl ... ... ... .. ... ~pace avail. Awni.-, N•w j' No door to door. 842-2664 ..::::::.::::.::::..cc:=~~~-1 se<'kln" man11.,emC'n1. Elll'n OPEN HOUSE oolumn. I >.,ine Fum1. iture otr-.... ,, ~ PUPPIES, Funy, mother • ......... -_. -·"' I Pil W ' Ad h • • A " ~~ TH-hol 1vater ht!ate.r &. roof. ~ Dai Y ot en . K ave 540!).SlOOO per mo. Vanable PP ianres SURFBOARD Pek·A·Poo, $10, .._ &16-950;-i • For best results? 64Z-5671! barg11 ins galore. hrs. CRI! 8.l't-1fll!l betv.'n 2-5 1 [Ill · Auction!'. FrirlRy, 7:00 p.m. 53fi·IT.!4 !~===~--~~~·!' l """"""~i-.-;c.-c&o;F""7°'IO'I I w· d ' A t• B 6'10" "Greek" low railtr, HONDA SACRIFICE new double-wide , IHjiio~lp~W~a~n~t~ed;;;i,~M~&~Fjj7jjljj0jjjiHjjojjl~pjjWjjjiajjnjjtojjdjj,jjMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili!p~m~T~h"'~o~•}F~•i:.. ~~;;;;;;;; E~ j 1n y s UC ion arn cl~ao ~hape $60, 6-1<1.ll<lO YORKIES-2 lb, 6 mo male. 2-atory mobile home. ! F()f' an ad to sell around . 207511' Newport, CM 646.8686 RED Siar Knelssl 200 rm Al sn sm11ll f em a le . -6'13-6809 : ANNOUNCING ANOTHER lxcltin9 AND We wlll •ccept •ppllc•tloM for - , • WAITRESSES \• IUS BOYS 1 • DISHWASHERS '• HomssEs :e COOKS 1• IAmNDERS le COCKTAIL WAITRESSES I sta~'"' o.c•mber n ' 9:80-4:00 Dally I Apply In Per- 2410I A...,W. do la Carlota L..-.Hlll1 r • , Ana or San Otero Frwy. to ·o R4. -Corner of El Toro d Avenlda de la C.rlota. ' . J I h o~.. d by Far West Ser:vlces, In~. Operltors ol Snack Sbop1, Coco 1 ~n's, Reuben E. Lee, The Whaler, Isadore'• I ,, 'I UN dock. dial 642--5671, Behind Tony's Bldg. ~1at'I. Sacrifice. n.3/761-81(,(l. ~'fRll:lll IUl\l:D"I new $135 wi~ bindings. ™RUU\ · VILLA 33, fiayllde Village. . Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 \\'AREHOUSE &. GARAGE 613-59111 . *!SCH! dNAGUZERI pups. ~l&le ,_· n&QI -· tn 1,000 Sq. ft.:· waterfront; f. If your raise was turned 'down because "times are bad," maybe you should be working where I i . ' "times are &ood." mes Just happen to be very gopd Jn our in· dustry. Re&.I f'l!lla le. In I.ct, they·~ never been bl'ttl!'r. Thtore are ~lot ot bright, wllllng pPople latinchinJ; new <9reers ~ry day In land lnveslme.nt. Be· CftUSE' thr.y "'ere lirtd , of hell_rinJt that "time11 "'l'rP 011.d." They Jwit chucked whatf!vcr It 'wtls they wuf' dolnc ~ joined. the. forcn Of a akyrockellna: in- ""'"" How about you? ArP Yoll bort!d by exetu1e. and tranquiln:ed by • dn:'.11ry Jo~? P.fa,ybe we should sit down and talk. We'~ a multi· mUIJon dollar land ln- Vf!&tme.n\ company that 1\l':eds aood.iodl.v~ We need sqlld 'man. po~r to kttp up wl th our gt'1)wth. ·rt doem't mtrttcr w~at )'Qur 1 pre$cnt job b:~:,AJI jt)u need are the JUtl a.nd dl!slre "to. 't~ll,f• .)'OUf • life fCR:• tk better. If you're ~ ri1ht penon ~ lake can! of your tl'alniq. , Th~ money CM be treat, I.he benefits Ire e:nonnous and the Cll· reer po~nt1-I b end-~. C..11 us. Alsht now. · WID cONSULTANTS. OF AMERICA, Inc. ORANGE CO. AR.&A -(Tl.fl 835-323.1 • RIVERSIDE AREA -f7t4\ 793-3580 LOS ANCEt.£5 AREA • (21..)) 8'12-362Q • Sa 1 e . Cons 1ruct1 o n I H""E"A"o"',v"Ecits""'""M"'~mm-::,m:::-, a 'u · ~~i· 537-6824 • B93-75tll5 choice loc, 11ii p 673-5848 eve. matf!rlals. u,r. & ,motors, $SO. U !AS AP!l(J pups. golden NEW.USE~SERV. 1959 10x33 Stearns. Furn. ; pottery equ p, g a z e ~ . v 67:J..-599-·-A d I t '· ' hrrnit ure & bric·a·brac. :Wl ' ·0 beauties. Shot!. $125 up. ........ - ---"• U P a r " · . Frankfort. HB. 5..'£.llTl. TV, llllidlo, Hf i, ~',"-/~76~1~="',--·-..==-.= • - - -... I 64:5-2549 ·! e SKI FAMILIES l--S-to_rao ______ l _36_ IYORSHIRE Terrie.r AKC -====;;;;;;=:;:;;;~;.l;T;;r;:aiillo:;,;:,-, 'TT:-ra:;v::o:01-o;945i<I ~: Reserve now! Cabin at Mam. GARR.ARD record-changer· ~ e~~ $125. Ph: MUST Sell 23• ALJ0-11/c, : moth Mounlaln. Sips 7, 1-'Lre. player. Diamond stylus, reR". 's=E"A~U~T""mal=•""-==""~kl"•"· .1111 xtru, spotle11&, in ahady : pl. etc, SJS.$2(] per day. $39.50,. rpedal S27. Nejlo' Al· 1 3,t did CTA Nf IAgu.na trlr park. Best otr. ,t 531-3374 days. lantic Music 4ti E. 17Lh. en. .,.. mo. · · la.3: 1133 Brm.dway No. Call 833-0037 alt 2:30 pm. • GARS refrlg ns. Elec hedge CURTIS-MATIIES TV-Stereo I ~...,..,...D"'AT[•MA=T"l"AN""s.--1 • 11 . I clippers. Twin beds " combin.. chm'ywood Fr. AKC e T'r•ilen, Utlilty 947 i frames $15 ea. ~2-9829 Prov. $100, 833-2'722 Aft 6 ** &41..'1937 ** Ml.e.11.-•s Pr.1 14' Tanatm Tra.ller, all steel, ·, ,,__ """'=,.,--.=~==:::; welded C'Orwttuctlon. ti ,, ' W•nted 820 SYLVANIA 4/fiO l!xponent 2 COCKAPOO PuPPiea fDr ~ AMIF?d multiplex, Garrard &ale $5. each· Dl"ck P&tins· M.S-4361. or ' tumtable 642-™4. * S6-2TIS * 6Gfl8t5. WllJ trade cm Pick _! CASH tor turn, appliances, . tool!. At. misc It t m 1 . * SHERRY'S POODLES * 642-7015 or Aft 5. 54.8-4227. l __ '_"'_"_v .. ___ ll I J Yr end puppy Ale, lf'CJOJD• PIANO Wanted for chun::b. . . Ina. l'tte pk...up. sm-2848. Reuonable price. PUPPIES, Frtt to qualllled CHOCOLATE brown mini 5(1.9DJ, home. Fathn'--lii blk Leb. toy poodle•, malt, AKC. Musical lnttrvments 122 Mother • Wht Sbcipberd/ 9e2-0S54 Sa.mo~. !5 wb. Must htlve4 ;-.:AOO""liABLE°"°".-cp:;,::,:op;::.,:-,-;;:l! DRUM SET, complete, fl95. fncd ylJ"d, Evts &fl 5 pm : Uuo · Apeo, small bf'Md, Incl. h.l·Mt, 22" cymbal, MS-5613, aak for Andy l/ZJ 5 weekl, $10 each. 548-4654 thront!, access. ExC!!lll"nt AOORABLE black A brown DOBIE PUPS $40 condltiofl. 548-5148 after ~ 8 wk old puppies, ma.le I: *' &d-2872 * pm or Wff.kend1. female. Mother l s l HorMt 156 FOR &II", Saariliol!I New Coc k-1-poo, fath er ----.------ bullet tenor aaic with new unknown. MS-1~ 1/19 BEAtrr AtaJlA ?D&tt, 5 yn, ~· $400. ~ 5"--33SI or 2 Tame wht ducks i and I gru.IJo, lJ hds, Jire.V•ndy 833-1889 2 )'tan old. :l wht female II~ tbDw rlbbonl. Floe fuLL Set Rocett drwM rabbit 1~ yr old tame ban-dltpotitlDn, «suao 5iJ&.30lll. with Zildjian symbolf. AllO ~ = 881 DelTyi ~ii I R,EGJS. AQHA Gtld!nt, 10 Gulld Mk tv fUltar. S«M662 \Ts. Pro,, ~trained, IOI.Ind , aner 5. BABY'S tint besstneu very spirited. Jk:u. 67$-2191. GT B SON Gultu/Electrlc 1 good oondlUon. , Complete Livestock iJI w/rtgu.lar hard.shell caae. wtth white lace tklrt .1 ---------- $195. 64&-7869. 673-3331 l/19 1 FOR SALE: PET C'hlcke,.., The .. Ytlklw Paat11" ol J HOUSE Hunttna! W•tch h duakl, CQQ, ferll!,. ecp. dwllled , •• ~-• m . ljOUSE -also Monx cot !WC>-2333 . ' • U " p, t ·• < ........ _ GeMNI ' • 1§1 ·i .I '67 au:vt<OL&T s.......,, . 120 Ka.•uaJd. euto quk:k s pu, e ey1, aum ttui, rlh, chanp 1prockflt. for ttreet 1 ownr, priv pt,y, JJZO, I or trail, on1,y 1.20o mtlel. m 1465 _ "°'· Cll1l a11er'"" m-.l-D"u::.na:..::;B,.:..._i._.---,u""1 ' 1970 li6NDA l!LIOQ' Ltke .. , ' New 1.50 mt '350 or otr. '60 C'ORVAIR klr sa.le. Gru ~ 67Wlm tot Dliine Bua:J. GODll•NI • BULTACO 2:50 cc dirt bib, ber $m. 5£.7117 a!W I xlnt c:ond S350 1,;:•,.c·"'-""'==,... .... =,_..,.1 ·~ "iii MEYERS TOw'd, ii! . WANTED: Baalct.t-eaee , cond. VW power. $UOO. •m&.11 tn1Jtol'eyele. or Just S40-$!IJ dQS; 5tO-..a251 .wt. amall efW1"f. "1-mf. DON"T ii" ft •ft)', cet 1)) T'rlumott !iCIOCC Like new. quick' cMb t:r tt we • Under l!ilXI ml . Pald s:i:n. DAILY. PILOT' an 'S • MW, aiklnf $97$. &ff-;lM. CaD 642871 l ~It. ,SJ OA!L Y PILOT Monday, January 18, 1971 I ...... w. 'JrBJ I -~u. l§J I ·~ .... -J§J I .......... 1§1 I ......... l!Qll -. .... l~I -.... l§l I _ .... 1§1 I ......... 1§1 Sflorh, R•co, Roda 959 Autos, lmportod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmportod 970 Autoa, UMCI 990 Auloa, Und 990 Auhlo, UMCI 990 Autos, Uaod MERCURY 990 ' '711 DUSTER --DA~TS_U_N__ PORSCHE vouc'SWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN CAMARO DODGE MERCURY 118 CID. H<•ok., H,.d...,,, l--------l=.10:-::91.JS::::/5:-::,::,-:Ll-::..,.--;:;Sil:=,,,, l--,-66-Y-W_S_E-DA-N--l-,-6-2-YW-::-S-E'.'."O-A'"'.N--. -------. ·6' DODGE CAMPER VAN --------1·------- ldlebrock Hi-Rise, Big 4. DOT DATSUN coupe, black interior 61 SS camaro 396, lo TW, 8-Cyl stick ah.ift. 1970 Mercury Monte90 LEAVING f'or active duty. Ccinsistent 13.15s at Orange OPEN DAILY AM/FM, air, clo!ie rstiO SS Ctager mags, xlnt cond. ~ * • 642.6189 MX 2 Or HT ~1ust SaC"!·ititt '62 Mercur')' · County_ Great Cone!. Ready ANO gears. Pert. condit ion, Radio & heater. (RUF 081) Radio & heater. (ZXW 267) $1300. 6~7591. ., DEALER OWNED Best off er 546-4237. to go. Cali altoc 5, 534-31!<. SUNDAYS ssooo. 557-9159. $895 $595 CHEVROLET FORD SINCE NEW I MUSTANG Trucks 962 ISSM Beach Blvd. '69 ·911 T, European _style, 1969 l TD 2 Dr HT Dealer own<'d dealer main. ---------1 Huntington Beach Tang., full comfort group. tanced since brand new. '67 l\-1U~'1'ANG GT 300. 4-spd. '57 INT'L panel truck, 4 whl , 7=842-~778=J~o,.' .. "-·"""'==..-m11g8, AM /FM. 2l.OOJ ml., Looking for • c:ar? DRNEN ONL'i 21.000 MI . Driven only 10,000 mi. buy. $Hi00 drive, 2 spd transfer case, 1 • ATSUN SEDAN 6n.626.5 Best offer. EASY Ex,ceplionally clean through-er receives balance of 5 year 5<15-5316 or 642-3675 4 spd trans. Nr new ·55 '68 D ..:::..::=-.=2-='-'-~~-1 18711 BEACH BL. 84:2·4435 umt BEACH BL. 8424435 Call Auto Referral tree or out, beauUfuJ medium blue on 50,000 mi warranty. Beau-• 6 5 co N v ERTJBl.E-V8 -· 900_. . Ph '68 Model 912. J\fust sell to HUNTINGTON BEACH •ha•ge, We haoo -ll<-metallic ext_erior. Dark blue d bl . · mo .... -. A:w lirt's. : h. h t b"•ddo• by Jan 20 HUNTINGTON BEACH " • "" •;> titul _pow er ue Lln_iah Wllh a••to. P•/Pb, facto~ a••' .• ~ ~~ 0oo "· ll nd ig es ' · · 1 __:=~:::.;:c:.::;:;.:o;:::::::_.1--....--..=-......-i.o'-'--I w.,·,,· ••. All ,_, & •• ,-,,, landau root. satin black _in· " -~ .. v•~"" 4 r. c..xce ent sero car, 11 '65 YW SEDAN " ..,...,,. • medium .blUe Interior and 1595/o"••·· ~-"'". I c . (\-0358) Super car w/a extras '67 VW Sellen al--W<l•ome. , terior, Auto trans. ..oodio, u ~~ '71 CHEV Super V811, auto, Rado, neater. '~"' .,.,.~ "'703 1 d 1 ·t """ ... ·~ dark blue landau top. Auto "°"'"""',--::;::=-.= $ 99 .,,,,......, or e a1 s. 642-••31 heater, power steerin ..... pow. '69 MA I, sharp. Must R/H, HID springs shocks 11 S 1 h bod S"'UAREBACK ..., .. trans, radio, heater, power lJ p · ! & tires. T/\V '71 Ile. $3000 BARWICK '62 PORSCH1~ofio· s ~J (l~ T Radio & beater. (PBF 665) Auto Referral Service er brakes, lactory air. See steerlng. power brakes, fac. se · riva e party. or besL 546-7281 damage, "~•AA Va.d ora gTE'('ll. Radio, hca!er, $695 1969 CHEVELLE SS J!l6 and ask lo drive this al· tory air cond p!us tinted =~~-646--· -"~!Ill --= !'!PORTS INC 9*2419 or 77ll"'\l't'l"I transportation special, Lie. ' tractive car 1oday. ZNV540. 1 / ,..n '65 Mustang ronvt. Auto., \Ill, '66 Ford % ton pick~up. ". . '67 9U. Air. AM/FM stereo. UOH677. golng into service X!nt J h & So 2626 "·-bo g ass, w .,... tlres etc, ....,m. Good cond. Moving, 1700 or Auto. r & h. Oean. Best Qf-DATSUN Con<!. $2200, cal! 536-1 771 ° nson n. •J.<LI r, pletcly serviced and ready !er. 646-7fiOJ eves & .,...knds. LB 494 gm Red w/hlk. ?ttany exrras. $1599 all day Mondays, or 8 C.M. 5'I0-5630. for d<'tivery. 003AGO. Cleoar--'-'-''~'·~6'-'-'~"-'·---- .63 FORD Pick·u;i. 8, IX'd. 998 S. Cst. Hwy, · clc,3600~·~"~4-<15=°"16,_,=~~ CHICK IVERSON a.m.·2 p.n1. Tuesday thru '70 FORD LTD ance priced. Johnson & Son, OLDSMOBILE Air rides. Air rond, Runs FERRARI 1968 PORSCHE 912-5. Must YW 187U BEACH BL. 842-«35 Sunday. 2617 Florida No. Priyate Party. Slue with 2ll2!i Harbor Blvd., C.M. --------- good. 545---8071 a ft 4 pm. ---------see lhis one before consid· HUNTTNGTON BEACH D. black Landau to p, air cond, 5'10-;,630. 1964 Olds conver tibl FOR. Sale-J!l-:'16 1r-Ton FERRARI ering. 494-251•1 or 548-5479. 549.3031 E.>:t. fi6 or 67 V b k Rd CREAM PUF F am/fm stereo radio, 4 new l ~1;;960:,9C'M~a-c-cu_r_y-,-M'•-,-q-u~;,-Dynamic 88. Ps/Pb, , d i · NeY.'J)Or! Imports Ltd Or-1966 PORSCJ-IE. X\nl cond. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '71 W Square 8,~ • e · 'fi6 Impala VS, auto., pis, li"t'S, 26,000 miles, custom 2 D HT IJres & bal lery. Sac $385. Pickup.Good con t 1on. ,..n , _, · .__ 5 Spd. '"~.Call alter 5 COSTA ~1ESA Standard. New car warr, . 1 1 / l b 390 r. • · 646-5639· aff6 673-5TI9 $'150. Call 546-2806. ange .......-unty s 01uy autuvr· ,J.>.)VU r&h. Just tuned up & polish-in Cf or, P s, P , en-LARGE & LUXURIO US · ' · · ' ' '"" d"I". PM 4!l6-3702 '67 SUNDIAL CAMPER good. Pvt p,.,.ly . ......,.05. . • ., Old• 88. 4 dooc. '" '67 FORD Econo Van, hvy SALES-SERVICE-PARTS .59~ p he 1600 Conv. Xlift I 1965 Bus w/ be,d: Lea~lng ed. $895. 644.0532. gtn~ake Otter, 673-1176 This beautiful tPJI of the titer-trans air ps/b. 646-1'/'. · dty, big 6, auto trans, new V Coaz J-orsc b 1120 town must sacrifice $89a. '69 CAMARO 350 SS, All l--"=C..::='--'=::.:.:_ cury line, reflects good care days.'548-1686 eves. I tires. Sl275 .&l&-005.'l. :1100 \ · ~1 lwy. tond Best otr Y · "--· IVQH692) C II '·"1310 p••T, ~•~ '"". "d, a"\O trans. 1969 FORD Falrlane, P /S, thro""hout aod is "'"'uip~ · Newport Beach 67s,.4094 ""-"' lo apprec1n1e. -:;a;:.;~~~~~·~=-~-.. ""' """ " ..., ,_... V''"' 1964 OLDS Real clean. run~ At L • 964 · $1795 "66 SQUAREBACK N major tuneup & Goodyear P~B. F.A .. Very IC\V with all lhe luxury features. u o easing 1342-9405 540-.17&4 .64 PORSCHE-SC · -ew 1 & ped t 11 good, good tires ~525 F ~ al tires & brakes. Afl!/FM polyglas tires .,..·ithin lase mt .eage equip 10 pu Automatic transmission, AM-~·s-sns 1 1!169 cadillac (bijpe de Ville, Authorized en'll.!o De er \Vhi!e, 1 owner, xlnt cond. 3000 mi's, Must sell, best trailer. 220 Ogle St. 646-4718 FM stereo radio, heater, ~ ,.,67~io32.70o. rig owner. SlZOO. PLYMOUTH !ull po1~·cr/air, SJ;:,9 pl'r mo. FIAT $3200. 194-6451 ,,... offer over $2250. 645--2485. '65 CTR Y Squire st. wgn . power steer!ng, power brak- 1969 Chrysler JOO, 4 Dr. 1---------RARE ·53 SUNROOF: .70 VW Bus, 7-pass, beige, '68 CHEVY' Biscayne 2 cir. R/H, P/B, P/S, 9.pass.. e~. po.,..•er windows, 6 way 1 hrdtp, p/winclo\i's, air. - - - - -REBLT ENG f. TRANS. 18711 BEACH BL. S424435 radio, Immaculate. 250 Cy J speed, Nu tires. new trans. gd tires $700. power seat, factory air con-'70 CUDA, Big 6, F'lr stk, $~ 645--2182. alt 5: 30 & .--------... - -• $1300 * * 539-&191 l·IUNTINGTON BEAOI * 675-23911 * $995. olfer. 675--1045. 642-38Zi. ditloning, cruise control, tilt 20 mph. 44,000 mi's w'ar, wkn-'· 1714) 496--5b"95. INK -l I l •1· h i· x lell 1200 & ·r OP of $67 ~ "TH " E M «05 * '67 Cheve!le SS 396-Silver 1969 Ford Jet 2--dr. Lo mi. w 1ee P us " ic e 1n . ra-. · · · · . A I S . p t 966 SUNB A .67 V\V "~bck. A:\1/F'.\1 '6.'i Sunrool-Radio. .._,., ····' . & I 544 8034 u o e rv1ce, a r s '--"l ~"gS grey. t.tags, Tape deck, For sale or will take trade. l<u ltt'es sty e sleet 1------~~--- Bf]• ----------1 shortwa ve. rad ial plys, good '67 Bug-Like new. 3~,.m' i..:"0:2-<ill::::::-:Jl::_· ______ 1,c.";::2-16~1.::07. =----~I wheels. See & drive today, PONTIAC WE PAY TOP DOLLAR ao • '65 Alpine, rblt eng. radial cond $1000 BE'.FORE 2/15. PLT Motors 646-2698, XTP478 J h '·So 0006 • · •57 Cl St ,,·o· Wago• '''' F··d Pt"•k··p. run• g--' · o nson"' n, ...,,. ---------"-FOR TOP USED CARS tires, \\'ire rims. r.idio, Xln1 ·197-1267 ievy a " " ~ u• ... u ~ uuu •-cl 00 Alt 5 "4-8101 1-~=-------' UQLV~ BEST OFFER $2'":.0. or best offer. Call 1.::H.::"':.,::.'°cc':,,· C.::C,.r<cc.·..:540,c:,.·5'.10.::,,,,,_· ~-e '68 Bonneville, lac air 11 your car .,. extra ean, NEW 1•• CPE. DEMO ·"'=:o·-'=""'~~~=c:~·---1 ·69 V\\'. Xlnt cond. Newl·---"---"'-'--1. 1 ...,. -* 497-1692 * mornlngs at 8.1!l-4370. '68 COUGAR XR7 rond, $1695. see us irs · $2795 TOYOTA tires, brakes. tune-up. '71 ----'--"""-''""'-"-~--1.~~;;::~:;;..::::::._:::;::_ __ I •· GTO f · d BAUER BUICK ,_ lie. R/ll T/\V. $1595 or • VOLVO '64 Chevy Belaire 2 dr '69 FORD Super Van, auto • 69 , ac air con , 23~ E. 17th St. V-8 stick $350 trans, V-8. $2000, Ca 11 $2195. Will arrange firlC- Costa Mesa ~8-7765 ''FRIEDLANDER'' 1971 TOYOTAS best. 5-l&-72~1 AU 71 's Are Here e 646-6728 e 893--7105 9AM-4P:.r. Air cond., vinyl lop. Nice car. 534-5960 or 584---0113. PAYMENTS -credit pro-13750 BU.CH ILYD. ARE HERE! ·~J\t~u~:n~l~le~~J:.' ~:i Saving:s Up To '61 CHEV. Camper Van '65 Ford Ranchero. R/H, ~~) Wholesale Book 1962 2 PONTIAC V-81 Catal2'JU.a blem! \Vil! take over IH-. 391 $756 AU extras. Original owner Air, S375. Traveling, must I · 51890 dr Hard-top. Cean S 5. -• M rk II C olJas cond. $1350. 492.1)123 JI 5" ~1 °•0 •145 8J8 1157 payme nts on acceptable, 893-7566 • 537..6824 a or -~----~--1 on remaining 70'11 ( U8782) $950. Call: ~.'}.3679 SC . 1,,...,.,,.. . I .,..,,..... or ... late model, lo mileage, fully NE\Y-USE~ERV., Coronas Pickups '6S Bus Rcbli 1;,oo New OVERSEAS DEL. SPEC. '64 CHEVY Impala, auto, MERCURY BARWICK '67 GTO 400 -auto trans, equipped c11r, \vagon or • - - - -• clu!ch, gen. voll reg. tires. r/h, $495. 1---------IMPORTS INC. I psfpb. AJr. Xlnt coOO. ranche ro type. Call Sally, ---------------1970 TOYOTA l'llust Sell $1100 or &st Gi""'l lnn.:• Ca!! 644-4779 1969 Mercury Marquis I DATSUN $1 :l25/oHcr. 642-I2L~ wkdys 8-5, 5.lff-2283 CORONA SEDAN offer $48-lOSO. UM' UIJW '60 Chevy Impala 396. R/H . Broghm 4 Dr HT 1%3 Grand Prix . Ps/Pw/Ph, SeU the old slulf Buy the new 168 FIAT 850 $ SAYE $303 00 ':'>9 VW Van, '£.1 cng , _recent VOLVO Good cond, $.)()() or best EXCELLENCE 998 So. Cst. Hwy, LB 4!)<1.9771 aii', r,i:.h, lo mi. Good cond. tl ,. d both hr l\'Qrk done on lrans. New II 5·7 9280 ~~ILyo~I~~ ~ant A~s . .: SPYDER • brakf! system. camper unil o er. ,;i - . PERSONIFIED '69 MARQUIS WAGON I _1_4_25_. ~"'~5-~564~· 5==~-- 1 Gooo '64 EL Camino w/campcr. Thi! beautiful top or the RAMBLER Aul.' W.nted 9-68 RDSTR, Red with black in-From window 1tlcker price Inside. New <' utc:h. 1966 Harbor C.M 646-9303 10 P••••nge•. (YCN -~") n . If 51 8 · · Xlnt cond. $9$0. Mercury line has 1hc popular _....__ , ·.uv terior. Like new. YQY834 #Ser 7826 Demo. MH, auto-COND. O<:S\ o er._· Q..31:..: •68 VOLVO 673-5991 dark ivy ~en melalllc: fin· Wholesale Book $2850 '63 RAMBLE!' 4 d V WE PAY Top $999 nl"!il•. 1968 VW G d C d · ' r ery " -oo on · MECHANIC'S Delight '46 i11h with matching interior $2899 ood · · 1500 p · CASH CHICK IVERSON 11.125• ,,.,..24,..., Local owner, .Jow mileage, g rond;hon · rtvate for med can & trucks just call Us for free estimate. GROTll CHEVROLET Ask for Sales Mana~er 182ll Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847-6087 KI 9-ll'll -TOP DOLLAR foe CLEAN USED CARS See Andy Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa h1esa 6-12-0010 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET '2B28 Harbor Blvd. Costa r.lesa 54r .. 1200 U'llPORTS WANTED OrJng" Counlies TOPS BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Ber1ch_ Ph. S17.SS55 Autos, Im ported 970 A U STIN AMERICA AUSTIN AME RICA Sales, S<?rvice, Parl.3 Imm<'C~ate Delivery All Modeis ·~ J1r\llporr · .. 31Inµofts · 3l~l.I W. Coll.st Hwy., N.B. ""2·94Cfi 540-1764 BMW 1967 BM\V 1600 2-dr sedan. \\'bile '"/blk inter ior. $1000. Call 645-1209 DATSUN '70 2000 ROADSTER 5 spef!d, radio, heuter, PireUI tires, m&p, dlr. Hardtop. Like IX!W! ITYZ104l Must sa.c:riflce! Will take tra.cle or finance pr Iv a t e part;)'. 546-8736 or 494 -6811. New '71 Datsvn 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. " L • ""'" w Che•"'. Needs tender loving and black landau roof. I "'2-5425 OftM nt>~I I "'~=~~~~---.--automatic transmission ra. ·~ BARWICK ~'~Y~·-·~·~==---VW WIL UAIW '67 .BUG, blk exterior, R/11, dio, heater y,•hite side 'wall care. Best Cif!C'r. 511)-4984. Equipped 1vith all the lUX· · T·BIRD Ong owner S815 · '56 CHEVY. $75 ury features. Au!o trans, Ta· IMPORTS INC. 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 TOYOTA ' · tires. elc. Chick's special at * 557-3360 aft 4 pm * l\lON710 353 LaPerle Ln, C.tlf. dio, heater. power steering, DATSUN 197(1 HARBOR BLVD. l 008 V\V Bug_ Radio, rear $1999 -~~==~~..--I (X'Wer br-dkes, po\\-·er win. MUST Sacrifice, '66 T-Birrl , COSTA MESA '61 CHEV 4 OR 6 998 So. CsL Hwy, LB 494-97n All pwr, Air, il-11chelin X 1966 Harbor, C.M. 6'1&-9303 seat spcak<'rs, $1375, pri. pty. dows power scat \Vay. · 5<117--7972 * '69 FIAT SPYDER, good 64-;-4687 after 6 pm, CHICK IVERSON , Gd cond. Jo ml. 962-201.2 facto!). air conditioning, set \Ire.!;. · · cond. $300 &. Take over '68 Toyota Corona CHRYSLER of excellent premiun1 vogue ANY Day Is me BEST day ·to· "·Ii 817 1'"'8 1 d e 2 V\V's • '64 Bug $!100. vw . A-'· f d 1· pymnts . ._... · · ""' Loca owner, new car tra e .61 sunroof $!i00. Xlnt cond. ---------1 IU'eS, ""' or en\onstra ion run an ad! D 0 n ' t 1%8 FIAT 850 Spider Very in. 18,000 orig. miles. aut()-JI.ills! sell, art 6 pm: &1&-8014 ~19-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 '67 NEW Yorker, full pwr, in !his outslanding car. Lie delay .. call today, 642--5678 I good $1100 matic tran~ .• radio. heater. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. air, nu tires. $1595/n\ake YWW483. Johnson & Son, items with ease, use Dail)'r . -. &1:'.--0795 * Lie. WAR052. '66 V\V Sq. hack·Sunroof. COSTA MESA offer. Pvt ply, 21J/832-492ti, 2626 Harbor, C.M. 54(}.5630. Pilot Classified. 642-5678 I $ ll(>W lire~ Rr C)(haust. Pvl I---'='-----• JAGUAR 1399 ,,.,1,. 642-1020. l.l'U'Ll'IZU 7HC1s:;~~INENTAL A=••c:.••,,.,.:.N::•:;.w __ _:_.::..:.:.:.:=:...:.:=---=-::::..:::.A::u:.:••c::";..:N::.•::•:__ _ __;980:;:, JA . GUA. R.. CHICK IVERSON ·s, vw 5'!'"'· '""· ,,, lK'wl , -------vw cone! Xlnt cond, $11!00. ~ ~ '· 54>-isos 'VOLVO' 1969 CONTINENTAL HEADQUARTERS "49-31l31 EX>. 66" 67 65 Gh ia VW Com•ecL ID 2 DR. H.T. The only autborlz.ed JAGUAR 1970 HARBOR BLVD. GOOD CONDITION LIKE SHOWR001'11 NEW ~~ .. " '° lh< <nlin """"' ,. ...... co .. sr .... A"M"E"S"Aiiiiiiiii --"-17'-"000.·,,6-;::'"".::34.:_'::,,'-= "FRIEDLANDER" 2400 MILES ""'~ • J\1US'T s c JI '66 vw Thi!f beautiful automobile Is Completl. '69 TOYOTA Squarcback, Lo mi, sunroof, iuw l &ACtt (HWY. #tl like new In every respect. SALES AM /FM. Ask for Jeff, 893-7566 • 5.11.6824 Attractive medium brown SERVICE COROLLA 642-8335 NEW-USED-SERV. metalic linlsh with ginger PARTS WAGON leather interior, white Jan. BAUER 1968 VW Bus. 7-pass. Radio, ~ dau r oof. Automatic trans., X!nt cond, New tires. $2150. · t BUICK Days ,194-8571~ eves &16-4780 VOLVO radio & stereo taPe sys em , Red, Joi,~: mileaxe. Xln't cond. healer. power steering, pow. IN '68 V\V Auto. AUTHORIZED er brakes, power Y.'i ndows COSTA MESA $1200 Or Offer S.4.CRJFICE Sl2~ SALES e SERVICE & vents 6 way po1vcr seat, 234 E. 17th Street 642-3844 • 5.16--3107 • FRITZ WARREN'S I power d~r Jocks, & factory 54&-7765 Eves & Wknds • ·ss V\V bug, Xlnt conrl, SPORT CAR CENTER climaterontrolair rondition- new tires, ~\1ust sell $1200. 710 E. 1st St. S.A. 547-0764 Ing , One owne r trade on MERCEDES BENZ ,71 COROLLA 673-5'170 Open da ily 9.9': closed Sunday '71 Mark Ill ZLK208. John. CUSTOJ\!IZED V\V convert. Autos New 990 son & Son, 2626 Harbor, Oran'e Cou nty's l argest Sele ction f'J n.,... & Ll,._•d Me rcede s · B..,111 Xlnt cond. Grabbt>r hl11e. :.:.::.:.::"'..c:_::.;: ___ ~:.: _:::C·:::•::.L_.:"4:,:ll-::5'.10='-· ~--- Radio. heater , disc brakes, New n101or, mags, oversize BRAND NE\V '71 CONT. '70 2 dr. Take over fa ctory air, low, !ow mile~! I tlN's, fhu-e fcnd(·1-s. Good GR EMLIN Take older car or sn1.<i.ll huy a l $650. 67:i-7200. On!..,i down. Under fac!, warranty. 1 WANTED $l S98 t•loSl'd-end le;i.se. full malnt. $18;).19 mo_ 968-9126 Gold Cont111€nlal . call l\faury dlr. aft io am I j 54(}.3100 or 49-1-7506 037:127. I'll pay top dolla~ tor your Order Yours Todny 0111nrr. Lan<111u lnp. . 1 · VOLKS\VAGE.t"l today. Call H b A • $137.l === BILL "fAXEY and ask for Ron Pinchot. ar or merican LINCOLN Continental '\9£.11. 1' 549-3031 Ext. £,6 .. ij';_ 673.()91)(). 1!169 Harhor Blvd. &l&.2061 4-dr. top cone!. All extras. -........,......--------jT)O~YIQ(T iAI or~~ 0~~~.u~.~a:~d. Autos, Used 990 I 1 0Y.·riec~2~V ~~~200, ~im Slemons Imps. ·warner & Main St. Saiit<1 Ana -'' .,.5 A.&11 • a lHINI 18881 BEACH JILVD. "" 6-l.J-.l.l07 BUICK "M,,6," Hun!. Beach 147..!555 l --1~6~9~VW SEDAN '68 BUICK GS 4(iQ ·~<bb';?R~R·2,.;'~;, ~~ I ml N, nf CoA-'1 Hwv. on Sch 4 s!X'C'll, v1 Llr:iso11ic s[>l'akcrs. -·~'4"-'6-_.7':::1_:_7 _::•:::".:c"~6_,P:::"::.'"-~ 7 1 TOYOTA PICKUP Radm & hf'a1C'r. !ZSR 939\ bra nd 11\''I' tit'I·~. huckt'I '66 Con •n\r 2--<:lr, r,th, 110 ''fR\EDLAHDER" $1395 s!'als, ~p!'cil41 "hrc-1 covers. hp. Great cond. $650. Pvt With deluxe 30" camper, f"111I Lie. XEZ.'i:2K ply 968-2149. 1l7ff IEACtt '"wv. >'J price l'.?251. Take small $1699 1968 CORVAIR 8113-7566 e 537-6.S24 AT NEW-USEC.SE RV. down or trade. dlr. 49'1-7503-Xlnt rond. S950. 96Z-0538 .... --------. _541J.~3l~OO-'-. ~·~°'~"'~· =~-! 18711 BEACH Bl.. 842-4435 CHICK IVERSON CORVETTE .... ~ '69 CORONA HUNTINGTON BEACH vw -- 62 MG MIDGET Best olter over $500 Runs good 6n-Sµ2 MG Sales, Service, Part1 Immediate Delivery, All Modeh J1rluport )l111p ort » 3100 W, Cout Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 54G-1764 MGA fi.\!J..30.11 Ext. 6G or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MF.SA '67 YW SEDAN --. '61 Buick 4-ilr Xlnt cond * $350 * 67~2571 * '67 vmE Fastback • "427". 4-~. AM /FM radio. New poJy. ~lass tirei<. . Excellent con- dition Driven easy. . $2850 Ask for Mr. Grannlll 546-8640 Jl.t US T Sel l sharp 1966 Corvette conv w/rem H.T. 427, 4-spd. Immac oond. 646--0968. '57 VETTE, Good cond. $450 or best olfer. '611 BUJCK Riveria Grand Aft 6; 546-2S31 Sprt, has every xlra. Xln't 1--~~~~~~--Pv "2-008 * 1969 CORVETTE 4..flpd 1...'-"°~"~'-· ~'~•~'Y~·~~-'-~t ~---1 Air oond; Silver & black. CLEAN UP ON' ALL s AT DEALERS COST! COUGARS •MERCURY •AND MONTEGOS • • EXAMPLE NEW 1970 COUGAR Power steering, power disc brakes, white side wan tires, deluxe wheel covers, rodio & heater, 5 2989 +n.&LI~ er. Sale l'rlce Pl99 dlr. ---------'60 MCA New '"''"' ti.res Radio & hea ter. (UEN 251) '62 BUICK Skylark, runs gel. TRIUMPH AUTHORIZED SALES 8 SERVICE FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. ht SL S.A, 547 -Oi64 Open dally 9-9; cl011Cd Sunday $1099 Gd tires, R&H. $250 or bst I ..::64.::lc:-<1::;56:;._~~~~- TR<t • J964. Blue, black 1op, 1 _01_'·-".,.G--0.-;-1.,."=~~--l ---C::...:O_U:;...:G.,.A_R....__ •OF91HTl783< <• PW1452270} Will take ,,_ . ., Qre In .trade. Will finance A engine. ~· ..,. • ., ....... Call '4&-8736 ---~*"'5.18"""---1 or-11. MGI '69 DATSUN SEDAN ·sg MCS-<;T. dk< "'w lo mi 's, wht w/blk Inter.' All extra1, J2250, * 675-1004 • 2 Door. RadJo. heater. (XWA 173! $1295 Har bour V.W. iirii_ B~CH st.. 842~ ·.~NBEAC!f '10 DATS\ffl, wainn, low mllt"9. au.to. fllr C'Ond . MuJt 'tieU: ~ 11.lter 7, fiiiLy JSDbf DIME -A . -.UND cailt JOU JI.tit ~n- nlet. dlJ. PORSCHE '65 Porsche 356 SC Suivoof BrlUsb raclnt ,reen. U c YCC 525 $2"' CHICK MRSON vw $49-ll.11 Ex!, es or 67 1971) J.IARBOR ,BLVD. OOSTA MESA ssso. Good "'""''"" ""' CADILLAC clean, 87.000 miles. A pxl '69 COUGAR buy 546-2050 ! •69 LUXURY SPORT " . 18711 BEAC1t BL 842-4435 CAD. El Doradn. Al!! Be11.uUful Arctic while tinL!!h VOLKSWAGEN I HUNTINGTON BEACH blti ck w/l !hr. int , s1erco l l'tHh black landau roof wilh ra~io, ney,• t!rcs. Only 2~.000 matChln,g lnterlOr. automatic Lanie s.i.ctlon Of VW Campers, Vans, Kombls, •-. New & Used Immediate Delivery CHICK MRSON vw I '64 YW SEDAN m>. A ,..,.. """ $5300. """""taslon. powu ,,..,,. 6f3-3430 ing, air conditioning, radio, Radio &. hcilter. {JFK 402l '66 El Dorado Convt., Way he1ter, completely serviced $695 below wholesale. at $l3ril. & ready for delivtry-. BAJ. Harbour V .W. Good 1hape in & out, a.nee of Warranty available. 645-2317 . szso. Uc. XWS 707 Johnson 1964 Cadlll11c, new tires, 1 It Son, 2626 liarbor Blvd., owner, S991i cash. call C.M. 5'10.5630. 18711 BEACl·t BL. 842-4'135 S4>.29Z!'. '67, Lo miles Except. clean. HUNTJl'JGTON BEACH '67 CriV Climate control, Auto. R, P/S P/B. A 563031 Ext. GS or 81 .69 BUG ,.11 1-AM/F'f\1 !!IP!'('!). All pwr. I Jewel SUITT ~t 1910 llARBOR BLVD. Pt'rf. ~::1. o.$l;;~ I ~jj $.1000. Extra cle11~34W. '67 COUGAR ~'R.7, vinyl !OP, COSTA M!SA 673-4923. '69 Ca d illac Convert. air cont!. PS, nrw fires '67 VW -EXCEL LENT DAILY PILOT for actiOfii $4'M. 642·6156 $1550. f9.l-3672: or -4!H-7400. 673-l.~fiS Call 642-5678 & Save ? \\Vil ht'lp you St'll! 6~2-5678 Dime-A·Llne fi•lZ-5678 11075. • Johnson & ·son LINCOLN CONTINENT~L eMARK, Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 545630 642.cJ'IU