HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-01-19 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANU;t..RY J9, ·197f . .
•
SGT. REGAN (LEFT), CA,T. GREEN TAKE IN\IEJ!IT.OJIY
Cost• Me11 Riki Neb .{>.rvgl. lui'1llry l""'-'\1utp..;l1. ·
SJ:iio,g Chokes CotUtline
A.s Heat Wave Hangs On
• By qEORGE LEIDAL -
ot "" MlfJ """ ~ ' ' Smoa's ugly spectre continued Its grip
on cotufnUnttteti 11Pnl: the Orange q,ut
today· u the record heat wave continued
In Soulllern C.lllornia.
COnlider1ble fog and low clouds tonight
aod Wedneaday morning will be followed
bf llUMY 1kte1 and a hilb betweea
• and 71. Uttle change 1ii the smog ~ condlUoM It e:zpected until ~J. liow"'tver, the Natlonll Weather ~ ..........
-By ~rlday, • buildup of -Ill' ::U'~ wW brln& with It incmllol
Tbe Orongt County Air Pollution Coo·
lto(Jllmkl reponed -bolow the
levol,ne<eAOrY to coll ochool llllOI ..,,,.
flip. In "t least ..,. Orongt.·COaot IOhool,
Loplla 8"1ch'1 El Morro el""1<1111ry
IChool. play acUYitY ot chlldten ,WU
llinl*I Monday by the thlc:i<, .Crld •Ir
th•-puohed to the cout by 'Ucbl •
•
Santa Ana winds. •
Wh1l< the •anal ·-k for Laguna
Beach tpday '!•• improVect, , the APCD
said coastal dflei could expect smog
·levels similar to those rf.&Ched Monday.
Orongt Qlomty Harbor Doparlinent
said viaibllity today .wu llmlted to one
mile by "foe or very thJck amoc."
With no wtnds at JO a.m. today, the
prospecta for moving the nnog out l<I _..,.llim.
Ed Clmareoa, APCD qlneet, uld
the -· ......... lhlt -.pt the . ' eJHlbillnc •mill In die •Orqe Cout
WU ~'to omu.. tlll'lugh tontght.
LlCMi IDd ·~. -during the njpt ;_$4 ·itNlll fJc""holB-t were forecut
for ~-oi ·-<ifll!l•l<,.1$ kllotl:
By w~·-wlrido ore ...
pectocl ' lo ....... '""" 10 .. 211 ---u,, c:oUL Foe ud low cloudl in Ille mamios 'Wldneolloy wtn yield
(lioJllOG, P ... II
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~ontinues
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Suspected 'Superhurglar'
Captured in Costa Mesa
T~oOthers,
One Armed,
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 tlle 0.11~ 1'1 .. 1 lt•ff
A Jong underworld probe reacMd a
climax today, when Costa Mesa police
captured a man characteriud in detec-
tive magazines as Mr. Big on the
Southern California burglary scene.
He and two armed companions -
one 1t Costa Mesan currently facing
federal stock swindle and drug charges
-were taken into custody without in·
cident.
One had a loaded. cocked, .380
automatic pistol tucked in his waistband
when grabbed, but was quickly relieved
of it.
Police said they have been keeping
Kenneth C. "Superburglar'' Moran, 29,
of Whittier, under survei::ance for a
long time.
He and Edward A. Zuber . 30, of 3073
Yukon Drive, Costa Mesa, plus a third
man who gave three aliase:i and a
Michigan address were arrested at 2:30
a.m. near Harbor Boulevard and Gisler
Avenue.
Police claim a haul of heroin, narcotics
and stolen audio-visual !Ol.lnd equipment
· worth up to · $10,000 was confiscated as
ev\den~.
"There's enough methedrine or 'speed '
here to service every knoWJIJ 'hype'
in Costa Mesa for a week," said Detec-
ti ve Sergeant John Regan, surveyinc a
ta.hie piled with loot.
Moran. Zuber BDd the John Doe suspect
were booked on a variety of cbareu,
allegedly following agreeiment to seD the
assorted loot for only $1,200, investigators
11aid.
Charges Include :
-Sale of heroin.
-Sale of dangerous drugs.
--Suspicion of bur~.
--Suspicion of posielalon of 1iolen pr<>-
perly. •
--Oorrylng a concealed weapon.
Detective Captain Rober:t Green aah1
the arrMtl could lead' to "tearlfltY of
additloruil stolen property, IOllie ol'irldcb
may not have been nported to
aulhorltiel.
"They've got a set ol. burglary tool•
that won't quit," said Capl Green, men-
Uonlna: waltle-taJkies for COllUDUDication
with a -pluUc abilol fai' quJc:i<ly
slipping loclol llld --· o.tec:tlYet Nonn Kllldl ... Bob Len-
nert oet up the ---10 p.m. Mooclly, then "called In -._
Monn, ' -for ,Clrtlonloduin C<nporotloo ol LOI ADpiel, ZoMr, ll1d
the ~lfled suspect ... all held
In lieu of lllO,llOO tilll.
C .... ea.S1!$P!!\ ·
Albert to Lead
House ·Activities
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Democrat.I
overwhelmingly selected Rep. Carl Albert
of Oklahoma today to be House speaker
but spilt sharply· on election of a floor
ltider to replace him in the I 2 n d
Conflre!S .
Albert, 62, a party loyalist with a
liberal voting record, woo over Rep.
Ecuadorian Navy
Seizes 4 More
U.S. Tuna Boats
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United
States, which has cut off military sales
to Ecuodar in a fishing·rights dispute,
reported today that the Ecuadorians bad
11elzed four more U.S. fishing vessels
since Mo~ay for a total of 12 in lhe
put eight daya.
'"I'his is the largest number ln recent
years taken over that length of time,"
said a State Department official who
ma~ the· dilclolure hued oo repc:rtl
from Ca!UomJa bma Industry spollesmen.
Tbe State ~t aald that during
the oame period Ecuador olao bad. aeiJ<ed
the J una, a .itJp owned by aa American
Tuna Company but aalllng under the
Panamanian flac, Ind a Japoneae Ollb-
ln( boat. 'i'lle Unljed Stfta aqnounced ' MolldaY
that It WU ~ l!alador 81\Y further
mllltary · aid' ljlll might talre further
action lnchldlnc lllJIPlllllon of economJc
ualatance. n-...,. the ' taloel cleYt1opmenla
In a lont<1!m>lli&. f«ld ·biij-Ille. Wlln ~'Muoa,.wJl\dl 'clainio a·
terrltor!Ol -~ ~ the ,dell Piclllc Dl!*ic wa .... Glf.111 cciolt,, ud ·
the United' Stales' 'fl!ldl·-llu oa1y
I 1).mlle UmJl ' .
In the,lateot 0...,, -..... boata blVt ae1sec1 1111.u.s, ~ on
poadl!D( cbarpa. Al laat nporl,. -
of the boltl' Md' Ml rel••·~ af'ter-
PIYlnC fkla lllalilc' '131.lli.
John Conyers, a fourth term black from
Detrott who said Albert had failed · to
di!play Jeadersb.ip qualities required of
a speaker.
Albert won over Conyers 220 to ~
Albe rt. whose selection by th e
Democrat.! will be formally ratified by
the full House Thursday, when the new
C.Ongress convenes. succeeds reUred Rep.
John W. McCormack oL Ma ssachusetll
who had served as speaker since 1962.
During that period , Albert was party
floor leader. Five candidates were seek·
ing election at a closed Democratic
caucus to that post to succeed Albert.
A new party whip also must be chosen
-a choice usually made by the speaker
and leader -to replace Rep. Hale
Boggs of Uiuisiana, one of the con-
testants for leader.
Prior to selecting Albert, on the way
to building a new leadership team, the
Democratic congressmen had tossed out
Rep. Dan RosLenkowski of Jllinols, known
as Chicago Mafor Richard J. Daley's
spokesman In the House, as the cauCWI
chairman. Rep. Olin E. Teague of Tei:u
•as cho.wn. 151 to .12, In place of
RootenllDWlkl.
Capo Beach Vet
Killed in Africa
Highway Mishap
A C.ptatrano Beacb -.ian, Dr.
John Hlllllrom, wu ldlleiHn a JUPway
cTuh on' the slOpes of · Atlica '1 ML
Kilimanjaro ·early today 1 "1tin be wu
a vOlunteer ln the U.S. AID.~·
WlJlle spoteamen 1n w~ .. D.
C., bad Utile opedllc ·lnfor!natloo' on
the fatal mlsblp, Jack 'lllomll, •·State
Department pmo aide, aald D r •
Hillltram, the fatbef' ol five ~khn.
WU woikin( od a dilly P!"Jecl Jo ~ 1 ll!Ulll city In T-Ca
Tiie .e1er1nar1an IUl!enct ......, bead
!njurlel when hi• --.. a road about 100 mu. north ol Dar
El Salam, lhe'Tanwrlln•copllal.
HJl!alroin WU fUlhed t<I a boopltal
1t T1ft81, rtpOril 11Jd, bul never r91U.
ed ctinleloumea. '
In County
Probed
Air aash lnveatigaton cooUnued their
probe today of the crash landing of
an exptnsive twin-engi,ne plane oear
Orange County airport which caused
minor Injuries" to a San Clemente in·
dustrial exeeuUve and his wile.
Richard M. Johnson, 55, and his wUe,
Diane, ~I , required only emergency treat.-
ment after lbe noon crash of their plane
about a mile from the airport landing
strip.
The John.sons live at 1217 Via La
Jolla, San Clemente.
A spokesman for the Federal Aviation
Adminiatratioo said Johnson was at·
tempting. a landing at the terminal at
12:12 p.m. when the englnea of tha
Cessna 320.F suddenl y stopped.
Jofµlao n's attempt.! to "feather'' the
craft in to the terminal failed. and
the plane slammed into a plowed field.
The impact tore loose a fuel pod
on one wing tip, sparking a small fire.
The blaze w:aa qWckly extinguished by
county fire crews summoned to the sce:ne
by construction worken: who were nearby
wheJi the laOOlng occurred.
OUter damage to the plane lncluded
bent 'propellers, and a damaged UD-
derarriqe. ·
·From amog to log, tbat'• tll"'e·
wohl along Ibo Onnp .CoNI.
where It'll be aocked ·1n tonllJ>t
ind Wednlldai inonling. Tamp.
entlll'el will • raqe from the
upper 80a w Ibo conlral 70..
INSJDB TOIJA)'
·End of tlle . -fCOtlO!lllc.
rccotdl allow 11110 ""' .IM' wom,..,. lincc I~ for.-
-r..,lliot<Nm(lotlcia.a.
th< l/1U~ , Slokf-'. SH ~:
J>OQt5. •
~ I =="' .: .. ... -, -· . ..... ...... ~aiii11iioiiik,;•'°1•1 1•tt ~ ... u Zuber mlde the news .nced!J when
Indict«! by • federal pnd 111111 on
charges of lnvo!VtMent In transfer ud
(Sal Ma. .BIG, P.,. II
sea.tary GI Stale William P. lli>prl
au mmontd EcuMart:8n Amb r b
eaT!oa ~ l<I tbe Stato
Department lfooday ln.rnooO to lnlmn him o !the action. A .,.._., Rid
Rotes ~'the ...... u thlt "allier
lop1 pnwlilonl n!ollns lo llUd! -an bilN nYfri """'"7· alid lhll lllr· ther aetJon by thll ....,._1 uncler
Tboinu aald apeclflc local delalll on
Dr. Hnlltrom, whole qe wu atnn
u 1bout 50 ln lnit11l reparta, were not ........... ,.
~...._., . '
(Sal mJADOa. Pip ll . irnmtCU1tal7 avlilablt. ·
r 1 .
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! DAILY PILOT s
Viets Raid
POW Camp;
Find No One
SAIGON (AP) -South Vietnamese
paratrooper5 guarded by U.S. helicopter
p:nships, raided .1 suspected prisoner of
war .camp inslde CambocUa where 20
Americans were believed held but found
it empty, Vietnamese sources aald today.
The raidlng party. hawever, capturM
30 enemy aold.lus. the sources reported.
'Ibe raiding pa rty was Jed by LL Gen. Do
C.O Tri. leader of South Vietnam's Cam-
bodian campaign last sprint.
The n ld took place Sunday and lasted
three hours.
''It worked perfectly .'' sa id one officer.
"l\'e suffered no casualties."
The raid was baaed on int.elligence
that American pNontrs were being
hel d In an area west of the Cambodian
town of Mlmot aJona: Highway 7. Mimol
Is 75 miles northwest of Saigon and
about five miles l.mSde Cambodia.
1be l()Urces said a flut. of South Viet-
nam~ helloopters landed about JOO par-
atroopers with U.S. helicopter gunshjps
eseortlng them.
American ground ad visers accompan-
ied the paratroopers to the border.
Tri, who commands the 3rd military
region guarding Saigon, la11ded with the
raiding party.
The oper1Uoa rec1Ued the unsucctalf~l
raid No\·. 21 by helicopter-borne Amen-
can comm.1ndos OD the Son Tay prUoner
of war camp 20 miles weat ol Hanoi Jn
North \lletnam. Elite, hJibl7 trained IOJ.
diers mtde bolh nldl.
In both cases, they fou.cl no American
prisoners u expected but the oper1Uona
were carried o!f with precisloa.
From ti me to time. there have been in-
telligence report.'! thal Americans ca~
tured in South Vietnam were held in bor·
der camps in Cambodia. The number was
never believed to be lar1e.
From P.,,e I
ECUADOR •..
pertinent laws could not be ucluded."
Last year. Ecuador Rcelved P million
In U.S. military aid. The size of this
yea r's program was .not available
although it was undu1tood Ecuador plan-
ned to buy 10tne belicoptera and other
aircraft from the United Stites.
ECllldor 1llo bas sought credits for
overhauling some shlpl and these were
suspended as well. Six of the Ecuadorian
Navy's 14 C<lmbal and patrol ships came
from the United States but the&e have
not betn used agaln!t Amtrtcan fiahing
vessels, U.S. officials said.
State Department spokesman Robtrt.
J . Mc:Clolkey said the United States
currently provldea $211 million 1 year
tn economic aid to Ecuador. Although
$3.5 million already has betn C<:1mmitted
this year. he said the State Department
is con side.rinl euspeoding the remainder.
McCloskey told newsmen, "our purpoee
In taking this action is not so much
retribution or revenge as it is a ri&ht
to protect the r ight.! of American
fishermen in these waters."
The military assistance procram was
halted under section 38 of the foreign
military sales act which McCloskey said
provides tblt "no 11lel, credl.ta or
guarantees abtJl be made or eitended
under the act to any COW)try during
a perkld of one year atltt such counbj
seius or lites into custody or flnes
an American flshtng veuel more than
12 milt! from the cout of that country.0
Motorcyclist Killed
In Freak Acc ident
SANTA FE S PRING S, (U PI )
-A motorcyclist dle<l Monday of lnjurle!I
suffered when 1truclc by a hood which
had blown off an automobile on the
San Gabriel JUvu Freeway.
Dead wu Elbert L. Setzer. 29, El
Monte. Tbt drlvtr of the car was not
held.
DAILY PILOT .....,... .............. .... ._ ............. _
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oAMM COUT Plll UIHtffft COMIWft
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li,h•rl P. H•I .... °"""' o-ty .,,,., -~ ... , .... ..., ........ ,.............._.arnw.taa ... ~
.....!:!!!!!' 1=£1 l:n"C. •i::r'l:.1 i:fCIMiiiiM *"' II Qn\lilla
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Tutwi.ty, J.ttwar, 19, 1971
UPI T1.._..,.
Capistrano
Gives Boot
To Teache1·
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of "" DlllJ 1'1191 l llft
John V, Robbins, a music teacher
In the Capi11trano Unified School Distrlct
for oe.arly 15 yea rs, was fired Monday.
The board of trustees unanimously
agreed lo dismiss the tenure tea cher
for .. incompetency " but refused to outline
spec ifi c charges.
Speaking 1n the. teacher's defense wu
Ed Olson. a musician for 55 years v.'ho
said, "If it takes 14 years to find a
man incompetent then there's something
wrong.''
Olson said when he moved tll the
district in 1954 Robbins wa:s the only
music teacher and was sta Uoned at the
high school. "He had to spread himself
pretty thi n,'' said Olson. He admitted
tha t Robbins ' disclpllne had been weak
but claimed this had no bearing on
his abilily as a teacher.
"I wish you would reconsider before
you ruin a man's ca reer," he added.
Mountain Named After
UC h·vine Manager
ByC~U.LOOS
OI IM DallV Pli.t Sltff
HOW ri1ANV GUYS do you lcriOw that have a mountain named after them!
Charles 0. Reinhardt does.
But he has never seen it.
What's more , he doesn't ca.re i! be ever does.
It's at the South Pole.
And when it comes to the South Pole, Reinhardt figures
one trip there is enough.
Reinhardt. a former Na\'Y officer, is the physical plant
manager at UCI Irvine. He spent three months belween Dec·
em ber 1946 and March 1947 in Antarctica.
MOUNT RE INHARDT . the National Science Founda·
lion Wormed him 20 years later. is on th e northeast side <:!"
of the Hughes Range alon~ the Siple Coast at the head of
Antarctica'• Ro!ft Ice Shel f. Reinhardt has a National G~
graphic map and a phot o or the 3,000-foot mountain to prove
II.
The mounta in was named by the U.S. Board of Geographic na mt!s In
recognllion of Reinhardt's work during "Operation Highjump," a 1946-t7 polar
expedition led by th e late Ad miral Richard Byrd and the late Vice Admir11!
Richard H. Cruzen. whose widow still lives in San Clemente.
As staff engineer for the expedition, Reinhardt. who joined UCI after re-
l.iring from the Na vy in 196.1, was respon sible for plann ing and building ca mp
facilities. The J:C,O Seabces under his command built everything from water and
sewage systems to housing and air strips.
JAMES BRODERICK EXAMINES DEAD BIRD AT SAUSALITO
Oil Spill Aft•r Collision Fouls S.n Francisco Bay
Dr. Robert Beasley . chairm an or the
board, assured the audience that the
decision had not been a hasty one. Re
said there was voluminous evidence to
aupport the charges.
Robbins, who was unavailable for com-
ment. has vowed to fight his dismissal
"all the way to superior court." He
now has 30 days to make his intentiorui
known.
CONDITIO NS WERE LESS than ideal. Temperatures during summer
months at the site, located about six miles from Admiral Byrd's 1939 Little
America camp on the Roa.s Ice Shelf, averaged IO degrees below zero, Rein-
hardt recalls.
And blizza rd! often reduced visibility lo three or four feet.
SF Bay Wildlife Periled The school district then has 30 days
In which to answer before the action
is t11:ken to court for a final decision.
Purpose of the 1946-47 expedition was to map the frigid continent and
pave the way for future scientific studies.
Reinhard t"s job required him to rtick close to base camp. Tha t's why he
never sa w the mountain that bears his name.
Why was his name picked for a pea k in Anta rctica?
By Massive Oil Spillage
Robbins said last June he will not
resign. ''If they think I am Incompete nt
let them prove it," he said.
He has taught all levels in the distric t
Including high school, elementary an d
junior high. He is currently teaching
at Marco Forster Junior Hi g h In San
Juan Capistrano.
•;f ASSU~fE the board named peaks in the Hughes Range for staff offj.
cers on that expediti on," says Reinhardt. He notes that the range it.sell was
named for the expedition's senior aviator. Moat of the map work was done by
.~.
Recently, Reinhardt says, he has seen travel advertisements offering -
for a few thousand dollars -tours to Antarctica. He doesn"t plan to go.
SAN FRANClSCO (UPI ) -Conserva·
tionista feared for Marlne Wildlife in
San Francl!co Bay today because of
1 huge oil 6p ill resulting from the col-
lision of two tankers under th e Golden
Gate Bridge.
Tid es and winds pushed some of the
slippery goo out through the gate to
the Pacific Ocean, the Coast Guard said,
but moat of It remained trapped.
ComervaUonist! patrolled b e a c h e s
trying to help OU-soaked birds , so heavy
and sticky they coul d not fl y.
Standard Oil Compan y, working under
Coast Guard supervision. assembled Ions
of atraw, dozens of pump trucks and
specially fitted boats lo sop up more
than half a million gallons of refined
oil from the ruptured hu11 of a tanker.
A gap ing hole was ripped in the port
side of the outbound Oregon Standard
Monday when ii coll ided with another
com pany tanker, the Arizona Standard, in
heavy fog beneath the Golden Gate
Bridge. There ·were no injuries,
The Coast Guard expressed fears that
a change in the prevailing winds could
result in incoming tide washing Ule oil
back into the bay, wheer many bird
species are wintering.
Sea lions took ref\Jge on rocks and
buoy s as the sun reflected rainbows
fro m odorous floating slicks at the mouth
of the bay. Dying fish fl opped In oil
pools on the beaches and oil-eoated
pelicans and C<:1rmoranls were carried
to cleaning stations established by th e
Audubon Society and local humane
.societies.
The. l:xact size of the spill was not
known, but the Coast Guard speculated
It may be more than the estimated
800,000 gallons of crude oil released into
the Santa Barbara Channel ln January.
1970, by a leaking Union Oil Company
drilling platform .
Dr. Joseph Connell, professor o!
Zoology at the Unlversity of Callfornl A
at Santa Barbara. said the refined oil
which spilled into San Francisco Bay
From Pn.qe J
SMOG ...
t.o parU y auMy skies and sligh tly cooler
temperatures .
The mid-winter heat wa ve shattered
three records in Los Angeles Monday.
A hJ&h of 06 wa.!J the holtest January
readinC on record. the ovP.mlght low
of 6$ was the warmest low, and three
carbon monoxide readings required
precedent-setting alerts at 8:06 a.m. and
7:05 p.m., ·Monday and again at 8:05
1.m.
Since Orange County's carbon dio xide
measuring equipment failed last Dtc.
l . the APCD his no t recorded levels
of that toxic Pollutant emitted by
automobiles, camarena said.
He noted that L<l1 Angele• reached
the alert stage btcauae th e rormer 100
parts per million benchmark was lowered
to 50 parta per million.
PrtSen06 of carbon monox.lde In the
•lr wu loged at 57 part.I per million
In Whittler Monday evenlng, leadln& to
Loi Anpl .. County"• iaauane< of lhe
alert wbkb ub motorilta to voluntarily
abandon U9t ol their vehicles.
Oranae C.ounty recently est.abltahed •
method where oiont re1dinp ln uoeu
of .3$ pan.a per million would btl relayed
from the APCD to lhe C.Uoty SChoola
oUloe. A tpokMmaD for tha Counly
auperintendent ol tebools said co warnl.11
wulllued7Wrday.
Tbt. um&IUll preeencc of lmOI along
the Orange Coaat rtsultl from the
temperature Inversion la.yer i nd winds
that h•ve brough t w11rm Wand 1jr to
tN area. A stonn condlt.lon off the
coul r,reventt cold a.Ir from moving
down rom the Pacific Northwest, the
N11tional Wcathr.r Service said.
is "more toxic" than the crude oil whlch
killed 3,500 birds and several sea lions
. on Santa· Barbara beaches.
The conservationist Sierra Club blasted
Standard Oil for "continuing to foul
the environment" and warned against
cleani ng up the mess with detergen!.l'I
and chemicals "more destructive than
th e oil itself."
A company spokesman told newsmen
the cleanup operation wou1d be completed
"within the ne:z:l several days" and no
toxic chemicals or detergents were being
used.
From P"fle l
MR. BIG ...
Russell Takes
Tum for Worse
At Walter Reed
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The condilion
of Sen. Richard 8. Ru~ell (D-Ga.), suf·
The trip to Anarctica was a wonderful experience, he says, adding:
"In that sense, r define 'experience' as something you live through once
and hope you never hav e to again."
Tate Trial Jury Listens
To Beatles' Rock .Mu sic
fering from a lingering respiratory in-
fection, suddenly turned critical early LOS ANGE LES (AP) -The ]ury
today, hla office reported. lll the Sharon Tale murder trial began
Russell, 'f3.year-old Senate president its third full day or dellbe raUons toda y,
pro tern, has been confined at Wa lter with a sessio n ef listening te rock music
Reed Army Medical Center since Dec. of the Beetles.
sale of stolen securities in Texas and 8 with a lower respiratory infection com-Michigan. plicilted by his chronic emphys ema. The panel a!lked to hear the untit led
The prosecut ion epposed allowing the
visits, saying it would reopen the trial
to new evidence. The defense, favorina
the visits, moved to, reopen the trial.
The judge denied the motion.
Chief defe nse attorney Paul Flt:;erald
told newsmen : "We don't know 11 It
would have hurt us or helped us. But
we feel it was certainly a re asonabl1
request on the part of the jury. They
Just ha ve these isolated photographs,
It would certainl y put lt in a mor•
meaningful per!peetive if they viewed
the scene."
Doctors reported Monday the lnfe('tion album whlch the state says Charles
He was already awaiting trial following appeared to be clearing •mder heavy Manson played obsea.!llvely In the sum·
his earlier arrest in the midwest on antibiotic lrelltmenl. Bul they examined mer of the slayings.
charges of smuggli ng one ton of mari· the senator at 3 a.rn . EST and found So ngs on the 1968 album figured heav ily
juana . his condition worsened, according to in testimony at the seven-month-old trial.
Lawmen are known to have kept an Powell Moore, Russell 's press aecretary. Wit nesses said Manson thought he heard,
"The senator spcnl a bad night," the Beatles predicting a black-white con·
eye on his Yukon Drive rtsldence, head· Moore said. "His condition is described flict In songs such as "Helter Skelter,"
quarters of a business called Top Line as critical. He ls on oxygen.'' ''Piggies .'' "Black bird'' and "Revolution
Industries and engaged in a variety Moore said a brother . a sister and 9.'' The st ate says Manson erdered
of activities. a nephew had been 1ummoned to the followers to ki ll in orde r to trigg er p F CJ
Zuber was in Costa Mesi Memorial hospital ln addlUon to a sist er who such 8 race war. e a•SOUp og 08e8
Hospital when indicted late list aummer. haa been on hand throughout the illness. The judge 11ranted the jurors' request
recovering from a aevere Jeg fracture 'Ibey are the Rev. Dr. Henry Edward r.·londey and ordered a record player California Ai rports
su ffered in a motorcyc~ accident. Russell, a brother from Memphis. Tenn .; sent In ror today's session.
Authorities were uncertain today of Mrs. S. Gorden Green ,. a siste r fro m When they recessed Monday , jurors SAN FRANCISCO I UPI ) -A hea vy
I.he status of the federal charges which Winder, Ga., and the nephew, Richard had deliberated 13 hours snd 45 minutes. b ght against be f in fog closed North ern California alrporta \\"ere rou a num r o · B. Ru asell JIJ, Mrs. J, K. Stacy, a Manson and three women members d 1 dln
dividuals from Texu to Michigan and sister from Atlanta and Winder, has of his hlpple·style clan are charged with for six houn on Mon e.y, Inc u g tho~
Nf\\' Yo rk. been on the scene for some lime. murqer·conspire.cy In :seven slaylng s. at San Francisco , Oa kland, San Jose ,
Police said Moran made lhe fron t The setback was the second Russell Superior Court Judge Charles Older Stockton and Sacramento,
page of 11 popular detective magazine has experienced ln his latest hospit al refused another jury ~uest. for a night The only Norther n Ce!lforni11 tt irporl
last Ma rch. characterizing him as the stay. The respiratory infection invol ving visit to the scenes of the August 1969 Number One Southland expert in the lungs and bronchial tubes became killings, Miss Tate's plush Benedict Can· still closed by nightfall was al Areal.a.
burglary. v.·orse las t week af ter doctors had believ· yon mansion and the home or wealtt.y Poor visibility caused by fog also was
They said one jail trusty -doing ed be wa s on the road to improvement market owners Lena and Roaemary La blamed for the coll!a\on of two oU tankers
tirne himself for a lesser burg lary -and recovery, Bianca. near the Golde n Gate Bridge.
11·as enchanted to find a celebrity hr"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mj cellmate when Moran and his companiona
we.re booked .
Detectives said the trio were transfer-
red elsewhere to begin a second stage
of the investigation.
SU!! uncertain of the Identity of the
third suspect, they said he ls believed
to be 37-year -old Frank J. Schrock.
Phoenix Ailing;
Trial Postponed
Bolh Gary Harold Pboenlx and hi•
lawyer were on the sJck llat today arid
the Oranae County Superior Court trial
of rape chara:es was held over until
\Vcdnesday.
Phoenix. 29, of Costa Mesa, is beln1
treated for flu in his or1n1e County
jail quarters. Deputy public defender
Roderick Rlddardl ts said to be 1tmoat
relovered from a vlrw: that has delayed
the trial for three days.
Riccardi will open his defense of
Phoenix whe n the trial resumta ln Judie
\Yllllam Murray's courtroom. N In e
women have appeared for the ~secutlon
in teatlmony supportin& chara:es: of ripe,
assault with Intent to commit rape, lJd-
nap ing . robbery Ind ~ ptrVersion.
Depuly district. allomey M I c h a e I
Caplul wUI 1si for the death penal ty
if the jury returns a l\lllty vttdld
on the major char1e1.
Fa shion Plate Felon
SEASAME STREET
Sesame Street is about the only street in t he harbor a rea that hasn 't
hod o carpet installation by Alden 's.
In our thirteen years, we hove carpeted thousands of homes in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach , Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach.
One neighbor tells anothe r until often we hove worked in every
home on o block.
The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask
YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven't,
bring her in with you .)
-SANTA AMA. OIAHI
l'UmN Cell •. ,
AIAIM'I
Ill MIU CAIPm
& DlANllD
11174 I,._,, ...... c.nt. ,, .. ,, ..
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lac•ntla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru ThurL, t to 5:30 -,,I., 9 to 9 -Sat., t ::JO lo ~
MEXBOROUOH, Enp nd (UPI) -
Fashion note: A gurunan clad in brl&hl
red coverall!: 11nd hood held up a po1t
office early toda/ and et<:1ped wll.h
$7.200 In ca1h In 1 ma t.chlng red duf·
folbag. police ,.Id. 1:.------------------------------------t
-· I
,
' I
........
' Uunti ... n Beaeh
· ' ·. '· EDITION
-• ' --
VO[, 64, NO. 16, 2 S!ili:TIONS, 26'if~&ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1971 TEN CENTS
Choking: -Smog Still Holding Grip on Coast
By GEOllGE LEIDAL
Of ... 09lly ,._, SM>tt
Smog's ugly 1peelre continued its grip
on communities along the Orange Coast
today IS the recotd heat wave continued
ln Southern California.
Coru:iderable fog and low clouds tonight
and Wednesday morning will be followed·
by sunny skies lild a high between
68 and 78. Little change in. the smog
producing conditions is expected until
Friday, however, the NaUonal Weather
* * * Smog Level
Figured Out
Simple Way
Orange County boasts two enUrely dif#
ferent systems for determining when
smog levels are high enough to restrict
physical activity of schoolchildren.
One is the latest In !Ophlslicated smog
measuring devices operated in three
county locations by the Air PoUution
Control District.
The APCD when it records ozone
readings exceeding .35 parts per million
wams the Orange County Department
of Education by radio. The coanty school•
office in turn warns school districts
participating in the p~m -usually
inland districts that more fi'equently eI-
perience smog.
The second system , that ust:d primarily
by coast.al districU, is lt:ss IOphisticated.
Yet, on Monday, wht:n the ozone count
reached .34 parts per million al Orange
Co~ . --abort o1 tllt love! ror a ICboOl-unog warning -~ tecond
met.hod ~ved,.guit,-~te. Tiie MCoad mothOd',... under cllf.
ferenl names but bolls down to tbe
"Go· Out.side and Sniff" smoe warning
a:ystem.
In Laguna Beach Monday, William
F . Allen, principal of El Morro School,
stepped outside into the heavy, smoggy
air. sniffed, and df!Clded to curtail the
physical education and playground pro-
grams at his school.
William L. Ullom, superintendent of
Laguna Beach Unified School Di.!trict,
said today Allen's action conforms with
district policy, since the county schools
office doesn 't recommend participation
in-the county warning system, "Due
to lhe cost of the system."
"Our policy Is based on principals'
own intuition," Dr. Ullom Slid, "although
they may call the county office for
a reading." Had Allen called the county
offloe Monday. he'd have been told no
smog alert was necessary since the
reading fell just one hundredth below
tbe required .35 parts per million that
triggers school smog warnings.
Ullom believes the Laguna system is
!See SNIFF, P•1e ZJ
Fountain Valley
School District
Vandalism Vp
The coet of vandallsm Is mounting
for the Fountain Valley Schoo} Disttict.
Since July 1, vandals have .&.used
'8,206 damage to Fountain Valley schools
ln 205 11eparate incidents.
The latest •ttlck came over. the
wee.Ir.end at Arevalol School -where
eorDebody broke into • buildlog, dumped
books and stole a record player. Total
damage added up to about $150.
''Thi.I wu one of the smiller act.I
pf vandalism," Principal R o be rt
Lindstrom commented. "There wasn't
really much damage here."
The worst vandalism in district history
nct"lllTI?d two years ago at Fulton School
when younii;ters went ~ the entire
School and ihot wlrickiws, JI ih t'.s ,
tel~vlsiQnJ. and aquarll\lM ,JVith ~-IUDS·
Sometimes vandala 4am18e t he
irounds b)' dlglng up turf or removin1
iprtnkler he•da. Often the damace ia
broken wlhdowa, tc•ttered ~· or milk 'Or p11nt smeared on noon Ind desks.
District officials believ. most ol tlle
'Vandalism ia caused by youths ln their
~arly toeno, but no dlollncl pillem bu
Occ:Urred e&Uw In' the style of'v•OdaHsm..
or the llnl. · ·· . ~· ,
"Tb•( llM to our lallJIOym la ""'
!nlltaUW.1
11 Afl ¥6kt Brkk. dlltrlct
jl\Jptrinlindenl .. _ .. ---...
!Mn '" pulled off main,_ work IO repair the -.ge." Some .......... JnclUM beUer·buildlop,
ug111u JoW, .-. ~· Brleir "" ft!~ own inlwtt: "II lruOld 'Ylrlually
wipe out vaoclallsm II all porJllll _...
ti>llie It o point to --·llltlr c11u.,reo .,. and wtlli ·-1111)' ... jpendlnC !heir ""' time."
'. l
~nporto.
Jij. Frialy,.,a buildup of ir.arine air
aocfciouds will bring with it increa!ing
winds. ·
'Ibe Orange County Air Pollution Con·
trol Distr1cl reported ozone below lhe
leV1!1 oeceSsary to call school smot warn-
iAgs.
In at least one Orange Coast school,
Laguna Beaclt'• El Morro elementary
scbool, play activity of childien wfl!:
l.inU1eQ • Maoday by the thlc.k, acrid air
D.i.R.'Y PM.OT M·tt ,..... Boop"""'""
Huntington Beach High
School !s Queen of Courts for
1971 is Cathy Graydon, 17.
She was selected by the Oiler
basketball team and reigned,
happily, during Huntint¥on
Beach victory over arch rival
Westminster last Friday.
Robert Meyers
New Manager
Of Seal Beacl1
Robert E. Meyers was chosen Monday
1s the new city manager of Seal Beach.
He fills a position which has been vacant
since !art July.
Meyers, the farmer ci ly manager of
ElsiR9le, wu appointed to the new posl
following a lengthy executive session .
The choice was approved by 11 3-I vole,
with · only Councilman Hamid Holden
dissentihg.
The city manager's job became open
July rt when 1 council majority voted
to oust former city manager Lee Risner,
now employed in La Habra.
~, wtli be&in his duties Jan. 25
with • beginning salary . of tl,500 per
month plus an addiUOOal M:,ooo· annually
in deferred compensaUon.
Erhplojm as city manager or Elsirde
lroni ' Adgult .J.MI •\o ·April .mo, Meyers
foutfd" h1tnse11 out of work last April
when ·vot.en ellminated hi• Sl4,000 a year job as an eci:iftomy meuure ..
Beach
that was pusht:d to the coast by ligbt
Sarita Ana winds.
While the smog outlook for Laguna
Beach today was improved. the APCD
said coastal cities could expect smog
levels similar to those reached Monday.
Orange County Harbor Departn1ent
said visibility today was limited to one
mile by "fog or very thick smog."
With no winds at 10 a.m. today, the
prospects for moving the smog out to
sea were slim.
Ed Camarena, APCD engineer, said
the surface invenion that brought the
eye-stinging smog to the Orange Coast
was expected to continue throueh tonight.
Light and variable winds during the
night and morning hour! were forf!Cast
for tonight at from eight to 15 knots.
By Wednesday afternoon winds are ex-
pected to range from 10 to 20 knots
along the coast. Fog and low clouds
in the morning Wednesday "ill yield
Ecuador
to partly sunny skies and sligbUy cooler
temperatures.
The mid-winter heat wave shattered
three records in Los Angeles Monday.
A high of 95 was the hottest January
reading on record, the overnight low
o( 65 was the warmest low, ar.d three
carbon monoxide readings required
precedent-setting alerts at 8:06 a.m. and
7:0S p.m., 'Monday and again at 8:05
a .m.
Since Orange County 's carbon dioxide
measuring eqllipment failed lut Deer
I, the APCO bas not reconled Jevo\I
of that toxic pollutant emJtted b)'
automobiles, Camarena said.
He noted lhat Lo! Angeles . re.ac:hta
the alert staee became the -former 100
parts per millio.o benchmark·wai IOwered
to SO parts per rrillllon.-
Presence of carbon monoxkle tn the
air was logged ·at ' 57 Jlartl· pU mllllon
in Whittier Monday evening. leading to
ISff SMOG, P•1e I)
4 Ships
U.S. Vessels Seized in Fishing Rights Dispute •
'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United
States, which has cut off military sales
ta Ecuodar in a fishing-rights dispute,
reported today that the Ecuadorians had
seized four more U.S. fishing vessels
since Monday for a total of 12 in the
past eight days.
"This is the largest number in recent
years taken over that length of time,''
said a State Department official wio
made the disclosure based on reports
from California tuna industry spokesmen.
The State Department said that during
the same period Ecuador also had seized
the JaS111, a ship owned by an American
Tuna Company but sailing under the
Panamanian flag , and a Japanese fish-
ing boat.
The United States announced Monday
that it was denying Ecuador any further
military aid and might take further
action Including suspension of economic
assistance .
Those were the latest developmr:nts
Commercial Use Asked
Church Rezoning Bid
... 1 .. ... "' "" .• ' ·~
Denied in Huatington.
An appeal by I.ht Lutheran Church
for commercial zoning on land It OWlll
on Springdale Street in Huntington Be1ch
was denied by the city council Monday
night.
The defeat settled a dispute between
the church and homeowners that required
two council beanlngs •od two htarlnga:
before the planning commission.
The Missouri Synod of the lAltheran
Church had sought a change from
residential to eommerclal zoning on the
parcel just north of Heil Avenue and
adjacent to the pre8ent Redeemer
Lutheran Church to allow sale of the
property to a developer who planned
a drive-in dairy.
The church was strongly criticized by
Councilman Jerry Ma tney and Coun-
cilman Norma Gibbs who said "lhat
sm ells" when told the church had re-
jected an offer from the child care
center to bu y lhe property.
Matney said he was annoyed al aletter
f~om Vern G. Pate, business ad-
ministrator of the church, who said that
taxes had constantly risen on the pro-
per ty "on a basis of commercial val ue
yet we are unable to sell it to a business
~enture."
Pale said lhat each offer to buy the
property had been rescinded becauce
of a denial of zoning by the city,
''We hope that if the council denlu
the zoning reque!t that they attempt
0 lower our taxes in order that we
can hold lht property and keep it weed
Cree as we will never have any UJe
for it," Pate wrote.
Through questions, Matney Seamed
Uiat tbe church bot!Pt the property',
1
nearly five 1cres, in 1862 and It was
then zoned reaidential, although the
church has 1ince obtained a variance
to build a school on the site. No school
has been built.
A homeowner, Verd Welch. said his
lnquliies indicated that the church, as
a non-proftt on, paid $224 in taxtJ last
year,
"Tbls really burns me jf in fad the
church . pald only $%24 In tues last
year and yet AYI It hid 'to pay com-
mercial taies without beinC .•ble to tell
(flee D.llllY, Pose 2)
Drag Race Death
Brings Jail Term
A dr•g racing enthusiast drew a six·
month Orange County jail term Monday
for his part in a Huntington Beach
collLsion that claimed the life of his
passenger.
Jose Lewis Guzman, 24. of Stanton,
was sentenced by prange County
Superior C-Ourt Judge Byron K. McMillan
and was ordered to serve three years
probation on his release.
Guzman pleaded guilty to manslaugher
charges stemming from the death last
Aug. 1 of Roberto Ramirez Frias, 26,
of Santa Ana. Frlu, • passenger In
Guzman'• car, died when the auto went
thrtlugh a red light on Beach Boulevard
at Main Street and ltrDCt an oncoming
"'" Doctors lald Guzman ref'Uled treat-
menl tor bis own """"" Injuries ud
wept. mr ~ body of bis friood u
IC wu carried· ....,. lie bu OOW
focove...1 -from Ille lojurieo.
in a long-running feud between the LaUn
American nation, which claims a 200-mlle
territorial sovereignty over the rich
Pacific fishing waters off its coast, and
the United Stales which recognizes only
a 12-mile limit.
In the latest flareup, Ecuadorian gun-
boats have seized the U.S. vessels on
poaching charges. At last report, three
of the boats had been released -after
paying fines totaling $133,000.
Secretary or State William P. Rogers
.
' u"•T.~ ELECTED HOUSE SPEAl<ltf
Oklahoma's Rep. Albert
Rep. Carl Albert
Wins Speaker
Post in House
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Democrats
overwhelmingly selected Rep. Carl Albert
of Oklahoma today to be House speaker
but split sharply on election of a rloor
lead er to replace him In the 9 2 n d
Congress.
Albert,. 62, a party loyallst with a
liberal voting record, woa avt:r Rep.
John C.Oayers, a fourth term black from
Detroft who uld Albert bad fa1W .to
diaplay leadership qualities requlrtd of
a speaker.
Albert won over Conyer-D) to ».
Albert, whole oelectlon b)' t·~,e
Democrotl will be lonnally ratified ')jy
tbe full u ..... Thunday. when· !he -
Co""'" «l""enes, succeeC!s retired Rip.
John W. lkConnadt ol M .... cliuMU.
who had ierved u 1peaker 1lnce 1NJ .•
llurlll!l that period, Albert WU party
floor leader. FJve cahdklates Wet'e',aetk·
Ing election a1 a clooed Demomtle
catlClll to that .... ,. -.Alboit. A new party -whip ~ inllt be ,dldi;n
-a cbolce 111111111 DWlo b)' .ti.-~· r ud ._. ..:. to 'nplace . eoa. of Loulllaill, -of "1t .
tulllrits for leldlr. ~ , . •
Prior to .. lectlal,Alberl. ... ,,.
to ""'1dlnl a new -lltlp IM!n, Ille
D.momtic -1114'-"0ul
Rep. Deo RGI-of llllnolo,·knoWO .. OllcalO ... ,., llld\lrd J . Diley'• ......"JI"' Iii tbe -. • !he -~. Rep. Olln•B. 7-of T-•
~ Ill to 'II, In .Place ol
Korean Goes Rener~
SEOUJ, (UPI) -A So,illi Korean
marine 'lll!'&eanl went· lie,..,~. killed
olx penon• and lnjured~·othen and theft• oliot, hlri\oelt to ·IJl.ondoy nlpt
It I . mi.rlne camp m I l"llmpo art•
15 m~ west of stoul~
.. •.
' ,.
.
1 u mm o n e d Ecuadorian Ambusadcs
Carl<ll ManUU.-Orte1a to llie Stato
Department Monday afiemqqJ) tcdn!onn
him o fthe action. A spokesman did
Rogers told U>e ambossador .that "other
legal provisiW relatfnc to such leizuret
are being reviewed urgenUy and that f'Ur.
ther action by this government under
pertinent laws could not be etcluded."
Last yea r, Ecuador received $1 mUUon
in U.S. military aid. The size of this
(See ECUADOR, P11e Z)
Huntington
Asking U.S.
To Buy Beach
By ALAN OllllUN
ot Ille o.ltr '1i.t Steff
The federal · governme•t la beJ.nc .ask-
ed to buy the HunUncton Pacific Beach,
the only privately-<IY/fled stretch or land
ln the Huntington Beach city limits.
City councilmen Monclv night Ip.
proved the &ending or a letter '° the
Department of the Interior ur1tna that
the beach be declared a nation~ ~bore
under tbe j\lrls<llcllon of tbe 11'.i Park
1ervice.
The ownership al the beach ud public acc.., to it .,. pre1«1tly being cootat<d
in liU,ation between the city and four
companies, includtne Standard Oil and
the Hwllington Beach C-Ompany.
Beaches and Harbors Direct.or Vinee
Moorhouse explained today that purchue
of the beach -the value of which
has been eatimated at $40 million -
by the federal eovernment was one cf
several avenues the city ts pura:lilng
to settle the dispute.
''This is a unique piece of property,''
he commented. "The o"ner Clll't really
develop it because of public sentiment
and yet the court case may take "trom
5 to 20 years. This letter simply opens
the door to another possible 10fuUoo
toward preserving t.le beach for publk:
use." •·
The letter, which also will be sent
to the U.S. Patil llervlco, pointl oul
that·tbe HIDltiq\oft P•cfflc Beacli, which
e11:tends north of thie ·pier to the bluffa.
la between thrte 'publicly-cwned beacbe8-
-tbe HIDltlnston ' Buch Slate Part,
the city be'ICI> an4 the Boloa Chica
Slate Buch.
·-·-, .
I I
\
'Super burglar'·
Suspect C·apt:nred
L By A!tTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1111 0.11, l"llltt 51•11
A Joni underworld probe reached a
t climax today when Costa Mesa police
captured a man ctiaracttrized in detec-
tive magazines as Mr. Big on the
'Southern Galifornia burglary aeene .
He and two armed companions -
bne a Costa Mesan currently facing
'federal stock swindle and drug charges
-were taken into custody without in-
cident.
man who gave three aliases and a
Michigan address were arrested at 2:30
a.m. near Harbor Boulevard and Gisler
Avenue.
Police claim a haul of heroin, narcotics
1nd stolen audio-visual sound equipment
worth up to $10,000 was confiscated as
evidence.
"There's enough methedrine or 'speed'
here to service evecy know11 'hype'
in Costa Mesa for a week." said Detec-
tive Sergeant John Regan, surveying a
table piled with loot.
From Pq~ J
SMOG ...
1Jll Angeles County's issuance of ttH
alert which a'sks motorists to voluntaril3
abandon use of lhe.ir vehicles.
Orange County recently establilhed •
method where OIODI readlnp Iii ucesi
or .3$ parts permllllon would I>-l'tllyel
from the APCO to the County School!
office. A spokesman for the Count3
r;uperintendJnt of schools !laid no warninJ
was issued yesterday.
The unusuaJ presence of 1mog aloni
the Orange Coast results from th1
temperature inversion layer and wind!
that have brought warm inland air tc
the area. A storm coodition off th1
coast prevents cold air from movln'
down from the Pacific Norlhwe!t, th1
National Weather Service said.
From Pagel
One had a loaded, cocked, .380
automatic pistol tucked in his waistband
·when grabbed, but WA! quickly reUeved
f ()f it.
Police said they have been ketping
Kenneth C. "Supttburglar" Moran. 29, 1of Whittier, under surveillance for a
:iong time.
Moran, Zuber and the John Doe suspect
were booked on a variety of charges.
allegedly following agreement to sell the
asaorted loot for only $1 ,200, investigators
said.
SAN CLEMENTE COUPLE WERE ABOARD DURING PANCAKE LANDING MONDAY
Mr. and Mr1. Richard Johnson lnfurH Slightly as Engine Conks Out Near County Airport SNIFF • • •
~ He and Edward A. Zuber, 30, of 3073
1 Yukon Drive, Costa Meu. plus a t.hird
From Pagel
DAIRY ...
·to a business venture." Matney com·
'mtnf>d.
_ The yote Q!l the appli~~ion to _ rezone
a parctl 100 feet by 169 feet was defeated
on a 3-3 tie vote. Councilmen George
McCracken, Ted BarUett and AL Coen
were in favor and Matney, Mrs. Gibbs
and Mayor Donald Shipley opposed.
Councilman Jack Green abstained.
The church had originalJy sought rezon-
ing for a larger parcel but this was
denied by both the planning commiJsion
and the council Jan. 4. Three councilmen
-McCracken , Bartlett and Coen -
said they favored rommercial zoning
on the 100 feet by 160 feet parcel and
the matter was sent bick to the planning
comm Wion.
The planning board qain denied the
request and the question was appealed
back to the council. Matney was not
at the Jan. 4 meeting, but his vote
forced the tie Monday nigh t
Roger Slates, a rtal estate broker
who represented the church, said that,
if the rezoning waa approved. there would
be a 170-foot parking lot between homes
and the dairy.
Homeowner Robert Sutake presented
letters. dated Januan, 1969. indicaUng
an offer to leue the lend, with 1n
opt.ion to buy, for a child care center,
and 1 rejection of this offer £rom Pate.
Pate wrote that the offered price of
$15,000 for Uie Jot was "unacceptable"
and the details on the lease were "too
vague."
··n ere are an kinds or possibilitie~
for this property, but the owner is looking
for the maximum buck and the max-
imum buck comes from the commercial
developer." Sutake asaerted .
Beach Imposing
Loitering Laws
Loitering Jaws have been tightened
up In Hurrt1iigtoft Beech to protect private
property from the nuisance of objects
or people blocking walkways.
The new law, approved Monday by
the City Council, makes· It poulble to
post private property such as shopping
centers and planned commim!Ues, to
prohibit loitering on walkways or In
entrances, or leaving objects which
obstruct such areas .
"It means they can call us for help
to remove such obstruction11," Police
Chief Earle Robitaille explained.
Breaking the loitering law can bring
a fine up to $SOO or six months in
jail.
"A warning has to be issued before
a.ny action can be taken," Robitaille
aald. "Th.is lAw is not directed at mas.!
gatherings or demonstrations. W •
already have laws for those."
DAILY Pll01
OIU.HOI CO.UT l'UILIMUMO C0M'.MY
Roll.rt N. Wot4
,.,_..,,. ol'lf Plllllll ....
Jock R. c .. rloy
Vlot ""'*"' •Al -.rtl M.-...r
no'"'' Koe.,JI
Etllor n-,., A-Mwphlq
Mlfltfll\I u ;or
Alo1t Dir.lit. .. , °'*"" (Wtty ...,...
Alltert W.' Iott'
:..... .. 11w
Hwtlliita.._.Oflke
17175 ..... '"'•••r4
M•Jli119 A.41,.., r.o. •• 1to, '2M1 --.._ ............ A_ C,,..Mml:'•w..ta.r• ..... ......... ._, Jiil _t ...... ...... -~ .......... c..... ....
Olarges include:
-Sale of heroin.
-Sale of dangerous drugs.
-Suspicion of burglary.
-Suspicion Qf po5session of stolen pro-
perty.
-Carrying a concealed weapon.
Detective Captain Robert Green said
the arrests could lead to recovery of
1dditional stole n property. some of which
may not have been reported to
authorities.
"They've got a set of burglary tools
that won 't quit," said Capt. Green, men-
tioning walkJe-talkies for communie:ation
with a lookout. plastic shims for quickly
slipping locks and other items.
Detectives Norm Kutch and Bob Len·
nert set up the rendezvous about 10
p.m. Monday, then called in others.
Moran, a salesman for Carborundum
Corporation of Los Angeles, Zuber. and
the yflt-unidentified suspect are all held
in lieu of $50,000 bail.
Zuber made the news recently when
indicted by a federal grand jury on
charges of involvement in transfer and
sale of stolen securities in Texas and
Michigan.
He waa already awaiting trial following
his earlier arrest in the midwest on
charges of smuggling one ton of mari-
juana.
Lawmen are known to have kept an
eye on his Yukon Drive residence, head-
quarters of a business called Top Line
Industries and engaged in a variety
of activities.
Zuber wu in Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital when indJcted late last summer.
recovering from a severe leg fracture
'~ in a motorcycle accident.
AuthorlUes were uncertain today of
the status of the federal charges which
were brought against a number of in-
dividuals from Texas to Michigan and
New York.
Police said Moran made the front
page of a popular detective magazine
last March. characterizing him as the
Number One Southland expert in
burglary.
They said one jail trusty -doing
time himself for a lesser burglary -
was enchanted to find a celebrity
cellmate when Moran and his companions
were booked.
Detectives said the trio were trarnfer-
red elsewhere to begia a second stage
of the investigation.
SUIJ uncertain of the identity of the
third suapecl, they said he is believed
to be S7-year~ld Frank J. Schrock.
Seated Again
Cory Proposes
Cal-Expo Sale,
Cites Big Debt
Assemblyman Kenneth OJry (0-Garden
Grove) says he has introduced a bilt
to sel! Cal-Expo because .. Mickey Mouse
financing" has created an annual $2
mi llion debt increase.
The Orange County legislator in-
troduced !he measure Monday . He pro-
posed a similar bill last session. but
it died in co mmittee.
Cory's administrative assistant. Doug
Jeffe. said today they are hopeful this
year's bi ll will pass.
··The various addilional financial needs
of the state have become mo re critical,"
Jeffe noted, "and the complexi on or
the Legislature has changed because of
the elections . We're optimistic about the
bill's chan~s this year."
In introducing the bill. Cory said, "Jn
a time of tight money and high
unemployment, we have to look very
closely al our expenditures." He also
noted that payments on the interest
and principal by the state for the Cal
Expo 1.'Qmplex in Sacramento "have been
costing taxpayers $2 million a year:·
Cory 's bi!! orders that money derived
from th<' sale of Cal-Expo be put in
the slate's general fund, and that pro-
visions establishing the annual fair be
repealed.
Edison Band Slates
Concert Thursday
The 120-member Edison High School
marching band will give a free c?nce rt
of pop music at 8 p.m., Thursday 1n the
school cafeteria.
The band. directed by Gary McJ ilton.
will play selections from "Hair." "Romeo
and Juliet ," and other popular musi cal
prt>ductions.
Alabama Governor George C. Wallace and his bride of two weeks,
Cornella, try out the governor's office. \VaUace delivered his inaua;ural
address Monday in downtown Montgo mery. Governor in Alabam.1
can't,s.ucceed himself. but can run every other four years.
I
Crash Landing Probed
Near County Airport
Air crash investigators continued lheir
probe today of the crash landing or
an e:icpensive twin-engine plane near
Orange County airport which caused
mino r injuries to a San Clemente in-
dustrial executive and his wife.
Richard flf. Johnson, 5&. and his ""ife.
Diane, 41 . required only emergency treat-
ment after the noon crash of their plane
about a mile from the airport landing
strip.
The Johnsons live at 1217 Via La
Jolla, San Clemente.
A spokesman for the Fede ral Aviation
Administration sald Johnson was at-
tempting a landing at the terminal at
12: 12 p.m. when the engines of the
Cessna 320 f suddenly stopped .
Johnson's attempts to •'feather" the
craft in to the terminal failed, and
the plane slammed into a plowed field.
The impact tore loose a fuel pod
on one wing tip, sparking a small fire.
The blaze was quickly extinguished by
county fire crews su mmoned to the scene
by construction workers who were nearby
when the landing occurred .
Other damage to the plane included
bent pr opellers, and a damaged un-
dercarriage,
The workmen assisted Mrs. Johnson
from the downed plane after she
reported ly romplained of back pains.
Her husband exited from the craft
on his own.
The fie ld is about 100 yards south
of the intersec tion of Von Karman Drive
and McGaw Street in the Irvine
Industrial Complex .
Huntington Forms G1~oup
To Finance Civic Center
The Huntington Beach Public Facil lt ics
Corpora tion ha s been formed to prov ide
financing for the $8.5 million civic center
and S3 million central library.
The city council Monday night ap-
pointed five citizens as directors of the
corporation -Darrell E. Ward, an Un·
dertaker, 627 Ma ir1 St.; Larry L. Curran,
an attorney, 8132 Wadebridge Circle :
William Ritter, a member of !he ULI
citizens steering committee .. 7582 Nancy
Dri ve; Dr. Dudley Boyce. president of
Golden West College , 16872 Phelts Circle:
and William D. Armstrong, 20522
Pierview Lane.-
The corporation is charged with con-
struction of th e civic center and library.
Motorcycli st Killed
In Freak Accid ent
SANTA FE SPRING S, (U P I )
- A motorcyclist died Monday of injuri es
suffered when struck by a hood wh ich
had blown off an automobile on the
San Gabriel River Freeway.
Dead wa s Elbert L. Setzer, 29. El
Monte. The driver of the car was not
held.
The corporation will lease the facilities
to the city and that lease will form
the security for the sale of ronstruction
bonds. Public Information 0 f f ice r
\Villiam Reed explained today .
Mayor Petitions
To Encl Marriage
\Vestm inster Mayor Derek C. McWhin-
11ey sued for dissolutio n of his six-year
marriage Monday in an Orange County
Superior Court complaint citing •·ir-
reconcilable diferences."
McWhinney. who is currently tem-
porary chairman of the newly formed
Or ange County Transit District, agrees
in the document to pay his wife. Sharoo
L.1•nn , $3,&00 and $200 <t month for 18
n1onlhs.
~lcWhinney states In an attached
agree men t that he will pa y $6,000 a
year to the support of his two children.
Sean C .. 6. and Hol!yann. 3.
The agreement Jisls a division or the
couple's com mun ity property including
1hc home at 7301 Jackson St ..
Westm inster. The McWhinne y11 married
Feb. 29, 1964 in Whittier and separated
last Sep L 1.
SEASAME STREET
more accurate since principals ma:i
readlly see the effect of the foul ai1
on their students who quickly react b)
sneezing and coughing.
"Ninety.nine percent of the ti me thes1
kids live in smog-free air,'' Ullom said
•·w hen it does come, they react mor1
not.iceably."
Ullom described the smog that drapec
Laguna Monday as ''the worst I've seer
in six yel!lrs. It was higher on th1
hillsides, heavier and loaded with <
smell."
William Cunningham, superintendent r l
Newport-Mesa Unified School District
also commented that the smog wa:
heavier. "Monday seemed to me to ~
the worst day in history,"
Yet, Dr. Cunningham wa11 unawar1
of the school smog warning system 01
how he"d get the word to curtail physica.
education activity .
"I don 't kn ow how we get the word .''
he said, indicating the county school;
office had not informed Newport-Mes.i
officials about smog warnings.
"We have a fan~ut telephone rela3
system lo warn principals," Cunninghan
said. Getting the school smog word Iron
the county seems to be what's Jacking.
All en said his judgment lo call of1
physica l activities was a "matter o'
sensing how bad it was. It was M
thick I couldn 't see Pacific Coasl
Highway, just below the school.··
Ed Camarena. APCD engineer, 1aic
that while an ozone count of .20 w a i
forecast for today, "with unusual con,
ditions such as we·ve been experiencing.
that can be way off."
He said continuation of lhe surfac1
Inversion of air might bring today'!
reading to a level similar to Monday'1
-.34 pa rts per million ozone.
Since Dec. I, when Its carbon dioxidt
measuring equipment "broke down'' th1
county ha s not measured amount!! ol
tha t toxic auto exha ust emittant thal
led to two record·breaking first stagf
alerts in Los Angeles County.
I gues~ we just really don 't kn o \11
how bad ly off we reall y are." Principa~
Allen noted.
From Pqe l
ECUADOR ..•
year's program was not 1vallable
although it was understood Ecuador plan·
ned to buy some heliC()pter! and other
aircraft from the United States.
Ecuador also bas soug ht credit! for
overhauling some ships and these werr
suspended as well. Six of. the Ecuadorian
Navy 's 14 combat and patrol ships cam'
from the United States but these have
not been used against American fishing
vessels, U.S. officials said.
State Department spokesman Rober!
J, McCloskey said the United State1
currently provides $29 million a year
in economic aid to Ecuador. Although
!3.5 million already ha s been committed
this year. he said the Stale Department
is considering suspending the remainder.
Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn 't
had a carpet installation by Alden 's.
In our thirteen yea rs, we have carpeted thousands of h o m es in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach.
One neighbor tells another until often we have worked
home on a block.
• in every
The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask
YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven't,
bring her in with you .)
ALDEN'S
..-... -.-,.-.-... - 0-.. -•• -,..... CARPETS e DRAPES
TUITtN C.SI •..
ALDIN'S
111 ••LL .. ,,... 1663 l'lac•ntla Av•.
11J14 ~m'!!':~ c.Mt. COSTA MllA .,...... 646-4831
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 le 9 S.t., " le I
I •
. '
\
, I
I
IJl"I Ttle ..... I•
JAMES BRODERICK EXAMINES DEAD BIRD AT SAUSALITO
Oil Spill After Collision Fouls San Francisco Bay
SF Bay Wildlife Periled
By Massive Oil Spillage
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Conserva·
tionists feared for Mflrine \Vildlife in
San Francisco Bay today because of
a huge oil spill resulting from the col-
lision of two tankers under the Golden
Gate Bridge.
Tides and winds pushed some of the
slippery goo out through the gate to
the Pacific Ocean , the Coasl Guard said,
but most of it remained trapped.
Conser\•alionists patrolled be a ch es
trying to help oil-soa ked birds, so heavy
and sticky-they could not fly_
Standard Oil Company, working under
Coast Guard su pervision, assembled tons
of strav.·, dozens of pump tru cks and
specially fitted boats to sop up more
than half a mill ion gallons of rerined
oil from the ruptured hull or a tanker_
A gaping hole 'A'as ri pped in the port
side of the outbound Oregon Standard
f.tonday when it collided "'ith another
company tanker. the Arizona Standard. in
heavy fog beneath the Golden Gate
Bridge. There were no injuries.
The Coast Guard expressed fears that
a change in the prevailing v.·inds could
result in incoming tide washing the oil
back into the bay, wheer many bird
species are \\'intering.
Sea lions took refuge on rocks and
buoys as lhc su n reflected rainbows
from odorous noaling slicks at the mouth
of the bay _ Dying fish flopped in oil
pools on the beaches and oil-coaled
pelicans and cormorants were carried
to cleaning stations established by the
Audubon Society and local humane
societies.
'The txact slze or the sp ill .,.,·as not
known , but the Coast Guard speculated
it may be more than the estimated
800.000 gallons of crude oil released into
the Santa Barbara Channel in January.
1970. by a leaking Union Oil Company
drilling platform.
Dr. Joseph Connell. professor of
Zoology at the University of California
at Santa Barbara, said the refined oil
~·hich spilled into San Francisco Bay
is "more toxic" than the crude oil whic h
killed 3,500 birds and several sea lions
on Santa Barbara beaches.
The co nse rvat ionist Sierra Club blasted
Standard Oil for •·continuing lo foul
the environment·· and warned against
cleaning up the mess wilh delergenu
and chemicals "more destructive than
the oil itself."
A company spokesman told newsmen
the cleanup operation v.•ould be completed
"v:ithin the next severa l days" and no
toxic chemicals or detergents were being
used.
Mountain Named Afte1·
UC l1·vine Manage1·
By CHARLES H. l.OOS
Of th• 0•H1 1'11111 S1•11
HOW l\1ANV GUYS do you kno\v that have a mountain named after them~
Charles 0. Reinhardt does.
But he has never seen it.
What's more, he doesn 't care if he ever does.
/l's at the Soulh Pote.
And "''hen it comes to lhe South Pole. Reinhardt figures
one trip !here is enough.
Reinhardt. a fonner Na\)' officer. is the physical plant
ma nager at ucr Irvine. He spent three months between Dec-
ember 1946 and Jl,larch 1947 in Antarctica.
PtlOUNT REINHARDT. the National Science founda·
lion informed him 20 years la ter, is on the northeast side
of the llughes Range along the Siple Coast at the head of
Antarctica's Ross Ice Shelf. Reinhardt has a National Geo-
graphic map and a photo of the 3.000-foot mountain to prove
it.
The mountain v.·as named by the U.S. Board or Geographic names In
recognition or Reinhardt's work during "Operation Highjump," a 1946-47 polar
expedition led by lhe late Admiral Richard Byrd and the late Vice Adrniral
Richard H. Cruzen, whose \llidow still lives in San Clemente.
As staff engineer for the expedition, Reinhardt. who joined UCJ af~ re-
tiring from the Navy in 1963, was r~ponsible for planning and building mp
facll!Ues. The 150 Seabees under his command built everything from wale and
sewage systems to housing and air strips. '
CONDITIONS WERE LESS than ideal. Temperatures during summer
months al the site. located about six miles from Admiral Byrd's 1939 Lltlle
America camp on the Ross Ice Shelf, averaged 10 degrees below zero, Rein-
hardt recalls.
And blizzards often reduced visibility to three or four feet.
Purpose or the 1946-47 expedition was to map the frigid continent and
pave the way for future scientific studies.
Reinhardt's job required him to stick close lo bast camp. That's why he
never saw the -mountain that bears his name.
Why was his name picked for a peak in Antarctica?
"I ASSU!\fE lhe board named peaks In the Hughes Range for staff offi-
cers on lh8t expedition:· says Reinhardt. He notes that the range ltseU was
named for Ute expedition's senior aviator. !\Iosl of the map work was done by
lllr.
Recently, Reinhardt say11, he has seen travel advertisements offering -
ror a few thousand dollars -tours to Antarctica. He doesn't plan to go.
The trip to Anarcllca was a wonderful experience, he says, adding:
"In that sense, I define 'experience' as something you live through once
and hope you never have to again."
H DAJL Y PllGf ~
Welfare Bill 30 Captured,
'Adds Insult South Viets Raid
Pact Okayed
By Clirysler,
Auto Union To Injury'
Orange County Welfare Director Gran-
ville Peoples calls It ''adding insult to
Injury" and the action \Vhich rai.sed
his ire does seem to be overdoing it
Red POW Camp DETROIT IUPll -Chrysler Cofi>.
and the United Auto Worker1 reached
tentative agreement today on parta of
a new three.year contract coverin&
workers In the United States and Canada
and averted a second strike in the auto
industry within the pest four months.
a bit.
Peoples' department received a $226
bill from welfare officials in Minnesota
to cover the cost of transport ing a
welfare family of thr1t lo Orange Coun-
ty.
"1 suppose that shipping yo u r
dependent poor to another locality is
one way of solving problems Lut most
responsible w e I f a r e adm~"listrators
discarded .this approach some time ago ,''
Peoples has written to the Koochiching
County \Velfare Board in International
Falls.
"You add insult to the injury by trying
to claim payment for transportation coslS
frGm us. 'This violates ethical admi l'I·
istrative practice an d fu rlhermore is
a waste of money which might be used
to a better advantage," Peoples con·
eluded.
The woman from J\1innesota and her
two children were in the county welfare
office applying for aid the day after
they jetted into Santa Ana, Peoples said.
"When "1e asked a few questions.
particularly regarding ISO acres of land
they had just sold in Minnesota, they
left and we haven 't heard from them
since," the welfare director said.
SA IGON (AP) -South Vietnamese
paratroopers guarded by U.S. helicopter
gunships, raided a suspected prisoner of
war camp inside Cambodia where 20
Americans wen~ believed held but found
iL en1pty, Vietnamese sou rces said today_
The raiding party, however, captured
30 enemy soldiers, the sources reported.
The raiding party was !ed by Lt. Gen. Do
Cao Tri , leader of South Vietnam's Cam-
bodian campaign last sp rlng.
Car Hits House;
Four Uninjured
Four me1nbers of a Buena Park family
escaped injury by inches Monday night
.,.,.hen a car .,.,.ith an unconscious won1an
al the \vheel sn1ashed into their house .
'l'he car of Mrs. J\1ary Koszka. 37,
of Buena Park. ramined into the kitchen
of the Robert Feduska home a the
fan1ily was clearing the dinner dishes.
J\1rs. Ko~zka's car had been in a
collision with another before crashing
into the home, She suffered extensive
head injuries.
The raid took place Sunday and lasted
three hours.
"It worked perfectly," said one Officer.
"We suffered no casualties."
The ra ld was based on inteJIJgence
that American prisone rs were being
held In an area west of the Cambodian
town of Mimot along 1-lighway 7, Pt1imot
is 75 miles north""est of Saigon and
about fi ve mil es inside Cambodia.
The sources said a fleet of South Viet-
namese helicopters landed about 300 par-
atroope rs with U.S. helicopter gunships
escorting them .
American ground adv isers accompan-
ied the paratroopers to the border.
Tri, who commands the 3rd military
region guarding Saigon. landed with the
raiding party.
Thr operation re<.'alled the unsuccessful
raid Nov. 21 by helicopter-OOrne Ameri-
can commandos on the Son Tay prisoner
nf \var cainp 20 miles 'A'l!S I of 1-lanoi in
North Vietnam . Elite. highly trained sol-
diers made both raids.
In both cases, they found no A1nerican
prisoners as expected but the operations
.,.,·ere carried off .,.,,ith pre<.'ision.
F'rom lime to time. !here have been in-
telligence reports that America ns cap-
tured in South Vietnam were held in bor-
der camps in Cambodia. The number was
never believed to be large.
Leonard Woodcock , presldenl of the
UA W, said tentative agreement had bttn
reached on the cont ract for production
and maintenance workers and bargainers
were very close to wage increases for
salaried workers.
The union has l.20,000 members at
Chrysler plants in the United States
and Canada.
A strike had been threatened for 10
a.m. EST, but Woodcock said t.ht:
deadline had been suspended indefinitely
because of the complexities and lack:
of lime. He said two or three days
of hard ,work remained to work out
a variety of issues .
The agreement closely paralleled the
contracts achieved at General Motors
Corp. and Ford Motor Company, where
the union 'A'On an average St-cent-an-hour
wage increase in the first year o( the
three-year eont ract and increases of 14
cents an hour in each of the succeedini
hvo years.
The main stumbling block ta final
selllement -ba ck pay fur Chrysler
'A'Orkers -was resolved when the com·
pany agreed to retroactive pay back
to last Nov. 2, the Rame date agreed
to by Ford.
In 1971, people will look harder,
expect more for their money
and end up with a Chevrolet.
You've changed.
Ex tensive research told us. Common sense told us.
So, naturally, we've changed .
For instance we gave our totally ne\v '71 Impala a
pair of po\ver disc brakes up front for greater resistance to
heat buildup and fade. They're standard.
We were also sure you'd like more than the customary
nice ride, So we gave il to you. In the longest, smoothest
We kept all the Chevelle things people liked so much.
And added some new things to like.
Big new Power-Beam headlights. A simple new grille and
new front bumper. A new rear bumper with taillights built in.
New front lender lights. A steering wheel with a cushioned center.
To fight pollution further, we've also
Impala \vheelbase ever. In a new \vidcr stance chassis.
And in a new bum p-absorbing Full Coil suspension.
\-Vhat's more, Impala's ne\v built·in emission control1
have helped reduce air pollution, as you asked.
'71 Impala. Did we mention it's the roomiest car in
its field? We've been building up to thi s much Impala
for years.
Because you have.
Our new little lega
The little car that does everything well.
And no wonder. It has a specially designed
overhead cam lour with a lightweight aluminum
alloy block. So you move right out.
It has disc brakes up front. So you stop well.
It has a low, wide stance. So you ride
stable. made all or Chevelle's engines so they
can run on no-lead or low-lead gasoline.
'71 Chevelle. Rel\ly to show you
how likable a mid-size car can get. Chevrolet And it sips gas, So you save.
Vega. Now open for
business.
I
hi've changed.~ chanpL A: v.lue Showdown will pnwe it.
' '
\
~--------
;I 1WLY PILOT
Wicka
lfc.k· 'I atilt can't get out of
the habit of uiriting
1910 on my chequu!'
U.S . St1·ip s
Two State s
Of Welfare
\\' ASHTNGTON (UPI) -The Health,
Education and Welfare Department an·
nounced today it v.·ould cut off federal
welfare funds to Indiana and Nebraska,
beginning April 1. for failing to raise
payments as required by Jaw.
"It is a i;tep we take ~·ith great
reluctance because of its potentially
serious impact on needy families," said
John D. Twiname. administrator of
HEW's social and rehabilitation service.
"But we must uphold the law and
insure that assistance to the poor pro-
vided by law is made ava ilable in fact."
0
"' ..
••
CAMBODIA
.. :~ .. ·::::·
. ;:· S.VIETNAM
25 =
Calley to Have
Sanity Testing
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -The
court·martial of Ll William L. Calley
Jr. was in a one-month recess today
to give the government time to prove
Callt"y was sane during the alleged My
Lai massacre.
This new burden of proof was put
on the prosecution Monday when a
psychiatrisl called by the defense said
Calley was under a compulsion during
the sweep of the hamlet tG obey an
order to kill everything there .
optimistic" in believin& the board could
report by then.
Three Army psychiatrists will sit al
Waller Reed Army Medical Center lo
see if Calley had some impairment of
mental responsibili ty during th~ search-
and • <lestroly mission .. Dr. La Verne
testified that he acted ''like an automa·
ton," a ''robot."
"Was he suffering r r o m a
derangemenr!" Kennedy asked.
"Yes, you can say that. your honor ...
the doctor replied. "But he was never
insane. It was a compulsion like someone
with a tic, or someone who mu.st tur n
off the water faucets at night or step
on the cracks in the sidewalk." Giveaways
Given Eye
Twiname said both states violated a
congressional mandate to update. their
maximum payment ceilings to poor
families with children to reflect cust
of living increases.
Fierce Fighting Rages
The psychiatrist. Dr. Albert A. La
Verne of New York, said Calley did nol
have the abil ity to disobey or to challenge
the legality or illegality of the order
from Capt. Ernest L. Medina, his com-
pany commande r.
The military judge, Col. Reid W. Ken-
nedy, said the testimony was clear that
the psychiatrist thought Calley ''was
unable to adhere to the right" on March
16. 1968, when he is accused of murdering
102 Vietnamese civilians. He ordered
Call ey examined by an Army sanity
board.
In granting the government motion
to commit Calley to the board, Kennedy
said: •·the burden is on the government
to prove he was sane. He should ha ve
a complete and thorough examination
at this point in view of the evidence
the defense has offered. There is nothing
that he would say in this examination
that would be used against him in any
way.''
By DICK WEST
WASHING TON -In recent m o n l h s
the Federal Trade Commission has filed
fJOMplaint.s accusing several firms of
fponsoring deceptive promotional con· ... , ..
Both states can avert the cutoff by
appealing t.o federal co urts for a review
of the decision or by adjusting their
v.•elfare payment ceilings before the April
1 cutoff date.
For Cambodia Lifeline
: For example, one contest tbat was
~illed as a "$500,000 sweepstakes'• paid
1ut only $13,000 in prizes, according
io the FTC.
t This might give you the impression
f\al 60me contests are misleading, but
t am convinced such is not the case. r was talking the other day to a public
ielations consultant and he made me
~alize there is nothing wrong with the
~ntests themselves. .
" ' "
The fault Ues with the contestants.
"A few years ago ·we ran a contest
in which the top ptiie was either a
million dollars in cash or a free trip
to Slapout, Okla ., whichever the winner
chose," the P.R. man recalled.
"THAT, PLUS such con so I a t lo n s
awards as 10,000 solid gold buttonhooks
and a year's marriage to Zsa Zsa Gabor,
brought the total prize potential to more
than a billion dollars..
"But under the rules of the contest.
·we only gave av.•ay $2.93.
''Let me assure you there wa~
absolutely nothing deceptive about the
contest. The rules v.·ere published prom·
inently and in full. The judges V.'ere
impartial and everything wa.s open and
above board .
''The trouble was we happened to
all.tact a substandard group of con·
testants. None of the enlries qualified
for the top prize or any of the consolation
a...,·ards."
I said. ''Nobody could blame you for
U1at. What kind of contest was it?"
"lt was a contest to devise a
mathematical equation that refutes the
Einstein theory."
"THE CONTESTANTS had no right
to let you down like that," I said,
becoming angry. "What was the $2.93
for?"
.. \Ve gave that as a bonus for neat·
nt>ss:' thl' P.R. man said. I said, "When
t.he contest was over did you disclose
that nobody had v.·on a prize?''
"Of course not. 'That would have been
tantamount to c;iJJing the contestants
fltupid. \\'e would never do anything
M cruel''
"I admire your compassion." I sai d.
"l~n't lhere some way that an honest,
k1nd·hearted contest sponsor can protect
himself against s!ov•-V.'ilted contestant.s?"
•·He might rl'quire the contestants I()
t;ike LQ. tests," !he P.R. man suggested.
•·But even that ·wouldn•t be foolprool."
"Then there is no sure way to avoid
giving av.·ay less lh<in the <imount of
the advertised pri1.es?''
"Tt's a risk yo u have to take:• lhe
P.R. man replied. -UPI
Jndiana receives about $39 million an·
nually and Nebraska about $15 million
a yea r from the federal government
for their programs of Aid lo 1''amilies
with Dependent Children (AFDC).
HEW contended that Indiana and
Nebra ska failed to comply v.•ilh pro-
visions of a 1967 la\V that required up·
dating the pa yment ceilings to AFDC
fa milies by last July I.
States can, however, raise their max·
imum cei lings while still not raising
actual payments to v•elfare families.
Some cities have sai d the provision,
in effect, is a paper req uirement that
does not necessarily benefit welfare
clients.
The HE\V al so is involved in confli cts
v.'L\h Arizona and Connecticut over alleg-
ed violations or federal welfare rul~.
Twiname said another reason for cutoff
or federal matching aid to rnd iana was
that the state's AFDC plan did not
provide payments to persons who furnish·
ed food or living accommodations to
AFDC children, as required.
lie also said Nebraska's plan required
stepfathers to support stepchildren even
though .state law did not make such
a requirement.
A federal hearing examiner ruled last
year that both states were out of com-
pliance with federl!ll lav• and recom-
mended that HEW withhold federal
funds.
NY Policemen
Spurn Appeals
To Res ume Work
t\'E \Y YORK (AP) -Striking city
patrolmen spurned their union leader's
back·tO-\\'Ork appeal tOO.ay and Police
Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy sa id
he might have to ask the mayor for
National Guard assistance wwith in 48
hours.
Spotchecks of the first tv.•o tours today
indicated the pe rcel'ltage of the city's
26,000 patrolmen refusing patrol duty
remained at 85 percent.
··we can't go on like this," Murphy
declared Tuesday as \II ea r y in g
supervisory personnel \.\'Orkcd 12·hour
.shifts for the fiflh da y to provide
emergency services. "The city must be
protected."
Despite the strike the symp;ithy
.... ·alkouls by many transit and housing
authority patrolmt"n , crime figures eon-
linued to show little change although
the number of arresls has fallen sharply.
Elsewhere on the city's labor scene.
1.600 teamsters continued a day-old strik e
th~l halted delivery of produce to four
1najor markci.s. Several big supermarkel
cha ins said they were not affected . easing
house wives ' fears.
PHNO!\ol PENH (UPI) -Cambodian
headquarters said today lls forces cap.
lured Prince Sihanouk's summer palace
overlooking strategic Pich Nil Pass on
i"fighway 4. But strong Communist units
were reported attacking outnumbered
Ca mbodian troops elsewhere on the
lifeline road.
U.S. jet fighter-bombers and helicopter
gunships assisted the allied drive to
recapture high\vay 4, which American
military sources said was not progressing
as v.·e!J as had been hoped . A Phnom
Penh announcement said Premier Lon
Nol would go to. Saigon \Vednesday to
seek more American and Soulh Viet·
namese military help.
Cambodian Headquarters gave no
details on the recapture of Sihanouk 's
summer palace -a mountain chalet
he used as a retreat from the hea t
of Phnom Penh before he was ousted
as chief of state last March.
A force or several hundred Cam·
bodians. with U.S. air support. moved
into Pich Nit Pass Monday and heavy
fighting was reported in the drive to
clear it and take Sihanouk's commanding
chalet.
Highway 4, a 220·mile paved road
largely financed by U.S. foreign aid,
has been in Communist hands since
last November, isolating Phnom Penh
fr om the oil refinery port of Ko mpong
Son1 . Gasoline has been rationed here.
Elsev.·here on high\1•ay ~ today. head-
quarters said a fort e of about 1.200
North Vietnamese and Vie l Cong \Vas
at.tacking a Carnbodia n batla lion (about
600 men) 15 miles east of Kampot,
about 40 miles south of Pich Nil Pass.
Fragmentary field reports said al lcMt
3~ Cambodians \\'ere \vounded in the
initial assault
Headquarters said Cambodian rein-
forcements were rushed to the a r e a
and that air strikes. presumably flown
by American and South Vietnamese
pil ol!i, were called in. 'The Communists
were reported "using all sorts of heavy
\veapons."
Russ Lea der Leaves
Cairo After T a lks
Hy Uolted Press Ioternatlooal
Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgomy
left Cairo for home today after a slx--day
visit to Egypt during which he promised
mil1L.ary support but empha sized the hope
fnr a peactful solution to the Middle
East problem .
Egyptian political sources s a i d
Podgorny and Egyptian President Anwa r
Sadat agreed to concentrate their joint
eHorls on helping UN negotiator GW'Jnar
V. Jarring \vork out a peaceful set.
tlement. But they also agreed Egypl
.lihould not lower its military guard.
New York Power Curbed
Frigid Weather Puts Big Burden on Heaters
Cllllfornl•
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Cambod ian officers on highway ~ told
U.S. pilots circling overhead they had
reports of 50 North Vietnamese trucks
moving south from Pich Nil Pass in
the direction of Kampot.
The court-martial, in which the 27·year·
old former infantry platoon leader could
get death or life imprisonmenl 1f found
guilty as charged, was recessed until
Feb. 16. 'The judge said he was ··being
Calley, after the recess, was heard
lo remark : •·This is an uncalled-fo r.
unwarranted, and unnecessary delay. I
don't th ink ·we are trying to say l
am insane, so 1 don't like it.''
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TAX RETURN
PREPARATION
DEPOSIT $5,000 -to a new or existing savings account at Pacific Savings and
receive FREE preparation of your personal federal and State tax returns. Some peo.
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PROFESSIONAL -qualified tax counselors will prepare ycur personal returns
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conference-
BRl NG OR MAIL -the attached certificate to Pacific Savi ngs when you open or
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REMEMBER -to qualify for this free offer you need onlyt o make your deposit and
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SO HURRY -make your deposit TODAY -or call me, Rick Jack ; Manager, at
5404066 or stop by our office for more information.
Pacific Savings and Loan Association
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3333 BRISTOi. STREET, COSTA MESA, CAUFDRNIA 92626
--------------------------------------------------------
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TitB CEH I diCATE GOOD FOR w.iwar
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:Foo••nal.•• Valley .
__ _: ED l.T I 0 H N.Y. Stoeb
VOL., 64, NO. 16, l SECT IONS, l6 ;p~E$· "' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNl:.t. JUESDAY, JANUARY H, 1971 TE N CENTS
, " ' ' Choking~ Sinog Still Holding Grip on Coast
By GEORGE LEIDAL
ot tM O.lly Pl"' Sl1tt
Smog'• ugly sped.rt continued its grip
on communities along the Orange Coast
today u the record beat wave continued
in Southern California.
Considerable fog and low clouds tonight
llnd We4ne3day morning will be followed
by sunny skies and a high between
68 and 71. Little change in the smog
producing conditions ls expected until
Friday, however, lhe National Weather
* * * Smog Level
Figured Out
Shnple Wa y
Orange County boasts two entirely dif-
ferent systen\s for determinillg when
smog levels are high enough to restrict
pbf!ical aet1vity of schoolchildren.
One ls'the latest in sophisticated smo1
tnea.5\lrtng devictS operated in three
county locations by the Air Pollution
Control District.
The APCD when it records ozone
readings exceeding .35 parts per million
warns the Orange C-Oun,ty Department
of Ed,ucalion by radio. The county schools
olfiC1! in turn warn s school districts
participating in the program -usually
inland districts that more frequenUy e:i-
perlenC1! smog.
1be second'system, that u.sed primarily
by· coastal distrkts, is less 10phisticated.
Yet, on Monday, whtn the ozone count
reached .34. pip,rts per million at Orange
COOnty Airport -1if.rt of the leVel
for ~ 3dloOI smog Wll'lling -th< """'1d
method Pf'O"ed:·flde·....,•te.
1'be tecond mMtiod. goes under dif.
fer:ent names but boils doWft t6 the
"Go Outside and Sniff" smog warning
11ystem .
In Laguna Beach Monday, William
F. Allen, principal of El Morro School,
stepped outside into the heavy, smoggy
air, sniffed, and decided to curtail the
physical education and playground pro-
grams at his school.
William L. Ullom, superintendent of
Laguna Beach Unified School District,
said today Allen's action conforms with
district poUcy, since the county schools
office doesn't recommend participation
In the county warning syste m, "Due
to the cost of the system."
"Our policy is based on principals'
own intuition,'' Dr. Ullom said, "although
they may call the county office for
a reading." Had Allen called the county
of!lce Monday, he'd have been told no
5mog alert was necessary since the
reading fell just one hundredth below
the required .35 parts per million that
triggers school smog warnings.
Ullom believes the Laguna system is
(See SNIFF, Page %)
Fountain Va lley
Sc hool District
Va ndal is m V p
The cost of vandalism is mountin g
for the Fountain Valley School District.
Since July 1, vandals have caused
$8,208 damaige to Foontain Valley schools
ln 20S separate incident!.
The !alt.Ill attack came over the
weekend at Arevalos School where
somebody broke into a bulldlng, dumped
books and stoJe a record player. Total
damage added up to aboul Sl50..
"Thi• •• one of the smaller act.I
of vandalism," Principal Robe r t
Lindstrom commented. "There wasn't
really much d1mage here.''
1be worst vandall&m in dlslrict history
occurred two years ago at Fulton ScOOol whentfpte~ we~t '!>rough th< en~inl
achoo and i w!Mow•, .. 1·1ght1, televl 1 Md uariwns wwi B-B guns.
.• ,.samttirfies ancbll damage t b e
p1IUndl by d · g up turf or removing
l!pfinkltt heads.. Often the damage Is
broken window1, 1c:attered books or milk
• point ......,..i "" f1oon and desks. Jt"Disttid. offlclala believe most ot the
ftndalllm la caused b)' youtba In thttr
...,Jy -· but ... dllUJlct pttem hU ciCcumd eltber ID th< o!Ylo of' vandallanl
or the -area. .
, , •iM 'a. to our 'ta1pi>i't 11 un--
mlotak•llte .... ,. . -flrli*. -...,..,.i,;i;;l,.t, "Besides actual damage.
mtn an pulled off mal.ntenlnoe wort
11a.t repalr the dlmqe." . .,aom. 11.1Wers Include beU.r buildtnp,
titl>,.r Jocl:a •. ci-r aocurlly. Brldt bu.
Ml own answer : '1lt would Yirtually
wipe out vandalllm If all ponnlo would
1 •Ire It a 'polnt to know wbtre their
children 11re and with •bom they .,..
• ljltndln( the~ free Um .. "
Serilc:ertportl.
By Friday, a .buildup ol rr.arine air
and cloud,, will bring with It increasing
winds.
Tbe Orange County Ait PoUution ·Con·
trol District reported ocooe below the
level neeeM8.ry to c811 school smoc warn-
ings.
In at least one Orange Coast school,
Laguna Bead!.'1 El Morro elementary
school, play activity of children was
limited Monday by the thick, acrid air
that was pushed to th< cout by llght
Santa Ana winds,
While the smog outlook for Laguna
Beach today was improved, lhe APCD
said coastal cities could ezpect smog
levels similar to those rea ched Mond!l:y.
Orange C-Ounty Harbor Departnient
said vifilbility today was limited to one
mile by "fog or very thick smog ."
With no winds at 10 a.m. t,oday, the
prospects for moving the smog out to
sea were slim.
Ed Camarena, APCD eaginetr, said
the surface inverslbn that brought the
eye-stinging smog to the Orange Coast
was "'xpected· to continue through tonight.
Light and variable winds during the
night and mornin& hours were forecast
for ton ight at from eight to 15 knots.
By Wednesday afternoon winds are ex-
pected to range from 10 to 20 knots
along the coast. Fog and low clouds
in the mornina: Wednesday will yield
Ecuador
to partly suMy skies and sllghUy to0ler
temperatures.
The mid-winter heat wave shattered
three records in Los Angeles Monday.
A high of 95 was the hottest January
reading on record, the overnight low
of 6S was l.be warmest low, and three
carbon monoxide readings required
precedent-setting alerl.s at 8:06 a.m. and
7;05 p.m., Monday and again at 8:05
a.m.
Since Orange County's carbon dlolide
measuring equipment failed lu t Dec.
1, lhe APCD has not recorded level•
of tbat toxic pollutant emitted by
Automobiles, cama~na said. ·
He noted tha t Los Angeles reacbtd
the alert sta ge becallle the former: 100
parts per million benchmark was fuwered
to SO parts per million.
Presence ol carbon monoxide in the"
air was logged at 57 parts per mlllion
in Whittier Monday evening, leading to
!Set SMOG, Pase Z)
4 Ships
U.S. Vessels Seized in Fishing Rights Dispute
• . DAL y ~l\.OT .._ ......
llOOfll ... -
Huntington Beach High
~chool's Queen of Courts for
1971 is Cathy Graydon, 17.
She was selected by the Oiler
basketball team aD.d reigned,
happily, during Huntintgon
Beach. victory. over arch rival
Westminster last Friday.
Robert Meyers
New Manager
Of Seal Beach
Robert E. Meyers was chosen P.1onday
as the new city manager or Seal Beach.
He fills a position which has been vacant
since last July,
Meyers, the former city manager of
Elsinare, was appointed to the new post
follnwing a Jenglhy executive session.
The choice was approved by a 3-1 vote,
with only Council man Harold Holden
dissenting.
The city manager's job became open
July 'l1 when a council majority voted
to oust fonner city manager Lee Risner,
now employed in La Habra.
Meyera will i.>egin hi&• dulies Jan. 25
with a be&innini salary' Of Sl,500 per
month plus an additional $4,0oo annually
in deferred compengation.
Emp!Gyed .a1 city manager of.El!inore
from. Aagust 1118. to Apiil"lflll, Meyers
found hlmaeU out o{ work last April
wben •voters elbninated biJ $f4,IOJ a
yelr }ob u llfeoonomy measure.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United
States, which has cut of( military sales
to Ecuodar in a fishing·rights dispute,
reported today that the Ecuadorians had
seized four more U.S. fishing vesseJ1
since Monday for a total of 12 in the
past eight days .
"This is the largest number In recent
years taken over that length of time,''
said a State Department official who
made the disclosure based on reports
from California tuna industry spokesmen.
The State Department said that during
the 1ame period Ecuador also had seized
the JUna, a ship owned by an American
Tuna Company but &ailing under the
Panamanian flag, and a Japanese fish·
ing boat.
The United States annowiced Monda y
that It was denying Ecuador any further
military aid ' and might take further
action including suspension of economic
a.nistance.
Thole were lhe latest developments
Commercial Use A.t1kt.'d
Church Rezoning Bid
An appeal by the Lutheran Church
for commercial zoning on land it owns
on Spri ngdale Street in Huntington Beach
was denied by the city council Monday
night
The defeat settled a dispute between
the church and homeowners that required
two council 'heanlngs and two hearings
before the planning commission.
The Missouri Synod of the Lutheran
Church had sought a change from
residential to commercial zon ing on the
parcel just north of Heil Avenue and
adjacent to the present Redeemer
Lutheran Church to all ow sale of the
property to a developer who planned
a drive-in dairy.
The church v.·as strongly criticized by
Council man Jerry Matney and Coun-
cilman Norma Gibbs who said "that
smells" when told the church had re--
jected an offer from the child care
center lo buy lhe property.
Matney said he was annoyed al aletter
frnm Vern G. Pate. business ad-
mlnistra t('lr of the church, who said that
taxes had constantly risen on the pro-
perty •·on a basis of commercial value
vet we are unable to sell it to a busines11
~cnture. ''
Pate said that each offer to buy the
proper ty had been rescinded becauct
of a denial of zoning by the city.
"We hope. l.bat if the council deni es
the zoning request that they attempt
0 lower our taxes in order that we
can hold the property and keep it weed
free as we will ~ver have any uae
for it," Pate wrote.
Through questions, Mainey to.rned
that the church bouiht th< property,
nearly fi~e &a-es. . In 1161. and, It was
then zoned raidenUal, although the
ch!JJ"Ch hu since obtained a variance
to build a achoo! on the site. No school
ha1 been built.
A homeowner, Vard Welch, said hls
Jnq ub1e1 indtcated that the church , as
a non-profit on, paid S224 in taxes last
year.
"Tbl1 really burhs me if in fact the
church· paJd only $224 In tare.s last
year and yet 11)'1 It had to pay com·
mere.la! t.aJ:es without being able to sell
(!let DA.UIV, Par• II
Drag Race Death
Brings Jail Term
A drag racing enthusiast drew a six-
month Orange County jail term Monday
for his part in a Huntington Beach
collision that claimed the life or his
passenger.
J ose Lewis Guzman , 24, of Stanton,
was sentenced by Orange County
Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan
and was ordered to serve three years
probation on his release:.
Guzman pleaded pilty to manslaugher
charges stemming from the death last
Aug. 1 of Roberto Ramlret Frias, 26,
of Santa Ana. Fr11s, • passenger in
Guzman's car, died when the auto went
through a red upt on Beacb Boulevard
at Maln Street-and siruct an oocoming
CIT.
Doctors said Guzman refU9ed treat-
mont for hll """ -inJurJel and w<pt ...,. the body of bk friend ..
tt .,..., carried away. He ha now
-from Ille Injuries.
Beach Spokesmen Travel
' Off~iazs to Se ll 'Top .of Pier' Plan at Meeting
HunliollOO J!each will tend a team
of four .,......_ to promote the city
at a natJonal dt'e'lopmtnt tXIDftrence .
They wm give • me-hour prnentatJon
at the ap1'1De land ··uae aympolfum of
tbe l1rban. Lind IMtltute In New Orie.ans
Ap\'ll I0>24. '
''IDI-.u the IOI peclllie a-g t!>il1,,.....~ .... ,w111 ··-·11¥ 'Id!>--de•elopln· tlln>llcbOat lbe U.S., it seam to mt lo be a m1rvelous
oppor1unlty to aell -Top of th< Pier t:r•u,"'' Qty' .,\dmlnltlnlo< Doyle told.tllfdlr.......u.
Thi ' """11Cil nthorlud four perlOllS
to mab ~ trip -former councilman
Dr ~ ·~llf'l'A"•· who headed the citlieni Jlilliin aimmlttee 'for the UL!
~ia·Jloiolqt<M -Ill 1"6, Coun-cilman 'a..irp lkCracbn, who oerved
' ' on the citizens 1teerlns coaunmee.
Public lnfonnaUon Officer BUl Reed ud
Beaches and Harbon Director Vlia
Moorhouse.
nie city waa iJlvited lo lf:Dd • deleoi
tion by Roy Dt.acbm~ pm!dont. ,r'
the .uu who ... ~ -of llle1
lnatitolo'I -!.lbat -a'.4>Juej>rtat
: H~nd~:i.:-· deffiopmeit
"We feel It wwld be an eace.llent
opportunltr for H""'""""' 11 ... 11 to nett .. a ccmlderable alllOUlll of II·
-and free pul>!ICll}'," Dradunan aafd tn a Jetter to the. ·dty.
He 11ld that Ille lnitltute _, ai,.
devolo 1 1111Jor pci1loo of olt f}l lla'JMI~.
i.uns to the lluntiJ111oo Bel~~ I!!':-•
plo,. wftb pbotogr1jJhs on'IM ell}'·~
the ULI atudy was made and ~ tin. .,,,
in a long.runn ing feud between the Latin
American nation, which claims a ~mile
territorial 90verelgnty over the rich
Pacific fishing waters off its coast, and
the United States which recognizes only
a 12-mlle limit .
In the latest flareup , Ecuadorian gun-
boats have seized tbe U.S. vessels on
poaching charges. At last report, three
of the boats had been released after
paving fines totaling $133,000.
Secretary of State William P. Roger11
Ul"IT~ ELECTED HOUSE SPEAKlR
Okl•hom1'1 Rep. Albert
R ep. Carl Albert
Wins Speake r
Post in House
WASHI NGTON (UPl ) -Democrats
overwhelmingly selected Rep. Carl Albert
of Oklahoma today lo be House speaker
but split sharply on election of a floor
leader to replace him in the 9 2" n d
Congress.
Albert, 62, a party loyalist wll.h a
liberal voting record, WOii over Rep .
John Conyers, a fourth term black from
Detroit who said AJbert bad failtd to
diaplay leadership qualities required of
a speaker.
Albert won over Conyen 220 to 20. •
Alblrt, wb* selection by t b •
Democrats will be formally raµflid by
the tun HOUie 1burllday, when tba new
CongrMB convenes, succeeds retired~~
John W. McC.ormack of M~
who had 1ervtd u speaker since lla ... ·
Durllllf that per~ Albert wu J'¥!Y
Door leader. Five c!Andldates Wirt lllk-
lnS electlon at a I cloled 'DemOcritlc
CIUCUI to that pool to ~-~l!iiK
A D<W party whip olao -be doqoen _a dlol<e uaaally made1"1 Ille_..,..
and lMder -to nipi-!lop.' JlaJa
8ofp of Louisiana, ... 11-1111 .....
tatanll for leader. 1 •
Prloo .. aelldfnl Albeot, Oii ~ -to balldtn1 a new ~.team, the De~~:;dMJ hW'~aut Raj>, 0.n · of.~-.
s u m m o n e d Ecu.ackl'ian Amb•aador
Carlos Manti.Ila-Ortega to the State.
Dep~ent Monday afterooon to inform
him o fthe action. A spokesman a.id
Rogers told the ambolsador that "othe~
legal provisions relating to such aeizuresi
are being reviewed urgently and that fur·
ther actlon by this government under
pertinent· laws could not be excluded."
Last year. Ecuador received $2 million
In U.S. military aid. The size of this
(See ECUADOR, Paa• %1
Huntington
Asking U.S.
~~Buy Beaeh
BY, ALAN DIRKIN
Of 1M DallY l"Olf llafl'
The federal government ls being ast-
ed to buy the Huntington Pacific Beach,
the only prlvately-0wned stretch of aand
in the Huntington Beach city limits,
City councilmen Monday night ap-
proved the sending of a letter to the
Department of the Interior urJlng thae
the beach be declared a naUonal lealhore
under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Park
aervict.
The ownership of the beach and public
acces:s to it are )ftSell.Uy being contested
in litigation between the city and four
companies, including Standard OU and
the Huntington Beach Company.
Beaches and Harbors Director Vince
Moorhouse explained today that purcbue
of the beach -the value of which
has been estimated at $40 million -
by the federal government was one ot
several avenues the cily i.s punuina:
to settle the dispute.
"This is a unique piece of property,"
he commented. "The owner can't really
develop it because of public sentiment
and yet the court case may take from
s to 20 years. This letter simply opens
the door to another possible solution
~w~~d preserving the beach for public
use
The letter, wblcb alto will be aent
to the U.S. Park Service, poinLI out'
that tbe HunUngtoo Paclflc Beach , wbicb
-north of th< pleT .. the blulll,
ii between three publicly-owned beaches
-th< Hun....... Boach State Part,
the ell}' bead> Ind Ille Bolla Chica
State Beach.
Wu doer
From amo1 to-:toct that'• the
·--i along tlie ·Oranc• ~
where it'll b!I ~ked In tonl1bt
and Wednesday mornlnJ. Temp-
enture1 will range from the
upper &Os tO-tbi' central '10I.
msms TOD.t.:t(.
.. ~ llo)'OI' -J, .DoloJ'• tpe!ll;eanan In the· no.., • tllil • .bl&ICU t eb01izMn. flol>. OUn "I •. ,.,.... of 'l'das
was chosen, m Ill 12, to ptaoa· of
Roallnkowakl .
Ind of th<.-. .........,..
..coni. '"°"' . JB71) ·-""'"· 190'1C ilear llllu ,1H'F Iii' eQJi.J
bf11M"uctmo. oiiil lfti'ilo. m'
tht l/nltd, Slafll> S•o... l!Ofr,
l"'Q• 5.
Korean Goes Se~rk
Sr.ouL (UPll -A• Soutb . .xoiun --t -·-It. ·kfHed
1
•IX .-.alld lnJlll'Od 1!>111 otbln and tben ihot blmaell to dutll ~ nl&hl 1 at a 'marine camp tr. &be XlmPo art•
U mflu w11t of seo.:J.
-. CMe19t u, It --.,_, "
-u --. -. == =-~,: ......... ..." -.. ..... _ ........ " ~L ...... t
,,
f·
••
-
J DllLY PILDT H
3 Arruted
'Superhurglar'·
Suspect C·aptnred
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OI 1t110 0.llY Plitt 11111
A Iona: underworld probt reached 1
tlimax today when Costa Mesa police
captured a man c11uacterized in detec-
tive . magaz.ines as Mr. Big on the
Southern California burglary scene.
He and two armed CQmpanions
cne a Costa Mesan currently facing
federal stock swlndle and drug charges
-were taken into custody without in·
cident.
man who gave three aliases and a
Michigan address were arrested at 2:30
a.m. near Harbor Boulevard and Gisler
Avenue.
Police claim a haul of heroin, narcotics
and stolen audi:>vi3ual sound equipment
worth up to $10,000 was confiscated u
evidence.
"There's enough met.hedrine or 'speed'
here to service every known 'hype'
in Costa Mesa for a week ."' said Detec·
live Sergeant John Regan, surveying a
table piled with loot.
. . . ...
Fro"' Paff" 1 -..
SMOG ...
Loo Mc<let C«lnly'• -" tM
alert which 1sts motorists to vt1lwitarlly
ab&ndon use of their vehicles.
Orange Counly recenlly e1tabl11htd •
method where omne reedlap In qoiaJ
ol .35 pan. per mllllon -'d bo' relayed
from the APCD to the County Scbooh
office. A spokesman Cor the Count,
superintendent of schoOl.s said no wamin1
was Issued yesterday.
The unusual presence of 1mog alon1
the Orange Coast re.suits from th1
temperature inversion layer and 1'illdJ
that have brought . warm Jnland air t.c
the area. A storm condition off the
coast prevents cold air from movina
down from the Pacific Northwest. tht'
National Weather Service said.
From Page l One had a loaded. cocked. .380
automatic pistol tucked in his waistband
when grabbed, but was quickly relieved
cf it.
Police said they have been keeping
Kenne th C. "Superburglar" Moran, 29,
ol Whittler, under surveillance for "
Jong time.
Moran. Zuber and the John Doe suspect
were booked on a variety of charges,
alleiedly following agreement to sell the
a530rted loot for only Sl.200. investigators
aaid.
SAN CLEMENTE COUPLE WERE ABOARD DURING PANCAKE LANDING MONDAY
Mr-. and Mrs. Rich•rd John.an lnjurM Slightly as Engine Conks Out Near County Ai rport
SNIFF •••
He and Edward A. Zuber, 30, of 3073
Yukon Drive, Costa Mesa, plus a third
l'rom Page 1
DAIRY ...
to a business venture ," Matney com·
men\M.
The vote on the application to rezone
a parcei 100 feet by 159 feel was de(eit.ed
on a 3-3 tie vote. Councilmen George
McCracken. Ted Bartlell and AL Coen
were in favor and Matney, Mrs. Gibbs
and Mayor Donald Shipley Oppo!ed.
Councilman Jack Green abstained.
The church had originally souaht rezon-
ing for a larger parcel but this was
denied by both the planning commission
and lht council Jan. 4. Three ceuncilmen
-McCra cken, Bartlett and Coen -
said they favo~ commercial zoning
on the JOO feet by 150 feet parcel and
the matter was sent back to the planning
commission.
The planning board again denied the
Tequest and th e question was appealed
back to the council. Matney was not
at the Jan. 4 meeting, but hi! vote
forctd the tie Monday night.
Roger Slates, a real estate broker
who represented the church, said that,
If the rezoning was approvtd, there would
be a 170-foot. parking lot between homes
and the dairy.
Homeowner Robert Sutake presented
1etters. dated January, 1969, indicating
an offer to leaae the land, 'with an
CJption to buy. fCJr a child care center,
and a rejection of this offer from Pate.
Pate wrote that the offered price of
$15,000 for the lot was ''unacceptable"
and the details on the lease were "too
VBJUe."
"There are all kinds of possibilities
for this property, but the owner is looking
for the maximum buck and the max·
Jmum buck comes from the commercial
developer,'' Sut.ake asserted.
Beach Imposing
Loitering Laws
Loitering laws have been tightened
up in Huntington Beadl to protect private
property from tbe nuisance of objects
or people blocking walkways.
The new Jaw. approved Monday by
the City Cmmcll. makes It poalble to
post private property such as shopping
centers and planned communities, lo
prohibit loitering on walkways or in
entran«s. or leaving objects which
obstruct such areas.
"It means they can call us for help
to remove such obstructions." Polict
Chief Earle Robitaille explained .
Breaking the loitering law can bring
1t fine up to $500 or six months in
jail.
"A warning has to be issued before
any acUon can bt taken," Robitaille
said . "This Jaw is not directed at mass
gatherings or demonstrations. W e
already have laws for those .''
DAILY PILOT
0.u.HGE COAST PUILllt\INO CQMPAltY
R•l:.•rt H, W.M
Pr•INlll .... ""9111111r
J•ck R. Curley
~ l"rftliSent •A _,.,..I~
lho111•• K ..... a
(flit<'
TM111•• A. Mur,hi111
MMll!nlhlier
Al•11 Dir•l11 .,.., o,....;. CAllllt'( .......
AllMri W. let"
........ a.i ....
H•llf'-""9 ..... OfftM
17175 .. uh .. ult••"'
M1 ili119 ~'"" P.O. lo• 7t0, ,2,41 --LllUl!t letdll ID •-t A......U. c.tt ~: m w"' ..,. •trett .......,. NKlll 1211 WJlll ..... ""'"'"' 19n QtfMrlMI •,..,,. El CMIW. ...
I
Charges include:
-Sale of heroin .
-Sale of dangerous drugs.
-Swpiclon of burglary.
-Suspicion or possession of stolen pro-
perty.
-Carrying a concealed weapon.
Detective Captain Robert Green said
the arrests could lead to recovery of
addlUonal stolen prope-rty. some of which
may not have been reported to
authorities.
"They've got a se! or burglary tools
that Won 't quit ." said Capt. Green, men·
tioning walkie-talkies for communicati on
with a lookout, plastic shims for quickly
slipping locks and other items.
Detectives Norm Kutch and Bob Len-
nert set up the rendezvous about 10
p.m. Monday. then caJled in others.
Moran, a salesman for Carborundum
Corporation of Los Angeles, Zuber. and
the yet-unidentified suspect are all held
in lieu of $50,000 bail.
Zuber made the news recenlly when
indicted by a federal grand jury on
charges of involvement in transfer and
sale of stolen securities in Texas and
Michigan.
He was already awaiting trial follow1ng
his earlier arrest in the midwest on
charges of smuggling one ton of mari-
juana.
Lawmen are known to have kept an
eye on his Yukon Drive rMidence, head-
quarters of a bwiiness called Top Line
Industries and engaged in a variety
of activities.
Zuber was in Cost.a Mesa Memorial
Hospital when indicted late last summer,
recovering from a severe leg fracture
suff-eN!d in a motorcycle accident.
Authorities were uncertain today of
the status of the federal charges which
were brought against a number of in-
dividu als from Texas to Michigan and
New York.
Police said P.toran made the front
page of a popular detective magll.Zine
last March. characterizing him as 1hc
Number One Southland expert in
burglary.
They said one jail trusty -doing
time himself for a lesser burglary
was enchanted to find a celebrity
cellmate when Moran and his com panions
were booked.
Detectives Yid the trio were transfer·
N!d elsewhere to begin a second stage
CJf the investigation.
Still uncertain of the identity of the
third suspect, they said he is believed
to be 37-year--0ld Frank J. Schrock.
Seated Again
Cory Proposes
Cal-Expo Sale,
Cites Big Debt
Assemblyman Kenneth Cory ({).Garden
Grove) says he has introduced a bill
to sell Cal-Expo becalfse "Mickey Mouse
financing" has created an annual S2
million debt increase.
The Orange County legislator in·
lrocluC1?d the measure Monday. He pr().
posed a similar bill last session. but
it died in committee.
Cory's administrative assistant, Doug
Jeffe, said toclay they are hopeful thi:!ii
yea r's bill will pass.
"The various additional financial needs
of the state have become more critical,"
Jeffe noted, "and I.he complexion of
the Legislature has changed because of
the elections. \\'e·re optimistic about the
bill's chances this year.''
In introducing the bill. Cory said, "In
a time of tight money and high
unemployment , we have to look very
closely at our expend itures." He also
noted that payments on lhe interest
and principal by the state for the Cal
Expo ('Omplet: in Sacramento ''have been
cos ting taxpayers $2 million a year.''
Cory 's bill orders that money derived
fr om the salt of Cal·Expo be put in
the state's general fund. and lh11t pro-
visions establishing the annual fa ir be
repealed.
Edison Band Slates
Concert Thursday
The 120·member Edison High School
marching band will give a free concert
of pop musi c at 8 p.m., Thursday in the
school cafeteria.
The band, directed by Gary McJillon.
will play selections from •·Hair," .. Romeo
and Juliet,'' and other popular musical
productions.
Uf'I Ttlte4Mt9
Alabama Governor George C. Wallace and his bride of two weeks.
Cornella, try out the governor's office. \Va\lace delivered his inaugural
addreSI Monday in downtown Montgomery. Governor in Alabama
can't succeed himserr, but can run every other four years.
I
Crash Landing Probed
Near County Airport
Air crash investigators continued their
probe toda y of the crash landing of
an expensive twin·engine plane near
Orange County airport v.·hich caused
minor injuries to a San Clemente in-
dustrial executive and his wife.
Rictiard 1\1. Johruion. 55. and his wife,
Diane, 41 , required only en1ergen cy treat-
ment after the noon crash of their plane
about a mile from the airport landing
strip.
The Johnsons live at 1217 Via La
Jolla , San Clemente.
A spokesman for the Federal Av iation
Administration said Johnson wa s at·
templlng a landing at the terminal at
12: 12 p.m. when the engines of the
Cessna 320 F suddenly stopped.
J ohnson's atternpts to "feather" the
craft in to the terminal failed, and
the plane slammed into a plowed field.
The impact tore loose a fueJ pod
on one wing tip, sparking a small fire .
The· blaze wa s quickly extinguished by
county fire crews summoned to the scene
by construction workers who were nearby
when the landing occurred.
Other damage to the plane included
bent propellers, and a damaged un-
dercarriage.
The workmen assisted Mrs. Johnson
from the downed plane after she
reportedly complained of back pains.
Her husband exited from the craft
on his own.
The field Is about 100 yards south
of the intersection of Von Karman Drive
and McGaw Street in the Irvine
Industrial Complex.
Hu11ti11gton Forms Group
To Fii1ance Civic Center
The Huntington Beach Public Facilities
Corporation has been formed to prov ide
financing for the $8.5 million civic center
and S3 million central llbrary.
The city council Monday night ap.
pointed five citizens as directors of the
corporation -Darrell E. Ward, an un-
dertaker, 627 Mai11 St.; Larry L. Curran,
an attorney, 8132 Wadebridge Circle;
William Ritter. a member of the ULI
cilizens steering comm ittee. 7582 Nancy
Drive: Dr. Dudle y Boyce. president of
Golden West College, 16872 Phelts Circle:
and William 0. Armstrong, 20522
Pierview Lane.
The corporation is charged with con-
struct ion of the civic center and library.
Motorcyclist Killed
In F r eak Accid ent
SANTA FE SP RI NG S, I U P I )
- A motorcyclist died Monday of injuries
11uffered when struck by a hood v.·hich
had blown off an automobile on the
San Gabriel River Freev.·ay.
Dead was Elbert L. Selze r. 29. Et
Monte. The drivt'r of the car was not
held .
The corporation will lease the facilities
to the city and that lease will form
the security for the .sale of construction
bonds, Public Information 0 ff I c' r
\Villiam Reed explained today.
Mayor Petitions
To End Marriage
\\'cstminster Mayor Derek C. McWhin-
ney sued for dissolution of his six-year
n1arr iage Monday in <in Orangt County
Superior Court complaint citing "ir·
reconcilable diferences."
1\tcWhinney. who is currently tem-
pora ry chairman of the ncy.·ly formed
Orange County Transit District, agrees
in the document to pay his wife, Sharon
Lynn. $3.:>00 and $200 a month for 18
n1onths
i\lc\Vhinney states In • an attached
11grecment that he y.•jlJ pay $6,0CXI a
year to the support of his two children.
Sean C., 6, and Hollyann . 3.
The agreement lists a division of the
couple 's co mmunity property Incl uding
the home nt 7301 .Jackson St ..
Westminster The McWhinne ys married
Feb. 29. 1964 in Whittier and separated
last Sept. L ------------------
SEASAME STREET
more accurate since principlls ma1
readily see the effect of the foul alJ
on their students who quickly react bJ
sneezing and coughing.
"Ninety-nine percent of the time theM
kids live in smog-free air," Ullom 11aid.
"When it does come, they react morl
noticeably.··
Ullom described lhe smog that draped
Laguna Monday as "the worst I've 1eeo
in six years. It was higher on th1
• hillsides, hea vier and loaded with a
smell."
William Cunningham, superinle.ndent ol
Newport -Mesa Unified School Dlstric~
also commented that the smog wai
heavier ... Monday seemed to me to ht
the worst day in history.''
Yet, Dr. Cunningham was unawm
of the school smog warning syatt:m 01
how he'd gel the word to curtail physical
education activity.
"I don't know how we get the word/'
he said. indicating the county school1
office had not informed Newport.-Mes•
officials about smog warnings.
"We have a fan-out telephone relaJ
system to warn principals," Cunningham
said. Getting the school smog word frOTI
the county seems to be what's l•ckJng.
Allen said his judgment lo call of!
physical activities was a "matter o\
sensing how bad IL was. lt was 841
thick I couldn"t see Pacific Coasl
Highway, just below the school.''
Ed Camarena. APCD engineer, 11aid
that while an o7.one count of .20 w a i
forecast for today, "with unusual <Xll1'
ditions such a.s we've been experiencing.
that can be way off."
He said continuation of the surfa~
Inversion of air might bring tod1y'1
reading to a level similar to Monday't
-.34 parts per million ozone.
Since Dec. I. when its carbon dlot:ldf
measuring equipment "broke down'' UK
county has not measured amounts ol
that tox ic auto exhaust emltllnt th1I
led to two record·breaking first llaif
alerts in Los Angeles County.
I guess we just really don 't kn o VII
how badly off we really are," Principal
Allen noted.
From Page 1
ECUADOR ...
year's program was not available
although it was understood Ecuador plan-
ned to buy some heli copters and other
aircraft from the. United States.
Ecuador also has sought credits for
overhauling some ships and these wert
suspended as wel l. Six of the Ecuadorian
Navy·s l~ combat and patrol shipg came
from the United States but these have
not been used against American fiJhing
vessels, U.S. officials said.
State Department spokesman Robert
J. McCloskey said the United State!
cu rrently provides $29 million • year
in economic aid to Ecuador. Althougll
$3 5 million already has been committed
this year. he said the Slate Department
is considering suspending the remainder.
Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn 't
had a carpet installation by Alden 's.
In our thirteen years, we hove carpeted thousands of homes in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach.
One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every
home on a block .
The form'ula is SIMPLE -we t!)' to make each customer happy. Ask
YOUR neighbor -we probably\ carpeted her home. (If we haven't,
bring her in with you.)
(
ALDEN'S
.--,-• .,-.-•• -.. -0-.. -.,-,-. CARPETS e DRAPES
TUITIM C.a ... ........
111 ""·• .. ,,.,. 166l l'lac•ntla Ave.
I IJ74 ~=r:= c.tlf. COSTA MIS.A
........ 646o4131
HOURS' Mon. Thru n.urs., 9 lo 5,30 -Fri., 9 lo 9 -S.t., 9:30 lo 5
,_
)
1
I
• I ~
I
I I
I
. ·-.. . . . . . ' -· -" 1~
•
Ne
. " ORANGE COUNTY, CA~~ VOL M, NO. 16, 2 SECTIONS, 26 P~GES
•"
. I II
. -
N.Y. Steeb
. ' TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1971 TEN CENTS
Choking Smog Still Holding Grip on Coast
By GEORGE LEIDAL
, Of ~ 1M1tr l'llM St ...
Smoe's ugly spectre cootinued Its grip
on comm\ltUUes atoog the Orange Coast
today as the record heat wave continued
in Souther-n California.
Considerable fog and low clouds tonight
and Wednesday morning will be followed
by sunny ·skies and ·a high between
68 and 78. Little change in the smog
producing conditiorui is ·expected until
Friday, however, the National Weather
Service reporta.
·By Frida~. a buildup of marine air
and ctoltds ·Will bring with It lncre.aing
winds. 1 ·
The Orange County Air · Pollution Con-
trol District report~ ozone . belGw the
level ne~ssary to call school smor: warn·
ings.
In at .least one . Orange Coast school,
Laguna Beach's El Morro elementary
school, play activity of children was
limited Monday by the thick, acrid air
DAIL Y•Pll.OT SWf 1''""9
Where Is the House?
Perhaps you are wonderln~ ~hat . h~ppeiled to t.be house on 32nd
Street (foreground). Well, 1t ·is sWl on ~nd Street (center, back-
ground). It took workmen three hours· to move 75-ton house across
the·street Monday. Dorothy Long of Ontario ~ught it.for $2,000, ~ad
it moved to her lot for $3,200 and paid $4,300-for a new fou~dat1?n .
That's $9,:WO. The house had been in tb:t path of a street w1den1ng
project.
Tate Trial Jury Listens
To Beatles' Rock Music
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The jury
in the Sharon Tate murder trial began
Its third full day of deliberations today,
with a session of listening ltt rock music
of the Beatl es.
The panel asked lo hear the untitled
album which lhe state says Charles
Manson played obsessiv ely in the sum-
met: of lbe slaying.a.
Sonp oP the 1918 album figared heavily
In tesUmony at the seven--month-<lld trial.
Witnesses said Manson thought he beard
the Beatll':S predicting a black-white con-
flict in songs such as "Helter Skelter."
"J>i&gif.1:4, '' ''Blackbird" 1nd "RevoluUon
I." The state 11ays Mamon ordered
Oruge C.ut.
Weather
Frpin smog tb fog, that's tlie·
word lalong the Orange Coait,
where Jt11 be·toeked in tonight
IDd Wednelday morning. 1°trii~
erature1 will ran1e from the
upper &Os to the central 70..
' JNSmE TODAY
' 1"£nd of the year tconomic
r1co1d.s 1how 19~0 ~1DCI the
100rst wnr rincl 1947 /'If COflf"
bftNd rtCt!l.rioft. and i1'./}cl"°" in
••• lhui«( Sto1r.; st. lcortl. i>fv• s.
..... i.1t
................ 1e .......... .._ .. --' --M ...... ""'' ........... 1.11
-M ~ ,. .. -. =:""..!:" , .. ~
followers to kill In arder to trigger
guch a race war.
The judge granted the jurors' request
Monday and ordered a record player
sent in for today's session .
When they recessed Monday, ju rors
had deliberated 13 hours and 45 minutes.
Manson and three women members
of' bill liippie~ie clan are ctiarged with
murder"-<Xlbspiracy in seven slaying.s.
Superior Court Juctae· Charles Older
refused another jury request, ror a night
visit to the scenes of the Auaust 11169
ktllinP, Mw "Tate's plush Benedict Can-
JIDll mWion and the home of wealthy
market· owners Leno and Roaemary La
Biarica.
~ prruiecutlon opposed allowlng the
visitf, saying. it would reopen the trial
to new evidence. The defense, favoring
the visits, moved to reopen the trial.
'Ibe judge denied the motion.
~ajor Newport .
' Project Delayed
Pianninc Conunlal'"' public hearings
an eeveral major Newport Beach pro-
jec:b, Including Fran O.laney'a plans
to ancbor a 11111 ~ plleon adjacent
to Davey's Locker, have" been postponed
for eo days, City ~ Planner t.urence w-oald_today. . ·The'--w!D-ao acl>eduled 'l'bunclOy at I p.m. l o Clly u.n. but
la left wl1ll Diiiy • lhort agondo.
A vartanoe req\lelt by the PaclUc
Mutual Ule !........., Cornpony aovght
In oonjuricllori with Ito planned 112 mWlM
oper1tionll ceh&er at Newport Center hu
been withdrawn.
A -y cont1nuance °" the pnlpoOed
11M permit !or· a· brancll DI. the n.-
Arll l!OYJ' Club In Eallblulf Park bu been Ubd by the city.
tbllt was pushed to the c:out by llcbt
Santa Ana wind,,.
While the smog ouUook for Llgumi
Beach today was improved, the APCD
said coastal cities could erpect smog
levels similar to those reached M01'4ay.
Orange County Harbor Departn1ent
said visibility today was limited to one
mile by "fog or very thick smog."
With no winds at 10 a.m. today, the
prospect! for moving the smog out to
sea were slim .
Ed Camarena, APCD engineer, said
the surr ... lnvenioo that brooght the
eye·atinging smOg to the Orange Coast
was expected to continue. through tonight.
·Light ·and · vaiiable winds during the
night and moi-nin£: ~s · were fore<:ast
for tonight at from eight to 15 knots.
By Wednesday afttrnoon winds are ex· pect~ Lo fange from lU tO 20 knots
along Uie. coaat.. Fog-and low clouds
in the morning Wednesday will yield
to partly sunny skies and sllghUy cooler
temperatures.
The mid-winter heat wave shatter.ed
lhree r«:ords in Los Angeles Monday.
A high of 95 was the hottest January
reading on record, the overnight low
of 65 was the warmest low, and . three
carbon monollde readings required
Jirecedent-1etting aJerts at 1:86 a.m. and
7:05 p.m., Monday and again at 8:05
a.m.
Since Orange County's c'arbon dioxide
measuring equipment fa,iled Jut Dee.
t, the APCD lw not ·reconltd leveil
of that toxit pollutant emitted by
automobiles, Camarena said.
He noted, .that (.()8 .\ngeles reithed
the alert 84ge becal.13e the former 100
p~ts per million benfYhmark waa lowered to 50'parts per ·mUUon.
Presence of .carbon . monoxide in the
air w~s· logge<I. at · 57 parts pc!r million
in Wtilttier Monday ·ev'lning, leac:finc to
(S.. SMOG, Pa ... %) ,
Ecuador 4 Ships
U.S. Vessels Seized in Fishing Rights Dispute
WASHING TON !UPI) -The United
States, which has cut off military sales
to Ecuodar in a fishing-rights dispute,
reported today that the Ecuadorians had
seized four more U.S. fishing vessels
since Monday for a totaJ of 12 in the
past eight days.
"This is the largest numbtr in r«:ent
years taken over that length of timl':,"
said a State Department official who
made the disclosure based on report!
from California tuna industry spokesmen.
Freeway Block
Backers Get
Phone Calls
Jlj f... P'l.~Ml'kJlmQ"r "'T '
Of ._ ~ .. Utt It.fl
'Ibe trio of former NewpOfi 11e.ch
city oUicials who Frldty filed auit to
block tht': March 9 freeway election ·have
been besieged by telephone calls, many
of them critical, from residents asking
for their reasons for the action.
The group's spokesman, former vice
mayor Hans J. Lorenz, has taken to
responding to the flood of callers by
sending them a form letter.
Lorenz and former mayors Otarlt':s
E. Hart and James B. Stoddard filed
the superior court action asking for a
wr it of mandate to block the ballot
measures.
The group that sponsored a petition
drive to forcl': the city council to place
the questions before the volers, tht
Citizens Coordinating Committee, is seek-
ing voles on two matters.
One seeks to force the council to
rescind an existing city-state agreement
on the adopted Pacific Coast Freeway
route through Corona de! Mar.
The second is a proposed charter
amendment th at would require the coun-
cil to schedule a referendum before
it rould adopt aJ1y futu re freeway
alignments.
In his form lctler response. Lorenz
cites the many calls he has received,
and says:
"In my opinion, the use of the Initiative
remed y in the case of the two que!ltions
regarding the freeway to be put before
the voters is a gross illegal misuse
of this procedure as it transgressea: into
(S.. FREEWAY, Pl .. II
Trial Scheduled
Feb. 17 in Lusk
Kidnapin_g Case
A man accused of kidnaping millionaire
developer John 0. Lusk'• IS.year-old
nephew and holding the youth for '2.0,000
ransom has been ordered to face trial
Feb. 17 in Orange County Superior Court.,
Judge Byron K. McMillan tet that
date for Ralph Timothy Potter, 23, of
West Los Angeles while denying a
defeme motion for reduction or $50,000
ball. Potter remains in <>rana:e CaUn~
Jail.
Potter is accused of grabbing John
G. IAl.slt, 18, last Oct. 30 on Udo Ille
and forcing the )'Olllh '* )bt ~
of his own car. Youn1 ~WJ>:.
12 hours imprisoned ia; ~ • ' el'i!ii' vehicle.~, &!' • The . ' -'1!1111 •••
--i·llo . • 'to ...... cie%YOOJ It Loo Anploij -llUniatin]lli
Al'l'Ort vta the I • Potter
.... -by po .. i.r he ~thelltieribod In ·the ra1110m ornc.n lald Poller
that he had the Lullr
the trunk of a car
Dtsneyland Hotel In A •
WU found in tbe Vtbidl11
to hl1 family.
The State Department said that during
the same. period Ecuador also bad seized
the Jasna, a ship owned by an American
Tuna Company but sailing under the
Panamanian Dag, and a Japanese fish.
ing boat .
The United States announced Monday
that it was denying Ecuador any further
military aid and might take further
adion including suspension of economic
assistance.
011 Drilling Snit
Those were the lale.!lt developme11ts
In a king-running feud between thl': Latin
American nation, which claims a ZOO.mile
territorial sovereignty over the rich
Pacific fishing waters off Its coast, and
the Uni ted States whi ch recognizes only
a 12-mile limil.
In the latest flareup, Ecuadorian gun-
boats have seized the U.S. vessels on
poaching charges. At last report, three
of the boats had been released after
Newport to Hire Firm
_ ·"'f <>J .. OJ,tUide .Le.gal.~AUl
. .
·~IModiWill llM'·--~' --lo' pms Its laWiaJt l(llMI G. t . Kadane 1nd Sorui. oil producers cbarg·
ed with slant drilling lnlo and under
property within the city limits.
Mayor Ed Hirth said this morning
the City Council decided to hire a private
law nrrn to argue the SUperior Court
case w~n City Attorney Tully Seymour
&aid the workload. on the case ·would
be too much for his department to
handle.
Seymour said it may take two or
more years to settle the litigation.
Coats' are estimated to ran~ betwel':ll
'30,000 and SI0,000 or more. Hirth said.
"Therl': is really no way to tell,"
lht': mayor said. "the attome}'! will be
hirtd on an hourly basis."
Hirth said the council has no
alternative at this point but to press
the suit. despite the cost.
Michael McCormick. lawyer represen-
ti ng Kadane and its partners, the General
Crude Oil Company, this morning said
ht': i1 "!urpriM!d the city intends to
spend that kind of money just to try
to prevent Kada~ from obtaining oil
from wtthtn their own property."
Ht explained that the 5Uit Involves
90 acres of property leased from Beeco
Ltd., that was annexed lo Newport Beach
·~~-'---"·).') 'fl .... -.. ' lu08!qUent to K1hnt ACl" !Hlet• ol. a 58()..acre tract.
The remaining 500 acres Is In ubin-
corporated county territtry a n d
McCormick said, "all we want to dci
is drill from surface Ioc~Vons on county
land into the area annexed to the city.
"The company stands to lose $5 m.llHon
ir, oil deposits If it is prohibited from
drilling ," he said.
McCQrmick explained the property,
itself, rs owned by Beeco Ltd., a family-
held corporation owned by members of
the Banning family . The mineral ·rights,
he said, are owned by Banning family
memberR lndividually .
Nl':wport's Mayor Hirth. however,
countered that. "The council has a sworn
obligation to uphold the chart.er."
The city has charged that the Texas-
hascd oil fi rm vio lated the charter by
drilling from outside the city limits under
property wilhin the city in West ewport.
"There Is no way to relax. to avoid
that responsibility." Hirth said.
The mayor pointed out that the city
staff "has tried for years to -negotiate
with Kadane " but all attempts to "work
so mething out" have been unsuccessful.
The council deliberated the wisdom
of brin ging in the extra legal talent
(Set DRILLING, Page!)
paying nnes totalin( ,133,ooo.
Secretary of Stale William P. Bogen
s u m m o n t d Ecuadorian Ambasaador
Carlos Mantilla-Orlt':ga . to the St.a.\e
Department Monday afternoon to 1nfoqa.
him o fthl': action. A apokem\an nkl
Rogers told the ambol!lsador thal Hotber
legal provisions relating to such seizura
art': being reviewed urgently and that fur·
ther action by this government under
pertinent laws eould not be excluded."
Reagan Now
May Consider
Race Betting
SACRAMENTO !UP!l -·Gov .. ftona\d
Rdpn today lald he ii willing l!D ....
alder ltpllUtinn of '-betting II it ls part of 1 broad tax refomi program.
Reagan, at his first new1 conference
sinCl': September, also dJscl03ed he will
not bjtroc;!uce his own tax reform ~
gram this ye8r for the first lime since
he carrle to Sacramento.
Instead, Reagan said, he wlll at~t
to work oot a compromise property
tax relief-reform plan with Democrats.
Assembly Democrats, led by new
speakl':r Bob Moretti of Van Nuys, have
announced plans to seriously comider
lcgalizins offtrac.i: betting In CaUfomia.
ll would be UgbUy controlled by Ibo
state.
"I'm wHlinc to II.st.ea to what the
programs art In One rontext -as part
of general tax reform," the 11overnor
aaid.
PropG&a\s t1ttady have been ln·
mxluced in the young legi!llative aesaion
to lt':plize dog racing, a statewide lot-
tery, jai alai and Nevada Cui!Jo.tn>e
gaming. . ·
Reapn l':mphasized that "all of the
converSation about legalizing gaml>Ung
is out of line at thl': moment," aside
from the offtrack betting.
"I don't think we ought to be going
outside existing (tax) reven11e" for new
state money, he said.
r
--
' t DAILY PJ10T N
3 Arrested
'Superhurgl'ar~
Suspect Captured
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lie Dtlly 1"1111 IMff
A lo«\& underwor"5 probe reached a
clim1x today when Costa Mesa pollc!:
capt.ured a man Characterized in deltc·
Uve magazines as Mr. Bil on the
Southern Cali!omia burglary 1etne.
He and two armed companions -
one a Cotta Mesan currenUy facina
federal stock swindle and drug charges
-were laken into custody without in·
cident.
and 1tolen auc:li()ovllual sound equipmuit
worth up to $10.000 was confiscated as
evideoce.
"There's enough methedrlne or 'speed'
here to service every knowJ1 'hype'
ir1 Costa Mesa for a week," said De.tee.
tive Serj:eant John Regan, surveying •
table plied witb loot.
Moran, Zuber and the John Doe swpect
were booked on a variety of cha rges,
allegedly following agreement to sell the
assorted loot for c;nly SI ,200, investigators
aaid.
Charges include :
-Sale of heroln.
•
Smog Level
I
Figured Out
Simp·Ie' Way
Orange County boasts two entirely ~if·
ferent sy1tem1 for det.trmining whtn
amog levels' are high enough to rMtrict
physical activity of sc hoolchildren.
One ii the latest in sophisticated 1mog
measuring devices operated in three
county locations by the Air PolluUon
Con trol District.
Ont had a loaded. cocked, .380
1utom1Uc plltol tucked In hfs wailtband
when grabbed, but was quickly rdieved
ol it.
Polke u ld Ibey have been keepinc
Kenneth c. "SuperbW'llar" Moran, lt.
d WhltUtr, under IW'Velllance for a
Ian& Ume.
-Sale of dangerous drugs.
-Suspicion of burglary.
-Suspicion of possession of stolen pro.
SAN CLEMENTE COUPLE WERE ABOARD DURING PANCAKE LANDING MONDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Rlch1rd Johnton lnJured Slightly as Engln• Conks Out Nt1r County Airport
The APCD when it records ozone
readings exceeding .3S parts per mlltion
warns the Orange County Department
of Education by radio. The county school~
office in turn warns sc hool districU!:
partici pating in the program -uaually
inland districts that more frequently ex-
perience smog.
The second system, that wed primarily
by coa.staJ districts, l.s less sophistlcated.
Yet, on Monda y, when the ozone count
reached .34 parts per mllllon at Oran&e
County Airport -short of the lave!
for a school smog warning -the second
method proved quite accurate.
He and Edward A. Zuber, 30, of 3073
Yukon Drive, Colsta Mtu, plua a third
man who 1ave three aliases and a
Michigan adduss were arrested at 2:30
a.m. near Harbor Boulevard and Gisler
Avenue.
Police claim a haul of heroin , narcotics
Frora Pagel
FREEWAY ...
a field not subject to local le,i.slative
control.
''This type of misuse can only lead
to the eventual curtailment or abolish·
ment of local control which would dutroy
all loCl.1 1overnment u we know it
"Hence my concern.
"No regional tram:porUt.ion system
auch u railroads, pipelines, naUonal or
1tate hlihways could ever be conatructed
w:lthout the right of enllnent domain
not subject to local or reglonaJ curtail·
menl
"In cue of the statewide freeway
systems the II.ate U!gislature left to
local county boards or city councils the
obligation to negotiate the access and
vacation of streeU!:, but not the option
to locate, pumlt or forbid such state:
highways.
"Would this right of interdiction by
local bodies exist, no freeways would
ever have been constructed.
"NegotiaUon for access is a 1tve and
take proposition to be carried out by
informed officials and cannot as well
be determined by a vote of the electorate.
"The present attempt to distort th@se
negotiaUons in;.o a procedure subject
to referendwn so that construcUon of
freeways or other statewide trantporta·
tlon systema could be atopped on the
local level must be opposed by all
unaelflah individuals truly interested in
a continuation of local government and
local control."
Newport Btacr. City Clerk Laura
Llgloe Mond1y was served with a copy
of the complaint. The city bu 10 days
to file a written rtspanse .
A hearing before Judge Robert A.
Banyard is scheduled Jan. 29 at 9:30
a.m.
Discussion Set
On Fire Merger
Su.a:gested merging of Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach police and f I r e
department.s to serve the entire Harbor
Area u a single agency will be reviewed
Thursday.
This is the concept to be discussed
at a 7:30 a.m. breakfast meetJ.n& of
CHART. the Cillu:na Harbor Are a
Rr.search Team .
Sptakers will be attorney Jack Hall
and indwtrial bu1ines1 manager Galen
Coffman, both CHART members who
have studied the various upects.
The meeting will be at the Costa
M tsa Goll and Country Club.
DAILY PILOT
OU.NOi COAST ,UILISHIHli COM,AH'I'
••!..rt H. Weff
JHlf l. C~r/ey
Vke 11',_lllent Ml 0-el MlrllfiW"
n.-•• ic.....n
'"" n .... A. M.,,t1111e M""""" 1•!"'
L. ,...,, Ktl11 H_,.,, ....0 City •• ,.., __ .._
2211 Witt l1lk1 k11l .... 1r4
M1ll11t1 A4t1,..,, r.o .... 1111, •2u1
1
-+ Otfl MMl1 no WW 1rt Streit ...... lllcfil:nt,._A_.... ............. a.ctll .,.,. ~.........,.
.... (---I -Nlr1fl al C-*"' .. I
'
perty.
~ing a concealed weapon.
Detective C1ptaln Robert Green u ld
the arre5ts could lead to recovery of
additional stolen property, some of which
may not ha ve been reported to
authorities.
"They've got a set of burglary tools
that won't quit," said Capt. Green, men-
tioning walkie-talkies for co mmunication
with a lookout, p!aslic shims for quickly
slipping locks and other items.
Detectives Norm Kutch and Bob Len·
nert set up the rendezvous about 10
p.m. Monday, then called in others.
Moran, a salesman for Carborundum
Corporation of Los Angeles, Zuber, and
the yet-unidentified suspect are all held
in li@u of $50,000 bail.
Zuber made the news recently when
indicted by a federal grand jury on
char1e1 of involvement in transfer and
aale of stolen securitie.! in Texas ind
Michigan.
He was already awaiting trial following
his earlier arrest in the midwest on
charges of smuggling one ton of mari-
juana.
Lawmen are known to have kept an
eye on hls Yukon Drive residence, head-
quarters of a business called Top Line
Industries and engaged In a variety
of activities.
Zuber was in Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital when indicted la te last summer.
recovering from a severe leg fracture
suffered in a motorcycle accident.
Authorities were unce rtain today ot
the status of the federal chargu which
were brought against a number of in·
dividuals from Te:ii:u: to Michig an and
New York.
Police said Moran made the fron t
page Of a popular detective magazine
last March, characterlzing him as the
Numb!r One Southland expert in
burglary.
They said one jail trusty -doing
time himself for a lesser burglary -
was enchanted to find a celebrity
cellmate when Moran and his companions
were booked.
Rep. Carl Albert
Wins Speaker
Post in House
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Democrats
overwhelmingly selected Rep. Carl Albert
ol Oklahoma today to be Home speaker
but split tharply on eltttion of a floor
leader to replace him in the 9 2 n d
Congress,
Albert, 62, 1 party loyalist with a
liberal voting record. won over Rep.
John Conyen, 1 fourth term black from
Detroit who uid Albert had failed to
&splay leadership qualities retiuired of
a speaker.
Albert won over Conyers 220 to 2Q.
Albe.rt, whose selection by t. h e
Democral.J will be formally ratified by
the full House Thursday, when the new
Congress convenea, succeeds retired Rep.
John W. McCormack of ti1assachusetts
who had served as speaker since 1962.
During that period, Albert v1as party
floor le.ader. Five candidates were seek-
ing elecUon at a closed Dem ocratic
caucus to that po!t to succeed Albert.
A new party whip alao must be chosen
-a choice usually made by the speaker
and leader -to r@place Rep. Hale
BocP of Loulllana, one of the con·
LMt&Dta0 for 1uder.
Prior to M1ecti:nC Albert, on the way
to balldinl a new leadership team, the
Democratfc caacreumen had losaed out
Rep. Dan Rolteakowakl oC Illinob:, known
11 OllclCO M.aJW Richard J . O.ley's
IPOtelm&ft ln the Houte, Ill the CIUCUI
chairman. Rep. OUn E. T@1iue of TuP
WU cholen, 151 to 92, In pllei! of
Roelenkowakl.
.
' I Bot 01
Police Bribe
Trial Slowed
By Illness
A defendanrs illness has ha lted the
Orange County Superior Court trial of
two men accused of attempting to bribe
a Costa Mesa policeman.
Presideing Judge William C. Speirs
scheduled Wednesday for a further hear·
Ing on the delay after being advised
that defendant Eugene C. Rondondo. -t4,
of 2422 E . 22nd St.. Newport Beach,
was confined to a Las Vegas hospital
and could not return to Orange County.
Rondondo was to have. gone on trial
with Samuel C. Ros man, Tl, of 29351
San Briso Drive, Laguna Niguel. Both
men are accused of the attempted
bribery of Costa Mesa officer Gary
Barwig.
Barwig has testified that both men
offered him $10,000 to plant narcotics
on a witness in an upcoming criminal
trial involving Rondondo. That witness,
Charles S. Dreyer. 32, of 1645 Sunset
Lane, Laguna Beach, was named with
Rondondo in an Orange County Grand
Jury indictment alleging the theft of
liquor valued at $25,000 from coastal
night spots.
Both men are accused of attempted
bribery of a policeman. con.splracy to
fa lsely arrest and furnishing dangerous
drugs. Those drugs -I.500 barbiturate
tablets -"'ere allegedly found by Barv.·ig
last April 3 in a car driven by Dreyer.
Rondondo and Rosman are free on
bail.
From Page 1
DRILLING ...
behind closed doors at a special study
session Monday night.
Seymour had ruled the executive.
session was legal "to protect the lawyer·
client relationship."
The council named Co u n c 11 men
Lindsl@y Parsons and Milan Dostal. along
with Seymour, to sit as a panel to
select the law firm to represent the
ci ty. Dostal, too. is a lawyer.
Hirth said the comm ittee will mett
"within two wuks" to pick the private
firm. which will be under lmmedlate
pressure to file a brief due 30 days
from now .
There are no damages claimed ln
the action al the present time. although
Hirth said "as the case progres~es there
prob ably will be some claims.
"However." the mayor added , "lhl':
whole th ing is to curb the violation
of the code ,"
Right Lawyers,
Wrong Group
A story which appeared ln the Deily
Pilot Identified attorneys Sylvla Elll!On
and Clruthers Beraer. who are repreaen·
ting Costa Mesa real.dint V e I m a
Mengelkoch ln her federal court 1Uit
ag11nst California labor laWI.
Miss ElliJon and Mn. Berau are
members of the Rumtn Riabta for
Women orpnizaUon. They were er-
roneously identified as belnC members
of a l@gal commlttet or the: NalJonal
Orizanizatlon of Women.
Th@ Daily Pilot r@grel.s this tm>r.
Fireman Help~ Firehouse Raiders
U1lna a flrtman q an undercovtr leadln& to his arrest on -.plclon Of
.,..,~ Colla M.,. police rolded Ille lnlerlerilll wllb polke In lbe line of ~ oudle bor 1111n w1J today duty.
ood alleiedl7 bid 1 bot time belor. ~:::.\-~= .:: ~ nude
it WU over. l\Jcbef tlleo lipo4 ·a """plolni llllllll
Fir< Suppnllion E!llindr Jim Rkhly, Holly Moote, II. ol Hollywood, who •u
JS. ln1pected the 1how at the bottomlm booked on suspielon of Indecent etpOSUre.
ni&blA:lub at tn E. 17th St .. thm lefl The red·h•lrtd fire J~or said ber
via 1 side door to slgna l wilting officers. 1ct offended him, based on allqtdly
Firehouse employe Dennis C. Perkins, lewd movement.$ and suggestive po!IC5
l:i, allqedly ordered him to shul the •g1inst 1t ltul 4i,;, background jukebox
door, brtnlln& offlctrs Phil Donohue and tunes.
Owen Krul at 1 de1d run from aerosa Miss Moore, • five-foot. 100 pound
the street. redhead he~r. didn 't have much to
Pol!Qe 11ld Perkins bloc ked the door say before Ming booked into Oranie
ind hid to bf hauled out ol the -.\Jail. with 7 boll "L
Crash Landing Probed
Near County Airport
The second method goes under dif-
ferent names but boils down to the
"Go Outside and Sniff" amo1 w1rnlng
system.
In Laguna Beach Monday, Willi1m
F. Allen. principal of El Morro School,
stepped out.side into the hea vy, smo11Y
air, sniffed, and decided to curtail the
physical education and play1round pro-
grams at his school.
Air crash lnv@sllgators continued their
probe today of the crash landing of.
an expensiv e twin-engine plane near
Orange County airJ)Clrt whi ch caused
minor injuries to a San Clemente in·
dustrial executive and his wife .
Richard J\.1. Johnson, 55, and his wife,
Diane, 41 , req uired only emergency treat·
ment after the noon crash of their plane
about a mlle from the airport landing
strip.
The Johnsons live at 1217 Via La
Jolla, San Clemente.
A spokesma:-i !or the Federal Aviation
Admin istration said Johnson was at-
tempting a landing at the terminal at
12 :12 p.m. when the engines of the
Cessna 320 F suddenly stopped.
Johnson 's attempts to "feather" the
craf t in to the termina l failed, and
the plane slammed into a plt'wed field.
The impact tore loo!le a fuel pod
on one wing tip, sparking a small fire .
The blaze was quickly extinguished by
county fire crews summoned to the scene
by construction workers who were nearby
when the landing occ urred.
Other damage to the plane included
bent propellers. and a damaged un·
dercarriage .
The workmen assisted Mrs. Johnson
from the downed plane after she
reportedly complained or back pains.
Her husband exited fro m the craft
on his own .
The field ls about 100 yards south
of the intersection of Von Karman Drive
and McGaw Street in the Irvine
lndustr!al Complex.
William L. Ullom , superintendent of
Laguna Buch Unified School District,
said today Allen's action conforms with
district policy, slnce the county school!
office doesn't recommend participaUon
in the county warning system, "Due
to the cost of the ~stem."
"Our policy is based on principals'
own intuition," Dr. Ullom said, "althou&h
they may call the county office· for
a reading." Had Allen called the county
offic@ Monday, he'd have been told no
smog alert was necessary eince the
readlng fell just one hundredth below
the required .35 parts per milllon th1t
triggers school smog warnings.
Fairgrounds Rent Boost
Irks Area Horse Lovers
Ullom believes the Laguna system 11
more aceurate since principals may
readily see the effect of the foul air
on their students who quickl y re1ct by
sneezing and coughing.
"Ninety-nine percent of the time thue
kids live in smog-free air ,'' Ullom uid.
"When it does come. the y react mor•
noticeably."
Ullom described the smog that dr1ped
Lagun1 Monday as "th@ worst I've •een
in six years. It was h.igher on the
hillsides, heavier and loaded with a
smell."
A proposed schedule of rental increases
at the Orange County Fairgrounds has
livestock lovers In league -horse people,
cat people and dog people -and
threatening a boycott .
The situation is further inflamed by
the Mesa Boots and Saddles Club being
given an edict to get Its rustic chuck
wagon off the property.
Directors of the 32nd D i st ri ct
Agricultural Assoc iation meet Thursda y
at 7:30 p,m. in Fair Board offices to
discuss the increased fees.
"They haven't been established yet,"
emphasize.! Fairgrounds G e n e r a I
Manager James E. Porterfield.
"Horsefe1thers." say horse people, or
words lo that effect.
Po rterfield also said It is possible no
acUon will be: taken to adopt the higher
rental and service fees, but equestrians
and equestrienne.! will definitel y be there
lo see.
"Something's gone wrong over there ,"
says Mrs. Pat Wright. of Santa Ana
Heights , a member or Corral Six, a
horse club.
She is also 111 for mer member of the
Mesa Boots and Saddles and enthusiastic
supporter of monthly jun ior hors~ shows
for wh ich rentals may go up to J\25
per da y.
'"We feel thi~ is outrageou.,." Mrs
Wright declared .
She predicts dog fanciers will join
the opposition rather than give in to
a SIOO per day fee imposition -with
a ban on lawn restroom activities -
and that cat people will also rally to the
cause .
"This is not just the horse people,
it's everybody," she explained, charging
!.hat nonpro fit group., simply cannot af-
ford such sleep rates . What's more,
lhcy may organize against them .
;'This I cao promise you," she vowed,
sayi ng she will personally aparkplug a
hoycott among the cat people, dog people
and horse people."
"Then what will they do?," she said
ominously.
Mrs. Wright asserted that you get
more for your money -and less of
that -at other state-owned fairgrounds,
adding that warm and sunny smiles
are thro1vn in free.
.. O..,er at Pomona . they'll do everything
hut slanrl Qn their ear and stack greased
BBs for $100," she said.
··11ere they charge you $125 and you
ha1•e IQ clean up the horse manure
you rself. .. fi>lrs. Wri~ht added .
She also cited .such incidentals as fl
$1 le<' for each fai rgro unds trash can
usC'd and $J for each chair rented, plus
a policy a~ain.'lt individual public ui;e
nf a park on the grounds for picnics.
William Cunningham, superinttndent or
Newport-Mesa Unified School Di.strict.
also commented that the smoe was
heavier. "Monday seemed to me to be
th@ worst day In history."
From Pqe l
SMOG ...
Los Angeles County's Issuance of the
alert which asks motorists to voluntarily
abandon use of their vehicles.
Orange County recently established a
me thod where ozone readings ir excess
of .35 part.s per mill ion would b" rtlayed
from the APCD to the County School!!
office. A spokesman for the County
superintendent of schools said no warnina
wa s issued ~·esterday ,
The unusual presence of smog along
the Orange Coast results from th1
temperature in version layer and winds
that hav' brought warm inland air to
the area . A storm condit ion off th•
coast pr events cold air from movinc
down from the Pacific Northwest, the
National Weather Service said ,
SEASAME STREET
Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn't
had a carpet installation by Alden 's.
In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in
Costa Mesa , Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach.
One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every
home on a block.
The for.mule is SIMPLE -we try to ma~e each customer happy. A$k
YqUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven't,
brihg he~ in with you .)
ALDEN'S r-,..-NT-.-.-•• -. o-.. -•• -,-. CARPETS e DRAPES
TVITIN C4I , •.
ALOIN'S
110 "'" .. ,..., 1663 l'leic•ntla Ave. a tun11a co 11114 '""-,....._ e.m. STA MISA
........ 646-4138
HOURS: Mon. Th•u Thu" .. f te 5:30 -F•I .. f te f -Sot., 9:30 te J •
\
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Costa -Mesa
VOL. 6-4, NO. 16, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
.. r
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
I -:
Teday'.-Pbud
N.Y. Steeb
:TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1971 TEN CINTS
Choking Smog Still Holding 1 Grip on Coast
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of ""' D1Jh' l"lltl lllltt
Smog's ugl y ~tre continued its grip
on communities along the Orange Coast
today as the record heal wave continued
in Southern California.
Considerable fog and low clouds tonight
and Wednesday morning will be followed
by sUMy skies and a high between
68 and 78. Little change in the smog
producing cot'lditions is expected until
Friday, however, the National Weather
' u
Service reporU;.
By Friday, a buildup of rr.arille air
and cloud! will bring with It increasing
winds,
The Orange County Air Pollution Con-
trol District reported ozone below the
level necessary to call school smor: warn-
ings.
In at least one Orange Coast school.
Laguna Beach's El Morro elementary
school,' play activity ·of chiJdren was
lin4ted Monday by ~e thick. acrid air
SMOKE-EATING FIREMEN BATTLE APARTMENT BLAZE
In Cost• M.s., Three Al1rms 1t Suppertlme
3 Mesa Blazes Plague
)
Fire'men in Afternoon
A pair of supper hour fires and a
simultaneous sprinkler system break thal
poured 2,000 gallons of water into 11
newspaper of fice kept the Costa Mesa
Fire Deparl.ment busy Monday . .
No one was Injured in the most serious
incideht, a $4 ,000 blitze that destroyed
an apartment tinit whose occupants fied,
losing their belongings.
The blaie al 2526 Elden Ave., was
reported about 5: 15 p.m., while half
the de~rtment equipment was at the
Los Anieles Time3 plant at 1375 Sun-
nower" Ave., firemen said.
"We had to roll all the way down
to E~n Avenue·from there,'' said Batta·
lion Chief Ron Coleman.
Mesan Charged
'With Smuggling
Drug Into U.S.
From wn Services
' DETROIT -A Costa Mesan Is in
jail here today, charged with smuggling
'911.000 worth of huhisb lnto tbe U.S.
from Ca111da.
John Wakula. ff, ()( MS Beach St.,
WIS arra!Ped Monday In U.S. District
COurt In connec1k>n with the cast ln-
v()lvlng 20 poundl of the potent martjU'lllla
deriviltft.
Wakula wn taken into CU!lody whlle
1Ull aOO.rct a train coming thrOuCb •
tunnel from Samia, Ontarkl, babnd fdr
Pert Huron, Mich., itm:IUgaton: sak:I.
1'. U.S. C:Wtoms ln1r>«tor alleged he
dpered the contr.bfnd in ll1l attacbe
c ... hlddtn uoder the man's coat.
Subtequenl lnvesUgAltion also turned
up a block qi the 1Uclcy compound taped
to the suspecrs leg, according lo agents.
h,
He said It ls difficult to determine
what caused the fire in the apartment,
due to the extensive destruction.
Firemen were on the scene for about
two hours, Chief Coleman said,
"The cause at the present time is
still tll!der inVesttgatJon." he added ..
Chief Coleman said it is even more
difficult to e:stirqatt water damage caus-
ed when the cellfug sp?ink!er In nmes
bll!iness Office.s broke.
He said .the S:05 p.m. alarm -no
actua1 firt was inYolved -will doubtless
result in some loss, but the severity
would depend on what documents or
furnishings art involved.
A third blaze blamed on overheated
cooking grease serft uruts to the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Garber. at
1118.1 Swan Circle, at 6:4S p.m., according
lo firemen.
Only abOut $150 l:tamage resulted.
P,.j . I Aili' ·~~,.n~ ng;
Tri.al Postponed
Both Gary Harold PhoeniJ: and his
lawyer were on the sick list today arid
the Orange County Saperlor Courl ltlal
of rape charres was held ovu unUI
Wednesday.
Phoenlr, 21, of Qie:tl Mesa , i.s being
treated for . flu • in ..Ida Orqe Counly
jlil quarten. Depoly pobllc Mieod<r
Roderick Ridda"dl Is Pld lo be almool
relovered from 1 vtnu lhat ha1 delayed
the trial for -da71. Riccanli will open hb def'"" ol
Phoenix when the trlal -· In Judge William Murny'1 courtroom. NI n •
women b8ve 1ppeaml for the proeecuUon
in testimony ..-pportlns charg., of rape,
llAult wltb lolenl lo ""1111111 rape, kldo
naping,· robbery and se:r: perversion.
that was pushed to the coast by light
Santa Ana winds.
While the smog outlook for Laguna
Beach today was improved, the APCO
said coastal cities could expect smog
levels similar·to those reached Monday.
Orange County Harbor Departnient
said visibility today was limited to one
mile by "fog or very thick smog."
With no winds at 10 a.m. today, ~
pro.spect.s for moving the smog out to
sea were slim.
Ed · Camartna, APCD engineer, said
tbt. IW'face lnvenion that brought the
eye-stinging smog to the Orange Coast
was expected 10 continue thrOUfb tonight
Light and variable winds during t.Ae
night and morning hours were forecast
for tonight at from eight to 15 knot.s.
By Wednesday afternoon winds are ex·
pected to range from 10 to 20 knots
alonR the roast Fog and low clouds
ln the morning Wednesday will yield
to parUy suMy skies and slightly cooler
temperatures.
The mid-winter heat wave shattered
three !'"eC{ln:is in Los Angeles Monday.
A high or 95 was the hottest January
reading on record, the overniabf. low
of 65 was the warmes t low, and three
carbon monoxide readings required
precedent-setting alerts at 8:06 a.m. and
7:05 p.m., Monday and again at 8:05
a.m.
Since Orange County's carbon dioxide
ar' us ect
Fairground
Rent Irks
Horse Clubs
A proposed schedule of rental increases
at the Orange CoWlty Fairgrounds has
livestock lovers in league -horse people.
cat people and dog people -and
threatening a boycott.
The situation is further inflamed by
the Mesa Boots and Saddles Club being
Kive n an ed ict to get its rustic chuck
wagon off the proPa'fJ:
DirfetDrs of the S2nd 9 I s t r 1 c t
Agricul-1 Aactatlon meet 'l'llm'll!ay
at 7:30 p.m. in Fair Board offi<.U to
discuss the increased fees.
"They haven 't been established yet,"
emphasizes Fairgrounds Ge ner a I
Manager James E. Port~field.
"Horsefeathers," say horse people, or
words to that effect.
Porterfield also said it ls possible no
action will be taken to adopt the higher
rental and service fees. but equestriana
and equestriennes wil l definitely be there
to see.
"Somelhing's gone wrong over there,"
says Mrs. Pat Wright, of Santa Ana
Heights, a member of Corral SiJ:, a
horse club.
She is also a former member of the
h-fesa Boots and Saddles and enthusiastic
supporter of monthly junior horse showa
(See FAIRGROUNDS, Page ZJ
Youths Declare
Pollution War
Want a clean city?
Try SOAP.
SOAP stands for Stomp Out All PoJlu.
lion , a newly formed communi ty service
club at Costa Mesa High School.
"It has got to work," says student
Larry Rollings, one of th e SOAP leaders.
"It is getting worse every day," he
says regarding pollution.
Beginning Monday, Jan. 25, Rolling
and his partners wlll collect cans and
bottles in a two week campaign, 11.0ckpil-
lng the rtfuse on the campus.
Deposits and other funds from Ole
return of the materials will be donated
to patient programs at Fairview State
Hospital .
DAI LY PILOT ltaff ~
SGT. REGAN ILEFTI, CAPT. GREEN TAKE INVENTORY
Colt• Mesa R.1id Neh Drugs, Burgl1ry Loot, Suspects
Soviet Court Sentences
Ma"le Hijacker to Death
MOSCOW (UPI) -A Soviet court
In Lithuania sentenced a man to death
by nring squad and his pregnant wife
to three years In prison Tuesday for
trying to hijack a Ru ssian airliner to
flee to freedom In the Wesl, dissident
sources said.
The sources said Vitautis Simokaitis,
34 , and his wife, Orazhlna, were sen-
tenced for a Nov. 9 attempted hijacking
of an Aeroflot plane traveling from
Vilnius. the capita l of Lithuania, to the
Lithuanian town or Palanga.
The sources said the Lithuanian couple
WM accused or trying to commandeer
the ·12-pusenger AN 2 plane to Sweden.
The di~nts said , the latest trial
had 11.ttle siml,larny to two previous pro-
secutions; mainly involvtna Soviet Jews,
for plott.lng to hijack· a plane to Sweden
and qten travel to Israel. .
'llley. saJd Slmokaltl> and his wife
arc not Jc .... ·ish and were accused of
actually entering and lrying to seize
the plane . The Jew ish defendants were
charged with only plann ing to hijack
a Soviet airplane, they said.
Simokaitis was accused in the. IQ..day
trial or brandishing a pistol during the
hijack atlempt, acco rding to the sources.
They said he was ove rpowered by the
navigator and the plane landed safely.
During the fighting, they said, Mrs.
Simokaitis allegedly tried to set fire
to the plane. They said she was accused
of pouring kerosene on the noor but
she failed to Ignite ii.
The dissident sources said the couple
can appeal the sentence.s within &even
days.
Powerful Powder Puffers·
Illness Delays
Bribery Trial
In Santa Ana
Pulled From Pilot Pages
Unfortunately, a lot o( thoee Powder
Puff Bawl football pbyen who perlormod
in a FairvleW State Hoapl181 beMflt S.t..
urday ui,ht got cut from the roster.
Fortunately1 it was uninttntlonal.
The girls "' Costa Mesa and Eatanda
high schools whose gamei on two eonMC·
uUve Saturdays collected nearly •1.•
turned out in record 1Umben. · '
So msny dooMd Je"'11 I« lbe beaddn
collillon at Newport llarl>or l!Jtll Sdloolt1 o .. ldaon Field lhat -,, nillrt'1 atory
war too loog for the IJllOI alloited.
The Eltaocia Elglea rualer wu lopped
· rtcht oU. For '1bole retdtrl Interested, here are
lbe -of tbe prb who-In ouch a "l'irlted l!'rformance. .
ARne Lee Mo Olson, ~ ea.-. Debbie Bolian, Cheryl llarller, w.nd,
Ward, Pam Regan, Yvette Gomez, Met.
1111 Synco, Cheryl Tornow eortl lllrfJn.
Jnsky, Gall Gill, .Joan Prentk;, Anne !Are,
MatP,·Geeoe~.
Alao: Ka(lty Trlck!I, .\WU Canner,
J,.. l'fellllce; 'Debbie KOlllOI, Sandra
ICQer, I.Inda. SuUlvtn, Maiy Cini, 111 ..
Un({a Maynard, Jenelle 1 Wallon,. Sheri Si·
Holly T'!'ln.·Chrll\J Blanc:,.Judy
Mona Serr•to. .
were: MldleDe Rllty, Kiiby
llryint, Brenda Wood, Kartn Abna,
Tull Noll, Aone:BOwia, Stella" Arbuckle,
J-Ila-Coro! llobbloo, Carol M17, Dor N•,,_, >fary .. Card, Bnndl
"ood, Pam M\ll'llOCI<; ~I Roie, I.Inda Sullivan, Bn:ndl Kittle, ·Don.a. Shafer,
Calfl1 Bryan\, Janelle "•!ton, Sandra
lldPrz:\ll"' Ward, PatH 0-, Lori Kor· atr, -Serrato, Tlnkar Mudera. Alld allO: Jannie.Moody, Judy Wheeler,
Poula ~I, Doolta January, Jalleol l;la..etloix. Cllrol May, ChrlJty Blanc,
ltariii Abna, 'l\lvla Nole, Debbie Sldy,
Amit Powln, .cmi. lloblo. Holly Terrin,
K1ren LI Fon, Cindee Sawyer.
A defendant's Illness ha1 halted the
Orange County Superior Court trlal of
two men acrosed of attemptin1•to bribe
a Costa Mesa policeman.
Presldeing Judge William C. Spelrt
ldleduled Wednesday for 1,Jutlller liw'-
lng on the delay lfter betn« adVlled
that derend1nt Eucene C. Roodonlo, · 44,
of 2422 E. 22zid St., Ne1'P"fl Bead!,
was confined to a Las · VqU·bolpltal
and cou1d not return to Or•na:e COUnty.
R<mondo wu tO ba+e sooe.on trill
with samuel c. Rooman, fl, o1 mt
Sln BrllO Drlw, ~ Nlpel. Both
men are 8CCUlled of the •ttmnoted
bribery of Costa -~officer Gary Barirlg. .
Barwli hu tea~lfled th.it · bolb men
offered hint 110,000 to plant urcollcl
on • wltneu l:n 1n apcorrdnC aimlnal
irlal lnvolvlng ll<Dbidoc That wt-
Chari" S. Dreyer, n, 'ol I .. -t
LIM, Ll1\ft11 Boch, WU ,named witb
-In ., '°""" Coun!J• °""" Jory lndlclmollt 111epc· Ille tlloft of
llquor valued 11 · 19,00I ll\lm' -11111
night spol>.
measuring equipment faUed 1111 Dec.
1, lbe APCO hn not recorded ~
or that toxic pollutallt emitted by
automcbiles, Camarena said.
He noted that Los Angeles ruchM
the alert stage bee.use P>e .fonnu 100
part.s per million benchmark was low•ed
to SO parts per million.
Presence of carbon monoxide In the
air was logged at S7 parts per million
in Whittier Monday eftning, leadine to
IS.. SMOG, Pqe I)
e
Burglaries
Trio Caught
In Mesa
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot llM Dally 1'1191 ll•ff
A long underworld probe ru.ched a
clima:r today when Costa Mesa police
captured a man C?laracterized in detec-
tive magazines as Mr. Btg on the
Southern California burglary scene.
He and two armed companions -
one a Costa Mesan currenUy fadnl
federll stoclc "'lndle and drug chargea
-were taken into custody without ~
cidenl
One had a loaded, cocbd, .319
automatic plstol tucked 1n hll waistband
wben p-abbed, bu! ·wu qulctlY relllved
of tt.
Police said they have been keeping
Kenneth C. "Superbur&lar" Moran, J?,
ot Whittier, under surveillance for a
Jong time.
He and Edward A. Zuber, 30, of 3073
Yukon Drive, Costa Mesa, plus • third
man who gave three aliases iDd •
Michigan addres,, were arrested at 1:30
a.m. nur Harbor Boulevard and Oliler
Avenue!
Pollce claim a hauJ of heroin, narcotJcs
and stolen audl::>-visual sound equtpment
worth up to $10,000 was confiscated u
evidence.
"There's enough methedrine or 'speed'
here to service every knoWR 'hype•
in Costa Mesa ror a week," said Deteo-
tive Sergeant John Regan, surveying a
table piled with loot.
Moran, Zuber and the John Doe rusped
were booked on • variety of charges,
allegedly following agreement to llell the
assorted loot for c.nly $1,100, inve!tigators
aaid.
Charges lnclude:
-Sale of heroin.
-Sale Of dangeroU& drugs.
-Suspicion of burglary.
-Su&picion or posseulon of stolen pro-
perty.
-Carrying _a concealed weapon.
~ive Captain Robert Green said
the arrest.a could lead to recovery of
additional stolen property, some of which
may not have been reported to
authorities.
"They've &ot a aet ol burglary tools
that won't quit, ... 8lid capt. Green, men-
tioning~ walkie-t.alkiel for c.omranlcaUoa.
with a lookout, ·plutlc ahims for qulcldf
1lipplng loca and· other I-.
Detectives Norm ~· . .nd Bob Lert-
nert let up tba rmdemJul about 10
IS.. Mii, :BIG,J'.111• I)
W•tller ,
From amog to toe. that'• th• 1 wWd' 110111 the onnp Ill~ ·· wilere it'll'be adcte4 tn · t
and Wedne~·momtng. Temp-'
eratures will r1n1• fro1t1 the
,.upper &Os to-the 'cen~I 70t.
IN8IDB ToD~Y
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SAN CLEMENTE COUPLE WERE ABOARD DURING PANCAKE LANDING MONDAY
Mr. and Mrs. RicMrd John.on lnjurttd Sll9htly •• Engine Conks Out Near County Airport
F,..,... P .. e l
FAIRGROUNDS
for which rentals may go up to $125
per day.
"We feel this is outrageous," Mr!.
Wright declared. . _ .
She predicb dog fanciers wfil )Otn
the opposition rather than give in to
a $100 per da y fee imposition -with
a ban on lawn rest.room activtties
and that cal people will also rally to the
cau se.
"This Is not just the horse pe<:iple.
lt's everybody," she explained. charging
that nonprofit groups simply cannot al·
ford such rteep rates. What's more,
they may organize agaiMt. them.
''This I can promise you," she vowed,
saying she will personally sparkplug a
boycott among the cat people, dog people
and horse people.''
"Then what will they do?," she said
ominously.
Mrs. \Vright asserted that you get
more for your money -and less of
that -at other state-owned fairgrounds.
adding that warm and sunny 6mi les
are thrown in free.
"Over at Pomona, they'll do everything
but stand on their ear and stack greued
BBs for $100," aht said.
"Here they charge you $1Z and you
have to cit.an up the horse manure
yourself," Mrs . Wright added.
She also cited sucb incidentals as a
$1 fee for each fairgrounds trash can
u.ed. and $3 for each chair rented, plua
a policy against individual public use
of a park on the grounds for picnics.
Porterfield explained the higher rents
will pay for new equipmenl and services
available to bone ownen1 stabling their
animals at the fiargrounds.
Stabling fees may go up 50 percent.
Crom $10 to $15. he explained.
Mrs. Wright charges that if Fair Board
directors want to incrtase public use
and revenue, they won'l do it by Gqueez-
ing out the Mesa Boots and Saddles
Cub and Its chuckwagon.
Fair directors will have all food service
catered in the future, resulting in the
ban on the chuclcwagon that has served
snacks at horse shows and the fair
it.sell for 21 years,
Roaming Thieves
Strike in Mesa
Roaming burglars 6truck three. spots in
Costa P..tesa Monday, taking more than
$1,000 in cash and jewelry at two homes
and a 5(kent housekey at a third.
Cecil F. Shirk, of 931 Senate St.. told
police someone pried Ydndow lOU\.Tes to
obtain $600 in assorted coi11s and a wed-
ding ring .
Cash and another gold rinii were re-
ported slolen by Lewis Ramirez. of 51•
Tr1verse Dri ve. by someone who entered
via a sliding glass door.
Ramirez:' neighbor, Mr!i. MalHde V.
Gt>rm1ine , of 518 Traverse Drive, said
only a key "·as stolen from her home.
'
DAILY PILOT
OltANOt COoUl P'UILllMING COM•AXT
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Crash Landing Probed
Near County Airport
Air crash investigators continued their
probe today of the crash landing of
an expens ive twin-engine plane near
Orange County airport which caused
minor injuries to a San Clemente in-
dustrial executive and his wife.
Richard M. Johnson, 55, and his wife,
Diane, 41 , required only emergency treat-
ment after the noon crash of their plane
about a mile from the airport landing
strip.
The Johnsons live at 1217 Via La
Jolla. San Clemente.
A spokesman for the Federal Aviation
Administration !!&id Johnson was at-
tempting a landing at the terminal at
12:12 p.m. when the engines of lhe
Cessna 320 F suddenly stopped.
Johnson's attempts to "feather '' the
cralt. in to the terminal fa iled. and
the plane slammed into a plowed field.
The impact tore loose a fuel pod
on one wing tip, sparking a small fire.
The blaze was quickly extinguished by
county fire crews summoned to the scene
by construction workers who were nearby
when the landing occurred.
Other damage to the plane included
bent propellers, and 1 damaged un-
dercarriage.
The workmen assisted Mrs. Johnson
from the downed plane after 11he
reportedly complained of back pains.
Her husband ezlted from the craft
on his own.
The field i.a about 100 yards south
of the Intersection cf Von Karman Drive
and McGaw Street In the Irvine
Industrial Complez.
Tate Trial Jury Listens
To Beatles' Rock Music
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Jury
i1I the Sharon Tate murder trial began
its third full day of deliberations today.
with 1 session of listening t~ rock music
cf the BeaUes.
The panel asked to hear the untitled
album whi cb the state 6ays Charles
Manson played obsessively in the sum-
mer cf the slayings.
Songs on the 1968 album figured heav ily
in testimony at the seven-month-old tr ial.
Witnesses said Manson thought he beard
the Beatles predicting 1 bl1ck·white con-
From Page J
MR. BIG ...
p.m. Monday, then called in others.
Moran. a salesman for Carborundum
Corporation of Los Angeles, Zuber. and
the yet-unidentified suspect are all held
in lieu of $50,000 bail.
Zuber made the news recently whe n
indicted by a federal grand jury on
charges of involvement in transfer and
sale of stolen se curities in Texas and
l.lichigan.
He was already awaiting tr i11l following
his earlier arrest in the mid1ve st on
charges of smuggling one lon of marl·
juana .
Lawmen are known to ha ve kept an
eye on his Yukon Drive re~idcnce, head-
quarters or a business called Top Line
Industries and engaged in a variety
of activities.
Zuber was in Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital when indicted late la st su mmer,
recovering from a severe leg fra cture
suffered in a motorcycle accident.
Authorities were uncertain today of
the statw of the federal charges which
were brought against a number or in·
dividuals from Tezu to Michigan and
New York.
Police said Moran made the front
page of ' popul1r detective magazine
last March, cbanicterizing him as the
Nwnber One Southland expert In
burglary.
They 1ald one jail trusty -doing
time himself for a lesser burglary -
waa enchanted to find a celebrity
wtmate whtn Moran and his companions
...,.. booked . M~~e Fliers
Escape Crash
• Two Marlnt pllots from El To"' MCAS
-Injury Mond•y·wtien thttr
P'4 J>butOm jtt cnsbed three miles
from tlrle Lemoore Naval Air Statelon.
A ipoban•a from El Toro 1aid both
men, LU. E. J. Turner, 24, and S.
W. Plctrell, 15, are back on duty today.
Bo\b are rt:sldent.1 of Tustin.
Tbe av latora were on 1 training Oight
when an undisclosed m1JruncUon caused
the plant lo plow Into 1 field short
ol tne Lemoor~ runway. Both men
ejected aafcly befort the ' crash .
Came of the crash is under In·
vaUption today, the apokesman nid.
flict In songs such as "Heller Skelter,''
''Piggies,'' "Blackbird '' and "Revolution
9."' The state s.ay8 Manson ordered
followers to kill in erder to trigger
such a race war.
The judge granted the juror!' request
Monday and ordered 1 record player
sent in for today's session.
When they recessed Monday, jurors
had deliberated 13 hours and 45 minutes.
Manson and three wo men members
of his hippie-style clan are charged with
murder-conspiracy in seven slayings.
Superi or Court Judge Charles Older
refused another jury request , for a night
visit to the scenes of lhe August 1969
killings, Miss Tate's plush Benedict Can·
yon mansion and the home of we.althy
ma rke t owners Leno and Rosemary La
Blanca.
The prosecution opposed allowing the
visits, saying it would reopen the trial
to new evidence. The de.feo.se. favor ing
the visits. moved to reopen lhe trial.
The judge den ied the motion.
Mesa Embezzler
Faces Jail Tern1
A 90-day Orange County Jai l term
has been ordered for a Cos ta Mesa
woman who pleaded guilty in Orange
Cnunty Superior Cou rt to embezzlement
charges filed after an audit of books
of the Newport Shores Company.
Judge James F. Judge set the jail
term for Norma Ruth Singer. 48, of
2134 Iris Place and ordered the book-
keepe r to serve five years probation.
A condition of that probltlon is that
Mrs. Sillier must not write 1ny checks.
Mrs. Singer was t.rnployed a 1
bookkeeper for the Newport Be1ch firm
In October of 1969 when auditoNi noti~
discrepancies in the company's financial
records. police reports indicate,
It was later alleged that she wrote
and cuhed cashier's check! tol.llling
f18,000 and pocketed the procteds.
Electric Rate
Hike Approved
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Califor-
nia Public UUUUss Commlllion today
ll'"•nted Pacllic Oaa Ir Electric Co. 1
SSI .5 minhxt lncrtase In elilctrlcity rites,
tbt first aucb incre1ae in more than 12
ytlrt.
The new rates will meaa 1n locreue
fll about f7 cents per month for UM! 1v.
er11e domestlc. user.
The PUC rejeeted the company•, re-
quest for a ratt of return rrom 7.1 to I
percent. whkh wookl hive brou&ht 1n
annu1I revenue boo!t of mere than $f1
m1111on.
The co mmission lnstt1d adopted lll
1t1U'.1 recommendation that 1 7.5 puce.nt
retu 111 would bt reasona ble.
Move B1·ings
U.S. Cutoff
Of Weapons
WASmNGTON (UPI ) -1'he ·u nited
State.a, which ba1 cut off military sales
to Ecuodar In a fishing-r!ghU disput e.
reported today that the Ecuadorians had
seJzed four more U.S. fl!hing vessel:ii
11ince Monday for a total of 12 in the
past eight day1.
"This ill the largest number in recent
years taken over that length or time,''
said a State Department official who
rnade the disclosure based on report!!
lrom California tuna induslry spokesmen.
The State Department said that during
the same period Ecuador also had seized
the Juna, a ship owned by an American
Tuna Company but sailing under the
Panamanian flag, and a Japanese fish-
ing boat.
The United St1tea announced Monday
that it was denying Ecuador any further
military 1id and might take further
action including 1us:pension of economic
assistance.
Those were lhe latest developments
In a long-running feud between the Latin
American na tion, whic h claims a 200-mile
territorial sovereignt y over the rich
Pacific fishing waters efl its coa st, and
the United States which recognizes only
a IZ.mile limit.
In the latest flareup, Ecuadori an gun.
boats have seized the 0 .S. vessel s on
poaching charges. At last report, three
of tHe boat!! had been released after
pa ying fines totaling $133,000.
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
s u m m o n e d Ecuadorian Ambassador
Carlos Manlilla-Ortega to the State
Department Monday afternoon to inform
him o fthe action. A spokesman said
Rogers told the ambossador that ''other
legal provi.sions relating to such seizures
are being reviewed urgently and that fur -
ther action by this government under
pertinent l8ws could not be excluded."
Last year. Ecuador received $2 million
in U.S. military aid . The size of thi s
year's program was not available
although it was understood Ecuador plan·
ned to buy some helicopters and other
aircraft from the United Stales.
Ecuador also has sought credilll for
overhauling some 11hips and these were
1uspended as well. Six of the Ecuadorian
Navy's 14 combat ind patrol ships came
from the United States but th ese have
not been used against American fishing
vessels, U.S. officials said.
Stale Department spokesman Robert
.T. McCJoskey said the United States
currently provides $29 million a year
in economic aid to Ecuador. Although
S.1.5 million already has been committed
this year, he said the State Department
is considering suspending the remainder.
McCloskey told newsmen, '"our purpose
In taking this action is not so much
retribut.ion or revenge as it is ll: right
to protect the rlghlll of American
fishermen In these waters."
Discussion Set
On Fire Merger
Suggested merging of Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach police and f i r e
departmenb to serve the entire Harbor
Area as a single agency ~ill be rc,1iewed
Thursd1y.
This is the concept to be discussed
at a 7;30 a.m. breakfast meeting of
CHART, the Citiz.en.s Harbor Are a
Research Team
Speakers wi lt be attorney Jack Hall
and industrial business manager Galen
Coffman , both CHART members who
have studied the various aspects,
Tile meeting will be 111 the Costa
Mesa Golf <ind Coun try Cl ub.
..
I....
Hot Old Time
Fireman Help& Firehouse Raider&
Usln1 1. fireman as an undercover
aaenl, Cost1 Mt.a police raided tht
P'treboule nudlt bar qain e1rly today
and allegedly had 1 hot tfme btfort
it was ove r.
Fire &Jppression Engineer Jim ruchey.
26. tnspected the show at the bottomless
nightclub at 177 E. 17th St., then left
via a ~ide door to signal waitlna officer•.
Firehouse employe Dennis C. Perklnl,
2~, aHeaedly ordered him to shut the
door, bringing officers Phil Donohue and
Owen Kreza at 1 dead run l.rom across
the street.
Pnllce said Perkins blocked the door
and hsd to be hauled eut nf the W'IY,
leadiRg to his arrest on auspl clon ol
interferin& wltA pcllce ln tht UM •f
cluly.
"Tbtl belna the am1t Cll the nud•
dancer,'' aCC(lrdi.1)1 to lhtir report,
Richey then si1ned 1 complaint ag1inst
HoUy Moore, 23, of •tollywood, wbo was
booked on suspicion of indecent expo:s,ure.
Tbe red-haired fire insPector 11id ·her
act offended him, based on aUegedly
lewd movemenl..!l and sugges tive poaea
against at lea~t 4 Yi background jukeboic
tunes.
Miss Moore, a five-loot, 100 !)OUnd
redhead herself. didn't hive much ht
sa.y before being booked into Orange
County Jail , with $625 bail &el
Mesan Asks Councilmen
To Act on 'Throwaways'
A Cost11 Mesa man upset over .solicited
advertising malt!rials complained to the
City Council Monday night 11nd won ss-
surances that offici als aren't ignoring the
problem.
Harry Ruper. who said he lives on
Ral eigh Place., charged thal he has asked
on such publication to cease deliv~ry with-
out satisfaction .
"It all started with lhe Mesa News ."
said Roper in re fe rence to one such
throwawa y.
"This is unsolicited pollution ," he con-
tinued.
"We already have enou gh solicited pol~
lotion."
City Altorney Roy June told Roper an
ordinance patterned on a controvenial
law upheld in a Fullerton court caJe in-
volving the suspended Sunday Mail cir·
cular is now in the works.
He -also suggested a ~gisttred letter be
:;ient to the Mesa News, opening the w1 y
for a trespassing complaint if it continued
delivery after being notified to .stop.
C.Ouncilman Wllllam L. St. Clair asked
Roper If he raised the J11ue ba~d on an
application by the Independent American
Bus Trip Slated
From Mesa Hall
A chartered bus will pull out of Costa
Mesa Thursday at 6 a.m., bound for
Yuma, Ariz., and city officials hope
all the sealll will be filled .
Downtown property or business owners
and other interested citizens will be
ta king a look at a redevelopment project
similar to that C.Osla Mesa is initiating .
"ApparenUy thelr.J Isn't as successful
as they'd hoped and we don't want
to make the same mistakes ,'' explains
City Councilman William L. St. Clair.
Price of the trip is 110 per person
and if you go. says Councilman St.
Clair, don 't plan to be back before
10 or 11 p.m., because you won't be.
The bus leaves from city hall .
Right Lawyers,
Wrong Group
A story which appeared In lhe Daily
Pilot identified attorneys Sylvia Ellison
anq Caruthers Berger. who are represf'n -
ling Cost a f\.fesa resident Ve I m a
~,engelkoch in her federal c<>urt 11uit
ag ainst California labor la ws.
~1 iss Ellison and Mr s. Berger are
members of the Human Rights fnr
Wnmcn orga nization. They were er-
roneously idrntif ied as be.ing members
of a legal committee of the National
Or l"Ulnization of Women.
Thl' Daily Pilot regrel~ this error.
Past Office considered earlier ln the
meeting.
The request for permi.!lsion to oper1le
was tabled until the firm provides re-
quested information about what it lntend.!I
lo do in the wa y of unsollcitecl advertl.s·
ing.
Roper sa id his concern began with the
Mesa News.
"I find it interesting that you object to
lhe News, but you don't object lo the
Pilot Advert iser," remarked SL Clair.
"I objttt to that too." Roper replied.
No ti~ element was proposed on the
law city offic ials say I!! being drafted,
but June is ba sing it on the Fullerton
code section challenged by the Sunday
Mail upheld in 1 federal court.
From Pqe 1
SMOG ...
Lo.s Angeles County'g Issuance of the
alert which ask!: motorlsta to voluntarily
abandon U!lf! of their vehicles.
Orange County recently establi!hed 1
method whe re ozone re8dlngs Ir. ei:ce.s.s
of .35 parts per million would b,. relayed
from the APCD to the Co unty School•
office. A spokesman for the County
superintendent of schools a1id no .w1ming
was issued yesterday.
The unusual presence of smog aJong
the Orange Coast resulls from th1
temperature inversion layer and winds
that have brought warm inla nd air to
~ area.. A storm condition off the
coast prevents cold air from moving
down from the Pacific Northwest, the
National Weather Service 1a1d.
Yet. Dr. Cunnlngham W'IS unaware
of the .sclnJI smog warnk>I system er
how he 'd get the word to rurtail phyalc1J
education activity.
"I don't kn ow how we Rel the word .''
he said, Indicating the county schoo~
offi ce had not informed Newport-Mea1
officials about smog warnings.
..We have a fan-out telephone rel1y
system to warn principals," Cuonillgham
said. Getting the school smog word from
the county seems to be what's lacking.
Allen said his judgment to call off
physical activities was a "matter of
sen.sing how bad It was. It was IO
thick I couldn't .see Pacific Coast
Highway, just below the school ,"
Ed Camarena. APCD engineer, said
lhat while an ozone cou nt of .20 was
forecast for today. "with unusual con·
ditions such as we've bee n experiencing,
that can be way off."
He said continuaiion of the surface
Inversion of air mig ht bring tod ay's
reading to a level similar to Mond1y'1
--~ part! per million ozone.
Since Dec. I, "'hen its carbon dioxide
measuring equipment "broke do"·n" the
cnunty has not measurtd amount! of
that toxic auto l'Xhaust emiUant · that
led lo lwo record-breaking first stage
alerts in Los Angele~ County .
SEASAME STREET
Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn 't
had a carpet installation by Alden's.
In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach on d Huntington Beach.
One neighbor tells another until often we hove worked in every
home on o block.
The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each custo ~1er happy. Ask
YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her ho m'e. (If we haven't,
bring her in with you .)
.--------, lANTA AMA. OUNel
NITIN C. ...
ALHN'S
llD HILL CAI:""
& DIAPlllD
11)74 '"'-, ...... c.Af. . .... , ..
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lac•lltfa Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4131
HOUltS: Mon. Thru Thura., f to S:JO -,rl., t fll f -Stt., 9:30 te 5
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Today's ~lnl
N.Y. St.eeks
voi.:. 64, NO. 16, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORN~ TUESDAY, J)l..NUARY 19, 1971 TEN CENTS
Council _ to Get Earful on Loudspeaker I·ssue
, I
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of Ille DM!l' .. Ii.I SllH
Appeal! from two fronts for city
pennission lo use sound equipment on
public property for relig ious gathering.!
face San Clemente City Councilmen
Wednesday.
An angry Dr . Cati Mcintire, the ron-
servalive radio evangelist from New
Jersey -is expeeted to confront coun-
cilmen and seek the rescinding Or an
earlier action denying the minister the
use of Old Plaza park for a rally sup-
porting total victory in Vietnam.
Immediately after the Mcintire ap-
~ spokesmen for Youth Missions
and United Ev~al Churches wilt
make their request to use amplif'y\ng
equipment al an Easter Weekend
observance at Trafalgar Beach.
'The Mcintire appearance, however, i!
·expected lo dominate much of the sub-
ject.
Early last week Dr. Mclnlire took
out a parade permit form for the
marching. segment of his planned Jan.
30 a~ity, but angrily charged that
the city had hatched a plot to deprive
him of his right to free speech.
In a muddled action two weeks ago
DAILY f'ILOT llaft f'Mle
San Clemente Find
These intriguing shapes uncovered during excavation Jus t inland of
San Clemente were at first thought to be fossils, possibly tbe remains
of some large creature. EXP.Cris said Monday, however, they are ac-
tu.ally sandstone shaped millenia ago by wave action.
Mi ss ion Viejo Residents
Probe Ser vice Tax Funds
Mission Viejo homeowners at a general
meeting Thursday will examine-how the
county spends ap proximately $225,000 in
8peci11l service area ta:x funds.
Mike Shearer, president of the Mission
Viejo Homrowners' Association, has in-
vite<i all interested homeowners to attend
the 7:30 p.m. meeting at Mission Viejo
High School.
Mission Viejo residents make up county
special service area 9 which Is called
Qso Valley DisLriCt. It is the !arrest
in acreage and has the large!rt budget.
The service district was formed so
that residents of ,unincorporated com-
mwiitli! coula provide funds for parka ·
and lan<!scaping, m:reational fadl!~es.
We•t•er
From sffiog to fog, that's the
'wOrd along the Orange · Co1-5t,
iwhe.re It'll be socked in tonight
and Wednesday morning. Temp-
,teratures will range from the
t uppcr 60s to the central 706.
INSm E TODAY
Efid of th• year economic
.r•cordl show 1910 wru tht worll ~~tOr lince 1947 for com-bi~d receuitm a'nd inflation m
tlu .lh&ited Sl4Us. Stt 1tor~
potJt s
...... 1 .. 1, --. ,..,.... ._ ... --. .,.. .. ,....., lf
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~treet maintenance, fire protection and
capital projects.
In Mission Viejo the owner of a $30,000
house contributes about $40 per yea r
for these functions.
Some Mission Viejo residents have
been concerned about the quality of
the job being done by the county in
landscaping, according lo Shearer.
In November three bomeowners, Bill
Gardner, Louis Learns, and AI Wlllema
induced a landscaping expert to tour
the county-mainlallied areas of the com-
munity. They found that many of the
slopes, median strips and parks were
oot b!e~ prepeJb maintained.
Sheartr said 11\e committee contacted
Buck , Weave.r. o( the C.Owity Roads
depal'tment who ls In charge of landscap-
ing maintenance. Weaver lmmedistely
reiponded. to a long lilt of suggested
improvemenb.
The Homeowners Association Is now
seeking volunteers who live near county·
mai(l.tained areas to supervise the upkeep
of Janda~plng of these properties.
Vohmtten :will be called · upon at the
general meeting.
~ing if.he ·meeting the homeowners
lwi!l also dllcttss the formatloa of an
advieory board for the Oso Valley
District to advlae the County Board Of
Supervilon on how the tliltrict's tu
money sbould be 1pe.nt.
Alto on u.e~ageoda will be a discussion
ol wi.t the community should strive I? aOconlpliJll during the coming year.
' N'arcoti~. Stolen -
' t • I Fr.om ·~ ·'P-hartnacy
More than '3llO..porthirt .lwd narcotla
was -~~ming from a Ganlen G-, p>lloo rep.n.ct,·
Off""". ;jbi·-. forced open
• •*1'6-in · at Jerry's Grove
Hll'bor P.blnnicr;-. 1Palm St. The
breakin IHlllAld ,an altrm bell b\lt
did ndt frllld*> all Ille bllrg!an, olllcen
aakf. _
">
councilmen refused ID ~nclion the rslly
and denied the use of any sound ampli·
fying equipment.
The youth activity for Easter weekend
Is planned for three days, April 9, 10
and 11 on the public beach .
John D. Langley of 103 Calle Seguro,
San Clemente, is making the request.
In it he said the services would com·
memorate Good Friday and Easter
sunrise. The Friday event is scheduled
for noon to 3 p.m. and 7:30 to 10
p.m.
On Saturday Langley plans to use
the equipment from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
Enter morning, the services would be
cooducted from 6 lo 8 a.m.
Other action facing the council at the
7:30 p.m. meeting includes :
-A public hearing to consider the
appeal of pl8nning commission denial
for an overheight and oversize pole sig n
at the Lerner Oil station al 621 S.
El Camino Real. Commissioners flatl y
denied the request for a sign 53 feet
taller than the code allows. Councilmen
have not overruled such a denial ror
a sign exception in many months.
-DetaJUng by City Manager Ken Carr
of plans for a pilot program for
newspaper collection for recycling. Re-
quests have come almost weekly that
the city set up such a plan. Several
local groupii have berome involved in
the collection idea.
-A report by Carr on progress of
an agreement allowing several San
Clemente High School studmts lhe use
of a platform beneath the main level
of the San Clemente pier for marine
ecology experiments. The project has won
support of councilmen and planning com-
missioners. A formal agreement must
be completed however, before the ex-
periments could begin .
Ecuador Seizes 4
-A fprmal ordinance calling for the
parM and recreation bond issue wh1ch is
expected to' seek: nearly $1 million for a
br~dth of parks and recreation projects,
including the new community clubhouse,
a youth recreation cent.er at North Beach.
and other similar projects.
-A request by the Junior All American
Football program for a permit to lell
fireworks in the city during the
Independence Day season. The stand is
pl&fllled for the market Basket parking
lot in Shoreclilfs.
More
American Fishing Boats
Move Brings
U.S. Cutoff
Of Weapo11s
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United
States, which has rut olf military salt.s
to Ecuodar in a Lishinl-rightJ . di@utc.,
reported today that 'the Ecuador Lana hid
eeized. fom n1Me ~.&.-fishing veaeb
since Monday for a total of 12 in lhe
past eight days.
"This is the largest number in recent
years taken over thet length of time,"
said a State Department official who
made the disclosure based on reports
from California twia industry spokesmen .
The State Department said that during
the same period Ecuador also had seiied
the Jasna, a ship owned by an American
Tuna Company but sailing under the
Panamanian flag, and a Japanese fi'sh-
ing boat.
Da'll.,.Y PllOT ""',.... The United Slate! announced Mdnday
th at it was denying Ecuador any further
military aid and might take further
action including suspension of economic
assistance.
SAN CLEMENTE COUPLE WAS ABOARO DURING PANCAKE LANDING .MONDAY
Mr. and Mtt. Richard John ~n lnjuritd Slig htly •• Engln•.Co,1k1 Out Near County Airport
Those were the latest developm~~
fn a long-running feud between the. Lalin
American nation, which claims a 7.00-mile
territorial sovereignty over the 1 ich
Pacific fishin g waters off it. coast, and
the United States which recognizes only
a 12-milc limit.
Crash Landing Probed
In the latest flareup , Ecuadorian gun-
boats have seized the U.S. vessels 'Jn
poaching charges. At last report, tJ:tree
of the boats had been released after
pavi ng lines totaling $133,000.
1Vear Count y Airport
Secretary of Stale William P. Rogers
5 um mo n e d Ecuadorian Ambassador
Carlos Mantilla-Ortega to the State
Depa rtment Monday afternoon to Inform
him o fthe action . A spo kesman said
Rogers told the ambossador that "other
legal provisions relating to such seizures
are being reviewed urgently and that fur-
ther action by this government under
pertinent laws could not be excluded ." ...
Last year, Ecuador received $2 million
lri U.S. military aid. Thf' size vf thill
year's program was not available
although it was understood Ecuador plan-
ned to buy 80tlle helicopters and other
aircraft from the United States.
Ecuador also hu sought Cl'fldib for
overhauling some ships and these were
suspended as well. Si!· of the Ecuadoria.1
Navy's 14 combat and patrol ships came
from the Unit.et! States but these. have
not been used againlt American flshlna
vessels, U.S. officials said.•
'
Air crash Investigators continued the ir
prob! today of the crash landing of
an expensive twin-engine plane near
Orange County airport which caused
minor injuries to a San Clemente in-
dustrial executive and his wife.
Ri cha rd M. Johnson, 55, and his wife ,
Diane, 41. required only emergency treat·
u1ent after the noon crash of their p!sne
about a mile from the airport Landing
sLrip .•
The John.!Ons live at 1217 Via La
Jolla, San Clemente.
A 1pokesman for the Federal Aviation
Korean Goes Berser k
SEOUL (UPI ) -A South Korean
marine sergeant went bereserk, killed
six persona and injured four others and
then shot himself to i!eath Monday nig~t
at a marine: camp ln the KlmP.O area
IS mllfll west of Seoul, military officials
said today. ·
A t Nixon Invitation \
Administration said Johnson was at-
tem pting a landing at the terminal st
12:12 p.m. when the engines of the
Cess na 320 F suddenly stopped .
Johnson's atterripts to "feather'' the
craft in to the terminal failed , and
the plane sla mmed into a plowed field .
The impact tore loose a fuel pod
on one wing tip. sparking a small fire.
The blaze was quickly exUngulsbed by
county fire crews summoned to the scene
by construction workers who were nearby
\\.·hen the landing occurred.
Other damage to the plane included
bent propellers. and a damaged un-
dercarriage.
The workmen assisted Mrs. Johnson
from the downed plane after she
reportedly complained of back pain!.
Her husband exited from the craft
on his own.
'lile field la about tOO yards !otlth
of the lnteraectlon of Von Karman Drive
and McGaw Street in the li'vine
Industrial Complex.
'
. ,
\ '
Cle·mentean Talks on U.
Berniece W. Harr ls of San ~ 1ttlre United Sflta of Ameriea, llDct
was one of 20 cltlzeN ot tbe wetUn ·lhe pm11dpated In the fqilndq "iillloril
stale• who tutlfied"" bwl~ ol Prfal. 61 the 'UN in s.n·irr-..C. fnllMS'. ' ·
dent Nl>on In 1-lOP di tM unu.d !!: her pieefttalloil· l!J'>, Hm11 ~
NaU-In Son Flaodaiio riot .w.et. ' UJe Uolted'$tata to uoe' lllO l\llJ. por..ua1
The beorlrip, ~ -y In ol lbe' Uiilted Natlonl Clianir. She ' Aid
... era1 oediON o1 tllO -·Stata that tho srear _., ~~ 'tbe
by Ambaaad<r HmrY Cobdf~. win United Statel ml lbe 'SoVIJ(UitJOn .m
provide matalll tor • a .,..pprailal· ~ Ille U.N. r•the• ,ihan utllliing
o1 tbe effecU-or the Unit«! Natlcn u u lhe '""""' o1 Ibo charter eo-.. d the United Statet participation •i vllloned. ' ·
the organiiatlon. . __ 1 .• "l!Pth t¥ ·cr!Ua and lbe ~ales
Mn. Harrll was .. 1ected to ....,, •crM1.§.·~t!oii·lo Ille UN .-mn
because of her 25 yaars of lea~ I ... ~-'NallOt\i for J.illlh( to lec:1u-o
on th• local, .Ute and naUoital' leVel. lho Doo<lo''--'·fot;rlildf H •n c:realell.'1
of the United N1U0111 A"°"I-' of ·Mio[ '!laltli uted the United Statet ,
to toe tbe IJ'Ji\lall've ·In • tulfUllnC tbl
proviliona of the cbarler to make Ole
1J~Nillons atroi>( '°""8!I to IOCilro . . . •tbe t ~ I 1 I ' • • I
After l't<Ofdlng· of hearl0,' t..umony,
"1 48 'member Pretldent'I Commisalon
wUI undertOki ' the · tUt chorled to It
·by President Nhion ''lo lliggtst· new ·
inlU11tlvea and refomu.'' .
A~ Uidgo,' .... king a ""'t' ~lion of Oplnk>n, said, )•~e ftnt 'the
-le 61 tho United Slafa •to 11"1
-cftucliiniil\d cOnmlcll•• .ldeola ·~t, !be Unl)td Nallo111, oo ,that the
commltaiOn can 111akt drOl'ic perauuJvt
ret0mmendatlona to the President."
1
'
Capo Beach Vet
Killed in-Africa
Highwa y Mishap
A Capi~trano Beach veterinarian, Or.
John llillstrom, was kl.lied In a highway
r rash on the slopes of Africa's Mt.
Kilimanjaro ·early today where he ' was
a volunteer in the U.S. AID program.
While spokesmen in Washington, D.
C.. bad little specific informaUon on
the fatal mishap, Jack Thomas, a State
Department Pfi!:S8 aide, said D r •
HUlstrom, the father of five children,
v.·as workin& on a dairy project 1n
Arusha. a small clly In Tanzania.
The veterinarian sutfertd severe head
Injuries when his vetrlcle d'Ubed on
a road about 100 miles north of DJr
Es Salaam·, the Tanziriian caplfal.
Hillatrom ·was .fushed to a hospital
at Tanga. reJP1g. aaJd, but never regain-
ed consciousdeu. '
Thomas sa,id 1pecifjc Jocal details on
Dr. Hlllatrom, 9'hole age waa gtven
as about so· in in.lti•I reports, were nbt
Immediataly available.
''Our Tanzania delt said he Wll
highly respected and a'ppreclat e;d
member of the. Am team in Africa~"
the aide oaid. \
Ex·pro ·Coach
Slatt>.s Talk . . . I ,..._ jll'O(eAiooW t-11 coacb II.
J. ,.,.Cllp\)er" SmUh wm ~"at ..
IApna,Beoch ~r.61 .~ bi:eU:IMl W.edlii1.:y at 7:30 a.;a i-
tbe lfof<1 Loguno: • . ' '
Smllli;" ' wtiO r coid>od' 1111 ~ v..-Of tilt NotloMI F-1 ~
in ,...,, Will ....... "Alalotlot ...
Anomallell" Smltb·playtd lc>otball ....,, -·-!or Notn Dome ·dllrN tHe ..... fD;1 and later became ~
dlNittCt' at vmanova Unl'•e lit)'. 1 Ht U.
ooce touclll • al U.. Unlvant\1. 61 sdla
Cl1n1 ·Law -· ' ._,.._ fiJr Illa bnUful "!llr
be made by caUJnc tilt ·-tlllce at 414·1018.
l
I
--
I DAILY .. LOT SC
!!! Da1• to Move
Capo Families
Given Reprieve
Several San Juan Capistrano families
Uvinl In a condemned labor camp have
been given ~ dlys Jn which kl find
new homes.
' 'Ibe City Ccuncil Yoled unanimously
ltfonday to allow the families to remain
.a while longer despite the faet that
the city b liable for any aecldent.1 which
might occur u a result of the condition
of the dwellings.
At the end of lhe 90 days the property
·Police Bribe
Trial Slowed
By Illness
A defendant's illnesa bes halted the
Orange C.ounty Superior Court trial of
two men accused of attempting to bribe
I. Costa Mesa policenian.
Presideing Judge Wiiiiam C. Speirs
lche-0.uled Wednesday for a further hear-
ing on the delay after bting advised
fhat defendant Eugene C. Rondondo. 44,
of 202 E. 22nd St ., Newport Beach.
Wal cohflned to a Lu Vega.a hosflital
and t'OUld not return to Orange County.
Rondondo was to have gone on trial
.,.ith Samuel C. Rosman .. 27, of 29351
San Briso Drive, Laguna Niguel. Both
men are accused of the attempted
bribery of Costa Mesa off.icer Gary
Barwlg.
Barwig has terti.fied that both men
offend him $10,000 to plant narcotics
on a witness in an upcoming criminal
trial involving Rondondo. That witnes.s.
Charles S. Dreyer. 32, of 1645 Sunset
Lane, Laguna Beach, was named with
Rondondo in an Orange County Grand
Jury indictment alleging the theft of
liqllOt valued at '25.000 from coastal
night spots.
Both men are aCC'llled of attempted
bribery of a policeman, conspiracy to
lallely arnst and tumllhing dangerous
drugs. Thole drugs -1.:.00 barbiturate
tablets -w ... allqedly found by Borwig
lut April 3 in a car driven by Dreyer.
Roodondo aod Roam.an are free on
bail.
Sentence Given
In Laguna Heist
A Santa Ana man wbo conleued to
tbe holdup tut June tf of the Jolly
Roger restaurant in Laauna Beach hu
been sentenced to one year to life in
state prbon.
<>ranee County Superior· Court Judge
Byron K. McMillan Imposed that term
on Benjamin Arthur Franklin, 35, after
reductio11 of charges from rirst to second
dogr .. robbery.
Police aid Franklin took '2:,814 from
the restaurant at 400 S. Coul Highway
after forcing an employe at gunpoint
to hand over the money.
The emp)oye told offic.ers that Franklin
met him outside the rutaurant. hultled
him inside with a gun at his back
and demllllded all the: money on the
premises..
Motorcyclist Killed
In Freak Accident
SANTA FE SPRINGS, (UPI )
-A motorcyclist died Monday of injuries
auffered wtien r;truck by a hood which
bAd blown off an automobile on the
San Gabriel River Freeway.
Dead w11 Elbert L. Setzer, 29, El
Monte. Tbt drlver of the car Wll!i not
btld.
DAILY PllOl ....,.,, ..... --.,__ " ........... ...... ,..,.
S. CZ a
0......01 (.OAIT '"'11LllMIHO Q)Mlll't
RoMrt N. Weo4
Prallfollt W ........,..
J •• .-~-~~ Vlt• ,.,.. .. , ..... M-.w
Tho_.,, ICol'ril .. , ..
TkM•• A. M11"'r11e M_....,
lldt1"1 I'. Hel
a.u111 ~ c..ir unw -Olt'9MOM:•w.t alJ ......
""""' ... di: m 1 w.1 .. ...,. ............ UIUM ... UI: tu Jlerol! A-Hllll"""" htdl: 11111 hKll ..,,,..,.,..
.. n '""'*""' *" Mwlll II (Miine II.Ml
owner. Mrs. Lillian Zaenglein a f
Pasadena must belin to remove the
dwellings or the county bulldin& depart·
menl will do it for her and send her
the bill.
The iSBUe brought out in the public
hearing was not the removal of UM!:
buildings, which moet parties a.greed
had to be done. but r•ther who was
responsible for relocating the famllies.
The Zaenglelns placed the.
responsibility on the city but Councilman
Ed Chermak denied assertion.
"The responsibility lies with the people
who allowed this development in the
first place," he said. ··tr the realdents
have Allowed these buildi.ngJ t o
deteriorate then the responsiblllly is two-
fold. It lies with the Zaengleins who
allowed this to continue and with
residents who didn't make im-
provements," he SAid.
Albert Nelson, Assistant Director of
the Building Department, testified that
there are raw sewage on the property,
electrical outlets without covers, sagging
roofs, no foundations and other hazards.
Bill Reid. a local rancher who leased
the property from the Zaengleins up to
Dec. 31 and subleased lo the families
said he didn't think the dwellings were
as bad as the building inspector reported.
Reid said the buildings were SO ye1rs
old and there was no building code
when they were constructed. "They've
lasted SO yea rs so why are they unsafe
now?" he asked. "The wiring is poor
but it works. he plumbing isD't up
to code but it could be fixed . These
people have no place to go. To them
this is home. Their standards aren't
the aame."
Reid said claims that he had made
loll! of money on the property were
false. He said one family lived there
23 years and hadn't paid a dime.
Mrs. Zaenglein's husband retorted that
they certainly hadn't collected rent from
any of the families and the responsibility
was Reid's who had subleased the pro-
perty knowing its condition. "We knew
nothing of these conditions until three
months ago," be said.
Mrs. Zaenglein added that while the
people remain they are no~ to pay rent
to anyone. Reid countered that they
hadn't paid since December and he has
kept the utilities connected "out of the
goodness of my beart."
•·1 feel sorry for these people but
the council can't 11\t here and asrume
responsibility for babysitting them," said
Councilman Chermak. ''The council has
been put on the spot. I doubt if honest
efforts to relocate have been made by
the people themselves.
Councilman Jim Thorpe said he felt
sure the people bid been seek.Ing homes
but cbup housing in Capistrano is almost
unknown. He added that the council
has a moral responsibility to the people
who can't afford to live elsewhere but
also lo their children who should not
~main in those dwellings in unsafe,
unhealthy conditions.
In asking for the moratorium on car·
rying out the demolition, he called on
the public lo le11d their a!.!llstance to
the five-families who !!'till remain en
the land.
There's No B usiness
Li ke Snow Business
BUDAPEST (UPI) -Two BudApesl
streetcar snow workers who had an
idea how to avoid work on a ro\d night
havt. been sent to jail for one year .
The snow cleaners met tv.·o girls. told
them they were plalnclothelf policemen
and that they su spected them of pro-
stitution .
"If you will do the snow shoveling
and , in addition. be nice to us. we
will not report you to our headquarters.''
they told the girls. i'he girl! Umidly
aiueed. but tht ca!le came btfore court
when the men boasted about their ad·
venture.
UPI T ....... te
ELECTED HOUSE SPEAKER
Oklthoma'• Rep. Albert
Carl Albert
Chosen New
Hou se Leader
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Democrat!!
overwhelmingly selected Rep. Carl Albert
of Oklahoma today to be House speaker
but split sharply on election of a floor
leader to replace him in the 9 2 n d
C.Ongress.
Albert. 62. a party loyalist with a
liberal voting record, won over Rep.
John Conyers. a fourth term black from
Detroit who said Albert had failed t&
display leadership qualities required ef
a speaker.
Albert won over Conyers 220 lo 20.
Albert. whose selection by t he
Democrats will be formally ratified by
the full House Thursday, when the new
Congress convenes, succeeds retired Rep.
J ohn W. McCormack of Massachusetts
who had served as speaker since 1962.
During that period, Albert was party
floor leader. Five candidates were seek·
ing election a\ a closed Democratic
caucus lo that post to succeed Albert.
A new party whip also must be chosen
-a choice ll!Ually made by the !!peak.er
and leader -to replace Rep. Hale
Boggs of Louisiana, ooe ef the ron·
le.slants for leader.
Prior lo selecting Albert, on the way
lo building a new leadership tum. the
Democratic et1ngressmen had tossed out
Rep. Dan Rostenkowskl of lllinols, known
a.s Chicago Mayor Richard J . Oa.fey'11
spokesman in the House, as the caucus
chairman. R.ep. Olin E. Teague of Texas
was chosen. 151 to 92, in place of
Rostenkowski.
Dr. Brown Rites
Conducted Today
Funeral .services were held today for
Dr. Virgil W. Brown, 21 Laguna Hills r!.!I·
iden t a11d University of Southern Callfor.
nia dental professor who died Friday at use. He was 61.
Rev. James G. Kirk of St . t-.iark·s
Presbyterian Church of Corona del Mar
conducted the services at Pa cif ic View
Chapel. Interment folJoy,·ed at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
Dr. Brown, who lived al 1181·N Via
Mendoza , is survived by hi!! v.'ile,
Virgin ia; a son. Kitchell. or Palo Alto:
a daughter. Mrs. Cheryl Grant, of Bloom·
ington. Ind. and a sister, Mrs. Sylvia
Schwan. or Ohio.
Dr. Brown had llved in California fQr
41 years and was the associate director
of the postgraduate school of dentistry
21t USC. He y,·as a fellow of the American
College of Dentists, an officer in the
American i\cademy of Dentistry and
was active in state and Los Angeles
dental aocleties.
Laguna Greenbelt, Inc.
Will Seek Canyon Site
By '1\EDl!RICK SCBOEMEDL
ot ffle Dflllp Plltt l lofl
With· the ual of a political campalan,
the Lquna Breach Greenbelt. Inc., plana
to "win" in 1971 by acqulrlng the 450-acre
Sycamore Hills site In Laguna Canyon.
To pick up support for lhe acquisition
project, the group, headed by bookseller
J ames Dllley1 has planned the followlng:
-A "Greenbelt Week ," April 19-25,
for the J>W'POll' of rallying support and
to raiat funds to purthase the 526-acre
Sycamore Hllll property.
-To work closely wllh the LI.gun.
Belc:h Jaycees who have m•de the Green-
belt project their official program for
J971. Retltor Rick Balter will act as
UallOll betweea tbe JayCffl and the
Gmnbell l""'P· Tbe annouoctmerHa came 1t lhe annual
me<tlng ol the Greenbelt orpnilltlona
ol the llolai J..quna Monday n!Cht.
Tbe Greenbelt wffk wu 1Upported
ln 1 ~lion latued by Mayor
RJchard Goldberg Lot< Monday II·
temoon.
SOme of the many 1cUvltts alated
for Greenbelt Week lnclude talks by
political figures, entertainment b y
Mollywood atara, ecology semin1rs In
conJunct.ion with UC, Irvine, prt.1tn-
taUons by conaerv1tlon iroups 11uch as
tht Slerr• Club and fund.rai!ing cam·
palgna.
To implement tilt Greenbelt Wttk.
Btlier called for the establishment of
an elaborate committee structure to han-
dle various phases of planning.
Committee! will be .set up to provide
tour!! of the Greenbelt, organize lectures.
work with downtown businessmen for
promotion, raise funds by selling buinper
stickers, buttons, raffles and benefit
shows, and to work with students In
Laauna Beach achools for door·to-door
aoHcitatlon.
'M'>fJ: work of the var\olll ccmmlttees
wl11 be coordinsted through a lar1er
central commitltt.
Balw noted that the local J1ycee1
group will go to lht dlatrtct J•ycees
to try to gain fw1her support from
throughout Orange County !0< the
Gr<enbell pro)e<t.
According to Balur, the district
Jayceet governor has · thrown aupport
behind the Gr<enbtll project.
During the twcHlour m e e l I n I ,
Greenbelt meriibers heard executive
board member reports and viewed 3COrtl'I
of slides depicting the natural aetUng11
of Wood, Aliso, Laguna, El Ttlro and
Morro Canyons, taken by 1 o c a I
photographer Richa rd Lawrence.
Capistran o
Gi ves Boot
To Teacher
Ry PAMELA HALLAN
Of lllli OallY Pli.t St1ft
John V. Robbins, a mll!lic teacher
In the Capistrano Unified School D~tricl
for nearly I~ years, was fired Mond11y,
The board of trustees unanimousl y
agreed to di1mi!.!I the tenure teacher
for "incompetency" but refw;ed to outline
r;peclllc charges.
Speaking in the teacher's defense was
Ed Olson, a musician for ~ years who
11id, "lf ll Likes 14 years to .find a
man incompetent then there '!! .something
y,·rong."
Olson said when he moved to the
district in 1954 Robbins was the only
music teacher and was stationed at the
high school. "He had to spread himself
pretty thin," said Ol!On. He admitted
that Robbins' discipline had been weak
but claimed this had no bearing on
his ability as a teacher.
"I wish )'-OU would reconsider before
you ruin a man's career," he added.
Dr. Robert Beasley, chairman of the
board, assured the Audience that the
decision had not been a tiasly one. He
SAid there was voluminous evidence to
support the charges.
R.Qbbln.s, who was unavailable for com·
men!, hu vowed to fight hi!! dismi!lsal
"all the wa y to superior court." He
now has 30 da ys to make tiis intentions
known .
The school district then has 30 da ys
In which to answer before the action
is taken to coort for a fina1 decision.
Robbins said last June he will not
resign. "If they think I am inC(lmpetent
let the m prove it," he said.
He has taught all levels in the distriC't
lncluding high school. elementary and
junior high . He is currently teaching
at Marai For!lter Junior High in San
Juan Capistrano.
Wide-ranging
Agenda Faced
B y Sc hool Board
Items ranging from religious education
\.0 chef training are on tonight's agenda
lor the meetina: of the Board of Trustees
of the Laguna Beach Unified School
District. The rea:ular meeting will be held al
7:30 p.m. in the Education Center, 550
Blumont St.
Or. Robert Reeves, i nslr u ct io n
superintendent of the district, will report
to the five--member board on the results
of the first week of the Released Time
Education Program. The program was
implemented Jan. 11 after several
month s of planning. SponsorOO by several
Laguna Beach churchea, religious educa-
tion is offered to fourth . fifth And sixth
grader! once a week..
The churches have leased a trailer
and hired a tea cher to rotate among
the three elementary schools in Lagun21
Beach and provide the training to the
students qn a voluntary basis.
The board will also hear a report
on the Jan. 13 meeting of the Regional
Occupaliona1 Program directors meeUng .
The program was begWl in Sept.ember,
1970, to provide vocational training to
high school seniors in the Laguna Beach
and San Juan CapistrAno Unified School
Districts.
During lhe laU semester, several
students were given nurse's aide training
at a local ('{)nvale!!Cent hopsital. The
spring semester progrJm call!! lor
training 11everal students in the art of
cooking in several local restAurants.
CAPO TRUSTEE RESIGNS
Thom•• Winget
Capo Trustee
Winget Quits
Longtime Job
Thomas J. Winget, Trustee of the
Capistrano Unified School Di.strict since
unification, resigned Monday.
Winget said in a letter to Dr. Robert
Beasley, chairman of the board of
trustees, that he regretted the action
but found that bll!llness concern! would
be taking up too much ot his lime.
He was absent from a trustee meeting
Monda y.
Winget Is president of Mission Bank
In El Toro which is about to open
a new branch in Laguna Beach. He
resides In Dana Point.
Long active in community Activities,
W i get is cu rrently president of the
Orange County Symphony Association
and is a member of the board of direc·
tors of the Saddleback Valley Chamber
of C:Ommerce.
In accepting his resignation, Dr.
Beasley said, "His expertise and talent
can't be purchased. This district has
been lucky to have him these pa9l few
years,''
ln ma k Ing his resignation effective
today the special election to fill his
position will be called lo coincide with
the April 20 general election in which
three other trustee positions are b e i n g
filled.
The board will call a special meeting
to officially set the date of this election .
Marine Fliers
Esca pe Cras h
Two Marine pllois from El Toro MCAS
escaped Injury .M o n d a y when their
F4 l'hantorn jet crashed three miles
from Lhe Lemoore Naval Air Stateion.
A spokesman from E\ Toro said both
men . Lts. E. J Turner, 24. and S.
W. Pickrell, 25. are back on duty today.
Both are resident.! of 1'ustin.
The aviators were on a tra ining flight
when an undisclosed malfunction caused
the plane lo plow into a field short
of the Lemoore run\.\'ay. Both men
ejected safely before the crash.
Cause of the crash is under in·
vest1gation today , the spokesman sa id.
Fashion P late Felon
fl.fEX BOROUG H, Eng1and I UPI ) -
fashion notr : A gunman clad in bright
red coveralls and hood held up a post
office early todai and e!icaped with
$7.200 in cash in a matching red duf·
felbag . police said .
SEASAME STREET
Smo g Level
Figured Out
Simple Way
Orange County boasts two entire\)' dif-
ferent systems for determining when
smog levels are high enough Ill restrict
physical activity ol schoolchlldren.
One is lhe latest in sophisticated amog
measuring de.vices operated In three
county locations by the Air PolluUon
Control District.
The APCD when it records ozone
readings exceedin~ .35 parts per million
wams the Orange County Department
of Education by radio. The county schools
office in turn warns .school di1lricts
participating in the program -U!Ually
inland districts that more frequently e1-
pcrience smog.
The second system , that used primarily
by coasta1 districts, is less sophisticated.
Yet , on Monday. when the ozone count
reached .34 parts per million at Orange
County Airport -short of the level
for a school smog warning -the secand
method proved quite accurate.
The second method goe!I under dif·
ferent names but boils down to the
"Go Out.side and Sniff" smog warn ing
system.
ln Laguna Beach Monday. William
F. Allen. principal or El Morro School .
stepped outside into the heavy, smoggy
air, sniffed, and decided to curtail the
physical education and playground pro-
grams at hi!! school.
William L. Ullom, superintendent of
Laguna Beach Unified School District,
said today Allen 's action conforms with
district policy , since the county schools
office doesn't recommend participation
in lhe county warning system, "Due
to the cost of the system.''
"Our policy is based on princlpala·
own intuition," Dr. Ullom said, "although
they may call the county office for
a reading." Had Allen called th!. county
office Monday, he'd have been told no
smog alert was necessary since the
reading fell just one hundredth below
the _required .35 parts per million that
triggers school smog wamings.
Ullom believes the Laguna system is
more accurate since principals may
readily see the effect of the foul air
on their students who quickly react by
sneezing and coughing.
"Ninety-nine percent of the time these
kids Jive in smog-free air," Ullom uld.
"When it does come, lhey react more
noticeably."
Ullom described the smog that draped
Laguna Monday as .. the worst I've 1etn
Jn six years. It was higher on the
hillsides, heavier And ioAded with a
smell."
William Cunningham, superintendent cl
Newport-Mesa Unified School District,
also commented that the amOf!: wu
heavier. "Monda y seemed to me to be
the worst day in history."
Yet, Dr. Cunningham was unaware
of the school smog warning system or
how he'd get the word to curtail phyalcal
educaUon activity,
''I don 't know how we get the word."
he said, indicating the county schools
office had not informed Newport.Mesa
officials about smog warnings.
"We have a fan-out telephone relay
system to warn principals." CUnningham
said. Getting the school smog word from
the county seems to be what's lacking.
Allen said his judgment lo call off
physical activities was a "matter of
sensing how bad ll was. 11 was 10
thick I couldn 't see Pacific Coast
Highway, just below the school."
Ed Camarena, AP CD engineer. 1aid
that while an ozone count of .20 w as
forecast for today, "with unusual con-
ditions such as we've been experiencing.
that can be way off "
lie said cont inualion of !he surlace
inversion of air might bring today·~
reAding t.o a level similar to Monday's
-.3.f part.! pe.r million ozone.
Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor a rea that hasn 't
had a carpet installati on by Alden 's .
In our thirteen yea rs, we have carpeted thousands of homes in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach , Lagu no Beach and Huntington Beach.
One neighbor tells another unt il often we have worked in eve r y
home on a block.
The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask
YOUR ne ighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven 't,
bring her in with you.)
--~ ~':·1;~, ,j ~~•LI Ii i_
·I I·• ., -_ ~--
1 • --.........
l ·-··~ -~-· •·. --~ ., ·---.
'
~------~ SANTA AMA. OU.N•I
nim N C4lll ...
ALDIN'S
l l D MILL CAI""
I Du.NllD
11J74 I ..... , ...... UN.
11f.JJ44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'lacentla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4131
. HOU~S: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Pr!. f to f -S.t., 9:30 to S
. ,
L~go••• Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Fhial
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 64, NO. 16, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1971 TEN CENTS
......... itizens ' 0
Laguna Planners
Hears Objections
LAGUNA HIGH·RISE AS IT MIGHT LOOK AT MAXIMUM
Ch1irman Lambourne's View From Top, Cito To Laguna Avenue
Smog Chokes Coastline
As Heat Wave flangs On
By GEORGE LEIOAL
01 t"9 O•llr '°llo! 51111
Smog's ugly spectre continued its grip
<ln commUJlitics along the Orange Coast
today as the record heat wave continued
in Southern California.
7:05 p.m .. Monday and again at 8:05
a.m.
Since Orange County's carbon dioxide
measuring equipment (ailed last Dec.
J. the APCD has not recorded levels
of that toxic pollutant emitted by
automobiles, Camarena said.
He noted that Los Angeles reached
the alert stage because the former 100
parts per million benchmark was lowered
to 50 part! per million.
By BARBARA l(REIBICH
0! 1M 01111 ,.1111 11111
"The message we are getting is 'No
High. Rise~· Civic League president
Anthony Demetriades told an overOow
audience at Laguna Beach city hall Mon-
day night as the Planning Commission
opened its public hearin&.$ on an
ordinance that would permit high-rise
hotels 1¥\ the beachfronl.
The message was echoed by a parade
of speakers during the next thrtt hours,
with only one voice, that lif Vacation
Village owner Loren Haneline, raised
in favor of the proposed C·R (commercial
residential) ordinance.
Builder Bernard Syfan, who had
criticized opponents of high-rise at a
Chamber of Commerce meeting earlier
thi s month, was not present.
More than half the crowd of some
250 listened to tt • .: proceedings over
loudspeakers on the city hall porch when
the council chamber was filled to illl
capacity of 115.
A scale model depicting seven 100-fool
buildings on Coast Highway between
Laguna Avenue and Cleo Street wu
unveiled by landscape archit.ect. Roger
McErlane to Wustrate the mfliimum
possible impact or the ordinance.
"It makes me shudder the way I
did when I first _. • .l(iami Beacb,.., commeilecf _ _..,_
Oiiii6l6ftbn"'l:H'i!mran Yilinl"" Lam-
bourne noted that the muimUna t(IO...foot
height limit had been retained in ·the
proposed ordinance "to get public reac·
tion" and coukl be modified.
A second public hearing is scheduled
Feb. l.
City Planner Al Aulry presented an
addendum to the ordinance suggesting
an alternate method of determining
building height by measuring from the
downslope ocean side of a property
rather than jrom Coast Highway.
Measured in this manner, Autry said,
a 10..story building 100 feet high on
the ocean side would rise 64 feet above
the level. of the highway.
Autry also explained methods of
calculating open space belWttn buildlngs.
The ordinance would provide that 10
feet or 10 percent of total lot width
be maintained for sideyard llpace for
the first lhree stories of construction,
\vilh an additional five feet for each
additional fl oor.
To achieve the maximum height of
100 feet, a building on a 200-fopt lot
would be 90 feet wide with 5U-foot
sideyards.
Thirty-five letters ~.t the high-rise
ordinance were read by commis.sion
secretary Judy Ronalr;y. with only one,
from Dr. Lawrence White. approving
the ordinance as a "basis of our
economy ." The remainder blasted the
*
Considerable fog and lov.· clouds tonight
and Wednesday morning will be followed
by sunny skies and a high between
68 and 78. Little change in lhe smog
producing conditions is expected until
Friday, however, the National Weather
Service reports.
By Friday. a buildup of rr.arine air
and clouds will bring with it increasing
winds. Civic League Up
proposal with such comments a!>, "High,
thin, wide or fat buildings wi;J lower
Laguna's level," "High rise and high
de°'ity does not help ease taxes but
creates new problems by burdening
sewer, police, fire and traffic facilities,"
"Why should the few who will profit
from higlH'ise be permitted to turn
Laguna into just another resort?" ''Value
of hillside properties will be reduced
when views are blocked."
Haneline pointed out that his hotel-
motel complei: has contributed $1 million
in taxes to the city in the past 10
years.
"Hotels do not mean skyscrapers, giant
lowers blotting out the sun," he said,
''This is just rhetoric ... l regard the
Suri and Sand Towers as a great addition
to the natural scenery , , . all or
California would be better off it its
buildings had been higher with more
open space ~served."
Professors from UC Irvine, Cal State
Fullerton and Orange Coast College op.-
posed high-rise from the viewpoint.. of
their reapective fields, ecology &ne. en-
viro11ment, urban planning and 1eotogy.
The SUrf , and._.~ T"""'~.,~ the "~~~·¥.~ "ui 'a~11 'lif. q0!'1bCe 'Iii ilei!&n" and .Ollt ol
~....,.Ibo people's wlih. apruaed
in the jOill stetement .. to maintain •
VUl"ltl~bei'<.
The ecologist Predicted an imminent
danger or water pollution with increased
popu lation density and the geologist cited
earthquake hazards.
Heater Causes
Laguna Blaze
A fire wh.ich starteC: wben a dust
mop was placed near a water heater
Monday did an estima~ $400 damage
to a Laguna Beach apartment house.
No one wu injured in the 2 p.m. blait.
Tht: fire occurred in the apartment
of James Folk, at 201 Cypress Drive.
Fire investigators said the blaze began
when an oil-treated dual mop burst into
names in a hot water healt:r closet.
The heat or lhe burning mop Ignited
fiber glass trays in the closet, which
in turn touched off the wall of the
closet.
Firemen said Folk discovert:d the fire
and. after calling lhe fire department,
be11:an throwing pam of water on the
names. The fire was out when fire
units arrived at the scene, an official
1aid.
• Ill Arms
The Orange County Air Pollution Con-
trol DI.strict reported ozone below the
level ~ssary to call school smot warn·
Ing•.
l• at )el:!t one Orange Coast school,
Lagima ·eea'&h's El Pt1orro elementary
school, play activity or children wa.<1 ·
linilted Monday by the thick, acrid air thli W81!1 pUl!lhed to the ~ast _by light
Re~idents Rally for Laguna Village Atmosphere
Santa Aaa winds. · \
While Ule smog outlook for Laguna
Beach today was improved, the APCD
satd coastal cities could expect smog
leYem similar to lhose reached Monday.
Orange County Harbor Departn1ent
sai4 vtstbilitY today was limited to one
mue. by ''fog or "very thicl( Smog."
W,ith..,ll9 wJni:ls at '10 a.m. ·t~ay, the
protpeCts for moving the smog' out to
sea""'W.,.e slim. p;rn.a~na, APCD engineer, said
llfface inversion that brought the
ttlhging smog to the Orange Coast
~_Je_x;pected to continue lhroue:h tonight.
1.4ht and variable wlnd.s during the
ntgll and momlug boun were forecast
for toalght it from eight to 15 llnots.
By "Wedndday aftemooo windl -are ex·
pected to range from 10 to 28 knots
nlorfg the COQ,l. Fog and low clouds
In the monUnl Wednesday will yield
to partly 11.1nny skies and slightly cooler
W!tQJltrature.s.
Tbe mid-winter heat wave shalt.t:red
lhrM records in ~ Angeles Monday.
A ld&b of 95 was the botttsl January
r1:.afng on record, the overnight low
of ts was the warmest low,· and three
ca~ monoxide re.1dlngs required
prectdent..eltlng alerts 8l 8:08 11.m. and
Laguna . resident.a rallied to the caWlf: except for those who will benefit finan.
of preserving the Art Colony 's village c!ally. It is a monument to greed and
avarice. atmosphere Mooday evening · 85 they "The general plan report sees a future
bombarded the Planning Commission need for l ,000 additional tourist toOllU.
with arguments a11:alnst ddoption or an which can be accommodated _rery well
ordinance that would perriait beachfront in lhree·story buildiniS. High) rise Ls
high-rise. ) dangerous -we live very near a large
A resolution adopted ib>' the 370-earthquake fault. lt would require\ an
mem9ef1 Civic League,· sing any Investment tn costly flreClghtlng ·eqylp-
form of high-rise building spearheaded ment. If a ho~ r0;0m generate. ~
Lhe c.ampiigh to block tpe o "ahce. ' a year In iJlco e for the city, what
"A poll of our memberShl ahowed does it cost in terms of fire, pallet:,
that 96 percent agreed with the resolution sewage and traf coalrol? ·
withOut reservation," League president "We need to accommodak: vlsitor1
Anthony Demetrfadet told tht commit-In a Laguna as nearly as poaibJe u
sion. it is today and hope they will want
Aqother Civic League spokesman, Fred to return."
Marchand. praented slgtiatures of 125 Rivlera Hotel owner Harry Willats ob-
penons polled while they were standing Jected to criticism of hotels u such,
on ~ city hall porch llste.ning to the but did not favor hi.gtH'ist.. "We al'fl
meeting over speakers. talkinf about eltremel;," be llkl, "We
"Of thole people," he said, "Ill f.iid can e11miJ\ale what moot pq~ don't
• they ~ -~1~. one '!'! ~. • ~ teei>.wtiat 1"noecloWla!ldliot!• deckledmamer~n•~·~ ... y.", 1 •ain .Deltle into tbe •hllla, wfflt, most
In hil view, he addod. rio building ol the mua ""'-below Ibo 30-loot over 30 feet llhauld be permitted, no line." He ctttd. the_. ldfantap ol low,
more betel! .ahoukl be buut on the coast U-tbaped but~ with larae petial froo-
and i.a,... · .lbould uae ltJ Intellectual Una oo the hlgmrl)o.
resources to come up with 1 belt.er David Munro questioned "tbe propriety
solution for·haodltng Its t.ourisb. If not the: legality" of taking up the
"High rise la not Inevitable as some proJ>Cl'led C-R ione· before the general
have stated," llld retired dvJJ ·englneer plan repc:rt his been fully .ludied. "Why
Men{tt Trease, "nor Is It a necessity are we in auch a hurry?" ht asked.
I)
Former plannia: .commiasioner Joeeph
Tomehak, noting the trend to bulld away
from central city areu, suggested that
arulexaUon of. label to the north, · in
Emerald· Bty or Crystal Cove for ex-
ample, might pro'vide a more suitable.
locaUon for new btittbi. _
wf.tter "t ArnoJd 'Haoo said nauy, "It's a terrible ol'dinarJ9e. ,,. He cited com-
munnltle!:' thtt have protpered without
hlll>r!ae, lllllng Carmel, La Jolla,
Sa~llto and Ttbaron. J:.a Jplla bas two
hlal> nae bulldlJ1P, the 'llllat' It 19
stories. ·
Quoting lrom 1 l)'ll1ll9llum on "1gb-rlae
held 'ln s..11 111rbira, HlnO 1114 -conclaslon· In thol city .... u..1 "people .
come because of what we at r now.'' 1
Qa h1il>'Ne " bail~ he coaclllded, "ElemlDy ind' lom.r ,_. milllb
ls In .JOUr f•ce."
A , final comrrwit wa made by •
1!Uln who 1dentJllnd -· ., ...... lit-tet:Olfod ·Yllllci-flom'V'-tti,'B:l: ..
."We hue ba11t ldgl>.rilO 'ln' Vfll' ·
COUYer," he told the c:ornmla~ •'Ind
1U I <111 111 to '°" 11 ·-di>n1 do It" f I
The l'1a!mlll ~· will ...-
-" Iron> tho· llnl pubUc hwlnl
al •· ~ -Mondoy Ind hold ·~fir-··· tho ord-Feb, I lie · Ito l't<oimneridoUon
lo tho £lit .
HOTEL OWNER
Lor•n H1n•lin.
Total Reaches 12
ise'
CIAILY f'ILOT Iliff ....... .... CIVIC LEAGUE HEAD
Anthony Demetri•d ..
' ,
Four More U.S. Boats
WASffiNGTON (uPI) -The llillted
State!, which has cu\ off i;nililary ia!es
to Ecuodar in a fishing-rights dispute,
reported today that the Ecuadorialis had
seized four more U.S. fishing· VU9els
rtnce Monday for a total of 12 in the
past eight dayl!.
"This is the largest number in recent
years taken over that length of time,"
said a State Departmen t official who
made the d·lsclosure based on reports
from Callfomfa tuna Industry spokesmen.
The State Department said ttiat during
the same period Ecuador alao had seized
the Jasna , a ship owned by an American
Tuna Company hut sailing under the
Panamanian flag, and a Japanese fish-
ing boat.
The United States announ ced Monday
that it waa denying Ecuador any further
military aid and might take further
action including suspension of economic
assistance.
'Those were the latellt developments
In a long·running feud between the Latin
American nation . whtch claims a 200-mlle
territorial sovereignty over the rich
Pacific lisillng waters off its ooaM, and
the United States which recognizes only
a 12·mile limit.
In the latest flareup, Ecuadorian gun-
boal.3 have seized the U.S. vessels on
poaching charges. At last report. three
Mrs. Iris Beaver,
Ex-clerk's Wife
Succumbs at 72
Iris E, Beaver, wife of foriTier ~
Beach City Clerk Edward Beaver Ind
a longtime Art Colony resident, died
in her borne Saturday at the age of
72.
Funeral llervlcel! for Mrs. Beav,er. will
be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday ,
at 'the ·Sheffer Mortuary Chapel. Rey.
Gary Herber"taon of the Methodist <f11W~h
of South haauna will officiate the ·
ceremony. Private Interment will follow .
'Mn. Beaver, who lived with he1: h~
ha.Oct at. 1 tzi'S ,Brangw\n Way, if · ~llo ·
survived' by' • daughter, Laur.a . ~,
Beaver; a s)ster, Mrll. r~~~·,
of Oklahoma and two ~ n.ay1nuut
and Joteph Cement, both of·Texa,.
Mn. I Seiver' came ,to b.guna Beach ..
.. 1111 her iwaban~ a ~ 'q<i' 'iu\cl
led a quiet !He .while .hei .and ialered.
public ~lte. Mr. Beaver terYtid u
City Cieri< from 1935 untll'hll rttlJ:emeal
in.1185. ' • • • • , ... Mri. Beaver 'had beeo,~·rr.m
1 ·heart 1!1m<ht for 1' ~bi yean
ptl<Jr to b<r·de11h, lorc!lna hqJq rtlrlln ;
tr.m· ""'-· ..... "' commum1 lf(lli1. . _,,,.,.... • .Y -.•
Korean Goe& Berserk
SEOUL (uPI) -A· SoUtJt ICoi'eill '
marine 1ergeant went .trtreffr~. killed
lb pertOnl Ud'lnJurid ,four otben"tnd
lhen'thol h-lo dealh.Mcrilly·nlglll , at •• 1111rl~ comp i. 'llii '.J!lmpo' ortl,
16 mllo we&l ·ol S.OUI. • · ,
ol the boat_, had been released art.er
paying fin es totaling $133,CKXJ.
Secretary of St.ate William P. Rogers
s u m m o n e d Ecuadorian Ambassador
C&rlos Mantilla-Ortega to the State
Department Monday afternoon to Inform
him o fl.he action. A spokesman said
Rogers told the ambossador that "other
legal provisions relating to such seizures
are being reviewed urgently and that fUr·
ther action by this government under
pertinent laws could not be excluded ."
Last year, Ecuador received $2 million
In U.S. military aid. The size of this
year's program was not available
although it was understood Ecuador plan-
ned to buy some helicopters and other
aircraft from the United States.
Ecuador also has sought credits for
overhauling some ships and these were
suspended as well. Six of the Ecuadorian
Navy's 14 combat and patrol ships came
from the United States but these have
not been used against American fishing
vessels, U.S. officials said.
Sta te Department spokesman Robert
J . McC\oskey said the United States
currently provides $29 million a year
in economic aid to Ecuador. Although
S3.5 million already has been committed
this year, he said the State Depa rtment
is considering suspending the remainder.
McClo5key told newsmen, "our purpose
In taking this action is not so much
retribution or revenge as It is a rlgh•
to protect the rights of American
fishermen in these waters.'·
The military assi3tance program was
halted under section SB of the foreign
military saleJ act wbi.Ch McCl011key said
prov.ides that "no sales, credits . or
guarantees shall' be made or enended
under Uie• act lo any country durilng
a period of one year after sudl 1eotmtry
&eiles · or tak8; into custody or fines
an America.n' (ls)'ibtg .-essel , more than
12 mlle11 frorn ~ ~aror Uwt country."
' .
·Weadier ' '
Fr0m smog to fog, that'• the
word' along 'the 'Orange Coast,
where it'll be :IOCked ln tonight
and Wednesday morning. Temp-
eratures will raiiae r.rom the
upper .eo. to' the ceutral, 70s.
· 'INSWE 'TOD&Y
' .llJd of the ~r tconorrdc
fWcordr 1how l910 "'°' t"4: ~ll/<llT. aUsCC. J9f7 /..--
binft rtce1.ticm .n4;"14ia*-"\itl
th< 19\111id l ~/ Alf1~ ~S:''" ... -~, .. .,.,-~ ~
~ . .,.:;.,.. ... " g,:::."" .: ......... ,.... ~ ii . : =~-'· ..
! ...... : ......... :tJ~ ==.:r .. ~ """"' .: ...... *" ....... '4
........ 1•J :r~·~ l>'M ~i...... ,, .. . ..-u....•
• • '
11
•
< :1 DAILY 11LOT SC Twld•1. Jan1111')' 19, 1971
M h1• to Move
'
Capo Families
Given Reprieve
Several San Juan Capistrano families
llvln& in • condemned labor camp have
.beeft &iven 90 days in wh ich to find
new hornet.
The City Council voted unanimou~y
Monday to allow the familie! to renwn
1 while longer despite ~ fad ~t
the city ii liable for any accident.s which
mlght occur as 8 rtSull of the cond!Uon
or the dwellings.
At the end of the 90 days the properly
Police Bribe
Trial Slowed
By Illness
A defendant's !linen has halted the
Orange County Suptrlor C.ourt trial of
two men 1ccused of attempUng to brlbt
a Costa Mesa policeman .
· Preside.int Judge William C. Speirs
icheduled Wednesday for a further hur-
tng on the delay after being advised
that deftndant Eu1en11 C. Rondondo, 44,
of 2W E. 21nd St., Newport Beach,
wu conf1ned to a Lu Ve1u hospital
and could not return to Orqe County.
Rcndondo wa.s to have 1one on trial
with Samuel C. Rosman, 27, of 21351
San Brilo Drive, Llguna NilUt]. Both
men are 1ccused ot the attempted
tribery of Colta Mua offieer Gary
Barwlg.
Barwlg his tutUied that both men
offered him $10,000 to plant narcotics
on a witness in an upcominC aimina.t
trial involving Rondondo. That witneu,
Charles 5. Dreyer, 32, of 1615 S.....t
Lane, Laguna Beach, was named with
Rondondo in. an Orange County Grand
Jury indictment alleging the theft or
liquor valued at $25,000 from Cilastal
night spots.
Both men are accused or attempted
bribery of a policeman, coruipir.acy to
fal sely arrest and furnlshing dangerous
drugs. Those drugs -I ,SCIO barbiturate
tablets -were allegtdly found by Barwlg
Wt April a ln a car driven by Dreyer.
Rondondo and Rosman are free on
bail.
Sentence Given
In Laguna Heist
A Santa Ana man who confeued to
the holdup last June 14 of the Jolly
Rorer restaurant in Llguna Beach has
been sentenced to one year to lite in
state prison.
Oran1e County Superior Court Judie
Byroo K. McMillan lmpo1ed that term
on Benjamin Arthw-Franklin, 3&, after
reduction of charges from first to second
degree robbery.
Police sald Franklin took $2,814 from
the restaurant at 400 S. Coaat Highway
artar forcina an employe at sunpolnt
to hand over the money.
The emplo,. told offl«n that Fraol<lln
met him outaidt the rest.aw-ant, huatled
him Jnslde with a JUD at hb back
and demanded all the money on Uie
preml5es.
Motorcyclist 'killed
In Freak Accident
SAN'l'A FE SPRING S, (U P I )
-A motorcyclist died Monday of injuries
suffered when atruck by a hood which
had blown off an automobUe on the
San Gabriel River Freeway. ,
Dead was Elbert L. Setzer, 29, El
Monte . The driver of the car wu not
htld.
owner. Mrs. Lillian Zaenglein o I
Pasadena must be:£jn to removt the
dwellln&s or I.he Cilunty building depart-
ment will do It for her and send her
the bill.
The issue brought out in the public
hearing was not the removal of the
buildings , whlch m08t parties agreed
had to be: dooe, but rather who was
responsible for relocatlna: th4!: famllles.
The Zaengle i na plaC«I the
responsibility oo tht city but Councilman
Ed Chermak denied assertion.
"The responsibility lies with the people
who allowed this development in the
first place," he said. "Jf the residenlS
have allowed these buildings to
deteriorate then the tt!sponsibJJity lJ two-
fold. lt lies w:lth the Zaengleins who
allowed this to continue and with
resident& who dkln't make im-
provements," he said.
Albert Nellon, AMJstant Director of
the BulldJng Dtpartment, testified that
there are raw sewage on the property ,
electrical outleta without covers, saning
roofs, no foundations and other haiards.
BUI Reid, a local rancher who leased
the property from the Zaeng leins up to
Dec. 31 and subleased to the famJiies
said be didn't think the dwellings were
••bad u the building inspector reported.
Reid aaid the bulldinga were 50 years
old and· there was no building code
when they were constructed. "They've
luted 50 years so why are they unsafe
now?" be asked. "The wiring b poor
but it works. he plumbing isn't up
to code but It could be fixed. These
people have no place to go. To them
this is home. Their standards aren't
the same." '
Reid said claims that he had made
lots of money on the property were
falat. He said one family lived there
23 years and hadn't paid a dime.
Mrs. Zaenglein's husband retorted that
they certainly hadn't collected rent from
any of the families and the responsibility
was Reid's who had subleased the pro-
perty knowing its condition. "We knew
nothing of these conditions unlil three
months ago," he said.
Mrs. Zaenglein added that while the
people remain they 11re not lo pay rent
to anyon e. Re id countered that they
hadn't paid since December and he has
kept the utilitiea connected "out of the
goodness of my hearl."
"l feel sorry for these people but
the council can't sit here and assume
rtJ!ponsibility for babysitting them," sa id
Councilman Chermak. "The eooncil has
been put on the spot. 1 doubt if honest
efforts to relocate have been made by
the people themselves.
Councilman Jim Thorpe said he felt
sure the people had been seekJng homes
but cheap housing in Capistrano is almost
unknown. He added that the co uncil
has a moral responsibility to the people
who can 't afford to Jive elsewhere but
also ta their children who should not
remain in those dwellings in unsafe,
unhealthy conditions.
lo asking for the moratorium on car-
rytna: out the demolition, he ca lled on
the public to lend their assistance to
the five fami!Jea who atill remain on
the land.
There's No Business
Like Snow Business
BUDAPEST (UPI) -Two Budapesl
streetear snow workers who had an
idea. how to avoid work on a cold nii ht
have been sent to jail for one year .
'M>e anow cleaners met two girls. told
lhem they were plalncloth~ policemen
and that they suspected them of pro-
stitution.
"If you will do the snow shoveling
and , in addition, be nice lo us, we
will not report you to our headquarters."
they told the girl~. The girls timidly
a~eed. but the case ca me before court
when the men boasted about !heir ad·
venture.
V,I Y•le-1•
ELECTED HOUSE SPEAKER
Oklahoma's Rep. Albert
Carl Albert
Chosen New
House Leader
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Democrats
overwhelmingly selected Rep. Carl Albert
of OkJahoma today ta be House speaker
but split sharply on el ect ion or a floor
leader to replace him in the 9 2 n d
Congress.
Albert, 62, a party loyalist with a
liberal voting retard. won over Rep.
John Conyers, a fourth term black from
Detroit who said Albert had failed to
display leadership qual ities required of
a speaker,
Albert won over Conyers 220 to 20.
Albe rt , whose selection by t he
Democ rats will be formally ratified by
the full House Thursday , when the new
Congress convenes, succeeds retired Rep.
John W. McCormack of Massachusetl.J
who had served as speaker since 1962.
During tha t period, Albert was party
floo r leader. Five candidates were seek·
ing election at a closed Democratic
cau cus to that post to succeed Albert.
A new party whip also must be chosen
-a choice usually made by the speaker
and leader -to replace Rep. Hale
Boggs of Louisiana. one of the. co n-
testants ror leader.
Prior to selecting Albert, en the way
to building a new leadership team, the
Democratic congressmen had tossed out
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski o( Illinois, known
as Chicago ~1ayor Richard J. Daley's
spokesman in the House. as the caucus
chairman. Rep. Olin E. Teague of Teias
was chosen. 151 to 92, in place of
Rostenkowski.
Dr. Brown Rites
Conducted Today
Funeral services were held today for
Dr_ Virgil W. Brown, a Laguna Hill11 res·
ident afld Unive rsity of Southern Califor-
nia dental professor who died Friday al
USC. He wa s 61.
Rev. James G. Kirk of St. Mark 's
Presbyterian Church of Corona del Mar
conducted the strvices at Pacific View
Chapel. lntennenl follo"'ed at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
Dr. Brown, who Jived al 88\·N Via
f\.1e.ndoia. is survived by his wife,
Virginia : 11 son, Kitchell. or Palo Alto;
a daughte r. Mrs. Cheryl Gra nt . of Bloom·
inglon. Ind. and a sister. Mrs. Sylvia
Schwan , of Oh io,
Dr. Brown had lived 1n California for
41 years and was the associa te director
of the postg raduate school of dentistry
at USC. He was a fellow of the American
College. of Dentists. an officer in the
American Academy of Dentistry and
was active in stale and Los An&eles
dental societies.
DAILY PILOT
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OlANOI t:oUI' "'1tl.~IM0 CIJIJl,llJl('f
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Laguna Greenbelt, Inc.
Will Seek Canyon Site
I
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By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
With tht zeal of a political campaJ.in,
tht L.tauna. Beach Greenbelt, Inc., plans
to "Win" in 1171 by acqulMng the 451Hcre
Sycamore Hilla site in Laguna Canyon.
To pick up 11upport for the acquisition
projtct, the group, headed by boOkseller
Jamea Diiiey, has planned the following :
-A "Greenbelt Week," April 19-25,
tor the purpoae of rallying aupport and
to raltt tunds to purclwt the 520-acre
Sycamore Hll1a property.
-To work clOlf:ly with the Laguna
Bttdl Jayetie1 who have made the Green·
bt1I projoct their ofllctal pro111m for
1m. llelltor Rick Baber will act u
liaiJaft bltwMn the Jaycets .and ~
G.-bllt ..... p.
Tb6 annouoc«nents came at Uie. al\Jlual
-o1 the o-bett oraantulloM
at !ht ilotol ~ Monday nlpl
,_. Greenbelt Met WU lllpported
In a procla.mltion I s 1 u e d by Mayor
Rkbard Goklbt:rt Lite Monday a(. .. .._..
SOme of the mtny actlv\t.cs 1J11ed
for Grtenbtlt Wetk Include talb by
poUUcal n,ures, entertainment b y
HoJlyWOOd 1la.r1, ecology aemlnar:1 ln
cc.1Junction with UC, Irvine, prettn-
Utkm by conservation IJf'Ollps auch as
I
the Sierra Club and fund.raising ~•m·
p.Jins.
To lmplemtnt the Greenbelt Week.
Balzer called for the establishment or
an elaborate commltt.et st.ruchm to han-
dle various phases of plannlng.
C.Ommittees will be. stt up to provide
tours of the Greenbelt, organlu lecture~.
work with downtown businessmen for
promotion, raise lunds by •tlllna: bumper
stickers, button.1, raffles and \benefit
shows. and to work with stucSenta ln
Laguna Beach schools for door-to-door
sollc.ltation.
The wtlrk of the various oommltteu
win be. coordinated throuah a lara:tr
central committee.
Baher noted that the local Jaycees
group will go to the dlstrlcl Jaycees
to try to 1ain further auppcrt . from
throughou.I Orange County tor tbe
Greenbtll project.
Accord±ng to &..lier. lht district
Jaycea rovemor bas lhrown aupport
betl1nd the Greenbelt project.
· Ouring U'te t~ur meeting •
Qrt(lnbl!:ll members heard executive
board member reports and viewed scorts
of slldet deplctlna: the natur1I 1etUn11
of Wood. Aliso. Lagun1, El Toro and
Morro CanYQN, taken by I o c a I
photographer Richard Llwrenca.
f
Capistrano
Gives Boot
To Teacher
Hy PAMELA HAUAN
OI ftle 0.111 ,!loll ii.If
John V. Robbin.a, a music teacher
In the Capistrano Unified School District
for nearly 15 years. wa s fired Monday.
The board o( trustees una nimously
agreed to dismiss the tenure teacher
for "incompetency'' but refuaed to outline
speeiric charges.
Speaking in lhe teacher's ddense Yi"as
Ed Olson , a musician for j5 years who
said, "If it takes 14 years to find a
man incompetenl then there·s something
wrong."
Olson said when he moved to the
dislrict in 1954 Robbins wai; th e only
music teacher and was stationed et the
high school. ••!fe had to apread himselt
pretty thin," said Olson, He admitted
thal Robbins' discipline had been \Veak
but claimed this had no bearing on
his abilit y ·as a teacher.
"I wis h you would reconsider before
you ruin a man's career," he added.
Dr . Robert Beasley, chairman of the
board , assured the audience that the
decision had not been a hasty one. He
said there was volwninous evide nce to
support the charges.
Robbins, who was unavailable for com·
ment, h~ vowed to fight his dismissal
"all the way to superior court.·· He
now has 30 days to makt his intentions
known.
The school district then has 30 days
in which to answer before the action
is taken to court for a final deci sion .
Robbins said laat June he will not
resign. "If they think. I am incompetent
let them prove it," he said.
He has taught all levels in the district
Including high school, elementary ~nd
junior high. He is currently teaching
at Marco Forster Junior H i g h in San
Juan Capistrano.
Wide-ranging
Agenda Faced
By School Board
!term ranging from religious education
lo chef tralning are on tonight's agenda
for the meetina: of the Board of Trustees
of the Laguna Beach Unified School
District.
The reau lar meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. in lhe Education Center, 5SO
Blumont St.
Dr. Robert Reeves, i ni;truc l lo n
superintendent of the district, will report
to lhe live-member board on the res~llS
of the first week of the Released Time
Education Program .. The program was
implemented .Jan. II after severa l
months of planning. Sponsored by several
Laguna Beach churches, re_Jigious ed~c a.
lion ts olfered to fourth, fifth end sixth
graders once a week. .
The churches have lea sed a trader
and hired a teacher to rotate among
the three elementary schools in Laguna
Beach and provide the training to the
stu dents on a voluntary bashi.
The board will al'° hear a report
on the Jan. I! meeting of the. Regional
Occupational Program directors me eting.
The proaram was begun in September,
1970, to prov ide vocational training to
high school sen iors in the Llgun a Beach
and San Juan Capistrano Unified School
Districts.
During the la\I semester. several
students v.·ere given nurse's aide training
at a local convalescent hopsital . The
spring semester program calls for
training several studen ts in the art of
cooking In several local restaurant1.
CAPO TRUSTEE RESIGNS
Thomas Winget
Capo Trustee
Winget Quits
Longtime Job
Thomas J. Winget. TrW1tee of the
Capistrano Unified School District since
unifi cation, resigned Monday.
Winget said in a letter to Dr . Robert
Beasley. chairman of the board of
trustees. that he regretted the action
but found thal business l'Oncerns would
be taking up too much of hi1 time. .
He was absent fr om a trustee meeting
Monday.
Winget Is president of Mission Bank
in El Toro which is about to open
a new branch in Laguna Beach. He
resides in Dana Point.
Long acti ve in community activities.
W i g e t is currently president of the
Orange County Symphony Assocl~tion
and is a member of the board of dll'CC·
tors of the Saddleback Valley Chamber
of Commerce.
In accepting his resignation, Dr.
Beasley said, "His expertise and talent
can't be purchased. This district has
been lucky to have him these past few
ye ars."
' In m a k i n g his resignation effective
today the special election to fill his
position will be called to ~in~ide w.ith
the April 20 general elecllon m w.hich
three other trustee positio ns are be 1 n g
filled.
The board will call <'I special meeting
to officially set the date of this election.
Marine Fliers
Escape Crash
Two Marine pilots from El Toro MCAS
escaped injury Mo n d a y wtien their
F4 Phantom jet crashed three miles
from lhe Le moore Naval Air Staleioo.
A spokesman from El Toro said both
men , Lts. E. J, Turner. 2", and S.
\I/. Pickrell. 2~. are back on duly today.
Both arc residents of Tusti n,
The aviators were on a training flight
.... ·hen an undisclosed malfunction caused
the plane to plow in to a field short
of lhe Lemoore run way. Both men
ejected safely befo re the crash.
Cause of the crash is under in·
vestigation today . the spokesman said.
Fashi on Plate Felon
t.1EXBOROUG H. Eng1and (UPI ) -
Fashion note: A gu nman clad In bright
red cover11lls and hood held up a post
office early loda/ and escaped with
$7.200 in cash in a mat ching r~d duf.
fe!bag, pollce said.
Smog Level
Figured Out
Simple Way
Orange County boiut.J two enllrely dif.
fercnt system~ for determining · whtn
smog lrvels are high enough to rfl!ilrict
physical activity of schoolchildren.
One is the lattsl in sophislicat@d smoe
measuring devices operated in three
county loc ations by the Air PolluUon
C-Ontrol District.
The APCD wher. il records O?.One
readings exceeding .35 parts per million
wams the Orange County Dep1rtment
of Education by radio. The county schools
office in turn warns school districts
p11.rticipating in the program -usually
inland districts that more frequently ex·
perience smog.
The second system. that used primarily
by coastal di.stricts , Is leu sophbticattd.
Yet. on Monday, when the ozone count
reached .34 parts per million at Orange
County Airport -short of the leve l
for a school smog warning -the second
method proved quite accurate.
The second method goes under dif·
lerent names but boils down to the
"Go Outside and Sni!f" smog warning
system.
In Laguna Beach Monday, William
F. Allen, principal of El Morro School,
stepped outside into the heavy, smoggy
air, sniffed, and decided to curtail the
physical education and playground pro-
grams at his .school.
William L. Ullom , superintendent of
Laguna Beach Unified School Di!trict,
said today Allen's action conforms with
district policy, since the county schools
office doesn't recommend participation
in the county warning system, "Due
to the cost of the system."
"Our policy is based on princlpala'
own intuition," Dr. Ullom said, "although
they may call the county office for
a reading!' Had Allen c1lled the county
office Monday, he'd have been told no
smog alert was necessary since the
reading (ell just onr hundredth below
the required .35 parts per mlllion that
triggers school smog warnings.
Ullom believes the Laguna system is
more accurate since principals may
reaWly see the eff~ct of the foul air
on their students who quickly react by
sneezing and coughing.
"Ninety.nine percent of the time thete
kidl! live in smog-lree air." Ullom aakl.
"When it does come, they react more
no ticeably.·•
Ul.lom described the smog that draped
Laguna Monday as "the worsl I've sttn
in six years. It waa higher on the
hillsides , heavier and loaded with a
amell."
William Cunningham, superintendent of
Ne.y.rport·Mesa Unified School District,
also Cilmmented that the smog was
heavier. "Monday seemed to me lo be
the worst day In history."
Yet. Dr. Cunningham was unaware
of the school smog warning system or
how he'd get the word to cur tail physical
education activity.
''I don'l know how we get the word ."'
he said, indicating the county schools
off ice had not info rmed Newport·Mesa
officials about smog warnings.
"'We have a fa n-out telephone relay
system to warn principals," Cunningham
said. Getting the schoo l smog word from
the coun ty seems lo be v.·hat's lacking,
A.lien said his judgment to call off
physical activities was a "mall.~r of
sensing how bad fl was. ll was 10
thick I couldn 't set-Pacific Coas t
H i~hway, just below the school ·•
Ed Camarena , APCO engineer, s11id
lhat v•hile an ozone count of .20 was
forecast for toda y. "with unusual con·
ditions such as we've been ei periencing,
that can be way off."
He said continuation of the aurface
inversion of air might bring today's
re ading to a leve l similar lo Mond1y's
-.34 parl, pet million 01.one.
SEASAME STREET
Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn 't
hod a carpet installation by Alden 's.
In our thirteen years, we hove carpeted thousands of homes in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach , Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach ,
One neighbor tells another until often we hove worked in every
home on a block.
The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask
YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven't,
bring her In with you.)
ALDEN'S r--,-.NT-.-.-... -0-.. -•• -,-. CARPETS e DRAPES
?VITIM c..a •..
ALllN'I an"'" CA•"" 1663 Placentia AYe.
11114 ~,!~','!~ C4ff. COSTA MISA
........ 646-4131
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 ht • -Sat., 9:-JO to J
I
I
I
17
' I
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tj
•
Today's Flwal
EDIT f O·N . N.Y. Stoeks
•
VO~. 6'1, NO. 16, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JUESDAY'; JANUAR Y 19, 1971 TEN CENJS .
Council to G·et Earful on Loud.speaker I·ssue
By JORN VALTERZA
ot 1Q 0,.1/y ,Ott ll•H
Appeal! from two fronts for city
permiS!ion to use sound equipment on
public property for religious gatherings
face San Clemente City Councilmen
Wednesday.
An angry Dr. Carl Mcintire, the con-
servative radio ev&J}gelist from New
Jersey -is expected to confront coun-
cilmen and seek the rescinding of an
earlier action denying the minister the
use of Old Plaza park for a rally sup-
p::>rting total victory in Vietnam.
Immediately alter tbe Mclnt.ire ap-
' polrlll<O.•-lor y-·-and .Vnlfe!I Evaqellcol.· c:fi!ll<bol wt1t
make• their request to use cnplllylng
equipmetlt It. an Easter Week.end
observance at TrafalJar Beach.
The Mcintire appearance, however, is
expected to dominate much or the sub-
ject.
Early lUt week Dr. Mclnlirt took
out a ' patade permtt form for the
marching segment of his planned Jan.
30 activity, but ·angrily charged that
the city had hatched a plot to deprive
him of his Jiiht to free speech.
In a muddled action two weeks ago
DAll.T P ILOT 1'8ft PNM
San Clemente Find
These intriguing shapes uncovered during excavation just inland of
San Clemente were al first thought to be fossils; possibly the remains
of some large creature. Experts said Monday, however, they are ac-
tually sandstone shaped millenia ago by wave action .
Mi ss ion Viejo Residents
Probe. Ser vice Tax Funds
Mission Viejo homeowners at a general
meet.ing Thursday will examine how the
county spends approximalely $225,000 in
special service area tax funds.
Mike Shearer. president of the Mission
Viejo Hon1eowners' Association. has in-
vited all interested OOmeowners to altend
the 7:30 p.m. m~ting at ~tission Viejo
Hig h School.
Mission Viejo residents make up county
special service area 9 which Is cAlled' ·
Oso Valley District It is the largest
In acreage and has fhe large:;t budget.
The service district was formed so
that residcnt.s of unincorporated com-
munities muld provide funds for parks
and landscaping, recreational fa cilities,
eraage
We•ther
-From smOg· to tg, that's the
word along the range· tast,
Where it11 be soc in t ight
apa \Vednesday morning. emp-
eratures will range from the
Upper &Os to the centr1l 70s.
• INSIDE TODAY
~ En~r Q/ the 11ear economic
n cori:.ls shm.o 1910 war ehe
ttorst Jij!'ar rintt 1941 j or com.-
blMd. r;etession and inflatitm in
tM Vnittct Si.ates. See 1tor11.
• Jitae 5.
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WwW Nnt -W
street maintenance, fire protection and
capital project.s .
In Mission Viejo the owner of a $30,000
houae contrtbutea about '40' per year
for the1e fanctklm.
Some Million, Viejo mideuts have
been concerned obout . the quality of
the job being done by the county In
landlc:aplng, according to Sbe.arer.
In Ntvember three homeowners. Bill
Gan!Mr, J..ouia.Lantei, aoil -Al"Willtma
induced a landscapiq expert to tour
·the county-maintained areu of the com-
munity. ~y roUnd. that many of the
slopes, median . atri"ps and parka were
not btinin•:operly maintained. ·
Shearer iatd 1ht :eonUruttee contacted
Buck Weaver ol. the County Roads
d<-•·ts.ln cbarp'of tandlcap.
ing maintenance. Weaver hmDediately
reopOnded ID . a loiig, Ital ol IUQesfed
improveMtnta:
The Homeowners AaociaUon is now
seeking volunteers who live near county-
maintai~ attaa to supervise the upkeep
of landa<;apjng of theae properties.
Volunteenl Will be called upon at . the
general meeting.
During · !tie meeting the "°""""'1en
will also dilcusa the formaUOI or an
advltory board for the Oto Valley
District to advile the County Board cf
Supervi90l'1 en bow the d!atrict'1 tu
money ahould be spent.
AJ90 on the qenda will be a discuuion
of what the community lhould strive
to accomplllh duri"I the oomlnc year.
Narcoti~s Stolen
F rom GG Pharmacy
More than lllO n-tJi ol hard narcollcs
was Jtolen early thie mornlng from a
Gmlal Gnm ~. polloe npot1ed .
-OfQttn aakl the tntruden forced oPeft
a drive-In window at Jerry'1 Grove
Harbor Pflarnuicy, 192 Pabn St. n,.
• ~ trlaend .. aJmn bell but dt.fliot frt&lllen of! Ille bUrgtars. officer>
Hid.
councilmen refused to sanction the rally
and denied the use of any sowxl ampll·
fying equipment.
The youth activity for Easter weekend
is planned for three day,s, April 9, 10
and 11 on the public beach.
John 0 . Langley <>f 103 Calle Seguro,
San Clemente, is making the request.
In It he said the servkes w<>uld com-
mem<>rate Good Friday and Easter
sunrise . The Friday event is scheduled
for noon to 3 p.m. and 7:30 to · 10
p.m.
On Saturday Langley plans to use
the equipment from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
Ealter morning, the terVices WOUid be
conducted from a to I a.m.
other action facing the council at the
7:30 p.m. meeting includes:
-A public .heariilg lo consider the
appeal of planning commission denial
for an overheight and oversize pole sign
at the Lerner Oil station At 621 S.
El Camino Real Commissioners nally
denied the request ror a sign 53 feet
taller than ·the code allows. Councilmen
have not overruled such a denial for
a sign exception in many months .
-Detailing by City Manager Ken Carr
of plans for a pilot program for
newspaper collection for recycling. R,e..
quegt.s haVe come almost weekly that
the city· Set up such a plan. Several
local i:r:ouPs have become involved in
the conection idea. .
-A [t!port by Carr on progress c(
an ~greunent allowing several . San
Clemente High School students the use
of a platform beneath the main level
of the San Clemente pier for marine
ecology ex.perimenls. Th~ project has won.
support of cow:icilmen and planning com-
missioners. A formal agreement must
be completed however, before the ex·
perimenls could begin.
-A formal ordinance calling f<>r the
parks and recreatk>n bond issue which is
expected io!seek· nearlY $1' million for a
breadth of pa.rkl and recreation projects,
including the new ~unity clubhouse,
a youth recrtmoO center at North Beach
and other similar projects.
-A request by the JU.Dior All American
Football progr1m for a pennit to sell
fireworks in the city during µ.e
Independence Day season. The stand is
planned fur ' lhe market · Basket parkllig
lot in Shorecltlls.
Ecuador Seizes 4 More
American Fishing Boats
Move Brings
U.S. Cutoff
Of Weapons
WASHING TON {I/Pl), -The United
Stales,:~ bu. <Jil.off,i-1"!',~ to Ecuodar in • t1ahlaf-i-1ght.r .dbjirle-;
reported. today tbat ihe EcuHorianl ba4
ae~ tow more U.S. f~iog v~
slooe Monday for a total of 12 1n the
past eight days.
"This .. the largest number Jn recent
years taken over that length of time,"
said a State Department official who
made the disclosure based on report.
Crom California tuna industry spokesmen ..
The State Department said that during
the same period Ecuador alao had seiaed
the J asna, a ship owned by an American
Tuna Company but sailing under the
Panamanian flag, and a Japanese fish-
ing boat.
The United Stat.es announced Monday
that It was denying Ecuador any f\rtber
military aid and might take further
action including suspenaion of economic
assistance.
Those were the latest developmentl
In a long-running feud between the Latin
American nation , which claims a 200-mlle
territorial sovereignty over the rich
Pacific fi!!hing waters off its coast, and
the United States which rerognizel ooly
a 12-mile limit.
ln the latest Canup, Ecuadcrtan gw..
boats have seized the U.S,. veuels on
poaching charges. At la.at report, three
of the boats had been releued after
paying fines totalir11 $15.1,000.
Secretary of Stale William P. Rogers
!! u m m o n e d Ecuadorian Amb11111dor
Carlos Mantilla-Ortega to tbe State
Department Monday· aftttnoon ,to. ldorm
him o rthe action. A spokesman gaid
Rogers told the .,nbosudor that ·"Other
legal provisions relating to sudl 1eimru
11re being revieW't!d. ur1ently and that fur-
ther act.ion by ttrlJ l(IYernmept. under
pertinent laws could not be ncluded."
Last year, Ecuad«r recelved '$2 mDlion
In U.S. milllary aid. 'l1lt sil:e of this
year's program was not avaUab1e
although It was undentood Ecuador pla.
ned to buy IOme beUcoPton lnd -
aircraft from the United st.ta.
Ecuador also bu oOulhl credits for
overheuling some ships and tflUe were
IUSpended. U well SI> ol tbe -
Navy'• 14 combot and ~ lfltpo came
from the United States but t1-e ba'ff!
not beon .med 1g~1111rlam tflilitac
vessel.II, U.S. officiall uid.
DAIL.Y'PILOT'...-~
SAN CLEMENTE COUPLE WAS ABOARD DURING PANCAKE !:ANDING MONDAY.
Mr. and Mrs. Richlrd Johnson In jured Slightly a1 Engi ne Conks Ovt NHf County Airport
Crash Landing Probed
Near County Airport
Air crash investigators continued their
probe today of th,e cruh lantting of
an expensive twin-engine plane near
Orange County airport. wh ich caused
minor' lnjurle! to a San Clemente in·
dulbial ezecuUve and hia '-,flfe.
Richard M. Johnaon, 55, and his wife,
Diane, 41, required only emergency treat-
ment after tbe noon crash of their .pbne
about a mile from the· airport fandlng
strip. ,.
'nw Jchnaons ·live at 1217 Vla La
Jona, San Oemente.
A spokesman for the Federal Avia.lion
Korean Goes Berserk
SEOUL {UPI) -A South Koreaµ
-;.r,.an1 W..t btrmrk. illted
Iii: penona and injured four othen and
then 111ot;~ td'a..itr'MOftday nigljt
at a mli1fie ·camp .1rt"•tr.e1 IQmpO ~·
II ..na. -: o1 -· mllifary olftciala aaid tod1y.
Administration said. Johnson was at·
tempting a randing at the terminal at
12: 12 p.m. L. when the engines of the
Cessna 320 r· suddenl y stopped.
Johnson's atterr1pts to "feather" tbe
craff in to the terminal failed, and
the pla ne slammed into a plowed field .
The impact tore loose a fuel pod
on one wing tip, sparking a small fire.
The blaze waa quickly exUng~ed by
county fire crews swrunoned to the scene
by construction workers who were nearby
when th e landing occurred.
Other d~rnage tn the plane included
bent propellers, and a damaged un-
dercarri8ge.
The Workmen assiated Mrs. Johhlbn
rro m the downed plan e after she
reportedly mmplained of back p,atna.
Het husband exited from the-craft
on his own.
The field Is about tOO y&rdl !IOUf!l
()f the .Intersection cf Von Karman Drive
and McGaw street in the' lrvlne
l~COmplexJ
Capo Beach Vet
Killed in Africa
Highway MishaP.
A Capistrano Beach veterinarian, Dr.
John Hillstrom, was killed.in a highway
r"esh on the alopes o( Africa's Mt.
Ki limanjaro early today where he wu
• volUnteer Jn the U .s . AID prorm.
While Spokesmen fn Washington, D.
C., had litUe specific infonnatioo oa
tbe fatal mishap, Jack Tbomaa, a. SLa.te
Deoartment preu aide, aaid D r.
HllfstJ:om, the lather Of flVe children.
was worklne on a d~ project in Ar\ISN!, A small c,lty bt ~ ~
The· vetertnufan suffered teYete bead
lnjurtel wlM!n ·tu. vehicle Cl'ubed in
a road a"bouf 100 mllii'l north · of' DU
Es salaam: the Tinilrtin: Ciplt.91. '
Rlllstr~ """'!'° ·rUhed• tp a hospital
at Tanga, repcrta: lild, b¢ never reglll-
ed COlllC~
'lbomaa Aid .,.cilic local details m
Dr. H1llstro.Tt, wtae age wu ~
as about 50· In tnlUal •reports, were nOt
immediataty anllable.
"Our TariJenll 'cteak . said he WU
highly re8petted and a p pre c i a t 4·d
member 'of I.be AID team in Atrtcll,"
the oldo laid. .
At Nboa lnritatlen
Clementean Talks on U.N,.
Bernlece W. Harrti of San Ctemeote:
waa one of 20 cidmaa of the ... western.
... ,.. •flo ,tOlllfled -.1"'1~ Of Prest· ""1i , ~ II\. beC1op oo \be Untt.d
N-·ID la Fraadoco lalt week.
Tiie hotmp. -_, ta
-al . aeclloiio, .. the ' l1illlod Slate<
I by -HG'}' Cabol lAp. will prwli» matortal tor a a -ailal
of 111e e11-o1 the untied 'Natlonl
•nd the Untt.d Statu port!Ctpotloll Jn
the brpntutlon.
Mn. Harril WU selected to teltffy
becauM ol her Q yeara of ~ ..
on the Jocal, state and naUonal .. lef"el
of the United Nationl Aaaodatlon of 11
J I 1 '
• .,
•
'J.
•
:t DAILY PILOT SC T~Q, Januwy 19, 1911
~" Da1s to Jtfove
Capo Families
Given Reprieve
•
Several Sin Juan Capistr1no families
living Jn a condemned labor camp have
been given to days In which to find
·new homes.
·' The City Cooncil voled unanimous~y
... Monday to allow the families to remain
: a while l<>nger despite the fact ll:at
·the city is liable for any 1ccldent.5 which
·might occtD" as a reault of the condition
of the dwellings.
At the end of the 90 days the property ·.
:police Bribe
··Trial Slowed
'By Illness
•
A defendant's illness has hailed the
Orange County Superior COurt trial of
\wo men aCCW1ed or attempting to bribe
1a Costa Mesa policeman .
• Preside.Ing Judge William C. Speirs
)cheduled Wednesday for a further hear--mg on the delay after being advised
lhat defendant Eugene C. Rondondo, «,
of 2422 E. 22nd St.. Newport Beach,
was conf1ned to a Las Vegu hospital
and could not return to Orange County.
Rondondo was to have gone on trial
with Samuel C. Rosman, 'l7, of 29351
San Bri.50 Drive. Laguna Niguel. Both
men are accused of the attempted
bribery of Costa Mesa officer Gary
Barw!g.
Barwig baa testified tha t both men
offered him $10,000 to plant narcotics
on a witness in an upcoming criminal
trial involving Rondondo. That witness,
Charles S. Dreyer, 32. of 1645 Sunset
Lane, Laguna Beach, Wall named with
Rondondo in an Orange Count.y Grand
Jury ind.ietment alleging the thefl of
liquor valued at $25,000 from coaetal
nlght opota.
Both men are accused of 1ttempted
bribery of 1 policeman, conapir•cy to
flllely l!T'Pt and fumiehlng dana:erous
drugs. Thole drugs -1,MIO hlrblturate
tlblet.I -were allqedly found by Barwll
lut April S in • car driven by Dreyer.
Rondondo and Rotman 1te free on
bail.
Sentence Given
In Laguna Heist
A Santa Alli man who confQlt:d to
the holdup list June 14 of the Jolly
Roger restaurant in Llgun• Stach· bu
been sentenced to one year to llfe in
state prbon.
Or•nee County Superior Court Judge
Byron K. McMillan impoaed that term
on Benjamin Arthur Franklin, 35, after
reductlon of charges from flnt to aecond
degree robbery.
Pollet 111ld Franklin look '2,114 from
the ree:taurant at 400 S. Coast Highway
after forclna: an employe at l\lDpolnt
to hand over the money.
The employe told officers that Franklin
met him atttalde the restaurant. hustled
him inside with a gun at his back
and demanded all the money on the
premise!.
Motorcyclist Killed
In Freak Accident
SANTA FE SP RI N G S, I U PI l
-A motorcyclist died Monday of injuries
suffered when struck by a hood which
had blown off an 1utomobile on the
San Gabriel R1ver Freeway.
De.ad Wll Elbert L. Setzer, 29, El
Monte. The driver of the car wu not
beld.
owner, Mn. Ulllan Zlenaleln or
Pasadena must begin to remove the
dwellings or the county building depart-
ment will do it for her and send her
the bill.
The issue brought out in the public
hearing Wl!I not the removal of the
buildings, which most parties agreed
had to be done, but rather who wu
responsible for relocating the fam ilies.
The Zaengleins placed the
responsibility on the city but Councilman
Ed Chermak denied assertion.
"The reapon1lbility lies with the people
who allowed thi.! development in the
first pla~." he said . "If the re.aidenUI
have allowed these buildings t o
deteriorate then the res~ibillty is two-
fold . It lies wllb the Zaenglelns whft
allowed lhi! to continue and with
rea:idents who didn't make im·
provementa," he said.
Albe.rt Nelaon, A1sist.ant Director or
the Bullding Department, testified thi1t
there are raw sewage on the property,
electrical outlet.a without covers, sagging
roofs, no foundation.11 and other hazards.
BUI Reid, a local rancher who leased
the property from the Z11engleins up to
Dec. 31 and subleased to the families
said he didn't think the dwellings were
as bad u the building inspector reported.
Reid a.aid the buildings were 50 years
old and there was no building code
when they wel"! constructed . "Tiiey've
lasted 50 years so why are they unsafe
now?" he asked. "The wiring is poor
but it works. he plumbing isn't up
to code but it could be fixed. These
people have no place to go. To them
this is home. Their standards aren't
the 1ame."
Rtid said claims that he had made
Jots of money on the property were
false. He said one r11mily lived there
23 years and hadn't pa id a dime.
Mrs. Zaenglein's husba nd retorted that
they certa.inly hadn't collected rent from
any of the families and the rcspons!Mlity
was Reid's who had subleased the pro.
perty knowing its condition. "We knew
nothing of these condlUons until tlu-et
monthJ ago," be said.
Mn. Zaengleln added that whlle the
people remain they are not to pey rent
to anyone. Reid countered that they
hadn't pa.id since December and he has
kept the utilities connected "out of the
soodness of my heart."
"I feel sorry for these people but
the council can't 1it here and usume
responalblllty for babyalttlna them," said
Councilman Chermak. "The councll has
been put on the spot. 1 doubt U hone1t
efforts to relocate have been made by
the people themaelves.
Councilman Jim Thorpe said he felt
sure the people hid been seeking homes
but cheap housing In Capistrano ls almost
unknown. He added that the council
hu a moral responsibility to the people
who can't afford to live elsewhere but
aleo to their chlldren who should not
remain In those dwellln1s In unsafe,
unhealthy condltJons.
In a1kin1 for the moratorium on car·
rylng out the demolltlon, be called an
the public to lend their assistance to
the five families who 1tlll remsln on
the land.
There's No Business
Like Snow Business
BUDAPEST (UPI) -Two Bud.11pest
streetcar snow workers who had an
idea how to avoid work on a cnld .night
have been sent t.o jail for one year.
The. snow cleaners met two girls, told
them they were pleinclothes policemen
and that they suspected them of pr<>-
stitution.
"If you will do the snow shoveling
and, in addition, be nice to us, "°'e
will not report you to our hea dquarters,"
they told the girls. The glrl1 timidly
al{l'eed, but the case came before court
when the men boasted about their ad-
venture.
U~IT ..........
ELECTED HOUSE SPEAKER
Okl1hom1'a Rep. Albert
Carl Albert
Chosen New
House Leader
WASHINGTON !U PI) -Democrats
overwhelmingly selected Rep. Carl Albert
of Oklahoma today to be House speaker
but split sharply on election l'lf a floor
leader to replace him in the 9 2 n d
Congress.
Albert, 62, a party loyalisl with a
liberal voting record, won over Rep.
John Conyers, a fourth term black from
Delrolt who said Albert had failed to
display leadership qualities required of
a speaker.
Albert won over Conyers 220 to 20.
Albert, whose selection by l he
Democrals will be formally ratified by
the full House Thursday, when the new
Congress con venes, succeeds retired Rep.
J ohn W. McCo rmack of Massachusetts
who had served as ,speaker since 1962.
During that period. Albert wa1 party
noor leader. Five candidates were seek·
lng election at a closed Democratic
caucus to that post to succeed Albert.
A new party whip abn must be chosen
-a choice usually made by the speaker
and leader -to replace Rep. Hale
Bogs of Louisiana, one of the con-
testants for leader.
Prior to selecting Albert, on the way
to building a new leadership ttam, the
Democratic congreumen had toned out
Rep. Dan Roatenkowskl o/ Illinois. known
as Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley'1
spokesman in the House, as the caucus
chairman. Rep . Olin E. Teague of Tex11
was chosen. 151 to 92, Jn place of
RostenkowskJ.
Dr. Brown Rites
Conducted Today
Funeral .services were held today for
Dr. Virgil W. Brown. a Laguna Hills res-
ident and University of Southern Califor-
nia dental professor who died Friday at
USC. He was 61.
Rev. James G. Kirk of St. t.1ark's
Presbyterian Church of Corona del Mar
conducted the services at Pacific View
Chapel. Interment followed at Pacific
Vi@w Memorial Park.
Dr. Brown . who lived at 88l·N Via
Mendoza. is survi\'ed by his wire ,
Virginia: a son. Kitchell. of Palo Allo ;
a daughter. Mrs. Cheryl Grant, of Bloom-
ington. Ind. and a sister, Mrs. Sylvia
Schwan. of Ohio.
Dr .. Brown had lived ln California for •t years and was the associate director
of the postgraduate school of dentislry
at USC. He was a feilnw of the American
College of Dentists, an officer in the
American Academy of Dentistry and
was .active in st.ate and Los Angelea
tiental societies.
Capistrano
Gives Boot
To Teacher
By PAMELA HALLAN
01 "'' o.u~ •11tr t••lf
John V. Robbine, a music teacher
In the Capistrano Unified School District
for nearly 15 years, was fired ~fonday,
Tht board of trustees unanimo~ly
agreed to dismiss the tenure leacher
for "Incompetency" but refused to outline
specific charges.
Speaking in the teache r's defense was
Ed Olson, a musician for 55 years who
said, "If il takes 14 years to find a
man incompelent then there 's something
wrong."
Olson said when he moved to lhf!
district in 1954 Robbins w11s the only
mu.!llc teacher and was stationed at the
high school. "He had to spread himself
preUy thin ," aaid Olson. He admitted
that Robbins• discipline had been weak
but claimed this had no bearing on
his ability as a teacher.
"I wish you would reconsider before
you ruin a man 's career." he added .
Dr. Robert Beasley, chairman of the
board, assured the audience that the
decision had not bee n a hasty one. He
nid there was voluminous evidence to
support the charges.
Robbine, who was unavailable for 'com·
ment, hu vowed lo fight his dismissal
"all the way to superior court" He
now has 30 days lo make his intentions
known .
The school district then has 30 days
In which to answer before the action
la taken to court for a fin al decision.
Robbin!'! said last June he will not
resign. ''If they think I am incompetent
let them prove It," he said.
He has taught all levels in the district
including high school, elementary and
junior high. He is currently teaching
at Marco Forl!ter Junior H i g h in San
Juan Capistrano.
Wide-ranging
Agenda Faced
By School Board
Items ranging from religious education
to chef training are on tonight 's agenda
for the meetina: of the Board of Trustees
of the Laguna Beach Unified School
District.
The reilliar meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. in the Education Center, 5511
Blumont St.
Dr. Robert Reeves, instruction
superintendent of the district, will reporl
to the five-member board on the results
of the flrst week of lhe Released Time
Education Program. The. program was
implemented Jan. 11 after several
months of planning. Sponsored by se\'ef'al
Laguna Beach churches, re.ligious ed~ca
tlon is offered to fourth . hfth and sixth
grader1 once a week.
The churchas have leased a trailer
and hired a teacher to rotate among
the three elementary schools In Laguna
Beech and provide the training to the
l!ludents on 1 voluntary basis.
The board will also hear a report
on the Jan. 13 meeting ol the Regional
Occupational Program directors meeting .
The program was begun in September,
1970, Jo. proJ:lde vocational training to
high school l!enlors in the Laguna Beach
and San Juan Capistrano Unified School
Districts.
During the fall semester, several
student.I were given nurse's aide training
at a local convalescent hops ital. The
5pr lng semester program ca lls fQr
training several students in the art of
coo king In severa l local restaurants,
CAPO TRUSTEE RESIGNS
Thom•• Winget
Capo Trustee
Winget Quits
Longtime Job
Thomas J. Winget, 'l'rustee of the
Capistrano Unified School District elnce
unification, resigned Monday.
Wing el said in a letter to Dr. Robert
Beasley. chairman of the board ot
trustees. that he regretted the action
but found that business concerns would
be taking up too much of his time.
He was absent from a Lruslee meeting
Monday.
Winget Is president of Mission Bank.
in El Toro which is about to open
a new branch in Laguna Beach. He
resides In Dana Point.
Long active in community activities,
W i g e t I~ currently pre!ldent of the
Orange County Symphony Association
and is a member or the board of direc-
tors or the Saddleback Valley Chamber
of Commerce.
In accepting bis resignation, Dr.
Beasley said, "His expertise and talent
can't be purchased. This district has
been lucky to have hifu these past few
vea rs.''
· In m a k Jn g his resignation effective
today the special election to fill his
position will be called to coincide with
the April 20 general election in which
three other trustee positions are b e i n g
filled .
The board will call a special meeting
to officially set the dale of this election .
Marine Fliers
Escape Crash
'T'wn Marine pilots from El Toro MCAS
rscaped injury Mo nd ay when I.heir
f4 Phantom je! crashed lh~ee miles
from the Lemoore Naval Air Slateion.
A spokesman fr om El Toro said both
men. Lis. E .• I. Turner . 24. and S.
W. Pickrell, 25. are back on duly today.
Bot h are residents or Tustin.
The aviators were on a training flight
when an undisclosed malfun ction caused
the plane to plow into a fiel d short
nF the Lemoore n1nway . Bot h men
C'Jtctcd safely before the crash.
Cau!ie of the crash is under in·
vest1ga1 ion today. the spokesman 1ald.
Fashion Plate Felon
~1EXBOROUG H . Engla nd (U PI ) -
Fashion note· A gunman clad tn bright
red coveralls and hood held up a pnsl
rJfice earl y Loda; :ind escaped with
S7.200 in cash in a matching red duf-
felbag , police said.
SEASAME STREET
'
Smog Level
Figured Out
Simple Way
Orange County boasts twn entirely dlf·
fe rent systems for determining when
smog levels are high enough to re!trlct
physical activHy or schoolchildren.
One is the latest in sophisticated smog
measuring devices operated in three
county locations by the Air Pollution
Control District.
The APCD when it reco rds ozone
readings exceeding .35 parts per million
warns lhe Orange County Department
o{ Education by rad io. The county schools
office in turn warns school districts
participating in the program -wua lly
inland districts that more frequently ex-
perience smog.
The .!lecond system . that used primaril y
by coastal districts, is leM 1ophistlcated.
Yet. on Monday, when the ozone count
reached .34 parts per mill ion at Orange
County Airport -short of the level
for a school smog warning -the second
method proved quite accurate.
The second method goes under dlf·
ferenl names but boils down to the
"Go Outside and Sniff' smog warning
system.
In Laguna Beach Monday, William
F. Allen, principal of El Morro School,
stepped outside inlo the heavy, 1moggy
air, sniffed, and decided to curtail the
physical education and playground pro-
grams at his school.
William L. Ullom, supei:::intendent of
Laguna Beach Unified School District ,
said today Allen's action conforms with
district policy, ·since the county schools
office doesn't recommend participation
in the county warning 1ystem, ''Due
lo the cost of the system ."
"Our policy is based on principals'
own intuition," Dr. Ullom said, ''although
they may call the cnunty office for
a reading.•· Had Allen called the county
office Monday, he'd have been told no
1mog alert was necess ary .!Ince the
reading fell just one hundredth belnw
the requ ired .35 paru per million that
triggers school smog warnings.
Ullom believes the Laguna system is
more accurate since principals may
readJly see the errect of the foul air
on their students who quickly react by
aneezing .and coughing.
"Ninety-nine percent of the time these
kids live in smog-free air," Ullom eaid.
"When it does come, they react more
noticeably.··
Ullom described the smog that draped
Laguna Monday as "the worst I've teen
In six years . It was higher on the
hillsides. heavier and loaded with 1
am.ell."
William Cunningham, superintendent of
Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
also commented that the emog was
heavier. "Monday l!eemed to me to be
the worst day In history."
Yet, Dr. Cunningham was unaware
of the school smog warning system or
how he'd get the word to curtail physical
education activity,
"I don 't know how we get the word,"
he said. indicating lhe rounty !lchools
office had not informed Newporl-Mesa
officials about smog warnings.
"We have a fan-oul telephont reley
system to warn principail!, '' Cunningham
said. Getting lhe school smog word from
the county seems lo be whllt's lacking.
Allen said hi5 judgment to call off
physical activities "'as a "matter of
sensing how bad ll was. It \lo'al so
thick I .,.'Ouldn't see Pacific Coast
High"·ay. just below Lhe school."
Ed Camarena. APCD engineer, said
1hat \loilile an ozone count of .20 wa s
forecast for today, ·'with unusual con-
ditions such as we've been experiencing,
that can be way off "
He said co ntinuation or the surface
inversion or air mighl bring toda y's
reading III A level similar to Mnnday·s
-.34 parts per million ozone.
DAILY PILOT
Newplft .. _. H ...... ...
Liiie• l..U. ....... "..,
C... ..... S.CI ••
QlAHCla C0AJT l"UIL1$HIMG COMPAIN'
J.oHrt N. Wo.4
Pr•lllfl'll W~
Jocli K. Corl..,
Laguna Greenbelt, Inc.
Will Seek Canyon Site
Sesame Street is about the only street in the harbor area that hasn 't
had a carpet insta."ation by Alden 's.
In our thirteen years, we have carpeted thousands of homes in
Costa Mesa, Newport Beach , Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach.
One neighbor tells another until often we have worked in every
home on a block.
vie. ""'¥9n' or.ti ~• -.........
lhH'lt• KM¥11
""" ne111•• A. Mw,.,hl" ~··iw tl.icfl1r4 '-Hal ""111 Or•Nt c-tr .._. -c.ti. M-' ,_ W..t ..., .,,_ H....,..,.., ... 1cfl; m1 W•• ...... ......_,. •
~ .. 1cn~ m ,..,.,, ,,,_
Hllftl'"'foll •""'"' 17111 teKll ......,.,. a.n Cltf'Nnlt: lU$ ...,,., II CMlllW l'•I
By l'JIEDElllCK SCBOEMEllL
Of .. Mlfr Plitt Si.ft
With the s.eaI of a political campalan.
lbe: f.A&UM. Btacb Greenbelt, Inc .• plana
to "wtn" in lt11 by.1cqulrlng the 4Mhacre
Sycamore Hills site In Laguna Canyon.
To pick up support for the acqulsltion
project, the group, huded by bookseller
J•mes Dilley, has planned the following:
-A "Greenbelt Week," April 19-2$,
for the purpote of rallying support and
to nlae. hmds to purchase the 520-acre
Sycamore Hills property.
-To work clo.ely with the Lagun1
Be.ch Jayeees •ho have mede the Grten·
belt project their official program for
l9Tl. Realtor Rick Balter w!U 1ct u
Ualbl bet,.... the J1y<ee1 and the
Groenbelt.,..p.
TN announcement.a came at the 1nnual
meettnc ol the Greenbelt orpnlut\ons
1t tile lfAlld LI ..... Monday niaht.
Tiie Grwlbett wed wu supported
In a pnclamiiUon I a I u fl d by Mayot
Rldlard Goldber( Lite Monday If·
temoon. . some ol the many acUvltes slated
for G-belt We• Include t1lka by
polltlW flaunt, enteralnment b y
Hollpood atar1, ~IOfY aemlnar1 In
<Mjunctlon with UC, Irvine, p,.....
taUou: by CIOftlt!'Vat.lon lfVUPI auch 11
• ~\· •.
the Sierr1 Club and fund-raising cam·
palgrui.
To implement the Greenbelt Weti:,
Belzer called for the e1tablilbment o(
Ill elaborate committee ltructure to han-
dle various pha~ of planning.,
Committees will be set up to prov ide
tou rs of the Greenbelt, organize lectures,
work with downtown businessmen for
promotion, raise funds by selling bumper
slickers, buttons. raffles i nd benefit
shows, and to work with students In
Lagun1 Beach schools for door-to-<»or
solicitation.
The work of the various committees
wUl bt coordinated through a larger
central Cflmmltttt.
Bab.tr noted that the local Jaycees
(l'Ollp wUI go to the district J IY'"'
to try to 1•ill further IUppOrl from
thn>uihout Oranre County for u..
Greenbelt project.
A«onllng to llatur, the d~trlct
Jaycees aovernor hu thrclwn support
bthlnd the Gmnbe~ projecl
Dw1ng tbe lWOohour m e el l n I ,
Greenbelt members heard executive
bo•rd me.mber reports and vif!wed acores
of alldes deplcUn& thf! natural aetUrttt._.
of Wood, AlllO, Lllguna, El Toro end
Morro C1nyons, taken by J o c 1 I
photolfl pber RJchard Lawrence.
The formula is SIMPLE -we try to make each customer happy. Ask
YOUR neighbor -we probably carpeted her home. (If we haven't,
bring her in with you.)
•
__ ALDEN'S
UHTA ANA. OUJtN
TUSflN c.n ...
ALOIN'S
llD HILL CAl"1'1
I DIANllD
11>1• '"'-. ,...... c.m.
IJWJ44
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -'rl., 9 to 9 -S•t., 9:30 t• J
• • "
•
I
For The
Tort.
Record
Marriage
Licenses
Df',.ltlS
J~•MI• C °'"'•'· l~!onl <l•ut~•I• O'
l>\r, •rid Mr1 0•"'11 01orr" ol JIU '
3u"'•''" '°I•<•· COlll .... ,,. D•Tt c+
d•tlll, J'""''Y !6. G••v"''"~ u ,..,ltu .
Wed"••••v. 10 1'M, G"ooa Sll~•~••o Cl "'·
11trv. let! l •o•Ow•• Mcrt111rv, DlrK1er1.
H01111'"Y
11: .... L. t1or•"Y JO.•t 1•. el 305 IE . lltr
AYt .• lllbet. Dote ol tlnll'I. J1"Ul "1 11.
su ..... IYN t Y Soll. Die••· ~ 1•1-. ~rl·
vut 11,..,lcK Wtl't ~e!d •! 1-11 '""•llw•Y
Mltl'lu•"I·
ARBUCKLE & SON
WutclUf Mortuary
Cl7 E. 17Ut St.. Costl a.tes1 -• BALTZ MORTIJARIES
Coron• del !\tar
C..ta Mcu •
ORI .....
ml S-!U4
BEIL BROADWAY
J\10RnJARV
111 Bro.dway, Co1i. Afe11
LI~ • McCORhO CK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTIJARV
liH Lll'IU Canyoo llod.
49'-Mll • PACIFIC VIEW
M!:MORIAL PARK
C.111ekry l'lfttrh&ary
Q1pel
a509 Padflc Vkw Drtve
Newport Be1cb. C1lUonUa "'"fl" • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7111 BolA A\'e.
We1tmluter lll"'W • SMITHS' MORTUARY
U7 Atala Sl.
HW1dngton Bead!
l3M53t
Pooli11g
Of Funds
Studied
SANT A AN A. -A pooling-
or county and city funds
to bury utility lines will bt
one or lhe s:ubjects discussed
at th!: Feb. 6 joint meetin~
or county supervisors and
mayors of cities.
The proposal lo discuss
formalion of a financing pro-
gram such as the CQUftty'~
well publicized Ar I !: r i a I
Highway Financing Program
was n1ade by Supervisor
David L. Baker.
1'ri,gg!:ring the suggestion
was a request by Newport
Beach for $35,000 in count)'
underground utility funds to
use along Pacific C o a s t
ltighv.•ay adjoining the Sea
Scout Base, which is o• county
property.
Baker noted that there is
only $1.2 million countywide
in Funds to be used for un·
dergrounding. The money
comes from the utilities as
mandated by the P u b 1 i c
Utilities Commission .
The supervisors and mayors
1o1·ill meet 01' Saturday. Feb .
6 at the Los Pinos Boys Camp
off the Ortega llJghway in
lhe first of a series of sessions
ai med al b e t t er com-
munication between county
and city government.
F a.ir Board
Sues Fir1n
SANTA AN.<\ -Apparently
unamused Orange County Fair
board members have sued
amusement operators al last
year's fafr for more than
Placentia
Pair Guilty
In Holdups
SANTA. ANA -A pair of
Placentia youths, one of whon1
alleged was involved in a total
of 13 anned robberies, pleaded
guilty Monday i• Orange
Cou nty Superior Cour! to
reduced charges.
Randy DOn Ellis. 18. ad ·
milted two of th e 13 anned
robbery charges filed against
him and 1o1•as sent by Judge
Byron K. McMillan lo slate
prison for a minimum fi1·e·
year term. All other charges
were dismissed.
Arthur Clark Johnston Jr ..
20. pleaded guilty to armed
robbery a•d assault with a
deadly weapon. He dre1v an
identical state. prison tenn and
dismissal of four other counts
of armed robbery.
Both men were indicted by
1he Orange County Grand Jury
after the panel reYie1ved
evidence that !he pair "·ere
involved in a t9·dil.V stnng
"' armed robherie.~ in seven
Orange County communities.
f.1ost of the holdups were car·
ried out in gas stations and
sinall neighborhood markets.
Critic s
Of Films
Colorful
l\lau Convicted
I u Areon Case
~12,000 allegedly owing on thr SANTA ANA -An Orange
contract. Ol:l\1A N aJllCS County Superior Court jury
The complaint filed by thP has found an El ~1odena 1nan
stale attorney genera l's o[fice guilty of setting a fire lhat in·
in Orang e County Superior Ne w Pres ide nt flicted damage estinuited at
Court on behalf of the 32nd $750,000 al the Orange 1o1·are-
Dislrict Agricultural Associa· FULLERTON -0 o c t o r house of General Tire and
lion charges Alias Amusement Fred M. Kay. an obstetrician-Rubber Co. last Aug. 12.
Enlerprises with non-payment gynecologist rrom Fullerton, Judge Howard C a m P r o n
of $12,068.72. will be installed as the 8lrd C1rdered Anthony f.1\ch;iel Tor·
That amount is the b11loncc President of the O!'ange Coun· rr.s. 23. lo return to his
owing on the $30,liOO co11+ ty f.1edica l Association tOC· tourlroom Feb. -i !or !>en-
cession drawn up between the MA) on Jan. 23 at lhe $gnUi1 tencing that cou ld bnng him
fair board and the Atlas Ana Country Club. He sue-;i two to 20-year term in state
organization, the J a \~ s u i 1 1_,~-:;cd;',olloriiiiiil<liiciiiiLmyiil,iiiiCii.iiViioiigiioii.iiiiiiipiiciiiii,oiioii .• liiliilii;liiiliii 11tates.
DANISH fUaNITUal SWIDISH CITSTAL
<.:onnty Doctor lllDAL ll~ISTll CHINA & STiil
11'ralilt•m•11
5118 DAILY II I 8111 FRIUYS
Our convtnient b1nkin1 hou1s were nlablishtd to
bt of s1rvic1 lo yo11. Don't Mh 1t 3:00 ••.
relax ..• 1nd bank at I ll'IOl'l ltisurety Pitt. You
can Slvt lime ind 1et more done. whether
blllinns or plusurt, wtlln you eliminate rushinr
to !ht b1nk In the middle of ttie 1rtemoon.
Ou1 employees ire just n friendly ind Mlpful •t
S·OO or 6:00 P.M, Our 1xtr10rdin1ry unique
wrvica will mike blnkin1 ti
Hewport ~ttional Bink a pltuvrt.
9 CONYINllHT OPPICll SllYIN• ORA.NOi COUNn
Alt.-rt Dnlct Mlcl!tllOfl tt MtcArthur lll·l l 11 • ..,... Otftll ...,.,,. ti ltmbt1H M2·1 l•I
C.llt11 P1rt Offlet Nvtwaod 11ComllHlllWHltb 171·nc>O • ... .,Mill otlcil H.rtlOt 1t lt'M 171·7290
hPlrirH Olkt $ul'ffior It Pltcentil M2·951 I • u......, Oftllt lnl °"'''"" It stftt Coflt111 71·•1-'0 Wntdln Offlel WNttllff •I l>Mf' 14.2..JI 11 ,,,, ltldl Ottk1 Lt1JUll Woi!~. $411 ... th SH-271 1 • Lii""• Mllh Oftk:e Lliturt WD111!. LI run• Hllll $10 JlOO
..
Tuttd11, J111w7 J~. 1971 DAJL't '!LOT f .
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CI: LEGAL N<Yl'ICI: LIOOAL N011CI':
--
I
1
,
JIJ DAIL V PILOT SC Tutw!ay January J9 1971
LEGAL NOTICE Wortlt
c.1•T11ric.An °" ,.,,.N.,I.
.. le.I~ "Ir'" ........ Tiie UftHnl9-dg ~ (If! l'\r
,.,.., ..... -~-a :l.irH l !\I UIM ~ 11 C .... lrt"""' II 7908 AHi \11111 ..__, llt.O. I' 0 DOii
4A1l. C.llfoNlla.. llftOtl W.. I clttl-I ""
-ol MARCO NEWPO•T -111.o ..... ,.,... •• ~ "' "" ,. low ...
.,,_ -.,...,.. l11 tul -t lt ct
ti r11l0troc1 t rt-ti 11:11-_L 10-wU
Recession Really
Ptul Htnov ""' ..... \I'll I Nh.PO ' .. "°" c.11"°"'i.
Milclest of Five
l'llYlll \<It MY 'fOe Alt \1 1 1
Nl-1 l!IMch C.11111'11 a
Ct Id JI" lt lt 1l
Ptu \<le 11v
P~r • Herwy
Sl.O.TE OF CALIFORNIA
COUNTY 01< LOS ANGELES u
On Jtn I tJI IM!C • mt • I'll> UY
l'ub c In t nd for ••<I tauntv •n<I
$It --y 1-lld PtUI 0 Ht It~ •n<I Phy 1 L Ht'11t~ kf\CWll
lo m. o be !hi P<!!rsoo• whOf• "'"'"'
I t aubKtlbed to r>t "' fl" • ufl\•fl
•"" 11cllnow edtl"CI lo "'" 1~11 /\fl' ••Kulld !"-s.m•
w "'*°' m" htn<I s...s •ea 40i<F (: AL 5EALI Ml,., K Hpnrv
l<IO!lrl' Pub t..C.1 a n o
P Inc P•I Ot! (.II In
0 •119• [ounty
Mv Comm u on E•P "' Mo t-t17
P bsht<I 0•"9<! c .... 1 D11 v P o
J~.,u•'1' ' 21 •n<I Fob"' v 1 t
1.i no.n
LEGAL NOTICE
T4n H
NOTICIE TO t •IED1TO•I
01' I ULK TJU,NSl'IE I
IS~1 11'1 -11'1 UC CI
NOT CE IS HIEllEllY (; VEH TO THE
C I'd to 1 cl C JANE JACKSON
T •nsft ror wlloot bu1 "'" •<ICI ••• • 110 w Un on SI -,pl Fu II Ion
Cguntv o4 Ottl'\lt Sii • cl Ctlllor" • thtl • bu k t tnlle • •l>Dul to bl!
mfdt lo Marvin D Glboon T aMft et
WhOM bu• neu •dd,..n • 1•131 CtrloJ S Tusl~ C1>11n Y al O •"'llt Set
1fC1lafla
Thoe pr-ty ID ~ t •"sit ed h
I~• rd • 1000 So N•wacrt D ~" cosi.
Me•• Collf\IY of Or111tt Sitto 4"
Ct lotn 1
S.kl "'°"" ,., Is <HIC bed n ~·M•I ..
A I stock In l r•<I• f •Ill"'' ll"IUlll"''"'
•llCI •-wtl ot 11>•1 oeer ba tius neu t"""'" I• SNOOl'Y S l nCI lo.cl ed a
By SYLVIA PORTER
Assuming that lhe recession
O( 1969 71 IS bottonung ()Ul
1n this its 141h month 1l
\1111 go down 111 history ai:i
the mildest of th e five
business do" nturns of the
post \\orld \Var II era
If your business has failed
u1 recent months or 11 )OU
are now belllg pushed into
bankrupl!'y this Judgment
may n1ake you even n1ore
b1Uer than you already are
1bou! the US economy 1n
the flrsl half of the Nixon
Admin1strat1on And you of
all people would have a point
for m terms of business r .. 1lures this has been a
serious slump The 105 28 per
cent upsurge 1n business
failures smce the economy
turned down in November
1969 1s the worst of the five
recessions
Or 1f you have losl your
JOb or been pul on a part lime
shift yo u too may wince at
this ob1ect1ve comment for
to you betng unemployed at
a time of rapidly chmbmg
1'000 ~ NeW1>MI a..., ev• d Cml• prices JS far more than a
Its a disaster a
But nevertheless
Mt•• C0tint\' ol Or111111 S!f • or rece!Ston Cl torn 1
Th• bu k 1 1n11e wt 11e c011wm1ta<1 nightmare
o&n w 1lle !'Ile ~5 h '"~ ol J1nu1•••, 1----------------1 1'11 II 0 00 AM II E .... 1d E.cow
Cotl>O 11 o" '161 l nco n ,1,venue l u1n1 LEGAL NOTICE ~!'':.,,., ~Oll<lh ot Or1nve 511 t of I----------------I
So 11 11 known lo tho T 1n1fe OOM T-41.U 1 boJs ne • 'llntt• 1no 1dd esses u1ed NOTICE TO c11a111T01t1
' '
• ' I r SUl'ElllOlt COUltT OF bY T llll e Ot Or 1,,1 h H Yfl I It THI! STATE OI' CAlll'OltHIA 11111 1 ~ FOii THll COUNTY 01' OltANGlf o~:e o..c~ri..r 1 19/0 H• A-4M21
Mirv 'I O c; bloOn £111 t of HENRY P HESSLER I Ml
Tron<lt ~ known 1• HENRY PAUL HESSLER
•MllltALO llSCROW COlll'OltAT OH Ottllit<J 11•1 LIM.II!! Avt,_ 5•11t J NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN lo he •u.,1 l'irt Ci l llrn 1 t t<I lo I ol 1he t bo\ft 111mf<I decf<len
• ..,,_ Na. •S-?121-S m•I • ' l>f:l'Slln\ hlY "' c tlms .ai;I• ... ,
Pub lshf<I 0 •119• c .... , o • ., " lot he •• d aKtdlNll • • rt<IU tf<I '" I I
'. ''''
UI 11 h•m w lh ~ nect•Yrv voocha • n Jtnua ., m.. clllct ot l1'>t elf k ot Ille l lloYt
LEG AL NOTICE
l,l,lt 2tU
SUP'l!lllOll COUllT OF THI'
ITATR 0,. CALU'OltNIA l'O•
TH• COUNTY 0,. Olt,1,NGI:
Clot NU_,. 0 -
IUMMOMS IMA•lttAGEI
., , !ht "''' Iago of Pel OM P OBEll:T G lllt.-.WLEY 1nd ll:eoP<>Adtnl
J UO TH M BRAWLEY
To Ill• ll:11opon<1..,1 JUO TH M
9 11:AWLEY
t nl !ltd cau r ar ta a 1sen1 lnem w lh
tne nKen 1 v voocher~ ta 1111 un
dt 1 1nea 1 lht otllce cl h• • o ,,.,., DONALO N BELVEAL "355 l oa1n<11
[1nvan Bou '"' a Su • 50 Waod •n<I Hiia C1 1on 1 '36' whkh Is ht
a t ct al buslne~s ot fht un~ • vM<I
In 1 1 mt t s at It nlng lo r>t "''" •
ol '' d de<tdf" w !h n lot! moMhl
1111 ltlt t rsl PUb t•I on of lh I ""' Ct
OtllHI J1nU1ry I 1911 Betty M• I• HISS er E•eclllrl~ of IM W I nf
!he Jbove n•..w<I SKeatn
OONALO N a1EL\l'IE,t,L The a•l I Gl'ler l'l•s I ltd • af!I! an 6JH l.,.1.,.1 c111y11 ''"" f;Unctrnlnv "°"r m1rrl111 You tnll' l•llil ~I
I t t wr t1INI ttsPOnh W thin l~lrty WIO<lltllf HI 11 C1 ltll'~ t tl ~
d ays ct 1h• da • ""' lh' 1ummcm1 Tt ftlJ) l44-40M
i. M!rved en Yau II vcu 1& 1 ro I t AllomtY w E••<111tl•
• wr ' en t SPOnst w thin I UCh I ..,, PU~ lhtd 0 I nt• Cc1st
YOU ddnu I m•v ~ fTilf Id •nG lh• Ji nuirt 11 ' U en<I f:'u~cT ";!' !"'e" h~ 10:~;;:~' fg~,! ~ ~ 1tn
Oat P ol
f'•b u•r. 2 '" fl 111lon or p OPt'1V IPo;i11I ~uapo ,:l·----1-E_G_ALC-CNCQ"'TCJCCCEC:----c~ d CUI odl' ch d support •Ito ~•v'
lets tol 1 •nd 1uch o tie e tf ••1 -------~--~c n tv II<! o 1nl"11 by !he cou t I US INIES!.
" ., ... With ,. -lh• •<lvl(t •t sT-.TEMEHl
•11 1ll•11ev 111 th 1 "''!!tr y.., 111o<1 " 111<1 to tow "11 ot )Oil 1 do"' bu• ne.n
llEAt H 011.APEllV EllYICE too .. .. • -•• ., .. 11111 .,..,, w ui. .. ••
r111en11 I tnv "''V -.. I !ff t• I "'' O•tl'd Sffrern~ l.t. 19/G We\ 11~ s H I Co•• M •••
(SEAL)
W E ST JOHN
Cit I:
!Iv -,LAN W CU"l ~
D•au!\I JOSl'PH P' LIOOY
AllorMr .i L•w 1 .. S W Klltl I A11t
A"t"-lm Ctllfemlt 77'SfU
1i11 ... 111v fv P'I! 111111r
Pub 1hed 0 •"9e C61$1
J l l\1111"1' s ll lt 2t 1911 Do '
LEGAL NOTICE
T471lt IUPElllO• COUllT 01' THl
STATI! 01' CA LIPOllN A l'Olll THIE CO~TY 0" D•AHGE
Nt A "'211
•• "'
frlOT Cl: 0,. HIEAlllNG 01' l'l!T T ON
POil l'•OIATI! OF W LL AN O '"011 LIEnl!ll5 T•STAMIENTAll Y
f s •IP al G LDEAT H DLAN KENSH I'
Dolct•'ld
l<IOTttE IS HEAEllY GIVE N •~•!
M•v K lltnkensha hi• l 11d ht~fl
~ otl on •or a Db• • cl w an<I
l o ""'"Ce cl Lt 1...-• Te1&m~~1 V lo !tit. P• cnt ref• 1nce o wh ch
II m•d• nr ""'f ~·CU I \ ~d
lh•I the r "'" •nd p i t t of ~•• no
I ........ h•• Men 1e 0 Ja Vil'
?t 197 f OM Im n hf C<>u oom
n O•Pf ttntn 'IO l C ,. d CQU I
" 100 Cvc Cen ~ O v• W • 1 ..
1n• C v a Sen~ -,,., C1 on I
Ot td J•~u• Y 17 '11 W E" ST JOHN
Ccuntv Cle ~
•OVlll(I! I tlOLlllOOIC
"' H0<1~ I NC!w1r Su o 10 ~•I'll• •"1 C1 lt..,11 t110
To 11111 5'1.iltl At>1r"1v1 for l'•I on1
Pu~ •h"11 0 ~""" toa' 0 1 y J1nu1 v 10 Xl 1! n
T EGAL NOTICE
T-i.nn
" 171 Tl
C• lo n 1 m 21 Dont 11 Kenne h k1nMt
G ~.,,..th 0 Hunl ""'"" C1lllo 11!• f?MI
t J 0 I
D••c'1
Th 1 l>ut n•n • be n, tonauc ed bY '" ,,.., ""~· o K Kenflt Y
Put> •lll'd 0 l"ilt COii 01 V
J•nu1rv lt :ll 11111<1 Fl'I> u• r
" LEGAL NOTICE
l'!CTITIOUS IUJINl!SS
Sl,l,Tl!MfNT
Tl\1 lo ow ng ~tton I do 111
"
' . ' . J1j 11
EXECUT VE LANO Lfl<E 1'10 E
Ed n•e Su • 1 l 5•n • An•
C1 on •
The• K Sime~• '''' Dt nr o ~· HUn "ii'"" Betcn Ct le n • '1U1 Tl\ 1 1>utl'1f'u • bt ..., conduc I<! b
1n ln<llY du•(
lh•I K S monp
Pub •lie<! O ang• COi• 01 l' P O
J1nu1 y t 2' troll l'eb u11 y 1 9 '11 I t I
1 000 s Of OIL PAINT~NGS
WHOLfSALI WAalHOUSI
Ol'IH TO THE PUILIC
50°/o OFF
1111 f EO INGEll SANTA
"IOlnt IH-t.60ll "'
• '<' OE •LIEllS W,t,HTIEO
How your odw.nlll119 to•
fwll t '"' wllh
TELEl'HONI
AHSWlRIHGo IUllAU
835-7777
werk
recessions
February
April
•n•t• Non • .., e"'olarm•nl
U~r>'D O~mtof • • MU~ I P oduclkl"
Pet;on11 Into,...
II•• ""~ nmrnt Rt <>I ~ats lle•I rt t I ~•Its
M;>nU ,..&<le W ti
II•• m1nu I "'" 5t ti GNP tur W 1
GNP real
A le lt~D OI !
8 U• neH ti UrTS
HOt!l ng • a t
Loan
1 O\\ ing~ 1n HOT CE TO Clll!C TOii~
SU~l!lllO• CC\JllT 01' Ttll!
STATll 0 1' CALl l'Oll,_ t FOii
THI! COUNTY 01" OllANGI'
Nt A .. 7'f'I
f.1111 Of 01WTl CLINTOl<I
Plil'l!KOn • 10 ~-n '' 0 C.L NTON "lilEStOTl Oece1•"1l
WE LEASE ALL MAKES & MODELS
NOTICE S 1-lEllEllY G VEN lo 1111
crodlla<I ol lh• tbove n1me11 oec'°""'t
t111t t 1 01 •-h•v "' cl&lmt tao ntl ll>t 81 d 6-~nl I I tt<IU t'etl lo 11 I
1....., w h IN! "ectts~rv ..ouch..,., " lht all Cl of lht (I ~ of lhl t boVt
tntllltd COii•! or to o '"""' lh""' w th 1~ "KtUtN voucht ro lo the u"' O!'rll~""' •I 1"9 offletc ol htf 1ttornfl'• MCKENNA & F ITl NC ,1100 El Toro
1100(! l uflt A L1~111 H • Ct llotn • ttill wfl ch It lhl Pleet cl' bul ,..,,
cl I~ undo•• eMd In • m1tt~11 H r
I• 11!ne to tM ttlt~ o1 11 d dt<"ld1nt
wllhl" lou "'°"!ht tfltr th• t "' a~b (t-'°" ol lll t l'ICllA Ot"-d Jtnu.arv 1 1t11
Ir-• ·~ott
l!lllCUlrl• ol !fie W H o•
-1bow "'"""' ~e<N!n M(KINN& a l'ITTINO
sv1 Ofvllle W Mc:C1,,...11 "'1• II T-....... l•lt. ,t,
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J1'1\0lllf II '' 11•<1 i<ebrUl 'l'
"" LEGAL NOTICE
I I
... , .
l~• 71
,,
EXAMPLE
1971 BUICK SKYLARK
2 DOOR HARDTOP
A co~d I on n9 A uloM1t c I on1m u en p o w1f •*••
n9 pow1 d 1c b 1ke1 W SW rtd o "'••It r•mc l•
ouh dt ,., .,0 plu1 o!I ftclo v sl •nd• d equ pmtnl
1• MONTH OPEN ENO LEASE
$110 PER MONTH
A QUALITY LEASE AT SENSIBLE PRICES
' '
' '
,
OVER THE COUNTER
••1-Hn 1• .... uler -ltli.r.$ 11 -,.• ,.,.1•11' t • 111 1,.111 NAIO
Ptk91 • Ml lel. ..... ,....,u ., _,..Ila ,.,..... ..... lf '"'"" M ....
NASO Llat1ngt for Monday, Janu1ry 18, 1971
-:"1'F) i" • , . . "
MUTUAL
FUNDS
I
Complete-Nr.'v York Stock List
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*When I die, con I toke my blonk ~t wi th me ?"
CHECKING
•UP•
WomenNotAlways 1
Talking of. Men
By L. M. BOYD
A WIF E WHO doesn't get
out of the house to work for
wages ought lo make al !east
two phone calls daily, one in
the morning, one in the after-
noon . each at least 10 minutes
in length. So contends an
authority on mental health.
Such calls. he says. uplift,
like catnaps and cof fee
breaks. Interesting. Tn1agine a
wife on a party line need
not talk all that much, pro-
vided she listens in awhile.
Anyhow, the foregoing jibes
with our Love and War man's
Profund Conv iction No. 14C,
namely that loneliness stirs
up more misery t h a n
any1hing . And the ailment
ought not be left untreated,
that's clear.
THAT WOMEN when
together talk most ly about
men is an erroneous theory.
Wh at they actuall y talk mostly
about is their health. Or so
says a beauty parlor operator
of 23 years' experience ....
TF YOU 'VE GOT any old
Superman comic books in the
attic, better treat I he m
respectfully. Note th e col-
lectors recently bid up to SI OO
for a 1939 edition .... YOU
KNOW HOW a line o[ dialogue
stic k s 1n your head
sometimes'! This one has br-en
stuck in mine for days: "It's
not that the majority is silent.
it's just that the liov<'rnm<'nt
is dear.··
MRS. LAPP of Lansing. Ill.,
says she plans to name her
next son Burr. Is she serious"
Can"! say. but she did give
her daughter. who was born
at sunri se in a car v.·hile cross-
ing a bridge . the name Dtiwn
Bridi;(etl ' ' T If E R E
HAVE BEEN three cases of
~uicide in my Corps." wrote
a German ,e;eneral in an of·
ficial order to his men during
World War IT. "I strongly call
yo ur attention to the fact that
the suicide of members of
the German army in time of
v•ar is desertion."
AJ\1 ASKED WllJ Cll came
first. the song "Chiquita
Banana" or the trade name.
The song it was. One af-
ternoon just 27 years ago, Len I
M a c k en z i e and Garth I
J\lontgomery knocked out that l
ditty for the United Fruit
Company. The trademark
sprang therefrom.
What a pron1otion piece!
\\'hy don 't the apple growers
con1e up with something like
that? Hov.· about : An apple
for breakfast. that will do
.... Don 't want anymore of l
the pot or the glue ....
An apple for lunch Ls sufficient
hep .... Don"t need anymore
of the pills for pep .... I
No. il Ja cks son1e thing. I
Try again· Tired of "Cool "
and tired v( "Neat ~" ... ·J
Tired of six to the pad where
J cal . . . . Tired n f
psychedelic bars . . . . or
seaweed girls with s a n d
guitars .... Of slippery lips
and rancid hair .... Aban·
doned denim underwear .... 1 Of festival sex in the trips l
by the moon , ... I'm tired,
man . tired or the old com-1
niune! .... Now v.·e"re roll·
ing.
All right, wind it up: Don't !
v.·ant any liquor. just can 't ,
take 1!, ... Mo111 and Money. I
the~· ~till make it , ... Don ·!
need a downer. evener. upper
.... Just Rive me a natural
apple for dinner . That
l<is t line didn"\ come out quite I
right . V.'i!I \\'Ork on it.
Your q11esr1o"s and com ·
1nr11 r~ (Ire 111e/rnmerl anrl
1t1ill be 11scd in C/IF:CKI!\.'G I
!I P luhercver possible. Ad.
rlrrss /rttcrs to L. M. Boyd,
P.O. Box 187.'i . Newport
Beach, Calif .. 92660.
He's the Same
But Na.1ne ls Different
DALLAS, Tex . (AP) -For 28 years, Harry though t
his name wa5 Harvey.
But thi5 week he learned lhe truth.
"Boy, was I ever shocked." said Harvey--0r Harry-
Labban. He and Mrs . Labban were digging through some
old papers when they discovered the error on his hand·
written birth certificate.
Harry called his mother.
"She said the nurse who rilled in the birth certificate
must ·have just made a mistake ." he said. "She intended
to name me Harvey." A quick call to hi s lawyer showed
he has no legal complications. Just to tnake sure; how~
ever, Labban will go to court and change his btrUt regis-
tration from Harry to Harvey.
Then, fortunately, he wUI not have to chance the name
o( bii son, Harvey Labban Jr.
2 SUITS l'OR MIN
$99.
1 CWfMI MM<t. lhlrt ........ Stlitt.
' ..
JUST LOOK AT THESE FAMOU S NAMES, •• ALL HIGHLY ADVERTISED NATIONALLY ••• NOW AT LOWEST PRI CES EVER ••• AL~ FIRST
QUALITY AND FROM OUR REGULAR STOCKS.
CARTERS -NANETIE -HEALTHTEX -LEVI'S -BILLY THE KID -HANG TEN-KANTWET -PETERSON
GENNAWAY -PLAYMORE -MAY KNITIING -LOVE -9UILTEX -HAN CINDERELLA -ROB ROY
·ALL REDUCED FOR A FAST SELL-OUT - 4 DAYS ONLY -WED., THURS., FRI. & SAT -JANUARY 20 · 21 ·22 -23
SALE STARTS WED., JAN. 20th, 10 A.M. SHARP
• GIRLS •
Underwear
Val. to $1 .50
fAMOUS MAKE ASSORTED
COATS
Val. to $25
$1299
BLOUSES
TOPS
T-SHIRTS
Val. to $7
$277
••• COAT SETS
~ .... $17
$999
Limit ..
, O•••tllV
FAMOUS MAll'.I
DRESSES
Va l. to $10 Y2 PRICE
Val. to $6
USE ·YQUR BANKAMElllCARD
MASTER" CHARGE
YOUNGLAND'S CHARGI-
GENTRY 'S' -C!HARGE w.·ev.n T•k•
CASH
•BOYS•
Pa.iamas
Val. lo $4.50
Sweaters
Val. to $10
Slacks
Flares
Jeans
Val. to $8
T-Shirts
Shirts
Val. to $6
EVERY ITEM
IN THE STORE
Reduced
ALL SALES
FINAL
No-Lay-A.Ways
No Exch•noe•
No Wr1pping
No lonus Cards
• INFANTS •
3 PC.
SWEATER
SETS
Val. to $6
$388
Val. to $6
$288
CRIB
SHEETS
Val. to $1.69 99¢
2300 HARBOR BLVD. <HARBOR CENTER> COSTA MESA Phone 545-1440
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Boyle, Brier, Harris, Hayakawa, :Qoppe, Wilson; ·
Big Names on The DAILY PILOT E~itorial Page·
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bAIL'f l"ILOT Sl1ll 1"11119
LAGUNAN ANDY WING MAKES RECYCLING AN ART FORM
Ecology Artist Puts New Life in Discarded Materials
E~ology Artist
Reusing Trash Not Neu; to Lagunan
By PATRJCK BOYLE
or 1~1 0111¥ P•ku n111
Although the movement to recycle
trash is just beginning lo gain popularit y,
a Laguna Bcaeh arlist has been using
discarded items in his pa1nlings fo r over
10 years.
Andy \Ving f1r~t began lo .. resurrect
trash'' in 1957 when he made a picture
fran1c fron1 !he \ll'Oodpile of a New
~1cxico pig ranch. Since then. he has
done over a hu ndred paintings using
discarded wood for frarnes or as a
painting surface. house paint remnants,
col!cctcd rainwater·. fiberglass dust from
a sur fbo:ird shop and many ather
castoffs
"It is just a 1natter of taking someth ing
that has been thrown awiiy." \Ving says,
•·and find rng <in artistic usl' for it."
He pulls a painting from a shelf in
his outdoor workshop and shov.·s hov.•
scraps of y,•ood were glued together to
build a flat painti ng surface.
The pieces of \\'OOd a rc from a lumber
yard, the results of lrimrning the ends
of boards. Th(' scrap.~. ('ach about an
inch !hick. oil h;1ve a distinct texture
from the saw blade
"I JUSI allow the lhinp: lo fall together
Into an r1r1is ric form.'' \Ving explains.
If \Vin(! uses cunvas as a painting
surface, he makes use of an old w!ndo\v
frame to strett'h the fa bric. Sometimes.
he adds eucal.vptus branches to lhe frame
that hulge the c!lnvas into different
geometric patterns. Coffee can lids have
been used in one nf his paintings. tucked
between a branch and 1he C'anvas to
bulge circles Jn the fabric.
The paint \Ving add~ to the speciall y
bu ilt surface is not the stand ard artis\"s
oil found in an ;irt ~upply store. To
keep do1v11 !he expenses of painting,
\Ving says he sometin1es makes use
of discarded house paint as a background
or a base.
··Acrylic is basicaUy the paint I use,"
he says. "I use a raw canvas so I
can soak the color in from the front
and the back.''
In this way, he says the fabric becomes
resistant to deterioration such as mildew.
"I can keep the paintings outside and
they won 't rot because of the plastic
in the canvas," he notes.
Instead of making paint or buying
expensive colors, Wing makes use of
the sedin1ent that settles to the bottom
of his brush-cleaning can. He also often
mixes earth and different colored sand
\Vith the acrylic to gel vi sually pleasing
shades.
··Not everything I use is cheap,'' he
says, "Sometimes. I have to use a very
fine paint to get a good transparency.
I use $2 a gallon housepaint or spend
$2 a tube for the finer paint. I sometimes
use chalk that costs 15 cents a pound."
One result of his y,·ork he displays
has a eucalyptus branch r u n n i n g
diagonally behind th!' canvas, stretched
over a window. A eucalyptus leaf lie~
in the dry paint nea r the bottom of
the canvas.
"Sometimes, I pull the leaves out of
the paint and they leave a little track,"
he says. "I did one painting du ring
a Santa Ana wind and the wind blew
debris and dust into the drying paint
for a very nice effect."
"Nearly everything I use is on its
second time around or is discarded
n1ater.ial that 1vas never used the first
time." he adds.
Wing·s paintings are now on display
for a one·man show at the Julie Dohan
Gallery. 746 N. La Cienega Blvd., in
Los Angeles.
Chrysler, UAW Reach
Pact; Strike Averted
DETHOIT ft;PJ) -C'l1rysler Corp.
and the l'nited 1\ulo \\'orkcrs reached
lenlat11·c agrcL•n1c11t lod1:1y on parts of
a ne11· t1u·cc·yc<1r contract covering
\Vorkcrs in tile 1·nilc1I Slates and Canada
and averted :i second strike in the auto
industry \\'llh1n the p:i st four mon!h S.
Leonard Woodcock, president of the
UAW, said tentative agreement had been
reached on lhe contract for production
and maintenance .workers and bargainers
were very close to wage increases for
llalaried workers.
' The union has 120.000 members at
thryslcr plants in the United States
B:nd Canada.
A strike had been threatened for 10
9.m. EST. but Woodcock said the
ileadline had been suspended indefinitely
because or the complexities and lack
~f time. He said ty,•o or three days
of h:ird work remained to work out
1 variety or issues.
1 The agreement closely paralleled the
tonlracls achieved at General ~1otors
Corp. and Ford Mal or Company, where
the union won an average 51-cent·an-hour
wage increase in the first year of the
(hree-year contract and increases of 14
cents an hour in each of the succeeding
two years.
t 'rhe main stumbling block lo final
settlement -back pay for Chrysler
workers -was resolved when the com-
pany agreed to retroactive pay back
to last Nov. 2, the same date agreed
to by Ford.
, Chrysler is the only member or the
~Big Three" which has salaried workers
tepresented by the UAW.
The ooion has asked for 13 percent
tncrea.ses for Chrysler's s a I a r It d
J.rorkeni. The rompany offered ·eight per-
Cent or less ror higher p11ld workers,
but Its propoi;al for lower paid workers
y;as about 13 pen:ent. Only about . 10,000
of the 120,000 Chrysler warkers fall into
lhe 511laricd class.
Woodcock said no dale has been aet
for approval of the tentative agreement
by the union's inlernalional executive
board or Chrysler council. A date will
not be picked until the salaried workers
problem is settled.
But Wootl cock said the two sides 1vere
far enough along on the issue of wage
increases for the salaried workers to
suspend the strike deadline. He also
said the union dropped its demands on
a dental health care plan when the
company agreed to study the issue.
Oscar A. Kaiser
Of Laguna Hills
Services Slated
Services will be conducted Wed11esday
at 2:30 p.m. for Oscar Ambrose Kaise(,
a Laguna Hills resident who died Satur-
day at the Pa rk Lido Convalescent
Hospital in Newport Beach. He was
79,
Officiating at the services will be Rev.
Phillip Murray of the Community
Cong;-egatlonal Olurch of Co rona del
Mar. The services will be held al Baltz
Mortuary Chapel in Corona de! Mar
and interment will follow at Fairhaven
Memorial Park.
Mr. Kaiser, who lived at 721 Avenid8
Maje ·ca, is survived by his wife, Marion;
1 dau,:::hter, Marion K. Bar~I, d Coeta
Mesa: a granddaughter, Mrs. Barbara
Ann Huber, or Irvine; a brother. Dr.
Carl J. Kaiser; a sister, Mrs. Margrett.I
Wright and a great-granddaughter, Carol
Ann Jlu ber.
Mr. Kaiser was a member or Amerk:an
Legion Post 455 or Costa Mesa, the
Masonic Blue Lodge. Scottish Rites 32nd
degree and tbe Shrlner Tebal1 Temple.
s DAll Y PILO' 3
Welfare Bill Laguna PEP
'Adds Insult Citizens Given
More Answers
On Rock Fest
To lnj1tr y'
Orange County Welfare Director Gran·
Yllle People! calls it "adding in!!ult ta
injury" and the action \vhich raised
his ire does seem to be overdoing it
a bit.
Peoples' department received a $226
bill from welfare officials in Minnesota
to cover the cost or transporting a
y,·elfa re family of three to Orange Coun·
ty.
''[ suppose that shipping you r
dependent poor to another locality is
one way of sol\'ing problems Lut most
responsible w e I f a r c administrators
discarded this approach some time ago,"
Peoples has written to the Koochiching
County Welfare Board in lnlernationat
Falls.
"You add' insult to the injury by trying
to claim payment for transportation costs
from us. This violates ethical admin·
istrative practice and furthermore is
a waste of money \\'hich might be used
to a belier advantage," Peoples con-
cluded.
The woman from Minnesota and her
tl'"O children were in the county welfa re
office a pplying for aid the day after
they jetted into Santa Ana. Peoples said.
"When we asked a few questions.
particularly regarding 160 acres of land
they had just sold in Minnesota, they
left and we haven·t heard from them
since," the welfare direetor said.
Tips on
The average housewife can't stap
offshore oil drlllln~ or ind ustrial poJlu.
lion, but the newly formed Pro.en-
vironment People (PEP) or Laguna
Beach has listed a few things every
family can do for ecology.
According to chairman Mrs. Luisa
Hyun, everyone can help the environment
by being more careful in his daily ac·
tivilies.
Some of her suggestions :
-Avoid u~e of colored toilet paper
And facial tissue because the dye daes
not break down in the sev;·age treatment
process.
-Return used coat hangers ta the.
cleaners rather than discarding them.
-Buy only producls in containers that
are returnabl e or that can be destroyed
without polluting the air, such as paper.
-Don't Jct the gas station attendent
"top off" the gas lank, because this
gaso line only spills out.
-Don't fl ush cigarette butts down the
drain or toilet.
-Don't hose fertilizers into the sewer.
-Use only house or garden sprays
made from botanical ingredients. Never
use DDT.
-Form a car pool or take the bus
to work or ta the store.
Ecology
-Use biodegradable detergents and
othe r cleaning agents.
-Don'_t waste water by leaving a hose
running.
PEP is now working to have the
city recycll!I all trash collected from
residents. Mrs. Hyun said that until
it Is done citywide. residents may take
old newspapers, bottles and aluminum
cans to two Laguna Beach churches
for reclamation.
The Unitarian-Universalist F'e\lowship
at 2007 Glenneyre St., wi ll accept bundled
ne"·spapers, clean bottles and any
aluminum container.
The Unity Church, al 678 Glenneyre
St., is accepting newspapers, wh ich are
then transported to the reclamation
center in Santa Ana.
The bottles must be separated as ta
t.'Olor, Mr:;i. Hyun says, and must have
all metal or plastic caps removed.
The trash recycling project is only
the first plann ed by the ne w ecology
group and any resident may join in
support of the pragrams. To defer ex·
penses, the membership fee is $1 for
student, $3 ror a s ingle, $5 for a famil y
and $W for a n organization. Further
infonnation may be obtained by calling
,._frs. Hyun at 494·8188.
Wednesday
Furt!M!r answer3 to questions asktd
about the city's handing of the Christmas
happening will be forthcoming at the
Wednesday evening council meeting,
Mayor Richard Goldberg said today.
The matter ls not included on • brief.
!!)..item agenda, but will be brought up
under reports or the city councll , Uie
mayor said.
A list of 12 questions was submitted
10 the council at its J an. 6 mettlng
by Bill Greenwood, who participated in
organization of the rock festival.
They covered such matter3 as haw
the city decided on actions taken durinR
the happening, bow much rooney was
expended. what supplies were made
available to police , when the City Council
met and why an emergency disaster
council was not set up.
Greenwood said he would like to have
ans\vers from each councilman &.!I an
indi vidual.
Goldberg told Greenwood he would
be willing to ansv;·er a ll questklns not
already covered in the city manager':ii
retort on the happening and would do
so at the Jan. 13 meeting.
The mayor said today that he has
prepared answers which he will give
under his report Wednesday. He said
a copy of his reply will be .!!Upplied
to the other councilmen, who will be
able to make their own stalemenU or
comment on his reply If they wiih durint
the period for reports.
In 1971, people will look harde1;
expect more for their money
I
and end up with a Chevrolet.
'71 Impala
You've cha nged.
Extensive research told us. Common sense told us.
So, naturally, we've changed.
I=-or instance we gave our totally ne\v '71 Impala a
pair of power disc brakes up front fo r greater res istance to
hea t buildup and fade. They're standard.
We were also sure you'd like more than the customary
nice ride. So we gave it to you. In the longest, smoothest
We kept all the Chevelle things people liked so much.
Impala \Vheelbase ever. In a new 'vider stance chassis.
And in a new bump-absorbing Full Coil suspension.
\·Vhat's more, Impala's new built-in emission controls
have helped reduce ai r pollution, as you asked.
'71 Impala. Did we mention it's the roomiest car in
its field? We've been building up to this much Impala
for years.
Because you have.
Our new litde \ega
And added some new things to like.
Big new Power-Beam headlights. A simple new grille and
new front bumper. A new rear bumper with taillights built in.
New front fender lights. A steering wheel wi th a cushioned center.
To fight pollution further, we've also
The little car that does everything well,
And no wonder. It has a specially designed
overhead cam four with a lightweight aluminum
alloy block. So you move right out.
"· It has disc brakes up front. So you stop well.
ll)•de all of Chevelle's engines so they
can run on oo-lead or low-lead gasoline.
'71 Chevelle. Ready to show you
how likable a mid-&ize car can get. Chevrolet
It has a low, wide stance. So you ride
stable.
And it si]l6 gas. So you save.
Vega. Now open for
business .
'lhu'Ye changed. ~\.e diangied. A \ab Showdown will pl'CM it.
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if tlA!L V PILOT T11tsd1r. Jan111t1 19, 1971
U.S. St1·ips
CAMBODIA
.,.u •.
~o
PHNOM ~ ..
Trial Re~e11ed ·
PINH
PICH NIL 7Q PAii ~ .,,. ,, /.
~~<""
Calley to Have Two States
Sanity Testing Of Welfare
WASHINGTON CUP!) -The Health,
Education and Welfare Department an-
nounced today it \YOuld cut off federal
welfare funds to Indiana and Nebraska,
beginning April I, for failing to raise
payments as required by law.
~+~.. 3
~t FT. BENNING . Ga. (UPI) -The
court-marUal of Lt. William L. Calley
Jr. was in a one-month rteess today
to give the government time lo prove
Calley was sane during the alleged My
Lai massacre.
optimistic" in believing the board could
report by then.
ifc,t.
'l atiU can't get out of
the habit of writing
1910 on my cheques!'
''It is a Jtep we take with great
re luctance because of ils potentially
serious impact on needy families," said
John D. Twiname. administrator of
HEW'a social and rehabilitation service.
"But we must uphold the law and
Insure that assistance to the poor pro·
vided by Jaw is made available in fact."
IOM,ONOSOM
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.::~·.::::::·:· .... :· S.VIETNAM
This new burtlen of proor was put
on the prosecution Monday when a
psychiatrist called by the defense said
Calley was under a compulsion during
the sweep of the hamlet to obey an
order to kill everything there.
Three Army psychiatrists will sit at
Walter Reed Army Medical Center to
see iJ Calley had some impairment of
mental responsibility during the search·
and • clestroly mission. Dr. La Verne
testified that he acted "like an automa-
ton." a "robot.''
"Was he suffering f r om a
clerangement?" Kennedy asked,
"Yes. you can say that, your honor."
the doctor replied. "But he was never
insane. It was a compulsion like someone
with a tic, or someone who must turn
CJH the v.•ater faucets at night or 1tep
on the crack:s in the sidewalk."
Giveaways
Given Eye
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON -In recent m o n t h s
the federal Trade Commission has filed
complaints accusing several firms of
sponsoring deceptive promotional con·
tests .
Twiname "'aid both states violated a
congrea!ional mandate to update their
maximum payment ceilings to poor
families with chil dren to reflect cost
of living increases.
Both stales can avert the cutoff by
appealing to federal courts for a review
Clf the decision Clr by adjusting their
welfare payment ceilings before the April
1 CQtoff date.
Fierce Fighting Rages
For Cambodia Lifeline
The psychiatrist, Dr. Albert A. La
Verne of New York, said Calley did not
have the ability to disobey or to challenge
the legality or illegality of the order
from Capt. Ernest L. Medina, his com-
pany commander.
The military judge, Col. Reid W. Ken·
ne<ly, said the testimony was clear that
the psychiatrist thought Calley "was
unable to adhere to th e right" on f\.tarch
16, 1968, when he is accused of murdering
102 Vietnamese civili ans. He ordered
Calley examined by an Army sanity
board.
In granting the government motion
lo commit Calley to the board, Kennedy
said: "the burden is on the government
to prove he was sane. He sbouJd have
a complete and thorough examination
at this poin~ in view of the evidence
the defense h!!s offered. There is nothll1g
that he v.·ould say in this examination
that would be used against him Jn any
\Vay.''
For e.xample, one con test that was
billed as a "$500,000 swetpstakes" paid
out only $13,000 in prizes, according
to the FTC.
This might give you the impression
that some contests are misleading, but
1 am convinced such is not the case.
I was talking the other day to a public
relations consultant and he made me.
tealize there is nothing wrong ·with the
contests themselves.
The fauJt lies with the contestants.
"A few years ago we ran a contest
In which the top prize was either a
million dollars in ca&h or a free trip
to Slapout, Okla., whichever the winner
chose," the P.R. man recalled.
"THAT, PLUS such cons o I at ions
a\l'ards as 10,000 solid gold buttonhooks
and a year's marriage to Zsa Zsa Gabor,
brought the total prize potential to more
than a billion dollars.
"But under the rules of the ccintest.
'\'e only gave away $2.93.
"Let me assure you there was
absolutfly nothing deceptive about the
contest. The rules were published prom·
inently and in full . The judges were
impartial and everything was open aM
above board.
··The trouble was we happened to
attract a substandard group of con·
testants. None of the entries qualified
for the top prize or any of the consolation
awards."
I said. "Nobody could blame you for
that. What kind of contest was it?"
"It \vas a contest to devise a
mathematical equation that refutes the
Einstein theory."
"THE CONTESTANTS had no riiht
to Jet you down like that," I said,
becoming angry. "What was the $2.93
for?"
··we gave that as a bonus for neat-
ness.·· the P.R. man said. l aaid, "When
the contest wa1 over did you discloae
th::it nobody had won a prize?"
"Of course not. That would have been
tantamount to calling the contestanta
stupid. \Ve \\'OUld never do anything
so cruel .''
''1 admire your compassion.'' 1 said.
''lsn't there some Y.'ay that an honest,
kind-hearted contest sponsor can protect
himself agatnst slow-witted conl'.stanta?"
"He might require the contestants t()
1ake I.Q. tests ,'' the P.R. man suggested.
"But even that voouldn't be foolproof."
"Then there is no sure way to avoid
gi ving away le ss than the am ount of
!he advertised prizes?"
"It's a r'isk Jou have to take," the
P.R. man replied. -UPI
Indiana receives about $39 million an-
nually and Nebraska about SIS million
a year from the federal government
for their programs <lf Aid to Families
v•ith Dependent Children (AFDC).
HEW contended that Indiana and
Nebraska failed to comply with pr~
visions ur a 1967 Jaw that required up-
dating the payment cei lings to AFDC
familie s by last July I.
States can, however, raise their max-
imum ceilings while sti ll not raising
actual payments to welfare families.
Some cities have said the provision,
in effect. js a paper requirement that
<loes not necessarily benefit welfare
clients.
The HE\V also is involved in conflicts
with Arizona and Connecticut over alleg-
ed violations of federal welfare rules.
Twlname said another reason for cutoff
of fede ral matching aid to Indiana was
that the state's AFDC plan did not
provide paymenl.ll to persons who furnish·
ed food or living accommodations to
AFDC children. as required.
He also said Nebraska's plan required
stepfathers to support stepchildren even
though state law did not make such
a requ.irement.
A federal hearing examiner ruled last
year that both states were out of com-
pliance with federal law and recom-
mended that HEW withhold federal
funds.
NY Policemen
Spurn Appeals
To Resume Work
NEW YORK (AP) -Striking city
patrolmen spurned their union leader's
back-to-work appeal today and Police
Comml.!sioner Patrick V. Murphy said
he might have to ask the mayor for
National Guard asaisl.ance wwithin 48
boors.
Spotcbecka of the first lwo tours today
indicated the. perc•11tage of the city's
25,000 patrolmen refusing patrol duty
remained at 85 percent.
"We can't go on like this," ~lurphy
declared Tuesday as we a r y i n g
supervisory personnel worked 12-hour
shlfta for the fifth day Lo pi·ovidt.
emergency services. ''The city must be
protected."
Despite the strike the sympathy
walkoots by many ttanslt and housing
authority patrolmen, crime figures con-
tinued to show little change although
the number of arrests has fallen sharply.
Elsewhere on the city's labor scene,
1,600 t.eam&ters continued a day-old stri~e
that halted delivery of produce to four
major markets. Several big supermarket
cha.ins said they were not affected. easing
housewives' fears .
PHNOM PENH <UPI) -Cambodian
headquarters said todny Its forces cap-
tured Prince Sihanouk's summer palace
overlooking strategic Pich Nil Pass on
Highway 4. But strong Communist units
were reported attacking outnumbered
Cambodian troops elsewhere on the
lifeline road.
U.S. jet fighter-bombers and helicopter
gunships asslsted the allied drive to
recapture highway 4. which American
military sources said was not progressing
as well as had been hoped. A Phnom
Penh aMouncement said Premier Lon
Nol would go to Saigon Wednesday to
seek more American and South Viet-
namese military help .
Cambodian Headquarters gave no
details on the recapture of Sihanouk's
summer palace -a mountain chalet
he used as a retreat from the heat
of Phnom Penh before he was ousted
as chief of atate Jast March.
A force of several hundred Cam-
bodians. with U.S. air support, moved
into Pich Nil Pass Monday and heavy
fighting v.•as reported in the drive to
clear it and take Sihanouk's commanding
chalet.
Highway 4, a 220·mile paved road
largely financed by U.S. foreign aid,
has been in Communist hands since
last November, isolating Phnom Penh
(rom the oil refinery port of Kompong
Som. Gasoline has been rationed here.
Elsewhere on high\vay 4 today, head-
quarters sa id a force of about 1.200
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong \Vas
<itlacking a Cambodian battalion (about
600 men) 15 miles east of Kampot,
about 40 miles south of Pich Ni l Pass.
Fragmentary field reports said at least
30 Cambodians \vere wounded in th!,!
initial assault.
Headquarters said Cambodian rein·
forcemenl3 "-ere rushed to the • r e a
and that air strikes, presumably flown
by Am!Srican and South Vietnamese
pilots, wert: called in. The Communi!ts
were reported "using all aorta of heavy
weapons."
Russ Leader Leaves
Cairo Afte1· Talks
By United Press lnl~rnational
Soviet President Nikolai V. Poclgomy
left Cairo for home today after a six·day
vls it to Egypt during which he promised
military support but emphasized the hope
for a peaceful solution to the f\.tiddle
East problem.
Egyptian political sources s ;ii d
Podgorny and Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat ~greed to concentrate their joint
Pfforts on helping UN negotiator Gunnar
V. Jarring v.·ork out a peaceful set-
tlement. But they also agreed Egypt
should not lower its military guard.
New York Power Curbed
Frigid Weather Puts Big Burden 011 Heaters
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Cambodian officers on highw ay 4 told
U.S. pilots circling overhead they had
report! of flO North Vietnamese trucks
moving sou th from Picb Nil Pass in
the direction of Kampot.
The court-marlial, in v.·hich the 'l7·year·
old former infantry platoon leader could
get death or life imprisonreent if found
guilty as charged, was recessed until
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to remark: "This is an uncalled-for,
unwarranted, and unnecessary delay. I
don't think \Ve are trying lo 1ay 1
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FREE
TAX RETURN
PREPARATION
DEPOSIT $5,000 -to a new or existing savings account at Pacific Savings and
receive FREE preparation of your personal Federal and State tax returns. Some pee>
pie will save $200 to $300 or more in accounting fees. Of course, this offer doesn't
apply to corporation, partnership, business or similar returns.
PROFESSIONAL -qualified tax counselors will prepare yoor personal raturns
and make sure that yoo receive !!Nery possible benefit under the tax law. Each return
will then be triple-checked for lega l and acc ounting accuracy by highly-trained spe.
cialists. All work is done in the privacy of your Pacific Savings office using the
trained personnel of Skousen Tax Service, Inc. The Skousen finn, started in 1946,
is the second largest tax company in the United States. They currently employ <:Ner
3,000 counselors and have prepared more than 1,000,000 tax returns. ·
WORK GUARANTEED-by the Skousen Tax Service, Inc.
Guaranteed Accuracy. Returns are triple-ehecked for accuracy of mathe-
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Guaranteed Protection. If your return is questioned by the Governmen t,
they will handle all the details at no charge including representat ion at an audit
conference.
BRING OR MAIL -the attached certificate to Pacific Savin gs when you open or
add new funds to your account so that it can be validated. At the same time, we will
set up a specific·appointm ent for you to meet a tax coun selor at a later time most
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PLUS -you get a FREE Safe Deposit Box. servicec hargeFREETrave ler'sCheques
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REMEMBER -to quarify for this free offer you need only-to make your deposit and
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until revoked but oot beyond April 5, 1971.
SO HURRY -make your deposit TODAY-or call me, Rick Jack, Manager, at
540-4066 or stop by our office for more infonnalion.
Pacific Savings and loan Association
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3333 BRISTOL STREET, COSTA MESA, CAUfORNIA 92626
--------------------------------------------------------
nns CEHI Wk::ATE GOOD FOR
··~ TAX RETURN n>N
DAILY PILIT G
1970 Hit,s 23-year Peak
For Recession, Inf "lation
Real Zowie Zoo
Ani1nal Population Booms
CINCINNATI (AP) -Mr. Ed 's Love Powder-or sorne-
WASHINGTON (UPI) -decline of 0.4 perttt1l. ·output Increased by 1 strong . thing -Is causing a. population e1:plosl0o. at the Cincinnati
The tot.al output of the U.S. That drop was the lint fun.. 7.9 ptrcent. ln 1947 output Zoo.
economy declined O.f percent year dttline since the 1958 slipped 0.9 percent and prices, Penelope the gorilla Is expecting again, the second tirM
last year but prices Increased recession. Inflation pushed reeenUy freed from World in a year. The big cata are Ie.adfn& the boom wlt.b 47 cut.
by 5.3 percent, making 1970 prices up 5.3 percent during War II controls, skyrocketed ln the past seven yean.
the worst year for combined the year ·-the sharpest rise 12 percent. "Mr. Ed" is · Ed Mruska . who came lo the Cincinnati
inflation and recession silce since the Korean war year Jn related economic deveJo~ Zoo in 1962 as animal curator from the Lincoln Park Zoo
1947. of 1951. ments : ln Chicago.
The Commerce Department The department said the -Bethlehem Steel Co. bow· Mruska says he feeds the anlmalJ· a mixture of iron,
said Monday the Gross Na· United Auto Workers strlke ed to pre&sure from President phosphorous, vitamins and other elementa wild animals
tional Product (GNP), which against General Motors was Nixon and rolled back a price 2 Phoemx• .. normally get from lheir food in a natural environment.
measures lhe value of the to blame for the gloomy increase that bad totaJed as He says no se.rual pep pill is included. nation's total output of goods figures. -b"IU much as 12.5 percent to the When he came to the zoo Mruska aa1d the animals "just and services. was $;uu.8 1 on Last year was worse than 6.8 -~cent aMoanced Sahu·. -""-··'d h ~-~~ th dl last year. That was an In· either 1958 or 1951 when both ,,.... D • wtren'l reproducing as they 1WJUW " 110 e .... ...,... e et
t t t _ _. . day by its biggest compeUtor, eput1es supplements. crease of 4.9 percen over ou pu anu prices are coo. U.S. Steel . An administration 1969, but when the figures sidered. In 1958, outp ut declin· "You have to give the animals all the things they get
d. t-• to i· · t th d 11 t b t · spokesman said Nixon was in the wild," he said. "But you have to circumvent evolu· ire a JUS eu e 1nuna e e e . percen u prices rose "gratified '' by the action but
effect of price Increases the only 2.6 percent. Jn 1951 , would not say if 6,8 ""rcent Cut Dou;i]l lion. You can 't feed them whole animals, so you add things." "real GNP" registered a prices soared 6 percent but r~ .,...,. Mruska also said animals must get out CJ( cages "into was acceptable to the Presi· the sun which most of them hadn't iieen in 20 years."
dent, who had denounced the So f h · Is beln gt th •-• ~ PHOENlX (UPI) _ Two me o t e zoo an1ma are g ven e u~om higher figure as exoruitant of moated areas.
and inflationary. sheriff's deputies attempting Alide £rom the big cal!l, Mruska Aid reproduction of 245 T,,,es '(] seless'
Prescription Drugs
Under Fire by U.S.
-The Federal R e s e r v e to repossess a moblle home birds, hippopotamuses and assorted booved animals is in-
Board cul Its discount rate, 10 satisfy an $83.1 debt were
1
;;;c;;;re;;;a;;;•;;;in;;igio.ii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0i_, the interest It charge! for loans to commercial banks, shot and killed Monday by
from 5Vt to 5 percent, the an unemployed cook.
P1·inied, Ready
Apollo 14 rocket stands alone on its Cape Kennedy
launch pad. r eady for its final dress rehearsal today
for Jan. 31 launch to moon. Astronauts simulate
blastoff countdo\vn.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The government, spurred by
studies showing 58.3 percent
of all prescription drugs <lf
questionable worth, Is moving
to crack down on ineffective
Thursday, Edwards reported
a wide disparity between the
adual effectiveness of 2,752
drugs now on the market and
more than 16,000 curative
claims made 11tx>ut them by
fourth quarter point cut in The cook , Hector Garcia,
little mere than 10 weeks. The 42. also died In the shootout.
reduction followed by several The deputies were Warren
hours a cut from 6Yt to 6 Larue, 56, who would have
percent in the bank prime been eligible for retirement
rate, the interest which banks in two months after 25 years
charge their biggest and best service : and Rex A. Stone,
corporate customers. T h e SI, father of a Phoenix
prime rate reduction was the policeman killed three weeks
sixth in 10 weeks. ago.
-The commerce depart-Authorities said stone and
medicines. their manufacturers. ment announced that privately Larue were attempting to
Officials of the Food and The nationa l academy of owned housing starts in-serve papers to repossess
ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS
Thotnands of
orltlnal oll
FOlntln9s 50% off
Dee ler Showroom W•r•house open to publ ic.
Buy •t de•l•r's prices. Custom Fr•m•s •v•il·
•ble. lay-ew•y on M•sfer Ch•rg• or B•nkAmeri-
card.
RENT -LEASE -SALi
Houn - 9 a.m. to 6 p.m .. MllllMy t!n ~ creased in December to a Garcia's trailer to satisfy a Drug Administration (FDA) science!, which ran the four· seasonally adjusted annual lien on a car he recently
told a Senate subco mmittee year study for the FDA, fowid rate of 1.99 million units, the purchased . ORIGINAL OILS L'D
f\1onday the agency is seeking the drugs totally ineffective highest total since 1950. The The deputies went to the I II •
to ban from the market 245 for lf.7 percent of their claim.. December figure was up from mobile home with a truck 1619 E. lcllnter, Santa Ana Pltoll• IJl-4601
• I
Gu s Grisson1's Widov.'
Sues North American drugs found to have no ed uses and only 19.1 percent 1.69 million in November and driver after talking with DEALERS WANTED
positive effect at all and to 0_:a~s_'d".:l~ec:'.ti~·v'.'.:e~a~s;c~la~im~ed'.:. ___ :1.~40'._m~il~Uo~n~a~ye:'.ar~ear~h~-,'.::'·--_'G~a':rc:'.i.?_•~•~ar'.'.l~ie:_r~ln'._'.'.th~e_<d~•_:Y·:__.:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!
set tough new conditions con·
TITUSVILLE, Fla. (AP ) -
The widow of Virgil I.
Grissom. one of thre e
astronauts killed in the 1967
Apollo I fire , has filed suit
for $10 million against the
prime contractor on . the
Muskie Has
Ne'v Idea
On Pullout
WASHlNGTON (U Pl)-Sen.
Edmund S. J\.i.lJskie has ch ang·
ed his mind about backing
a unilateral withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Europe.
In the past the t.1aine
Democrat has been a staunch
supporter of resolutions by
Sen. r<like J\.1ansfield, the
De1nocratic floor leader and
a member of the Foreign
Relations Committee, lo bring
U.S. troops home.
But after a two-week. four-
country tour of Europe and
the Jl.liddle East, t.iuskie sai d
f\1onday he was now having
secon d thoughts about such
action .
The senator, an unan·
nounced candidate for the
De mocra1 i c presidentinl
nom ination. told a news con-
ference the witl:drawal issue
was tied to the new East"·ard·
looking policy of We st
Germany. a European securi-
ty conference and the Berlin
Talks.
spacecra ft, North American
Rockwell Corp., and three
subsidiaries.
Betty Grissom. \vho Jives
in Houston, brought the action
Monday in Brevard Co u n t y
Ci rcuit Court. c h a r g i n g
negligence in the flash blaze
that killed her husband and
his colleagues Roger B. Chaf·
fee and Edward 11. \Vhite Il.
The astronauts were in the
capsule perched at the top
of the 300-foot·high Saturn
rocket the evening of Jan.
'11. 1967, running through a
countdown rehearsa l when
ground controllers heard Chaf ·
fee's voice cry, "We've got
a fire in the spacecraft."
The fire flashed through the
oxygen·rich cabin, killing the
three men in seconds.
A blue ribbon board of
review later reported it found
•·many deficiencies in design
and engineering. manufacture
and quality con trol" by both
the National Aeronautics and l
Space Administration and in-
dustria l contractors.
The board said the most
likely source of the fire was
an electl'ical arc or s h o r t
circuit in wiring under the
seat of the command pilot.
Grissom.
The day following the fatal
fire. it was announced that
each of the three widows
v1ould receive $100.000 from
life insurance policies.
'fhe free policies v:ere part
of a contra ct under wh ich two
publishing firms held e:it·
elusive rights to stories on
I.he personal lives of the
astronauts and !heir families.
WALLICHS JANUARY
trolling the sale of hundreds
of others.
But they said their cam·
paign to protect the nation's
ailing from unneeded or
worthless medications may
fail unless doctors -who last
year wrote more than two
billion prescriptions -change
the ir habits.
"Far too many drugs are
prescribed by at least some
physicians ," said Dr. Charles
C. Edwards, the FDA chief.
"It wit! take some time to
put some rationality back in
the whole (prescripllon ) drug
scene."
Edwards tesUfied before a
senate monopoly sub-
committee, headed by Sen.
Gaylord Nelson {D·Wl.!i.), that
has been examining govern·
ment drug purchasing policy
for months.
Elmer B. Sta a I s, comp-
troller general of the United
States, was to testify today.
Using final figures dated
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:• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
• State Law Is Needed
• caurornla lawmakers al state, county · and city
levels have been caught abort in developing legislation
controlling rock festivals and similar gatherings of the
kind t...guna Beach and many other cities from coast to
roast have had to endure.
Five bills relating to rock festivals were introduced
in the 1970 Legislature, but none passed. As 1 result,
Laguna Beach had titUe or no helf from ~e s~te l~vel
beyond the presence or officers o tbe California High-
''"Y Patrol.
use in such emergencies, even if they're nol u compre-
hensive as they should be. They deal with offending
public decency, noise, blocking traffic and health and
safety. But enforcement becomes next to im~ssible
without violent insurrection when crowds run high into
the thousands.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors last .July
28 adopted an ordinance regulating outdoor e:athenngs.
It set& forth requirements including licensing, w~ter
supply, sanitary and medical facilities, fire protect.J?"·
traffic control. parking. security guards, food serv.1ce
and concessions, hours of operation, overnight camping
facilities, communications, dust control, aJco hol or drugs.
noise control, advertising. ticket sales and number of
participants.
Cities shouJd tighten their laws, or course. But
above all, the Legislature should provide a basic body
of law applicable everywhere in Calllornia if the festi·
vals are to be brought under reasonable control in a
uniform way.
Unfair Treatment
The county ordinance and others adopted in other
states are serving as models for municipal laws now
being drafted by several city attorneys, including La-
guna's. The knottiest problem with which the city coun-
cils must wresUe is how to control the "hap~enings" in
the absence of visible sponsorship. Most ordinances are
• base:d on the assumption that there will be a specific
person, group or organization with which to deal.
Out of every higher education dollar in California,
the university system receives 43 cents and the state
college system 44 cents. That leaves a wholly inadequate
~3 cents for the state's 93 community colleges, includ-
ing the Orange Coast's two campuses, Golden West and
OCC, and Saddleback. The rest of the community college
load is borne by local property taxpayers.
In California, 85 percent of all college freshmen
and sop~omores attend comm unity colleges--800,000
.stud~nts m all. Without the community colleges, the uni·
vers1ty and state colleges couldn't do the job either in
preparing underclassmen for later degree work or in
vocational education. One city upstate tried serving an injunction on
several hundred John and Jane Does as they entered
one of these "spontaneous" get-togethers. A court can
Jis1ue a temporary restraining order good for 10 days.
If it ls violated, the city ca n go back for a new order
citing conte.mpt of court.
While California leads the nation in development
of community (formerly junior) colleges, it is no leader
in assuring fairness in distributing the education dollar
where the students are.
One city attoI'l,ley on the Orange Coast asks, "If a
court order won't stop them, what next-call out the
National Guard?"
Most cities have long had ordinances they can
With community college enrollment d1..Je to pass the
one million mark within five years, the Legislature can-
not afford to delay the budgetary overhaulin' needed
to deal fairly with this full partner in the states system
of higher education.
Apprehension Exaggerated Beyond Realities
Breaking Barriers of Fear
WASHINGTON -The idea on which
President Nixon has based his forecast
or better times is that growing confidence
will release the pent-up buying power
of millions who have been hunkering
do WT! during a bad period in history.
Statistically, the idea holds up.
Personal income il!I up, savings are very
high, financial rel!IOW'ces are at record
levels, and the stage is set for the
kind of buylng and investment spree
which kept Ole tcooomy hw:nmmg .for
so long before the present recession.
The key is how this
renewed confidence
will be triggered.
Anyone w h o lived
throu,g.b the great de-
pression of the 1U>s
will remember how
p e o p I e scrimped,
saved and hoarded,
treasuring e v e r y
asset and fearful of · a.
letting anything go, No financial frivol-
ities were indulged. and prodiglOUJ. e:f•
forts of the government, by um stand·
ards, were unable through an entire de-
cade to break the barriers of fear which
made a bad economic situatiOPI worse.
( NOTHING REA.LL V worked in battling
depression until World War II came
along with its unprecedented demand for
manpower and materials, and hang ~
cost because the nation'is existence was
at stake.
Then. when Ole war was over people
were tired of wartime restrictions and
starved for the good Ure. They used
their wartime sayings, bought to the
hill. and went happily and confidently
into debt to buy houses, cars, boats.
power mowers, holll!le.bold appliances and
gadgets of all kinds.
But the mood Is d!Herent IDday. Th<
upllft ti World War II'• end cannot
be matched by the slow withering away
of Ute Vietnam War and there are no
8ellS&tionally new technical developments
like automaUc transmisl!lion, television
and pitw housing styles to excite the
tnteftst of buyers to the point of
mortgaging their futures to get them,
end hang the cosl
THE SPIRIT IS NOT NOW so ad-
venturous and carefree but is overl ayed
by fear1 of racial turmoil, civil disorder,
ttlme, polluUon, unemployment and a
vacue apprehension that the American .
dream will never come true.
All this is exaggerated far beyond
the realities measured in economic
islatislics and potential growth. There
is misery and discord in the midst or plenty and contentment. A nation
with a 6 percent unemployment rate
is saving money like mad and piling
up personal assels as never before.
Income tax reductions and pension
Increases are on the way. Wages are
rising. Inflation is not much worse than
lt has been. But people aren't quite
ready yet to CQme up out of their
storm cellars because they aren't sure
the v.·orst of the blow is over.
THE CHANC~ ARE that the people
will not pow-from their shelters in
one vut splurge, but will trickle out,
hold up a wetted finger to lest the
wind, and slowly begin to commit
themselves once again to the future
in the form of new cars, houses, and
gadgets.
The great fright of the 1960s Is not
likely to pass rapidly. if the economic
experts are to be believed, but it will
surely do so whether in time to assure
President Nixon's political future or not.
The lack here is obvkm. It ls the
series of events which would restore
to American life its soaring quality.
Even landing on the moon could not
do tha t.
The crusade against pollutio n was sup-
posed to give the nation great new
goals, but so far it has only added
to the gathering gloom which 1':ceps
people hunkered down.
STILL, IN IDS mechanical-minded
way. President Nixon is sticking to his
nriginal conviction that now is the time
when the clouds could begin to lift.
and when they do the sunshine of vast
consumer purchasing power will come
shin ing through.
This v.•as a conviction he held as
lon51: as a year and a half ago, full y
confident in his talks with doubters that
he was absolutely right.
At Last, I Blew My Stack
Heaven knows, Margaret and I tried
to be good parents to Irving. We read
him all the Dr. Seuss books, encouraged
him to watch Sesame Street, neve r
bought him war toys and always reuon-
ed with him instead o( punishing bhn.
To teach him the
value of money 1s he
grew older, we gave
him $2 a week allow·
&nee Jn return for
two hours of chores
&111'0Wld the house.
And we paid him
50 cents an hour for
bob)'111ttlng his littl•
b<other.
It waa Olia last, I suppo1e, that rparlr:ed
the ttilill. In some fuhion, he di.9covertd
thalwhile: he w1s away al the 'Blueberry
Hill Happineu camp last summer, we
paJd Mrs. Grommet down the bl«k
•1. 75 an hour for precisely the ume
talk.
llow well l ~u the militant look
----
•
on little Irving 's l2-year-<1ld (ace as he
marc:bed up to me at the breakfast
table the following morning.
"Father," he said grimly, "you are
an adult chauvinist pig!"
MY 11"'4TI'IAL reaction was one of
llK>ck.
"How can you say thal. Irving?" I
psped.
"Equal pa,y for equal work ." said
Irving . "That goeis for babysitting.
Furthermore, that $1 an hou r you give
me for chores violates the federal
minJmum wage law."
"But you're not engaged in interstate
commerce, Irving." I protested.
"It's the morality that matters," Irv-
ing said. "For tl>ousands of years you
fldulllatl have been uplolling us children
because we'rt weak and unor1anlzcd.
You Jove us oo1y for our hard-working
UWe bodies. You have brainwashed us
Into believing we art lnferk>r creatures,
flt only to serve your every whim."
'"But haven, I b<on good to )'GU,
Irving?" J asked.
"IENEVOLENT J)ltemalism!" lnlpr
ped Jrrinl. "Oilldhood fm:dorn now l ..
1'111 ..... the .m al Thi CliUdrm'• 1A pr-... 9QWD.
.... ,, ... """" hoW"ll ---Illa liid. 'lllr publlcatlan of IJ.)'Hr-old
BttlJ 'Freen*n'• I.look. '1Tbe Otlldhood ~ .. Ille ..-.. ... ,,, picl<etlng pro-
telttnc 'lnftriat "dllld'• portJon•." the
Junch counter tit-Ina dt:mandlng lower
counters and 1hottt:r stool11. •nd lh•
CGnltanl nwdles for an end to
dilcrlmillatory dtlnklnl, llllOlllna .... .,,
and driving laws -not to mentioft
G-rated movies.
At last, the most <lppressed minority
in the Nation was aroused in righteous
wrath. At last, the truly litUe people
were speaking out. At last, I blew my
stack.
IT WAS THE day Irving came home
from a Kids' Lib rally and demanded
the keys to the family car, a separate
checking account and room service on
the grounds that, as he put it, "Youth
must be served !"
Something inside me snapped. "If you
want to wear the pants around here,
Jrving." I said, "you need a belt."
So I belled him.
He's been meek 1s a churchmouse
ever since. Margaret looks at me with
new respect. Life seems fuller and richer
somehow.
Call me an adu\tist chauvlni.111 pig.
Call me an exploiter, an oppreissor. But
let us an treasu re our little children.
Remember, fellow adults. they are the
Jast oppressible minority we've goL
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Brine bocli the cipntte com·
merdaltl The .. -lndlllltry Is really scraping the botU>m when
they adverti.<Je that one kind of
lotion. They're giving me a pain
where 1 didn't evtn twve one.
-D. G. T. ,... ...... ...,..,. ......,... ........ ""'
_,,,. ,.... tf ... -''"'· .....
-"' ...... "' • ....,., ..... Dlltr .. ,.,,
Premarital
Sex ls Up
•
Dramatically
( ·~ ""':'.
I
Gµest:Report
Premarilal sexual Intercourse is in·
creasing dramatically across the nation,
and women's sexual attitudes and
behavior are becoming vastly more
liberal, .a noted authority on marriage
'-"· It'1 an across-the-board reality among
courting coupl es, college-age and older.
Dr. Carlfred B. Broderick said in an
interv iew at the University of Southern
California.
Dr. Broderick, profeS90l"·of famlly rela-
tionships at Pennsylvania State Universi-ty, visited use where he lectured to
sociol<lgy faculty and students.
IN ONE SURVEY he conducted of
newly-marrieds in Pennsylvania, 75 per-
cent of the couples indicated they had
participated in premarital intercourse,
Dr. Broderick said. Thirty percenf of
the wiveis in the survey revealed they
were pregnant before their marriage.
"It is int eresting to note that
premarital pregnancy was admitted, but
not one of the women surveyed admitted
to heing pregnant before she was engag-
ed." Dr. Broderick said.
The Penn Slate sociologist told a USC
Interviewer that his and others' research
indicates that men have not changed
their sexual attitudes and behavior
markedly in the past several years.
Women have , however. and dramatically
"·
"STUDIES SHOW that even in the
more conservative areas, tile numbers
of women who particip ate in premarital
sex has risen from about 10 pe rcent
a few years ba ck to a current 30 percent.
"In locales where SQCiety tends to
be more liberal . there have been in-
crease! on th e order or a previous 30
percent to a current SO percent. The
only region of the nation where these
figure! don't hold true generally is the
Deep South, where the traditiona l 'double
standard' of sexual morality is more
influential,'' Dr. Broderick declared.
lie ind icated Ulat statislics gathered
recently by social scientists tend to upset
assumptions held by many t h a t
premarital sex is mnre cht1racteristic
of college studentis than of courting
couples at large.
"IT'S NOT JUST the college students.
Jt applies equally to non-students and
<llder couples as well.
"Another interesting aspect : Not only
are more women engaging in premarital
11ex nowadays; statistica lly, fewer who
do so have regrets about it It's more
accepted," he said.
Dr. Broderick dismissed as "hogwash''
the current popular predictions that
monogamous marriage i!i doomed as a
!!nclol lnstituti<ln, and will be rep\sced
by other alternatives, such as communal
marriages. in coming years.
"Last year, the nation had the~
marriage rat~ since the end of Worlis
W11r 11. "he said.
A prolific researcher, author and lec-
turer In his field, Dr. Broderick ls e:ngag•
f!d In an extensive study of the roles
of RX in eight different "tJpes" of
eoartship he tw identifitd.
Ual....ity of Soalben c.Hlonll
Quotes
Marcll Fooc, Alameda c;:o a a t-1
A31emblywomu -"Work weeks are
getiln& ahorter ; people retire earlier.
1r1 nevtt too early to btgln educatinc
for le.laurt."
•
'Why t.hould I worry a.bout the rest of the world? I'm only
con.cemed with what happens right here!'
Mind Plays Tricks
With Our Memory
One of Freud 's most substantial con·
tributions to our und ersl.anding of the
unconscious mind was his work on
''memory'' and "forgetfulness." He
demonstrated conclusively that when we
forget dates or misplace objects, such
carelessness is usuall y a deliberate (if
unconsci ous) act.
1 used to forever be misplacing my
lecture notes -a!S() losing the addresses
and forgettblg the
dates of my engage-
ments -because of
an aversion to public
speaking. And it is
probably true of an
of us that we "mis-
place'• bills a good
deal easier th a n
l he c ks ; we don't
want to pay the bills,
but are eager to cash the checks.
a row, and was quite uncharacteristic
of Miss ;ferry, who was a "quick study"
in all her parts. Finally. she sat down
to analyze the trouble, and then
recollected that the speech echoed •
disturbing episOOe during her youth -
SCI her unconscious mind rejected il.
Stephen Leacock i n v a r i a b l y
••!VJ.spla(!ed" invitations to social fune· •Wmi .6e didn't want to attend. Dickens onen rotgot the names of his literary
colleagues, which was his way or
obliterating his compe.titors. Dwight Mor·
row. who hated to travel, would embark
on a train trip and in the m i d d I e
o( the journey CQmpletely forget where
be was going.
DARWIN, WHO understood this trick THE rttOST CLASSICAL case of
of the mind long before Freud, wrote absent-mindedness is that of Painleve, ~n his a~tobiography : "I have made who was Ulree times premier of France.
1t a habit over the years always to This brilliant man would take a taxi
make MleS of a.ny fa cts or observat!o~ ( 'home when his own car was waiting
that disagreed with my ~eneral theories , foi; him, and would often give the cab--
for 1 found by e;cper1ence that such driver his telephone number i nstead
facts and observations were much more of his addres.~.
likely to escape from the memory than Once, expecting a friend, he pinned
favorable ones.'' a note on his own door: "Painleve will
Ellen Terry, in her memoirs. relates return in 15 minutes. Please wait." On
that one of the. few occasions on which returning. he saw his own note and
sht forgot her lines was during the early sa t down on the steps to wait for himself.
perf()rmances of an Ibsen play. When This "icOOt" had bttn Minister of Avia·
she came to a certain speech, she simply ti on, Mini!ter of War. and one of the most
"blew up" in her lines . and had to brilliant mathematicians Europe had pro-
be prompted. duced in this century. Whot a field-day
TlllS HAPPENED several nights in
Dr. Freud would have had tramping
around in lhat unconscious micd.
Draft Files Full of Lies
\YASlllNGTON-Dfalt boards often de.
pend upon a mishmash of mi sinformation
to determine whether young men should
J!O into t.he armed forces. 'I'be Selective
Service system has accumulated millions
of raw files which are loaded with
derogatory information -idle gossip,
wild rumors and vicious lieis -about
potential inductees.
Senator Vance Hartke, D-lnd., was
aroused by the dis--
covery o( a stacked
-file in his naUve In-
diana. He immedi-
ately made a spot
survey of draft
boards in lndlana,
Pwtaryland. Virginia
and Washington,
D.C. He found C()ITI·
plete confUsion about
what can go into • draftee'• fi\e .
"A($}LtJTELY anythlna," said a
Maryland draft bolird worker. "Just be
sure the registrant'• name and number
are on It."
Jn ~vansvtlle, a , boll'd employe. told
the Senator'• o!Oce: .. _ brln:; In
aaythtrc you WJnt and say )'OU want
It put la Ille Ille, end IL wlD be."
Only 1t oftt Virginia board did Hartke
llnd tu J>la1. Then. '"11 u. . ...-... 1
oould allow den>&•tory data to ro Into
hJ9 folder .
11"'1kt'• first polite quorlea to •Sel«tJv•
Servk:e Director OJrtil T..,. Wft"ft
answtred wlU! the ~ gOvtitnmenl
doublo-lalk. A few ct.ya ago, ii a mm
lhrtt--page letter to 'Tarr, Hartke
dem1nded some 1tratgbt anRWen. He
1ccused SelecUve Service o( denylfll
1'b11ic saff!guantl" to thoee: It ii caUJna
Into the armed forces.
PRESIDENT NIXON'S M 11 e s I
headache is developing In LIUn America.
A Marxist government has taken power
in Chile. Bolivia, Brazil Md Peru a~
led by mililary men who are inteme.ly
nationalialic, anU-U .S. and left-leaning.
A new breed of mllitmy officer, deeply
opposed to U.S. economic dominaUon,
ii coming to power throughout Lalin
America. These young <lfficerll'. unlike
the military leaders of the past, advocate
IOCial change.
Even the Catholic clergy in many
l,.fltin American countries have joined
the clamor for change and ref<lrm.
Jn short, Latin America, which hu
roltowed the U.S. Jlne: almost unanimously
In tht l'Ul. is emerging a11 a major
e:ower bloc bol!lllle to the U.S. Nll'Oftl
may go down In history a1 tht Preddent
who loat Latin America.
.---B11 Geor9e ---.
Dear George :
So, George, lhal is my problem.
DESPERATE
OW Oaperat"
Alldl again, MY pnibl•m 11 r .. ·Ioit· Ill bu( the Iait)iip of ,....
-· llo-.r: Smile: -S.1 Die;-K1:<1> Pllddng; ~ YOllr
Ear io the Ground, V<v Shoulder
to the: Wheel and Y cu ... Noae to l~ <;rindslolle ; Wtlk•'so!Uy 1nd
O.rry a Big !!llct: Damn the
Torpedoes and Full $pcod AhoOd I
(H 0nt of tbote doesn't CO¥tr yr/I/If
problem. write back.)
"
f
•
f
d
•
• •
•
·-
DAILY PILOT 7
-
iscOUnl
OUR NAME MEANS DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY!
WE CARRY A FUll llNE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRtaS.
PRICES·EFFECTM WED.1hru TUES. JANUARY 20 thru JANUARY 26 STORE HOURS:.DAILv' 10 c .m, tc 9 p.m .. SAT. & SU N. 100."', to 7p.m,
f ::: .._
FRESH
GROUND
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FRESH LEAN, DEPENDABLE
QUAtlTY
. CORNISH ri:~rJi. ' FROZEN CHUCK
"GAME HENS
FRYING&~~~RADEA ": BODIED
FAD SLICED . BACON EXTRA . . · ~:PKG.
DUSTBIN 2•1
c
SOME fAD
STOliS DISCOUNT
CHARGE PIKE
.
ROAST FIRSTCUT
USDA CHOICE
SHOULDER~~~:ss
:CLOD ROAST
STANDING ~~~::YE
RIB ROAST
THIN-SKINNED
FLORIDA
20 All 36QT.OR ~OQT. •
DB.MONTE•303CAN •CUT
Green Beans 7i1" 2~
WHITE
GRAPEFRUIT TRASH CAN or WASTEBIN
or SIT ON HAMPER
you1 ""' CllOKE .£.
fliuPiclt'MEAT &5• 53c
""-~ 802.•SVARIETIES
ALL PURPOSE
RUSSET 10
SOME fAD
STOMS DISCOUMT
CH.liRG£ PllCI
W' &l;'s & Quill 39~3: s 1 POTATOES LB. BAG "sl~~d0H~;·srK W . 49c
0 BoLoG"Ni '::: &;. 55c flwlENERS 1 S::'~, 45c g~1~l :i~ERICAN
fltiibi:;;'(;;:•"OZEN BANANAS •
. with Butter W 31< ·-.. ·-••••••-~: .. DUTCH PRIDE • 1/2 GAllON •FROZEN fOIGIT..U-NOT FLOW I IS :
Imitation Ice Milk ~· 39c ""'' ••• : wE wEtcoME ... SPECIAL oRDERs • "-~-VAN D KAMP • I 1hOZ •FROZEN Stam DISCOU•T e FOR CUT FLOWERS& POTIED PLANTS :
W' CHICKEN PIE ffc 43c DELMONTE •460Z. CHARGE ••KE i • ~~~~;r :ovu~u;o;~~so~c~A~!T~E~~LE~· i
•
W£1.CH'S•12 0Z •FROZEN -p· I G f •t : OROERTHEM FORYOU.-: GRAPE JUICE ••• 33c · . 1neapp e rape ru1 : • Pt1AsEG1ve "'M sEvERAl DA vs FOR ! .,.. · D • k 'lie 33c • BEST RESULTS ii TREfSWEn. 6 oz.. FROZEN r1n -.JI~ ............................. ..
.a&\ orange Juice is· ·21..Gi DRMONTE .. 60Z.CAN
... '20L•""'ZEN '" ........ TOMATO ~ .. PAD•PACKOF< JUICE '9'' 32<
.. 'APPLE PUFFS ~ 3CJ< SALAD OR COtE SLAW
KIWI FRUIT .
GOlPEN MEADOW
26 OZ. BOTTLE
TRIBE SIZE
c D.NEIWARE .... CJ9c PIACI
VEGETABLES :~~~~
LITTUCE :=:.......,"""'
CUCUMBERS
BELL PEPPERS
CREAM STYLE or
WHOLE KERNEL
WITH
BEANS
c
-• NO COOl'ONS •NO il'UtCHASf ..... -.... ,
• Dl~ASHfl.SAff ., __ ;)
• • !"I.US DISCOUNT SAvtNGS OH All
COM'ANK>N "KE$ AHD AcCUSOltY
'llCfS..
SQUASH : ~•MEDlffRRANl~N
RUSSETS MKmG•Zf
BULK VEGETABLES
' . e . ,).1iN1"J • TUltN1'5 • CAllfOTl• l\ITAIAG.U
· 10cu.
Seu. ...... .......
1ocu.
IOCa.
SILL
·IOtLL
IOcLL
'
'
-. . -
I DAll.V PILOT
'
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
"Feels so li:'O(ld, J"CMl hat.e to put her down."
Skipper Consoles Wife
Over Ecuador Seizure
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The
skipper of the ~million tuna
boat · Apollo. which has been
seized by Ecuador, has told
his wife he'll pay an expected
$100,000 fine and "God willing ,
go rlaht back to where the
filtl ire."
"Don't 'M'Orry dea r.'' Oli via
Cintas said her husband.
l\lanuel, radioed late lt1onday.
"Our sons and the rest of
the crew are fine and I'm
just waiting for this lo end.
When ii does I will, God will-
ing, go right back to where
Ole fish are."
Cintas, 44-year-old skipper
and co-<>wner or the 285-foot
Apollo -the world's bl1gest
tun• seiner -made his brief
call from Salinas, the.
Ecuadorian port city where
he and his 17-man crew were
taken Sunday.
sales and ship repair credits
for Ecuador announced Mon·
da y by Secretary -0f State
William P. Rogers.
"lt may sound corny," she
said, "but it made me fee.I
proud lo be an American. I
thought I was the only one
dilm1yed at Heinl American
lives and property on the high
seas threatened by the very
aircraft and ships my husband
and many of his crew and
those of olher seiners served
on during World War II and
Korea ."
T·wo Killers
Walk Away
Front Prison
SAN QUENTIN (UPl)-Two The Apollu was on its
maiden voyage and fishing first degree killers a n d
about 50 miles off the coast another man walked awa y
of Ecuador when it was fired from a San Qentin Prison
on Saturday by what were ranch donnitory M o n d 1 y
believed to be American-built
airplanes, accordina: to the nlghl J American Tuna-boat Associa· The escapees were ames lion. Havard, coovicted of robbery
and kidnaping o u t of
Slaurg• Off Jail Threat Engineers
In Capitol
For Jobs
Chavez Vows to Continue Boycottii1g
SACRAMENTO (AP) with 1 picket sign aDd get at SacrUMDto to write the Chavez has contracts Y.'ilh
Shrugging oU the lhrut et some a.ction . Then it works." Dtfenae Department to make growers producil\li about IS
another jail sentence, farm be said, adding he would go them recognize the UFWOC perctnl cf Ule nap.i's lettuce.
SACRAMENTO (AP) labor leader Cesar Chavei to jail again ~fore stopping lettuce boycott. contending tne Growers of about-70 perCi"nt
Unemployed a e r o s p a c e his boycott activity. military "is up to its old tricks or lettuce have Tee1msters
engineers gathered in the says he 'll continue his na· "Nonviolence in action" Is again" by purchasing non Union farm tabor contrat·ts
Capitol today for meetings tionwide lettuce boycott -US· the key , the fonner field hand UFWOC lettuce. challenged by Chavez. with legislators to discuss ing the t.actics or nooviolence. and father of eight children.-:.:_c...c:.:_:.:_ _________ :_ _____ _
ways to get new jobs -''There'• a 1 rem end 0 u s said, citing his successful five-
posslbly in helping lo solve power in nonviolence. We year struggle to unioni:r.e
the slate's pollution probler:ns. know il works,'' the 42-year~ld California table grape workers
About 10\l engineers from leader of the United Farm in the Delano area.
t h e h I g h -unemployment . LUW1l S ;tt;1ig w o r k e r s Organizing Com-Cha h d b th " " mittee said in 1 ipeecb Mon--vez was c eere y e aoro1paca re1i<ml ol the San day before l,000 -crowd u la andad b1I tallt.
Franclloo Bly Ana arranpd L Jlle l S1er1mento State Co 11 e I e St liter mlt wltll 1Upportlr1 meetings with about 7 0 UW ga students. at a Sacramento church, then
assemblymen. But, he noted , ''If you are spoke to studenl.!I at the
The meetings were to S C <>oing lo ad vocate nonviolence nearby Un i v er s It y of di SCU!'IS "ideas for chanelling ays ourt " California at Davis. this presently unused man-... you can't escape the f-act A UC D . Ch t
You've got \o be a good t avis, avez go power in such areu as educa-t d' U from more SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -organi:r.er, °' you're going to a s an tng: ova on lion, the environment and th 2 ooo t d •· hot d h C l·r · s be discovered ," e.mlainiflg an , s u en~ w urne urban development," s a i d T e a 1 omta u P rem e -,. 0 t t h b' deli e a nonviolent leaden are e<>n· u o ear 1m v r Ass em b I y m an John Court has ruled that a city stantly challenged by short. talk similar to his earlier
Now ••• Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
Artlllclal Teeth NH er Felt So Natural Before
For the fint tim,, sci'nce offus F1xOOENTholdsdenturesflf1Tler
a plastic cream that holds den· ... and mort romj01tobly. You may
turcs u they've ncvl'f bet:n held bite haoder, chew better, eat more
brJor,-lonns an elastic mem-naturally. brant that A1//u Jtol.d yowt dm· F1xoof:io.'T lasts for hours. R~
f11tu ID t.V Mhnal ti.muJ af yout sistt moistur,. Otntures th.at lit
lftOIU,\, , arc t1*nllal to heallh. Stt your
It'• a revolulionary di1COvuy dentist rCiUlarl y. Gtt eas}'·to-
ca\led FIXOOl!:h-i4 for daily horn' Ult fJXOOEh'T Dentur' Adhesiv' u.. (U.S. Patent fl,000,988) Crum at all drui oountcn. Vasconcellos ([)..San Jose). ordinance which prohibits sit-tempered followers who want discussion of nonviolence.
The engineers also were in--ting on public lawns is un· lO resort to violence. _ _'Ch':".a~ve~z~a~ls~o ~urg~e~d~•l:LJu~de:'.n~t3'!=:=====================-vited to a meeting of the constitutional because 1 ts ·w· b I I •-Joint Legislative Committee ' it v o ence you can ~
on Economic Conversion, purpose and effect is lO a lousy leader ..• violence USHER'S GREEN whlch ha• been dealing with discriminate against hippies. cements leatlerllhlp," Chaves
immedl1te way1 to stem the A 1968 Carmel CJ t y sild.
aerospace jobless crisis and ordinance makes it unlawful Chavez was released from
also Jong-ran"C pceparations jail Dec. 24 afte r serving 20 STRIPE ·SCOTCH " to sit or lie on public lawns. da s r on•· t f urt for conversion to a peacetime Y or c ui:mp o co · A declaration of ur gency 'l1he state Supreme Court is economy. th
Assemblyman John Burton, designed to make it effective now reviewing e contempt st'ART THE NEW YEAR OFF 1/2 gal.now ... head of the committee, said immediately said the City order that stemmed from " 99
its two-year study concluded Council ''has observed an ex· boycott activities a g Ii n st -, 11
that un!--• the .talt and trao<dinary influx of un-Salinas Valley lettuce ~~WITH BIG $2.QQ $A\/INGS . -federal ~nments plan for desirable and u n s an It a r Y growers. KY
a chan•. ·r from defense visitors to the city, sometimes "Nonviolence is not enough. • h " y • t t g t out •"---aa.m~"NSt-a,,..~•• 11 NlllM l:GT!ll!ll CCllD'~tDU6ftlf.rr,•1t11 to consumer goods, "our 1 _'kn'.'.:'.'.own:'.'...".'~'.'.'.'.'ip'!:p:'.'.les:'....:. . .:.·.:_· ___ _:..:':"_:':•_:g~o::...:::'.!:'::...=..:"=:::,:•:;_ __ _,_ ___________________________ _
jobleu rite will con tinue to
climb."
"Today, three-fourths or our
research money is still poured
into weaponry and space
research," said Burton. lD-
San Francisco.)
"We must di vert much or
this to shift our aerospace
and other defense-crlented in-
dustries into fields where
basic research is needed to
save our environment and im-
prove llvlnc condltkma for our
people."
He said un e m ployed
engineers, accustomed t o
higher living standards in re·
cent years, perhaps should be
granted temporary delays on
repaying Cal-Vet loans and
possibly be given higher
unemployment and welfare
benefits.
He also said California
lhould require ltJ aerospa~
and defense lnd111tr1ts to file
plans assuring that they can
move over into other opera-
tions for peace time. Cintas told his wife "we Sacramento; Oiarles Jolley,
e1pect a $100.000 fine" which convicted of flnt degree !:;:=========::;
he will pay. hoping for release murder out of Yuba City, and
''any time." Ralph Ruiz, convicted of first The crew of the 1,800-lon degree murder in San M•teo.
Apollo. jointly owned b Y They were missing at the 10
LET'S BE FRIENlll. Y
American, Costa Rican and h k p.m.cec.
lf you ha~·c new nc1Khbol"1'
or know or anyon€' n1oving
to our area, plcast' lcll us
so that ,1·r may f'Xh~nd a
friendly v.•,Jcomc and help
thc1n tn become acqu11intro
in their new surroundings.
Panamanian businessmen, al· The two killers had been
so includes the Cintas' t Vt n behind bars for a decade each
older boys, Dennis. 2.1, and and had been model prisoners.
Mlchael, 2.2. The couple has Havard worked in the prison
five other children ranging in handicap shop and prison or.
age from 5 to 18. flcials said it appeared aboul
"What's been happening is $15 had been taken from the So. Coast Y-ISiler nothing short or piracy on cash register,
the high seas," Mrs. Cintas "These men have been good
told a newsman. prilonetl here, but with their
Many boats lack the ranj!'.e bacqroundl they 1Ull Mve
lo fish outside the 200-mile to be comidered dangerous,"
limit claimed by Ecuador. she ~a~spo~k~es~m~an~sa~id~·---~~:::::::::~1 said, and while big American 11
seiners like the Apollo can
travel far out to sea, "the
rish simply are closer lo
shore." ·
Mrs. Cintas said she was
'"heartened and proud " about
the 12-month ban on aircraft
Policemen
Get No Help
In Brawl
SAN Fl\ANCl900 (AP ) -
Two plainclothes policemen
nid Monday they battled with
an inned man for seve n
minutes while passersby ig-
nored their pleas for help.
"We're poli~men ," officer
Robert Peterson said he
shouted 1t passing cars i nd
pedestrians. "Get us s o me
help."
He said ooe driver retorted.
"That's your problem :' and
sped orl.
Peteraon and his partner,
Carl Klotz, said they were
que.t.loning two men in a car
when ooe pulled a pistol and
ahoV'ed it into Peterson'•
1tomach. They said the gun
did not fl~ only because Klotz
wu~ baldiDI the revolver's
cylilllllr:
TRANSCENDENT AL
MEDITATION
as taught by
MAHARISHI
MAH ESH
YOGI
Tr•nK•ndent•I Meditetion ls • natur•I
spontaneous tKhnlque which allows ••ch
lncllvidu•I to exp•nd his mind i1nd Improve
his tit..
LAGUNA .BEACH
HIGH SCHOOL
IM.• 15 IM•1lc l•ll•l"'J
JANUAl!Y 20th Wtclne1doy 7::IO p.m.
For lnform•tlon call 494-4J72
AOMllllOJI fl•ll
HAMS
•HAIL STOltll
J7Dt I . (Nlf H•hw1y, C.,...., llltl Ma,_.7l·to00
1222 s. ll'Mkhwat, Ani1Mlm 635-2461
Reassuring. These are trying times. Probably
the perfect time to try us.
It's easy. If you can 't visit one of our 23 neigh-
borhood offices, just phone. We simply transfer
your ICl'(lngs Into a "Try Us" account _ .. and you
try us. With $5 or $50,000. How much and
how long are up to you.
The ''Try Us" account, our new Umpteenth
Woy To SaYe, is comfortable. You try us on your
own terms. So you bosk, with o quor1er of 'o
millia(l others, In the warm seciirtty of O't'9r o
·'
billion in asse!S. It's a nice feeling. Then when
you want your investment, we give it back with
interest.
Just remember. Once people know us, they
usua lly stay. So come try u5: Then you can relo'x
and enjoy the other goad things in life.
Trust Glendale Federal Savings
~~~ ... you ccn't'lose: · \
I•
Costa /v\esa 1833 Newpo rt Boulevard · 642-4711
Fo1~ The
Record
Marriage
Lice:tases
Dealh l\'otice•
Pooli11 g·
Of Funds
Studied
SANTA ANA -A pooh ng·
or county cind {'llY funds
to bury utili1 y lines will be
one of the su bje cts d iscussed
al l he ~'eb. 6 Joinl meeting
of coun1y supervisors and
niayor.s or c ities.
The p ropos al 10 d iscuss
formation of a fina ncing pro·
gtam such as the courity's
we ll publicized A r te r i a 1
Highvvay F ina ncing P rogr an1
\1·a s mad e by S uper \'i.!or
David L. Bak er
Triggering the ::.u gges t ion
"·a s a request by Ne\vport
Beach for $.1~.000 in co unty
underground utility funds to
use along P a c ific C o a :; t
Highway adjoin ing the Sea
Seoul Base, wh ich ls OR county
property ,
B aker noted that there is
only $1.2 m illion countywide
in funds to b e used for un·
de r grounding-. T he m o n e y
com es f ro1n the utilitie s as
n1aodate d bv the P u b I i c
Utilitie s Corrlmis s ion ..
T he supervis ors a nd m ayors
will meet 011 Saturda y, Feb.
ti at the Los P inos Boys Ca1np
o ff the O r tega H ighw ay ln
lhe first of a serie s of sessions
aimed at bet1er com·
m unica lion b el\1,,een county
and city g overnment.
Fair Board
Sues Fir1n
Placentia
Pair Guilty
In Holdups
Critics
Of Filn1s
Colorful
SA NTA ANA
lives, but this
horrible death.'0
"f.10tflrl
IJlm d ied a
DAI LY PILOT 8
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N01'1CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
l'·ttfl1 ....... '-llTl .. K.Afl 01' I Ull,,.IU tllTll'l<.\TI 91' IUtlNlll MOftCI Of' PILI .. 0' (llflll'ltAT9 01' IVllNlll
f'lt'rlftCllill Ml.Ml l'l(TlllOUI MAMI l llAIKM ffl'tni &l'l'Lt(ATtolll 'Kfl'rlOut MAMI
1"" wnlltfthhld «i (llnlf.-t!MY lrt Tl>o ....... rMMf ,,_ ('lf11"' 11\0 11 l<tllct h ""' ..... ,._ 1'1111, ...,,.111ftl TIW ""'""ltMI tlO <wfff'I< "1w I ••
t-••UI"' 1 11<111-11 Ud.4 fMdl (""'ll(flnt • °"'1lne11 ti I~• Mlt, It 11-••1wlol-of Mc!IWI ..SO.I~ .i .... ~, .... 1 ~'""° ., 1th ,...,,..,, l hrf,, """rl ... IOI'! a...;r,, Ci Mt.,1111, -hv lN. (1Ukw'~l1. '1o.6ol 11/Mltl Int l!C> •uln orol .... ~11ri.n. for , .... F..,.,11 l ivd,. (•11 ~. C1llfw11l1, llflilltt
!flt lktlll-n.,,, M!llt Ill' Ck&IT tniou. "'"" -ti TO l HE l'O!Nr .!t•lftt• •Ml L .. 11 ~~ ....... '""' korM Wit llcjllt.uo """' Ml'M Ill' HALCYON REAi.T Y -cl Iii.I ..... rlrrn II ~ Md ltltl Mid !!rm loJ -td ., Ftd1r1I $.Iv-eM LNll ........... INTE•MATIOM L 41111 !f\11 .. w KfM
of 111e 1..i10 .. 1,,. "*'""'"· -· ,,__ IN tcolltwi"' ,.,-. wllM• ft•m• 111 tt Stn 01-. C•ll"'"'I•. ht• nltd 111 It ~ff ol IM ttl_..,. """'"' In lull I nd plftt OI •t.•l~t ••• "'"'""'•I"" Ill' rtlltltn<t I• •• i.ntw1: -llailltft wtlti "" F ...... Html LMll ~ ,..,,,.. Ill fun ,,.. PIKft •
t • flltllows. Mro. lt11"' lllomm, "11 $urt.,... Lt,.., It'* l t t t41 ,., H•mluloll ... 11litblfoll rMi.ifflet trt • ~111...,:
11.0Y E.. E11tl&fld, 1)1) El ~ttO Avt .. COfO!'ll dfol Mlt '212$. 1 bror>ell office ti. ar In "'° l""mt~lltl~ l!t rl C11 .. l11, :1111 W-1111111 "It,
f Olln•tln V11l1y, Ct Ill , 0.ltol Oeumbtr ?t. tt 10 vl(lnllv ol .. ttlllc Cttll Hli~wtw tlloll •, CMll MMI, (1111.
Ht rt l<:I W. S..l•Y. tJ02 C1!b1entfl M•o. Rulll ltQOl'lm Mal" S""'· Sttl lotell, Ct llloutlt . Tiit Alkt W. Ctrt.111, Jt• Weo.l!t "d OT . H~11!1n1ton Btt<ll. Clllf, 5•111 af C•ll•N1, o. ..... c........ tl'l'!l<o•ltft "'~ -HllVt tM ""' .... Nt, II. Co.It -· C.1111.
Dtltot Ju 1, 1, H/1 °" De!;tmblt 2L HIO, Mii• • mt, olll(t ti lht s...trvltOrV A""' 01 "-O•IN Jt nu•rv 11. "" Roy £. EntllM • Nelt l'l' .. llbll(;: !n .... II>• otld $1•11, Nl41 l ll&ld, f«1.... •t ~ l'Mtrtl i!:••I Ct rbf.l•I
H1told W. Setlt• •trMllt ltv •-•"' M,., ltul~ lltmm H_. l oi n ltPll! el l ln Prt ntltto'• All<• C11C.l1I $TATE OF CAllFOltNIA. lt.,_n 11 mt It ,,. •ht HtfOfl whott LO> Antllh OH1t• ti IU 14ulh l'lllwlr SlATE OF CAL11'0 1UtU" That's one of s C' v r r . I OllANGE COUNlV1 ntmt II' 111lll(rlbff "' th• within 1 .... Shot!. LK Ant•lti. C11ltwnl1. "'"" Oll,1t,NOE COUNt'I'; 0.. J t nu ••• I, It/I, lltla•• mt , 1 "'"""'"' t nd •cli.MWlllltM IM tHKUtld ''""" m•Y lilt (Ol'!'ll'nllnl<lfltnt. In· Oft J1n11t •Y 11. !'11. "'-'"'• mt. • humorous e valua tions b y a Noto"' Pulllk In '"" tor .. 10 s1111. tflt i •m•. ~1ud1n1 to.lo!\. In 11v0< .,, 1n 1re1t11 Nol•n ,~bl!c I~ 11\11 '°' N\41 11111.
leachcr of one of the l!I 000 •tr111n111y 101111rtd Rov E. Entlt!\11 lOFF1c1,11,1. SfALl o! ••"" ,,,11,111on 11 .,,, ••ottuld oinwit llv •-••tct 1u 1 C1•11t l•• t n<1 • •n<I Htrol<I w. Stt l&l' tnawn 11 mo llttC. H, Cttnt lt! olfl<• al Ill• su .. rvloorv Att nl wlll!ln Alltt W, Ctt~ltl ~-II .. mt In
rilms c irculated lo Orange To ... ·~· ptrtlll• who .. nt m•• ,,. Ntl••v .. uttllt ·Ct il!Omlo 10 Ot YI '" wl!hln 36 dtv• II advl(t bf !tot P••IOfl• w-• ntmtt .,~ 1ub1crlh
Ed
oul>M:t!bt'<I lo t~t wltM11 l11tlrumt nl 111<:1 P'tlMlt l l Oll!ct Jn 11 tUtol wl!hl" 1111 flril 10 dtvo itollM fCI It Ille w!lllt.. lnlltUM.nl Ill~
C OWJty SChools by I.he UCB· tt~llllwlldtfoel !llev t•Kulfoel th• 1tmo. Ort"'' County n111 mt11 tltN 11 n..O.d It '"'"!tit a<:-ntwltdtfoel """t•1<ukol !~t 11m1,
lion a l Me dia Centr r of the 1oi11~111 3N I ! Mv commln le<'. l!••I••• 1dcl1t1..,11 !nftrmt1l0t0I 11,_, ,.... d•'-10111ci.1 s11n J•t n L jo~1t !iot•t. U, lt?S ol lhl o t Ubt!ct llon. SI• c ... tH ol ony Mi ry l tlft MOl'!Ofl
county Educ ation Department. Ntttr"ll "ub11t • Ct1•forn11 ,.ui.11011..i Ot11101 C1>111 0111w l'llol t""'mu111c111.,.,, "'°"1' bl 111.,. 1110 !'4ot••• ,u~llc • c11111r1111 P•!n<\111 Olllct In Q«""bt' 19, !•XI 1nd J 1n111rv S. 12, 1ppllctfotl tnd t ll t ommulllt tll.;.,I 1.. l'rlnt lt•I Ofllct In
F'inding it im possible to o.1nv1 Cou11tvv lt, 1111 1ttt.ll! ''"" .,, 1" t tfttsr thu...t 1tt •••fl•~,. 0•1nt• c""""'
review every fil m e a ch l im e M• Cornm1111011 E••lr•• '°' 1n11ect1"" bv tn• 1,, .. 11 " •ftt Mr Comm1u1011 E••l•n Mott~ l. lt n LEGAL NOTICE 1!0•111111 olllct er 111t su .. rvl1erv A11111 Attol t, ltll it's issued , the m edia c enter l'ui.11111"" o rt111• Cot•• D•"• fl'llor "OME Ftol!:ll:AL ' "u1>ll•lltd Or11111 c .. ,, D111, 11101.
I-h .1 h J1nu1ry j, U, It. 1•, lt ll •·11 "'"'" Sl.Vl~GS AND L0,11,ff Jonul n' It, H t nd ~t~tulf'I 1, I,
re 1es ea\'! y on teac er com · --------c lRTt,lcATI 0,. 1u11,..,1 AISOCtt.T•ON o, 10 1 ,,,.,.
ments penned on ca rd s which LEGAL NOTICE ,1c1T1ou1 NAM• s"N DIEGO
are returned w ith the f ilm s. '"~ ~t1t1•ri1••ed do <•"!"' "' 11 ~~~~~ J~!'u!~l 11, 10 , P-1"S1 conauctl111 • W11Mu .r 1n1 """ Cl'lltTll'IC•TI OP I Ulllll lS <1~1 Sut, &olbo•, Col!torn!t . ut'Mler lho '"bllihl'd Ot1ntt Col il Otoly ~llel.1 ------------
l'l(TITIOUI NAME t!<llllou• lltm na""' ti I J'o WIT DOCI( Jo•uorv 1'· U f! 1'1·11 IUPl.101 COU•T 01' Tloll
LEGAL NOTICE
Tftt und•t1l1nt<I dOti (•t!ll• M 11 •nd 1ht ! ,,;, llNn •• ttmto.H of I TATI: 0' cAt.IPOJINlA POiit
SA NT A A N A _ A pair of conouclln• • W1lneu 1t tll w. 17Th '"e 1ollowin1 H flOll, whow "'"'' In l.EGAL NOTICE TMI COUNT'I' 01 OAANOI SI .. Co•!t Mtu. Ctllfornlt . un<11r 1111 !UH ••G oltC1 ol •e1kl"""• h "' IN. IH n1
Plac e nt ia y ouths, one of w hom ll<ll!lou1 "'"' ntmt 01 CUSTOM tol!ow-= o •ol!R TO SMOW CAUtl wH1:11tt: • SERVICE ,11,'40 REPAIR Ind ""'' 11111 em J•colneo. lllS .. 1111 ttl 'u" P-3"\J co•,O•ATION I HOU\.D NOT I f
a llege d was involved in a total llrm 11 com1>oott1 a1 tl'MI •011owlt1t H •Mn, e.111o1. Clll:TIPICATI: OF 1u11M111 Ol'CLAllO wollfojo u.. "N ° who•• n•m• In lull 1nd pl1c1 o1 r11ld1nc1 Ot t1<1 J l,...lfY I, ltlt PICIT10UI NAMI: OlllOLVIO
of 13 a rmed r o bberies, plead ed "FUm uns ide do1vn on reel 11 •• 101111wo: 1111 J1cob11n , 1 Wit.LIAM c . •o•ERT S. Pl•lft1lt1, "'
I · J · bl • Wl!llt m Cr1lt WV«1U, 111 w WlllOn. Srtrt o! C1lllornl1. Ort ntt C""M~; ht 11"dtt1 I ""'! ~°"' ct rtlly "" If LIDO TOOLS t.tDO M.1.NUF,tiCTUllt lNG.
,::u illy Monday i11 Orange SJC , nol VLl!'Wa e , ' was O~ No. 01. Co••• Mttt, Ctllf. 11121• on .1i nuarv ,, n 11, Mftrt mt. , :'.~~~1::'un:i~"i:=::~. ~1111;::~1,~~;:.~ LIDO 11111.1.is o ucE•s. c • 111 1 • n ''
County Su""rior Court to leacher's grammatically im · 011111 J1nu1rv 11. 1911 , Ho11rv PuD1it In 1"" fG• N ld 11111, 1~, 11ctlll~• 11 .. n "'"" of co•PElt CorPOrt tlc.no. '' i i.. OttMllltnh . ,.-f · · Wlllltm Crt lt Wwcoll ~rsorullv • ..., • .,.., a111 J•coou n kl\Own c,11,NYON IMEXLCO! TOUltS 1,,,. 111,1 l~tr• h1vl n1 "-n !UH wllll tnl1 c1urt
reduced charges per eel cr11tque. s1111 01 C•lllorn11, O••nt• C011nrv '" mt t'! bf •h• o'''°" wllo•• "'""' ••'d 11rm 1, comtooeci t1 '"' 1111owint • ~orui.ci "'l"fobn1.i'i:tiO' al "1 on
Ra''d y Do " "ll<'S, IB, •d-Srw>l i'l"g W&' O [ h On Jt nu1rv n, 1t11 , bflor1 1n1 1 I• 1ub•cr1bt<I lo lllt wltllln ln•lrumu1t ,.,_ w~011 nomp In Ill!! •net Plt Ct beholl olLU;>o Ml."IU AC· " l:i .. r-" s a n 'r Noltry l'ubll( In '""' for ••Id sr'111, •n<f tcllnowlt dlfoel "' IXK llllHI tilt •• .,.. •. ot" 1d111Ct II 11 lol111w1 TUlt!NG. •1111 LIOO TltANSDUClltS,
niiUed two of the IJ anned teacher's water loo, "This film "'"""'11, 10HorlHI w 11H1m crt lt Wv<tll (OFFICIAL SEAL) •'•uct It . s,~..,.,,,: '"' "''donao c1111orn11 co••••t !lono. lor 111 o..itr ll'f
d
. 11.nown lo mt to .,. lht Ptt1on w11e11 "''" IC Htnr"\I A 1 l-flt•ch (t ill 1n1, court dlc:lt •lnt 111<1 cor1arollon1 full'
robb ery charges filed against ha been 1m prQberly /'C· n1m1 I• •ubicrl~ to tht w1t111n In· Not1rv rtubllc.C1+111rn11 0~,;.. Jt nu•f'I 1 '1111 · wound UP t l!f <:1l1t0lv<1C1. '"" II •l'fft•ln•
h Jrn a nd w a s se n t by Judge WOUnd '' 11rum•n! trl<I IC~MW!eclt!O ht t~tcv!1<1 Prlncl•t l 0111<1 In lruco it. k~wlrl lrom tlld Ptlltltn lhtl rtl SOllt blt t roUM ! . !ht 11mt Ort ntt COUMI" STATE OF CAl l~OlltNl.t. mt v 1~111 IOI' lh• mt-fllt OI sue~ otdt";
Byron K. Mc M illa n lo state Wllh \Vhat evule ntly was not (SEAL) . MY Co mmi .. 1011 E••l'" Oltl.t.rGE COUNTY · ' IT IS HEltE8 '1' OllOElt ED ,~., lthlll -r ' -,. I 'I "· I t"A . Mory 111n Motion No~ ll, 1•n 0.. J•n111rv ~ . 1f71 bt!Cft me • t!llllon I" ••• for htt rlnt by !hi' court 011 p rison or a m1n 1mun1 1ve-a ! m a uuu rl\; pop mus ic Nota rv Publlc . c 11111,n.. ,.u1111he<1. oranvt c.,.1, o111w "!lol Noll,., ,.ubHc 1~ 1...,' 11, ••id si't1e iii. 3rd o•v •' '~•rch, 1,,,. •t 111e "°u' of
year tern1. All other c harges s cene cam e this teacher com · Pt!nct111 Olfltt In J1n~1 rv s, 12, it. 1', un 111-11 P1t1ont111v '""''t<I ••vet •. s cnw1rl ''30 ,.M. •'clock In lht cowr1'oom 0' ,, . . Ort ntt Countv knawn t• m• 10 bt 111, l>tn on w!l••I Otptrtm ... t 2 of tllll c1url ICM:t !IHI II lOO
were dis1n issed. m e n\, ThlS film shakes and Mv CommlHlon Elf l•"5 LEGAL NOTICE namt 1• ,11bsc•IDN ro !ht within In· W11t Clvl< C111lor Dr!v•, Si nt• An~.
A r ll'ur C lark J oh"S[O" Jr., J'iggleS fo r a ll bUI thC f'•rsl Aprlt f, 1'71 tlrum"'t t nd t CknowllOll>d ht tl<tc:uled Or1n11 C111nty, C1ilforn•l t I nd !~ti •1>1" " " l'uDtlshtd Ottnl t co1oi 0 111• t ho! ttlt 11m1 1•rotn1 c11fml111 to ~ lnltr11tld 111 1'fld 20, ple aded guilty lo armed five minutes ~" J1nu1rv n. It. 21 '"" Ftbt11•"' i. "-mn fDHlcl1I $..11 corr>a•1tlon1 •• .,,,,.,,.,141,., crttrltoro •~
0th . . 1'n Jt.n CllltTl,.ICATI OP 11U11H11S' Jtt" l JOl»I otll1rwl11. lhtn ancr "'"' ·~ tt11••· "
robbery and a s sault with a ers pro vide s imple "'a m· PICTtlioui MAMI No11..,, ·,."~nc . c11;1orn.. 1nr '"'" .,,.,., .ui, till• ~·' i.l'lould ""'
dead ly we a po". He drew ... in°s to s ub'UOl'1uenl users of LEGAL NOTICE Th• undersltntd ""' <t•tlty ho 1' "•IMl111 0111c1 1,., m••• •n •nMr. In '''-'"'• wlln lh• " " . • --. ,_~Cll!19 • buSINH ,, J.W N1w1>01'1 0<1n11 Co11nll'v Provlt!om of §DO.I ol '"" C.!'Ytttll ....
iden tical s tate priso n term and films. "Las t 30 feet of film ••• "'' l lvd .. Mt woori 1•t<ll, C•ll""111'· under Mv commi .. 11,, EK•l•a Coo:r• 11 C1t1ki,nl1 "~'••In• 111d co•·
'
·s brok " LOOK OUT ., ltlt llC'lltlous Urm n1m1 ol l"Oll:lltl!ST Mt rcn t U ll _.1n0,,, dul1 -•n•<I ut ,,... 411Holutcl.
d is missal of four oth~r counts e .. -. SUf'1•t01t COURT 0, TH I AltT ANO WltlllNG SEii.ViCE •ntl !ht ! '•1111"11111 011-~ COt ll Dtlly .. ilot tM Ptrllcult rl• ·~ trlllr •telltlftt:
r d bbe B [ th [ ITl.TE OF CALll'ORl'fl.t. POii 1110 lltm 11 CGml'Ootcl of lllt loll-ln1 ''"" l Th t Id '°"'°' 11 41 1 o arme ro r~·. U among ose m os cer· TN• coUNTV oP o••N•• ..,,..,,, wtioo• n•m• 111 11111 •rMI ,11,1 Jtft11t tYs..12. 1•. 2t. nn J.11 • .. •. 11 • °"' •I'll u Y
I ' d'f f'I ' ' 1 ' 1 WOii UI>, Both men "·e re indicted b y a1n lo e 1 y I m reparrmen ,.._ A"'1Sf 0 '•1 o...ci • •• ol-•: 1. T~11 •11 I•••• dut urMl•r "'' ltnlc
I be th . [ "f 'I NOl1CE 01" HIAlltOtO OF "ETITION l'orr11t Rtw M<Clll•lon, 115 11111 LEGA•. NOTICE uld Cor1>11r1tlan Tt • L•-~l~t Mtn the O r a nge County Grand Jury m us e Simp e. l m l'OI P11tD1,11,11 OI' WILL ANO POii Sl•N t. N1..,ort Bt •cll. c1111orn11 t'lNt ••Id fo• u 111 <0t1>0r1non11
a fter thC pa"el re•1"e"'ed broken in the midd le O( l.ITTIRS 0 P AOMINtlTll.t.TION Dt!eo Ji"u•n' 1• lt'1 l. Tiit! lht ollltr -1111wn ""' 1nol " " S , J d ,1 WIT"·Wil.L·!INNl:lllD '°"'"'" llav McCulslon '·l"H lltl>lllt!11 ol 111<1 co1 tor1ll0111 Kl'lli llW
e vid C'nc e lhat the pair w ere WLlZe r a n . E1ttl• "' CAl!RIE M JOl'l'45DN. Sltlt al Ct lllornl•, 0••111• CouMy; Cl:RT•P•CATI 01' 1ut1NISS hi.,. btell ••Id; ] Oe<•ll1<f On J1~111rv I, 1171. btfort mf, • ,ICTITIOUS N,1,/1111 '· Tht l i ll know11 tUllO ti •ti• Cir•
illVO Ved ln a 19.<Jay St ring NOTICf: 15 HEREBY GIVEN tht l "lolt r\I PuDllc in on<:I lOt 11111 S!llt, fht 11ndtroltne<I do ct1'1111' tho• 1ro oot1 ll""1 ht ve btt• dl1lrlbl/TIHI It 111•
of armed rohbencs in se ven ETHEL M. 11;1.UBLE" ht • !11011 Mt1!11 P•non1nv •oo•••"" Forr .. 1 111 • • con1111C11n• • bu1ln•» t t 11'1 oo"""' ihor..nol<lo";
SANTA ANA -Appa rently l\f " d t p1t1t1an '"' P•obott ot w ill "'" McCu!1!on ~f\Own 1• "" It bt 1111 Otlve suit• 11', Ntw11<1tl le1ch s. Th•! !ht ollrKtor. of 111• cor-
d 0 C [ F Orange County communitie s. Jl an ...:onvi cte lor l1111 t 11a ol L1Utt1 ol Admlnl•••ttlon PlflOfl Wiii>•• "'"'* l• SOblCrlbt<I !<I Ct llfe•r;1, under l~t llctlllou• llrm n1mt aortllan• ••• Gll<hlttttl trom lll•i~
una m use r ang e Oun Y a ir !\lo s t of t he holdup s were c ar-w1111-w rn .. nnt)td !o perlllonor, reloren<e 1he wltnln ln•trument •nd •t~nowltdt•O 11 Jtt.NCHO VISTA Glt...,NOE 1nd th1t dullti 1nd ll oblll!lts 1e crecll!ors t nd
board members h ave SUed lo wMt1' 1, m•d1 1<1' lurthot p1rllcul1ri, ho ••ttuttcl !ht ltmt. •tld llrm 1, cornr>a)ed of 1ro. tollowlnt 01'1rt tioldtrtl t nd
ried out in gas stations a nd JU A ' , t n<I lhll '"' time •nd ol1c1 of hotrlni (0 FFICl.t.t. SEALl otti.ono, who'• ntm" In tun 1n<:1 •l•ct1 '· T~1t 0110 cor,ortl\0111 '" dls51l~-
a n1usement o perator s at las l 11 h"' h d k 1·~011 ._.ase the "'"" "•1 Min str '"' P1b•u•"' "•b• H. c1111•11 o1 ••sld1nc• '" 11 1011ow1· ed.
Y
ear's ra·ir for m ore than sma n e1g uur 00 mar els. ,, u 11. •' ,,30 •.m., 111 tht tourrr"""' "'°''"' Pubnc. c1111crnlt 1. K•n"•'h Goo<1m1n, nu1 H1 H1n1 1T 1s Fu1tT11E• OllOEll ED thit 1n1~ ot Dop1r!menl No. 3 ol st ld toud. l'rl"<1P•1 O!llct '" llotCI. l.tkftltlt, C11!1'11rnlt J llt on.rt W. trder .,. ""'"' b'f publlc1Hefl Ill t c""Y
$12,000 all~gedly O\~'\ng on the SANT AN A 0 ,, 100 Civic Ctn1•r Ori~• .... ,,, In Ort rio• CounlV 11t1uch, 3.!3& l.t•lt l l i nt, lt1Tll110 Hlllt lh•reaf In 11\t Ortntt (Ollll D1lty Piiot, I A A -n range th• Cl!Y ol Stnl1 An •. Ct lllornl1. My CommlHIOll E'~Plrtl E1l11t•. C•lllornl1; j on" Wldth1m, J.j n~WIPIPlr ol tlnlftl clrcu1111tn In '"'
contrac t. OC ''lA Na Ill._.,;,: C ounty Superior Cour t jury 0111d Jin~•"' i" 1t11 50•1· u. lt1l c i.uckw••on Ito•~. •0111n, H 11 '1, ccunlV 01 O••nt•· c1111om11. wMrtln ""'
h
l' .._,0 w. t!'. ST JOHN, P~bll1llld Oron9t Cl>tlt Dt llv l'llol, Colllornlt t 11ton1!d C. Winter, 1UU 1rl,.cl1>1I ol!lct al 11ld '''"•l llOll• 11
The complaint filed by I r has found an El Modena man couni. c1~,~ Ja"u'" J, n, 1t, ,,, 1'11 '·'I Hontv Crtt~ 1110111. P•I• v .. de1 10.-1led, tor • 1>1r1ot1 o1 ._ n1 can·
state attorney general's office guilty of selling a fire th.at in-LAWRl:NCI' k . 11:11.11: L•GAL ""'Insult , c11111rn111 J. L1wr1nc1 11cu11v1 mo11!h1 cornmtn<lftt •rt · S · Ne J~ 'd l IJJ N, ••11 c. NOTICE Slont. 413' Commonw11n• •ve .. Lt 01c1m11tr n, 1'10,
In O range Coun t y upen or w rcs1 e n ' flic ted damage estimated at ''"" A~•· Ctlif, C1n1dt , Ct ll!Otft!t l "o""I"• H ...... 1... A• ••ovl•ld by §no3 GI l~t C•• ... •t •
Cou rt on behalf of the 32nd $750 000 I the Or a e-'''' S41..llll l!u .. w Nt. JU·ttJ J l1 So. C1mden Or., llt•t•lv Hii is, non1 C<ICl1 of C1lllorn11. 1nv ter1on1 ' a ange W r Alltrntr Nit "'11111Nr NOTICI O, IULI( TRANSPlll C•lllornlt ; Diiion lros,, t Mntttl clolml"t lnlu tot In otld corl>O<tll-t i
D ist rict Agricultura l Associa· l•'U LLER·roN -D 0 c l 0 r h ou se or G ene ral T ire and Publ\1n"<I Ot1n91 Cotl! 0 •• 1. 1>110!, (Soc• •1'1~111 U,C.t .) per1n1t1hl1 b•~ 11.obf>rt L Dillon.. l«I t/ltrt/loldtri, c•Hlttro, or t•htrwl1t, .... ..
lion c harges Atlas Amusement Fred M . Ka,v. a n obslttricia n-Rubber Co. last Au g . 12. J1nu••• lt. 111. 15. 1'71 1:ie-n Nolle• 1, hereb• 11v1t1 te tM c,.,ouo.. E. Elill!Orn Av1,. 51lm1. C•llforn!t ; •P•••• Tn tll!• 1roctHlnt 11 1nw 11 ... 1 ol "Urtd s. Greco '"" MttrY Jov N, J. ltt ll. 1'5ll S!lrnip •01d, St n ~1011 !ht ••Oltt l!Clfl ol lhlrt'V t)O) 411••
E n terprises wil h non-payment g y neco log ist from F'ullerton. J ud g e Ho ward C a n1 e r o n LEGAL NOTICE GrK o, husbt...r 1nd wH•. Tron•fetDri. Pidro, C1li!or~11; Lot s Como1nv, ''""" 1111 comp1111.,, ot •11bl\c111en .i 1~1.
2 068 d d h '\' h I T """o•• Duolnou t <Hl••\\ I• Htl 11ttDOr • 1ent ro! •1tln1tonlp b•; Omtr I.Ont . Ordtt It ShDW Ct~lt 1nd contt1t 111•
or $1 , .72. w ill be: installed as the 83rd or ere Ant ony "IC a e or-1-------,-..,,11 191-1 ------1i.o .• COii• M•~•, ccun•v 111 0,.,,.,, 1 1tn1r11 •••IM<. 411' C•m1u1 Ori~• ... erllled 011111011.
Thal amount is Lhe bala nce P1Yre~i1d0ed",·,~,o1r tA~~~a,n11_g0~ eo
1
0Cun-,"o'u'rtr'oo''m '°Feb". tu,rn 10•,u seh~~ !~:::1:: c~!~::.:1~ ;;: ~:·':~, c:~1111.:1•·m'!,'..' ~ .. nu,!':..,~'.~:··~·. ::..~rr:,~·~ ~:~~~~1c:!~in:~~2),,bvi.!~~~ 0'1"~f:~0~~.'0sc'ri~11.Lt
O"'ing on the $30,()00 con-" ";>V<,.' " -" T"I COUNTY 01' Ollt.N•• PO!!•r '""' H, e. l'oltu , wilt •~d Otlv1. Ntwl otl 9,,th, c.111. tlUO; JUDGE OF THI '1 AI O" ''"-23 a llhe Santa tenc ing that could b nng him ,., •...ua ~u•bond. '''"''""'" w11011 111111""" ,0• Nlcno111 ~ D'Oon11111. • t!nt r11 su,.e•1ort cou1111 ce ssion dra "'n u p b et,vee n the ,. " " NOTICI: OP MIARll+G OP ,.ITtTIOll '"'' 11 ~1 w tllh StrN•. Ct •tt •1tln.er1hl• 1¥: JOl'ln D. O'Donntll. flUlllWITJ:, M!JllW ITl. ••Mi ii
fa ir boa r d a n d t he Atlas Ana C ountry Club. He s u e-a two to 20-y ear term in slate POR ,.110,ATI OF wtt.t. ANO •o• M•••· c ..... nrv of D••n•o. s111 .. ,., • 1t111••1 P•'""'· ,..,. G•l•llV or .. "'"""1'" L-
I V . Ll'TTl'lltl 0 I' 110/rlllNllTllATION C1l!l0tnlt. N ... Po•I l•tcll, Ct lll. nua1 by; 411olbf llrM'I
o rganiza tion, the I a w s u i lr_'c":e~d-s~Docilt~o0r~L·yie~Ciii.iii~o~g~e~.iiiiiiiip~r~1~so~"··~~~~~liiliiiiiii~-: wiTH·w•t.L-,NNixio ,~. ••ooer1w 10 bf 11t n11i tt<t 1, toc11.., M1c11111 "· Nlt110110. 11» Anll1u1. 1ttwtt" .,.t , c111,.r111t
'.'.' ••• '
"'' .. 'OH"00", o-, •• ti 11'1 HtrDOr e 1va .• Cos!• MMt , Countv N1w"6rt l1tch, C1!;!ern!1 fl .. 0. Tth 17111 •f>-,.,. Slate s. l'<I "" "'~ "' " .... o1 OtollOI, Sltlt al Ct lllornlt . Dt ltd J1nu11•y 7, 1'71, .t.""11'1"1 fir ~ .. llt
Nc:ittt£ IS HEllt EI Y GlVEN tn9' Solorl 1>•-"'Y l.1 011crl-In it nt •ll ltANCHO VISTA Gl:l.NOf: l~bllohl!d Or1n11 Co11t D11tv "•lot.
DANISH FUlNITU•I SWIDISH CITSTAL ETHEL M, 1(,11,Ul t.E ht • u ieo ~triln 11· An 1tock In 111dr, ll•!u•t•. ••u•1>mon1 11v Nkha!11 A O'Dtnntll, Oecomber 15, 12. 19, lno t nd J1nut rv II.
lllDAl •t•tnaY CHINA & STiil 1 pell!lon !or "robtt• al Wiii tnd •net '°"" will 01 '"" O••nt• Jwlluo Gl"tl'•I "•rlneri 17· 1'· 1'' 1911 ,,,,_,. 1cr !H ut nct cl l tttttl OI ,tifmlnliltillll<l bu1lnru 11111wn •• Al's Or•n1r Jullu• Jolln 0 . O'l>onntlt wll~·Wlll .. nno•<ICI to rttli!loner. relt •trKI t nd lOCtltd ti lit! Htrlx>r l tv<:1., C•ltt Ml<hoel 5. Nlc!IOI••
I• whi ch !I mtdt !or lllrtntl' 1>t rlleti .. l'I, Mt••• Ceun!v of Or•ntt. STiit ol $f,1t,TE OF CAl lFORN l,ti)
i nd lllll th'-!l"'f ind PltC" or ""''"9 Ct llla,.,,lt , COUNfY OF OllANGE) !j 1111 ••mr n1, lltcn oft tor Fi brui ..,. T~• bul• l•tn\lf t will Dr con•um-On J1nu1rv /, 1•n , klor• mt. !h1 l.t.11 HI)
!. lf7L 1t 1,30 1.m .. In int (l!\ltlroom m111d "' or allor '"' 17th atv o! un<11ril1necl, • NOlt fV l'ubllt In i nd !or I UI ElttOll COU lltT OP TM I
Ill' D1p1r•m•~I No. l ol otld c.tUrt. Jt~u•rv, lt ll. ti ltn~ o! ....... ,1 •• Hif S!l!I. Olr'IOnt llY •P•r•r•O Jo~n D. STATE OP CAll,Oll:Nl!I ~! 100 Clvl< Can!er 0-1~1 Wto1, In NT~SA. W W. ltlll SI , Co1t 1 IJ,111, O'Oonnr ll 1nf Mitht•I !I, Nlcnolt s -nown PO• TNI COUNTY OP o•aNel
WG1·11'1·aRmDEHN. HuG,.8110cyV,Ewl-,o 1,·,o,r, daniah cd~e rn~.~~ ;~,,5:.~': '~~~·~1111or1111. c;von'~.~· ~;·';'.,~w~·~~ o~~.1~:;~~~1 ..... ;:rr:::r;~1." rt'.':' •:.:~1~"'':;' ~11~~~ tVMMONs-o~Tii~1'~~~1.1: ACl10H " gQf'den w. E. 5T JOHN. •II b11•lnn 1 nJmoo t<ld •f8rtUU """" l"l!rumrnt. and icknowl.cr1H 'o mt Wit.BUR E. MITZLl!ll! 1nO •l!LVA
County Doctor LEGAL NOTICE
Wins Election
in Garden GrOVf' a nd practices 2£n t. 11 counlV C ltr~ bv Tttn•t•roro '"' t~• 1nr11 •t•ro 1~11 ouch "'''"'"~1, tlltt11ttd th• ••m•. f LLEN METZLEll., Pltln!IH•. ••· ltUTH v"TO E. CoaJi;. "kill'! Co•ono cfol "'o~ 1.,1,w••NCI ii:. Kt llt K 1,,, "'''· u tl!tort nl 1rom •~• '""'' w1tNESs mv htnd 1nd ot11c111 1n1. TULL v, J&NN•E WALDIE, t.ILL1Al'I
ANOILl in Wes t1ninsler, has been _, ,, ,.., • IU N. .... t rt: ......... (OFPICIAI. !IAL) ~·.,.:;.,",,~TIER, llLl.1AN c . IONHAMo
L•ur1 o. """°•II, lilt Loncoln Li ne. New-e lected president of the Doil" 9 :30 4o S:,lt Tel: 644-7340 ••~II Aftl, CtlH. 011811: j1nu1rv !]. !t11 DONN• RIE&ert Tiii ,..0,.1.1 01' TNI:
l>Orl B•t(~. Ottt 01 d111h, J1~u1ry 11. J ,.. JJ. +oS a Ar II.. ...... &. c:i. T-.!1 1(71)11 511nfCI Dw: Nottrw Pu~ll(. C1llt1rn11 IT.t.TI OP CAL!,OAlllA
SYrvlvH bV Ot"9hler, Mrs, Vlvltn l t f· Southern C alifornia Veterinary \I wa. ..-" -m-lr nQrg& Atttrntr hr l'tlflltt!t r ~ob•ir;• S. "011" OronJt Covnfy TD: Ruin Tully, Jtnnlt Wt l<:llt , l !IHtlf lo!~ln, ,. __ , e11ch; •on, "o~l'1 c. -~M~e:dl'."'c~a~l'_'.A~s~s~oc~i:a~r~'°~"~·----~===============================1~~·~"'~'~'~:::'."::.:~·:'i'~~~·~~<:u:•:'~':•:•:"_.,~'~"·~1 •on•"" Mv Comm11111n Ex'111• L. cmor, 1.1111111 c. •-•m. '"'"toll. N-Yor'k. l'"untrll tt•Vicos u >d Jtnut ry n. 10, 1J, 1'11 Ut -11 H. B. Pollot, Ttt n\tet., M1Y U. 191J ''"' '''''' .,..., 1,. Mrtll'I' •lrldM to ,_,,. lntu mt nl Wiii bl h•ld In L011q l1l1na, PYllllsnO'd Oro rige c ... 11 Otll• t l+•i. .. uDllW.td Ori .... Cot Jt l lld t nlWlt ft com"llnl ti l!>t t"9vo·
Ntw 'l'crk. ltllt Co111 Mffl Motlut !'Y. LEGAL NOTICE J onut n' It, "11 ll]..1! ~:,",~'" n, ... 11 ..... Ft-rv-r:,.,;· ftt med .. lt lnlllll 111111 I~ ,,.. 111ev ......
Forw1rdlnl Ditt clori LEG NOTICE 11111<1 c""rl In l~t t btv"1flllllfCI tctr.,... IAlltNl:t P-m u AL b>"OUth! 11tln11 '"" In 111<1 '""rt, wltllfro
Gtlfi. M. l t rnls. t.oo "5, 0, 11' E. 111~ ClltTIPICAT• OP I USIN11SI LEGAL NOTICE tftltl'I' 13Cll d1y1 t fltr IM ltrVlct "'
SI , Ct1!t Miit . Ol!t 01 dt•ln, Jo~uo"" l'ICTITIOUI NAMI Mt. 1'·11"• you al 1~11 t11mmtn1.
II . SurvlvM DV h111blfl{I. Mt. ,It,. W T~e U~det1l1ntd dot1 (t rtl!v no 11 CIRT I' (All·:: ::~COllTINUANC Ct11 Nt. "·lltff YOll t rr ht••h' nolllled ltllt l u~lt11 l•rnts: dt111tnlor, Jt <,lt e8rnt1; aro"'"'· <On<lvcllnt • bu1l11tss t i •2J..I So, Eit st I 1 I CIJITl,.IC!ITI 01' I UllNlSS Vtu oo ''"tr t nd i no ... r st I Plt lntlll!I
l'lo•d H1rrt ll, COii• M•••• ne1>n1w. a..... ~1~i'°"i":i~~":;.~:1~~,~~:..:~:: s';;,1 ~t OP u~~ A,.~g~~:.oAu•,A:~N.MlllT ,ICTITIOUS PlllM lf.t.MI: :'~~.~'.!· ~~~::, ·~~ ·,~~ n:-.::11!~~
1-'t ttfll, Cao!• Mn t . 5ervl<11, Frldt v, '"" !ht! >ti<:! llrm II comooitll o1 THE UNO!R"GN EO htrtbY co'11!y IAllt ?ftt 1• 1rl1!nt ""°" car.h ot!, or will •••1• I~ JO t M, 1111 lroodwav Cht ,..l. wllh II>• lollowlnt •t •io•-. wtloll ~·"'• !n 11111, •lftellvo J1n111rv " 1'71 M <t••td l l>t vftdltlltllM dG htt•I• <•t1 i1V 10 ll>t court ltt •n• O!htt tt lllt dt mondM
ltt • r 1ovd N~!S<ll'l ofnco•llnt Enl~mt ! l1u11 t nd pit<•.,. r•il<l•ntr l~ t• •otlew" to do b111lntn unde• lh• !l(!llllMJ~ llrm ll>OI •n•• 1" (Of'GUCI!~• 1 bu<in•11 In !ht tomt!tl~•.
mtnl, Mtl ro~o !lbOl y. 6•11 &•ot aHtYI ltt•mo~o t £ctluno, l?l Gt locrt•t n1m1 ol SAMMAllA Ol'VELO,IMENl It• CO·Pt tlntr•I t i lOC~ )'n!er•tl!t Tht olliKI of lhi• •U iOll 11 to m1~•
Morlut roo. Ol•Kl0t• .t.vt , Volfnclt, Coll!. CO. '' :JDC• Enl•••rl•t SI""· CO•fl !"ee•. Co!•• Mii t , C•lllerntl , uO'l<ftt lft• 1bo111·11t mtoel D11tnd1nt1 otl lor!IO l l!:AVIErt O••l<I Jon. 1. H it Ml >t . CJlllcrnTt. wftlcl> ti111lne:1 "''' II•• H<llllou• "'"' nt m• ol ~IMMA llA !h• nll11r1 ol tl>t lr t!t lm or clt lmt
1,1, E ltover ,,,, &ran""''" Wav, l •· ••vmo"" c Ecklunm comr><1i1<1 ol 1111 te!lowlno •t"""'· who•• 0EV!Cl0,.M£NT CO. '"" 1~tr ••Id tlrm 10 lhe rtll ""'"""' In lh1 <0tnt lt lnr
•ut\f ltit". O•!t of dollh, Jt nu••• 11 st.t.rE OF Ct.t.IFOllt"l!!I . nt m11 rn fl/It Ind 1it ct of rt1lo1r>e t 11 com11<1•t<I or 1111 !otlowlnt olftan•, 1nO noreint!ttr d11crlbtd, II 1ny ""'"
Suroolvtcl bv ~U!bond, IE'd'wl •<f ,,. ee•ver; OR!INGE COUNT'I'. 1t1 11 follow~, lo-wit· Wl>ott ni mts In tyU I nd t lt c•• of hi ve. '"" ll>t l 111<h <ll lfl'I '" c11lmt
o1uoh!or. M1n LIU•• .t.nn Btlllt tl 11111r, Oii Jtnijt ry I, 1t H. bolort mo. 1 ltotltrf J, M1111 t r. :ieot En!tr1rl11 '"1~tnca 1'1
1
11 ',11\~w1:· 1~~~: ~--bt 1dlud1ed of ,,. •lltd t nd ....ild, Noltf'f Public I~ t nd lot 1110 ~1111, ~· .. Co1•• M1••· Ct lll. ""''"" · 1 t ' . -"""' t nd 11111 "l•lnliff's lillt to 11141 rul M11. Forrtt! l urn" OllA"om• City; lwc .,,,.0,111,.,. i oot t rtcl lt ovm-t Ec•luft• Ct rJlllca!t tor lrtntt cllon o1 builntn L•~•. '"'"""'' &tt<n, Col,. R!chord P•O<>••IV bt •Ultlt<I 111111,1 lhtm.
b'otht ,., lltvmond 1"" Jo1t<1~ G""tn!. k11<1"'n to ..,1 10 bt Ille •tt••n wlleH u..au '"' t t>ovr lkllll~• nt mt . i n• E. ll'c,1t,f 1m. 30? Ori!""'-llt11d. Tiit ! U ld ,..1 ,,.,..dv It 1111111• bo!n ol T1•11. $tr.,l!•I. W"'nt td•v, Jt n· nt lTHI Ii iuDicr!-1., lht wl!hlft fn· t!lldt vl! OI •ubllCtllOll lhfrN I, 1,1 tn C••an1 ti~ Mi r, Col.I •11x1""" 5, In l~t Counly OI O••nte. $1t 1t of
u•rv 11), 11 t.M, Shelftr Lttun~ l 11<h t irum•n• tnct ocknow lultH he 1,1,ut~ 1111 In t~t ot!lt• ol 1~1 Ctunlv Cltrk ••~•· 111 Wtsl Mttlt •••nut . C•llltrn•1, •net 11 •trtl<Ult rlv dtKrlkd 11or1111rv C~1,,..1 . Prlvai. ln•!rmenr. •M ••me 01 Ort110 t Ctunt1,. unetet tht 1,0.,h i..,, Mo,.•cvl•, Col.; W11!1r ltt<kl•, 111 11 /ollow•·
Sholl1t l a,un• &ti<~ Mortu1rv. Olt«· COl!lcfl l 5tll\ of 5t cllon 2•W "' I"• Ct lUor nlt Cloll We"t Ml•I• A~tnut, Mt nrovt1, C11.1 PAll;(EL I· Tht £111 l~.00 lt.t 10,1. Morv lt!h /\'0'1~n c..ao. STIGh8n l.t(!o,, I!) Wftl MtPll A•enut . ol "'' wut IJT.00 Iott of 1111 Norri. Net•·~ Public. C1ll!orn11 Dt ltd "'" l"h dev ti Ct"tmfltt, M""•0~11• Col. 1<.00 lffl ol Int 5ou!n ?ll0.00 le•'
J••~~lt C Ot~•••· ln!1nl dau1~•tr Qt
Mr t nd Mri. 01~1~! 0•1>•eo, (11 Jl•'
Sum1111 Pl•c•. c .. 1. M•'"· O•I• ot deo!~. J•nut tY 1,, Gr•vt\ldt u ,..lce1,
W1ane11u •. 1n """· G1111a ~ht<>~ .. ,d ce..-.
e!lrv 1111 B ro&~"•v M~r!v1•v, Oort c1tor1.
HO!t,11,NV
~011 L Mort~v Ao~ 19, 01 lOS E llY
l vt .. l1lbo1. Otlo o! dtll~, JtMUory II
Survl~td ~• Son. O''''· ot l •lbot. "rl
-••t t trvl(a wut held ti 1•11 Bro1<1wt~
Mtr111t rY.
ARB UC KLE & SON
Wea:tcliff l\tottuary
4%7 E. 17th SI.. Costa Mes• -• BALTZ 1\10RTUARIES
Corona del l\l•r
COit.i l\lesa •
OR 3·9'5t
mi s.w•
BELL BROADWA'V
MORTIJARV
11 0 Broadway, Costa Mn•
LI l-34S3 • MeCORl\1JCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTIJARV
1715 Lmpn• Canyo n Rod.
· •M-Nll • PACIFIC VIEW
l\fEMORJAL PARK
Ctmeiery Mortuary
Ch1pe.I
3500 Pacific Vle" Drl\'e
Ntwptrt Be.1cli, Clllfornla
HU711 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
71'1 BolA A\'e,
\\'e1tm.111ter ltWSU • S~llTHS' MORTUARY
C7 ~fain St.
R11nUnfton 8e1cll -
11·n••r1•a1
5 pm DAILY 11• 6 pm FRIDAYS
Otir con~enienl b1nkin1 hours we11 established to
be of $t~ice to yoll. Don't rush 113:00 ...
rell ( ... ind b1nk at 1 more ltisure1~ p1ce. You
can SIVI tim• and 1et more done, whether
busineu or pluw11, wtlen you ellminalt rushinc
to lh1 b1nk In the middle of tht 1ftemoon.
Our omployltl on just IS friend~ ond h1lpful 11
5:00 Of 6:00 P.M. Our 1draordin1ry uniQul semen will make bankin1 at
Newport N1tional Bink a plnsure.
II 11111
9 CONVINllNT Off\CIS SIRVING ORANGI COUNTY
Air~l Ofllct Mlchtlton ti M•tMhvt 133-3111 • ltytltlt Offlea 8'rsldt •I /1111bo1•t ••2·11• I
Call•C• ''" Olfia "utwood 1t Commonw11lth 1 71-2900 • S..eft1 Hffh Oftiu Htrbol •t lfl1 171-72!0
S..Hrilr Oflia Suptrlor II l'lacenlll •42-1511 • UnMt'llty Otllu Eut Chtpmtn rt Sl•t• Collep 17'·4140
Wwtdlft 01f'lc:I Weltchll ~I Oavtr '42·3111
Stal h•C~ Olli<a l t ituit Wot Id. S.•I S..ch ~95-2711 • l•P~• Hilb 0111« l•itlilt World. l t 111n1 H!!lt 130-3200
•
l'"lnclttl Olllt • In 1tll). Da!ed Otctmbtr 14, 1'10. al lh1 E11t htll ol !ht Norlhtt •I
Ort rioe cc~ntvr l!ab~•' J. Mt u"' Huooon •. S1t1ru ou1t1•• of !ht $ou!flw1f! •v1rter of
M• Commin lon E•PH.. Sl &.TE 0~ CALIFD•Nl!ll llt l<Mt td E. McA<1om Socllon 1•. TOWftllllt 5 South, 1!111111
t.trll t . 1'71 COUNTV 0 ' LOS .. NCELESl S5, ,l,le•tndtr 5, llldtl II Wt 1t, oorllv I" Jt encl>o Lt &oh n
l"ubllsnet Drtntt Co••I Oo•lv "l!ot o~ Dtc•mbt r 11. 111n. b~ll•• mo. Wolttr lttdD• Cnu:.1 '"" ••rll• 111 !ht ll.1n(no l t• Jt nu1rr i, n. lt. ,,, lt/1 •·71 !ht v(l()•r$IOnlO, 1 Nott•v l>ubllc In S•r•h,n ••do• 101111, •• thoW'n "" • M1• r1c1•ded -• ---ill(l IQr u ld tounl• •~d Stott '*"tn•llv ~T!ITE OF Cl.1.I FOllNl,t,, I• B11<>k .!I. 011t ll al MllCtill'*"'• L~GAL NOTICE •••e•recl ~ob•rl J. Mturer.' ~nown 11 CDUl<4TY OF LOS ANaE~ES. ",, Mt o« rtcorf1 ci Or 1n1o Co+.1nll', mt Ito b• '"• Ptno~ whei~ ,.1.,,, o.. C.Comblr U, 1'10. bl" o me. Ctlllotnli. ------I,, lllb•trlb~ 10 '"" wilftln ln•huminl t No!or~ "11b!Tc. ln Ind tor ••Id CoutilV .. !lll:Cl!:L ?· T"t Ei•I IO•.Clf lttt
P-MIU t nd t <:k •owl1d1.., '"'' ~. e••CYIN ,~ ..... Stolt ......... 11. IPPet•td HUGIOn •I '"' Wt•I J1',00 t111 tf .... Ntr'lll ClllTlll(!ITI 0' I USIN IS5 ""'"· 9. Stll•ll •nd ltlch .. , I!:. MtAdt m ~-CID .. ., Of i!ll Seu•h tMLoa lttt
PICTITIOUI NAM• WITNESS fllV I nd tnd llllclt l u t l. k1111w11 to ml to ~ th• llft00n1 """°'' ti !ht Etit holl al ttit NortllMlf Tho undt n ltnld <:!Gel ctrtlly ont I• (OFFICIAL SE!ILJ ftlmll t•• 011bsetl-lo !ht wllftln t ulrto• GI fl'tp Soulhwu! ,.llll'1tr tr
.:.nducllnt t buo!M n t i flj A W, ll:AVMCTNO W, HUDSO N l11tl"'"'tnl, t rtd t tkMWt:""° !e mt SllC:lltn U . Town.,.11 S Stllltl. RtN•
151" 51 .. N......art h t<;h, C1HfornJ1, o"'lltt NO•••• .. ~bllt • Colllornlo 1~11 lht r t•t<u•-:_cr~"" ""', · 11 w..i, "'''"' In ,.... 11t111doo l • lh~ ll(ll!I .... l!tm nt ml ff DIJCDUNT Ptl1>el11I Ollic1 In w1 ...... mr "', ... IM ·~·. •01u CMc• •11111 tltllY !~ tilt 1t ......
M,lilltlNE H!lllDWAltl! LTD. INI 11111 Cou~ty of LOI AnJtlu (0 1'1'1Ctt.l S Al l I.ti loltt s, tt ....... n tn 1 ,..,.
uttr llrm 11 toml>Mtd ti lh• tollowlllw M• Conimlnltfl l••I••• snllltl' V. C,,.,.nv~ retor41H In I ll* s1 , ""• 1J ff
11n111, wllttt ntl'M In IU~ Ind •l1ai N M 10 1''1 Ntllrv Pu~lk • Cl llltrnlt MIK tHIMIUI Miii, rtcor41o ti °'"""'
fl/I r111dtnc1 II 11 1'111\tWI: crv"" ' • Or•ntt C""""' c..,,,., Ct tlfornlt '""' JOl-IM Tn lt', 11GI M1'1 ... r1 •o•t:ITION, Nowt••. •ARI.ANO. My (tmmlttitn 1 • .i... o.rw~'o.c--·,, lf/t.
01., Ntw,.,O &t•c~. An.PM•• A•tll J7, ltlJ W. I!!. I T JCIMN
Ot lfd 011;91nbtr ,., lt 10 .,.. Ct mtlll o,,v. STl.TI 0 1' (At.IFDlltNl!I Cl~••
S..llr J. T0tllllt 11-trf lttcll. Ctllf. 11Hl COUMT'I' OF I.OS ANGELl 5 J u . l y Anll\Oflv ,11,, t l\M\•Htl
Slt lt al C1tlf11r"l1, D••"'t Cl11"11': Tth 1710 s-.MM Oft tlllt ttt!I 41t v If Ot<tmblt, ltl'e, Otwly On OK. tt. 1t 7il, btff(t mt. t Notl t'I' 'u'll!l1"'4 Ort n11 CN" 01111 Pll1r, bttl•t mt. 1 Nllt fl' Publlt In .nd !SEt.l l
P11llllc; In tnd ltr" l t ld S!tlt, •trltf\1111 Jt"lll"f 11, lf, 11 ,.,. l't1t111rv 1, tor ''" (..,nil' 11141 Sltlt ... r.Ontll'I' PfOTICI TO TH• P•llON llllVllt
•-rtd S.111 .Jolftftlnt Tt -'111 k"""ft 1'11 ""71 •-•rid Al .. tndtr S. •t601, known -v .., 1r1 c1rvt111 11 tn l""l"i.utl
le mt to llt tilt "'"" wfloM n1m1 lo "" to bt !!If '"""' wi..11 "'"" dtltn4tnl 11 111troKr!bHI lo 1111 wltlll11 IMln,il'Mnt LEGAL NQTICJ!: 11 tub'l<rlbtd i. '""' wl!h!n 111,1ru,..,•11I, -Vtv .,._ ••"'*' 11 (or 111 ir.-lf'
i nd I Ck-1"""" .... ••1<u!M tilt '''"'· •!Id 1cA111wlldftd ""' I'll tltl;Ult<I llM ofl I~• PlfOlll! •lltd un411r "'' tldllt.wi (OFl'JCIAI. Sl!AlJ P·Jtlel lll'M. ntmt .i ---
Mt rv e11~ Morton C1rl:TIPIC.t.TI OP lutlNlll tOPFICIAI. SEAL! -Vou t rt ltfYtcl tn lllhttf 91 -Nalt f'f .. 11bll<-CtlU0t"lt P'l(TITIOUI NAMll D'Olit.1. "· FEA-IJllll'~t:
Prlnd111I Dllltt In T~t und-role"M ao t trtlly lh•v 111 O'Dtol "· Fe•r -C.C .... ~11 1.10 (C0t,.,.t liO!ll
0•1119t (tullll' -ucllnp • D!(ol-o ti lll f OUHn! Ntll 'V .. 111111(. • Ctll!1r11l1 -C,C .... !jol! .. JCI IDtlllMf c1r..-111tr!1
MY CttnmlHltn t •t1r•1 Ottvt , Sul!• i14. NtWHrl ltedl, LOI AnttlM CouM• -C.C, ... !j<ll•...0 (AIHCll l\fft # Ptfl•
Ac•ll '· 1t11 Ctlllo ... lt , undt• .,,. llctlll .... 1 "'"' "'""' M• CommlHI.,, l!•io!tt~ ntrd\lt J Pubtlohtd Drtlllt Ce11! Oollv 1'1101 ol SAGE lll"t.ICH JNVl!ITMl!MT i nd F ... '2, 1'1~ -Ot111r
Dttt mb<!r ?t, 1•nr lr>iil J•nu••Y 5. 1', lillt ot ld film It CM'IPOltd 111 !flt STATI! OF Ct.LtFOll NIA -C,C,,1, §~11,tO !Mlfltt!
It. H itt 1llt-lf lfllowlnt o~roon1, wllott n1m11 111 11111 COUNlY 01' I.OS 4NGELt 1 I n . -C.C,,, !•ll .1'11 (ll>C.,,.Httl!ll
LEGAL NOTICE
'"" <111c11 ti rnldtntt 1r1 11 ttUowt : On lhl1 '4th dt~ ti Otttm..,t, lt7e. _ c .c .... §'U.!'O Olllflv1t111.i1
Jon w. l ell. M.D .. 5a 01,.111c1er btl'llrt mt . • Hottry Pubtlc In •1141 Tiit wertl "c-ltlllf" lilch ... tJ er .. .,.
Orl•t. I.ti AnttllS, C 1 II I tr11 I • J lor n ld Coun!Y •net Slllf, ltflltnt!ll Comol•!nl, "•ltlnlltf ltl" 11'1Clu41tt tt ftl·
p..ffeill OeWt rnt I! Dll!O. M.O., Utt $Mith ••Pll•N Wtlltr R1H1t1, k,,...,n to Ill c"""ltlntnfCO. t tlll "d.tftlllltnl(tl" 1 ...
ClRTIPICAT• Of' 1u 1111•1s At11n1Jc llvd., Apt. Ho. :ne, Mlllltrtv 10 M tht tt•Hn wllo'lt n1mo '' tuhc:rlllo cllldt• crMo.0.IWIHfllt PICTITIOUJ NAMa "••k, C1lll.; Nlthol11 I O'OtnMll, ed '9 lilt wllflln ln1lfllfrlollt, tlld A wrlllM tltldll'lf, 111(htltlnt t 'I t nt_,:
Thi uncllrilt.,.. •• c1rtlfy nt ,, • teN•ll •••lntrohl1 b'f: Mlt!IH 1 •CXllOW'ltdt •d thtt h• •~KVltd t~e 111111 11tmv1rtr tic muil Ill In fM i.r"' •
Ctnellltllnt 1 D.,1lfttll 11 11' Yorl!NrWn, A, Hlcllall o. tt11erlill Pt rf"tt, IJM (OPFJCll.l SEAi.i tMU!rlld ' h ...... Ct M"°'1'1ll lllulfl II '
Hunt!1ttlon ltt(n, (tlllorn11, under ""' Antl1u1, Nt•tort •••<fl. c•11tot~l•1 O'Olii"l fl'. Flt.R '°"'' v"" ..-1111111 l'l_.lll """" M
flctlllout llrm 111-ti Mil. TON AUTO JOlln l), O'OOllftfl1, "111r1l 11r1111r. Nott f\I Pultl1e • Ct llftl'fl!t tllN '1n llllt <ou" wnti """* flh
•OO'I' '"" "'"' 11kl UNn It "'"'""" ltof G1I•~· o. .. ,._,, •••en. Ct MI. LOI """'" (0!,1111'1' I-•llCI l flOI INI • _., ,..... ol ,,,, f'll!lowl... Pt 'IOll· WlloN Mmt 0.9" ,, ...... .., 7, ltll. MY CGn'IO'llulotl l •Pllfl ..... M!Vtd ... tilCll i>litllltttt'I l fllt1!iW
!11 lull tlld 11111;1 al 1t Jld1Mt 11 M SAGE lltANCH ,. .. , 2t, lfl• Incl ort ~ 11l1111t"' oM1 ,_,,....,....
fOllllWll· INVl!l'TMIJIT nA11 0" CALIPOll:M IA I .,. 111 •ltonltv.
Gtl!tM E . .wnon. U$41 Ot-~lltf. •r : Hld'lllltl • 0'0...ntll, COUHTV o .. LOI ANOE LEI ) u. Tiit ,._ '""'" • _...,.. fl ......
W1olml1111tr. 0-.-11 l"trtMrl Oii ttll• Miii *Y 11' D1<""91<. 1t7't, """" 111 1 111rl'J' rlllY ""' ........... 011td J tn, 1, 1t11 (STATI OP tALlFO•NtAI "'-""" PIOI. I ..... ., illlltlle lft •11111 1111 1111 """""' f11 llrf4a. hr ..........
Gtottt MtltOll ICOVHTV Cl" OlllANOI:) II fW Nit Ctul\'fY tlMI llt,., --Hr ... CNt ef (Ml Prtc_,. Rftl.li
llt\9 al C•lll0t11l1, Dtlfttt CouftlT: °" J_,., 7, 1m. lllttrt ..,., • .,...,.. ............ -""""" lo "" lflf'Mfl ,,. .....
()II Jlllut•V I, lttl, lltl'Or• mt, t Ntltni Plltolk: lft ......... •klll IMM, M M h -....... MIN ii NMcrRI-VQU !M.Y 1aEtC nt1: AO"(l(IL'fi
Not•rr ,11/b!lc. I~ '"' ,., ••lit t r.It, ,., .... "" ..... ,.. JIM I), 0-0-11"" ,. ... wllfllll ~. • ... AH ATIO.NIV ltt AN'f MATTI•
ptrton1llv ,,_,,_., GHrtt W. MtlMll t ntl Mlcl'IMI A.. lllC!Wtt ~-M ld!Mw...._. !Mt M ••"*"""'IN NIM. NIC'TIO WITH THI ~~T
--11 lo mfl M bt IM .. ,._ ""'-..,. ft llt llftl !flt .. .,,,.,. If COP~ICIAL llALI THIS SUMM0/1111, IUCH A M
111,.... 11 tvltlc.tltlM ff '"" wlflllil ~!ht HrtMn/111 11\11 -cvfed tllt wlttil11 D'OIAl,P, ,1,11,11 tMOULD l l CONSU\.rlO PlltOM 'f
1tn1mttt1 tnd '""'°""""'td tit l.lllW9'd l,..lf\l!Mllf, t fl!I ..a-ltdtff M mt Nlfilni "vMk Ctll~lt $0 THAT YOUlt ;,L.IA.bl!IO MAY I lflt Mltn•. IM! a+/cl'r H rln'""r. •11tult4! lftt •lf'!lt· I.• ""9111 C9'1"'" ,tL[O DI!; INTllltlD WITfliM TH (Ol'PtCtA L l l Al.I WITl'flll ..,., ~·1111 ..... l'lllclt l ... 1. Mr CtfMll•ltn .. ,1, TIM I 1trou1111D IY 'fHll IUMMOltS.
Jttn t.. JOit! (Ol'l'ICIAl ll:ALI Pi ii.. n . ,,,~ ll:DllAl.O ti ......... ,
Not••Y Pullllc·C•ll!ernl1 001'1N" •• ,.,. 11: •••• , ..... --··· II""""' II i..w .. tlllCll t l Olflct In NPlt ,..,. PIJOUc • Ct ll!trnlt & eAllU.NO I'll W"' ...,.... • ...,.. O<.,_ Co11"'1' Ortnt• CWlllY U4t C-Dt'I" Ulllt ...,, Clllftrllll
MY Commlnlefl E•<1ir~1 M~ Commlttltt! E~11!t•\ Nt"'"'1 ltMll, Ct W!trll>ll , ........ , ft11) ~
1o111e11 t. ltlJ Mtv n. 1m T•h ..,.,.. A...,_, ,... .......... .. ubllshld O<t ntt Co.,1 Dt l!Y "llol P11llll1n.<:1 Or•l'llt Cc"t Dally '1161, l'Ulllh l\M Ct•nft C.,.,, 0111• Plitt, ,.llfllllllttl Ortfttt Cot1I IMll, ,.,,.
J1n111rv 11. It, '' tnd Ftb•ut rv 1. Jt n111,.., 17, It, I' •"4' ,earw1rv 2. J111u1ry 11. It, 11 1"4' ,,.,.,.,.., 2. Doc""'W 71. lt7't l flf J'""""' J, IL
101 ,,.,, 1971 ~71 ,,,, 6'-11 u . 1'11 14l)o.Je
~-__ .. _
'
(
•
Je DAllY fllO T s
LEGAL NOncE /'ffo11ey's lfot•th OVER THE COUNTER
Rece ssio11 Really CIUTI,lltATa OI' 1uso1•s1
.. ktf ..... l'lnll ·-"Tl'ls ...... ""-'*' .. fie fll1y , ... ..,
.,,.. ... ••• ~j... • 5!>'<C I ly
Ml.. tlyt.lne1t ti 0."•" i.r• I 1'00 Al~ '1 .. 1.. N""-' .. 11<11 P 0 eo~
..i1L Ctllfof11L• ,,,...,.,. II'-. lk !ltl°"'I ti m
....,... ef M.t.lltC.O NEWH)lt T -rrwil
.. ._ 111"111 11 (~ of ,,,. fQllQw ""
"'---II 11111 Incl 'IGI "' etldetM:t •~ 11 1000,.• ,.,. .. 1 ...... ""°"°'y 1'°° Alt V I I NP"Q
•eKll C1 lot11!1
Mildest of Five
P IWI I H.-.tY t"IJO ,t. ,,.v 1 1
Hr<o'l>Ol"I Bit ch C.t !GIA I
Ot e9 Jen II !fl
Ptu! ~•W•
Pll•ll Ht<WY
Sl,t.TE OF (Al FOl!N 1'..
COUNTY OF LOS ANGEi.ES U
O" Jtn I lf7l bf'lo • "'' • f<o ,...,
P'11n1 c " '"" lo ,..Id Co n • t r><I ~··~ Pl ...... V IPHa'I'<! PtU D
Hef'lfV • \Cl Plwl • l He 3~V -OWi\ to ,,..., I'll bf' lhf Ile ..... , ...... • • ...
•• 1r.11»<rt>ea o ~"' "" """
t "CI '°'"""' od~ lo ...., "' ""~ t ~u ta lllt u mr
I' '"' • '"' ~'"° 1110 Mll IOFF C!Al SEAL!
Mt v I( lolen..,
No• v Puft cC:t o
P nc PA OI c•
0 t nu• C:ounly
MY Com ... UIM E '" Ml H Hn
•ul> •llfll °''""" Coo DI • P ~! J~ 111.-.. I 71 1..d r.b ua-.. 9
H I 170· I
LEGAL NOTICE
, ... ,,,.
HOTICll! TO CllED TDIS
OP IUl.K TllANSFEll
flK• 'U -611 UCCI NOT CE IS HERE6V C YEN TO THE
C !d o s o1 C JilNE ilCKSON
T tn~le 0 ~e bu neu 8(!M en
'l o w unl0<1 s "'" l Fu • '°" Counv ol O l"o• ~·• o Cl !on•
lhl I Im k I 1no • • 1l>Oul o lie
miKlo to Ml v n 0 C. ""''' T fn~ t •• "'1\0~ bu• ..... , tddro < I U JI (I 11• S T1J!n(wn1Y<UOin<1•S•t
1t1 c.r lorn •
The ,, "'"' v lo ~ lixd od 1 70(;() 50 N•woe
1n• • to Is
ll ~d Co~
S I t o M•s• Coun v o O 1nv•
(I IG n I
Si,,ODD4'V 1d•,i.C btd n oene~ ..
W I!' ST JOI-IN
'" '~ Al.AN W CURl D•ou!Y
JOSt:JI" JI l ODY .a,1tor...., II LIW
1"'5 W K1!1ll1 .,,,
.-,,..Mll'!I C1t'"'11i.
·~"" ... .._, ,., J11tll-~
Publ tl>eocl Or1M1 Cotti 01 J1nu1t"I' 5 12 It '' 1tn . " "'
By SYLVIA PORTER
A.s.~um1ng th!ll \hf' re<.'t!ss1on
of 1969 71 is bouoming uut
111 1h1s •Is 14th month II
\.\Ill gr dov.n rn h1stor\ as
I~ mlldesl or the fJ\ e
business downturns or tht:
post \Vorld \Var IJ era
I( vour bu siness has railed
111 recent monlhs or 1f \OU
<:re no 1 being pushed 11110
bankruptcy this JUdgm ent
n1ay 1nakc you even n'orc
biller than vou alreudy are
about !he US economv iri
lhe first tia lf of the Nixon
Admin stra t1on And you of
11! people would ha\e. a point
for 1n terms of business
f31 lurcs this has bee n a
serious slump The lO:i 28 per
cent upsurge 1n business
failures since the economy
turned do Yi n ll! NO\COJber
1969 1s the \\ors t of !he five
recessions
Or 1f }OU ha\e lost 'our
JOb t r been put on a part tune
sh ft vou too ma) v.1nce at
this objective comrnent for
lo you being unemployed at
a time of rap1dl} chmb1ng
prices is far more than a
recession Its a disaster a
nightmare But nevertheless
llEA.C'l ORAPEllY Sf.'1111 C:E •OO
W• lh S ee (O\t M • 8
C:1 lo n 1 •'l.il
Con" a l<•nnelh 1Cenn•1
C eenw en 0 Hun no 01
(1 lo nl 976411
"0 11 •• u.
Th, bu• n•U i• be g conlh!f !d bv ... """ ""' O IC l(en"•¥
Pub sl'le<I O ange co" 0• v P "
Jtnu1rv t 1• •"nd Feb .. ~ v 7 '
•1 15 1
LEGAL NOTICE
~•·.o: No ~ m •mil o•m~"'
U""rn~ DYmen I • ><1u1 I P O<lvt on
Po '°"' l'>Come
II~• ~ "'nl nc.ome R•a ~•es
Rra • • • •• A JnU ,.a<!e •a t S
llM manu Mle 11 •• GNP cu e~ l
CNP ea
A er-•• ~fO ht ;mt. f.f:
l!~nJHIU ••
110"1 n<i • I • 1 ::;ik:~• ~
No1v where do v.e go from ~ ~~n ~
hrrr 1 F'or several weeks the a. uen . ~· ceononty will continue to be ow
d ... v Cll distortc by th e catchup from A.•cc eot
the General Motors strike and :~10<1 5~
stockpthng of steel 1n an-~~·P."
t1c1patton or a possible steel :::~ :
strike this summer But the R~~ ~1,
llevelop1ng recovery IS based ::•~";_ •
on far sturdier forces than R!nm Mn:
lhese temporary stimulants ae k Ha Br t Lab Fi rst extremely powerfu l 1111uPs w
recession antidotes are now : "ch Son
being adm1 n1stered by the :~~ ~
\\ h1te House and the Federal ::,n·A~
Reserve System Money 1s nr' d~c~~P
bemg IVlUred Into the banking I! rnks n r v rkl 5CI
S)Slem interest rales have gr:s",, ~.
f:i llen well below their 70 8~~·•c,,
pc ik s "~ """ s CC L••• 11ght money helped bring ~ w sv
about the 1969 71 recession and f:'~g !J.
:stock market crash easier ~!~"..~ 6
mone} is help111g to bring !: ~~e
aboul the recovery and stock c~:1:~•A
market rebound : • 0tv
Housing is bow1c1ng brick c: [/fl
under the spurs uf easier E:~ e c~o
cheaper moncy and great er" vPs
'" Lol_b pent up demands This 1n Ch• n1~0 M dl!stry alone will be a trcmen .. hm L'a
(he> "' douslv 1mport:1.nt a n I 1 cn~1 u
recession infl uence ~ ,~ ~
Spending al all levels of c~a<1e Qf
government -local state and ~ 1, (::
Federal -1s slrongl} con-c iv ,,uJ,
tr1bultng to expansion no\~ c •h k M~~
And the very facl that the ~~~°"c~
n.•t:ession has rcmn ned so !Yu o
n11ld fur sf lf ng a period ~.~ ~~
at 14 months 1! s the ~~·~"' om<e.t longest of all lhr recessions on c
1s a fa ctor n fa\or of :;!: ¥:•
its \ erv early C'nrl :;: ~ ,!"
Do not forger !!us reces~1nn ~pc~
1\as del bera1<'ly created by c~: •r::
government pol1cv rhere 1vas c~ ~~~
nnlh1t g accidental about 1t at ~:; ~"n
nil As 1t was crenled so 11 c-~ L .. ' can be ended c'"''" -.,,
---=L=E=G=ALc-c=N-0-Tic-cC=E,-----1 l'ICTITtOU• •UStNE SS
STATEMENT
d ' w • ln fact 1t v.ell ma; a!rea y "" en h~vc ended even though 1t .~ •• ~ ~
11 Lll take t1mc lo brighten the 8!~~ ... LJ:..•
uncmp10) 1ncnt picture 8:1: [?:~ T"'n• 1.Ufll!lllOI! COUl!T 01' THE
STAT& 01' CAllFOllNIA l'D•
THI COU..TY 0" OltANOE
N1 A-'1111
NOT Cl! 01' NEAltlHO O" fll!TIT O+I
l'Olt flltOIATI! 01' W LL AHO JOit
Ll'.TTlltS TESTAMENTAllY
l!'s . e "' G LSERT H 6LANK!NSH p
Dec•~•e<I P<IOT CE ! HERE8Y C VE'I that
Miry IC II ~nktnsh p h15 I t'd !'le e n
Tho lol -no ""''"" s do '1111 bu """ .. E:XECVl IYE LA.NO L NE 11'10 E
Eo nv• Su t ll S..~• An1
C•lon1
Thtl t( S mo~ 11• o,, ••v D ~·
'"'uni ..Ul<lll llel Ch C• on• t 1ft• lh 1 bu1 ,..,. • be nu coroctu< ed br
an ..a "du•
T""'1 IC ~ m<>flr
"ub •hto 0 ar>11e Co" 01 ¥ P ~
J1rni•rf ' 1• 1na l'•b u•rr l •
911 ' I
Lo.111
o,.,. n P
Div 1 Fd O~v M
d O•cc In A I I a ll!!C l~~kh b t.0
'-' O• u C~ Dfo c~nT
I p.eJ!Gn !>or D lllll e ol wl!I tnd
'"' uu•nc• ol' L' ..,, T1111menllry .-
lo t~ pe °"' ''' enc• lo wh Ch 1 Ol>O 1 Of Oil PAINTINGS
WHOLESALE WAREHOUSf
OPEN TO THE PUILIC
(.I EVELA~U -E alon Yale ... ~._8 e
and rov.nc Inc an aulonlot1ve ,;:' ,;t
:ind 1ndu$lr1al e q u 1 pm en t &;,~,CM
1n;.1n 1fr11:turer hns :i rr<inged a ~;:•r:i0~
'>O ni Ilion f'\ rt dollrir loan loy t os
1• rn•dt o "li•r ~ cu • 1 •nd
hlf "'' 1 rn• o"<I oloc• er h•• no lhl 1•m• ~'' l>ffn 1er lo J 1nu1ry
7f f 71 1f3!!1 ,.,, n !ht couloom
ol ~~ 1ment No 3 ol 11 d '"'" t •t JOO C v c Conll D vo we,r n
Tiie C..,. <rl S•nle """' C• torn I
01tlCI J1nu1rv n 1t1
W E ST JOHl'I
C11<1nl¥ C P ~
llOUIUflE & HOL•llOOlf
_. H•rll> I 0tll••• Su t 11
S•n J Anl C1llf1n1l1 t l711
Tt 17141 !41~111
A"-'' IK rill! OMr
Put>I •h...i o •"II• C111s 01 v " ot
J•n111 v n '° 1s. ti 111 n ----'•I
I EGA.L NOTICE
50°/o OFF
Ult I! EOl'IGEll ~A'llA AHA
,n.,••~
__ .,. ... OEAtElllS WAHl lO ~
Now yo11r odv..,..111"' c:•l'I wor•
hall ti"'' .. 101
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING IUlEAU
0 ''" NL thrnugh a S\ nd1catc of Euro-Uun~ n o
E ~ ~ pei!O banks 8fld uropcan EZ Pa n
branche'i of US banks he aded ~::c ~'
bv I llenrv Schroder \Va gg ~~~" ~·b
and Co I t I o{ London ~\0f8i!°
lnteresl on th<' fi ve ve~r loan ~ a-;_ ~&•
I~ pcg~ed at :i 1 :i rg1n abovf ~· ~c
the Lordon ntc rb an k E c sv~ ... curodollar deposit r t<' Th t: MbClut
T •17.n
'IOT CIE TO CllEDITOllS
SIJl'llt Oil COIJllT 01' TMll
STA fl: 01' CAL l'OllH A 1'011
f"ll! COUNTY 01" OIAlotQI!
horro\1Cd f u1tls 1 II be 1sed 1~~"~,.0c 8 JS• 7 7 7 7 to r('! lacr :-.lurt 11 rn bor ~~~ .. n, 11• l:~::::::::::::;:::;::::::;:::::::~ .. •:o~•:::•o~r,~'~";'~E~u~':o~Jl<:::..;;.~..;~~g~ ci
0
-~ • l•c F8 Cec11
c~n To~
Ho A .. rtt
E•!Uo o! OtWl'fT Cl N 1' 0 H
PRESCO TT I 10 ~""""n •• 0 CL!HTOH I PIESCOTT 0tc11ll!d
HOT CE S HEREl!Y G YEJl lo ltll
( ltd tors ol ll'>f •"""• n1m..d e11cedtnl
fh1I 1 I Pf'!'"'"' h1v n;o clalm1 191 ni t tt.e •• d d1ce<11nt 1 • re<111 f'td lo II I
"'-"' wh h• ,,., .. ,.~ ~'"
!IHI of(lcA ot Ille do • ol l'i.t 1bo¥1
@t'll !It'd <:Olltt cir to p Henl '"""' "' 11'1
the nece1wrv voutM~ lo ll'lt ""'I Mr•l•""" 11 !hp "" ce ol ~e 1ltc MYI MclCE'IHA a. F ill HG '~\DO E Toro 'tOl!I Sii I• A. L1aun1 H 1 Ca l0<n ft
f?ill •h ch I 11'1t plfCI of bvtllleU
"' .... Undl I 9~ In • Pnllltrl "'
t1 nn. tu 1 ... n •tt ol "" ll«ldtn .,.lll'lin lour monll'lt •ntr IM I 1t Jtull C.,_
,_ of ttl l !lotlc'
0.1e<f JI""'"" I ltJl
lrt n• flra<OI
E•t<UI • ol' ""' W I DI ·~ •be~~ nlmed dl'C-n•
Mcll:l!MNA & P"lntNO .., °"4119 w Mc(•" ... 141• l[I T-11"41 IMtt. & ~· """ (1'"9rl'll "'" Ttl (1111 ...,,..
AttwMn tw 11_,mr.
flubllsf'lotd 0fl~~ COll1 O• IV Pl!ol
)""""rf It H l lWI F-Ul fY ' t lt71 1'1 .. 11
LEGAL NOTICE
WE LEASE All MAKES & MODELS
EXAMPLE
1971 BUICK SKYLARK
2 DOOR HARDTOP
A conc:I t on "9 Auhlm1! c I t n1m u "" powt I e1
.,9 pow• cf ,c; b •\t1 W S -N 1d!o h11!1 •t mo!t
o~h de m , o• plu1 111 f•clo v 1l1nd• d 1 qu pm•~!
2 ~ MOl'/TH Ol'EN END LEAS[
$110 PER MONTH
A QUALITY LEASE AT SENSIBLE PRICES
•
~. nq
MUTUAL
FUNDS
Complete-New York Stock List
•1• ••
c .. J ltllll "'" -=-'"' tv. 21\.1 -•• 15 I + ~ U H '" 21 . -u~-• • ''"' -. ~~.: = 't • +' It \ • • • " . " 55"' -• ,,.
" , •• + • 11 .+. lo
" + ........ ' . ~
' ,.
' " XO
" + ~~ t .. 1tW. + • 0 . + fv. +
ll • • " "' " 21 .. -". 16 I ~
" '" J ' + lJ• -
" ,. ii I:_
. •
:0 ~ tl
~tt 1 .
12. + '• m +
1•1• 31~· -.6(11 .. -•• ~'' l " ' ' n ~,, ..... y" " t "' •JV. -76'.4 -1
"" t ,.. , ,, ~ -
;,,: .:t 1;
m. r . ' . ., ' SS'l'I + r " ; •'4 + ..,, r\! !+ : lS 't o JJ ~ ••
31\o + ~. ?2t'o -I 1M• + '• " . ,,.,.. _
.. + ,~ ...
] ~· + " •• +
" + 131' +, 11 l -
11 + ••
" + ,.
" + ~.+ "+ 1&•• -• 13 • ~ '• 1S . 4 1 , •• + • ,. .
1 't + • U'N .+ o
19 ,, + ~
2~,. +
61 +1 ' . -" . ' • + 65 + ~ ...
Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
"' '" IS H\9 ll ;Jl; ,, 2,..
11t 14\lo • li:t 11, • " ,... I~ 17\li " ... "~ 10 • JO 11111. l• ,.~ ,, ll ..
"' ' " • ' ~· " " " " M• " ' " ' •• "" • " '" '" " " '" ' ,.
" " " " • ·~ " ,!
'" " • ..
' " " n • " '~ " " '" l
' ·~ ... • " ,. • '" '" , .. '. " • 5~
"" • •• ,,. ... •• " ,.. ,,. ... •• "" ,,. ,,,,
" "" ...
" ·~ " ... .. ,. .,.
'" • "" -'"' "" •• " ~\'" " ' ,.
'"-... ,,.
~· ~
' :st
"" " .... , ..
'"' 1r,: ,,. ... .... '" '" "" "" " ...
"" '"' •• '!... .. .. •• "" " " ' ,..
'" ...
"" ,.. ,,.
"" •• ... , .. ..
" "' •• .. ,
' .. ...
"" •• ... --" "" ~ ll11 .. " . i1:i;i ,,.
Stocks Edge Higl1 l~tf;,
l•l<lllY~ '*' T __ A 1• T d r!/:3~,..J#, n1 c 1ve ra e 1:::..'r l\ r.~ t,:.: r:o~~ 11~ + lo l-~11$,1111 1~5 NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market con iSff:~ ~11
• + " t1nued to edge higher Monday rn the face of the 1"' 8 °" \ ~ll-1'1 d ( ed T:a1 f::.l 1b N _"' secon quar er pont r ucuon in the pnme bank ;u•••~• '°
lo! Interest rate in !our days Turnover was heavy ~~011Gi " ',I" ! ... Tt• "h ~~ 20~ :; The Dow Jones lndustr1al Average was ahead ~::,u.!, 1,o'°
tt\4 "' more than 2 points near the final bell Standard & le•1 ortM
""' + " P 500 k ~~r~of'1"° 1r,: = \, oor s stoc index showed a gau1 of O 33 Ad f:='i~~ °"•
,,l't vances led declines by more than 300 Issues ·~ "" A I f d 000 l~ffiJ~ 1
/: " + 1~ vo ume o aroun 15 000 shares compar. ,1 corco 1 »
l\'o cd with 18 Oto 000 shares traded Friday j 0e ... M •0 1i~ ~1~ AM T&T 52711 up 111.t Beth St 231h off ~ ,!~~~~ ~l&
~'" J tt Chrysler 25114 up 1.4 DuPont 129:Y4 off 2114 Ford ~~R~h" 1 ~ ~~·· + ~ 55% off % Gen El 95'A Gen Motors 78 ~ off o/a ~00~~ 1fb
;::, t ~J•m'ii";,d;;,;10B0M;;.03~11-'f,;.:u~p-101';'g.••••••a""'•""••••ll,:~ u0 1 : 7 l an$WA r
tV. T nW,.\r al J
.0 +l SOS Con• ~ • 11 llto U '> -"-Sin y WK 60 I 51"' U"t S1 .. -, trnW," Ml!
t + 1~ SCI EG I Jt >3 11, J '> ) ""t \'. Slanr1Y 4ll 11 '"' 9!1 9"-.. "l :~:m • lb5 15.,., S.C: EC Pl? 50 lt lt ll 2 S • r•t to ,•, ,u .~ ,•, It "' T am~?' nv yv, +,"" SoJtr !>cl l 11 j 11 1~ 16\'1 \~ s •II• Ch ! ~o '·· ,, ~ -,, ,, ... ,\' ~ UV•+l"'IS"d n nc 9 Jl:;, ll l10 -"S111npll0 •''•'•'JI J1 -l'o 11.,..,. .IO u. -lo wn Pll IO 1 Jl» JI ' J\V. + "'St• ch 8 ... .... lh + ... T IV• I D 1 1~ + v. .iPS 11! ,',', '•f! ',',., 1 v. S•r Drue 10 11' •I' •D """' + \'o! co" 121j 11\'o -"" OllC• E 1 sc lS + ~ s"'"""'J l.OO 100 Jl'-ltl'> n t • c ''"' -l't 50\/!h Co 1 H 111 1 1o ,,,,. 11 S!~wW1r 1 .0 1.1 llV. 32~ ll " on o/2 D
13\0 SoUlnGE 1 70 11 31>' 35:.,, ljo"' l Hli I <>1<1 vane 3-4 21i... /,1-. n:i.. -"'t • .:i~.~d ,.~o 10» SouNC11 , "° ,•,, ',l' ',',,. s.i:i.. ....... ~~ vc pf .no 1... 1•'1' T 00 C•n• "' ?2 ' Saul"1c llct JI + 1.1i loMW 9C 1 3'• 3''\11 Jll\>1 lRW n 1 1.S + Vo SoU h nRv 3~ ~I 6.1 ,. 61 ~ 6.1 + ; l<ml'Con 36 10 10W 10 0 TRW 11u so
411 ... -v. Sw1h Ry Pl I 4 • 1• ~ • ' -~. "''" II.; ~ '6 lt'\11 ' lt>\ -• TllW or• •D 11'-SouUG••111 11 150 l !'O 75 ,.+!olol'"°wor !MI ls s•\<o ~ .... ~ + JRW r>•1S lo>tli S"' Alrm j1r 1 16 So Uh I WP A .., JI • •O.., ~ + \It vnn Gf n
9 + '4 Swt1! PS • 116 l•~I 1' 'O 1'"" -" uO Proo 160 1• f. o '9Vr JllV. -\i T"'~"1 C•nl 1s _ \.\ s.>ar11n1 l'ld 113 G-\; IQloo 1~, , -, ~ ~·,~!-*° •• ~2 lh 11'.'o ,01~ +"' l v o Coro JI +2 SN lln1 ,. 54 1\00 1 \/,0 .., w w" "w"' ..., I ~ 10°" ,,
16\o. + ~ sti~,'~" ... ", II I • 11 ~ 1 ,. + ... u...0 I 10 ,,• • •• ~ ~.,, "'1 ....... ... ·~ ww •, w •6 •l .. ~1 •)h -""' unOll ltlll5 -.. ..,,. •V.-\'oUAL I"' ~ -"" PrrvR nr 1ss 15\'o 2s 15,,,. -:. vnbtun te 11 ,.,. l' lM u,.~ P o,i
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1' + StD\ Ind l Jt ~ •", ~,,.• ~.-j: •,•, T Un El oil J.O S>'o + •SIOINJ J IS. -· - -UnO Ca tO llv. +,,. sioono~ 110 16 1??11 1 ~ 11 -1 left 8 d .o ' :11 21~ 11\'o + ~ uoc~ pfl 50 16 S!OOhPlllS 17060'>6t!~6ll ~+~l•co11 1-10 1oon xi .. n J:''UnP•~CD 1 u~ Std Pes1 1 2~ •~ 5o 6 + 'a T~l•v Ind 768 11>.1,, O> JJ ~ •UnlonP1tl! 1 l$'!0 -4-SrPvd•nt M It'"" ' e.\:o +\liTlltV•ll 1 9• 1~"'" ll~, l•'> n UnPICPf 40
..
DAJLV PILOf
J
1,
l
I
'
f
f
•
JI DAILY PILOT
l'AMIL'i' CIRCVS
.. , .... _
-·-·-~
"When I die, con I take my bla nk et with me ?0
CHECKING
•UP•
Wo1ne11NotAlways
Talki11g of Men
By L. ~f. BOYD
A \\'IFE WHO doesn't get
out of the house to work for
wages ought to make at least
two phone calls dally. one in
the morning, one in the after-
noon, each at least 10 minutes
in length. So contends an
authority en mental health.
Such calls, he says, uplift,
like catnaps and co r re e
breaks. Interesting. Imagine a
wife on a party line need
not talk all that much, pro-
vided she listens in awhile.
Anyhow, the foregoing jibes
with our Love and War man's
• Prolund Conviction No. 14C,
' namely that loneliness stirs
up more i;nisery t h a n
anything. And the ailment 1 oughl not be left untreated,
that's clear.
THAT WOMEN when
, together talk mostly about
men is an erroneous theory.
What they actually talk mostly
about is their health. Or so
says a beauty parlor operator
(lf 2J years' experience . , , ,
IF YOU 'VE GOT any old
Superman comic books in the
attic, better treat t he m
respectfully. Note the col-
lectors recentlv bid up to $100
for a 1939 ediiion .... YOU
KNOW HOW a line of dialogue
stick s in your head
sometimes? This one has been
stuck in mine for days: "lt"s
not that the majority is silent.
it's just that the Government
is deaL ··
MRS. LAPP of Lansirig. Ill .
says she plans to name her
next son Burr. ls she serious?
Can't say. but she did give
her daughter, who ~·as born
al sunr ise in a car ~'hile cross-
ing a bridge. the name Da...,·n
BridRett .. , . ' ' T H E R E
HAVE BEEN three cases of
suicide in my Corps,'' \Oo'rolc
ii German .(lencral in an of-
ficial order le his men during
World War TI. "I strongly call
your attention to the fact that
the suicide of members of
the German army in time of
war is desertion."
AM ASKED WlllCH came
first, the song "Chiquita
Banana" or the trade name.
The song it was. One af-
ternoon just 27 years ago, Len
M a ckenzie and Garth
Montgomery knocked out that
d illy fo r the United Fruit
Company. T h e trademark
sprang therefrom.
What a promotion piece~
\\'hy don't the apple growers
come up with something like
that? How about : An apple
for breakfast, that will do
, . , . Don 't want anymore of
the pol or the glue • , ..
An apple for lunch is sufficient
hep , .•. Don't need anymore
of the pil!s for pep •• , ,
No. ii lacks something.
Try again: Tired of "Ceol"
and tired of "Neat~" ....
Tired of six to the pad where
l eat Tired of
psychedelic bars . . . . Of
seaweed girts with s a n d
guitars .... or slippery li ps
and rancid hair .... Aban-
doned denim underwear ....
Of festival sex in the trips
by the moon . _ .. I'm tired,
man. tired or !he old com-
mune! , ... :\'ow we 're roll·
ing.
All right. wind il up: Don't
~·ant any liquor. just can't
take it .... to.tom and P.1oney,
they still make it .... Don't
ncf'd a do1,~:ncr. evener. upper
.... Just gi ve me a natural
apple for dinner .... That
last line didn 't come out quite
right. \.\'i1\ work on it.
Y ou r qaestions and com·
mcnt~ are welcomed and
11•i/l be used in ClfP.CKll\'G
r1p wherever possible. Ad·
drt>ss letteTs to L. ,.,1. Boyd.
P.O. Box 187.5. Newporl
Beach, Calif .. 92660.
He"s the Same
But Na1ne Is Different
DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -For 28 years. Harry thought
hi! name was Harvey.
But this week he learned Uie truth.
"Boy, was I ever shoc ked," said Harvey~r }larry-
Labban. lie and Mrs. Labban were ,digging through some
old papers when they discovered 'the error on his hand-
written birth certifica~.
Barry called his mother.
"She said the nurse who filled in the birth certificate
must have just made a mistake." he said. "She intended
ta name me Harvey." A quick call to his lawyer showed
he has no legal complications. Just to make sure, how·
ever, L.abban will go to court and change his birth regis-
traUon rrom Harcy to Harvey. ,
Then, fortllnately, he .wl\I not have to change the name
ol his aon, Harvey Labban Jr.
. ~ ... ,..
JUST LOOK AT THESE FAMOUS NAME'S ••• ALL HIGHLY ADVERTISED NATIONALLY ••• NOW AT LOWEST PRI CES EVER ••• ALL FIRST
QUALITY AND FROM OUR REGULAR STOCKS.
•
CARTERS -NANETIE -HEALTHTEX -LEVI'S -BILLY THE KID -HANG TEN-KANTWET -PETERSON
GENNAWAY -PLAYMORE -MAY KNlmNG -LOVE -lj)UILTEX -HAN CINDERELLA -ROB ROY
ALL REDUCED FOR A FAST SELL-OUT -4 DAYS ONLY -WED., THURS., FRI. & SAT -JANUARY 20-21 -22 -23
SALE STARTS WED., JAN. 20th, 10 A.M. SHARP
• GIRLS •
Underwear
Val. to $1 .50
11~
FAMOUS MAlll
ASSORTED
COATS
Val. to $25 $1299
Limltld Qu1~.
BLOUSES
TOPS
T-SHIRTS Val. to $7 $277
2 PC.
. DRESSES
-AND
COAT SETS
R09. $17
FAMOUS MA KI
DRESSES
to $10
PRICE
l lml!MI 0 11111.
Val. to $6
USE_ YOUR
BANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHARGE
YOUNGLAND'S
.CHARGl-
GENTIIY'S CHARGI
W• Even T1ke
CASH
.\
•BOYS•
Pa.iamas
Val. to $4.SO
Sweaters
Val. to $10
Slacks
Flares
Jeans
Val. to $1
T-Shirts
Shirts
Val. to $6
. ------'
J ,
/
EVERY ITEM
IN THE STORE
Reduced
ALL SALES
FINAL
• -INFANTS •
Val. to $2.50
3 PC.
SWEATER
SETS
Val. to $6
$388
CAPRI SETS
Val. to $6
CAPRIS
Val. to $~
ANY tnM NOT IN STOC K
MAY at OaDlllD ftOM
OUl CATALOG AT
$AMI $A YINGS
,,,......,..,._ ..... _. Cu•toml-Foshl0..1, I'\<. ,......, __ ..,.
HONGK.ONG
$99!: No-Lay-A-Ways
No Exchan,..
No Wrapping
No Bonus Cards
2300 HARBOR BLVD. <HARBOR CENTER> COSTA MESA Phone 545-1440
~ ;,;E,~~!~~ J!!_L9,_~S ....... 1 ~ ... ii~===========::;:,=================:;====~===! _tt. lfllrtl, ....., ...,"' _ s-~ -.... .,. Miity. ~ .__ J\I
CWi>ll .. ,_. ... ,..nwr.w.) Sii• w ""·,;;;~;_~;;..;-----....
AT tfoMe KoH9 '9llClll 2 IUITI POil MIN
,. .. ALTUATIOlll $" W .-CUSAIY. • • YLU.iaDUllD SUITI 1 .~ ._ tMrt cl'i.iiiliu't:'f.'-"" POSTAee.1 , ........ 111 ..... ·-~·c.,., ......
CALL POii APPOINTMINT , • , MA. ICllWANI
M MIWPGIT llACH I In ANAHllM JAN. 11 .... 21 JAN. 22: a_. 2J
., Newpa9• '"" •• HMMl•f Inn T ... ; ..._.,,_ Tel: SU~
... wwwn"' C.•M-, ......... IM., ,,0, ... Ma, IN ..... ,.,,...... t U•
Jloyle, Brier, Harris, Hayakawa, Hoppe, Wilson;
' ' Big Names on The DAILY PILOT 'Editorial Pag~ ·-
'
•
•
Syndr0 rn :e Still Pants
Injected
Itali an desi gn ers
show pl enty of leg
by slitting lon g
skirts. Substitute
·fo r mini sk irts
i~ the new version
Of short shorts,
c~lle d "ho t pants."
Pizzazz
By MARIAN QllUBl'Y
Italian detiinert, well awan of the
antimidi feeling 1till 11weepini{1 a mini-
minded -United State.I, art trying
desper.ately to sweeten f88hion again.
And, boy, the ntw ideas are worth
looking at.
The Romans, now unveiling their
spring-summer, 1971, falhions to the
press and store buyers from points
around the world, are putting the femme
fatale back into circulation again.
NS.vel fashions, concaned wi\h the
.. see," zero in on a berttOfore unexplored
part of the femaJe anatomy -the belly
button. M.1di skirts are slung at the
hips and come equipped with some
version of a coordinated Carmen Miranda
top that leaves the naked midriff on
view.
Designers are usin& I n t e r c Ii t i n g
6men
BEA ANDERSON , Editor
,...,. 1J
psychology.
Obviously, the Idea is that all the
loud yelling against the midi will turn
into whis lles Bs men gp gaija over
bare middles. The distrattion offsets
covered legs.
The look is .showing up for after..dark
bashes and for beachwear. In the case
of the latler, the skirt slips off and,
voila, the model prances off in a teeny.
weeny bikini. Girls who show their navels
will not be wallflowers at nigh.ttime
parties.
Valentino, the ''king" of nalian fashion
has joined the brigade of designers pum·
ping sex Into clot.hes by coming out
with a look which has been dubbed
''hot pants."
The name alone is vastly suggestive
-but the fashion Isn't haU as naughty
as the connotation.
Hot pants. In case you haven 't heard,
are short shorts which are equipped
with the ir own coordinated tops. They
come with shirts, jackets or tunics.
They're a cross-breed of mini skirts and
pantsuits. Some designers are suggesting
them for city streets.
Who says the stand for "leg~" is
• hopeless cause'!
Every big-name Italian designer
from Fabiani to Princess Irene Galitzint
-is tuned into the pantsuit syndrome.
The lta\ians have been apprised by top
New York manufacturers who buy-to-eopy
that the volume sellers still are pantsuits,
not long skirts.
The Romans. sensing a good thing,
have taken the classic pantsuit idea
and injected it with new pin.au. You
can spot a 1971 pantsuit a mile away.
Jt is sliced off at the calf and shows
a woman's leg from the mid<alf down.
"Pantaloons" is the name of the new
look, obviously an outgrowth of the
•·gaucho," wh ich had only limited success
this winter.
Daytime pantaloons come In one piece
so that lhe wearer steps into them
and zips up the back or front -depen-
ding on whether the o r i g i n a I
"inspiration" comes from workmen's
coveralls or astronaut uniforms .
Evening pantaloons, which ~melimes
become puffy knickers, are dazzled with
shiny paillettes and are topped with
long. slithery tunics. Ran!ly does the
onlooker notice that most of the leg
ls under cover. Great designers like
Bik i make the· tops purposely sheer so
that the unbra'd bosom Is quite visible.
The idea of seminudity is :'llill new
enough to cause a sensation.
Yes, most skirts on the Roman horizon
are lon g.
But they're a definite improvement
on last season's midi. Yesterday's midi!
were rehash.sea: of 40s and 50s fashions
and looked like tired retrieves from
the attic or old family photo album.
New long skirts -and they're
t verywhere -have slits that shoot up the
front or side and are more of
11 bombshell lhlln last season 's midi.
The differe.,ce is sex appeal.
Blazing Colors
Mood, mood, mood -that's how Count
Romi defines the fashion theme today
in fabric and color for the contemporary
woman. And the cOUectk>n, as a result,
has spectacular elegance.
According to the code, women 1hould
be stared at with" admiration, and coats
must be deliped with that purpose.
Because fabric is buic, they scour world
markets for bokl .startling prints and
teztures in exquisite taste, right for
811Y weather, or any occasion. On these
fabrics, the Count Romi Imprint ls un-
mistakable.
A double-breasted Ci.re coat, for in·
aLance, ii a delicious geometric pattern
for Ughtly formal eventngs, lf you want
your entrance to be a dramatic event.
Imported and domestic cottons have
been glamorized P d lavished with spec-
t.cular line and femininity. A metallic
evening coat dominates .n eyet with
Ill elepnce. All ltaliln striped cottoo
.. -ii uniquely Roman ond very
beUllimo tor CllU8l weer.
QJoa IOll boldly 'obstrld oo !NI
• IU'Oll down the ttreet becomes •
"" chic ocent. And Ille rul dynamite
for iprln& -d<nlnl -Is dahin1 in
a Saf•ri suit or c•pe eo1t.
\ Pattern of el.,.nce 11 •tpeclelly dremetlc In this doubl•bruttec:I
C o•t. It's spect•cul•r in •ny w .. th•r.
We're on the·crest of a grut faah1on
perlJd, wtlh an extnordlnary burst of
Cr<>tivlly !{Ult deslgnera. And Coon!
Rom! ~r Mu Adlllr leads with
, line and shape, working with danlinc
prlnll, bold p11Umll .... • pllieUo el
pAstels and dramatic colon:.
J I
::..}is:
1V•t. 1
"· •. }' ...
, r· 'l;:f~,·l -\,:
~ ... ) -..1•
.f..• :Ii ., ,_
~ "! ··(>
I
1
FASHION LACED WITH LEATHER
Leather Balled Up
In Knitting Yarn
By JO OLSON
Of I~• Dt ll' P'llll lltll
Takt a pair of knitting needles,
a •·skein '' of soft leather and a little
enthusiasm and what db you have~
A new look in leather fashions
that's easy enough for a child to
create.
Designed by Roberta Shmikler,
an 11\inoi.!I resident, the leather
fashions come in ~ils with \IS.inch
continuous thong and precut gau-
cho pants, ponchos, vests 11nd oth-
er garments.
The knitter simply follows simple
instructions snd knits long pieces
with the thong, whic h are sewed lo
the prtttlt leather piece!!. The re-
sult is a fashion with a knit panel
that gives for easy fit.
Mrs. Shmlkler conceived the idea
a year ago and her husband Joe, a
glove maker and leather tanner,
developed the continuous leather
U\Ong which Is considerably small-
er than the normal thong that
comes in 6-foot lengths and is 1t4
inch thick .
An Interior d~ignet who has "re·
tired." 1.lrs. Shmikler has tumed
h"° attention to producing more
th11n 20 kil~ for knitted lea the r hat~.
belts, vest~. ponchos, p.irses, head-
band s, boot spa ts and chokers
along with garments to be assembl-
ed includirig gaucho pants, serapes,
bodice vests, hip huggers and bot-
"°'· 'The soft leathe r comes in a var-
iety of earthy fall colors as well as
vivid purple and red , grey , black
and off-while. Spring colors will be
aqua , lilac, melon. Air Force blue,
saddle, rawhide and palomino.
'I'be lealher can be cleaned with
fine sandpaper and dry cleaning
is necess.ary only arter long peri-
ods of time, if proper spot-cleaning
is dooe.
Mrs. Shmikter point! out that be--
ginn ing knitters can assemble the
kits very easily because no increas-
ing or decreasing is necessary. and
the patterns are not complicated.
Even a child can assemb le some of
the simpler pieces. she added.
The attractiveness of the knitting
done with leather is, 9he feels, its
appearance of having a dimension.
Comfortable, beautiful and dur·
able, the «b-it-your1eU leather
fastli;ons are guaranteed tel look
handmade instead of homemade.
And can be sanded clean!
Kits are availAble al the May
Co .
Cloak Milady
I
I
i1 J4' O:ULY ~ILOT y,,..i,y, J"""Y 19. 1971
:· Overindulg·ingaGraveMatter
'
.'"\'DEA!( ANN l..ANJl!RS' Wl>y didn1
~ tell "rt011*1 hi Seattle." -the '
ANN LANDERS ~
Princess
Lectures
Princess Alice Siwundhla. I
For Family Services
Volunteers Praised
author and l«turer from Usberinc in its 17th year 20, in the Airport.er Im, and Guest speaker will bt ftit
Malawi, eut central Africa. ol prov Id in g profesaio!W a aipeclal tribute will be paJd Rev. C. Richard MitcbtIJ , put
will speak when l..-wytrt' comse1ing cm a low-fee buiJ to all women volunteers of president of lhe Southern
Wives of Qrance Coun\y meet to troubled Oranae County the: five FSA auDHariea and CaWornia Council, FSA, and
Thursday, Jan. 21, ill the families is tbe family Service the A.ssistanoe League of entertaining will be th•
....,., wbo said her husband 11 lillllll
tt;JdmwM wilh food, -that be qnb 'J die. J know what I'm talkina about
~~ J am that man -and tbae
~ -"' many others Ub me.
J My reli(ion forf>jdt divorce '° there'• ~ "·~ out for me. My marriage fell -~ a Ions time ago. Home,~ to Ille,
I aio, MC llDdltc -....... -an It er • ..... fftt'ftiPt. I meu
Grand Hotel. Aasociltion. Fullerton for their cootinllOW f Tull"
That night we t.tlephoned the neighbor A social illhour frosn 11 a.m. New officers will be in--diliftnce in funding effort.a ~1:1'~i:tendi~ ~;
promptly 11 t :15 a.m. after about 15 to noon w be foUowed by aWled dlD'ing the aMual din· aodother vita] supportive pro-William Leinberger.
-'mean!· nagging, complaining, endless minutes of barking. A very sleepy man luncheon. oer meetiQI" Wednesd.ly, Jan. jecta.. More than 150 guests are
•••wo-.. I said in a poli~ voice, "Your Princess Alice IDd htr hll!--nd ••-
,..,.. ......... ._SI., 1$ pMl9d1.
T1te per.-... llkel kimsdf tat.el argulna and screaming. The tension and
hc.Willty is indescribable . My wife has
fuanaged to kill any .sexual desire I
might have had. '.''hen I look at her
no~· it's diffkult to belin•e I e\'er wanted
ha.
cart of llllmatlf. 1Ddtvidul1 wlllo eat
too m•<* Md drllli IM mad!, or men
a.rood -.ltli drllg1, are lllbcon.ickwlsly
trylne la .chieve Ne CoaJ -self deSll'U('o
Uon.
,..., •~ band are studying ror their e.1pected to atte we: 6:30
dog is bart.ing." He replied, "WHAT!" doctorates in thUI country and social hour and 7:30 p.m. din-
1 ............ "'"' dog " bukil!g .. He ,1.,, .. ,..,um wilh the~ Jami-Crimi no Is Exposed ""· hung up. Thrtt minutes later the barking Jy to Africa to wort among Arthur Gray, FSA president,
Yoa dida't uk for advtee Ml 1 won't
offer uy. Filf'tllermo.re I Mlped )'H
bow lite IOl.•UN bat you 'd ratlter keep
oa ditiD& wit.at yoq're doiag. So &a YN r .. ,.. eood lad; ncl farewell
stopped. their people. Detective John Simon of the Beath chapter and following said that all branch offices
The nut night the barking began Accepting reservations art Newport Be.acb Police Depart-a social hour and sack lunches are bracing for a busy year_
Eating is tbe only pleasutt left in
my lift.. In the i4 years we've been
married I ha\·e ne\'U cheated on my
..,ife . She bas soured me so thoroughly
on the entitt fmi.a.le sex that any thought
of another woman is just u nauseating
as the thought of her.
on sehedult. I made anotbtt teJepbone Mrs. A. Lee Adair Of Newport ment will discuss Games at noon. Lloyd E. Morriaor1 Citing the high rate of.
call. Saint message... Same respome. Beach or Mn. James Bootb, Criminals Play on Older will preside over the formal unemployment, econ om i C
\\'iUun 10 minutes I.be batting stopped. Irvine. Citizens when the American meeting. slump, Vietnam war. youth
ThP do& st.amd to ba.ri again at 5 Plans ~ beinl completed As.matioo of Retittd Persons AJI members of the AARP rebellion and general unrest
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I"ve been out
of town for 9e\•eral da}'S but my ,.'lfe
saftS your cotwnns for me. I bopt
I'm not too late to offer a •-or~
solulioo \o the bart.ing dog problem.
Thi! is bow we did it
•m and . for the nei:t philamhropic meets Tbur3day, Jan. 21. or others wishing to become as prime causts. tie1 f~-~I ~
I tt}epOOned once more. agam event, a fashion lhoW 'J'uel.. Newport Harbor Lutheran acquaiDted with this naUonaJ nen 11 months COU d ~ uo:o
If obesity will shorten my life I say, f-"'Pas.1 tht Sf'COnd piece of pie-1-la-modt."
1 Ifs too late to give me any advke,
L.Ann Landers. but if yoo have a com.men!
tbt ntighbor hung up on me. but 1 day, Feb. 16, Qi the Dbii.,.tand Orurch bas offered a new organi:ution of older citizens come the gnat.est challenge
had to make onty t>A·o calls after that Hotel ....-.; ... room for the Newport are welrome lo attend. In the organization's hiJtory.
"""· 'l\"e hll\'e not seen the dog sUa r'ii;ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_;-.....~~~~~~~~~;;;.~~~~~~~~---.:;;,.:;;,i.i;;ii;iii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-. and 11i·e don't know if ~J stiU bavell
I'd like to hear it. -TWO. TON TOM.\fY
My wife and I were berom.u1g lneralty
worn out from a !act ol slttp. Tht
dog nut door bow~ a.nd barked regular-
ly from about 2 a.m. uaul -4 a.m. '¥11'e
reviewed lt\'eral aJtemalJ\·ts and ~ltltd
him. Bui wt' DO know we are no longer
a11.akened at odd hours and thal's all
11itt care about. -PEACE IN KA.l\JSAS DEAR TOMMY: V1111r admbs ... that
ClT'i' I: WUI ~ die, comet: U .. surprise
•· n.e ooly tllilt& thlt .a·,. ...
ls ~I Y" recepia: Oat motivatioll
behiecl ,...., uceuJve utill1. Most com-
1 ,u.tvt e9&a'I aru'1 • t.lrosptdtve.
-.on a diplomatic solutloo wh.Jcb Wt'! not
entirely crictet -but •e •"-~
DEAR PEACE: I see eothiq •·u-
cricket" •boot your sohltioll.. ~
5ucettd5 like 1ucce11. Tbaab fer Pa.f.
1 ,Honor
: !
i \Given
Mrs. Rona.Id Murphy was
honored as Woman-Of-the-year
by the FOWllain V a I I e y
,Womµ's Club durm, its la.st
meeting.
• Oiainnan ; of the club's :L ~tywide MOthers' March of
Dimes for the fourth year.
she also is serving as federa--
tion e:ictension chairman.
f
'
' • • •
Other commun i ty in-
\"Olvement activi~ include
church a.nd Girl Scout work,
offices in both Fountain Valley
High School and Harptt PT.".
Historic1l Soc.itiy ind Fne.nds
of tM Librar}".
~lrs. ~!urphy's husband 1s
a h.igh sc.boo\ pnoc1pal and
they ~ partnl'S ol four
diiughten
Membership in the club is
open to al! 11·omen in !he
communuy. They arr in\·11ed
to attfnd meetinp coaducted
at g p.m. I.ht secor¥I llooday
of each mQOth in the Ci\"IC
cent.er. ~!rs. Clay Stewmon
is membership chairman.
Matinees
In View
despenl<. iDg.
·.
Hor~ope
' Taurus: Be Patient
WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 20
By S'fD~n-O~R
ARIES 1 ~larcll 1l-. .\pril It):
_.\,·oid taking financial position
for granltd. Discuss money
malttrs "·ith male. partner.
a.ttk details. Look beypnd
the superficial You cari make
significant gain. Make 1n ef-
fort.
TAL'Rl;S 1April 20-May 20):
Accent en joint efforts. ability
to cooperale. You may not
like everything about current
siluation, but try to see bright
side.
GEMfNI 1 ~1ay 21-June 20):
Pets require attention: so do
those wbo depend on you.
Keep premises te neig hbors.
those who perform special
servi~s.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
You lead to seek perfecLion,
Key is to analyze and arrive
at realistk co nc 1 u s ions .
Creative urge requires outlet.
LEO \July 23-Aua:. 'D): A
competitor could stimulate..
discourage aod caaa secend
thoughts. Be aware of ISiets
as well as liabilities. lWd .U
on land deals. Iona-ranee com-
mitments. Time is en your
side.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ):
Do plenty of investigating. Ac-
cepl oothing en 5Urlace in-
dicalioo. lk one wbe probes,
asks questions and oblaim ..........
IJBRA <Sept Z>-Od 22):
Fine Arts Galleried
New outlaot on financial mat-
t.ers is essential. Don't permit
•·ell-meaning associa~ t o
waste )'OW' assets. Put foot
down. Competition in arts, crafts.
literature. drama and choral
groops from the 36 c l u b s
comprising Orange District,
California Federation of
Women 's Clubs. will be
featured during the 11th an·
nual Fine Arts Festival.
The district-sponsored eyent
will take plal't ~een 9:30
a.m. and 2:30 p.m. tomorrow
in tbe Fullerton E b e I I
Clubhouse..
The 50 cent adrnl§ion fee
will be med. toward the
Orange Oistrkl ~ I u d e n I
scholarshi~ Which are award-
ed during ' 0lhe April coo·
\'t>ntion.
Acti\i ties -will begin 111·1th
coffee and uhi.bit viewing at
9 . 30 a .m. A program of drama
Music Takes
To the Wind
A program of baroque musk
....-111 bt' presented 10 the Alta
Bafna Commllttt. 0 r an g e
County Philharmonic Society
a l 10 a m. Thursda~·. J an. 2L
~lus1c from the E~lban
l'ra, featuring !ht rf!COrder
.,.,.ill bt pro\·tded hy ~f rs John
\\"yman. ~ITT. Donald "Yoder
and .\\rs. John K en n e 1 h
Harnt'!.
\!rs. Robert Lo...,·elJ '\\"o\f
will opt'n her Newport Beach
homro fr)( 1hr ~tt meeting_
Sht' 11·1ll be assisted ~· Mrs.
L \\" Jenks and ~I.rs TIKI mas
Baume.
Star Gazing
For Alumnae
Looting to the stan will
be lh< South Cout Alumnllo
~. Z.ta Tau """"° Thursday, Jan. 11.
~In. Button Gran1 will open
btr East.bluff home for the
mttting wbe11 Mrs. Ceorgill
Gross discus:5es the effect ol astToleo oa daily fr•es,
,,
and music will be. presented
at 11 a.m. and Fullerton Ebel!
members will serve luncheon
at noon for Sl.50 per persoo.
~1rs. \Y i 11 i a m Carleton
French, general chairman. an-
ticipates at least 250 entries
b y both amateu r
and professional!>. All entries
will be judged.
Wife Gives
POW Plea
SCORPIO (Qct_ 2.1-Nov. 21 ):
You ra.n be at right place
at right lime. Sense of timing
is boned t• razor-5b.arpness.
SAGmARJt.lS IN"ev. 22-
Dec. 211 : Vis.it ene who is
unable "' get around. Don 't
be' high"""' ol nuoon.
speculatiln.. Insi9t on facts.
CAPRIOOBN (Dec. · ZZ-Jan.
19): Make future p I a n 1 .
Refuse to be bogged down
with details. TaJte overall
view. Bruk through red tape.
AQUA.RD.JS {Jan. 71)...Feb.
11): Be ready for change.
Treatmtnl of Americans travel. variety. You can pro-
htld capth·e in ~orth Vietnam fit.ably confide in GembU in-
will be discussed wben a JO. int dividual. Advancement is in-•
dicated. Professional associate 1
meetin( of the COIN Mesa American Legion Post and' will lend helping hand.
Auxiliary takes place at 8 p,m. PISC~ (Feb. 19--lttarch 20):
T'hur!da J 21 · th Cooperate wilb Pilces person. y. an . ' in e A«'ellt ta wb.al , . .,, gain Lqjcn Hall. through special study. Bt sell· Mn. Dooa\·an L. Lyon, wife ~liant. Family situation may
d a L'S.A F' major mis.si ng In not be entirely to yoor liking.
action in \-ietnam, will present Money mailers demand at-
pas:. and ~t lnronnatinn t.l!:rltion.
known oo tttal~I of the-'iiiiiio;,oiiii;;;;;;; _________ ,,,,
prisoners of war. She Wo•
will suggest how citiien< can BY DEMAND!
help the prisoners.
Kiwi Club
Expanding YOGA CENTER •••••• w-. ... cllMn.
w-,.-~, ,, .. , ,....,
n.--isl~A!
'-Da• """'-w...i. I , ... 1.-. ....... 1
New members will be in-
troduced when the Newport
Beach Kiwi Club meets at
8 p m. Thursday. Jan. 21 . In
the Santa Ana home of titrs.
Lee Meynen.
weicom<d will bo Mn. Ron YOGA CENllll
D·~H <"-1 D-.J.. Mn .. L 11al S.. Q9 --IJallKu.., -~-. s.a.1 ~ Emma Collias.. Corona dd ........ -. ""-"' • _.. ....
Nat. and Mn. Robert ltopprel, :::...::... : • .=-..tr-Ir
r~Sulbl~~Ano~§:::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~t
SPECIAL LOW PRICE
•
WASlle " -
HERE Frigidaire~
Ski
Mi
l\1)Y
s 95
5-Y ear Na.tlOawidc PratectO.. Plaa _., __
u ... -..-.... -..... --.... 4YU' Pt*d ....... """ ........ It: I t i I fir .. _,. ... ___ ..., __ _________ ..... ..,. "'"""--·-·-
•
'COSTA MUA
411 !. S.>•olwtlli St.
._.,... •lly ,.,, Sot ....
ru. •
Ftts
almost~
here .
(Only 2 feet wide)
Install it where the wash is, and
save steps and time-anywhere
you can get adequate wiring,
plumbing and venting. 2-Speed
Washer cleans family-size loads
at Regular and Delicate settings.
• Flowing Heat in Dryer leaves
clothes sunshine fresh. • Per-
manent Press Care in Washer
and i)ryl! r.
Frilidaire
bothers ta
bald in
lllOl1 help
ll TORO
i.-HRh Plua 1-.. .....0.1 m.-•lty IM; Ml' 1 .. f
'
.
'
' 1
•
•
•
DICK TRACY ,,
"1:lll S/I#-MAl>OllA lllQ)PY !¥If? U~'nllllP
~w
TUMBLEWEEDS
POW! POW·POW !
POW! POW! POW!
POW-POW!
/-1'1
Mun AND JEFF
'THIS CltMOID~IE'F
OW'Ce' CXl5TI.We
AS ME-.XS.
!>CWT~E
RIPIC'LOOS!
ly CMder GOlld
By Tom K. Ryan
TAR6E T fOW· l'OWI
PRACKTICE! POW! POW!
POW·P<:Nll
By Al Smith
WHAT THIS COUNTRY
NEEDS JS A
SHEPHERDESS!
A WOMAN
TRt:D IT
ONCE AND
JUDGE PARKER
MADE A
MESSOFIT.'
By Harold Le Doux
I WANT THE TRUTl-i M:ltE-VE ME, ELM .. I POM'T
FROM VOii, DRIVE~'. KNOW WHAT YOlfRE TMJCl .,C.
HOW ArotJT MY
IXTTIM6 IS A Cll P
OF COFFE E •. OR:
WHAT DID VOi.i Aeour: '-N D. PLEASE: .. PllT THAT
TELL MR T 6 """ CANNON "WAY! IT MAl(ES
WOU LD' voa PRE-·
FR A ~INK?
AP>Oll T ME? ' ME VEO NE~OllS ~
PLAIN JANE
'THIN
lC.E
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R A. POWER I
ACROSS
i JC. Killy 's
mi11r11
5 Mar shy
ground
l ll E-prt1or.i tr
14 Furl
15 Rod---:
T rnni~
91rat
1& Roo\sta llc
17 Conl1•mrd in
~ hitb•t
19 Tum1ill
2() lntbr 1a trd
S!anq
21 lid I 1~11
~r~11nt!
2J P11\ lorlh
~ d1!fr1r11I
op1nio11
2b F Arm
A111m~I
27 F;t~c1oat1n9
propl~
JO Airport
b11ild1n9
)4 i<tpl
)5 Was 111
r nltrl11nt r
'.37 Sri!
)8 Jud9r or
lsr~ti
J'l B1 krry
p1od uct~
-i l At th is
po int 1n
timt
-i l Vtslmtnt
worn by
priests
-i 3 Qurbrc
Ptninsula
-i4 Parr nl
•
"
•
" "
" ..
'
45 Composed
47 Dan• or Pole,
t .lj-
50 Pr •~surr
uni\ Ab~r.
51 Bobbin
SZ Givr !ht
r 1Qhl to
<,om t lh1no
5& .tu;ib danc in!f
91rl '" 'Perr Gynt "
bO Stl!n!orlan
bl Jaqqtd
l titf
b4 Ftm•n1nr
f1.1~••
!>5 Sl~g•
dirt(! 1011
bb Prtpo~lllo~
117 PropliPI
bB G1,1:1tt~
bl! Low l·1
WQf~er
DOWN
1 s~cird
bull
Z T1mr of
yrar
J C.ovtr
t 1rmty
~ 011r ctor or
strva11ts
S Vthic!t
b Confl 1ct
bttwrrn
nal iOfls
7 Girl's
name
B N<1l1on~I
lra;w
lfil!ll
' • '
Yrst rrday's Puzzlt Solvrd-
s 1 c 0
'! ~ 111 ~I
\tlr c lolh
10 s~~Het~d
11 Po~tr
l101'11ng
12 Mt!.i I
l J 111 ···-:
In lhr
whole: l at.
18 T 1mr
ptr1od
22 B 1g
Qll.;lllli1y
24 Sov 1rt
moul)la ins
2S Gt Th nay
27 Of !11tl t
\'alur
28 Grrrting
2q [Jrt ll~t
}1 Spirit in
lorrn of
:in imal
32 Gitt k
assembly
33 Second
crop in
1 seas on
l 'l'in 1
3f>Bind ·
l word s
3'i Oiscbar9~
40 Founder of
Otttolt
44 Go diflr1rn!
way s:
l words 4!. Insect
48 Llllght d
loudly
49 Mrs.
Cl\apli n
Sl-Gitt~
tllldtrground
53 Not orir
S4 A.lr
SS Comrort
57 Fork part
SI Newspaptr
srclion:
lnfo11ni1
59 Soon
bl El -:
Spanish
hrro
Ll Nrlhtrland~
community
By Frank Ba9inski
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
I
yOU C~ME TO TkC.
~1Gf..4T PL.ACE.
WI: 1-lAVE
Tl-4E5E THFitE£ VSltY
G<X>D ·LOC'KING
FEU...OWS
IN STOCK.
STEVE ROPER
DADDY.' WAKE UP.'-l MUST
MAVE MIS'UNDERSTOOO
'ltJUR MESSAGE
TO MR. ROPER /
PEANUTS ,.
•
T11tsd11, Ja'liwJ l•, 1971
SALLY BANANAS
"'
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
• •• • • 'T~IY1vi< JUST
<GOTTA t>o
SOMeTHING A90UT
,Ai!t f'OLLU TJON !
• • • • • •
ANIMAL CRACKERS
,......,~----~ ~!I-EH! 1!(.(. Vim ue Helle ~u.>
sru..i.1-1MAllKs 10 M<J
IJ/.1\Ji?AL .CAMOuA..46e,
:X: LOCIC avs!' Ul"e
A FJ.OitnAM;; ~ ! .•
AS I
WAS
SAYING, we 1-4AVC: THESE
-n<l<EE
IN
570CK.
MEH ! Heil!~! W)
MllllJlE OOllJ. 'll(lS!l
Ull$0Sl'!:Cfl""" 8IRt6
\\)11.l.. WADE 100 CLOS!!
AOO WHAMO ! ~1!14 ! ·•
By John MllH
By MeH
•• • ... • • • • • •
DAILY •JLOT Ii
ly Al c •••
By Gus Arriela
ly Ferd JohMOll
• •• •• • • • • ••• • • =· • • •
•
• •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • •
By ROC)el' Bollen
.• SIU.., Ul llOU'1"
$IJ9fl?5E 1H.11' CCX,
IS SCAIZIU.. Au>ACJ
1'1E FISH, DO CJ/,.~-
I ll !! il
DENNIS THE MENACE
By Saunders and 0YenJCll'd
ly Cllarlft M. Schm ....,...----....... -.
1 '-llii Doc ro ~ 1
l'U. !If IWr!I IF [ .lJ5T /.\AKE THf PUl/CH5
II DAILY ,!LOT .
Dallas
DALLAS (AP I -The o.IW C..bc>)>.
11 p' • but aabowed heroes to bomt
.... fMI, returned home Ml • berots'
welax11e Mooday -the city's f1TS1 ticter
.... ,..,.. lo ... de<a<le!
The Lat timf: ~ dty tl.lr!lt'd on sucb
.. parade WU In i..t lO boner (Jen o..p MlcArtbur. aller he •a& relieY-
ed el <'Omrnand b}' President Harn'
Trmn.uL
.. You can't imaglnt whal it mtam
.,. Id 5Udl a welcome back.." Coa·boys
cmch Tom Landr:-$a id actno .... ·k'dging
Honors
t!iat wim spiriu 1ank Wlr attU-Saoday's
16-U SUper Bowl km to Baltimore.
1be biJ cdttntion lor 1 ddealfd
tum !rd one ~ity offtoal to adaim:
.. If Otey v.in ~zt y .. ar. ~ will
hl•t to ttbu.ild Uus to\m ..
1be dwDbtr of rommn-tt arranged
the paradt last wetlt. promismg ll would
go oo •·in °' ~ in Sunday's SUper
Bo.,.,·J at Miami.
1be C-0\0bo~s· plant v;as al~t t'Y•o
hours late in reaching Dall.as and Lhr
outpouring o1 fans s.,.,elled b)· ~ward
,.
F alien Heroes
bound WU'b:rs in the dotntowa 4is1rid. ""'*' bow tnJlic becanw -Ill ooe ol I.ht wont ja:nu ol rectllt hiltot)'.
A bi& rtd fltt truck with *"" blartng
~ Uw parW. moving alowly tbroogtl
dioisarwb jamming Ma.in SU"tt'l.
The playtts wttt headed b)' a SbriM
m.I. riding a Oat tnJd: on a Wll\'t
al surin« brass IOUfld.
'l'ben came multimillionaire etilmilll
CliJ'lt MlD'chitoa. Jr.. principll owner
of lhe Co•-boys, standing in • <2r and
wa\·ing.
--.
U,.IT .......
Landry and the pleyon ,_ ii>
1lq!Wul-les.
f'am darted lo tht can ti:i greet tbe
~mr.-faced Cowbo)' pbi)'ft'S. Small boys
in Cowbo)' uniforms ICf'UJDed their'
wrkome.
Allor the ........... <Ud>ed the -ol Cil)' Hall. then: were preseatatiam,
speeches and mare c:bee:rs from ~
<rood.
PmUn lfav~ ltom lhr: llid@lines. One:
said, "\\·e )ove yau, Cowbo)'I -we.lcome
..... lo Cowboy """'ll"J· ..
And be:lt of all, no one booed.
Baltimore
MterQB-
lnsurru1ce
MIA.'\fl (AP1 -Qu.arterbacll lnsw'a.oce
ls high on !ht prkrlty list of Baltimore'•
pro football champions today as they
turn their attention from the Super Bo•I
to the upcoming Ka tiona.I Football
League draft.
But. ,..·ith geriatri<' ••onder.s Johnny
L'nita! and Earl ~!orrall apparently RI
for another -..·hirl in 1971. Colts coach
Don McCafferty isn't anxious to m&lle
a preffi\um p.aymffit by breaking up
h~ cld gang.
··we·d like to get a good . young
quarterback. but not at a high prier
that would break up this team." McCaf-
ferty uid Monday 111 the Colt.!i, savoring
their l&.-13 Super Bou.·! conquest of Dallas.
prtpared to make the most of the SIS.000
winners· share and their new-found plare
in the sun.
WALT GARR ISON ILEFn ANO DUANE THOMAS GREETED BY COWBOY FANS.
A contingent of players and their "''i\·es
headed for a Bahamas vacation. Three.
standouts -Bubba Smith. Mike CUrtis
and Jerry Logan -hav• playing dates
in Sunday's Pro Bowl All-Star g .11 me
al Las Angeles. And 1,;nitas. a tttOM-
quarter casualt~· in the Super Bo•I.
"'U due 10 undt.rgo further tests on
hill damaged ribs. Sports In Brief
"Haywood Wins Round;
I
t
t LA Hosts Philadelphia
!
J.,OS A.\'GEt.FS Cootf'O\·mial
Sftncer Haywood. fighting a rourt halt~
apimt the Sational Ba!ketball ~
bin. ha.s u.·on appro\·aJ In rootinue
playing .,.;01 the S'BA Seattle Su~
plhting ftrther legal action.
That micht C"O~ today. or it m1g.hl
not comt unul March. aff~ti ng all of
irofessional basutb•U .oo perhapo othtt _...
L' S. District Court Judge \llarren
Ferguson. ttimment1ng that prnftsSIOl'lal
1thlete.s •·cannot be used and cannot
bf treated as merctiand1.Se." 1SSUed a
prehm1~· iniuncuon Monday permit-
ting Ha~ .. 'OOd to st.a:. .,.Ith the
5uptrSooic5.
The J\Jdif' §E't a trial dau of ~arch
2 for thf' case •tuch 10Cludes Haywoo1f.s
cont~1Kirt the \B:\ 'w lates antitrust
la•.s and thf' argument of the ~n,·er
Rockf't.s that lhe p\a~f'r i.s under rontract
to Uw!m. •
l"SGLEWOOD -The Loi Angele!
Laktts laundl the ~ half of the
~aticnll l\a.sUtba ll ~tion r.ta!OO
~ht. lYK-ung the f'tliladielph1a i&us
11 tht forum.
The Laken currently lead lht Paa.fie
UCI Tackles
Chapman FiYe
Qapman Collqe Panlhe:n fumi!:h tht
~ for tbt UC Irvine buketball
tam tDaigbt in Cra11dord Hall with llp-Off
at I o"doci: ~ by a freshman-
jlyvee encounttt II i :f.S.
· a.:lt Tim Tift. puzzled o\·er the
IUddm tumabou1 of the Ant.eater team
6lt &as 1 tough road schedule 1n
Ille next fivt games after tonighrs •n-
eoanter. indicated he W'OUld go with modi
Ille same: lftup that laced San Fernando
Yallty ~te Saturday.
Di~·w. o{ the ~llA with a 2:5-20 rttOrd
'ltlth l7 games left.
But Laker roacll Joe. ~unaney i.sn·t
pleased with bis leam·s record and hopes
to inject a new ,-igor in hi.s old players.
•·"'' need mcrt mo,·nnenl. more ,·ar;ety
and •e sbould be less pretbcUble. We
must camoufiage our 1111e11t so the defen.se
can't key on what "'e do," he said_
•
PJ'TTSBURGH -!ol!ckey Davis fired
in li'•e poin~ in overtime and Gary
Kdson added four as unranked Duquesne
upset ninth-ratE'd .\'otrt Dame 81·i8 ~!on
doy rtighl.
Duquesne held a l'.?·poin1 lead midu.·ay
in the second hall but the Irish thundt'red
back and ""ent ahead by three pomts .,,,,th just two rrJnute.s remaining m the
game.
Ba~· .\'el.son \led the gaffif' al 6"9
1101th one minule lefl and ~ team didn't
scoce again until the O\'ertime period
.Au..<;1.1n Carr 5C'Ored 31 poinu for 7\olre
Dame u.·h1le Collis Jont"S .11dM-d 'l7 for
the Irtsh. IH •
ULr:A.\" . .\' Y. -\"111.:ioo•.:i jurnped
to a big l1r.;1-quart f'r JP,:irJ and heir! on fnr
an 8IH7 basketball •1r10~· over 10th·
ranked SL Bona\·l'ntu re .\londay night.
•
SHRE\'EPORT, J.;i -Tht' 11""nl'r of
!he £1 Paso Sun l\1ngs. the Class A.~
Texa5 League farm club of 1he California
Angels, an.nouncrd ~londay he .,.-ouJd
mo\'e the lra.nclu.se to Shrl'\'eport for
lht 1971 season.
AP Cage Ratings
, .. ~ .... Ma.
I VCU' 11'1ol lM "1 J 1Nr-'11{1) 1M A•
J USC 1 6't ~
• "-lM 311 s. l(..,....,i 11-1 m
t JKt..,..vlUc 1•2 21l
1 i-. 1( ... 1\f<_tt., ,,., 1'1
' l--l•·J lJJ ' ,. ...... c..... t.J 1'1 1e ~· ..,.,.._..""""' f..I llf
~,.,, '" , .. , ,,
U·J ti
•N M ,.., ,. •• • It-I J1 ., m
11.1 •
II~ ti
Boston Hosts
Hockey Stars;
Sinden Returns
BOSI'O~ {AP 1 -Harry Sinden ud
Scolt\' Boinnan. the rival coaches in
the
0
Stanley CUp fin.al!i bl'twttn the
Bostofl Bruif\'!I and St. Loois Blues last
spring. return to the. bench on a one-shot
basis tonighl as opposing mBJtors in
lhe r\alK>na.I Hockey Ltague.·s %4th All·
Star Game.
Sinden. who shocked tht hockey world
by quilting as coach afler leading the
Bruin.s to their first Stanley Cup cha m-
pionship in 29 years. is expected to
get a big reception on his ILrst return
lo Boston (;.11rden _
Gordie Ho""·r. the Detroit Red \\'ings·
On Tl. To11ighl
1:30. Ch•"""' ij
4?-year-old tight winger. a lso erpectS
10 be in uniform for bis ?2nd all-star
.11ppearance. ~. -.'ho has bttn pla~
by 111)\Uies this suson. said Sunda y
n(8ht he wouldn't play ··tiecause I don'!
deser\'e 11 " Ho"·e•·t•r. he changf'd hi!
mirnt
'·Howe is part cM thf:. .-\!I-Star i:ame,"
Sinden satd in ..,elroming the Eray1ng
\'elt>ran to the fnld How could ~OU
play lhe ~ame \ll!hout htm~··
f\ou.·m.1fl u.l'ln tno\·ed rull-limf' inlfl
the gt'neral manager"s office a.ftt'r his
Blut>s k>sl four strat,i!ht to BostDn. ~
to s1x11I Sindt'n's r£>turn and lead the
\\o't'st All-Stan to their first ,·ictory O\'tr
the E.ul.
"l·vr oevf'r ittn a n AH-Siar gaml',
so this is qu.ilf' .11 thrill," said Sinden.
•. no""· a bus1ne.ssman in upper N•u.·
York State.
•·rm really 'looking forward 10 tht"
game. It shoukl be a good one with
Bobb)' Hu1l. SUn Mikita and the other
OUcqo stars playing for the West for
lhe first limt:·
Sinden . .,..ho hejped de\•elop lhe Bruins
lnto an awe30flle powu. will ha\·e s11
ol his lormu charges to gi\·e the East
Dle...-e1. tbey are Phil E.1posil0 and
-, OrT. riding 1 ·2 ii> lhe NHL .arin& roce. K•n Ho.t,., JohNl1 llucyk, Dallu
laUtb and Eddie WtstfaD..
It will be back to business for the
tall. soft spoken McCafferty, a Baltimore
assist.ant coach for 11 years before dirl"'C'-
ting the Colts' rf'demption crusade in
he; first year as head man.
··11Je players are on their own," he
said. "but we ha,·e to start working
on the draft for next wtek.''
On the agenda for tilt Colu· brain
trust art further discusston:s with the
Boston Patriots. •ho have the top pick
in 1he dra!t -and Ole fint craci:
al Jun Plunke11. Stanford's Heisman
Troph~· wiMer. or .11nolher-of 19iO's blue
chip colll'ge quarterbaclu.
"We ba\·e talked .several llmes ..,·1th
Bos1on. but only in gE"neral." said (())15
general manager Doo Kloslerman. "!'\o
spe<:1fic ,players u.·ere di!CUMed. "'" m-
ed the Patriots not lo do anything until
afler the Super Bowl so we u.·ould ha,·e
a fair 5.hot . They agrttd."
The Colts. ,_.base fourth-quarlf'r come--
bark agains! the CO'A·boys ga,·e them
a measure of revenge for a l&-7 loss
lo the \r1o1· 1·ork Jets in Super Bo"1
111 t""o ~·ears ago. i,t,·1ll drafl 25th. But
rommtSS1oner Pele Rozelle also has
au.arded them the ~o n pick. from
:Miami. as a "tampering'' penalty against
the Dolphins for luring coach Don Shula
away from Ballnnore.
Th.11t extra pick cou}d be utiliztd as
par! of a trade pack.age for Boston·1
7\o 1. but the Patriots liU!y llFOUk!
demand Sl'\'eral quality pl.a~·en ~ •ell.
They r:eportedly are interestt'd in tight
f'nd John M:tekf'\', for oot".
. .\f!er !!'If' Clllts. nipped Da lla5 on rookie
.1 1m o ·Rr1e n·s l2-yard lit'lcl goal "'it h
fr1 e !'f'Cond.~ \-0 p!a~. 'lcCaffen~· "'·;i~
::i ~l..ed Mu.· n1any Baltimore p1ayer5 C()U]d
be !;il>eled ··untnuchahlf'·• in lr adt talks.
·All of lhem." he repilf'd.
LO I\G LINES A IT'A IT
SC-B RUI.V TICKETS
LOS A1'GELES 1AP1 -Thert are
a few hundred disappointed studenU at
Southern California loday.
Lines v.·ere 2'-i blocks k>ng on the:
t:SC C&mpll! Monday •hen llckell went
on s.a}e for the l'SC·L'Cl..A baske1ball
clash Feb. 6 at the Sports Attna.
The 2.900 student lideb for the
meettng of the unbe:.llten turns •e.tt
sold out in le$.S tholll two hours and
a few tnrndred had lo be turned .1w1r .
Some had lhoWTI up the e\'flling bel•t'!
and w1ittd all niltJL
Mik• Conr•d
OVER THE SHOULOE~ PITCH
Oef•aled Manny Soto in NY Wre1tlin9 M.stth.
Super Heflectiotts
Ho,v Did NIVP Selection
Bypas s Mo1·1·all, Ciirtis?
Post mortem on the Super Bou.1
How Chuck Howley of Dallas cou ld
ha ve been \'Oted most valu able pla~l.'r
for Sunday 's spectaC'lt remains a
m}stery hert'. \\"hat about Balt unor-e
QUOl.rtl'rback Lari .\tonal\.,
He brought together a \tam thal 51.'e'll·
ed hopelt"ssly doomed to fall \'ictrm to
iLs own blunders and the inability cf
Jonglim' hero Johnny Ln11a.s 10 nius1er
a sustained offense.
"'hen l.."nit.11s ruffered the injury \hal
denied him further Supt"r Bou.·I action,
---------WHITE
"'ASH ----
ClEMM WMITS
!olorraJ1 look O\·cr br1llantly, rally1ng the
Coll<; 10 Iha! 1~ J.1 triumph.
And if the .\1\'P nod "'a.sn ·t to be
acrordf'd .\lorrall. ""ho then should be
betttr quahf1t'd than ~hke Curus?'
The BaHimore rlefcnS1\·e gem picked
off t1o1·0 1nterC'ept1on s and forrt"I a
fumble Tht' se<:onrl 1ntercept1on H. • U?
the Coils [or tbeir last-ditch fl'ld go.al
And he Jilrred the ball oot of Di.ant
Thomas' hanrl.s "'hc.'n the \aUf'r was
a nostril a""a:. frorn upping Dalla.5. l~ad
10 20-6.
lnstrad Bah1n1nrr rn.."O,·ered and u.as
a ble to fight bar k for the trtumpn
Howley had 1u.·o 1ntcrcep1ron.s Bui ""hal
errect did the~ ha•e on the game's
OUtC"Omt~
~lore than ooe la} man has said tn1ta.s'
injury saved 1he day for The Colts.
Even an unlikely woman. d~ m
a llger coet. said .she noted the dramatK'
lumabout brooght forth ~· Vrut.as'
departurt and Morralrs entrance to
hostilittts..
And ifs too bad Johnny l.." had liUCh
a pxrr day la ''itw of his m.11gnif1C't'nt
C.11"'°'r.
r,•e beard a kll of complaint about
the. Super Bowl -peop~ calhni; it
lbe nmnerup bowl and dUdinc both side!
for their erntic play Sunday. But in
complete honesty, wouJdn 't you rather
lolerale the errors !created in a
pre.."'5ure-paC'ked atmosphere I for the 15·
IJ fina le rather than ha\·e an error~.ss
i>10 soo.,..~
* * * Randy \'ataha rt'places Jim Plu11keH
as 011t of lhf' speakf'rs at the. upromkl&
\Thursday~ South Coast Plal.8 foot ball
a"·ards dinner. Vataha caugbl lbe
louchdoit·n pass that clinched Slanlonl°«
2;.1; Rose Boit·I triumph O\ er Ohio State.
He it·ent to C.olden \\'e5l Collf'ge .1111d
prepprd in Garden Gro\·e prior w
migraling lo Stanford.
* * * A suggestion for niaking track a nd
field more interesting Pu! burning oil
over the \\'aler 1umps ,Jurin~ the $teeple
chase and put explo~ive "'ilr heads on
ja\'ehns SCJ they'll explode ~·hen lhey
hit the turf
* * * Ed l\irkpalrick of thr l\11nsa1 City
Ro~·ali; "ill hf' tbf' J:Uf'~I speaktr at
the Adams School h1 1hrr-~on banquet
Thursday night at thr Costa )ltsa Scbool.
He r•plaCf's l\C manai;er Bob Lt:moa •
origiaally scbedultd to pu\ on tbt pro-
c:ram.
* * * f qrn1tr .\le11p11 rt Ha r hnr High bas.ke l-
ba!' ('tlarh Al H..-kner is. nou.· a footb all
a.i;.51.-1an1 at \'Illa rark H12h He·s. a!Si'I
a \'ar..1t\' bas.kt'!b11 1l flff1c1 al -and a
flt'"" father
La ve r Faces
Ashe Thursday
;\E\\. YORK 1.'1.P 1 -\\'h1\e ArlhW'
Asht dreams of beatini;! Rod Ll.\'er,
IN> \flrflna del ~la.r art' s-1\'S he "can't
afford lo drtam" abou! !u.·eeping all
It matches m the $2\0.000 Tennis Cham-
pions Classic.
Laver. .., ho has ..,·on the !Int four
stops {ln the lournan1ent lrail -and
pocketed the S!O,IXMI top pr ize each time
-goes .11fte.r No. S Thursday n i g h t
at :'\la.di~n Square Garden Against Ashe. "We 'jNve to do a belt.tr job on lht
liouds or we are. in for a Joi of trouble
... the fut of Ole seuon." Tift indic:attd.
"We played good enough on def•.nse
aoept for the reboundinx. They wuu1d
_. a ilhc>l net then get t•·o or lhrtt
..... upshots as well,'' he said retm-rin&
to Sul Fernando.
Wicks: Unstoppable Bru~n Clown· The left-hander, "'hose Ii g h I n in g
~r r1ct' h11s earned him the nickname
t1f "The RO<:"kl'I. ·• and .,.·ho ha ~ vet to I~ to Ashe. turned back Kl"n no.Sc ... ·all.
J flhn Newco1nbe. Tonv Roche .11nd
Neu.-port Re11 C'h·s Roy Emerson in the
hrs.I four matC'htS. A s""·eep of all 14
would bring him Sli0.000. ~ c.dl Dtvid Wqlberill al Chapman
.. .. ~ lorwanl in Olli<
--... -~ leodinl -~ a..t.aAat:z"8 al Cl!dtt,
11" the -•0 ., ----h UCI El n' toarwiMfM: .. December. U.. A '2 5 I f;,'l7ll1P7ld I •
1'1·11 ~. • . ~ ... ~
-.... -.. IJO -·-... ftle ..................... . .,.--""' .... .
'Ifft .... --Pllll --... BW ~ at tile ""'anl I "' wltlJ
-nlelnat--
111 Is --........ ing -" ..,,_ bul lndbled M -.Id
"" Ed...,...,_ ad n.,-lldpll .... m*Mtl:, alto-lltelldiOL
UlS Al<GELES tAP I -iw.Jy -
Joilo Wooden hoop sJowlll& proiR on
ant of hi! OW1I UCL.A baltdblU player&
durinC • ~. All-Amtricao Ln
AJdndor ttee.ived suth rare Wood " n
wwds and DOW Sidney Wicks is tetti1W.
the treatment.
W-KU. spectacular last Saturday as
he !l'Ol'ed JI JOinls •nd led the un-
bMa.81, Cop -ra.nbd 8 r u I 11 1 over
c:.lffomia , M-il, has appe-ared unstop-
poblo thls lu!oo.
"Sidney gt'LI a tremendoo! amount
cl Kclaun he nchly deserve f'very
bit of it btc01use he's a greal ~rfonner,"
W oocle &aid. '1 llill 51 y ht '1 OM of
the most am.u.lng pl•>·er1 -becauJ.e.
ol * mlmU\lef'llbility I his lilt, Ida Jpeed
and his body cootroi DOW, whk:h be
cli*l't aJ•ays h.s\"e.
•;r or hi• stu, M Ind a P'JW)ds,
be moves \•tty wen. He made an io-
ler<eplioa apinsl Col ...... ht ocooped
the baD off Ole floor like. • 5horUlop
and tame out with U>I' dribbW: Ind
W'tlrt down and tust .. dropped it in. Yau
can·t dtSlk I.he bill u y men ao be
just dropped ii in.·•
..... Ids is conMtud the down of UM!
Bnun team. His ;q·<Old .U.re by tN\k.h
be Unnfr\·es opponml.s is of1«i Just Jn
1d . Wooden commented about the wm ·
seyle:
"Aller lb.l bl.a !mid apuut Cll.
ho ltlppod and l•ll Ind ·-his oed
•
or llOmelhKI& ad p,·e us a nice
putonnance ce tlll •Q t.ck dowa
C1IUrl. But the -lo, ho 61 ..
bock.
··He is • tr euftttdoul pafonDel', I
just don ·1 belie,·e there are any bettu
pet fonrim in collect ~ ..
Se1JW Akt after '9lt -thlt. W"ttb
aiuldrl'I !hoot. well outside and Wooden
Pid Wkb WU disturbed by tbal talk.
··He did a lot of wort on hi! own
lht.S last summtt on impn>\'ing b1.s
OOU.ide 5hootinji?. which. J. loo, felt was
a W'l':.si:nu" I don'! think it's a weakness
now. He'll shoot with mosl bt1 fnE..,
bla •iu out thert. ··u )'OU dmfl 1uard bun out !but,
he's a dcfiniEt and ii vou do lUI: him..... lreme.ndous Un.it ...
'lbonW-'
•'Somet}ltng I shoukt ba\lt sa)d .-lier.
boftvtt, is that CUrtis flOW't is overlook·
eel I lot becauol! of SidDey Wicb. CUrtis
ft.owe iJ' I trtsnendous ptl'fonner and
his ohootiog Is u..ntnt. "'""' ibotJih
he .... """"' lat --.. He plays nil dertasivtly and he
rebounds weU and ht's often O\iWkioked
bttau. of Sidney. "
Wooden f't't(T:r\lJy said Ro"" "hfc; Tl('I rr
played a bad gamto for UCLA." The
M Stnlor forward hl!i played tfl t'Vtl')'
g1mt s111tt his rir&t as • !Ophomort.
Tbi.5 season, tw: i.s .11verq in1 20.J Points
per II.mt w1lh \\'iW Tl l-C.
"\'ou kno"· you·rt: still eligible foot
it:· l..;ivf'T obser.•ed. ··Eltch match '5"
a new challenge.
"rm playinf: qu.ite •·ru right no•.
tt's just a c:a~ of pt..ying eadl matdt
as ll comts ;iking," he ~id. ··?o11y1)&
J'\·f' h3d a tompeliUve •·inning stre«.
Some oC the boy& h.sven't pl.syed )ii
f],·t or six 11i'f'tks." ·1
As.hi'. "''ho rtln~·td only last Saturda;y
In Philadt"lphi11, lostntt to Roche ln ,1
prelimin.11ry to I hr l.11\•er-Eme.rson
milch. hellt•cs he ··h.113 bttn playml!,:
too mu1·h 1111'\v . . You nttd 10 rest m~ntally." Bui ·he •drlf'd: "II an·cs:.~'09
addtd lnt"enfi\'f' to play against '1be
Rocktl." ..
: Horpel Shuns Criticism
To Build Area Wrestling
Frank Horpel is one or those guys who
.really cumes on strong and if you don't hold
on tight, he's liable to blast you right oU
your feel.
• 1r you asked a dozen persons their opinions
of Hc.rpel you'd probably get a dozen differ-
ent impressions.
He's a man caught in a whirlwind-but
he's got his eye oo one specific objective-
,aµld that's the improvement of his wrestlers
fl the Orange Coast YMCA and their ulti-
inate goal-collegiate scholarships.
Horpel admits he has critics.
"A lot or coaches around here dlsagree
----
ROGER
CARLSON ---
with me on techniques, tactics and patterns.
But my way is based on what I've seen on
the international scene, v.'hat the top com-
petitors in the world are doing successfully.
"I think it's a simplified system, one that
Involves constant repetitive rhythm."
To illu strate, our man in molion grabbed
this writer from the rear. hoisted me off
~ ground and began shaking me to show ~ benefits of a particular exercise originat-
ed by the Russians!
He put me down after I promised to help
publicize his Orange Coast Yti1CA's sponsor-
ship of three Mexican prep wrestling teams
that will arrive in the area Friday.
The three teams are University and Poly·
technic High of Mexico City and Vera Cruz
High, which are scheduled to compete in
the Five Counties wrestling tourney at
Fountain Valley High Jan. 36.
His taste for international competillon
doesn't end there, however.
Among other things the ex·Penn State
grappler has in the works, is a 1972 trlp
that will involve his wrestlers in competi-
tion in Turkey, Russia. Hungary and West
Germany, capped by first.hand viewing or
the '72 Olympics in Munich.
\\lithout blinking an eye, he says. "that'•
going to run us around $25,000."
His lean1 is involved in 15 toumeys dur-
ing its season, wbidt runs from the middle
or March to the mJddle of November, thus
not conflicting with CIF competition.
He says he already has tentative clearance
for the central European trip from the
State Department and the National High
School Federation.
A trio of ex-Orange Coast YMCA gra~
piers under Horpel that went to Auburn on
scholarships !ed. their team recently to the
Georgia Tech Invitational championship.
Freshmen Al Thompson (heavyweight
from V:illa Park) and Bob Haun (142-pound--
er from ~farina). along with El Modena
High's ~flke Roberts (167), captured a pair
of firsts and a second to lead Auburn.
However, the results or Hori>el 's tutelage
doesn't stop there. ltis record is remarkable,
Eight of his boys gained scholarships last
year and in all he's had 29 wrestlers place
among the top four in CIF finals,
His 01.\.'n son, Chris, was the undefeated
OF champion at 148 pounds for Newport
Jlarbor last year and Is currently at Stan-
ford .
~1.ater Dei, a school now without a wrestl-
ing program, had the second wrestler from
Orange County to win an individual crown in
CfF history 1vhen Horpel was coaching the
sport in 1959-60-61.
Lou ~fonville 11•on the 123·pound CIF title
in '61.
Harpel scoffs at most or his past record.
hov.·ever.
"The limelight should be on these boys
and what the program involves. We need
people who are interested in us in terms of
backing for these trips and who believe in
the net result or what we're doing, and
that's the obtaining of scholarships to uni-
versities.·•
His teams in the recent past have per-
formed at Worland, Wyo. and Mexico City.
The sites this sun1mer are Spokane, Wash .
and Tokyo. hoperully.
"International competition is one of the
chief reasons for the improvement in Amer-
ican wrestling." adds Horpel.
Somehow, one gets the impression th at
Horpel will see to it that his YMCA lads
get that competition .
Saddleback
Aces Feted
Pirate Swim Team
Toby Whipple and Steve
Patterson were a c c o r d e: d
Gaucho of the year honors
for lootball and cross country
at Monday night's alh!etic
awards banquet for Sad-
dl eback College.
Rick Day was named the
outstanding offensive end for
tne Gauchos '"hHe Dav e
Limebrook was accorded the
bonor as the lop offensive
lin eman. Steve Smith and Rus-
ty Seedborg were selecled the
outstanding defensive backs
and Rocky Fletcher was
honored as the top linebacker.
The outstanding defensive
lineman award went to Bryan
Colbert.
•
Strong Again in '71
By CR·AJG SHEFF
01 th• OJll\I l'l~I Sll!l
Fullerton figures he has one
of his best diving uniUI in
Orange Coast College has years, Returning are lei·
Jong been a swimming power termen Lumpy Durk.in and
among the state's junior col-John Ree:g. Two (lthers -
Jeges-and with some top Bailey Abbott and Jim
sophomores returning f<>r the Oberg-give the Pirates much
1971 season-that situation needed depth.
doesn't figure to change. Abbott lettertd two seasons
The best of coach Jack ago at OCC and Oberg (from
Fullerton's swimmers is Chris San Diego) attended Orange
Gammon, the No. 1 butterOier Coast last year but did not
in the state. compete.
G a m m 9 n , affectionately Another top letterman back
called The Machine by team-is distance ace Steve Schwer.
mates. ha s a tong list of 1970 Ile finished seventh in the
honors. 1,650 free in last year's state
For instance, he was : meet with a time or 17:47.l
(I) The first place finisher and was also 12th in the 500
in the state JOO.yard butterny free (5:08.7).
Huntington We've Only Just Begun
~ i:: ?ths --Story of Uni Hoop Boss
ting By PlllL ROSS hearing through tht? grapevine
Huntingon Beach lf i g h • 1 Of 11" 0•1"' "11" "'" that the job WAS already Ioele·
basketball !tam, with six. After a wh-Ole di'!y or ed up by sorr.eone ehe."
slraightwinsbolsteringltsim· devoting a good.part .or one's The 6-0~ Driscoll was born
age, has gained an<:"'.her notch e~ergy to teaching hi.story to and reored on the soulh side
in the CIF AAA.A Top 10 poll high school students, it would of the Windy City where he
as coach Elmer Combs' Oilers see~ one would rush horn~. played basketball on the
(lU) are seventh. recline on , the old easy chair playgrounds and at that city's
Servite, beaten by Mater Dei and fall mto the lhroes of Brother Rice High,
by 10, dropped to ninth while 8 ~I:e~~~P·such ls not the His family moved to Utah
tbe latter gained 11 points . · . and he played prep baaketlmll
in voting, the same as rival ca~ in the , life of John there for a year before sh.if·
Bishop Amat . Driscoll , .varsity ba:ketb~ll ting to ~later Dei bis senior
Verbum Dei continuet lo lead ~ach at first year Un1vers1ty year.
AAAA ratings while West f{igh Sehool. , Driscoll performed for Alan
Covina and Los Altos are one· .For, the former ~1ater Dei Sa\\'yer at Orange Coast
two in the AAA. West Covina Hsgh, Orange Coast College College for two years then
beat Los Alt-Os last week. 66--and UC l~vine at~lele c~n attended Cal State CFulierton)
61, after leadin(! 42-17 al the really begin tc> hken his for a semester before
halt, 'lifestyle to the hit song, We've transferring to UCl He was
AAA Only Just ~gun, when the a member of the f i rs t l"IM• T11m ,.,1~11 · II nd
1• v...wm ~1 n.i.ii 1., evening ro s arou . Anteater cage squad und~r ~: ~~!'::/, l~~~~ <U·Ol l:~ S!nce the Trojans don't .have JOHN DRISCOLL coach Danny Rogers.
:; U";Yn1J.!i~U. :i.i.n :l L?eir ow.n gym as yet.. Dr1scoll After spending a year's
•· P1wJ11"1 111-•i ~1 finds himself spending noe· cagers at the beginning er coaching apprenticeship under J, Hllnllno1on 811th 02-31 ~J •· W•rr~n !I•·•) i• tumal hours at either Mission the current campaign. Bob Wetzel at OCC and
'· 5...-Vllt Cl,l.)) 21 I d.d . 1a. 0111• n.i.11 ~a Viejo or Tustin High Schools. tie stales. ''I real Y t n t leading the Costa J\1esa i·unior O!Mn: MOf\rOVli (!~ .. ) !6. IUmOI" ( f. n~·ll. LQv<>I• 1n·•J. Nol•• D•m• keeping a fatherly eye glued know what to expect a irst, varsity to a hvo year record
!9-J) IJ uc~1 M1 er 0.1 tU .. l. l l~hoo I h h I ' h f I ~' rt-1) 1 ••th. !..• H1t»"1 112-n to University's basketball pro--at oug m ope u we can of 24·19, Driscoll applied for I, Mllllk•n 111·5!, Ml fl"• ' J·SI, r· . h l I t 500 th• Plon"i'• n:s.s1 t ·~·n, L• s.rn• 00-n spects. 1n1s a eas . IS the Trojan position. S, Torr1nct {IJ·ll 4, SI. Fr1nci• " C d 111·2) J, S•n'• B1rbll•• (t-5> 1. In addition to practicing ~eason.. onsi ering himself very
1• "''" covin1 \1•s..to1 110 at either of the above sites The UCl graduate made a fortunate to have landed a
1• ~ "110" (I•· l 1 1~ after the sun goes down, the venture to a Tustin }!igh varsity coaching post at his 3' Hit) ps"..~bl&~,~1:;d>lr.o (1~0 101 •. U1>!•n<1 (lJ.JJ 102 Trojans also play most of School District board meeting age, Driscoll has one other
~: ~!~1111c":•[lf.3\11·3J ~~ their 2.2-game free lance pay off in fat dividends last goal in mind in addition to t ~~~t!' 11c\'f.~1 ~f schedule at night. year. a .500 slate for his quintet 100,~~i,hv~';11\]!·>1111 .• 1 u. ,0,.,f. And, the 26--year-0\d Chicago .. I v.·ent over to the board this time around.
ciJ.si n, Wortman t~•! '· "'""h native is the chief overseer meeting one nig~t and talked "Wt hope to have a solid r~v.M!~~1d!1• (9s~v11.· II.~~~ i1.~01~~; of all this nightly cavorling to Donald Castle (the late contender \\•hen we move into b'~~~ ~~~jt''I~.~~5lt!i"1c!'.ic~.rrovo on the hardwoods. University principal who died the Orange League next
i . ont•rlo 06.11A~. Mlr.:.111 !it·•l He is assisted by coaches last fall) about the opening," season.
3•.'e$~~11J~2·1/i1.2l 5, 51n11 ,1.,1 Gary Sise! (junior varsit.yl, Driscoll says. . "Having a 6-7 kid transrer
llC·l). ,.. Brian Quinn (sophomore) and "I was subsequently in-1n from somewhere would help
,~·,.•p:11~:"(1i~~.n 2• ••n~1~a 11•·?1 l\1ike Fazio (freshmen). terviewed and hired after too," he finishes.
•· 01~r1 01·11 s. Aqu1.,.. ft.~J. "Our players have a
DAJLV PILOT ff
Key Loop
Cage Tilts
Scheduled
Mater Dei High's sur1ing
1\<1onarchs go after victory No.
2 tonight when coach Jerry
Tardie 's Angelus Le a au e
qui ntet plays host to Pius X.
A victory for Tardie's 12-t
crew would enable the
Monarchs to enter Frida)"
night's confrontation w i t'h
circuit favorite Bishop Amat
with a 2-0 ·1oop record.
The Monarchs s t u D n e d
Servile in the fint round, 57-
47, knocking the Friars out
of the top position in Orange
County and down lo eighth.
All games are slated for 7
o'clock.
In Crestview League action,
Mission Viejo (2-2) will be
trying to 11et ba<:k in con·
tenLion after dropping a pair
of circuit crucials last weU
to Tustin and Katella.
Coach Pat Roberts' Diablo.s
trek to san Clemente to duel
the luckness (0-4) TritoM of
San Clemente, wOO have Jo(t.
their last three is~ues by mar-
gins of one. three and two
points.
Laguna Beach will be trying
to salvage its Orange League
season when roach Jerry
Fair's outfit hosts Saddleback.
The winner escapes the cellar.
And University Hi g h '•
seniorless Trojans will be
trying to snap back from il!
63-56 defeat to Bosco Tech
when they trek to Carlsbad
in a J100.league encounter.
Troy 1'011s
Hoop Poll;
Oilers 2nd
tremendous amount of in-
experience all lhe way do11'n
the line so our program shou!d
reflect the parlicular varsity
coach's philosophy," sa ys
Driscoll.
"And ," he adds. "a!! my
assistants ha ve philosophies
consistent to my own and it
works out very well."
USHER'S GREEN
STRIPE SCOTCH
Driscoll notes it was very
hard for him to make
START THE NEWYEAR OFF
WITH BIG $2.QQ SAVINGS
Freeway League I ea d e r any kind of determination con·
Troy has taken over the top ceming his seniorless Trojan
spot in the official listing prepjp;;;;;;;;;;;;oi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ..
basketball teams in Orange
County following a pair of
circuit wins.
The Warriors rep la c ed
Servite, which lost a 10-point
decision to Mater Del. The
leaders had been tied with
Villa Park, for second whic2
plunged Ollt o( the top 10
followi ng a pair td Crestview
League losses,
Huntington Beach High's
Oilers have moved Into second
place after two easy Sunset
League wins and K.a tella snap-
ped out of a three-way tie
for sixth to take over third
place, following verdicts over
Orange and Mission Viejo.
Mat.er Dei moved to fifth af-
ter chalking up decisions over
Unive rsity and Servile.
8ENEllAL
TlllE Wo'rB Dvorstockad •.•
Lowost Pries Evor On Nsw 71 Car
Calibra
GLASS-HELT TIRES
WIDE GENERAL JUMBO 780
Other football awards in-
cluded : most in-
spirational-Jim Yunt : most
improve d-Steve Divel:
out.standing frestunan -Rod
Cummings: and most valuable
t~am players-Chris Hector
and Don l\1artin,
in 52A, seven-tenths or a se-Sophomore John Blauer .and
cond off the national record. freshman Dave Bannon (Costa ~'.1c'r:';:~11.,1 "'1"::
12) Second in the state 200 Mesa) should give the Bucs ,, 1-1u"'1~~on s,1(11 111.Jl <11
Triton Duo
In Top 10
fly in 1 :57.9. added strength in the distance 1: ~r,111t. 111f1~11 ~ !. Miter o, 117·•) ?I (~) First In the Southern events. '· M1r1n1 o'·lj.,, "
California 100 fly and second Fullerton readily admits ~: k:r!l:.IH'r1~1i; \;
in the 200 fly. that the backstroke will also 1:: ~::::-~,.,Hi::..uos''tJl.s1 ~
(4) First in the South Coast be strong with Bill DeHuff Al~~l't";.' (l~~~ r·;~ch1,11>-J) • .!i~ cf.n
Conference 100 and 200 fly and Tom Reeser back for 11"';;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
events. another season plus freshman 11
(51 Athlete of the year at Bill Thomas (Costa Mesa).
Orange Coast. Kit 'Veiler (Estancia) ex. GOLF TIPS
To say the least. OCC should pects to be one of the top L•• k•,. l11el• .. " •
have little trouble scoring in breaststrokers. G•IHI Si..rt G•-· San Clemente's Steve Kalata tl1e butterfly events l his At the moment the Bucs
and Jeff titaslerson of Mission season. have no sprinters, bu t Pracrk • ., "'-• · ·
Viejo are the lone Orange The Pirales again \Viii have Fullerton is not worried. NEWPORTER INN
Coast area players on the a rather small sq uad (nine "We've always been able to PAR 3 GOLF COURSE
latest official Cre s tview swimmers, four divers), but make someone into a sprin· Sl .ao wltll tlli• •4 ... k 4_,..
League lop IO scoring list as l-"i n~t~h~a:.1 ~ti~st~l~s~so'fl'.'.m~e~F~in~e~la~le!<n~t.:_~t~er~.~" ~sa~y~s~t~h~t~OCC~~c~o~a~ch~.:___:ii,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.~ compiled by the D A I L Y
PILOT,
Kalota is massed in a three
way tie for the sixth spol
with Tuslin's Don Swaim and
Vifla Park's Pat Mclnally. All
have potted 64 points in four
games for a 16.0 average,
"'-YW I "' l. Scln,11!r, FOOIMll 100
2. JICkoon, 0•1noe JI
J, z~1kows1<1. Ty1!fn ,,
... Serntl, Orlmltl • lot
I. T. Long, El Moct.n1 • 611 i. (1!1) k&lct1,
San Cl1m•~lr ~
Sw1lm, Tutlln ~
Mcl~lllY VIiii P•rk
'· W~ltl<lon, k•f~lll
10. Mllle<"IOn.
Mr111on Vlt!o •
.. • .. ..
...
7~.D
H.S :t.o n.c
U,l
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lt.O
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Artist Pair
Scores High
The Laguna Beach duo of
Vince Whilnah and Bart Tabor
4lf't the Orange Coast area
representativu on the DAILY
PlLOT's official 0 r a n g e
,League top m scoring lbt.
Whitnah has tallied 37 points
In two league games for an
11.5 average. He's lini with
J3rea'1 Harry Dowell and
Sergio Echevarri• for fourth f'act on the charts.
.. MIY9t I 1, ,,_., 8<11 1 :a. Mfn<•, Sonar• _,
I. O.W""' El Oor•do l .c.. (Ill) W'hllnah,
LIOllflt IJtl(I! ' D<Jw<IH, 8r•• 1
Ec~1,,I•,
" " • •
" " V11e!>Cl1 2 , lT
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LIO\IM 1.-ch 1
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NOW II Al-New
Velide Resort
Opens in Palm Springs
Th• P•lm SprJngt Oeli1 Rfff't•tioNI V•hide RMOtf now ha tptce aveif•blt for
immedi•f• occupancy. And not fli• uwal, run-of-tM.miR. rK!°9•tion11l whid.
11ccommod•tions, eithfll Here, w. off., t'"" l.wn1 ••. w1v1119 pelmt : .. • ~ri:Gng
poof ••• luxurioU\ clubhovse witfi bat.rd ttblel I lount•· a Al of th1! fl~""''
w•ftr, electricity I sewer) for only SS• tl.y or $30 per ... ~n rf you te •
family of four. There'1 no fiMr locttio~ I milts from tM he.t of Pefm Springs, .6...meri~'s. grt•fnt duert pl.ygrovrtcf. lrint tM kidt-+My'I h.ve • IMD. Artd your
bo.t, too-the Silton S.t •ncl lh corlttn. ,,. only~ ... •1Y· lc.t 'P.M* '"
9oing erlremtfy ftsf, so WT,,.: ~ I
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'
GLASS·BELTED for long mllnge
POLYESTER CORD BODY for otrongth
Callbraled for • mnooth ride
Jumbo 780 ••• the same lire that comes on new 1971
cars. Overslock b ecause of the automolive strike.
We've got 'em ••• come and get 'em!
TWIN-STRIPE
WHITEWALLS
2 WEEK SALE ••• JAN. 11·23
2ror$49 2ror$59
S>lt ,t, 71·13 fl';.00·1~). M~ "'1~! •~d iomp~~l CtM. Ftd. l•. T•• ,, 11 90
p~< lite.
$!•• E 78.t~ p ,35·14), ~t• "'n•t iol!t,_ ~!~di o!I t•''· Fed. E.o, l•• '" 1~3S
f'll '"~·
Charge ii al General Tire
Sl11 F 7!-l C, F 78-lS jT,TS·lt, 7.7~1~1 , •• ~·• m~nr •l•n<l~•d c••~. FM. £• . -r •• (l '? 5~"""' $2.61 Der ti•• dt~end
4·PL Y NYLON CORD
Ou~~tA\[lJL~
General.Jet
• 4-Ply Nylon Cord • Ou1! lr"ad Oeslg11
• Dutaoen• Rubber TN*<i
7 75.11
7 1S·l~
S21 .25 I s2s.14 I ess.1c
I 2.5-1S
S24.DO $25.15
TiobeleM whlt ... •11 O•le•• p!v1 11.11 to ,,$3 FllCL E-'o 1•• JM• •••••
·-n<llne Or> 111• Ol•!I ••l ht"OI Clolit'lf,
~·o .,.., ,1,,,
TIRE
CHAINS
for
Pas1e119•r Can
and
CamfMr Trucks
~•I ll G 18·15 (9.~161,,. k!!I "'10f
•uoe1 t•"'· fill, £1, l•• '' S211 '"' Int ,
3 Piece
Wind 'N
Rain Suit
HDDl>-JACICIT
--iLACICS
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ONLY
$199
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GENEllAL
TlllE
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COAST
GENERAL
TIRE
115 W. 1 M., c:..i. M-540-1710 ~SOJJ
AYIRY
GENERAL. Tin
SIRYICE
16t41 IMCltl11l11•tl.H•INt,_IMdl
147·1111
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DAll't PllOT
Doctor and Nurse
Co11rt Clash Over Cash
Beatles Singing Different
By ANT HOi\l' COLLINGS
LOj';DQN I APl -In !heir
carelree days the Beatles
\VCre a l1appy family and sang
"Money Can 't Duy Me Love ·•
Now they are spiil. and drif·
ting into a lung court b11ll !l'
over their acc umulated
furtune -perhaps $10 million.
Priends fear that the court
battle. beginning loday, will
dredge up bitter details of
tensions dating back to the
death of the Beatles· fir sl
manager and a marriage that
came betY.een tl'.'O gifted
songwriters
A London court will he<ir
a mo,·r by Beatie Paul
rt1cCartney to end the rock
group·s I e g a I partnership
make a full accounting vr
their many ventures and givr
each Beatie his share of the
fortunt'.
mu11t change the business ar-
rangements 11•e h 11 v e , ' '
McCartney said bffore he
started the legal action.
··only by be ing ron1p!etcly
free of each other fin ancially
y,•ill we ever have any chance
or coming back together as
friends. Becau se it 's business
that has caused a lot of the
split.··
One of the main business
disputes, sources close to the
Bea!les say, i nvolved
McCartney's American wife,
Linda .
~I L-Cartney wanted he r
father, 1''cu• York la"'Yl'r Lce
Eastman, lo manage the
Beatles after the 1967 death
of Brian Epstein, who pul
them un the road from a
L1,·crpool basement eafe.
taking ch;.irge at Apple and
"this "''as a blow to Pa ul's
pnde , . They .,.,·ere no
longer boso m buddies ... "
r-.lany of Lennon 's act ivities,
such as peace demonstrations.
"'ere not sh:ired by the other
Beatles.
McCartney . 111 de.scribing
.... ·hat happened to him and
Lennon. uses v,·ords like ''trial
s eparatio n '' jlnd then
"divo rce."
and he"a oo longer In love
\\'ilh the oiher three of us ."
h1cCartney said last year.
Afte r Yoko arrived ,
htcCartney said. eventually hl'
and Lennon stopped ·••riling
such successful son gs as
''Yesterd11y :· ·' E 1 ea nor
Rigby " and ··r.1ichellc."
DIFFICULT
'"ll simply betame very dif-
ficult for n1e to Y.Tite "'ith
Yoko sitting ! her c, ' '
l\tcCartney said.
"If I had to think of a
line I s1ttrted getting very
nervous. I n1ight "'ant to say
something like 'I love you.
girl.' but with Yoko y,·atching
I always felt that I had to
come out with something
clever and avant garde . , .
Tune
recently said h-1cCartnl!y tried
to dominate the Beatles. The
other three were ''fed up with
being sidemen for Paul," he
told the American pop m•Js1c
magazine Holling Stone.
Lennon s~id lhe o the r
Beatles insulted Yoko, and he
added · "They despised her •
Hing y,·as all right ••
but the other two really
gave il to us. I'll never forgive
them.··
Desplte their troubles t~
four young men are still doing
y,•ell.
Income from lhe records
they once made logelht'r. their
filn1s and olher Bealll!.S ac·
tiv1ties keeps pouring in. One
estimate is $16 million a year,
Each of the four has record·
ed solo albums that have sold
\1•ctl. Early this n10nth }lar-
rison and Lennon were No.
2 and No. 3. respecti vl!ly, in
American album sales.
Bing Crosby is a small town Vermont d octor and Blythe Danner is the nurse
who learns the horrifying secret of his medical practice in ··or. Cook's Gar-
den," tonight's "Movie of the Week" at 8:30 on ABC', ('hannel 7.
The court \\'ill need months
to figure out ho\v much money
is involved The ma n 'f
business deals o! the Beatles'
v.·himsically named f i r 111 ,
Apple Corps Ltd .. incl ude
Beatles records and films and
records by other performers
such as h1ary Hopkin.
Lennon wanted someone else
-Allen Klein, an aggressive
LI S. businessman who h;id
nianaged the Rolling Stones.
Lennon convinced the others,
and Klein is now their
rnanager.
NO CONTRACT
''John's in love with Yo ko,
•·1 was jealous because o[
Yoko, and afraid about the
breakup of a great musical
partnership."
Giv ing his side of it , Lennon
The album by Harrison is
entitled •·All Things Must
Pass."
JANUARY 11
l:Oll 11 lfc .... (C) (60) JttTy Dunphy. Cl MIC ,.._me. {C) (&D)
8 T'9 Allll .. (C) (ID) Schtd-
ulff ...,...1 lncludt J1ck f'tlallCI,
f'ft lolnl . .letl'J' Clllllns, tnd Dr.
l..lll6ill Smith. Oo-host Is Alil1
klWrl.
Q Sil O'Clld Mttito: (C) ''C11·
tflk 191" Conclusion (1dv1nture)
'65 -Om1r Sh trit, Sltphen &o,id.
, .llnr• Muon, lli W1ll1ch. A Mon-
fil ,..11111 t Klptf l1om slivery ind
11r11nizu a btnd of fu1i1ive1.
0 Did \111 °"' (30) II Tiit nillsttnts (C) (30) •@ (JJ Stir Tl'lli (CJ (60)
fl')ArtStlllil
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I ...... 34 (C) (60)
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8 HEE HAW-HAVE FUN ! * TV's HAPP(EST SHOW! fJ Qjj (() H• H"' (CJ (60!
G11ests: Mtrty Robbins. COnn11
~mith.
0 @ (j) m "IC Mtvlt: 9' tllr
WHll: (C) "Dr. Coo k's G1rdtn"
(wspense) 'ro-Bin1 Croaby, F11n-
COnwt111, 8lyth1 01nnt1. Youn1
doctor 11turns to hi1 sm11I Ver-
mont town •nd diKOVlfl th1 Dot·
tor who ui•d ~im is lrNfint his
p1ti1nts •s ht don his 11rdt11-
nur1urln1 !ht he11thy, c1rln1 101
the sk:k i nd weedln1 out wht lt
ntcetstry. S1<1ry is bt:Jed on lh1
play by lr1 Levin. m Dtvld frOlt SHw jCJ (90)
Guests; Mrs. Woodt Guthrie, Ed-
munds & Curley, Julie r~h~.
Q) relony Squid (C) (JOl m l'lttun for liwini {30)
€IJ lt C1l1d1 lilft Cr~da (C) 130)
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Br•d Dil1m1n. l!elhtl lesli•. Petu
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WIYS }eop1rdilt hH ll\lllfitl• tnd
htr PQ$ition ln tocitty. film i.
b•sed on lht nowt l b7 John O'H111.
ID I IJIC!& I Wiien ll'1 Hlpfltn·
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9' ~ ......,. ... TOiiy Cur1i1 (C) (60) "f1lse Sprin1 u 01. Kiley
fl) ..... f• I °"'9 (C) (30) falls in lllv1 with 1 TB pl hent.
fit m frwtll « C.11"111ttKt1 (C) D1n1 Wynier t nd ll11bert l1n11n1
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11 l6du tilt " f 11. ffi ltm1 ind l'ouibilitits." .. I m I n II II U €I) A11pi1 11111.ital t30)
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D ~ J•li• (CJ (JO) "Cool Hind lD:lO m l il1 Joh11s ...... (C) (301
l ruct. Bob Hopi i nd Dr. Cht lltJ -. l• f 1111 (3~
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"A lumNr 1111 RJ ." Ctr! Btll M1rn1 lot. JdfflJ Hunter.
pttb " 1 40-Y.ll·tld man wtio 4D Mo•lt: "A Welt 11 tlll Sin~
tri. lht ti5"1• lif1 and blC:OIMS (dram•) '46-01n1 AndrtwS. Rk.11-
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h....,.lld's lift H111nn ,. 11Y1 titr A 1roup t1Mr111r *ilDll Is l11tured.
4111......, !ht WIN If t1tddl11 ttli ll:JO II !fl (j) lllll'f Crll'il (t) "A
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l:JI IJ "TIM ...... t1 12114 strMr
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-httr lald11in. t• • (t) .,... 1.,.i111" (mu*-1J 'St-Lina T11m11r, lzlo l'i1111.
z• DCC> "to.eoo ltdrlt111~ <com·
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-l111Nrr1 $!1nwrt'. Jot! McC111.
'Encotu1ter'
Show Airis
Real Dran1a
By CYNTHIA LO\'i'RY
NI::\\! YORK IAP ) -An
"encoun({'r session ," 17 hour~
of nonstop exploration Qf per-
sonal hangups 1n a group was
the vivid subject of a candid
report on the public broadcast-
in g stations Mor.d~y night.
Part of the "Realities" ser-
ies , the 90-niinute prog ran1
sho1ved 10 troubled men and
women. ranging from the
early 20s lo middle age, gath-
ered inforn1ally in a living
roo1n selling The ensuin g at'·
t1\•itics y,·ere guided by a psy-
thologist. Ur .\lark (;o!dste1n
I !is voiec w<is h(•;irtJ occas1on-
;;1ly as he clued the telc,•i:;1on
audien~ on what was going on
or about results hr sough!.
The three other Beatles ma v
not want to dissolve the old
parlnership. even though the
four haven'l played togelher
for years. It 's all because of
someone they once satirized
in song: "The Tax Man."
TAX BENEFITS
they are all 30 or in their
late 20s. By being in a
partnership John L e n non .
George Harrison ::.nd Ringo
Starr enjoy tax benefits \\'hich
they'd Jose if McCartney win~
his case. Their friends say
dissolving t he partnership
could mean a quick sale of
assc!s. bringing a whopping
capital-gains tax for the young
nlillionaires.
McCartney hi1nself .,.,·ould
suffer heavy taxes, yf't he
still \\'ants to kill off the
Beatles as a legal en01y.
"For my own sanit y \\'e
··r lhought. and I still think,
!h<1t Linda 's father would have
bf'en good for us all," Paul
said. ··n the others want
Klein. ell, lha t's up to thein,
but I've never signed a con·
tract with him."
McCa rtney di slikes a JO-year
con tract all fou r Beatles sign·
ed in 1967. It makes them
share their earnirigs, aside
from song writings. through
Apple .
1'\icy share evr n the earn·
1ngs that one receives from
a ~eparate recording
"We should alt have our
:ndepcndent incon1es," h c
said. "And let us v.·ork out
for ourselves the ac -
companying problems.
"If there "''as one ~1ng!c
oll'n1ent in the split I'd s;1y
ll was the arriva l of Yoko
Ond." s11id Hu nter Da vis. of-
ricial biographer of t h e
BeJ!!e~. referring to Lennon"s
Japanese v,·ifc.
Davies said Lennon began
Musical of 'Exodus'
Fails to Hit Murk
FilH! Critics' Cltoiees
Smiling \Y1nners of the 1970 New York f''llm Critics a\.l'ards are (from left)
Glenda Jackson. best actress ("\Vomen 1n Love"): Chief Dan George, best sup·
porting actor ("Little Big '--tan"); Karen Black. best actress t"F'ive Easy
Pieces''1, and Coll een De,•:hurst, accepting for hu.o;hand George C. Solt, best 1lu· ses.s1on started quietly
w I t h the participants. all
s!rangers, sitting around . ner·
vous ;ind rernolc. At that point
the in1pa1ien1 \•1cwcr 111ight
have strayed lo another chan·
nt•I. which y,ould have been <:
n11stakr Oril'e nerves and shy.
nes.s 11·erc overcome, 1t eX·
plocletl into real-li fe dran1a.
By \\'ILLJA,\1 f,LQVEH
N~.:\v YORK <AP1 -Leon
Uris. aulhor of be.'ll ·st'!ling
novels. trie~ de~p1'rately to
turn one or 1hen1 into a
musical. ''Ari," wh i c h
lumbered into the Hellinger
Theater last week
. actor {"Patton"). the film , thr.. episodic sequence 1--------------------------------
The se~sion . based on "a
new theory and technique or
psych!!therapy," Go ldstein ex-
plained. opened up v.·hen a
bl ack \\-'Oman suddenly said.
'·For the first time is many
years. rm not color-conscious
today al all.''
A Young man shyly reported.
"1 I i k e people, everybody "
This provoked a tirade from an
aggressive girl, \\'ho 11'ound up
in tears confessing great in-
secur11v and a ronv1ct1 on 1ha1
nobody liked her
After that , 11·01nen spukr
frt'i'IV of 1nari1al problerns 1'
v,•om8n separ<1ted from hr r
husband talked nr JOn<'linC'S~
A man admitted he .... ,.nted his
y,·ife to rernain ov rr"'eight be-I
In reworking hi s book "EJC -
odus." y,·hich ali;o \va s the
source of a mov ie a fe w years
ago. Uris has trier! to cra1n
1n more deeds. t haracters
and. yes. propa gand<i, than
ll'.'O hours of stagecraft can
SU!lain .
Ills titu lar hero, a leader
of the undergroun<I l lagan<1h
on masquerade n11ss1on 11110
a Br itish detention cn mp for
Jrws on Cyprus in !9-17. sePms
tnotivated more l:i.v petu la nl
arrognnce than fi red b v
patriotic !deal1sn1 If you
ha"·en't read ihe book. or seen
ranges frrnn chaotic t o
awk'ol·ard t . I
It is 1101 until the secondl
h::i!r that he hc::.vy-:set en·
deavor d e v r I ops sotne
drarnatic 1nomentun1 as a
shipload of refugee childre n
refuse food unti l the rusly
ark is per1ni!led to :.ad for
Polestine. Even then. inept
1vri11nc and cloddish plotting
stifle 1nu ch emotional
response. I
\\1i!h such nlalerial. Dav id
Cryer's 011ly opportunities to
do much with the title ro!e
arr in a <.i>uple ol spirited
hy1nns to salvauo n cotnposed
hy \\'alt ~m lth. a Color<ido
friend of Uris ThP. novelisl.
doubling as lyr1C"1sl. has a
fr1c1lc wa} "'ith rhvn1{':;,
;11!hough hr over-depends on
"~hrilnm'' for the song<> of
racial pride.
t;u1se he .... ·as ::.!raid he wou ld lr---------.---------------"""-•il lost' her if she Wl're n1orr at-~ '"""" •. ,, ...... Tiw.rr. 11crc furiou ~ ::irgti-~·11111
n1cn1s and at one poin1 blowc; ••
"M·A·S·H" is the
bast American
war comedy
since sound
came inl "
Y.l'rf' a I 111 n s I struck f\1 t Ol 1111 Coul Hw,.
anothC'r , a 1TI11n and \1·11man l ~ co•o" .. ttl'L MA'
skippt'd h!1 nd-in-hand arllt1nd ?On c,.1111~ r. pr~s
the roon1 Jl~·sterical moments
of n1r rr1n1cnt ""'ould suddenly
diC' into sill'nce or f'~plodc in
a torrent of tears The object
of the se~sion wa.~ 11> ~el
1hese people' lo ll'CJ emohons-
fear. angf'r, p;iin or love . il
did not rnaller -and tal k
iiboUl tht'lll I
A"
lngo Preminger
Production
The program wa-. vc r1• Joni::.
but once thl! \ir11rr i:ot inlo
thf' th ing, it \\·as intense\~ ab-
so rbing I
At Irvine
A discussion of (ireck
tragedy and a film version
of Euripides· "f.leclra··· will
l:ie pl't'scntcd in the Science
Leclure llRll al UC Irvine
at 7·30 p.m. Thursday. Jan.
" The pubhe pro1:ran1.I
rescheduled frorn Jan 21. 1s
sponsored by Symposium.
undergraduate c\Rssics soci!'t)'
at UCI. Members of lhc
faculty of the Department or
Ch1ssi~1 will m1tke b r i e r
presentations on G r c c k I
tragedy prll'lr to the sho"•ingl
of the fllm directed by
Michael Cacoyanni~. I
-:!!l Color by 0[ LUXE •
Panavision~
-ALSO PLAY(NG-
Thc ~tory u r d beaut1tul girl's lrlf't1111 1·
bet\veen thP i1ges o( 1'J .ind ::i ~.
/'.,\!IO~Al Q '1fRAl.. l'l(TURt5 "'-'i1 "'" • ·..i.,,-"'-"'"'' !!) 1• 4C>
ENDS TON(GHT
Elliott Gould
"MOVE" •nd
"SICILIAN CLAN"
STA~TS WIDNESDAY
"Orte' •I tllt 111MI dtnt lltf,I c11flll'lf,-t1111111at 111 Itel/It , ....... "
-l lrM lrolett111I"•
.. A wl•llfr" -1"111,i.ey
"OR• ,, , ... 11tlj11r llllYlei SYrpriw1 ., Ille VII I ,"
-llt i Re.4, H111My
H11ppl..-i. 11
0Yf1Ckltef ~
GENE WLDER
'WllCll..f1;o.."1t.11:;~s.i•1s PREM IERE ORANGE
COUNT\' ENG AGEfl.I ENT
ACAOiMY MfMBIRS'
Ali ll1e6r1w • Ryu O'Rul
¥OUR CARO AOM•IS YOU AN D A
GU E!! TO ANY PE~fORMAricl
.....
• tou 1 ••• •T -.w;u '""' """ ~1 •"001 M•t• • .. , 0100
PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
John Marley & Ray llillud
ELLIOTT GOULD
,~ o JI ,.~ 1 h .:l\"'!:I ~100.i· O"
"I LOVE MY ••• WIFE"
A Howard Hawks Producll()n
"RIO LOBO"
lf's a Feline Frolic ..
WALT DISNEY .,,..,u .. 1·
*~' .
/ I 1vo1.·o~ 1-lf lJ L NE W CAATOON f(A f UPE '
ALSO FROM THE ORPHAN • GlfNN FORO I•
WALT 0(1N£Y "NIOK, ELEPHllf'
Somebody Fights City Hall • .. Tickels at SI.~ each "'Ill
tw. available at t ~ Dtp<1rt· -M~~-~1~ :
Hu manltieJ-Soeial Scienl-es (~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~::]~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Who fighlA city hell ? The DAILY PILOT does. That's who. And where else can
you find cogent cornmentary on your community? Check. the editorial page of
YOL:lt co1nn1unity·s dally ntw1paptr, the DAILY PILOT, of course.
Bu ilding and at the door the Also e "ZIG ZAG" -•oth In Co(or -R•ted "R" I .,, . u --ntg 1! o 1he progr;nn
•
I
I
' ' ' •··~··-·--······ . ' . . . . • ' '
Follows MGM
Fox Puts Props
On the Block
By GENE HANDSAKER
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -COi
any use for the whee.Jed Teddy
bear drawn on a string by
toddler Shirley Temple in
''Capt!lin January?" Or the
oval couch of Marllyn Monroe
.and Yves Montand in a dream
sequence of ''Let's Make
Love~"
These and about 2,000 other
Hems including ersatz gorillas
from "Planet or the A[M!s"
and a gory-looking dummy
head that rolled downstairs
in "Hush, Hu.sh, S wee t
~harlotte, '' will be up for auc-
tion neit month.
Twentieth Century-Fox is
going the route taken several
months ago by another finan-
cially troubled studio, MGM,
in disposing of its old movie
props.
But less extensively , MG ,\1
sold a vast , 40-year ac-
cumulation rang i ng from
Clark Gable's raincoat to the
55,000 properties -one; that
have served their purpose,
can't be used again, according
to supervising set decorator
Walter M. Scott.
Scott thinks the auction
should bring ''anywhere from
a quarter or a million dollars
up."
MGM hasn't said how much
it realiud from selling its
gigantic collection outright to
an auctioneer. Trade talk is
that MGM got $1.3 million
and that the auctioneer sold
the props and costun1es to
the public for somewhe;e
between $4 million and $7
million.
Fox is different, too , in that
it isn't selling its goods to
the auctioneer. It will retain
possession until lhe bidder
buys.
The auction, Feb. 25-28, will
be the first by the new \Vest
C-Oast house of Sotheb y,
Parke-Bernet Los Angeles. H's
a division of Parke-Bernet
OA1LY PILOT Slaft P'hfh;
Lovers' Quarrel
Jana (Stevens) Newport attempts to rekindle the ·affections of a sullen Tom
Threadgold in a sce ne from "The Unexpurgated Memoirs of Bernard Mergen-
deilcr," one of six short plays to be presented by the Irvine Community Theater
under the title "Shortstuff." The program opens Friday for three wee kends at
the old UC Irvine studio theater with an 8 o'clock curtain.
Tutidiy1 JMIUll'J 19, l,71 DAILY ,JLOT Jt
Broadwa11 Notes
Theaters in NY Filling Up
By JACK GA VER
NEW YORK {UPI) -The
new year, which brings the
last half of the 1971)..71
Broadway aeaoon. s h o u I d
result ln more actJvity In lhAI
stttor than there was in the
first semester, but the irn-
provement doesn't promise to
be gN!al.
There will be additional pr1>
ductions. but at present there
are only JO shows definitely
scheduled, and three of lhose
are part of the repertory
operation in Llnt."Oln Center.
The Ci:nter has scheduled
re vivals of "The Playboy of
the Western World." "An
Enemy of the People" and
•·Antigone."
Two other prospects also are
revivals of classics
Moliere's "The School for
Wives'' and Sha kespeare's "A
Midsummer Nig hl's Dream."
spots of t.ht early half of
the :!eUart haa bMl'I I.be suc-
cess of "Sleuth" at the Mualc
Box, not only trom tht 1land·
point of its eicelltnce, but
abo because of iU financial
status.
* In lhese times of high J>ro-
duction and operatiang costs,
when it seems to take forever
for even a smash hit lo get
out out of the red , thi.~
i\nthooy Shaffer su s pen s e
drama reeouped tht entire in·
vestment of StS0,000 within ZJ
days here. One reason this
was done so quickly is that
the tryout engagement in
Washington, D. C., turnl'd a
nice profit, which doesn't hap-
pen often on a break-in tour.
* Duke Ellington has been
signed to supply the score
for "The Hu.suer." a musical
scheduled for next season, by
a new production firm made
up of noveli st Kurt Vonnegut
Jr., Lester M. Goldsmith and
Mlchael J . Kane.
Jackie Gleason. The .how wID
havie a difterent title.
* JMeph Kipness and Lawr-
e:nce K.a!tha. producus of the
successful ''Ap pl aus e''
musical at the Palace, have
acquired a new com@<!)',
"Father's Day,'' by Oliver
Hailey. They plan to aet It
on this season, with Donalrt
r-.foffat directing ind playing
in il.
* Now that the actors' strike
again s l olf·Bro1dway pro-
ducers has been seltled afttr
31 diys, 8roadw1y producers
art ne.xl in line for contract
negotiations >A'ith Ac tor I'
Equity Association. T b e
present contract ends in June.
The union is certain to •k
1 good rise In the minlmum
salary .
Pilot Film
:!~:'Showboat'' river steamer.
::·: Fox i1 clearing out only a
:::.traction of its approximately : ·.
Galleries in New York and------------------------------------
Also listed are a new co1n-
edy, "Four on a Garden,"
with Ca rroll Channing and Sid
Caesar: a re viva l of a 1920s
musical, "No, No, Nanette:"
a new musical, ' · A r i : ' '
"Follies," a musical, and
"Murderous Angels ."
If lhe title sounds familiar.
it should because it is based
on Walter Tevis' novel which
was turned into a movie lhat
starred Paul Newman and
HOLLYWOOD I UPI)
Paramount Television cem-
pleted production of it! 90-
minute feature television pjlot,
''Esc ape ." s tarring
Christopher George and Avery
Schreiber.
• .
·'
Orchestra
Auditioning
Tl1i s Week
' In an effort to encourage
~ Southland vocalists. lhe l.lls.
: Angeles Philharmonic w i 11
ho I d auditions Wednesday
• µitough Friday to fill botJl fea-:· fured and supporting roles in
' future programs.
'"Ille orchestra is seeking
local singers with either pro-
: 'fesslonal or academic
• background which w o u I d
. enable them to appear as
11oloists with the Philharn1onic
. in operatic, oratorio and other
vocal works," Jaye Rubanoff.
rtrchestra manager sa id. The
appearances will be in both
the Music Center a n d
Hollywood Bowl.
Applicanl8 for the [irst twe
days ef auditions -from
which 12 finalists will be
selected for the third day -
must submit a 11 h o r t
biography, reviews and pro-
grams before an audition will
be scheduled.
The r;ingers must also bring
their own acco1npanist.
A panel of judges includi n~
Gerhard Sa mu e I , the
orchestra's associate con-
ductor and Rubanoff \\·.ill
select the finalists for the
22nd. Music dirertor Zuhin
Pl-tehta and Executive Director
Ernest Fleischmann will make
the final selections.
1t1 sotTI
COAST l'L&JA
an affiliate of Sotheby & Co.
of London.
Scott, 63, a winner of aix
Academy awards for set
deco r ation -on "T~
King and l,'' "The Diary
of AMe Frank," "Cleopatra,"
"Fantastic Voyage" an d
"Hello, Dolly!" -led a tour
of a huge sound stage cram-
med with gooi:is for sale.
There were-
A three-wheeled cycle of the
1870s, with side-by-side rather
than fore-and-aft seats. a type
said to have been the in-
spiration of the song "A Bicy-
cle Built for Two'' •..
Brass -based, padded arm
rests once used in elegant
stores by customers being fit-
ted for gloves .. ,
Tallulah Bankhead's chaise
lounge in ''The Royal Scan·
dal ," the ornate desk used
by Marlon Brando a s
Napoleon in ''Desiree" and
t:dwa rd G. Robinson's 1S30
French bed from "House oi
Strangers."
Chandeliers, antique pain-
tings, chairs. tables, rolltop
desks, Victorian ums. sedan
chairs. perambulators, life
jackets stenciled "S. S .
Titanic," and Paul Newman's
bicycle in "Butch Cassidy and
the Sundance Kid."
Stored eslewhere. said Scott,
are fishing boats, 130 wagons,
fire equipment of the 1880s
and miniature battleships.
Shirley Temple's Teddy bear
stood forlornly on top of the
grand piano ornamented for
the White House East Room
in "Wilson." Scott said he
had no idea what price the
Teddy bear would bring, but
he recalled it originally cost
only S3.
,.lt
PAICflK
A1FfP<5i I I
' '
-umllftl . _..,.
--Miii•~ _......, llUlllftS
WIUUI UIMUITINlll
K•fll.I ""!" n.... I~ A.,DI! I r"' ,,... l .. l
_r,#Ol!l•M-MIO · H,n
$olf I UI .-tit! )Jiii l.Jll-1..&.Jt.OI
They~re High Hollers
Si1iatra, Martin, Berle Delight Vegas
* Still another British success
is on its way here. This ooe
is "How the Other Hali
Loves" by Alan Ayckbourn.
1 t will have pre-Broadway
engagemenl.s in Palm Beach,
Fla .. Washingtnn, D.C., and
Boston. Robert Murley starreci
in it in London. Phil Silvers
and Sandy Dennis will do It
here.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Three entertainers, and only
three, gladden the hearts of
casino operators in La s
Vegas: Frank Sinatra. Dean
Martin and Millon Berle.
Their affection for the trio
is impersonal.
It Is, in fact. purely selfish .
Berle and the two Italian
slngers fill the cavernous
theater-restaurants on the
blazing strip to overflowing.
But then so does Elvis
Presley, LlDerace and some Miltie said. puffing a black
of the others. l'igar,
The principal difference is "Maybe il 's because we
that Uncle Miltie, Frank spent so 1nuci1 iime periorm-
and Dino bring in the high ing In night clubs that a lot
rollers from Dallas. Miami, or the patrons relhember us
New York, Chicago, Los better than some or the others.
Angeles and other bastions of "Guys who watched me and
hig h stake dice and card Frank in clubs are fai rly well
games. Presley fans are !till a fixed fin ancially by now and
bit youngish to gamble the a lot of them don't object
* One of the really bright
Heads Oscars
kind of money the operators to a little aclion at the tables. JiOLLYWOOD (UPI)
like to see hit the tables. Millf111 lamented the facl Elmer Bernstein, oscar-win-
Liberace fan s buy suits wilh that few others can attract ning compOBer. was voled
two pairs of trousers. big spenders. chairman or the m o v I e
Barbra Streisand's followers "When .Joe E. Lewis was Academy Awards Policy Com-
come to hear her si ng. and in his prime he brought in millee for 1970-71.
walk right past the spinning some of the biggest gamb!ersli!i;~~~;~~;;~il roulette wheel, the. blackjack in the country," Berle-said.
EXCLUSIVE
~¥P'
Donald Suther\and "'
ALEX
IN WONDERLAND
c.Mlt"IAIU.ULU'"
... otfk• Op-. .5<U fl.II'.
SI.ow ~la•ll 1>! 6':IO~O~··~· '""'""'
-~, .... • --· MJ·l•U
c. ... ...., ...
~wf.-.,.frOll!7tlOllp.ni. ~x •DPOeT•uca • -..-
Tryouts Set
For Drama
In Clemente
table and the gang around "Gamblers even came in from
the crap games. Europe to see him perform. -----------------------
Some recognized sta r s, "Frank is a fine attraction
Auditions for Frank Cilrey's
drama "Who'll Save th e
Plowboy'' will be held Sunday
and t.1onday, Jan. 24 and 25,
by the San Clemente Com -
munity Theater.
Mary Eastman, who form·
erly operated and directed
the Oraoge Studio Theater,
wHI stage the production,
which calls for four men. two
women and a boy 8 or 9
years old.
The riading!'i will be con·
ducted al 2 o'clock Sunday
afternoon and 7:30 p.m. on
Monday at the Ca b r i I I e
Playhouse. 202 Aveni d a
Cabrillo, at Ola Vista, in San
Clemente.
Further Information may be
obtained by calling the theater
at 49'l--0465.
,
especiaJly the television varie-because after he does his show
ty, do not even fill the big he goes out Into the casino
rooms. thus necessitating an to enjoy a little action . Hun-
increase in the price of rooms. dreds of people like to say
There was a time when they were shooting craps with
a gambler was provided with Frank .··
free booze as long as he '°""""
continued to throw the dice.1 ~~;;:~2 And wh en he looked hungrylJ
he could still call for 7-11
while a free chuck wagon
breakfast was served. Nol any
more.
"I really can't understand
why we bring in the guys
wilh the big bankrolls," Uncle
Film Scored
HOLLYWOOD I UPI I
Concert viollni$1 Isaac Sl.efn
has recorded the musiClll
score for the rooft&p scenes
of "Fiddler on the Roof" for
United Artists.
I See by Today's
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MYRA
BRECKINRJOOE
..... _. /V\x -----c-...... ,. •. \.AJ-------
JOHN \WlYNE.11
A.tt-d .... ~
"RIOLOBO• ~
4tlctno:r·· -ALSO l(;.PI
"IF MELVYN DOUGLAS
DOESN'T CAP HIS CAREER
BY WINNING AN
ACADEMY AWARD
FOR 'I NEVER SANG
FOR MY FATHER:
THERE'S NO JUSTICE!"
"HIGHEST RATINGI ONE OF THE YEAR'S
OUTSTANDING I" -W¥tDA HAU ,., •. °",_
"THE BEST PICTURE OF THE YEARI"
"MELVYN DOUGLAS IS MAGNIFICENTI"
-1urm H (~Iii, H[W YQll'I< MAGI.lit<(
"MELVYN ooueus IS A JOY TO BEHOLOI"
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BESTI"
.... -................ _
MfLVYN DOUGLAS GENE HACKMAN DOROTHYSTICKt-l'V
.ind [STELL[ PARSQl\JS t.. "I NEVER SANG fOR MY FATHER"
~-.. !IOlll-TNCXISOOI _____ ., ___ "_li'5'fil~·aorJ
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stereo103FM
• • • • music music music music
good music
' '
Ev·eryon• H_os
_ Something lh,at
Someone Else Wants
T\ltsdly, January 19, 197!.
\
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS -The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast;... Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
.......... _ ......
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trode It
With a Wan t Ad
. I
11
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Coton. del Mair Huntington a. .. cn
• '
2629 fJarbor, C.J\.f.
546-8640
Thinking of
SELLING?
Let us help, "·e 1~'lll buy
your house loday for its
t.11 valu<'. Thi' unly ad-
ditional chargt' is 1 ~d of
thr selling tirice. No
gi1nmick.~ and no addi-
tional expense. W• nffd
hovtH I It doesn't cos t
anylhini:: to call and find
oul -YQU might even
save!!
GET
E xceptional 3 Bdr m.
$162. mo. total pm1.
Taki' over subject lo
eJcisting loan, thil is the
cleanes't home Wt''ve
seen in a long 1 ime -
o~'11er asking $23.500 -
see lt now,_ or it will be
SOLD·!·
ACTION
Ea1t1ide
4 Bdr m ., 2 Bath1
No money down to VPls
· low low down 10 any-
OOdy. You get a spacious
4 bedroom home Costa
Mesa's most desirable
area, with a double ga-
rage -convenienL built-
in }dtchen -oversizro
lol call now you'll be
glad you did.
FASTER
Costa M•sa
F ixer Upper
$176. total down pm t
plu:i1 n01·mal closini:;
cos Lo;, and this 4 bedroom
2 ba th home ~·i ll b+>
yours. All il nef'ds is
riaint and carpel. But
at this price you can't
misi; -Asking $24.000 •
make offer r
FROM
* * MOVE RIGHT IN INCOME Cd.M, 2 houser;. 9o/D * * * * TAYLl>R CO. elJnJa J j/e
To this WESreLIFF charm-retum. CJoee to eYerythlng.
ina 3 bedroom 2~ bath $38.500. J>hOne 499-3622
FAMILY home on secluded 1 c~ .. -,~.~Me~.-.----
comer within waUdng dis-1 '°="°-='-"'------
WOWI $24,500!
GI/FHA Term1!
or Low int VA Loa n
l Bedm1. 2 ha, crpld, fncd.
HAF FDAL R EAL TY
842-4405
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
SO. OF 15th ST.
$30,700 WINDOW ON THE SEAi $8 I ,500 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOM ES tance to sc.hoois & major Distinctive
shopping. New wall-wall car. Executive Home pet, c~y fireplace in over-or Eves: 541-2446
Luxurious custom Corona del Mar home ov-52 Linda Iii• Dr .
e rlooki~ famous "Arch Rock". Ideal for Cust 6 BR., study, s bath home w/4 frplcs., sized living nxim. Out of • 3700 sq. ft. of CHARM~!
town owner will consider * Magniticent view of the
NICE 3 Br, w/!an1 rrr1. Nr: That's right~ UnbelievahJ~ In
Ne1Vpol't Beach. Vie w, Large
BR's. Formal dining rm.
Huge paneled fam. rni. IVlth
cathedral beam ceilings. 2
_fireplaces + BBQ. Cherry
kitchen. 2 baths. Lath_ &
plaster cus!om built. Terrac.
e<I rear yard. Brick patio _
Won't last. Hurry and call
(714) 962-5585.
couple. Sparkling close-up vu of the ocean circular stairway, decorator selected carp.
& the sound of the surf make for joyful living. & drapes . Shown by appt. $210,000 lease _ Jeese option and wiU Harbor
Fnvy & n('1V elt'111entary
sch!. Want 16 sell fast!
Princi pals Only! 893-·1076
Huntington Ha rbour
SACRIFICE -$8!1.00J -J\tag-
nificent 4 br, 4 ba water-
front home in Huntington
Harbour. JOl' \\'aterfront.
57' dock. Call 67S-8'200 for
appt, Principals only.
assist in financing sale, Out. * Loaded with special fea-
standing value in choice tures
area. $39.950. ASK FOR -BulJt.in vacuum system QUIET CUL-DE-SAC For compl•te infor mation on Mammoth !iv . rm., isolated master suite, 3 ,.11 homes & Lots, p le a•• call: DICK DUANE. -Electronic oven
-Intercom
-Price includes washer
bd rm, DR. Yard has roont for pool. $69.950.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
"Our 25th Year" 833 Dover Dr ., Suite 3, N.B. 642--4620 Colesworthy WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors I'!"""""'"""'""""""'"""'...,."""'"""'"""'"""""""
2111 Sen Joaquin Hill1 Road General G•neral
+ dryer. relrigerator-
freezer
-Electric garage door * .1 SoacioU!! bedrooms FOREST l OLSON N E WPORT CENTER 644-4910 t===-----1 ;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= * * * * * * cu~".iE:L~.H~:%'iNo NEWLY LISTED
& Co.
Rcat!or
Ne\\'port Beach Office
1028 Bayside Dr.
675-4930
• Unique. TM-level • Con.
temporary design
La guna Bea ch
G~,-n~,-,,-,-------~G~,-.-,-,-,~,-------I LAND near NEWPORT
------------·-----·!BAY. Elegant entry, large
living Rrn., with marble tire·
place, formal Din Rm., all
Own TEN Connnercial rent. Cute older 2 BR & 1 BR units elec1ric Kit. including elr.e-
<.ils plus additional resident. on corner Joi. I0'7D Down, tronic oven and breakfast
PERFECT TAX
SHELTE R
N EWPORT H EIGHTS
T R IPLEX
ial & parking income in
EAST lITH STREET shop.
ping complex. RentaJ in·
come oHscts all expenses in·
eluding payments enabHng
buyer lo 1ake full deprecia-
tion, tax and interest deduc-
tions. Priced 10 srJJ at
$119,000 ll'ith 29 % down. Call
call /or app!, Only.,. room. 1''am. Rm., with used
$32,500 brick fireplace, Jarge ser-1
NO DOWN TO VETS
Large 3 BR \\'ilh 20x20 rum-
pus room, hrdwd floors.
Rear yartl compJ block wall -
ed wilh jumbo cement patio
area. VA appraised at. . ,
for details. $24,600
.:!ll!l!llll!li!llllllllll• 1· C U 5 TOM F OU RP LEX
vice porch and lhree car
garage. FIVE BEDROOMS -
3~'ri BATHS plus large 800
Sq. rt. all pufiiose rumpus
room. The perfect answer in
a perfect settlng for a large
fan1ily. Priced Ix-Jo\\' market
at ouly $79,5()(1 -Shown by
appolntment.
Evenings Call 548.326,'i
Choice Newport area, 3 BR
& 2 BR units. Ideal owner
occupied & tax shelter prop.
erty. $9,120 Income. $12,000
Do\\·n.
$75,000
Beautiful Hawaiian MODERN
home in Mesa de! Mar, wit h
HARDWOOD 1'~LOOR.S &
SHAKE ROOF. Hey, don 't
stop yet because it has an
enclosed PATIO ROOM &
S\VIMMING PCX>L too!! 11'11
a lovely J bedrm beauty on
a quiet street with lo!s of
privacy. Take over 5~ o/o
annual percentage rate loon,
payable $182 per nio. loci
taxes. Full price only $31.950.
* Price -Unbelievable
$67;000_
OCEAN VIEW
White water view from Early
California stylf' h0n1e. Tile
546-2313 entry with double \\'ood
NEAR HARBOR HIGH doors. Open beam ceiHng.
Lge. rustic 4 BR. 3 Ba. home Lots o! wood tllruouL Built.
over 2,000 sq. ft . Bit.in kit.: in kitchen With dishwasher_
family roon1, frplc., huge •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiio I 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths. mstr. BR., drest>ing room, $31,900
Grocian bolh. 2 P•ti"'-A~ SUPER SHARP!
31.lme 5\. "I. loan, Price AO $.1Ei,500 Looking fur total pnyments O -'a.· -for aroul1d S20!l a month? I-• 16/
--
See this spacious 3 bedroom, REAL ESTATE
2 balh home with new car.
.--LL -.II 11-t-pets & drapes. dbie garage 11~ GJenneyre St. ~wow,.DIWllW & Jots of exlra.s. Very low Gt-9473 549-0316
COATS ~--clown payment required with EMERALD BA y & FHA term11. F ull price no1v
WALLACE BJ• 700 only $Z3.950. Fast posses-3 BR. 3 Ba .. sep. Jiv. rm.,
REAL TORS .rl ~2430 dln. rm .. tam. rm S75,00J. -546-4141-sionr Call 540-1151 Heritage 716 Emerald Bay By App't.
(_Open Even}ngs) CORONA DEL MAR !!!R!!!'!!!!'!!!"o.,',,'.,.'.,°"'!!!!!'!!!'.,".,'.,·)....,.,.,,I Bill Grundy, R•altor
A most delight1u\ home, very ~18,750 OR LSE OPI'ION 833 Dover Dr., NB 6424620
close to NewpoM Bay. P•g·
EllGIBLE VETS Spacious E-side 2 BR, 11,2 100• Vie1v of ocean &
ged flooring is just one of Ba. to\\.·nhse condo. Like Cat alina.. Small but
Inc. Real!ors
19131 Brookhurst Ave.
J-luntington Beach
HARBOR HIGHLANDS
Hard to find HARD WOOD
F'l.OORS, massive comer
FIREPLACE, all applianc-
es including freezer, refrig.
erator. washer, dryer, dish-
washer, built·in double oven
range. Al\ for $36,000 and
EXCELLENT TERM.'t Call
for details NOW!
Walker & Lee
Realtors
W.13 Westcliff Drive
646-7711 Open 'ti! 9:00 PM
EARLY AMERICAN
I SELLER PAYS COSTS!! EASTBLUFF
POOL HOME 1
Evenings Call 644. 7003
WHO SAYS!!
irs· custum features. $54,500 new, all bl!ns. pat i 0 • huildable lot in Laguna.
675-3000 garage. Nr pool & dubhse. $5,950 full price. Low dn
cmll1l\' ,\ llE.ll'lll
llE.U:I'\' l~C •
~E ST 1~9 -~-l~j
Vacant. Underpriced. & O.W.C. wt low monthly
Owner. 54~7 paynwnts. Bkr, 493-1153 or
Channing 3 BR & fam. rm.
Beam ceilings, wood panel.
ing, old brick [rplc. New
epts/dfTls. Elect kitchen,
snack bar, dining area.
Large enclosed yard, gar
on allt'y. $31,900.
°'-LL e 646 ·1·14 Room !or lots o! kids, V.1e
ha ve 5 IJ.edroonis nnd three
ba!hs. \\/ant lo swim? \Ve
havt' a beautiluJ pool. Want I
to buy a boot? We haYe
room lo park oil the street.
\Van; a swing set? We have I
roozn Jor !hat 100. Want a
fine scl)l)Qi district? New-
port -C.Osta Mell8, Wa nt a
fair price? $52,00. Phone
646.TI71.
i-0 THE REAL
''"'\.. ESTAT ER.S
VACANT N' READY
4 Bedroom 2 story. family
roon1. 2 Patios, fish pond,
sprinklers front & rear. One
1n inute tu grade l!choo!. This
one won't be around Joni;, so
hurry!!! F11A/VA terms,
$32.500_ '
~COATS ~WA~CE
REALTORS
Open E venings
• 962-4454 •
REAL T V COMPANY
642-1771 Anytime
Just 1is1ed large Republic
J-lome w/great floor plan 1~
eluding massive .!!Unny kitch-
en/lamily room arrange.
mcnt. 4 Large bednns &
view that goes forever: llke
living in the country. Owners
transferred. Asking $52,500.
')llcsill irbc :J1calt11 • 546-5990
You Can't Live
Anyplace For Free
But you COULD purchase
thi.~ "'ell located west.side
Any house over 1500 sq II has
to. have 4 or 5 Bt'd:rooms.
\VHO NEEDS to have a 1 house designed to sleep an 1
army \vhen there's only 31
or 4 in !he lam1!y~ ! \VHAT
YOU NEED is LIV ING
space not sleeping space.
Like this spacious (l!KJO sQ
ft) 3 Bedroom 2~ Bath home
with large separate family
room wi!h wet bar, formal
dining and huge ea!iY care
rear yard, all in !ip-top con.
dition.
ONLY $31 ,500
\Vl'lll 10% 00\VN
1-a·THEREAL
"'"'\.. ESTATERS
' . , "
TR·l-PLEX
$39,500
triplex and live in a com. (3) 2 Bcclrm units, separate
fortabll' 2 Bedroon1 uni t one for owner. Live in and
wilh privaieyard a.rt'a, fore. try $600 down FHA.
Tha!'s righl~ Just furniture
and kids needed to occupy
lhis rambling, tree-shaded
4 Bedroom. Entertainment-
sized Jiving rm. Bar and
burning fireplace. Spacious
all elec. kitchen. Terrazo en-
lly sliding glass to covered
patio, New exterior paint.
Prof. landscaping. Conven.
i1>n!. w i:ill, Hurry or stand in
line! Call (714) 962-5585,
FOREST E. OLSON
Inc. Rt'altors
19131 Brookhurst Avt'.
Huntington Beach
MESA DEL MAR
e COLLEGE Park's most 1 ='~"=-"~"-'-"-'-· ~=--unique house. 3 br, den, QUIET &. cozy. 1 BR charm-
1 % ba. New landscapini:;, Ing apt in residential neigh.
rustic Interior, remodelCd borhood, Close to beach &
baths. 5-16--0902. town, Employed single adult
CHEAPEST EASTS I DE COZY W-Sidc. 3 & Fam rm. with relerences. Sill incl
Current Inte rest Ra te On Oak. GI/TI-IA or whatever utit. 494-S392.
REDUCED TO 71/1%! I $24,995, 5r,. Quintard 642-2991 cozy cottage 2 blcks trom
No down payment VA, less Fountain Valley Crescent Bay. Large front than lOo/v down FHA. 4 Bed-1 ------~---yard. lrees, patio, ] BR.
rms. 2 baths, family rm: Yes. there·s a beautiful Span.. $150 mo. Util. pd. 725 Cajon,
Good areo_ MotivatcU own. ish Condo in Fountain Valley 494-8946.
ers want oiler!! Only $25,500, that has 3 bedrooms. 2 =~==---~--
Lachenmyer Rlty baths. all the recreaUona! GORGEOUS ocean-hill view, modern 4 BR, 2 b11,
Cali fi46.3928 Eves: 646-2290 facilities (pool, clubhouse, playroom, bltns, cpts, drps,
1 'l~~~~~..,~~!!!! I pool tables, pitch and put decks. renced, s 5 4. o o o.
~~,,,,,.
N'1r Ntwpo rl Po1 t Offf,e1 * NEW LISTING * Beach duplex; 3 BR. 2 ba.
each unit. Mint cood. View
from owner's living rm. SUn-
dcck over garage. $67,500 .
Including the land~
Cali: 673-3663 548-0715 eVH.
associated
BROKERS-REAL TOR!:
lOJS W Bolboa 67J·l66J
I Gold Medallion 4-Plex and much more1. Assun1e a Owner 494-3412
Choice Ne\11pC1rt Joc. Lo dwn. $22.oOo 71470 F.H.A. Joan BY OWNER - 4 br, 2 ba, OCEANFRONT
Pr. -" 1 ,74 000 8 with Jow paymen!s total ployroom, f"n""d y,, d, \Vi th a sea & sail view. Old
"A must sell" owner has 01~~r '~~u-c~j_7039: · Y price $26,900. Ca Ii now, bltns, crpts, "'d;ps, de~ks, Newport charm w/Spanish
bought in 1''lor1da. One or 546.2313, ocean view. S:>i,OOO. 494--3412 Dare. Spacious 2-story, 3
largest one story horn('!; in * * 1/~ ACRE, pool, 2 Br. br, 3 ba, fam rm glass encl..
the area wit h 2000 sq. IL. 4 1-lorses OK . Owner. $27.500. aft 1 w/ ei forever Catalina view.
bedrooms, 2 baths, large * $45.69'18 * INSPIRING vlew nr beach, Situated on Balboa Penin.
family room. Beautiful car-Ba ck Bay 3 BR, Jge deck, spacioull Asswne 69'0 Joan. Could be
pets. Home freshly painted 1 ----~-----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ i lllod., $39. 750. Xlnt buy· used as 2 unils, Good tax
inside and out. aose to St. OPEN HOUSE -For Sale DIVORCE Moss Realty 642.8732 ~helter. Consider exchange.
Johns and al\ schooJs plus by Owner. New paint, L<lve-Forces sale or this immacu. FOR Sale or Jse/option by $59,900. Owner, &16-0300 or
shopP.ing. Call now 546-2313. ly garden. Good crpts. 3 late near-new 3 bedrn1 2 owner. Ocean vu, pool, :J br 644-8397,
BR, 2 BA. FIR, dble !rpl, bath, customized A~s den, 2 ba. $49,000. 494-6923: l -=ro=R~SA~LE~B~Y~O~WN==E=R-1
1-oTHEREAL
\~E~TATERS
~rvice por1~h. O\vncr will B 'l fl AU bl carry 2nd TD. Jmmed. oc-ui t ome. tns, rlrps, Lido l1le 5 bedrooms or ! 3 baths
w/w crptg. frplc. shake functional beach home. Pvt. cupancy _ S:t1.~. 2 3o 4 roo! prn!"'p~10·011 !o•d ON STRATA CENTRO Fairhill Dr. ;,.1s-66S:J ' ~"·" " Y " -community, $57,000 By appt.
R~duc.d $2000
Owner Sacrifice
Thi~ clrganl 4 brdroorn
hon1c has 2 lu.-:urious I I!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!"'"!!'!!!!!!!!!!
h11ths. a fa1nily room. POOL
('d air heating and built-ins
for approximately $.JO per
nio. (Based on 20'11 down.)
CALL 67~.S~i::it
FOR DETAILS
scaped, block WAii , 4 Bedrooms, 3%. Baths only 642-7781; 675-8680.
MINI RANCH HEATED POOL 35 Ft. +Lot
Collage sn1all 1--studio. Over. only on~ miJ, from ttun!iog· J\fUST SELL BY O\VNER ••
Foirv;ew ! NEWPORT HEIGHTS "'"' '"'"' b"'"-'" kit· ch<'n v,;lth breakfast bar,
it's lo<:ated in one<>! the
n icc.~t areas of Costa
Mesa and rnu.~1 be sold
this ~·eek • S('llcr \\'ill con~ider peyin!' all huy-
t"rs closinl'.: r.nsts lo vets
at th" ll<'lfl\\' markrt
p ric(' of ~29.950 -I-furry
it's beautiful.
FARROW
$37.50 Mov es You In
If you're a v1:1 :..rllrr
~·ill ronsidf'1' paying
your closin11; costs. ram-
Uy emcn1:cncy forced
lmmedialt' vacancy, It's
a beautiful 4 lx>droom 2
bath ranch style home
ln Costa Mesa t Mesa del
Mar). Fireplace, built-
lns, two car J;::arage,
ahake roof. family room
In move in co11dition. See to lx>lievt>, lf y(lu're
looking for a hRrgRin
thli; 15 it at ~29.950
don•t wtlt • CAU.!
Wll! have openings for
2 full time salei;mrn lo
cornplc>tt our profP.i;sion-
AI gaJe1 stalt. l f y0u
want mon.> 11ctlon, a
ruler pace Mid more
u lea call no\v and make
"71" a iood year,
2626 Harbor Blvd.
546-8640
OPEN EYES.
'TILL I~
2629 H111>or, CM.
Sparkling 4 bedroom home
to · THE REAL
\'"'\._ ESTATERS
' ', 'I '•,1
. •· I k I "' Street lo Strata Brand 11e\•1, fee simplo, 1 ~1z" garage, wnr,.;s tap, rac tnn State Beach. Assume 7% S72,SOO 6-46-l~l l I 2 l-lomcs On A Cornf'r Lo1 room. Enjoy casual Cf)llnlry l loan. a stral at $32,990!! LIDO REALTY INC. ~:~lc;e~~~~3 C:~in:s.b~~f~
(•ny time) A Good Investment At living, Horses O.K. l 32XLlO .c.,'.,"..,'°.,'.,'.,•.,P.,L.,, .,""'..,".,"..,".,".,·I i33~n:<Vwiai;;;-L~i~dor;;;;;;;-6~7tJ.h7;3_D00 I carpet. huge dbl gar . :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~ $29 7.SO ~-t . lot. S..14.000 '4"7,-23. ' ' U"rvERSTTY RE•tTY ** 40· lot · Clean 3 br, 2 -Roy M ccardle Realtor ,. w • "· Huntington Beach I "'o--==,,--c-==-c-1 3001 E. Cst Hl'>y, 673-6510 ba. Newly .redecorated. BY OWN ER: 4 BR/2 ha,
Toda y's Bargain lBlO Ne1vport Blvd ,, C.M. The House That Large patio. $11,500. bltins, 1800 sq rt. Nr: all
\\i th beautiful Roman pool· I·----------Fully carpeted, all bltns,
family rni., covered patio.
fire pit and moM>. Only
$35,950. Call 54.5-8424.
Retirement In
Corona del Mor
0 r. I y $600 down and I his
3 bedroon1 oppoMunity is
y<>urs! Call us, "'e SPECIAL-
IZE In low S down oppor.
tunlliH.
Walker & Lee
Great new \islin11: in Mesa 548-7729 Ba lboa Isla nd KI 5-2512 after 6 pm sch!'s. 6'12-5748.
Vcrde·s popular Camhrldge Really Company $Z? 9 Q J Br. 2 ha + gst hse, palio, Terry Built Mes• Ve rde *Z23 OCEANVIE\V Ave for
series. 4 & Fan1ily room un.. LOCK UP & RUN I , 5 ('Ov'd, fnd , nr \\'at.. !rpl. TC.TTY was i;uperinlcndent nt sale by O\\.'!lf>f, View of Bay
dcr $31,000. Offered at even _ 4 BR + Famil y rm ~lO:vl dn, Ov;n, car ls1. ronstn1ct1on for Suburb1;i BEST BUY -4 bedrm single & Ocean. $.18-7!)8.1
IK> dn pml to Vl'I~, or loiv Tohyour lavor!le ~sor~ a.re~ Beautiful home. Lan;<' roo~s. 6i3-6Z67. Park traf'l and added many li!Ory \v ljmaginative floor. BELO\V 71larket-Excer1lonal
'
'HA •orm~ \\' r.n you own t 1.~ ~ Rr!l · 1, f .1 di . 1~=-~----~--1 ... ,,0., 1,,,,,_, '"'" , .. ,1_
1
. plan. 7(1xl00 Lot, nice yard. 2 h 1 -• "· -N ~uge anu v rn1 n1ng rm ~ HR 2 ha gar pa•'o ·m "" " ,, ,, " " r, own you r own """' \VE H,\VE RENTALS l>rdroo•11 (~1ndo. in l'Wporl 1 1 . I .d I '1 , i '' , • • i • s rrady bea ut1ru1 Spanish style heauurul Republic !Ionics +qualify hn111e. 675.!'475. · Bca<"h YOll own !he land · win st(' Je( l'OO!Tis, en-I lot , $10,!XXJ down, r-arry l s!. neighl>OrhoOO of hight'r pric-
SCS·!iSID $32,750 ' try hall, central l}Oor plan. 1 138 ToprH .. 673--0252 honlr. 1v1th 4 br. 2 b11, fam-ed homes. o~·ner/Brok<'r BY Owtl€r 3 BR, rlen, 2'l
~clntmtthlMIW Open to 9:0() PM . ;H0-1720 j Corona d el Mar i!y roo1n anr] fo1·mal d1n1ng needs cash. Priced at BA. Pool S39.500. 1936
EGE REALTY TARBELL 2955 Harbor SHOR C room._ S1tuatcd on1 a c~:ner1 Sl4.950. ~5990 days , Teresita Ln, N.B. R36-lil7
Adl!M ttMlrM.cM REPOSSESSIONS * E LIFFS * Jot ~·ith room o r uuat 6T>7973 eves. N t H -ht ~=========-1 642-8235 67S-3210 Sparkling .clean hOmes, some OPEN DAILY 1-4:30 !Tailer. Located in excellent ~ro=R~SALE~~B=Y~o=w=N~E~R~ ewe?;r e ig s
" 302 E n'n c Huntin..m.n Beach neighbor. OCEAN vi•w 4 br 4 •-newly painted & carpeted. 2, ve 1 g anyon 6 '" Condominium, S p ei n is h • " -· .,., LIDO WATERFRONT
APTS.-320 LIDO NORD HOME 3, 4 & 5 bdrms. Some \l'ilh Calif. ranch style. Xlnt family hOod near schools, beach. w/w carpet, drapes, bltns, lge rumpus nn w/bar, Ip:
pools. FHA-VA coov. tt'rms, home. Large patio. 4 Bd-and abopping, Must be aeen fireplace. 3 br, 2l,J ba. liv rm, frplc. 3,()1)) .!lq ft -t
Crom $17,0l)J to $40,000. rnis, 3 Baths. to be appreciated!! $39,900. Beautiful grounds & pool. 800 .!lq ft unfinished . .$49,5(ll.
Collins & \Val(s Tn1•. DON V. FRANKLIN Phone 546-2313 for showing, Low maintenaoce. Adulb. 548-5766 or 548-5371.
8843 Adams Ave. 962-~ R E AL TOR 673-2222 5-19-0977. Santa Ana
~--~~-~---
DREAM HOUSE GREAT VIEW! Newport Beach Behind In Payme nts
Nt-w Wells-Built ltame 4 BR or harbor & ocean. Attr. spli1 BLUFFS BEST BUY $23,000 FULL PRICE
3 Ba. pwdr rrn .. f~m r~ !eve! home on R.J 5100 ,q, $19 500 , •• With view of Bay. 3 BR, 21h Short riislance to ocean and 11•/frp\c, Uoobstruetcd upper fl lot. Ideal for 4 apt. units. WHAT A LOW PRICE Br.. split level. Vacant. shopping. 3 queen-sized bed-
Bay ~icw front ~IDR. kit., S200.000. 2501 Ocean Blvd., for this gurgeou.!l 3 bedroom, Move-ln cond, Will se.U or rooms, .ma.~ter bedroom ha11
l'IE'P dln rm & tiv rm. Court-CdM. By app'I, only. 2 beth doll house . .Lou of luxurious pn·vate balh. Ideal
$28,900 yard pool. $l08.900 , Roy J . Bill Grundy, Realtor Tender Loving Care here lease. $44,50Q -Submit. floor plan with 1--of -m. Ward, Rltr. 64ft.l55Cl, O""'n ,.,_,1 .. ,,.,, .....,... . DON V. FRANKLIN v"' ,,,.,
'O THE REAL
"'\.. ESTATERS
3 Bdr m+ Oen ~~""""=""'""==1 dail 1013 M . ,.... ... .._. "'"_, Deep pile carpets wi th ~EAL TOR 67~2222 Upgraded ca rpll!tg llJ1d
F•mlly rm . BEA~ UNIJS Y, anners Dr. CORONA HIGH LA DS matching dra~. Time.!lllv. WEEKENDER matching drapes. S18.600 VA
Beautiful hO-. Addres, of * LIDO SANDS * '3 BR. & den. Priv, ach. tt kitchen, doUble garage, Loan with payments of mg "-Im d •-y I Stach cottage. 4-0x85 R-2 lot dlstinction, Central floor 11 UNJTS only 7 """'· old. mae., ecort1.tor·s uvme. Owner \\'/carry. Lowest pric-an:I e-0mp etel)' fenced tn-per mmrth. An)".)ne can bU)'? .z·~ New ... & ti 3 cl di lro (yuq own j0; 2 BR. 2 ba. Plan. Park like yanl. n....n Ne"""'rt Shore~. close to nt wa paper, rd In Highlands, u ng nt for the kids. CAU. • v~ .. ~ BR 2 •·1h ~ H •• I 10% d ·1 _,, .Stt>Ps to 'l'.·ater. Garago w lk ·Realklr!i tn 9 pm . ....,, I._., beach. Excellent J""°me of ·, "" 1'· r•·•v. oommun. om• "1fl0W Re• to S 0\l'n WI I hauu e! I & L ~ ·~ I I r ·•11 sl're~ed for add 'I. unil , Gd. a er ee 76lt2 F-dinger TARBELL 2955 H a rbor Sl .S70 ~fo. No vacancicl!, 1~ w poo pn eges. 1 Blk, to "Arm chair Househunli ·• CALL financina. Under $30,000,
(71•lt 8.\2-445:) or ;>'!Q-$1 40 Sell or Le•s•/option garage~. fl3.i,000 ~:~~~·:~ch Re•lty Jj.35 E, ~~~~')'.. M Walker & Lee MORGAN R~AL TY ReaJto~
NEWPORT HEIGHTS 'DR., 2119 ha., frplc. 2 Car CAL9L E) •4•·1'14 67;>.1642 Anytime 1 _6::7~~2~~~J~67~S-64Sr:::9~,27>J~~H~"'~bocr~Bl~•d~,~·~1~A~da~m=1:I Beaut. trl-Jcvel tion1e + pr, 3 Yr1, old. ~ Sq. F t. • •,,I~ ' RUSTIC BEAUTY Rea1tor1 545-0465 Open 'tll 9 PM
studio 'lpt., in bE>1t loc. Only A·l Cond. Vac1U1t quick po&-40...... $24,500 Open beam ceilings, South 2790 Harbor Blvd, at Adamg AL OA COVES "9-~ "·t/SU l " C"t '°" , RE AL TY a'" t'-t , __ .. _ 54,.__, .. 91 ~-.,,.1 9 PM WATERFRONT S.nta Ana Heights .., '"""'· v.,.:n ""' n, ..,, 3f!S!):, ,... ay. Nt •r Nt•p•rt Po1 1 orrlct 3 Bdrm +den. Huge lamily "'e pa...,; grea ru<.:a,..,n .,. . .,.. ..,.,..,, · Pti
43ii SAnta Ana. Ave, CaU Patrick Wood 545-2300 rm, fireplace, nat\ll'al 1Wlod only 1A b1k. to the beuh. 2 lll$IOO MOVE-IN me Joe. 3 BR. 2 ha. slntle 1---------~I
CAYWOOD REAL TY e Biii Haven, Rltr. EMERGENCY SALE eahincts, built-IN , Open ttU Bdnn., 2 bath. $54.950. Auu . .. It.,.,"""' "'A lfOO'. Newly decor. Fenced OWNER 'IRANSFERRED
2lll E -""'' Bring .,...,, offe o th1 prime ... _L R I E me vrisung _.,"""' ~'" yd, \30 ft. bol.t slip, $7'9,500 $1000 aswmes 1'%! G J 6306 w, CO&SI Hwy., NB . Coal\ CdM v•.-.u #¥~ r n • 9:00 PM. No down ttnnL U9 •ncy •• state Joan. 4 Bedroom 2 beth, BIU~ Grundy Reaftor tnortg~ s BR. ramtJ,y rm.
548-1290 TRIPLEX-NO DOWN Irv, Terr. 3 BR. home w/ 516-1720 2828 E. Cofll!t Hwy,. CdM 111.rge kitchen with mCdem """"-·-Dr., N• .B. ••• ·--ft 54' -pool &_ m&ny extnlt tor TARBELL 2955 H bor &14 mo bt t --v~, ......._, 4'•w sq. >-'""'· *OC EANFRONT* lo veti. Lc 2 BR unltl!, enc c.hoictllvlng Aa.ldna SS9500 ar -tns, amn~room com,bl~ -IAYSH0RES
DUPLEX ~lfa, Pl~ $35,000, by anxious 0'wner. ' ON!:. y 10% DOWN • IRVINE TERRACE tlon, btg Jiving room, aJltlC• BY OWNER Save your car • it's not
Cc>mp. tum18hcd, J Br. u~. KER. COR Bl N 3 Bdrms., 2 ba. Pride of own. ....._ __ I 38,500 bla bedroom,. dble PJ'&ll!, ~ s• >2 '-· ""' .., .__ •--1 Ju•t ,..~ lor -• en .... -..... VE -·· ~ lo ... ,wu-m I'll 3 BR • 2 BA. palio, -... d-, fenced ol ·~ .... .n., MW ru k:111'n, I.II.I" 11.:H .. .._ _ _. -uuWn. • .... -TS ~ NO DOWN I -e ..... 1p, ....... mer t,\ TEO HU ... ., .,... bdwd floon Pri
G11ra• Wiiiiam son *BR.: 2 b•th", f}l•fllde c.M. AR N Fon ln Co, 642-0IXXI , R~~:SAS&>C and..Und.ca~I. mwtl~. f blk to W::. = phone A can n.u,. Pilot
Realtor FHA • •lttro Down. M JI 'Tl-fE Futest draw In UWJ 34n Vla Lido 67~ I' in. 66-1410. Caulfled 6Go-S678 Oiu1e
•7MUI '45-15'4 ""*' FORTIN cb. 642-5000 I West. .. a Dally Pi lot Tor lbat Item under $50 -·m ·-·-•'I! ,_._ ,_._ ._ .. -~.~~
-Ol..M-U.. 64'"'871 Wt 'il help ,.. ..U! _,. REALTORS 644-7662 o ... ili<d Ad • ...._ "1"" .. ..., Pl"""' ' ..-11 l :J llf6.llU ·~.w.;:n .. ~ww ••~ ·--....,,
•
... -. ' -· . . . ' ............ .
Tutsd.11, J111Ull'y l•, 1971
240-Unfum.
I tjj .___I --· __,!~ [ r-,..-·--.][tl, .__ .. _ ,[tl ,~ ... --;;;;;.;;' ---.:.;] •;;1
a10 Aph. Fum. J6I Afot. Unfvm. 3's Afot. Unfvm. JU L "o;;.;t.;;.•...;fo;:;;rc..:.S•;:;;l.;;.• __ _;1;;.;.71 Mono! 19 L-
_,,,_
305 Apn. """'·
VACANT-3 BR. Newport Beach Cotta Mew Cotta Men NO beuer vi.w Jot in Arch 1st JD l Gtntr1f . ?f•wert Beach B.alt.o. Peninsula &aoh '"'· Laguoa. Reu. Oln 1.::..:==-----,:l'-~-----,.---1 --------
2 Bath, 11h1gJe hulllly rt'SI· Xl11t fin. By 01'1'1'1er, MIN. f'I.. $120-2 Br. w/yrd, Kids '' BR, a bi.. bl.l:.n•, drp1, 1 DR. tum. Utllit.ln paid. A Ntiw W•y To L1v• • CORSICAN 2 BR, p.raae + pcktna, de~ee. 1700 Sq. JI. Fre&h DOWN $2SOO. 546-8790 bd 'ni 1• INTEREST pel!I welcome. cpta, on wate:r. Pools It $1%1/mo. Adults. 310 E. In Newport h•ch drp& bl Ad
pa.ltll !: New le\\n, Uiw JO tun & aft 5. 2nd TD Loan Blua Be•con * 645-0111 b.*nnil crt, walk to beach. Balboa Blvd , Balboa OAKWOOD GARDEN NC'w, llJ"it, deluxe 1-2-3 BR'•, c:;ra. mo. Ru tns. :-
ckM·n PflYTilt . mov('~ you !n.' . 616-ifQ aft t pm. PENINSULA . l BR fun! APARTMENTS Priva!e patio Jlvin1, only 3 ~19 ~ ,
$32,%0. r ~·lONARCJ-1 BAY, rare ocean . ~ ~URM. + ~ nn., full ~WPOR.T laland 2 BR / Adulti on! no ts. Wintl!'r nel(hbors In your bldg. '
i d h ~lP'.1.' lor. Exclusive priv. Tfonna based on equity, dinln& rm,, built-In• .. hr*-finipl .• ,. tam rm, * ba. [ rental. $Jimo.~7'T79 or On lli!h Street btwn e 1u111, dwhr, lorced aJr heat, $165 LGE. dll:. 2 Br. 1% , re .,,, beach co1nmunily. l..i?¥ehnlrl ! 642-~171 545-0611 $300 a month. NG FE!!. 2 ~Ill. ht. & .11,ar. fa5 Lea.se. 64LMSJ aft 6 pm. lrvlne and Dover Dr. ~hag crpbi, drva. [rpJc tn 3 bi. Qulet; adults, G.& Kii.
S25,7;io, 496-4819 I Serving Harbor area 21 ~ Newport, 54G-1720. 673--0883 ~ ;;r;o.;:;;(7"'1"4'-1 ;;;64;-2,-1.,1.,1,..0-;;-;;-l er, gar. 1\1 ml. E. of South Storq:e. 240 E. lfiUI Pl
LJ..KE Ellinore; 3 adj Settler Mortg• .. Co. $.15-lluge 1 Br-. w/tr,ilc. UNF'URN. 3-bedrm, l 11' Ba, Coron• del M•r OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, Coast Plaza: turn oft Sun-MU432.
REALTY hillside lake view Juts, nr 33G E. 17th Street Stv/ref, yrd, gar, Child' 1 door to bel!ch. 106 Olive, 1----------erpts, drps, dlx. Winier. tlo11i'et 1.t Roll.) l-c•~U~N~U~su=A~LL°"'Y,..-....,--,2-,.b,-I •
Univ. Parle Centtr, Irvine ca.sino. PlO(I ca&h. 536-2'149, CASH FOR 1nd TO'S pet I N.B. $225/mo. I BR, nicely furn, harbor S250. Adults only, No pets. FROM $150 l ~I ba, tam a:i atudlo. No
Call Anytime ™ 536-1160. Mr. Fry, 6f2..3.573. Blue Beacon * 645--01 1 S•n Juan Capistrano view, no child!'eft or pets. ,,',,73-""8==· ==~~~~ l =o;;; ... 5'ii0-iil97'-3 .. 'o.' ii'45-;i;o23Zl ... ._ii I pets. Sl.50. 5 4 5-5 2 'l O,
Rand1es, f•rms, Money W•nted 250 $14~3 Dr. 11,i Ba. RIO. Cphl, Sl!lO, 673-2S2'3 eves. OCEANFRONT 3 BR, 2 BA. • i .,.c"'-c;.,J>l-0~~·------'
Groves 180 drps, yrd Olldr".' wclc. 3 BR, 2~ BA Spanish town. Costa Mesa Frorn $275. Jan 15-Jurie 15. DELUXE 2 e~, 1~~ ba itudio. $115.
COMMERCIAL STABLES Blue Be~con * 64$-0111 houae, bltins, cpb:, drpg, 2210 W. Oceanrront. 675-1410 TOWNHOUSES utllian Incl. 339 Cahrl1lo
Construction &: permanent . pool, elec garage, many I BR turn, Near ocean. f135 ON NEWPORT E!ACK BAY 54~ or SIG-3648
5 AC HORSE RANCH f · needed $.15<0> $150-Redec 3 Br. Nr heh, other extras. $285 lease. CASA de ORO from 1/17 to 6 /27, 01...X a Br, 1 ~ Ba Stuflo, '··-------··I PICTURE BOOK s~1NG ;::.,1ng573.2259 . ' . Stv/cpll. Kkl• & pet!I" ok.. 6f4.226Q day 673-1028 eve. 675-6099 J &. of BR-3 Ba. Frplc, tam I' "" · Bl •-* 64, "Ill • CASUAL Calif. Living in a BJ1111, Cptl/drps, No pea, Lo .. ,, Juxur· ... 3 b ue YW•con rw U 1 •t p k --::o-OTT.,.-----.,., room, double garage, Beaut. A I F b L 11~ ·--.-Property 151
Shopping Ce nter Site
10 ac, c.2 dO\VlltOll'n San
Juan Capistrano • or can be
split for development . Bkt.
4!13-11 53 or 493--1706 eves ,
• Y new lO,.. r Mortg•ges, n vers1 y •r 1varm Mediterranean almos· Apt. Unfurn . 365 v e • ""· ~ ghake root, white fe nced, Trust Deeds 260 3 BDR.i\t, Family nn .. park -phere Spacious color CO· lounge. Pool. Billiards. IL!i""~Gc..;l=.B~<~. ~,=,~l=All;,;.=,,.-w-1
ar1111le v.·ater Must sell saoo 1----------1 like yard, Costa ?11f!SA, !\ids ordiniited apt5 • designed &: G I Adult &: Ch!ldrens area crpts drps tile A: pa.int
d "'000 1 TD 3 -OK brio:. $200 a month. NO 2 BR. 1 bath ......... · S2l'J enera 350 Riviera Dr. 642-mOO • ' · own to reliable buyer . .,...,, s1 on acr~ • • . 3 BR. 2 baths .......... S.125 furnished !or style & com-----------I Bllrul. $145/rno. ~-
$29.950 1otaJ. (n4~ 68 4.5555. estate _parcel,,
1
w/. magnih· FEE. ~ltll. 3 BR. 2~ baths ........ S300 fore e J-Jeated pool e Kitch.. 998 El Camino, CM.
TOday or eve, eeut v1ew. 9 ·". int: 5 yr $13.S-2 Br. w/gar, l.rg lncd 3 BR din m 2 ha .... s32j ru 1v/ lndil't'ct lighting • e MARTINIQUE • NEW DUPLEXES
due date 12'/t> discount. yrd for kids & pets. ' r • I IX>luxe n.10. Adults only, No d" Bkr. 493.j153 or 494.f.632 Blue Bucon * &4S.OJIJ 3 BR. plus hUjle bonus roon_1, RENTAL FINDERS P•rk-Like Surroun 1ngs J-2-3BR. Wuher/dryerhook-Condominiums
for s•le l ;R~ea~I ~E~•t••:l~e~W~a~n~t~ed~1~84~I ~'~"~'~· ~~~~~'.'!~~/:~~~~~~::::! 2 baths ••....•••.••.• S350 pets. free To Landlords DELUXE 1-2 & 3 BR API'S. up. encl gar, patio, trOO ah'. 160 4 BR., fam. rm. l"' ha. $375 1 BR.-$175 turn. ~~s-Ol l l Also 1.o~uRN. BACllELOR t.1e sa Verde area. ~1034 I:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;; j PRJVATE party '.l."a11ts to B•lboa l•l•nd 7 BR., of% haths ••.••... $450 UTILITIES INCLUDED ~ Prv patios * Hid Pools
I• buy 3 or 4 units.. Prelt"r ~ !AVE OTHERS 365 W. \Vi.Ison 642-1971 4J5W.1ttti,Cod• M-N t • Ad·"' n1y SHARP Lg. l br, crpt/drpl, RECllEATION nundl'd """"---u....--t.,..., I ..... 3 BR. 2b•. hltn 1roivt>. relri•. \VE l ~~~i"'".c:-,,-""7o;c-· I r s MlP g • ... ts 0 blt:ins, Quiet bld'g. Infant .~~ ocean view, \Vrite; Frank ,....,_., n::J e $30 WEEK & UP 1m Sa ta Ana A 0.1
pie n1ove 10 "TIB URON"' -J. Moher, ]4() Avalonia. ,,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~I dishwasher, dispm:al. FA Just for Single Adults n veMs-5542 OK. $130. stG-9722 o r if you haVn J1v~ "L-ondo· ht>at. ~t•, drnS, dbl tar 1 BR. ot' STUDIOS furn w/ ?11gr. Apt ll3 • -547-2682. " Pleya Del Rey, Ca . 90291 ~·..-•r 1 l I l SOUTH BAY CLUB ---------1 n1in1um style'' and loved it w/beth k washroom. AvaD comp\. kitchen al e ec. · 2 BR. DUPLEX z. BR delux, clean, 4U1.et,
-move up to TIBURON Apt. Uni!s In good location Houses Furnished 300 now yt'ady. :-;., srudenU. F ree linen5, heated pool, a.ir-APARTMENTS Crpts, dfll?;, hltins. Cpts/drps, bltns, beam cell·
'v11nled by pvt buyPr. Cond d TV & ·d Nowport Beach wtlert> real 1011•nhouse !1vi11° $295. 673-2·131 con . ma1 service L rg . Fenced Yd for ing. Adlts, no -111. F""1l ., not important. 6i5-3.l11. S9"La g h B I · ~. I-"-A··• •·-is ic ~I swing. ,,.... g eac: unga ow. 3 Bdrn1 -2 Bath avail. oov ''""" ..... Children & Pets, $145. 1974 Wallace.. 5%-53116
If yo•1 haven'! 1rlcd ii -in-Ulil pd , Con1pl lurn. Pvt. • UNF'URN • "SINCE 1946" Daily It Monthly rate~ (lrvlne and 161h) Prlv. gar. $150 J BR, 1% ba. Crpts &: drpt.
vest 111. li ttle tin1c 10 look 1t II• I i'<iJ'~'='',",·!;-h,;;-°'E:;;;;;"('ii:ll~~·~67~"'~721~•~1-t _6_P_M __
1
1st Western Bank Bldg. 2080 Newport Blvd., at 31st C7l4) 64S-0550 8ll PaulaJ'lno, c.r.t 549-1746 a Children OK. $160 mo. over. Financial . Blue Beacon * 64S-Ol 11 Balbo• Coves Univer-sity Park e 642-2611 • 2 BR, NE\V apt., bltns, shng 515-1882
Choice Resales Avail Now ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~1 $1JO-l Br. h."f!. E-side C.t. Days 833-0101 Nights B/Americlln'.l • M/Charge_ crpts, drps, pallos, gar. LA COSTA OPEN HOUSE SAT A: SUN
\Ve speciaJiz.e in selling con. I Lrg yd. Ideal l or 2 adlts WATERF'RONT, decor. 3 • • • • • • • • • I $175. 356 E. 20th, Ci\! NE\V I & :! br. Bltns swim-IG-2, BRAND NEW Ea.sWde
d . . I I B . Bl . •-* 64'0111. BR. 2 Ba Pllo. to Mo. $350. S6 nit up $30.00 wk up &12-4~ min" pool & .,,.,· e. All 1 & 2 BR. 1 & 2 batbS. om1n1un1s, try us or rea u0s1ness1 _
1 200
ue ....-aeon .r Bill Gru ndy Rltr. 64.2-46ro UNNERSITY PARK n:-::o-;;c-------• • eclion. Pro~·rties nt•cdcd, ppor uni y B Ibo I I nd 250-STUDIO & l BR Apts Back Bay utilities pnid. $150 to $170 $155 lo $1!15. Crpt!, drpl,
buyt:!rs \1•ai1ing: ~ I a a s • Corona d,el Mar 2 BR, 2
1 Ba's:····· $ ~ • Color TV, phone serv, pool [----~-----mo. Adults, no pets. 354 d&hwhr, self clean gas oven,
LEASE "TIBURON TOWN.
HOUSE"' -1600 sq. fL, J
hcdrm , 2~~ balh. only 6 mo~.
old. All pool and recN'ation
fttcillties. Avail 11pprox
2.1.'(l
La rwin Realty, Inc.
962-6988 anytime
YENOM
*CANDY SUPPLY J BR . 2 ,~ Bas .... $3{X].$32a e Linens, maid scrv avail, Vll.'\V - 2 Br, cpts/drps, • dos CM .. A,.,,.•n1 all•·"-& ..... pd Htd pool 4 BR. furn. Avail Feb lsl 3 BLKS. TO OCEAN 2 Elo •-3 bdrm., 211 ba th bl p .. voca I .. vivJ"N ..... •-• • OISTR. * i $375/mo yearly. Gas & wtr g .. , •')?-$425 O ip Ad .. Good FOR $5. tns. ool & sundeck. 324 E. 20th St. 646-9148
1 PART OR FULL Tlfl-1E) pcl. 646-2130 3 Br. hou~. t mo lease, S~/ townbouse11, · •· •· · .,..,,;,. On Week Rent, n 6s * * 673-.1690 A'M'RAC. Like new, l &: I ~-.C,,THE=~G~AB=I.~F.=.s~.;:;;..-
VERY lllGH INCOME ' mo. lncd ! ~tove &: refrig, 3 Br. 2 ba. fam rn1 .... $340 2376 Nc.,11port Blvd, 548-9755 Balboa Island 2 BR apts, Dshwhr, crpts, ntE SEVn.LE
Balboa Pl'ninsula Fenced san:l dbl garage, EL TORO • • • • • • • • • 11----------''''· bltns. Htd pool. All 2 B 1~ Ba I 'di~ Now available in Costa fl-·Jcsa ·67 7499 f 5 Bd 2 ba h 1260 COZY 1 Br. apt, YTly. No r, "' • w pr. "' '""• anrl surrounding areas. All 4.1' BAY FRONT Ba J b 0 a Vacant now. J. 8 t · 4 COcmR•·0• NA 0
1 E,L •. M •• A. ·R SMALL, clean l Br. w/w util pd. Only $150 & crpls, drps, rs.nae, tncd yd,
d I blt pets. Squares only, Rel'li. ..,,,=; I 307 A do locations are commercial or Penln 5 BR .f Ba pier YRL't J.-.e, .1 BR, I ba, _ crpts, rps, e ec ns, Sl6S + util's. 673_1503_ "''"" mo . nq: voca . patio. 636-4Ul
factory furnished by us, float ' \vinte~ or ~early'. Dbl c a J' garage-shower, 4 Bdrms., 2 baths , ..... S.1l:> suitable for working: adult. Apt. 9, &1;).IJIJ&I 2437·D Orange Ave S1S5
Qualified person will become 67J.--2o39 stovr ,'le rf'fiig, Adhs only, e·.·. '. red h·.11 Quiet area. Nr Fnvys. No Coron• del Mar \VILSON GARDEN AP'l'S. :zt;J9-E Santa Ana Ave $155
distr1hutor for our candy Coron• del Mar 1 blk !rom bch, $250 mo. ~"'~'"~·i54~5--l:S9~l;;;;<>"°T.;;;;; I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii i 2 BR Untu m. Newly dee. 3 BR, 2 Ba duplex nr bu.ch.
INcs1les, Planters, Tootsie ----------1 799-l7l3o._~-~-~--I FURN. 1 BR. apt. $135. Avail New cpls/drps. Spac Frplc, bltm, crpts. drps,
Rolls, !'vlilk Duds, ete}. You 2 Br. furn, Fireplal.'E', lovely LiKE-new 2 br & den, dining F'eb 1. 1922 Wallace Apt ~..,, -grounds. Adil!, no pets. enc l pr. Yearly. 4814 N~ r: :;r\n~~~·i~~~~·;._i~hn :~ ~~~~ ~~~~e 2ti~e 8(~~s~~ ~~~.&A~~1~: ~-;~.·~;r5 ~· ;;~.c, ;;;~ tr:r~~l5;. Univ. pa';;~~~~. Irvine ~-,:.d~;~~~·ri!~:ts-"-~\~:m~.' cZ:~~~·~;. ~9t93l2lll 388-5255 ;
& recreation fac1ht1es. Ex. rves) mo. 673---1953. eves 673-697of Cal) Anytime 833-0820 ACAPULCO Apts attractive, on \Vilsont. •e,.e'°"B~IG~G~E~R"°'thon=~a~ho~m<~,I
c:ellent investmrnt -acrm;s $17;ii CASH REQUIRED Jo"RONT House, 2 Bdrms .. 3 Bn, 2 ba, fenced yarrl, Pool, Util paid , Garden ON TEN ACRES VILLA MESA APTS. 3 Br, 2~1 & studio, $195
from proposed F'ountain Val. I F"or n1o11' information .,1·rile'! 2 ba., carp., drapes, $250 Near beach, $2;'(1 mo. 414 LEASE OPTION avail Feb. living. Adults, oo pets. 2 BR 1 I: 2 BR. Furn 4-Unfunl 2 BR, Priv patio. Hid pool. mo. No pets. 545-5270,
Jey l\liracle riitilc. "'DISTR IBUTOR DIVISION r.·lonth. Ai;:ent 675.2101. FC!·nll'nr, 5-16-2176 l -3 br, 2'3 ba, fam rm $175. 1800 \Vallace Ave., C.M. Flrepla~ I prlv. patiG! I 2 cnr encl'd gar. Children ~"=""="~'~-~---~'
$23,500 full price •2t P.O. Box 1739 Covina CC t M Costa Mesa tnwnhse on park. $280 mo. QUIET, studios SUS, I BR's Pooll. Tennis · O:lntnt'l Didst, \1-"elcome, no pets please! MODERN 2 Br, 1% ba
Larwin Realty, Inc. Calif. 91722 Jnclud'e pho~ OS a esa , · 0\11llt'r '19-1-2335 or 64.'>--0880 $125 .. No chldrn or pct,, 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2tHI S!SJ mo. 719 w. Wilson. among pines on cul.cfc-uc.
962-6988 anytime number. XLNT Location -near shop-VlR.Y.-SHAR~ 3 hcdrm, 2 Houses Furn. or 213.'> Elden Ave, cr.1. See (MacArthur r.:-Cont Hwyl &11>-12:·11 Encl p.r. Nr bua, Come
* On B.y W-1-5-1-,.p-*-A oR~E-,-.0---•. ---1-0 ping . 3 bedroom 2 b al h bath ho""' wllh crrils, dr_PS Unfum. 310 ;\JJ::J Apt 6. * COROLIDO APTS ~ee many luxury items. ·' u an ... ..-mp oy{' r xeculive home -built-ins, I· fenct'(I yard. 11 s;1----------'sr=u~D~IO~~A-pl-.~,~,-m-. ~Go,-,~& * 2 BR Duplex, all. garage. Adults. $155, M&r. 12-of E .
B h k" v· t aerospace <'ngineer? \Voulrl d"o•hw"•h·"". dJc.-..,..~1 -,~".00 \'ACANT &· ready now, .on Balboa Island , .. ,,, • .,,·d. 1975 P•-""· 2 Br. l1fUdi03 & street levels, Clean, vacant on quiet St. 20th real ta ·i ng JC\~". _vou like to have an incomr " "" ~· .,,..~.... "°" h h 1o " • ,... ,....,,.., SlS p • .,..,,., S12J. Small child &/or sml --·~-------I Poo: -Balcony . F.lcv. De. of $1000 10 $1500 per month mo. v.·ater paid. 2 year monl 10 mont a nice C.?.1. Call 7 pm 646-4205 5 & up, enthouses ..........,. dog ok. &1~2; 548-4969: ATt'RAC, Studio apt. 2 BR.
lux,• 2 bdl rm aprl. Jn.co, .. n1par-v.·/ln1tial investment or less leasilo ,•,11hN oplitOP Retol ~~ ;~l~l~or SXIO. Call agent F~lror:ia:m!y wl o ;~t" ~1:; $155 • SHARP 2 BR. ~~h:il-~~· dbl carport. 6'12-0791. Al!iO 2 BR houses 1~ BA. Crpt.s, drps, bltns,
abevaue.ony $.J"1. than $100 &: still be tree ava a e. opes. ·•"" L"lll Tl F n--1 Adi (t furn&unlu_.,~n~·==,--retrig, pool. No p•t•. MOSS REALTY 642·87.12 sec.. deposit required. Tel J BR "-lam, 2 ba, 450 on l e ~ e 11rn or un· ,-,..,. u ts. no pets, cen 2 BLKS f 2 B .;;; 646-6610 lo accept tu111r<> "Dlploy· ".". --. '' ft bonus rm. Dream furn. 3 BR. 673-7138 oki * 642.952() rom ocean, r. --2-BR DUPLEX I p 166 n1rnt opportunitit'!? Let mf' .... ~ C d . . · 2 Ba, frpl, blln'!l, crpts, $lSO/ $170. 2 BR, 1~ ha. studio,
1_n"o_o_m_• __ ,_o_P_•_rtv____ show you hoi\I w i 1 h CUTE, quiet 1 Br. tna~ Jd!rhen, pa llC'lled Jiv'g rm on om1n1ums DLX I Br. new. Frigidaire drp~. $2,1:1 & $250. 328 mo. redec, cpt/dt'pa, adJ ibop'I·
n-IANK YOU ••...••• 11h$0lutrly nn obligation on furn ish, pool, util & Ind , ":',','.,'.!',11<;:,. D1b2170 'm'o' 1,,&.1 __ u_n_f_u_,n_. _____ 3_2_D_ 1 "c'o'mHpo1nc;;...,~d "~'I ~7:.,. ~ l\1argurrhe. li7~873 ~~:l~·i~~· ~~v l~i~~re~6!~ i~"-=-8-830~01~. ~"'~'~592--~""=~-l
Youo p"I· For appoin tment $130/mo 17(1 del r-1ar ·' " '-~. · · ... ,.. · .._... """"""'"'0 BRAND new 2 & 3 Br apt•. ·· • FaHhful people for your · · 546-234t Huntington Be•ch e es 54£'.J666. 2 Br. Crpts, drps, 16'13 San.
loyalty in 1970 at my new call .\1r. S!'nilh, :J.':.'l-2809 L•guna Beach ,;.:;';i;;c-=-;-;:;"°;;;;;o.onl----"--------, 1 ,~';7'· :,· ;;--.:c7""~c-;; So ot h1''Y· 322 ?11arguerite. ta Ana Ave, CM, $150/mo. address. Every listing y,·llh l'lfll'r5p.m. MO VING-'fRANSFERRED-oELUX~ condo for !ea!;e-2 BEAUT. Bach & l Br. apts. 644-1342 or 673-2712. NEW TOWNHOUSE 542-727'9, ew!! S4l-85n .
Qui ntard Rcalty ,vas sulrl in •Laundry . Self Servic'* RENTALS Tired of fighting w i th hr, den, 3 ha, 2~ar gar, $.~.'i 1vkly & up. Fum incl Cost• M 1 1 & 2 BR, 2 BR, li,t BA. ~=~--~~---1
1970 _ and all sellers receiv. Jn n1:i.j()r shopping cen!er. l. Charm. old red\lid. 'W! l cnanl.s~ Call the prolllt'm Pools, &Pflhancf's 8 v a 1 J. ulil. fl-lonlhly terms av&il.0 __ •_____ Crplg, drps, self cleaning QUIET l & 2 BR., gar .I:
ed the net agr('{'d amounts. 1 i\lof:.t deluxe in atta. 2 years at Victoria Beach. Oce \1.I 110lvci's -South Coast Real $260/mo, ls1 &-last + $.10. !l98 El Camino. 546--04.'H FAIRWAY .i:as oven. encl. gar. Patios. pool. Cpts/drps. Ad U I ta
young, Carpeted, t'Olor TV. & path lead lo l:x!ach om· Esta!r, Prope.i·iy r.-tanagc· El'f'S oog..59-11: 5 3 0-0 l 3 g 2 BR. Duplex. Bltns. Pvr I 5-18-3605_ 377 \V. Wiison, only, no pell'i. 642-&'.M2. ~uintard pall<'l<'d : e Q u Ip p e d hy plelely furnished. Fir~ ace. rnent D1v~~1.?n ~ any1irnl' yd. 36&-A 16th Pl, CM. n SO/ NR new 2 Br, II,~ Ba , * 2 BR. elec bltns, lode.
Maytag. Exc-enenl trade, af· 1 Pegged floor . Lease st Mo. :i-la-84-1 1 'D~u~p~l0-,-.-,~U~n~fu-,-0-.--3~5=o mo. Childl't'n ok. 549-3666. VlllA APTS. cpt/drps_ &tvfdshwhr, gar. gar, Mesa Verde area. Big ~REALTY Since 194' j trndant. Prtced below 2. 2 bdrn1. furnished l, al SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA. quiel 1 BR. $125. Pool. Spacious. Avl no1v. 766 W. Wilson. closets. $l5S/mo. No pebi.
replat.-ement ~~!. Sc!' a t Woods Cove. 15(1 y ·' to 1treet. No\v vacanl, $240 per Huntington Beach Adults. Ideal for Bachelors. 2 & 3 BR'i 642-795R 5..il-3400 Downtown Costa Me111
1171 Bakf'r I..· Fairvieii', Costa beach Lge tree sha cd pa. mo Call LARRY Heritage 1993 Church. 548-9633 Private paLio poo.J • indlv. 1 ,t, 2 BR unturn, util paid, DELUX, clean 2 Br, 11' BA,
Mesa, then call Belly or tio. ~ase $ifi5 Mo. ~I Estate 540--li51 . 2 ~R. Lg~ yan:l: closed laundry fac.' ~tudio. CJl!b-, drpe, pool.
John, aHer 5 p.m. 6;4-1307. 3. l.ge. oldt-r 2 bd ., un-MONTICELLO CONDO. 4 :;;_~ $120. Refs req'd. CifA~p~, ~~~. frgB!~~~ Near Orange Co. Aiqiort & poo l, no ';~:zi$J:s, Adlts, 1 child ok. 646--0496
• FRIGID . .\IRE • tum. unit, close l down. BRs crptg thruo111 . $2.15/1•••••••••• Pool. Adlts, 00 f>t'UI. Util UCJ. Arlul ts only_ $90. 1 person, non-smoker . COMPLETELY Redec Jrs 2
HARBOR 642-2991
List "ith C.Q. Buy from C.Q.
AS] fh~, Beta 10',enl e(t'1' town. Fireplace, tV car. n10.· pd. ~8--0336. 20122 San!a Ana A\'e. Srove. refig. Avail 950 CW. ChBo.ildbltmk ...,r:;.w64~'P'7J;<.,,,..
· .n.-\'<nUme s e. pets, lots o( wood neling_ 545-360& I I~ l\tgr, Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3·A 0 • ..,........ ..,. ...,, $100.000·Dwn Pyn1t :;i:.-78.1.1. Lease $25(1 lt1o. 3 &. FA.i\T rm, crpt~. drps, Apmments tor Rent 9 FUE RN B~che111o, &
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Br. 516_6ZJ5 J7th. &15-:1787 I ·$~1~45~. ~2 ~8~R~.~N~,-w-d'P'~~.~0-.,.-.' EARN 15°/o
$1 70,lXXI Loans al • FRIGTDAJRE • l\f!SSJON REA!..TY F'll\ heal, !Ii>lc, 1~ yrd.J:·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·;;;;~ xcept1on• Y n ce l BR, clean, near 5tores. stove. Adults, no pets. Gall
Lo rarrs on 8..i.000 sq rr. \Veslmins1er. S3000 do"'n to 985 So. Coast l-lwy . Laguna S<!G:i Tst t.· la.~T . ~ clean'~jl 2110 Newport Blvd., CM $135 -SHARP 2 BR Older t"nantii preferred. 642-5848
"AAA" Tenanrs-Nr OC Au'P! lonn fl ! 52;)...78.1:: Phone 49'1.0i n dcp. Cal[ Mt>-8Z22 eves af! T, Apts. Furn. 360 * BACHF:LOR APT * Pool, bllns, wl "". rlrps, adlt~, Orps, crpt.~. $100. 64Z--lro4. LRG 2 Br. crpts, drps, bkna,
W R DUBOIS INC R no prr~. f1r.en ok;. BRAND NEW •PLEX · · • e FRlGIDi\I E e MFSA Ori !\hi 4 BR f;un $12'"./ nio. Call fi.16-3~ or .r l-2 children ok. Nr. schl1 * 5'1.i.7166 * LRI"!'.:(' ~lorr Cash out $7~)()(). El\1ERALD Bay/ !lower' · 1 ~ 2 B ' 1 · 1 t Genera l 67.1--3767 F.esrsidc * 642-!1520 2 BR. Garage. Extras. & shopg. $150. 962-30'5.5 --I :.2· 7~:\1 3 b 2 b i I l I I rm, A. crpt~ ( 1[~· rp c[----------~~-----A · TRADE F:quily 24x60 01.Ynl· ...!..!...!._,__.:: .. ·------• r, a, con 'e e y urn & i1ewlv pa1~te<. S21!fl. RENTING FURNITURE Da na Point ~ood v>'ant afl \~ a good I lr f!. $175 6-15-3544
pian niobile 11oi)lf', lv<:1tled I e FRIGIDAIRE e [ 2 frples, pal.JO lgc back Rrf'~ 5'15-7319 COSTS LESS ----------invf'stnu1nl We'll help you sell! &n-56'1!
in beautiful Orange County choiCf' loc, Oranitr volumr yarrl 2·l:flr garage. 'i b!k · " -Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 :t:l to Mrth l)eaf~. $600 mo LOVELY 3 BR 2 Bl\. modf'rn SINGLF:, TV, pool, pets ok. ~rk fnr <'qui!y duplex, I stnrf'. (11 52~78. . lcasf'. 494--0107 home. Fencf'd yard. Grdnr S'lS &. up wkly, DANA
triplex, 4-p!f'x, C.i\1. area. Business W•nted 210 n_l h S26.i. 642-2755 642-0~ir.G Complete 1 BR. Furn. M•·o··· '"" 34lll "·-·t * 545-8241 * Newport UWIC $1 7~1 -J en. Fil('(! yd as low as $22 per mo. H~." "" ...........
Lots for Sale 170 \VANTED: Small bui;iness in SHARP 2 hH./, cmpltly Childl"<'n ok. 2044 Prcs1denr IOo r. PURCHASE
----------I the Ne11.-port-Cosla J\1~sa remoriclrd. f;:eps to ocean. l I. 6-16-114.l, h~2.l.i OPTION Huntington Beach
M· 1 Half Acre area. Prefer ma il order 213/.l98.4!Mi9. 3 BR z BA. r;:rpfs, rlJ!ll'o, Ind. i!cm selection
rlf'eTric fi_~!urt' hu~1nr~s ll l Houses Unfurn. 305 hit-in l"llngc lenr'd. $725 on 24 hr. df'l\l. r-1onth lo J\lo. BEAUTl~UL _FURN. A ~S.
l..ev<'I Joi ready to build, Ou! manufacturing Jevrl or akin lf'llsr . ~;)--4~?) allPr 5 pm. CUSTOM $140-$16:>. Qu irt, pr1v, pa~10,
()f town 01vnf'r will f1nanc<' linrs or Op!"'n fnr other p1'0· Gene r•I -· .---Furniture Rflttol I 2 \Vardmhc$. frpl c, dr('i;s1n1<:
nr may consider Jras111,::_ dul·I~, i'ltall full dr~crl p1 1ru1 Fountain Va lley :;17 \\'. 19th C.l\-t 548-3481 1•m, lorkrrl srp. gar. P"°I.
Phone 646-7171 In Ril<' 0" L!lf'. Box-4612, 11 BR fu1•n p1ob\Je hon1e ... $7;1 FAi\-llLY hon1r • 4 hr. '! .\nnhf'im , 774-21100 ~ui\,i Rr.r rin.
Glrn<lRle Ca. 91202 I BR pr1v{home v11c11nt .$11:0 b11 hUn~ S260 mo. Av.i ii L11H11lwa 694.::1708 1 17.,01 l{crlson Ln. II ~lk \V. TIME FOR 2 BR homt kidsipt'tsOI< $100 im"mrrliat<'ly. 6·12-22f1I I o: ~;a;~RBl\•d, on atcr)
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QUICK CASH i~~valc..klcls/r,1s1or;s120 Huntington Beach M:~~~~~~';.T 's1:,s .-N ~V a Br. Crpts ,amrm,1s ., _bl•··
UGH A pets QK ......... ,, . $165 BEAUTIFUL 3 bed.rm, 2'ii SPEClALJZING IN "" rp~. s"'ve, ,..,,,: gar,
OCEAN front to Coasl Hl\'Y THRO 3 BR h<tse ranch vacant $195 ba, Meredith Gardens ho~e. JIOMES & SMALLER UNITS ~~gn:l; pat. 309 Lincoln,
R.J pro,,.rty, appro>. l2.000 DAILY PILOT STA~LET n6-7330 """· l•m rm., form '"·· STEPHENS & KAYE l'iq. ft, Xlnt busines.c; or -II hit "'I M H ..... .,.t>e $125-$135, LGE, mode(TI 1 br WANT AD Sell!Nol.d i;;tutfBuythenew a n~. c,,_, 1 r. "'"" ' 645-0122 ~:na:o;ic;1~.~. it t 21 ~i 642 5678 stuff You can do both Jtr~ ~~:1rMCoasl Re a I to~ , ~ ~~!~. ~2G:i~'Lsi-~i~·'
2.14-1 • DAIJ.Y pnm Want Ad•. . HOLlDA y PLAZA 11 9 "" 4 BR 2 ba. healed pool, DELUXE Spacious 1 BR. BEAUTIFUL FURN. APTS. G::_:on~o~ra~l'--------G~e~n~•~·~•~I-Ge "•I lmm8c. 2 Blka ftum Jr. !urn apt $135. Heated pool , S140-$16S. Quiet, prlv, patio,
, 1 Hii;:h. VacanL S295. 774-83!13 Ample parking. No ch\Jdrt>rt 2 wardrobes. lrplc, dres~inr-
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---s-·/'i\1--1)--~-~-~-----f)--1'1~.-;r,-~h"'"e•,___ 3s::~~ .. 2 bath, fireplaC<'. c~;o pell. 1965 Pomona, ~~n~~~~ :~· 1ar. Pool.
\..!::) I.' ~ p ~ 1-.===.,""7===c [ 17301 KeelllOn Ln. n blk w 1 833--0300. Ev<'s IU1--05JO CHATEAU LAPOINTE of Beach Blvd, on Slater). The Puzzle with the Built-In C rd/e 3 RR, 2 ba. oopt" '"'· DELUXE '"" ' B<. •Pt. • 64>7848.
bllmi, frplc, lge yarrl, Nr Pool. Close lo shops, $150. I ~1 •s~R~.~,~urn~.~w~,,~,-,,~..,-~JUl~ld~. 0 Jl:eo11000• lltttfl ol The
four ..mmbt.d wcnb be-kiw to form four sfinplti words.
GUNED
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beach. $270. Zll/284-5902, Adults, no pets. Adultl only. $90: ru dean-
4 BR. Near the ocean. 1941 Pomona Ave; C.M. Ing dep. 918 Palm.·5.16-4678, I
$21!1/mo. Drps, garage A: B•lboe l1fend or 53&-4979 4 fenced yarrl. 5.16-0346 LARGE modern single story
Lagune B••ch FOR Jeasc 3 Br, 2 &, 2 Br. $150/mo. C A 11
3 BR 2 BA view rpld nlOClf'm, redccoratr.d\" lower OOS--4441, !Ye§ 962-TilO. I
' ' d ' -. ' duplex. 5. Baylmn\ op-DELUXE Bachelor Unlb .
rlrpd. Exira pa ve par!Clng pnsile Pavillon s:Aotmo Walk to Oce&n. Util pd.
fnr 1r11Her & boat, 3 yrs ~211.i F'ra nk Stilwtll ' LtNDBORC CO. 53&-2519
oltl. X I n t cond. $280. B IL--p I l
495-424-t, • -en n1u •
Nowpo<t ... ch BAYFRONT·YEA'RLY
3 llOMES in Newport Shorea Duplex, lower 2 Br, 2 Ba.
Ea. Ms 4 BR. $300 -$.115 Furn tlf Unturn. Pvt be&eh
& $400 mo. on yrty )('UC &: pe.lio. No pet.I. $.100 per
Caywood Really 543-1290 mo, 673--0174
l BR apt turn 'tll J une 15th PENINSULA Point. lee 1
$140 mn. 4405 Channel Br. Sl.50. Yearly. To dtsir.
Place:, 61.~1071. able 1dul11. 67S-13S8, 1544
Lagune S.Hh !
$30 WK LUXURY
&. up. Bachelors, alnclel. l
Bdrm, 1te111 to bcb. all utJI ,
hid pool, Unent, ~ rm.
mlaunnl, cocktallt, di.fl('
Ing.
Vlllqe Jnn Hotel AJitA
.... !14.16 I NWPT Sch, 3 BR. den, 21,1 1.,M_I_"="'•"'~·~===== • HINT NI.MERED RA, dining rm. 2.iOO Mf, e S25 \VK-OCEANFRONT
LEmRS IN ft., lanrlscapina. "50, Dttlla Lovely Bachelonr;, 1 -BR.
UNSCIAMM.E lET1US 6*-4414 M.:dd 5ervlc:e, Pool. Util.
FOR ANSWER DAILY PILOT DlM.E -A e 675-8740 e
__ S:..C=RA:..::M.:.:....:·L::;n.:.:....:S...:...A::.N:..S:..W.:.:....:ER:.;;..;S~IN_C_LA_S.SIFl-r--E-D_700 ___ ni.. u:'~."'" "" ""' .... ...,0~';.~ ;_"!,,1actJoni
Old yuu ~ tl\lnk Of ,...,.
Ina lhat White Elephant tn
the attk: tor aomethlns J'Oll
can use? Try aw Tftden
Pandiae ooluma In .. DIJ-17 Pilot Want Ada.
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Gener•! General Gen•r•I
HUNTillGTON BEACH-Adults
Ol'EJQllGSPfall-l llEJlllQl-$145!
CASAdelSOL
Neat all belches• PliYatl '"""•Ille Blildins •Sauna
2 Pooh• ~lliaids •Gym• Pwttinr G,,.. tntl Volityblll
B~lt-in Kitthons • Dismmht11 • libposab• c:.tpets/Drapa
Close tD a 11 sh09pin1 • Private Partil1l 1nil Slorlp
ALSO: 2 8'tlroom w/Areollct Fl'llll l20S
21161 lreolllnl. HmjlDI lltodo-(714) "2-4iSI
HUNTINGTON BEACH-Aduff Ind F1mlly 8odlons
l-F•$l.15-2 ...... 2-Fimlll5
HUNTINGTON GRANADA mm.''""'.' POOis •/Cabana. Blllt.(o -· c:ai,.ts/Drtpos •Walk-lo C1ootb • llnaCot-
Closo lo Sltoill>lnr. All Bttchb tnd ..... -
17111 lioedto ll11Ut., "'""'"" lltodo (714) 117-1'515 Uast South Of Wllllll)
' SANTA ANA-Adult Ind f1mlly Sldlant
orDIDllSPll:lll.-1-IDSlln PARK PLAZA
--• ... Bliidio(• -• -·""" 8iilt ... ma.. Dmlwatalts• ~
llmSoltllColll-•lllllll-•F-
ALS0:,2-n 11111 r ... 1111
Ton-•/lli-Fto!ISl75
---.-lll,-(714)11GW
(2 blocll lllltl lltlltl~ -Ill•)
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DAJl.Y PILOT Tlltldu, .i.tlLWY 19, 1971
1 ........... -l~ I ...,._ ... _ I~ 1 ..... -... -J~I llpla t .. _ I~ I -
R-.1 "Apt= • ..;.u.;;.""'"'..;...;.;...· ___ XI_ Apt. un1um. w Apll.. Apt• .• ~ , __ F_u'-m_._•_r_u_n1u __ m_. __ m __ F_u_m_._•_r_u_n1u_m. __ 3_iv_ 1 ROOM w/bath 1n u-•v -·• Cost• Meta Hunfi"lton &.ech ,. ... ...-...
1.:.;=:_=:...----1---=-------I Huntlnf!on leech Huntl"lt!!' Buc:ft for woman or student~
HAUOR GREENS 2 Bdnns. · 2 Bath --i"t:;~""",:u!';.~~
GARD!:N It. STUDIO API'S ofa Q J.J. after 5, m-11s1 8adt. 1. 2, 3 BR'a. from fl.lO, $150 MONTH • POOL • l ROOl\1 w/balti ii) UnJV Park
2700 Pl-tenon Way, C.M. cpta/drpa/bJt.ins, patio Utn a ermo~a lor woman mo itudent
5tS.(J3'JO Kids ' pell OK, lt& rooms Pools, tenniA courts, kitchen
SPAC. 3 Br. 1tudio, 21i M, 26'la Otla~·are, H.B. Casu~l 1estahte llving.tmEntehr La&Qulnta11 trHer--&· laundry prlvile1e1. Call i.rs kitchen w/ elec blins. 64Z.22ZI; alter 3 p.m. 536-1816 mosa s US green a osp e re stro ee-a.fter 5 833-t~7.
New w/w crpt, d rp s, AVAILABLE NOW lined Walk ways to your apt. PRfVATE ROOM , KIT.
freshly painted. Nr schls ,st59 2 BR, All xtras. Pool. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED CH EN PRIVILEGES,
& trwys. No pet•. 54S-4893 Kids OK, J•'um av a 1 l , 1 BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $180 POOL. 549-4.ll'\
LRG house-like apt. 2 Br. 968-7510, 847-7446, l74ll No, 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210 * FURNISHED room, pvt
tam rm, trplc, 11,t Ba. bltns, C, Kttlaon, HB 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings: live entrance, kitchen privil. $20
drps , crpt, pa tio , dbl CHEZ ORO APTS within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. wk. 646-2M2.
carport. Adults. Inquire 558 B~ Atlanta, 1-2 BR, pool, Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ'! W/ * S15 PER ~ek -Up
Joann Apt A or c private garage. \VashC!l'S, seculded seating compL w/Rlmada & Foun-wfki tchens. S27 .50 per week
bLDER 1 br, vinyl fioors, dryers, !"136-8038; 536-2727 tain • up AptJ. MOTEL. ~g....sr:>S
pr, Encl. rear )~d-Pro f. tl!ODERN 2 Br. duplex.* Coior c.o-ord. kit w/ indirect lighting. NE\VLY furn room, •t.1 P'' lndscped. SIOO. S3J depos. Frplc blLns crpts drpi; I & Pl h h f • l Adult, no pets. 252 B v.·ell-~ainta~~d" 2 ~hddre~ * De uxe r•nge ovens * u1 s •9 c.rp 9· w~k & up, Pvt entr avail.
Walnut. 540-8600. ok. Sl35/mo. 842-5817. * Bonu' stor•g• spec• * Cov. c~rport Phone 546--0451
Quiet Adult Living NE\V 2 BR lrom Sll5. Cpts, * Sculptured m•r~I• pullmen & t tl• beth1 PVT. rm &-bath, have own
be -fAm * Ele~•nf recre•t1on room. car. Aclll .,.,'Orklng lady. $65 2 BR. Shag cpts, bllns, aut. ~rps, bllru, pabo, sec· URNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY C ! uo 1300 iJxhcpd Sl70 incl all uri.1. tlOn, play area, No pets. . . mo. .!\ . area . .,..,..
Adil& o~ly n~ peis 846-7777 Blk from Huntington Center, San. Diego YNG college or working rirl
"' 24t Avoca& S1. *. 646-0079 2 ATTRACTIVE 1 BR a.pts, Frwy .• Goldenwest College. Balboa. lsl. Kit & TV rm
BEAUT. l Br, 21Ai Ba stuclio nr Huntington Harbour, San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on tele. $65/mo & up. 6Th-3613
apt. Bltns. new crpts, drps Sl60-S170. 84&-9152. Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. en Holt to . . . LRG room in. pvt home, pvt.
& paint. Avl Feb. No pels. * NE\V deluxe 2 Br&. den. LaQuinta Hermosa 71 4: 847-5441 BA &. enter. SIS. wk, Nr .
.Sl~. 998 El Cami no . Fireplace, garage. Nea.rf,,,,=c=e""';=====~~;=;========• Warner & Beach. M2-t649
5-16--0451 beach. Call 968-4544 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apia., NOW'S THE * NEW LUXURY 1 & 2 Br. 1 BR w/stove & re!rig, crpts ------Furn. o r Unfurn. 370
dwhr. ahag crpt, garage!!'. & drps. Nr beach Sl25 mo. Santa Ana TIME FOR
Pool k Rec. Quiet adult ~7~,~·~dewl:"'.'~"'~'~R1"'"~lf2Y~. !"~'~·85~ll\. I;;;;;;~;;;~~~~~~ Costa Mesa
Ii•'"< W-4470. Laguna 8Hch VILLA MARSEILLES QUICK CASH
l30 wk-1 "'· w/klt $35. BRAND NEW YILLA CORDOVA Mald ser, linens, TV & lele. FOR rent or l ease year rounrl SPACIOUS -THROUGH A
&>aLark ?<.fotel 2301 Npt 1 yr old 2 bdrm apt, kitcben 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt&.
Blvd. 646-7445. furn , ocean view, w/w cpl, d I NEW NEW NEW * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. undcrFOund pkg, close to A u t Living DAILY PILOT
Garden Apts. Bit-ins, priv. very nice beach 494-963.3 or Furn. & Unfurn.
patio, heated pool, frplc. '49-J..7447 Ask for" Mr. Brack. 01.<;hwasher _color ooordinat.. Luxury 40 Unit Adult WANT AD
· ed appliances -plU!h 11hag Apartment Complex l jAd'i;iw~t.~.~$~!;4S~mo~. :,,._.~~1~63~·~1 ;1;rv;;;in;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/ CIU'JM!!t • choke o~ 2 color 2 BR 2BA O.Lux w/w drps schemei • 2 baths • stall 1 & 2 BEDROOMS 642-5678 FIA~ D/w....,r $1 7S "'""' NOW LEASING! .OOwo" • """°"" wud. FURNISHED OR Adults 548-1003 No pets robe doors _ indirect light· UNFURN. DLX 2 Br, cpt, drps, R N•w. family and adults units lng ln ldtchl!n • breakfut
&. O, pri patio. encl gar. Y.ith total reaeation club bar • huge private fenced
$155. No pel1. Refs. 646-7411 and pre-school. 1, 2, & 3 patio • plush landscaplnr •
bdmu from $150. Nr . 5hop-D•na Point . __ ....._, J 1 brick Bar·B-Q'1 -large heat.
ping, golf, "'.:.uuw.S, us ei! p::>ols & lanal.
SPLIT level. 2 BR, 1 ~1 BA.
Leue or mo.Imo. Dishw&sh·
er/dryt!r, garage, fenced pri-
va~· patio.
south of San Diego Fwy. on 3101 So. Bristol St. Culver Dr., Irvine. 8J3.3733. ) PARK WEST (%ML N. of So. Coas· Pla.za
S Sant• Ana
• Spacious Apartments
• Special cabinet 1pace
• Lock garages w/ lg stor e Bm cell e Lndry e Patios
• Dwhr/displ • Gas stove
• Special .soundproofing e Shag carpets, drapes
[~INDEX)
I _,,, ... I~
c1.,,ifi c•tion 100-149
UNGO REAL ESTATE APARTMENT PHONE· 5S7-8200 Owned and M~ by I-=~~-·=~~~= 499-1397. 494-2328 or The IrviM C.Ompany I•
4!>1-4791
l--.o"c"E""A"'No';-';V.71"E°'W..---1 Me•• V•rd•
Lge 2 hr. 2 ha, dining nn,
balcony, crpts, drps, bltn11.
S185. 837-3927.
NEW 3 br, 2 b&, trplc, bltns,
2-car gar. paLio. S 2 50 .
6'F.>-<lll6 or 673--4912
CAN'T BE BEAT
SINGLE STORY
South Sea Atmosphere
2 BR. -2 BATll
Carpe:ts & drpll
Air Conditioned
Private Patios
HEATED POOL
Rtal E1tal .. I~ ""'"'' Cl•11ificetion 150-184
f"nincial J[i]
~~2~ ~1~0~T!v~,PAl~D I
CM
646-0032 or 642-1121 I
East Bluff
NEWPORT BEACH
Villa Granada Apts.
NEW 2 br, l~ii ba, shag,
bltn.~. gar., eocl patio, $185.
675--0U6 or 673-4932
Newport S..eh Plenty of lawn
PARK NEWPORT • care Carport & Storage
fr't'e livg overlkg the v.·ater. JllDDEN VILLAGE
7 pools, 7 tennis ct.s $750.000 GARDEN APTS.
Spa. From $115 to S-IJO. 2500 Soulh Salta
1 BR. turn. $130. 2 BR furn
Sl55. 2 BR unfurn, Sl55.
Pool. Bltns, crpts, drps, no
children. no JX'ts. 325-J E.
.17th Pl. CJ\.1. 548-2738
DELUXE l &. 2 Br. turn
& unJum. Sl30-S165. Pool. in E. 22nd St. CM. 642-3645
H""'ington Beadt
Cl111si fication 200-260
HousH for Rent I~
Classification 300-355 I ... """"" ,,._ I~
Clessific•tion 360-370
Four bedrooms with balcon-
ies above & below. Gracious
Jiving & quiet surrounding
for farnily with children.
Near Corona del ?.!ar High
School. Fireplace. wet bar &
built-In kitchen appliance&.
83S A~flGOS WAY 644-2991
Bach. l or 2 Br. Also 2 Santa Ana 0 54S-1S2S 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I r-------
l ty To wnhouses. Elec. kt. R1ntal1 II~ I
pri. pat or bal SUbtrn parkg· f .!!'""""""""""""""""" i ON BEACH I . opt maid ser cpts, drps Jugt Westminster • Cl•t1ific•fion 400--465
N. of Fuhlon l.sl at Jam--·--------
Coldwell Banker & Co.
1--fanqing Aaent 541-5221
boree ,,_ San Joaquin Hills LG 2 BR, crpt!, drps, bltM, e Bachelor Apts. From S215 II ~]
Rd. 644-1000 fur lea&ing info. gar. Child ok. Sl40. 839--4605, • 2 BR unt From S225 Announurrwnt s
Charming 2 Br. 1\.1 ba apt1~'-"'"-"-"-------·I · 2 BR Fun1. From $285 Fountain Valley
ALL NEW
VALLEY PARK
APARTMENTS
, .. opens new doon for
••• YOUNG FAMILIES
2 BR. Apt• $160
2 BR. G•rden Apts $175
2 BR. Townhoua•• $185
in great area. Newly redec. Apts., Carpels-drapes-Oishwa.~her
S175. Call Ull today! Furn. or Unfurn. 370 heated pool.saunas-tennis
l'f'C room.ocean views Jean Smith, Rllr. General '"'''~•mol• ,.,.ki,.,
RENTALS NO FEE Security guardS.
400 E. 17th SI., C.M. I BR,,,'"'"· $125 HUNTINGTON
646-3155 2 BR ept prt·lum, S\50
SEACLIFF Manor Apls. 1 2 BR :c:cp unit, lrpl, Sl6() PACIFIC
& 2 Br 1~1. &. $145-$160. * Bkr, &Hi-8226 * 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B.
$30 mo~e in allowance + Costa Me.. (TI4J ~1487
reg. discount. Crpts, drps, Ole open 10 am-6 pm Dally
patio. pool, infant ok. 1525 BAY MEADOWS APTS. \VIU.IAM WALTERS co.
Placentia. 548-2682
I &. 2 BR's. FRO~ St2.l
c1.,sific•fion 500-510
Penon1!1 J[j]
Classification 525.535
lost •nd found J[g}
Cl•s1ific•lion 550-555
lnstrutlion I~
Cl•ssific•lion 575-580
Pre-&ehool cen!er. Adult pool,
Children's pool, Prlv patio.'i.
Elee kitchtins \Vail lo wall
closelll & c&Tpets. 2 pl1y-
grounds. Carports &. stor·
ag".
------~=--I BRAND NE\V UNITS all with * BA YFRONT * beam ceilings paneling pvt
High-rise 2 BR's from S295. p11tios. frpl r, 'au rt'C iacil-
3 side tie glips 11.vailable. ilies. Adul 1s, no Jlf'tl'
642-2202 • BaC'bc)or e
Overlooking beau! garrien I 1~ palio & h!d pool. Adults. S«vices: and Rtplirs
1035 12th SL, across from . _ I
Lllke Park. 5.16-2'6!12 , Clas,ification 600-699
e I BR from SIJ;i e
e 2 BR from Sl65> • 17256 S. Euclid St. 4 BR, 2 ba, 2 porches, l"t'frig, Newport Beach , I •-.•--_ l[tJ Ji crpts & drps. near beach. ...,,.....,,,..,.
(just M>Ulh of Warner In ~......,, l Br. deluxe apL Furn or I ·~•<>· fountain Valley) 546-7176 ~7 W. Bay St ( hh~:n JJa.rbor Unfurn. Crpts, df11S, b\Lns, Claiiific.tion 700-710
Phone (714 ) 540-4715 2 BR rompt re·mod, c::rptd, & Ne1••por11 Blvd, ~ mi N. Swedish stovf', 2 B 11 , [§]' l ~'-""""-'--=--~--·I ~leps to !he .,.,·ater. Yrly ol 19th 51 . _ rlsh\\'hr. garage. Furn I "°""'""" I""-Huntington Beach or Winter rental. Sharp. Pb: CALL &l{;.00,3 $325/mo. Unfurn S275/mo. I ' V
213 •00 496n 902 \V. Balboa Blvd, N,8. Cl .1. . BOO • 2 BR. bltns & reJri~. crpts ,::::·~· ~·~:0:·'.:'.'.'.:":·--~--fn:::::::;;:;c-cc-c,.-;-""-,cc::f (bc'acht's or Ne .... wrt BBy a si1 1caflon -836
& drps. $1:.0 incl u11l's. Also 2 BR, carpeted, clrapcd. near Beau!llul l & 2 ~~ f~l~ 1 blk av.·ay), &12-799-l , 213: I ][El
2 BR hl!ins f..: n>fri~. drps beach Sundeck, garage, or unfurn apt.~. OFt-t.RrNL~: 28:>.-7077 Pets ind Supptiei ~
& shag ('rptg th r uo u t . '"'a.shlng fa ciL Ye a r J y . st!lr clean. ovens. D/\V (Jn CLEANi·-b<l~,m--,-,~,.-~-,-, . .
Upstrs w/ocean v le 1\' • 642-397!1 eves & wknds. 2 Brl, cllspls, ~ha!.! crpl s, T>-adl'll'inrl s Rt'al!y, M7-8511 d J -& S 1 11 ~tores ;i111l pier -1 adult BAYf'-RNT '\'rly I br. Nl"wly rps, acuzzt · auna 111 1• 20061 , Co11r1 /\\'e, NB 2 BP.. $155 Up. - 3 BR de"cor. S1l!;i mo. Adults. ·Huge Pool. FOR ADULTS --
Sl80 UP. Patio. pool, ,, •936 only . San Clemtnte
children ok . MORA KAI Util's pd. 64~ MERRIMAC WOODS
Aptll. 18881 t-Tora Kai Lane, LARGE 2 br. 11,, ba, crpls,
'i blk E. 01 Beach oU clrps, bllns .. nr. Hoait llosp. 42) ?>lerrlml\c \Vay
Cos111. !\!esa $16.YSI85 mo. 642-4387. Gartleld. !162.-8991 -="-'=-"'~.~---IATTRACTrvE 2 BR apts.
WALK TO OCEAN Newport Heights Furn SLi5. Unfum S135. Nr
1 BR._ Crpts, drttt;, Mime w/ SPACIOUS 2 Br, trpl, cp!..11, Harbor & \\'Uson. Call
trplc Ir: pa.tio1. Sll0-$150 per drp&, patio, lndry. Adlt&, 6Th-8181 8:30 10 5 pm.
mo. Adulta. no ~t&. Sl70. 646-1972. 2 BR. Crpts. drps, patlo.
LJNDBORG CO. 536-2579 f'c:lr' &n ad to Rll around Sl50 unr. $'160 turn. 2658
th.: dock, dial &11-5671. Orange Ave, C~t. ~16.i7
Apt. Unfum. 365 For best results! 642-5678
Oime-~·Line 642-5678
Apt .. Unfurn.
FCMintaln Vall•y
:Jounlai~
ll<t<li,.rran..,. S1yr. wruy
e r..I
1 ., ' llodrooom _, _
Malt lhlq
hnllW a UatudJW
-· NI ·.-
e -·-.,,......, ... •o-1-·e-..c.oo.,. __ ... _
2 BR., 2 BA., bltin range,
dshwshr, laundry fac. Rec.
rm. Tastefully decornled.
Adults Only . $180.
214 Calle Patricia
Ca3a Contenta, 492-2259
"WEED Tl .~ reap" •. clean
out the treasure' & trasb -
turn inro cash thru a Daily
Pilnl Classified 1d. 642-5678
Cl•1sific 11tion 850-858 I
eo.11 Mid r:Je11
M•rine Equipment ~
Classific•tion 900-91 2 I
T"""°'""'" llrtt l
c1.11ific•fion 915-9 .. 7 )
I ,_,,. .. I~'
Cl•11ificetion 950-990
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
I
See If You Have Any
· Of These Things A
QAILY PILOT
I
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. Stove
2. Gulter
3. B•by Crib
4. El•ctrlc S1w
5. Cemer•
6. Washer
7. Outboard Motor
8. St•reo Set
9. Couch
10. Cl1rin•t
11. Rtfriger1tor
12. P ickup Truck
13. Sewing M•chint
l 4. Surfboerd
15. M1chine Tools
16. Dishw1s,,er
17. Puppy
18. Cabin CruiMr
19. Golf Cart
20. B1rom•t•r
21. St•mp Collection
22. Dinette Set
23. Pl1y Pen
24. Bowling Ball
25. W1ter Skis
26. FrH1er
27. Suitc1M
21. Clock
29. Bicycle
30. Typeiwrit•r
31. Bar Stool•
32. Encyclopedle
33. V1cuum Cleaner
34. Troplc1f Fish
35. Hot Rod Equipm't
36. File C1binat
37. Golf Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39_ Victori1n Mirror
40. Bedroom Set
41. Slide Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43. Pool T11ble
44. Tires
Pi1no
Fur Coit
Dr1pes
Linens
4'. Horse
S . Airpl•n•
5 Or91n
5 'Ex•rcycl•
53. ~•r• Books
54. i Boots
55. 1gh Chair
56. ins
57. Electric Tr1in
51. Kitten
59. Cl111ic Auto
60. CoffM Table
61 . Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skl1
64. TV Sot
65 . Workbench
66. Oi1mond Witch
67. Go-Ktrt
68. Ironer
69. C1mping Tr1iler
70. Antique Fumitur•
71. T1pei RM:order
72. Sollbo.t
73. Sport• Cir
7 4. M1ttre11 Box Spgs
75. lnbo1rd Speedboat
76. Shotgun
77. S•ddlo
78. Dirt G1me
79, Punching lag
80. Baby Cerrla,.
81. Drums
82. Rlflo
13. Dool<
14. SCUIA Geer
These or any other e.,.,_ thln91 around th• houM
can be tumedl into cash with a
'
DAILY PIL~T WANT-AD
so
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678.
' -
T....day, Jon,.,, 19, 1'171 DAlcV "lDT ~~! ~-~~-~._.~l~~.;~1~ ... ~-~ ... ~ ... ~1~~~1 "*-1~:*!.::*~:'.::.*~:~::~:~*~1~1 ~-~· ~ ... ~-~)~~~I -~ ... ~-~.I~~~! ~~~.~!!_!!. ~l[Il]
ON'T PINCH1•An-~-~-~-~-~50l11
OVERWEIGHT?
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
Fum1111.. Polntl"I & l •l1~•~lpii;;Wil•il.....,~i1M~-&~P~·~n~1
FURNm.m.E St r Ip p 111 I f-C.'..:•J:,..:...;rh_;•;:,"l;:;,cl"11;:· '---B.UYstT ~I~~ !&lb.
Alao, boa! partl. Wood ~ PAINTING; Honsat, IUltU'· catt for cbUclrto. M)' ~
mttal. In our 10' vat tUd work. We'd. LocaJ nt'•. ,,.2~""':iim"""n;--.(!Ur;iij;ji;;;;;ii"\ 542.-.3(4.l. Cail 6~$140 a1t 5. "BfAUTY Ii OUi' BH1ineu"
G•rdenlng PAINTING/paperlni. u yn Make it Y6ur1 • ~
YOURSELF
(You're Not Dreami ng)
But You Con
an A V ON Rl:P)t.EJEN. AL'S GAltDENING In HU"bor ana. Lie It T TlVE SPECIAL LIMIT!D OFFER
6 WEEKS $20.00 (or Gardenln& & am.au lanJ.. bonded. ~f'a tum. 642-2116. o!n ~ •. NoR:"1"~un':a
1eaplnc aerv1ce1 call MO-il9S Jl'I1t.S'r Cla.11 Palnttn1 It potential. C1J1 ~ in med .
S.rvtn.a Newpon, CdM, c:o... paper . h.anaina. Trte t•t. 5'Q..7041
U nlimited Vi•ils ta M•u, Do"'< .... ,..,, >Callrr:'i~:==-':;;59;::·=,.=-.-'l~O~A~T~CA~R~P·l~fl•t•1~11~5-t
INCLUDIS: P'ully equip~ llutl & told HAVE 10 UnJta in Dow~y. Weatclitt. lila•ter, Patch, Aep11ir E:lcperiencitd 6!\ly apply,
-Personalized Cour5eS -Whirlpool laundry, ett u yr1. VAIUe WANT: Unlta II'\ Orani• M6\V It. edte • .,,, rrnt k WU\U'd Boat Worka
-St.·-Bath -Free Babyoi'tter $10.000: tuft C!Ollple. f;x. C.ounty or 2nd Tru11 0t!d1 bk yd lb wk. R.f!ru.l&r malnL .... ,1P~• .. !..,.LASTE••tim' lUN, •• ,c 1300 Locan Ave,, C.M. ...... cha."J"P mobile or motor or 1ubmiL Lee Pereyda tmmP.d. ll!rv. R e \111 . ,... .,,.,..., · c .~ "" -Sauna Bath -Heated Pool home or .m houae. !)t8.5640 ~altor 546-!6!11.1. !168-7311, c..11 ~5 +iOAT CAJtPtNTtR. and
-plus Sunroom Plumbing rIBEft.GLASS. Ptrm. jeb '70 VW Squarebaek, !ully IC. Ac, clPA.l' JeveJ, on un. ID Yr& exp Jn Harbtlr art:1 . 1----=------Wftrin&e benetlt•. LAXE
OPEN 7 DAYS PER WEEK f'l:!Uipped auto. \VU! trirle 1mpro~'eri J1.nd in Nevada , A'll lwn SU412 par mo. PLUr.1BlNG ftt.PA.IJt AMOWHEAD ~I AR IN A GARDEN SQUARE HEALTH CWB for '69 or '70 club waion. 1\'ilJ trade ft\r ca.r, camper, C & ~1 Garrieninr ~r\'. No job too amall 17141 3lT-2Ml
9562 GARDEN GROVE ILVD., GARDEN GROVE Even t~ch .. •,~~6089t· '!OUM!, condo or~ 1..::"::;&-,e7.::'1::;':..· ------• 641-312& e a OOKi<EE PE1t , fipt
7141537•5410 • ----~-----Call 540·23.l.1 NEW Lawns, rt·aeed. Compl Roofing iecrelaria.I \O,~rk. Muar be
Pl NCH You R l By OIO.'ner J BR 1114 ba on l11.wn ct.re. Clean up by job I---"-------experienced. 41)..hOur "A'l!f:k * •EQu.ity in ~auulul n,.3 113 'arre 'clear. 'Nr or rM. Free eat. For Info LEt: 1\00FING CO : Roolini Written re&ume ID: Clauif·
oce&nlront lol in i\lt xico. Knott'g BPrry Farm, rOR 597·2417 or 846.(1932, ol all type5, recover, ed. Ad No. 1M, Dttly Pll61, ll!~j;j;j;j;j;;;;;I~[;; &~1 1 ,~'-;;-;;-;;-;;-;;-;;-;;-;;~-;;-;;-;;-;;~1;1 ; &;i 1 ProFORfil~. 2'!i""A6.7worl'.'~"S<t•Srro' ','.. n
1
c,. horn"" or vacaot land AL'S La.ndscaplng'. Tr. e e repain, roof coatin&s. Lie P. 0 . Box 1~. Cotta '-i•&a. Rent1 l1 ~ ftantal1 ;-in the i~a s12.~ removal. Yard remode.hnr . "54•1'°222"'. ed aince 19 4 T. C&.litC. ,,.A,.,RRIER !
PENNIES
with a
PILOT
PENNY PINCHER
Classified Ad
3 LINES
2 TIMES
52.00
I • I I
I I
Any Item Priced
$51. or Less
" " 1 If rMr• t1'•n _. Item, the Nmlt1nM tetal
•• ,4unnot aft!Mll SJO.)
1
642-5678
· Truh haulin&'. lot clea.nup. ,,..
I
xtnt tax shelter F&C. val \\lani late moo clt.ar mobile Rtp.air sprinkJen 673·1166. 'E~A~ST=EltN=~~Q-,.,~;ty--~w~,-,-,.-,..
• no""° fO ht> moved, ""'i &f't'· n . !"'-.. _, A lll * Prict.I '. All ...,..,.$ u-,.;w,., BOYS Rent•ls to Sh•re 430 lndustrl•I Rent•I 450 $93,000: lor yachr, inc prop. 11rit1t.s or C D.'s for dnpyml + n.cl or:n ...... -P .... .-,......,...,., I c::c.c;:.;o,:.;;_,;:...____ I busiMs~. 1'<1cCrea., 1200 RI\/• ... CommerclAl * Lylr, 6~7930.
WANT 1em1 roommate, prt.f NEW BUILDING erside. Dr., Burbank. ~~~~ ~2~.4~~:~'3 br Complete Care SJS.98SS Sewln9/Alter•tion1 WANTED
age JO • .j~ for 2 BR. Oakwood I COSTA MESA c \PISTitANO c .zONl'.D GEN Clranup, tne & •prnklr • Dn!~smakina: -Altr ratioru; fCJr tlte Garden apt. Day5 '65 Dodge 880, full po10.'l!r, ' · serv. Rototil. Handyman,
... ~,0 fl < ,.2 817-f 1280 Sq ft al $167 mo. I ._ Arrf'i<, frf'~ I: clou, odd i'•b•. R•u. "°'"! Special On Ht.ms DAILY l'ILOT ,,..,,..""""·a.. ,,.. "" -,J S:-J()O &I . 1'1. Ile Gl"O$s 1i:tra cit.an in Ii out! Ori.Ji· . .. .,..,,....,..
MID woman 1hare 1 $"•" hi hook SlJO.f'Ql TRAD£ FOR In· EXPER H i· G ~en< '""°"C,;:..i;;;.;J'i;o~*,,:::"'.::""',;;,:;4c:6-., Dana Ptllnt, San Juan age emp, , lmmediete Occup•ncu na ownrr. ;JOU ue ~~~ . awa ia.n l.111 r EUROPE•"' --'·
my be11 ut. lgt.. 2 Br. apt.fl ln.220 Po"'f'f privat otfc' 1 I val . Trl'lrle nn 1mal! house com~~~L.TOR 54~.nu co r:" p I e 1 e G a rd en l n 1 "', dttsi,,...,.inr all C&plstrano and
No d1,·1nk or gm o k e . p!enry o! pa.rklna. ~3th 1 a~d equity, 847·5384. Service. K•malan!, Gt&-4.678. custom litt!!d. Vtry rea.t0n. Capistrano &each.
54/!.6432. '.\'hitlirt· ·-------Lllkt> ls11htJl" tot \VJlJ trAt\e Complete Y•rd C•r•I llhll'. 613-1849 Conta.::t Mr. Stay at
· Wh•t do you havo tt\ tra!it>~ '2000 pqu1ry !or 3-11m, oo 2 JI'! "'. "'°'2 Alter•tiona -642-5845 DAILY l'ILOT i\!ATURE Emp~y~ wam11n, 641·1485 Agt.nl . ' " .,..~ no &moking / d rinking. , List It here -In Orange 3drm. -1-In Hunt Bch., 1::::_ _____ .....:c:.= Neat, accurate, 2D years~. San Clemente ottl.Ot
A , 1 ,1 d 1 INDUSIRIAL bid&. So. San!a County'• tarse~t read tr•d· Prefer roon1 lnr oo~se. Oener•I Services Tllo 305 N, El"·-•-ft ... !15UffiP , ren . " l"!la e A 5700 • d ~"~ ~ ~1 . 549--0421 &-II PM . , na, approx. . sq, e-1 inii po!!t.642-5678 847.8457 Eld I Att ti I ~ ar · luxe air C'ond oUict.s. 1240 er y, •n .., * Vtrne, The Till! r.ian *
SHARE my v•alerfront home E. Hunter SL oivnr 4~.4349 * * * * * * will lake you by car, any CASHIER. ExP'd, tor hne w/ •··k. M.,, '°"° y!!ars. · _.. R 1 .,.29..,.. Cust. v.·ork. Inatall & repairs. ~ bid 28 trra'"" ~as tt. ;),)0-'" No ,.. b "'° •ml. Pl••t•· '~men'& clothinc •b:ft, part S150/mo. 675-4331 NE\V f , 17 ·2300 1Q. ft. ..., • Nr Bakrr t.,,_ fairvit>w, 1 Husb.snd Bu~y~ Ca!! f.1ooM! patching. LeakiltJ' shower time. S<>11 politlon 41IO
FEf.1ALE roommate nt t>dt>d
until Junr. Bal !tie. 675-4680
!'>-9 PM only
)T !st>. Sullivan, 540-4429. [SJ ~ 54~ aftt r 6-Rl!pair ttpa.lr. 847.1957/MS-0206. open for exp'd, No pt.one
St or•ne 4~ LOlt and found I ,_...,.... ___ '""_"_-_·.,__,] Build·Serv Mo~I Things CERAMIC tile nev.· & ca.lls . Backstreet, No, 25 ~;,;~·::--~;:-;;;;:-~;:;;; 1 :.;;;;;;;;;;;;~· ;;;1 ·~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·~~;1 RAIJ'l Cutten In 111 11 td . remodel. Free e1.t. Small Fath, Ji;l. NB WANTED. the righl IO.'Oman Quality "''Ork . Reuonable. jobs welcome. 536-2426, '*" * CASHifi. NataonU
10 shr NB Bluffs hm. Pvt LARGE, Jock . up. 1.toraie Free est. 963-2208. 53&-8856. Lumber, Huntincton -..ch.
ba, a.II priv. S80. 644~9 1?3-ce avail able, trom $20. 1 ~F~°":.:::"~d:..:.lf~r~H:.:..•~d~•~)'--5-50 Babyaitting <i'7'""'-------Call 962·5561 lo to 4 P.M.
G f R t 435 S46-639:>t547>-9863 H•uling Tutoring a r•ges or en YORKSHIRE Terrier found OCC College !llrl wants ----=-------I CASHJtR For fine ladies 1----------· BOATS. trlrs, dune buggies. in H.B. permanent babysitting job HAULING TEENAGE tu torln c & clolhin6 store. Part-time.
DOUBLE Car or large single Back Bay area. S@cure & 962.9568 wt!h ..,,·oman who "''Orks Licht & Heavy co u nselinJ. Exptrienceri, No pl'IOne clllls. Baclatrftt,
car ~ar11ge for i;lor.sgr. l:'asy access 646-4519. FOUND, Great Dllne pup, nitt>s. Re5ponsible and roe. Anytimt. Call Chuck c r ed e n Ii a led teacher. No. 25 f'ashlon l1land, N.B.
Coi;ta 1'<1e5a area. call Rentals Wanted 460 Vic: Ora.nie Coul College. ilable. Good terll1!;. Livi!· ~().:l379 or 494-4438 542-&511. Call hftwn 6:30 CwsOO 546-2~13. A5k for Terry. t----------~077 !n OK. Ca.II Lynn 531-3885. YAFtD, Garage cleanu~. & 7:30 Dl1tributttrshlp Sale•
SINGLE CAR GAR AGE 2 YOUNG ladies a.nd a. 0<1f YOUNG Si~ria.n Hu5ky. Vir. 11-londay, Wednesday & trt.l's dirt ivy removal, Akip Trff Service Franch!&e and
FOR RENT, SW/mo. Hun-need .a home. Rt:a.son11hlf. 22nd In Costa. Me&a 5Jb-3174 \veekrm1s only. loarler hllrkhot. 962-1745. t:xperit>ncl!d Only
r1n£"1on B!:h 11rea. f.46..~7. NP"'por1.Cost11 M"ia a.rea. to idi'n tify \VILL h.a bytdt one child 1n TRASH. f,,_ Garage clesn-up, TREES, Hedges, Trip, Tnm, Sl.0001$1.500 wk. C6m.m,,
Office Rerlt•I 440 675-8726 niy honie .... ·eekd11ys. Dt>pen· . cut, remt\ved, hauled. Ins. Qualify applicants. ~~~"-~~--~~ t FOUND sm. 111n lt.m11Jr dog. o:i hi I C t M day~. $10 11 lo1td. free t:SI. 642-4030 Bi5 Jtlhn Wllh VendinJ Mff ., Hea.vy
SUPER·DELUXE QUALITY Misc. Rent•ls 465 Vic : l5t.h SI. N.B. Ca.JI A.ft I ·c:ll ~s:'i.':i.'l~s11~tt>r ~s~~rea. Anytiml", 548-5031. • Travel. All Lead1 Furnlsl\ed ----:-------l ..'.''..!"'"'"'..''~7~.~~2~22~l _____ 1 J\10V!NG Garaiil! clea.n-up [Ill Thru National Advertistni ~;~~ll~~~i;~. 1~m~r:. :~ Yenced storage spacl! BL Ac K pupp y, part I R..,,.~ ~aOn NS~~~ hE Y~~~ ~ J11e h·~u!lng. Rt~a!IOnable. '---'""'°'--"""-' _ _,! I J Call Coller:t (312) 6'2·3757
cupancy. Oranre County. for ca:;.~r~2~s, etc. ~hrRt'lnr, !~und n e Ar tr1ns[Mlrtation "ill bllhysi1 tree est1males. 64.l·l502 --r.lr. S.snd"rs, BfC
/.irport Irvine. CQmmerc airport. 646-4J22 daily or ..,,·eekly. 675-8726 Hou1ecle•nlng Suit.i 3121 ·JOHN HANCOCK
C I d. A' 1 ,~u"o p~1 v· , ~I CENTER • ChlCl""', Dllno11 omp P:<.:, 11 J. irpor er '\' '' "'"' e irini y ·"'"' e CHILD CARE .--HOUSECLEANING Bach!!lor Job W•ntad, Mal• 700 60611 •-Jlotrl & Rrsl11ur11nt, ba.nks. ~ hlock 17th St. Co1ta Meu. 1 · -'.ii'i:~~--==~=I SAn Diego & N'pl r .... 'YS. P1rson1l1 1 a.. 646-1 116 Pomona School Atta 11p!s, home~ or off1ces. Rea. COOK . woman, Rflttrernenl
UNCRO\VDf.:D PARKING . "S SSS • ~14/!.5328 * Mn1hle. SJJ.&475 or RJ6.9Zl3. SCRAM•LETS home, Lquna &each, Call
LOWEST RATES Lost l FULL or p/tnnt>. inJant or HOU~ECLEANING 494-Mjll
01'.'Mr/mgr. '.!172 DuPont Dr. I P 1 \ girl 7 Good home & care. By Day Own Tr11.ruiportation i co'°"u~NTEi;""R""'G~IltL=-.w=~Dry=-1
Rm. JI, Nel'.'Jlflrt Beach •rson•' 530 \LOST ne11 r Pomona k \\'llM>n c.~I. 64S-:J5.37. . 83&-0648 ANSWERS Clea.rtinc Pl!Jrt. Apply D'.lO
83J..J223 Counrsy tci Brokers 1 St. C.M. Sml 2old & wh! \VILL ba.by11t my hom e COf.iPLETE lmusecleaninc Harbor Blvd. C.M.
ADVENTURE Pl. Cnc~~r k Doxy, malr 8'yv1f10.' Sehl area. Any S2.:i.:l hr. stove, retria: etc. l'U.nc1d -Fifty -Nlldf e -DESK SPACE
222 Forest Avenu9
Laguna Bettch
494-9466
SAILING CRUISE "Dandy. Reward, Call agl". cau ~fi.-0!1~1 Newport Bch. 675-55!3, Dttod!! _ DANOJtUFF We'll help ycu aell! ~
t.'JO f1. 3 mast Squa."'°' Rigger. t>,·ei; 11ttrr 6. 646-8221 Business Service HOUSE Of CLEAN Oldtimt TV ~rform~r Wlth
Lea.ving 3/15/71 IQ r 3 WHITE kit1t n, 6 months nlrl , I Complete House CJeanin1 too much expor;ure : "He dyed
months. i\1en & IO.'Omrn want. Ear!i "W!. PLEASE BURGLAR A 1 ar m 5 & 642·6324 his ha.ir Mi many times hi!
er! w/desire fnr adventure R"~TUR N. 11111 l\11r11mar, strvice . Local & !Llenlt----------harl technicolored DAN· al11m1~ LfaM' nr b y Meu. Oean!n& Serviet DESK SPACE & trlH'"I "-11h1!1 ry to ~h11.re j Llt~1n11 Be11ch 4!M~3 fi.16-111fi u . Carp!"lll. Window1, :f'loorserc DRUFF'."
R •• i ~Xf'l"n.'if's. }'or inlnrmatio11 STRAYED fJ·nm 2119 Na · C · Rl!a Ir. Commc'J. M8-41ll Job Wonted Fom•i• 7~ 305 No. El C•mino
S.in C 1ament•
492-4420
call Pam Reynold5, (Zl3J 11onal, CTl-1. Sm. Siamese. f ~•~rp~o~n~l~o~r~-----ff;i,iii;i~~i;;:';;;;;;;;-:::;;i;' ' •• c6UPLE dnine hnusa work. f----------:t7R-26G.;. f~m. 1'"l!!a l!l'lllAr a.drlttM CARPENTRY 4 hnur ~hirt1 HOW a.bout an "All·Ar6und
20G ~q . fl ground f!orir,
prt>st ige Wf"s1t.Jltl Dr. Pvt
t ntrancr. Util p11 id. Park·
ing, $,ll."i m(). 1741 W1!11tclilf
Dr, 64~>-3033.
FULLY LlCENSED * & ph No. 646-25-ll Aft 3 I MINOR REPAIRS. No Job fl62.850n Girl~" Yn1. a!lr, ag-
~nnwnrd 1-linrlu Spiritull.!ist LO. ST: 81.\ck k grl':y 1lriPt T-Sm·". C•bl•·.t Jn r••. lr••ln '"' ..,. ''"' ,.. .... , I 1res-'1ve. Skilled in 1\ll'iling. Al'lvk e on a.II ma.tiers. t1e;_rr cat Vic. 27th NB 11 ''" & 01 hf: r ..... bln•I•.'---''-------p x <-•. ., . B ,,~ "'21 Th .... ·I' B . ~c')'/r,.c:pt. 646-17<49 ...,v,.. "lllT!llge, ustness ,,...,,; e ow~rs arP 545-8175 U no an~wer lesve lronine : Sl.50 per tu'. AIDES-f"or convalesctnce,
ATR Cond, crp1s, facirtJ
Bt!:ach Blv d, R.e11s. Csll
842-2525 or owner
213/394-0015.
Rearl 1ne;~ J1:1ven 7 d11y1 a lll'~ft . m•g ol ... -~ H. o. Bri"" Own Hanr•~ '· 10 JO I lnl>"W'.. ,.., l"lder!y care or family care. wfey · am · pm. I.OST: An Aua~1e 'h"phtrrl Anderr.on Call 645-.3092 312 N, El Camino Rt>al. 32nd d liomt:ma.kers, 547..Wl.
San CJemrnte pup at : lln .N!!"''port ALTERATIONS &: ~pain. :J~o~n~il~o~r~l·~'------i l5EfiENDABLE Wom.tn to 492·91.~6. 492-{1()76 Bl vrl. l·L>7l. Ian with choke Lie,&. InsUl"f!d.Res & comm !io hoUaework. 4 hrs per
YOGA FOR YOU! l"hain Door han11:1n1 • drywall '. ~UALITY Ja.nitoria! ·"clean· day. Own traMp. 642-5539
SEALPOlNT Siamese, malr, P&neling 642-5872 inr &erv. w/a pnce )'(IU HOUSE ·-·k. ' •-!or •·-YOUNG Altornl")' w11ntt!d lo Amfrican approach. Demon. rlfocla~·t>d Iron! I e et . · · can a!ford. Dependable, ins. ""' na •"'v
share off ice & secy w/1 slra!ion & ta.Jk on ?t1on I. ~ward Cerpet S•rvlce Baker Clt.aning &: Mainlen. peoplt>. Own lransp.
other 11.ttornry. PN'f. bu5. Tues a t ,1t pm. CLASSES * s.,16.4316 • anc.e, 640.7~2. ~liabl@. 541-9l'30 .l 5U-3&26
pracnce. N.'R. S:tJ.3622.__ START TuPs ar 2 pm. Wtd I .:,.HITE temal" Samoyed lost Diamond Carpet Cleanins Lancl1c•plng Jobs W•nt.d, M & F 704
Sl{,\RE des1g.n off.Jee, .sllr11.c nile al 7 pm. 1/11 nr Qranlj:r Cn a.irporl. New Yea.r Spt><:l11l~
sp1.ce. Arch~lt'c!, en11tfnee._r.
1
F'OUND NUDE Sf>lonit:i to 3 yr olrl. SIHlJO FN'e l\hnor Rep11iring LANDSCAPING : lncludin1 Housecle&nina: S3 hr
11r1lllt nr ries1Jt1e.r only. Sl;JO A l1"J1kine; !'0(1f 1n Dn vrr LOST Siamr~e Kitten. Nr· \\'irh Cie1ning 400' $20. patios, rlerki ng & lencina:. I 111d Plumb1ni:z R"pa1r
mn IHS-1~3S Shnrr~ 1 fixrrl \!. T (;llv BAlbn>!I Rlvrl !.· r, Sr I 1''r""' r sl. 64>1317 Rea~. 837-9301. e 54!>-tl29 e
VERY nicr nfhcp In Ll~lnA Rool1n11t Co, 6 4 ~ -27.It11'. R,.wird c1111; 67j..1276 CARPET J11yt>r hat shat CoMPl.ETf~ Prnf. S,. r v Help Wanted, M & F f10
B,.11ch. \\'f l'.' r rit, rlrps. S.11!-~~00 ALL hlack Llllhr!ldOr Retr.~ c11rrir1 Rnll·l"_:id~. fng tal l S!stP h(''rl contractt\r. C11ll ~94·96,1.1 or 4!14.7447. Ask for Si\\'JNGER (}r>1.n11tc (I), fenilllt. Ln~I llllt5. R,.werrl. lltURr. R,. 11~. 64~l.l9 A111 or 91i~l!l21!. _A_R_E_S_U-,-,E-.-.-,-,,.-,-,-,-,-,-~
,\Ir. Rrack. (i uldf'. F'r"' inlo OC~<; P, C11ll 962-2MJO I P'.\I Malnten•nC• pl1c11llon oo TOP~ W1 coin·
CORONA DEL MAR-n Rnx 2111, An<i~eim,
1
Celling• posr & print 100 copil'!i; •
2 Rm !IUJ!r. P"I ba, pvt "nlr. !<2~~. :1~~001!1.. I Masonry ONLY s1:l. Call 646--08S4 f6r
p,,,, crnt/rlrn, 11ti! prl, Al ""fl"! TC" A I l[l• ]I I I ,,. ''' -" ,, . ., · " nonymQUJli. ln1trucUon PAINT Arroustical Ceillnas. BRICK. block. conc r,.!t. ~·P~P"='"~m:;:;,'~";·==---$1~~11 mo. 0\11ncr. li71.fi7:07 Ph ""1211 ·1 "' · nne ,,.,,._ nr wr1 e I 110 ta or trade. 531-6927. c11rpentry, house le11e.!1n.1:. ARTIST ~EWPORT offict'!, C' pt ii . P. 0 , Box 122.1 C.OSIA Me.AA rir li.16-:1110 all 1yf)t>~ rl'moclehn •. Nt\ Comn1t>rc1al IU'tlst wanter! !or rlrp~. ocran v1"w. lrt1m Sli5 I Schools & Cem•nt, Concrete ~~ .,~~. 1rt1J.U. Lie. Contr rs111.bli1herl cold type aetting per mo, Onr Alt 6 pm: ""~""" b · ;· u· / Gi5-4FM j[S) Instructions 575 us111es5. am W' w paste.
Loil Md Found CEMENT WOJtK, r.o job too BR~CK & BLOCK WORK up & meC"hanics. 642·9678.
600-1200 SQ. FT. small. rea10nable. Free MASONRY OF ALL TYPES AUTQ PO LI SH J NG &
Offices, C~f. 64g.2130 I I rrs YOUR MOYE Eatlm. H. Stulllck, 548-8rui. For estlma.te. 531·2112 DETAJL positiOns. Exp'd
3700 N-~~~_i :~~D, Nl! Found .I free •ds) 5501 INDUSJRY CAREERS •• CONCRETE. FIOOl'1, ~alntinv & ~11!,~"' ~~~:'.i"!..!n~~~~ patios. Any site job. Ria•. Pa,..rh•ntl"I "• ~... r-
67;>-24&4 or 541·5032 j l\lALE Ge.rman Shepherd. Ca.II Don &42-1514. co. ~1ETRO CM WASH
1670 SAN'!'A ANA AVE, CM • 11ppro:"( I yr olc:I. Yellow AIRLINE & JRlYR Contractor PRE Sprint Specll l. X·f ~""::;"~";'"'°:;;;~'~B~l,~d~··:-::C~.M;.'--o-
3.X: gq. foot I Schwinn nn Tustin & 17th -Painttr, now i c hool BABYSJrlER needed, Snuth 67~21M or 541·503.2 It hlk rolor. Vic St>.1 1 . ieer her. AccOUirtkal N!il· El"m Sch di&t, H.B. 2:30
• NEWPORT BEACH Civic St, CM. &\~2641i f' OPERATIONS AGENT ~1Y Way, qua.hty home il'!ls. SlO room . Cu5tom to 9:30 p.tii., Mon thru
Cen1t.r, 300 ft lo 1000 f!. BLONDE mall! Cllt in Boal e TICKET SALES ttpalr. Wall.s, cfillfl&', fleorl hOuite paintin1. 64&-t519. Thun. Yf!Ur home. note
An11.•11 k ~crelarilll. 67~·1601 Can,YOn, 4 nm. old, rhint-: ~~~;,lARGO ~~:00~0
24 ~~ 11.11": aes::"· LiSCO Pa.inllng Contractor ;~~Y~~~ue only need
EXECUTIVE 11uUe of of. stnfl!! nt.a coll.tr, 494·4~. fl COMMUNICATIONS ' Inter &: Ext.tr. 2 :S!&ry _;,r;;~"";;;;:;,..-=-..,= li~1. 33~5 Nl'wport Blvd, J/Zl
1
•TRAVEL It.GENT LJC 'D Contr. Remodelina, Speclall:r1t AllO acc0u11 !IAfiYSITrER i:i pm dally
N.B. Call 645-4545 -.-0-0-,-,0~h-1,-,-,-.-w-h-1l-,-,-po-l· arld-0M, roofing, painting A ipraylna. · Lie 'k In •. for 2 children a.if:11 W . l'Opolr• 54()..7358 540 ~~ my home. OR will consUS . HAVE n!!ict ~p11.ce f() 11h11~. ll"rl rem11le puppy, nt>w !!ta Alrllne School• P•clflc · • .,_., M5-2l99. live-in. 54!}-4367.
O.C. Airport .area, $75 mo. collar, near r.1ontt Vii§la in 610 E. 17th, S•nta Ana GEN'L "CONTRACTOR PROFESSTONAL P1lnttn1. 9iiitiliillm,;;;;ii;o __ _
~.tl-l•lfi7. S11n1a An11.. 1;46-:.412 al1Pr fi.1 S4U5'6 Rf!'modellnr·Room Ar1dlUon1 Exltr. 1 1tory, lt\W U $200
Busin.11-Rental 445 f'OUND li~ht brown m&le COSTA MESA Lic'd/ins 645-0991, 61U809 w/R'd f)&lnt. Ava rm. S18. ' I rlojt Mexle11n h11irle.,1/? PRE~SCHOOL Additions * Remodtlillrl Aecous. ce!llnrs iprll)'td ~
Hot ... ~ n ., "·rwi'ck • Son, Lie. coats $15. Roy, 147-1358 STOR~~ or Shop av a il . mwuvu r, 1•e10.'f!Ort l.Ath & J\1onrovla. % day .+ Vt'
down Io w n SA.n Juan Be11ch, 64S-22!l0 full day M!Uio~1. Planned 873-QMl * 54~2170 No Wllstinir:
Ca.p13'tra.no !or 1mall Jo'OUND bt1ut\f11J Irrt'Y haU -ram, Mt lunche:i • .t.-.. Lic'd COntr, ~eltrc * WALLPAPIR * ,..... ,....... ·\vb.en,._, call "Mac" butlneas or office. $75/mo. grown ml. Irvine Avt, Nllllif 2.fi, hra 6:30 AM·6:00 PM. Adl'llDt>na, Plana, Layout 1 .,..
4U.1153 or '49J..1706 evt1, Hence Enllla:n Schoo I . $18 wk.COMPAJltE! 642-«150 Karl E. K'.m:lall Ml-1537 •14" •1111
E. 17th Si., Costa Meu ~1904 or 831-!237. WALKING D£CK iPff!Exttr J)tinttna. Trte
Sto.te-ofllce, ,_, Month SMALL white cat wl~y -~P~IA=N~O~L~i~S~SO=N~S-I COATING$, llt. Local rtft, IJc'd Is 1111,
1taalonomtea Oirp, 675-6TIXI & ~ m&.rldnr-found or all type• tAe Jt.oot1n& AcoaUltica1 Celllnp. C&ll
:t==, .~ ~-'-•-lllO. near Hell "-Ntwl•nd. Bettnner1. lnttnMdiatl!!&. °' CM &0.Tm tllr tt.. Cluclt. t64(11)9. """"'" ~-, •w ~ -W I M2 °~2 Wm .... ry olJht -int " . ~.JF ! U ltlt 221'111 St. Ntwport Beach. ettm nster. ......., etc. Call ltrvCt £0.C.I. ll'ln. nt. ''W'l 1 U"t'u-DI• nt. yn.
531.-S.16.1 CUTE IUlle grey k bnwnt It' blcJmd) MS-+178 Meas JtOOM Md.itloat. L. T. Opet. Ina. U c. F'l'M: tat.
Stote:bi \V 19th s CM fe_mal' 1hap:y dog w/M Verde. · CoMitruc::Hot\. Slqle •I.Or)' or Aecoust. C.lll"f•. 911&-9121.
S11J/mo. * ~741• tAil founrl vir Oran.ce &. 2 &sttm plAna • ia)olul 3 Jk. EXT ~ . •u. 22nd St, C.l\f. 545-Jda .Ut 6. PIAf'.O lA•llOlll your homt 847.1511 .. , ' 4 llt EXT: $140:
wv' St'OR.E, 1tKlp, office. certified te1chen:. MIUllc :Steve ~54~
·IANK·
l'OSITIONS
Now lnterVleW\f\f ftlr ntw
branch op@nini In l"Jew.
pott Center in February.
e TILLERS e
Bank ._xp.tficl'ICf! requifed,
e PROOF M&CHINE
OPIR e NC1t __ ,,__
-APPLY -M~., MOIUWON
2l:sl I:. C.0.t Hwy,
Coro"-deJ Mar
$95. 2340 Newport Blvd, VIC Goldenrod I Stavlew, Systems. M.r . Ha tl'lcock. Wtth jult a call, )'04,I can 1 NTEJ(/Exttr. SptcWlata
CM. ~. !148-3333 Cdf.I. Fat puppy, call 64&-1388 aeu tt all ! Place • 0&1ly Uc'd. bonded, Ins. Wo11't Crocker Cltlaen1
PLANNING to move!' You'll 6"4-ln BR.,IDGf Le 11o n1 by be n4t bid• 543-S03:1
tlfl(I an a.ma.zln1 numbtt ol round Poodle Vicinity 300 ~Jed Gortn Tt.cht.r & Pilot Oa11ififd Ad C&ll 1..:'-'.:"::;:;:':;:;;·..::;:..::;;;.__ Netle119f lank
home11 In 1~·, Oa.u:ltled bltJck 17th ~t. COAi• Meu.. Life Matter. fOtU'IOMC • · * PiJiiii(HANOINO Equal ~tun)fy .,..ploytr
btll>fld )'()'.! M can Mao In 646.Ulfi only..ln your home , ~\TS. tltttt 5'~78 TODAY! .l 1'AINTING. * Mt·2'2S i•O.-itil'•.,;•.;,•1.I
CLASllFIED
HOURS
8:00 a.m. t.o !5 p.m.
J..1onday thrt.1 P'rttiy
9 to noon SatuH~
Advertisers may place
their al!a by telephone
COSTA MESA OmcE: 330 W. Ba.y
642-0&TI
NEWPORT 'BEA.CJ!
2211 W. :klbM Blvd.
642$18
HUNTINGTON Jli;ACI!
11875 ~h: Blvd.
00-1220
LAGUNA BEAi'.'.!! 22% Tbr~t ~ve. ........
SAN 0.EMEN'TE 305 N. El Camino Jtal 492-4420 .
NORTif COUNT"!
ltial tree 540.ua>
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
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ls 5:30 p.m. the da,y be•
fore publication, elettPt
for Monday '.Edition
when deadline 1s S&i:Ur'o
day, 12 n6on.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Ad~
shoul d check thrilr ads
dally & report crrot'I
Immediately. THE
DAILY PILOT 8UUl'MI
liablllly for th~ fir1t In-
correct Insertion onl)>.
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1ure to mtke a Mee~
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1Jven you by :your 1.4
tU:tt u receipt ot )'OUt
caneellaUon. This ldll
numbeT mu1t be ~
nted by the •dvtt'UMr
In cu. of a dlqlatt.
CANCEi.LA TION 0 II CORRECTlON or NEW
AD BEFOft.E RUNNING:
Every effort is made to
kill or correct a 1'*"' U .
that hU betn ~ but we cannot · •
tte to 4o tO untt tht 14
ha• •ppieared tn ~ pa.. per.
D!Mz.A.·UN!l ADS: tMN ... ar. atdctb' ........ ..._by ...a
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Tiii ll.ULY J'u..or ,._
-,,,. !lahl .. du: t lf)'. lfdlt, ~ • ft. ruse aey ~rit.
and 10 Cblftll tta rat.I A re!NJ•tJon. wlth6ut Prior nntlce. .
\
JWLY '1lOT TLIC'.wf,q, Januerl 1!, lYl l .M
[ ( o'•J• ... J[Il] I l[Il] ;;I ;;;,_,;;;-~J~[Il]~l~I __ ... _d·-~I~~-~l;;--~-;;-~l~~;l~I ~-~;;'~~1 :l;.-''""_,..._l~!i;1 ~l ~·'"~"y;;;;;~ ~l~~I ~! -~ ... ~;;; ... ;;;' ~l~I
Help W ........ M & F 711 Help W•nto4, M & F 711 ;,Ha;l;p~W~•~n~tod;:-, ~M;&~1';;7~tO~liiF~uijm~l~tv~"'~iiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiOiil'iiuiimiiiilNii,.ii"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiltij;-;;;;:lu~l~l;-M-:"-t;q.i;'.""i1iOl220w ILOVABLE mbtd bret1 doc ADORABLE h"" • ""'"" 1_G::.-=;_;'":;..l _____ tl0_1 wtli~ with blk C!')'ft and I v.·k old P4Jppie1, malr. & L YN l to 11:30 PM ghi!t. Nunery School Tea t'her. PRO.BAND equ.lp. 300w rue I mo. male med 1iz. female , Mother Is SEXTANT, AOF,ComPMNlll,
COOK I p A R°K L JOO CON-\\'rite: f'Xp. & qua.Hf's !lo CLOSING OUT A1n~K Olympian, Hoffner lo\'H children needi good Cock-a_ po c, I a 1 her RDr , trlesoo1)1!s, &romete:r,
For loc-al mtfec lhop. Day-\'ALESCENTcENTER. Ph: ClaMlfled ild No. 16 Daily baq .cuJta.t, cus1. val~ home fncd yd. ~ unknown. 56-l.J67 l/l!I Bu1ucula1·s 492-4 __ 230_. ---I
time ah.lft. wknd! oft. Some1 642-8644. PiM>t, }-.0. Boll· 1500, Costa DECORATOR GETS CANCELLATION tromboM. All very chea.p. 83&-4493 t/Zl BABY 'S tint ba.ss111e11 \'t'ty Boat•/M•rine
exptr, deslrMble. $2.%5 to LOOKING 1or moN' than just Me&a , Callf. m2ti OF 11 LUXURY APARTMINTS 1~61>-;;,t~<07~~d~Y•~-==cc---.=•f lLOmV/iABW!LE:E1t•~malmi~•-mmr.ioiiiaii<;;o,.ie good rond1tion. Con\f>lere Equip. 904
start. C&IJ Now! another ,JOb ! Join the ''New OPEftS.SINGLE NEEDLE Sp41nl1h & MediterranMn Furniture DRUM SE"l', coml)Ute, Sl95, ~P and beagle mix pup, with whi~ la<.'t' s k 1 rt .1 -..::::!-0:!:C-------'-
ORANGE COAST f\l>.aurifu.l I~" Div. of Spl"C. mach. Exp'd onlv, ALL BRAND NEW Incl, hi-hat, 22" cymbal, 1l wttks lovu cblldren 673.-1331 1119 t11 •\\'ARE AUTO PILOT.
EMPLOYMENT GENERAL FOODS. llelp spor~""l!ar, &d. pay. N.B. A decorator dream bouse on display _ Uundlvnt, a1.:<.-ess. -Excellent needs cd home (ncd yd, CnuMMY soia]6U-\Verldi con1plete,
AGENCY othen to enha~ their 642-3472. 3 rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture 00 lion. 548.Slk d 48 alkr 4 548-08ll 836-4493 1/21 Terra~. Laguna. 497-1360 i:ioo
124 Broadwa.y C.M. 64;..3111 personal l>eau!y while en-PART TTME -Cl"-rk/Typi1t pm C1t' wee en 1· BLUE-tteme \.:. yr female 1119 78 \VA'IT rnarine rarlio, ~w:
' joying a profitable bu1iint'11s .• bookkttper. small in-(was reg. $t295.) FOR Sale. Sacr ifice! New cal, short-hair, ~-Persian. "i.""'M"ln:;ia"°'l"~""P~ood::::;;1,:-:,=o~pp:;;~.,c.1 2 sel~ hydraulic trin1-U1bs,
*DENTAL.* ST.>;lSOwkup.Noexpnec.1 forrnal I girl oUiC1!! $1 TJ $ACRIFICE • • • • • • $425 buf1et tenor HX v.'ith new Preferably lo sonieone 6 wks old. 644--4227 aft 4 11ew. 962-4981.
Secrt!tary/ReoepUonlst No door to door. 842--2(.64 I per hour. Call lor ap-C I 1 " d 't B d S -1 c-ue. $400. Call 5W--8359 or w/une.ltered blue or creme p•, 1 t/21 NE\V Col. 26 ~1eGihbini. 2 omp e e Me 1 err•n••n e room lU • 8'°1889 " 546-5613 I I poin1rncnt . 6-1;)..10 I . 0 k IR $349 001 NOW $1110 ....-male, 546-9965 1/2] sp1nnakPr & pole. S21ill. DJSTRIBlITOR ~t an a I<' MACHINE _____ .. ,._ ... ..,! in • , •9 · • ........ • 0 l 'Ofi="lc-o~F"u_r_n,l~tu_r_o~/---Lo\'i ng 3 yr old While-Orange 2 Femalt>. J n1ale GermM s-16-538.'I rlay, 67.'>-:Hl I evf'
)"Our own l>Usineits W/l'(}-ISetup man for local elec., PIE -MAKER Gorq•out. Speniih Custom Bu ilt Sof• with Equip. 124 Shepherd, Collie &.· St.
«'nte potential of sum JX"r mfgr limi. Tltechanical bck-For local lir1n. /\take cr usts, matchin9 lov• Seet-Choii;• of beeutiful !--~~------male ca t. Alteml, shots boll" Berna.rd mlx. 534--0823 1/21 Boats., Power 9G6
mo, lnllial inveslmt'nt if'ss <Tt'rw:I "'-"/dnJJ pres.-;, lathe. Jill pies, h-ost l'akc&. Per-fabrics. { R•g. $319.95 I ........ NOW $191.00 ] t.tODEL 209 31'1 auto photo ~~~-· .. ~t'!!'! good homt' Sl·IRUBS & Cactus. You dig!
•· & I s · ' D' • 5 t $7S 00 .., .,,., u""""' ""'""'....,.., 64&-m:.! all 5 pm. 1/21 196: 31' \'••i::,, Sportrish.er. than $100. Early reuremenr f'lt:. Exper. dl'!>irable. S:.!.2.J sonal n1atunty · n1anu11 panisn 1n1ng e s ........................ --• copier, new, late '68, "''"°" "'c-;;--""'.,.-,-,--,---, ___ -,-lo · --·• 1200 S I'd 0 k Ed T b l & C fl T bl $1,50 l P "---'!ALE Ba•••t hoond, fibf>rgla.s:-: t".B .. Auto pit, po65ible. 642-2150. 10 staM. Call No1>.1! dcx1eri1y nt:T1.1Cd. · . to o 1 • n • •1 o •• • •• • va ue. urc1J<&M::r 11..Siiume "
ST T II D t T bl L J 6 1 total tri-<:olor. 4 yrs old, goud ADF, Kohler 110 grner111'1lr, DRIVER wanted: Leavin~I ORANGE COA I star1 Call Now' S a ecor$a or a • amps ~~t'~ pa~[11en s ri "'/children, Owner mov ing. I l["L.i ) ball lallk, outr1g. tita\nles~ t...A. rio\i•ntown approll" 12 1 EMPLOYMENT ORANGE COAT IRe9. 49.95 1 ........................ NOW $11.00 · paya e quartt Y 495-4798 1119 Pet1 1ndSupplles T" gallf'y, reLr·i~. ovt>n. PX"t'f<is
noon. Call 213-626-44.50 AGENCY EMPLOYMENT Sp•niih Hen9in9 Swag Lampi ~ror full t> l'f u i 1 Y. ';mmmmmmo;;;· •;1 "·ater. sho"·er , radio, dt>pth l
124 Broad .... ·ay, c.~1. &15-3111 I AGENCY !Reg, $'49.95 -.... ---· ............ NOW $22.50 ~E to~ honie -l...gt' I l't'CQrder. Docked at Harbor Ever think !24Brood"·ay,C.t.1 6.fj.Jlll CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN IBM EXECU TIVE type-rman ht'pherd I: sm Cats 152 Is. r.tarina, s.o. $14,500
I
\\rritt>r, model B. carbon eock-a -poo puppy , 1'1ovlng to :\1f'xico , makr
You'd be nood Moture Nurses !'RODUCT!ON WORKERS RD fURNITURE ribbon. $195. 646'535 >tB--0166. 1119 I YEAR old Borm• .. ,,,,.~, o!ln. 49'-0"7 -. "d Expene™-'!'r! \\'Omen Jor day at setlinn J Al e & night shill~. 1844 N Blvd IA H Pianos/Organs 826 J UMPING Jack Pre School s'1',_niale. 17' Classk-· -FG~Bo a t .I
':I Some typing. Call Ann./ !\farina Jndusll'ies, Jnr. ewport . t arbor Blvd.) TJ49 Tustin Ave. hu black ~·7:r.ll fibl'rglass, !iO tip John!On,
fife insurance? 6-13-m[) \\'este!1ft Personnf'l 16131 Go1tiarr! St., H.B. COSTA MESA ONLY CLEARANCE :~e ':~~ ~n;!'ts~bblt~/~~ BEAUT maJe Burmese kit· Jo mi 's, cuddy cabin, l~
Mutual funds? Agf'ncy." m3 \\'estclitt Dr .. I S~2-i7G9 Every Night 'Til 9 -Wed., and Sat. 'Til 6 SALE l"i\I a Jlttle orange kitten. My ~:11 ~iL:T ::td2:i::m~g. ~~~-a~~n:ioo1f ;~~J ~r/:i.'< P~i~' Investment N.B. * ~LUl\i-8ERS, rep~.1r & Ov<'r 100 Planos & Organs name is tlarvey & I'm bang. Dogs 854 C.t\1 . 548--96~.
I :\1ARINE Engine Installer ' heating. op '~·ages. icens-Antiques 800 Furniture 810 Rf'duced for immed. sale, In' on till s<>meone givei:; n1e :'6' Nci\'Y 1, halr lnlll 11·/g!l~ counse inq? 1
1\'anted Experl encer!I ed. Call 6l;)...3J30 Buy Now & Sav•I 11 home. 494-5700. 1/19 J Ma.If' silky puppy, 3 mos .. f'f'lg ln•'. Ph· £12-3629 01· Or did you ever only/apply LUHR'S BOAT RESTAURANT AUTHENTIC 100 year old MOVING : Misc, us"d furn. Open Daily lO ti! 9 S200. 1 "·hf1e male !'l'g. toy 6-t:.!-:l::fJ6
CO, 1781 Placentia, C.M. TRAINEE Victorian hard"·are, hinge~. for salr, couch, chairs etc. Sat J0-6 * Sun 12_5 5 r.fonth old shaggy pllppy poodlr. 3 nios ., &16-0142 or ~-'-'----~-~
W ·1sh you COUid I rloor knobs drawer pull! 6~2-4""'• and l year old G. Shep. ~'"\022 •33 E t71h St 27' T.F .. JcHr1<'s 100fl v..>:7;;1 ~IAID. ,..,. .. 1. time. Call in Cleancur youngman,to earn . • ·· "°"'· COAST MUSIC Both h•"" ·.·hot•, -r• ,,..,,,... ·" · ·· .,.... etc Sail Inn Mott>l 2627 G S I 12 .... ·• " " c '' 1u11 e11nd. n1arkPI S7;,()(). sell all f'hree? pl.'l'SOn. Hu ntington Shores a!l ~hases of 1he rcs1aura_n1t Ne;vpor! Blvd , Sa!' thru arage a• I NEWPORT & HARBOR females, ti46-M74 l/19 =·~·~·"'°=-,---ccc-c~-:;;; First $j()()() buys/offer f oi·I
I "-f 1 · l\1orel 21002 Ocean, HB business. Siar! on daysh1 t ·r • 8 • Costa t.lesa * 6.fZ-2851 HAVE •-,.r•I h•aot i lol GREAT Qa.11(' puppies AKC. moi·e Info 6Rl--99W. We're one o tue cw w K> IS l>-IAID -Sleady work. Retire-v.•ashing dishes at S2.2:. an ucs', .,_ pm. GARAGE SALE ""' '"" 12 weeks o!d . 1 lawn. 1
now in all three, And 11-e"re men! OOme, Laguna Beach. hr. Apply in p<>rson _ Appllanc•s 802 2&.1 Chevy parts; tool.~; miY". FINAL older kittens with pcrsonali-brindlf' both lemalr. Evt>. 30' GLASSPA!.:;--11·111 d1f'sr.I.
ready 10 offtt the right man Call 494--MlS * WOODY'S WHARF ]~· inboard boat witJi motor YEAR END 1y v.:ho net'd a good home only 546-3708 after 6:00 pm. Coninil. Jll"IS.~ihiliucs. $6750.
an e~~I "''•""'·,~ opponun. * MEDICAL LAB 2318 \V. Newport Blvd.. L\~D,,Yher~~,:."."'220 ~oolt~l: .. o. ~ .. o.·'2"cilr1'1· .. ~ri,M Sal, SSaun. CLEAR OUT !644:714al92•mol< and J 1/G19 2 Darling black lf'male 1oy 57:;.2.12.1, ~·rs. -ily. =• ing roa .spectrum "'';/' • ._ .~') a .c .,,..n arcos. n of P1"ano• & Or•an• " . Poddl . A L'C B 5 ·1 909 1 · TECHNOLOGIST * Ne11'Jl0rt Beach XI ·1 _, s~ c 1 d J c t •9,.716 • e pupp1t>s. "" reg.
1
oats, a1 financial planning to inch· n C011u, ,,,, uaran ee uan apis rano . ., ,,....., J\.Jany at "'holesale prices Shepherd purebreds. f'ree 2 333 E =:;:.;°"-.O.::'-'------i
vidua\s and businesse11. Rf'p. California licensed. full time, t RESTAURANT MGR. ~~~vered . 8 4 7-811 5 • GIGANTIC garage sale, Clo~ \VARD'S BALD\VIN STIJDIO lo quaI homes. 897-5480. ~~~-~ ~~1~8-l02 . . .. SACRIFICE J _I
rf'senting a lint-rate $3-biJ. Pi\l shift. Salary commen-for eve i;hift in ne1v llhoP. · ing out estate. Sale runs Slit. 1819 Newport Btvtl 642-8484 1119 OLD Englisb sheep d 0 g,122 Jo 1_ber.c:~a.~ ~lc:'.'1Jl . lJ.;,,;
lion cnmJiany. Wit h a train. surate "'-" i I h experience. Spl<'ndirl oppty. for advance-KENMORE gas ran ge· & Sun 23rd I.:. 24th 425 Vista H nd S t '1 GOOD Homt>, ff'nced yard female. 2 yrs. Show quality. cockprl. b1.M7!1.i._.l411·116·t._
inI; 511Jary up to $8j() Al e WEST~1 INSTER COTll-1 ment . Exj)C'r. prerd. Ca ll av~ado. 2 m:»s. old. Cost Flora tBlutts) N.B. y::::.New&u~;aar!; for lovablt> male Poodle & Ready to breed. s4oo . • 28• COL U;\lBTA 1969 month pi!JS opportunities for MUNITY HOSPITAL •e Aph. for appt. i\10N & TIJES ~~· ~I~ ~150.il Sa~j~ BEGINS 'Ved. 9AM~Pi\1 o.:: most makes. Best buys in o'idi~".~1r~~~rt;;i~ .r;',,ill" 3 t/m2o1 644-4506. [);1ys :!13/~7
additional income. And pros. ply Personnel, 17772 eac : ~~I-&\40. ~ :a in am y, 1~4 Sanla r.1A.Nlina Cil'<.'le, So. Calif. at Schmidt Music J"W".>.J<n ...,......... 7 \Vies old, healthy, beautiful i-:vrs 71,1/f\46--!"li.!4
pects high In the five.figure Blvd., Huntington Beach, or ROUTE Sales-$130 wk to Al. ~ L . FV, or Garfield & TIIagnolia Co., 1907 N. ~lain, Santa FREE poodle-lo o J de r Poodle puppies, purebred ran~. cal.I (TI4) 8-17-7807. Take ov estab Fuller Brush KENJ\'TO~E a~to wa.she~, 962-i161. Aoa. couplt>. Call 67l-6.l57 altt>r . S2• 491'.Hi265 Boats, Slips/Docks 910
If this llOOnds interestini; to i\1EDICA L Assistant, ba<'k rle in Laguna. Xlnt pl time model 10. xln t con? ~J. M h" 816 6. 1/21 min,. J. LE 2 to .·-•~It"' at 542.5623. "''· ... , ,1 •• , .... ,1 54,7•73 Guaranteed & delivered. ac 1nery Sewing Machines 128 FEi\iALE, R<gi•. l•r<d REG. Collie. 1•,~ )'I'S 33:.. SLIPS AV1\ILt\B • 5' "" of!ice, for busy G.P. f.1ust ., "" ~ ,,... a · S41°!l-°'"'6-,1 ood ho 40'. 2602 Ne\vpor1 Blvd, 321 , \Ve'd like to hear fro m know EKG, X·ray, draw ..,, J, _,...,... ·~· 11 * REPAIRS * Siamese cat, rrce lo good us! go to g me SALES 111 DEL.UX FR I GI DA JR E l.ATHE, Scars sma Home . iv/children. 968--6477. 673-6606 )1lU. blood give injections, Sal-STOP "'T Sho p complete 1v I jaw, Clf'an. oil & adju.st your ma-hon1e. 5-l~1314 1/21
1
S -~ &~S~k~-~9~11 ary 'open. i\ti~sion Viejo ••• D 1 S H WASHER · x...,, mo!or. gears, drill chuck. chine in your home. Spec-DARK greyish/black altered PUPPIES, Fuzzy, mother Boats, pe'"' I
area. CaJI 837-7j20 LOOKING & ACT COND, ;1~;ii90 ,. Xlnl cond, $100 or best of-ial $3.!l:;, all \rork guaran. male cat, ahou l 2 yrs. old. Pek-A-Poo, SlO. '61 GLASSPAR Flying-Z; FASHION PHOTOGRAPH-
ERS needed. J.A.G. INC.
SJ.5.3503 .!IC'!! minded person, see for i\IAYTAG washer 2 i:;peeds. ,;...·.· . rcr. J-. ...,. ,, MEDICAL OFFICE SI . fer Aft 6· .)1&-0730 t I 54-82.'o 64&-5'17!1 1/2_1 536-7724 1·,1 .• · l"li>. nib. L1'k• Newl
Need 2: Front Ofc. eXP. gd yoursrlf. a rr.a( career op. to........,f-line nu)fl~I s•:l. 432 Miscellaneous 818 1970 Singer Zig-Zag Auto, OARL.ING part Basset & YORKII::S-2 lh, 6 mo malt> .J"1!1:.ti. 1\-12-2007
typ· 1 e k01" ··p knO\\' ... ·1 XI I It f r •·-h .11 r 1 1 par1 Bt>aglf'. Gre11! wi!h Al so sma ll frn1alc .1 -10,-G-1--.-.-0-,-.---.120--~, I-'>. ac ~,e ... · -P'J11Un1y, , nt u ire o rrvlne Ave N.B. caur1u \l'anu consoe. h'rd _2_1372 1_
1
~crificr.. 2131761_81({1. ~ asp.u .. ~ 1 ~al . "I' F /C Bookk•eper IMge in all procedures. right man Earnings com. ' ILAR.GE rolor TV S1 25; Bluer.ta kes buttonholes, c: 1 ren.n" .__. 1 ~· --1 .. \lf'l"t'. r·niisf'r in/ou1 . na11
Young f'nterprislng group. \\/rite, Classified ad #1.i. m<'nce 1mmedialcly should REF'RlC:ERATOP..S '~!LG ''elvc1 tuxffio sola S150; ovrrcasls searns, b I i n d BEAUTIF1JJ, Jl<lale 11.dult ca! * SCHNAUZER. pups. Male lank. E:oi.. c<inrl. 67~5.l'.6.
Must be able to harw:l!e all Dally Pilot, P .O. Box 1:J60, heir. excess of $250. ~r "'k. FRE~z;'i.i5&..::i"s.!:sJ::>. Kin~ size he.~dboard S~; h('ms. dt>~ign.~ etc. Guar. gold & while, gold eye:<, I al stud. Grooming. ~~~~~~~~~~I
phaSl.'s of bkkpna:. CPA once Costa /\fesa, Calif_ 92626. Nr canvassing or ~olicHing. I Frost·free rch 1gcratnr Sl2:J. S4·1A4 cash, or smaU pymts. 673--3652 1/19 84&-0839 I ;
a year. r.1 E D IC At.. F'ron1 or-lntervie\\•s by appointment KEN.\IOR~ Copper colored 686 Cf'nter St., Apl C, C.M. 545-8238. Small breed puppieg, 2 male, [J.IAS APso pups. golden l __ '_"_n_''_"_''_"_'~ __ llr1tl
410 W. Coafit -Hwy, NB -SIOO * * 646-788J EVREST Jennings fol<11n1? po 9 •ll<r 4. 213/761-81Ei0.
MISS EXEC AGENCY fi~Exp"d fem ale over 40. only 9-3 weekdays. 835.ml "'asher. Likf' new: 7 cycl~-".: I 642-4280 _ S rtin Goods 830 2 rema!t>. Very cute. ;.48-9·139 beauli<'.~. Shots. SJ2:. up. 1 . •
Ca!l fHU.4461 bet\\'n 9 & .-). SALESr.1AN \Vanier!. Exp. I · · I """==~==c=---.,;; I ·---------·1 646-3939 L\llDDLE Aged "·on1an. 30 pref'rl. l\I u s t be sel l-LG Gas range, Roper, C!?P-"'bee c~atr, s-tO. Beaull!u SURFBOARD AKC poodlf' 6 months, ma!~ YORSHJRJ-: Terrif'r AKC
I --n-1 ~ . 1.1 1 pcrtone. Xlnt cond. $150. 1 aut? ha1 P, hke !K'IV ~l!h 6.10.. '"Greek" loiv railer 11 _, h 1 niales. Ptice s12;1, Ph: 1 Aircraft 915
FLOOR WAXER
' Exper only. 546.53811 appl.
GENERAL. or.!lce "·/OOok-
keeping b11.ckground. Part
time. CaJI bet\.\·een 8 &. 10
a .m. ONLY, 673--47'82
or over, nea appea..on ..... sa.,f'r, ca 1 essen a. * 91i:.!89Sl run ing key and pitch pipe · a papers a,,.., s o !I
for ASST, l\f AN AGER Carpels, tile, draper ies. : : · · _ I inslru;tion book S'10. Cali clean ,;hape S~. 644.1140 84&-1680 1/21 523--0238 eves. I _'"_L_Y_R_E_l-.P.-.A-C'-f-,\-
8
-L-F.--.-,-011 TRAINEE. Starting salary Con1m. only, highest in Bu1ld1ng Materials 806 537_7297 · TV, Radio, HiFi, S\\'ING 1!1.'l for rlellf!rv ing e DALMATIANS r
SJ15 I · · f ld NO hn 11 11 I AKC e l.f.R, 1•qt11pped Bonanza, 24 mo. fliUtre Ill person, It' · . P ne ~A s. rs COLLECTION ol rare old Stereo 136 fam ily you lake d 0 iv n -hr s1·hrduhn<> .. full.v insured.
PA ¥-LESS SHOE STORE. 10 anl·J pm. 209 Ocean Ave., book. I A 1 hl 1 .-.rrv &.13-13'18 1121 * • 642-193• • • "' mt Harbor Bll'd., Costa Laguna BeRrh. DOORS s .r · li ory, .~. : · , -I _ . l.i-11-1."!6::. 9A.\1 -!IP.\I
L\feS8. INTER/ EXTE R e!c1 . Sail Inn ~to1el . l6:l7 "Sil \'errone"' stf'reo rf'f'Ord 13 Small hrt'd puppies, blk . 2 COC~KAPOO Pupp1e:; lor CycleS:-Bikes., ----
NEED 4 YOt.JNI. l\t EN SARAH Coventry ln<'. lull 1000,l'!. To Choose from TNr\\·po1«
8
a1v1I. Sar thru playl'r. ~ spef'c! turntablf', 2 mkal"ld a!w.1,,
2
1
106
remalt'
1119
7 !!ale $J. e~~~-2716 Scooters. 925 GTRL to live in or day Catt or pt-time &Ip nttded, no • . ur~. · lo pm. rf'n1o!e sprakcrs. Ju ~ 1 \lee 5 o . .,...,.... • ....,,,... + _;cc_c.:._;_-'------11
for 2 yr old. Pvt sui!e, Age 20 10 30 inveslmen!. 537-6483. MI0-5I LDL•E>IRY. DllR4ASKonE. iRVlt>:E Coo~t Cou ntry Club rrl'onditioncd, ideal Ji(irt.: Young Adult Cats. CaliCO, • SHERRY'S POODLES • f 1970 l!ON Di\ :-1.100 : L1kf'
salary. 642-99j() Part timt' ........... $lOO wk. SECRETARY-RECEP • f;im1Jy mrinbership !or sale .$10.00 or br-51 ofrer. Also flutfy GN!y and J\f\i.Ju .co. i'r end puppy sale, groom-1 Nrw ri0 nit. 1:!."IJ or ofr
GROOVY "lod 1 _ _, _ _. Full time .. • ... $225. wk. 2106 So r.1ain St SA r "" ,-,1 , k k -, ~ 8 " e -type "~"" Car-"-C•ll ''' 4 PM, Small. fast growing company ' · "' ' · rom mem,"'r. or in-a "unt2., trac 111er'PO !aJl" loi-ed 5'16-73111 1ng. Frf'e p -up ..... 1 .... ,..,_1 . 673-6~!9
I --• flt fl · '"''-<Nr xt to Standard Brands) f alt 613-91 31 JI<! I 4 t ----------1 or cas"""te ms. arnson 892-1038 nreds shaii>, ('Xperienced 546-1032 ormatton c · '· r. pAyrr. llrls outpu AKC Beagle. remRlr tri. Hors.es 856 HULTACO 2:.0 er. dll"I bike. 1_c_o_rl~, -'-"~'-4'2--58311==o,·=---l-=,~=-=:~o.E~R=E'"N~'C'"E""D gal "'/good typini;: skills & Sm1 1h tf'rtninals incl 1.1ding stereo 1 d 1 Tll h xlnl ront.l $~-.o HAIRDRESSER NE\V OR EXP I good pl "' --~no1·11 --USED BIKE_S ___ phooc ja('k -inclu<le~ coore. year. ·ust avt . . '"'31'"
S•LES,!AN LA R W I N lO ""1"" · Y. F 'I 810 fen "ed Y'~ •·In °"~0 "e' BF.AUT AQlrA c. ~1.-.... "" SOME FOLLOWING " -SlK>rthanr! helpful, but not urni Ur• 1 JO Spd, :I spcl Coa~!cr Br.tkf' ll~~!.ted tape11 S30. Phone ,_ •u . .,. v-ov.>0 ev "" · niare, ·• Yr~. ==-~~"--~=-cc=
536--8929 <18.)'ll. 839-1813 evt" COMPANY Resale Division neccssflry, Contact l\·lr. --in all sizes. Alf"oO, have used &12-1544 . KIITEN 4 mo ro 2 yf'ars . .erullo, ,\;) hds, sirr-VRndy iO Triun1ph ;,o()cc Like rw'IV
HSKPRS Emplyr peys fee. needs sevc.rAI ge~ral r;al Johnson at Univf'rsi 1y Oflicc Custom Draperies I par!s. 642.9867. GARRARD record-changrr· somf' spayed 8 3 6-4 4 9 :i ; II Jl.lany show ribbons, Fine Under l.'i()(} ini , Pair! Sl:JOO,
George Allen By!And Agney esta.1.e a_gen1s. Nc.w Of ice Equi mcnt Joe. &!6:88111. ___ _ player, Diamond ~tyhis. rrl!. :>18--0!UJ 1/19 disposilion, SllOO 536-3008. new, aski11g: $~7.'i, 64G-23S·I. l~B E . 161h, S.A. 547--0395. opening rn H Un I I nbg tlo In SELLP!NC :1ANAGER F. De c:,~ r II Io rl _d d r a Ip ~,;:J ! 141:'.opl 1c~nk~:;u111l!.1~~~w~: $39.:10. !Ptt"ial 52'7. Ne\v At-FREE AKC G. Shepherd i\IANNERED. S p i r i I e Ii ' ~"-2'~V,\NITI J~J)I ,_
Bf'ac.h approx. Fe · s · :1. ho• ''. ,__ ~. •1 ,.x· wor .. ,wtnd <' osin1;:! 011. ""J<Nt 1•2"1 N 1 ·•~'I-1 la.nti'° L\!usic 445 f:. 17th. male, 10 good home wilhou! Sound. Jr, Jurnp<:<r or tn1 il. ,,,..., or .1nr:r onr a ....... ·ram.
Lis1ing leads, n; a j or' c1 1ni:. ut1q.uc s""fl in ~t o. yards of rapery abr1r an( . r~·l.'r u.~ · ~·-·1 VR u~ childrrn 842-:JOR.l 1/19 1 Exp. rid!'r S400. 614--0724 blrr. Ru11n1ni:: nr not. !".49·1690 1
med>-,,1 ,·,, .... ,,,-, paid by ~1nt . bl.'nrf1ts & _cro1\ th m;idr:-up draperies. :'11alrr· -sacrif1cr for S17;;i. 111:..-1 ~.Ja CU RT!S·illATllES TV. -Stereo , J .. ... ..... ~ I 2 fl&-87 I r 6 romb>n cherl"V\lood fr FREE wood al 1644 Su~rior 1 f'vrs · an _ _ _ _ _ "70 B.>.;A company ineentive contests poten!ia · 1 131 7• 31 ials from 7."ie. a yard :inrl -~pm . .. · -r · &16-3231 1/19 REGIS. AQHA Griding. 10 I n aJ Si ·~_,
and boni;~ plan . Get in on SF: RV ICE Sla.-Grnveyard r!rapcl'ir s ll'f•m $:>pair, :>.'1.'i:l 1 BEAUTIFUL Black st11r sap· Prov. SlOO. s.33-2122 A 1 6 yrs. Proc. lrainf'd. !IOunU. $l!OO. oy· ' :ir ' 646-n-IOS
the grnu~d 1100~ and gT'OIV shift, full •time: P/\RT-11me Birch SL, Ne\.\•pirt Beach 11h1rr t1f'eklarc. f'nrr1n.es .':: PM ~D of that old furniture? splrited. Reas, 673-1191. 1 ,63 CHEVROLET
6
eyl 12 with us Can l..a rv.'in Realty help l\"kf'll{ls. R!Cll l'~IE LD, M&-1431 . adj to Orange ring se1 from Bankok. SYLVANIA 4.'&l exponen! l l s really not that hard Livestock 858 1 run pickup. S."J!lj. C 11 11 I 1 952 6988 877 2271• 19th & Ne11•porr Blvrl. C.:\t. County A1rpor1. N!'vPr worn. Sl ~. 67:)..1345 Ai\1/F'f.t multiplell", Ga rrard to replace. Just watch the
64
l-IiS-I
n<:.. . or • , SERVlCl:: ST \ "-TI ali I EAVING state forcer! t(I Aflrr 6pm. h1rntable 642--7j44 . ..-,··-• mi.-tt•-·.-J-----~----oonhdencc kl-pl ' · 1 1 · • . • • I ~ -•w-u •u1"' ""' ._,.. ,.._,,,.,, .,.. C I -''-'--"--.C'--'-~· ----1 ith if1s 01}('n . Applv 1n per:«an , l'('IJ house rut nf l1kf'-nr\\" FOR SALE 6' EARLY Am<'rican maple columns In the Oassifit'd FOR SALE: PET C'hicken!I;, For Fast resulls. · all ''The
f11'JINE PERSONNEL
SER.YICESl'AGENCY
488 E. 17th tat Irvine\ C.!l.t
642°1170
ilnewpon
f.111.c /\rlhur & 46711 Campus :\led. furn. Kingl'i"le bdrni. Used double tier Jockeni. Fair s!f'rro console. SJ7:. 833-2481 Section. ducks, cagf'S, lertilf' eggs. [ !fol Line'" Daily Pilot
Dr .. l".B. !<f'l, game Sf'I, formal <lininc ronrlilion. :,tr. Laney Dally a'1 6 I al so :\lanx ca1 ~r...3.1. Classified -· nel SERVI CE l':~tab"d. Fullrr rn1. Sf'I, bunk beds, velvrl Pilot, , -pe~On Bn><h "'· 112;.11;; wk tu "'1' & hi-b><k ch""· LOCKERS 1 11m1 01 s USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY THE POSTAGE! agency I · 54" i:.--!->p11111sh t'(lfCrP & cnr! c:oin-st .. a~ pl. ttme o-.J14.1. r-k•>' 119 Only J lerl C·--~-1 niodrs. lamp~. p l rlu res , "'" · · · .,,,.
!..ADY ror restaurant
t>Xp des"d. Plt>a"<' cal!
54>-1686
"'Ork Professional Service
for the employer
•nd the applicant
833 Dover Dr., N.B.
642-3870
• SUPF.RVISOR LVN ti-MO "'" """ ,.u lhi• w<ek, "'I '1<. Loney""" DA I-5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
a .I'll, t'<'l1rf sh ift, •1k <'nrls. ra\I !Jii2-l'fl:,1. LY PILOT ;>.J() \\'.flay, C.\I
TIIE SUN NEVER SETS on
Pilot Cla.ssltled
Holp Waotad, M & F 710 H•lp Wanted, M & F 710
ANNOUNCING ANOTHER
Exe It Inv
AND
We wlll accept applications for -
• WAITlESSES
• BUS IOYS
• DISHW ~SHERS
• HOSTESSES •cooi •I.AR NDERS
• COC .AIL WAITRESSES
St•rff"I 0.C.mbor 2'
9:0M:OO D•lly
Apply In Person
-t A-W. do I• Carlot•
·L-o.Hllla
Santa Ana or San Diego Frwy. lo
Et Toro Rd. -Comer of El Toro
Rd. and Avenlda do la Carlota.
Owned by Far West Services. Inc.
Operators ot Snack Shops. Coco's
Reuben'•. Reuben E. Lee,
Tho Whaler, Isadore'•
Pcirk Lido Conva.Jf'~i_·ent j 1 ;--:'l·Onuu::C' -roUc·il1100: CAP.P ET L..ayers-ha\'c-~h-a~
C~nlrr G-12--8044 2 113111111 ,..,111 l!lblf's $:Z:J ea. ,'I, l"!n1n1'l 1v.•eer! rrpt.~. Oral
2 r1111an bar !l"tOOl!I" $10 C'a, I direct, Ex-per in1;t11llrr. Can
\\"r arc lookini.: Ill!' 1 belly hoard 1 El PipiH fin11nrf'. ~1!h'1327, 1127-$17~0
/Ill l'XflCl'iC'nl"f'<I s2n. .c-olhcr mlS<" itfm~. * AUCTION _*_ l'l'~1rlent1al !1"11.le~nian fi-lf1-S l02.
"I · 1r n1 , ... 1 t ~~~=~c:o= fine 1-'urn1ture " io is !I"<' 0 1~a er Dt:AG1rd long king-sz lwd
amt 11·1H1I~ lo "/1111lnut h1>11dbrd " :<wins: & Applial"IL't':< -·1· 1 11-lh , Aur11on.~ Jo~riday, 1,00 p.m. a~ .• .,.; 11 c ., framr. :'I mo old. has 10 ~ucces~ful e!ltahl illb!'d l1rm yr guarantee. New cost W indy's Auction Barn
Call": 111r. Cobb S"lOO. 001v sell SI~. 847~2. 21'.17j!J Ne1\'port, Cr.t &16.8686
,\IOVl:\!1;· 3 Pc Oll.'n1""-nort Behirw:I Tony·~ Bldg. i\·lal"I.
br!rm Y't lold fa~hion), f'lcc \\'AREHOU~E 1.:. GARAGE
d11-·rr. 4 P"1Slrr tied maple ! S alr , Construct ion
& i\1 1~. -~:163 Coriander Dr. malerialll. 1iW It motor:..
C:>-1. 5-ro-1.100 1 pottery E"<!lliP. g I a z t> ~,
REALTORS t'OR Fa1~: 7 Pe liv roon1 rurnilure & bric-a-bnc. 101
SINCE l!MJ se!, sofa w/match chair. I Frankfort. JIB . a.16-1177.
I 673-4400 2 .,, '"''-l """" '"'I • SKI FAMILIES '" 2 match lamps $175. . :':""'~~~~'i,'';.'":'.':;":;J ;•~n~-7~1~331__~~-~· ~= Rr!\Crve now! Cabin 111 ~1am . ** WAJTRESS-11111~1 have A• 1 . 1 ~"· 1 moth L\lounlain, SlJtti T. firr-.~ ne1\~ s ~ping so a ,,.,.,. 1 l t8 1-d local rf'ft'ft't11·e~. , F'ull or RC'hig., SS=>. Color TV S\50.1 fl · e!c. · £V per ay.
par! tltne. Apply 1n fl('r..on Call 6-t2-6:l00, ev es : 5Jl ... 'lJ74 days.
only, ;i9;io \\', Coast JI")'. r,4;~2020. 1-\l::N MORE tire ril')'C'r. Xlnt
N.R. Surf &: S1rlo1n. , .. c.,,.,.A . __ , -11_,
1
rond. SJO. Ali;;o :\ gi rl'~ ~ -----• ......, . ne1er u,.....,, qut ,...,
\V0.\1AN lu l\Ol'k In <l(lth1l floral, scotc.hguardcd $12i bikes. Good cond. ~16-0921
S!J?P All:1·t100n hrs 1-!ll"'M. 11111!1'hing lovescat $ 7 5 , GARS refrig S15. Elf.'c heclgr
\V1~hel1 s Donu.r Mouse 2':1-11 :i:\0-8337 I clippers. Twin brds N.
Ha1bor Blvd. C.M. Is· EAHl.Y Amet•ican MJIR lramcs f15 ea. 642-!"IS2!1_
YOU".'G lnternatio11al _Co, ,t,,, matctting 10 ve ll C'11 t . \VF.T SUTT, Radio. Slerro
5eeking m11n11gen1ent. ~~arn S200 833-2481 llrl fi I kit, rabl~s. oourh, clubs,
SIDSHXKI prr mo. V11nahl: "rnr Naug. King recl\ner dresses 111ie 16, 492--4230.
ht11. Call 833-1681 ~tv.11 2-S 110 M ' 11 m Thur or tTI SSO. SJM'lllgll & m11.1tress , 11ce •neous
P · Drt'SM"r f!O, 54~3448. ! Wanted 120
• nVIN Bed, complel~ with --------.--1
I ~-"u )!""-J hox 11prings and matlres.s CASH for tum, appl~. _.,._ V I.:. rrame iz; 549-0674. tools, l misc Item 1.
* CUSTOM F11RN ~;;;;;;;;;::~; 1-~==~~==lTUR="°E 642-7015 or Aft 5.. s.i&--4227.
RENTAL.. &'f! ad elus 200 Pu.NO Wanted tot cllun;h.
Antiques IOO Genttal Call 5'18-3481. Reuonable priee.
DANISJ-1 Teak dining table, 541-9.130.
11 th ANTIQUE
SHOW & SALE
LONG BEACll
SPORTS ARE.N A
Oc-tan & Lonjt" B<'ach Rh·d.
Thur, F'rl , SR!, l·IO PM
l3'x4S ... xlnt cond s.50. * Musicel ln1trume.rtt1 m
962-8903~.~~~~.,--~l AJ~L~ dl'Ofl leaf table. 4 f'UI.l. &>! Rogf'N dM.Jm it
\Vindsor eha1r-1, custom pad, I with Zlld)lan f;ymbol\11. Al!Vi
Xlnt cond., $1'.\.i, 846-2S28. Gullri L\l k IV gultar. ~m-8662
IT'S ~3cn hou!lf' Ume. BIR· 11flr1• 5.
I SlUI 12 to 6 PM
·--------······----· P.'Of bt'~I ff'\l\Ul!.'I! 642--,'i6711
IJ«i&t seltttlon ewr! See the GIBSON c:u11/;r/F.:ler1rrc
DAILY PILOT OuaUlfd w/regnl11r h11rd she.II cue. I
\llectlon nowt ' $\9:"1. 6-16-7869.
' TIMIS
$4.50
$5.10
$6.00
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
P11hlhh ... , , •••••• , .d•'f', h•9i1111l119 ••• -•• - -•• , ••••••••• , • • • • • • • • • • •
Cl111ific1lio11 ••••••••••••••••• ,,, ••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••• •••
. ....................................................... ..
Addrett . ...................................................... .
City•••••••••••••••••••········· Ph•11• ····--·················•
------------CUT Hlll -PAIT( ON TOUl IMYILOPI
IUSINESS REPLY MAIL
~ct-........ tr. C.. M-. C."'9nlie
Oroogo Coast DAILY PILOT
P.O. lox 15'41
• TIMlS
$6.80
$8.28
$9.76
' TIMlS
$10.65
$13.1 0
$15.S5
" TIMES
$15.90
$20.10
$24.30
TO FIGUll COST
p.,t •11ly •n• wor1I in ••ch
1p•c• 1he••. Include yout
•ddr1n ., phe11• 11vmh1r.
Th • co1t 1f ,our •Ill i1 •I th•
•11111 •f th1 li11• 011 which fh1
l11t werd •f yevr ed h -rt·
, .... Ad.I 12.00 ..... if , ...
d•1lt• 1111 1f DA ILY PILOf
l e• l•f'liCI wlttt .... 11.111 , ..
.1; ...
•• l'ollart Slup -u Mal~ la tlt
Val~ StlLH
Coote Mele, C.lif. 92626
----~~~~~~-~----~--~-~~-~~~~~~-
•
9111 Autoo. lmportod Cyd ... Blko1, O-rol t50 Au...,, lmporled
,_Sc_oot_°" ____ m_ ,•· . .,-OIEVRO---LET-s-_..--__ ..;D_A_TS_U_N __
970 A utoe, ln :pt tlid
PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN
1 .... 6 cyt, ""'° """· •lh. DOT DATSUN --------1--------I------------.----OONT. ~o 'ci.. ,.... .,.. 1'70 M<t•<vrf -•
1 """'· pnv Pl;f. Sl2'0. '65 Ponche '69 vw. Xlnl oond. N,.. '62 YW t'rlllll ""''"'"""' Jcue Ml mola~ MX 2 Dr HT ,, TH• 49'1-7465 OPEN DAILY ""''· bnl<n. tw>Hp. '71 .JUlftn CAD. 1"6 Cpo. do Vll lo $105.0 mo . ...m. DEALER OWNED
Ho_.._ a Dune llugglo 956 AND 356 SC Sanniof Uc. R/H. T/W. $1'9' .,. Rldlo • boai... czxw :irn ,...,,,,,, "" oondltiooloa. an , Gold °"'"' ta! 1 SINCE NEW .a.-.~ 1---~"--'---SUNDAYS British raelna grttri. bttt. 54&--1281 iio-r eJttru. Tilt wheel, fl!5 err · De&let owned dNler mah
-'al C'ORVAJR for u.lt. Great ll83S Bee.ch Blvd. Lie YCC 525 '65 Bus Reblt 1500 Nbt $595 AM·FM tdio. Stately black owner. Landau to,. fin..0252 ta1'Ctd ~ brand JWW.
•'EIMDI 1 ..,ER" for Dune Buggy. Good rub-Huntf.Qrton Beach $2199 clutch, gen, volt ftl. Ure1. eXterior t'01ar with red leatb-stm Driven only 10 im mt bey.
nuun.AIW her $275, StG-7817 alter 6 W.718l err S4MG CHICK IYERSON OM!!~! 1:~1wu. 00 or BHt er int. (SBBTI4). LINCOLN ConWntal 19118. erreceJ~~olt)WJ'
p.m. FERRARI -~ ,,.. +<Ir. "" oon<1. "" "'""· :;o ooo m1...,,..,,, ....._
'70 MEYERS Tow'd. gd --------VW '59 VW Van, '64 ena:, re~nt ib 1 owner. $.1250. 675-m:l. :U Powder blUe ~with
rond. vw power. $1200. FERD•RI 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 work done on tr&nl. New l87ll BEACH BL, 842-«15 ~ e4 CORYAIR medium blu. Interior and "" •~ "" -·1 ~ b-•-t It HUNTINGTON BEAOI .rroJ""VJJU da,vs, ~ eves. Newport Import.I Ltd. Or· 1970 HARBOR BLVD, ,-..,.., aya em, camper WI CAOtll..AC dark blue landau top. Auto
Sports, R•c•, Rods f59 ange eount,y'1 cnJy author-COSTA MESA inside. New clutch. GOOD '65 VW SEDAN AUTH01t1zto D~AU" '60 CORVAIR, red. Gcod tn.nl, ndlo, heater, poww
fzed dealer. ·70 9llSJ5 2,2 Uter Silve1· COND. Beat offer, 54().Jll8. l60() HARBOR BL. rubber. Gooo1 2nd car $275. ltferinc, power bralml, fM:..
'70 DUSTER SALES-SERVICE-PARTS coupe black i nterior '67 BUG, blk l!'Xtuior, R/H, Radk> &: heater. (PBF 66S) COSTA MESA ' 516-7817 after 6 pm. tmy air oond plu. dnta!
318 CID, Hooker Headen, 3100 w. Cout Hwy. AMtYM &ir dose ratio Orig owner, $815. 5695 540.9100 Open Stmday '66 Corva.ir 2-dr, rAh, PvtllO ,tu., w/w t1rel etc. Com-
Itilebmek Hi·Rise, Big-4. Newport Beadt gears. Pttf. 'con dition , * 557-3.160 alt 4 pm * e hj). Great cond. $6:i0. plek!y ~and rMdy
Can&i!tent 1.l75s at Orange 642.9405 540-176t $8900. 551-9159. 1.968 VW Bug. Radio, rear PIY 961-2149. for delivery OOJAGO c.r.
Counly. Great Cond .. Ready Authorized Fernrl Dealer ,69 9u T, European atyle. seat spemn. $1375. pri. pty. '64 CADILLAC 1968 CORVAI R anoe pziced: J ohmon, A Son.
to go. Cal.I alter 5. 534.3196. RAT Tang .. full corn.fort group, ~after 6 pm., Xlnt oond. $9SQ. 962..Q53!I Z26 Harbor Blvd., CM.
Tr ucks 962 1 ___ ..;._:,.c;____ mags, AJ'\1/FM. 23.tXkl mi .. • 2 VW'• _ '64 Bug $800, ism BEAOI BL. 842.«J:i C»nwrtible. Full power. CORVEI IE ~.
673--6265 Best offt>r. '61 IUiln'lOl $600. X1nt cond. HUNTINGTON BEACH Sharp~ (0WS519) ---------11969 Mercury Marqull
'51 INT'L panel truck, '4 11>'hl ~ ,67 Sl2. Air, AM/FM stereo. Must sell, aft 6 pm: 646-8314 $595 ,67 Vl:l l'li 2 Or. H.T. drive, 2 spd transfer case, ·n VW Squ~be.ck. ~. ~ UXURIOUS
4 spd trans. Nr new '65 ''THINK'' R.ed w/blk. Many extras. '66 VW Sq. back-Sumxif. Standard. Ne\.\· car warr. llM# ... -. "1111-J--. F ba k ""21" ,, ____. LARGE• L $3600. 644-0516 new tires &. exhaui.1, Pvt '~-~ ast c • . • ...-e~. Thh bl!autUUI top oi the Mf!'l'. motor, 900Xl6 tires. Ph: goocl. Pvt. Party. 646-6805. AJ'\VFM radio New poly-ll fi ~ ~ ""°" aoBfl '"' PORSCHE 912-5. M"S( party. 642-l020. 2 00 H -Bl d 645-M66 . c:ury ne re ects -eve ~"'~~=~~-~~= 1 Ji .. 196.l Bus w/ bed. Leav~ 1 a v • a~• lire~ .. Excdlent COD-~t and i. equipped
'63 FORD &.'OllO!ine P.U. see this one before consid. MUST 1 e 11 '66 VW town, must sacrifice $895. '69 CAD. El Dorado. A.II d1tion, Drivl!'n eu.y. with all the ruxmy tu.tutti.
Comp!. overhaul eng. 8 ering. 494·2514 or 548-5479. Squarebe.ck. Le mi, aunrool, Call 646-1310. black w/ltlrr. inf., 5tereo $2&50 Automatle t.r'alllm.lukln, AM-~1;;::'.· ~~23~A $4Z5 or best NEW 12~!,~· DEMO SUNBEAM =· Ask for JeU, '66 SQUAREBACI{ -Ne.w radio, Ol!'w til'K. Only 24,COJ Ask tor MJ'. Grannla ~ FM stereo r.dio, beater,
.... .... .... tires & brakM. AM/FM ml. A aharp car; $5300. M us T Sell .. i. .. -1966 ......... , .... --.... '67 CHEVROLET 1~ ton II See . d' .. 1968 vw Bus 7-pa.gs. Radio, -...... ....~er I ~ .......... ~-.. ''FRIEDLANDER'' ·~ Alpl'.11!', i:hlt t.n& •• ra L8JI Xlnl rond, New tires. $2150. radio. Orl&: owner. $1200.1 =''-'""'~:;:'°'--~=~~~ C«vette conv w/rem H.T. ea, power windows, t 'lllq 11l.1Spension, gtep bumper, g tirts, wire nmi. radio, Xl.n D 49'-85n; eves 646-4781) 673-3270. '66 El Dorado Ccnvt., Way 477, 4-spd. lmmac oond. power seat, factory aJr o:>n· • ey!. big 6 ply tires $1300 13710 IU.C:H IL¥D. cond. Aft 5: 644--8101. BY• '70 VW Bua, 7-IJ&ll•, beip, bl!'low wl>oleaale at $1350. fH6..-096!1. dltion!na cru11e control,. tilt
120 Kawasaki, auto quick 0°~'~'~""~''-''~'·-"-'~-'~'-15 --1 IHwy-. Jt) TOYOTA SA.CRlF .. vwlCEAu~._,. radio, Immaculate. Good shape ln • out, '57 VETI'E, Good ooad. $450 wheel pius Michelin x ra-;
'71 CHEV Super Van, auto. 893-7566 e 537-6824 •UJJ • 615-2398 * 645-2317. or beat offer. dial tins .1: ah•J. .tee.I change sprocket. For street """'JlOl e -'-'-"=-~----v R/H, HI D springs, shocks NEW-USE[).SERV. e ""7<r '65 V\V Bua • New motor e Aft 6: 546.2531 Wheel!. See A drive today. or trail, onJy 1,21Xl miles. li $3000 1971 TOYOTAS -
$400.Callaftcr 6 pm737.M49. & tires. T/W '7l e. a - - - -1 • '68 VW bua, Xlnt cond, & brakes. Xlnt cond. $800. CAD. '68 Conv•rtlble * 1969 CORVETTE .f-apd XTP478.Jobroon•SOn,D
BOY'S Sti-y bike o ...
0~'-""F~'-'n1·~,...~.-'"~~--.-~.-- - - -.. ARE HERE! ,"!:'o:~~a. Mui t sell $l.200. 546-0921 aft 6or wlmds. FACI'ORY Air oond. Silver A black. Harbor, ex. 540-5630-
....... 0 "" '"n p ... -up. C o1Jas ,.,......,.."' '61 VW Bus · New 1600 cc A.IR CONDITIONING 64l-6156 MARQUI S ST ATIO N
Nu paint & reblt . Auto, r & h. Clean_ Best of-'68 FIAT 850 Mark II . or CUSTOMIZED vw convert. e~. muffler a: tires. Ra.ck. Full PoWl!'r incl. door-locks. DODGE w A GO N ' 1969. Xlnt Cond. Bst Ofr. fer. 646-7603 evea & wknds. C p•-L Xl nd G bbe bl v .... for '71. $1750. 644-4445 · T _....,, ...,_ • * 646-6972 * * Sl'YDER oronas ·~ups nt eo . ra r ue. ....... tilt a: teleKOptc 1teeril11', 10-puserw'l!'r. ~ • .,,._.,..
H 935 ·6.1 FORD Pick-up. 8' bed . bl ck in-OYOTA New motor, me.gs, oveni:te VOLVO Sten!O, Sentinele, FUIJ leath-8J3-ll.f9.
Moblle om•s Air rides. Air cond. R'lfL'll RDSTR. Red with a 1970 T tires, tl.ue fenden. Good u lnterio;o A: vi:oeptionally '71 Dod11• Van LEAVING For acttw dut;:r. ~ «< ~11 I 4 terior. Like new. YQY834 b I K~ ~ ---------• """"· .}'tJ"'OU a t pm. CORONA SEDAN uy a _,.,, . .,,.,....,'""', nice inside and ou t CVDR· 6 cyl.. a uto. 127" whH:I bue. MUd S&crlflce '62 Mer"CU17 :u:t?I i d?l':l•l•l!I§
SWTounded by
Irvine Orange&!
Real rural living yet close
to ocean, shopping "
recreation
ALL ELECTRIC
Choose from
105 floor plans,
you name it!
Adults-Pet1 O.K.
P rivate Club--$300,000
Recreation Center
14 BEAUTIFULLY
FURNISHED
MOOE LS
(Dir. TR193)
14851 Jeffrey Rd.
In Irvine
5 ml. South ol Tustin, and
1.4 mi, S. of Santa Ana Frw>',
(2 mi. N. of San Dieao Frwy)
832·8585
Fg,~kupSal~";'on;.'itl~:'. CHICK$TvERSON $SAVE $303.00 WANTED • VOLVO 5.12>. $2999 !;.~.:;"~:""Fl """° ""'ottu.......,,,
""'· c.i1 516-""6. VW ru poy top dolla· 1or >"" AA 71°1 Are H•• ib CORT FOX LEASING , __ M_U_ST_A_N_• __ 1 Auto Leasing 964 From window stick~ price VOLKSWAGEN today, Call Savings Up To ~ ed 2586 NEWPORT BLVD. ,. 54~3031 Ext. 66 •• fi1 • s .. 7826 ll<mo. ROH, '"'.. and uk !or RDn Plochol $756 ~ '65 MUSTANG 1969 CBdillac Cbupe de Ville, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. matic:, 549-3031 Ext. &&Ii:. m.o900. ........., CADILLAC Cos~"'~· c:!~ ~
COSTA MESA on remaining 70'1 (•01-) J.UT ......... IZEO OEAUR (TI4) '""""""~ (.u.>) ~ full po\.\'el'/air, $159 per mo. L '69 VW SEDAN OVE SEAS DEL SPEC. .....,... g radio 1969 Chrysler 300, 4 Dr. '69 Fiat 850 Spyder 4 11pd., flllAM ,._:_. R · 2600 HARBOR BL., '66 SPORTSMAN Van cyt., aulD.,. • new
hrdtp, p/windows, air. mag wheels, radio, heater, WA "9'IO L COSTA MESA w/windowa & lea.ii. V8, paint (RIKM$9f~
$25&.I 645-2182, aft 5:30 & 488 A.FT. Harbor American. TOYOTA Radio &: heater. (ZSR 939) fie.at emiA Cali 540-9100 Open Sunday auto. Good cond. $950.
wknds (71 4) 496-5695. 1969 Ha('bor Blvd., 646-2061. $1395 • ~ 4111 • -~ ..
Auto Service, Parts 966 IAT SPYDER, good VOLVO 1964 Cadillac, new titt1, l '69 OOJX;E CAMPER VAN ns41• ~-.eo~~-F$300 t Take over 1966 HIU'bor, C.M. 646-9303 owner, $995 cub. call $2450 !-Cy!.* ~ck •hl':u-6189 21((1 Harbor Blvd. 645-0t66
WE PAY TOP DOLL.AR
FOR TOP USED CARS
pymn~. ean 847·L1S8 '68 Toyota Corona ""'Harbor, C.M. 84s.9303 515-292!'. '61 Muatong Fottbock
1968 FIAT S50 Spider Very Local owner. new car trade '68 VOLVO • FORD 2+2. V8, auto., air, R.lll, PS. U your car 1.s extra clean,
see us first good. $l100. in, 18,(XXI orig. miles, euto-187U BEACH BL. 842-4435 CAD. '69 El Dorado N"' tifts. (XBM610) $1600.
• 833-0795 * matic tra ns .• radio, heatl!'r . HUNTINGTON BEACH LDcal owner, tow mile&i'!, Vinyl !OP. full leather inter. CORT FOX LEASING BAUER BUICK
234 E. 17th St. ' ___ J_A_G_U_A_R __
Costa Mesa 548-7765 1 •
PAYMENTS • ,,,,,i;i pm-JAGUAR
blem? Will take ove r HEAD~UARTERS
paym'"" on acoeptabl•, T late model, lo mileage, fully The only authorl%e.d J AGUAR
dealer in the entire Harbor equipped car, wagon or Area.
rancbero type. Call Sally.
wkdys 8-5, 5'$-22113
A utos WantH
WE PAY TOP CASH
for wed can • truclm Juat
call ua far free eatima.te.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Completln
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
234 E. 11th Street
511-776S
Lie. WAR052. '64 VW SUNROOF '"""'""' tranm!Wion, 't 1,,., '""° AM.FM ""'°· '62 E Ii "'6 NEWPORT BLVD. $1399 dlo, heater. white aide wa power door locks, tilt steer.. C0ft0 ft8 Cmta Mea&. Calil. 9X3'1
BEST BUY tires, etc, Chick·i apecial at tn&, full po~r equipment (TI4) 645-3661 (213) m.6211 CHICK IYERSON Artie while, with contrMtina ~tON710 plus factory 1.lrC'OndiUoninz VW rtd ll!'&therette lnterlor. t"I.· $ 1999 most every db:. extra:
51~3031 E,1. 66 "' ., ,;., ., .. ,.'$~;; YWZ886 CHICK IVERSON cXWB.soo~999 1970=.~~VD. CHICK IVERSON VW · jb .
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 GN'al eiJ; '71 COROLLA vw mo HARBOR BLVD. ... ~CAOILI.AC
549-3031. Ext. 66 or 61 COSTA MESA AUTHORIZED OEAlVI
RAdlo, heater, dlac brakes, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. t ....... -• 1600 HARBOR BL.,
factory air. low, low miles! COSTA MESA - - - -... COSTA MESA
Take older car or m1&11 1--,~6-1~vw=~s~E~DA=N~-lHml 540.9100 Open Sunday do~. Und" !act. w..,.,,t;y. ~ 'fOl.VO' • Call Maury dlr. a.ft 11) am
54().JlOO 00 •"--. 037327. &ufo & heot.T. !UEN 251)' • CAMARO
Van
e 213 Chevy v.a
e Beoled Hyd•o
e Cabinets
e lea lox
$625.00
638-7689
'61,MUSfANG GT 300 • .f..cpd..
11600
545-5315 or &rU6'l'5
'65 Muatana: rorrvt. .Auto., VI.
Good oond. Movtnr. f7tD ar
offer. &U-C993.
OLDS MOii LE
1964 Olds c onvertthle
Dynamic 88. Pl/Pb, new
tires A: battery. Sile $385..
&f6-.5639; aft 6, 673-:i719.
----~----l'S3 Oldl 88 4 door, autn
s 1 099 "FRIEDLANDER" • ttaru air • ps/b. MS. 7755 BIIL MAXEY '67 ss CamM> 396, ro ml, FORD '70 LTD Farmol d.,..,',...1"6 eve&
tl7Jt auc11 OfW'I'. •J SS Crqer map, x1nt oond. Luxurloua hardtop ct>e. w/ 1964 OLDS Real cltu, runs ITIOJYIOJTIAJ 193-7566 • 537-6824 $1300. 673-7597. factory air oond. V!nyt top. rood. rood ttre1 $5'o 5 . THE BEST OF Ask lot Se.lea Manqer • --_ NEW-USEO..SERV. ~~~---LET ___ , power rteer., power d1le 5U-8778
BOTH WORLOS l82ll Beoch Blvd. 11111 llEACH BLVD. 18nt BEACH BL. "'·"" -.;;.. -·---=-CHEVRO -· ., ......... ,..,..1 •• ..,=0:;:l;:cdac...,.88~, -.~doo-,.-.. ~.,1
For a beautiful home. Jow Huntinpn Beach Hunt. Beach l47.a55S HUNTINGTON BEAOI ~ multiplex + mreotape etc, tn.nl, air, p1/b, 6t6-T'19i ·
maintenance and an:hltecur .. 847-6087 KI 9-33ll 1 ml N. afa..t Rwy.CID 8dl '64 VW SEDIN VOLVO '63 CHEVY PICKUP etc • leg than U,tXk) mllel. dlyl, stS-1686 nes. ~~ ;:,;;~;;·:,~"'.';'"~ TOP DOLLAR '71 TOYOTA PICKUP II AUTIIOR!ZED (Oi8ADW)$3333 PLYMOUTH
House" by LeviU Mobile RAdio &. heater. (JFK 402) SALES e SERVICE Lone Bed. Auto., new paint. ib
Systems on display now at tor Wilh deluxe 30·· camper, Full $695 FRITZ WARREN'S CG96244 > CiN'AI ed •70 CUDA, Bic I, nr stk,
. BAY HARBOR CLEAN USED CARS ""'""'= price $2251. Taite smell SPORT CAR CENTER $991 .a..Vc Alt 20 mph, 44,000 mt'1 war,
MOBIL E HOMES See Andy Brown MG down or trade, dlr. 49'-75M-no E. lit St., S.A. 541--0164 ~,..-~ ,..,~-.. AUTHORIZ~~o~ Jen , Wl • T.O.P. at $161.
1425 Baker SI . Costa J'\-fesa THEODORE ~3100. a oJ«8, Open daily 9-9; closed Sunday nl49 ~ '~-2500 HARBOR BL., i.;,:54Ul34c:,;;::.:._~~--,
'"" S. 01 S.D. F•y" Hochoc ROBINS FORD - --..-..-.. '69 CORONA Autos, New 980 2100 Harl><" Bl'd. 645-0466 COSTA MESA '68 Plymouth "°""""""· 4
714/;,40.9470 2060 Harbor Blvd. ............--.,_ tBTil BEACH BL. S42-«35 I---------l9S9 OIEVEU.E SS 396, Call 540.9100 Opell Sunday Spd, For infonn&tion, call
Trip le W ide Cornell Costa f.lesa • THINI Hardtop, Vinyl roof, 4 ipee<:, HUNTINGTON BEAOI BRAND NEW ·n going into .ervice Xlnt • i ft 5, Mfrb.
Hillcrest . Flamingo 642-0'.!10 ''M ... G'' immaculate, Sky Blue. Sac-'69 BUG ra'1io MW tires GREMLIN Cond. smi. call 5JS-4711 1969 LTD 2 Dr HT PONTIAC
Paramount • Universal WE PAY CASH rific:e. , Will take trade .or Perf. ~nd. 'st495. eall Only all day Mondays, or 8 DRIVEN ONLY :n,ooo Ml. ' ---------dm finance pvt. pty. ('Jill Sid, 613-4923. •·
Barrington • Broa oor dlr 540-3100 494-1506 a.ft 1,,;c;;..c~~---~-$ 1898 a.m.-l p.m. Tunday thn.I Ext"l!'ptior\&lly clean throuch-'69 Flr•blrd 400 Contiuenlal " Star 'ti'fRIEDLAUDER'' 10 · x-o34r3 1965 VW 9-pueenger bus. SUnday, 2617 Florida No. out beautilul medium. blue b .,_ nd -• Ge -• e HiJICl'('St FOR YOUR CAR n a.m, ~" · or· inlll owner. Order Yours Today D • Converti le ~-CD ., n.uY ne.~ '69 TOYOTA-$1100 ~~. >S7.Jl4< H b A • . m•IAlUo e>tonO•'. Du1< blUe wheel• A ;p... belted tita CHAPMAN IJ7Jf ••ACH IKWY. JU """'~""'=~~~~"-7"' ar or mer1can CREAM PUFF landau roof, utin black in-Sport equipped, 18,00) milft:: MOBILE HOMES CONNELL 1193-7566 • SJ?-6824 536-7880 alter 5 '68 BUG, 1.enllh blue, AM/ 196!1 Harbor Blvd. 646-2061 '66 Impala V8, auto., p/1, terior. Auto trans, radio, (YCN Still '2.3SO.
12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. NEW.USED-SERV. TRIUMPH FM. Good mileage. Xl nt Autos, U i•d 990 r&h .. Just tUnl!!d up & pollsh. healer, power 1teerlnc, pow. CORT FOX LEASING
+ TI4'530-2930 * CHEVROLET ~ ---------l;;;;"";;-n_,d . .,$;;;1,...3.50-,·,,'='='·::°'-"n:=I'---'-------' ed. $895. 644.0532. er brake•, factory alr. See 2586 NEWPORT BLVD.
Tripi• Wide Cornell 2828 Harbor Blvd. TR IUMPH 1971 VW Camper. Radial AMC * '61 Chevelle SS 396-SilW!r and u k to drive thl1 at· Costa Mesa, C&llf. 92621 Continental e Paramounl Coata Meaa 541'>-1200 62 MG MIDGET AUTlfORIZED tires.. AM-F!l-1 ll t er f! o, grey. Maga, Tape deck, tra.c:Uve car today. ZNVMO, <n 4) &45-386l (2l3) m.fiZ11
Barrington • UrUvenal 1 --'IMPO~;,R'°TS='w=ANTED==-Bi's.I of!rr o"'rr S:11)11 headen, $400. for my equity 962-GOJL Johnson A Son, J626 Harbor,,1:..:===:..,,..::=""'::..::=1
Flamin<o e General Runs gonrl 67.'\-11322 SALES e SERVICE & as.sume !0&11 615-5015 a.ft '67 Rebed. V8, Automatic C.M. 5'W-5630. 1962 PONTIAC V.S Cltallna Orango'! Countle9 FRITZ W'RREN'S '57 Chevy Station Waaon " dr H· .... ......, Clean -broadmoor e Star TOP S BUYER MG ""' 5. tran11m111ii;ion, a Ir co~ BEST OFFER Looklnl for a car? • i::•• ~=~· 838-1157._
IUllcrest . cambrldge 0 Sales, Service, Parts SPORT CAR CENTER '66 vw SEDAN dilioning, power •teetlng. * A97-189l * •sy . ~-CHAPMAN Bll.L ?<.fAXEY TOY TA lrnmediaie Del.Ivery, 710 E. l.st St. S.A. 547.0754 US0005. Harbor Amelican ., " '!2 Tempest tn wsn, 'SC
MOBILE HOMES 18881 Beach Blvd. All Mnde'-Open dally 9-9: cl011ed Sunday 1969 Harbor Blvd., 646-2061. '64 OIEV. camper Van Call Auto Fld'ernl b'ee ot Ford 1'£ T ~k mtr n.dl
H. Beach. Ph. &17-8555 "" ::!:::.:..:=..:..:.:.=~~--'-I Radio • heat (RUF OSJJ All extru. Qr1a1nal owner charre. We have wllm 711 •
Ul6 N. Harbor. S.A. _... 970 TR4 • 1964.. Blue black tcp. sa"9·5 BUICK $9:A'.l. Call: 545-3679 waltinc. All types .. prices, work. l46--0273. * m/5,ll-8105 • Autos, Import-$850. Good ru~ning, very ,64 OfEVY tmp&l&f auto Sellen aho welcoml. . '67 GTO 400 -auto tram. 1 --'c:..O.::S::T:.:A=M:.:E:.:S~A~-clean, 81.000 miles, A good rlh. $495 · 8'24431 ps/pb. Air. Xlnt can4.
Casual MobDe Estate Ltv'I ALFA ROMEO buy. 546-7050. '6' BUICK GS 400 ~t &U-4779 Au to ReWTal Senr!c. $U25/ofter, g.u..ix.J
Nu 12, 20 & :U Wide Mod.ell I---------! TIW recent engine, clutch: 4 •Pt:ed, vibrasonic: apeakers, ·so Chevy tmpail 396, R/H. 1969 FORD Fatrlanl, P /S, RAMIUI
Now on dilpla,y in !5 Star '63 AI.IA ROMEO. xlnl 'nt top rup car brand MW tirn, bucket Good nd UXI be t P/B T A V J
GREENLE•f' P'RK trar.. top eng, timi. R/H, 3100 W. Cout Hwy .. N.8. ~°':',r Pl.~~wle~ simi· Aft l87ll BEACH BL. 142-4435 aeata 1pttl11J wheel cov!rs: tt 55~7 9280• °' ' il • ... .;,, .:...,,,., ...... to !:::1---------I " ""' $900 492-0520 642-9400 M0-1164 ..... ~ · · · ~'TINGTON BEAOI Lie. XEz.528. 0 l!'r, -· m e • ~ ... , _. '68 IM£Rl~lll 115() Whittier Avenue 842-1350 I AI'· papen · · !i, 846-94.17 ,67 VW $l6" 'M Chevy Bel Air 2 dr trailer. DI Ode St. '*"'nl II wm
J UST A MOMENT! Call AUSTIN AMERICA MGA W TR3" aood oond. (800 AT V-3 sUck 1350 ~ CTRY Squln IL ""'' ~~11~~"',;;G, ~"!'. r. --------10
·oo_M_G_A-,-,-w-.. -;n-1.-n...-, ~~: ,:7509wu."' Avo, SQUAREIACK CHICK IVERSON ~~~~ ;;;:· .!::.· .:1~o:;;: c;;:.,,c...~~"'·· 1 ~
wtll save you time & money. AUST IN AMERICA • ~-~. TRIUMPH SPJTFIRE 1970 Vadora 1?Mn. Radio, heater, VW l42-.382'i. t"S
UNITED MOBILE HOMES Sales, Servkt, Patti 962-2558 While 8000 ml. Jlke new. tranlPort&tion apeclaJ, Lie. •r• ..... ,., VD !iii l'Clf'd Jet QI>. Lo ml. 411' ...,_ &!~3140 63J.21161 Immediato DellftlJ MGI $2.100., poi• . .,.; C95-4!83. UOH".'· $l59' mo oom':.:!: · 'II/ NEW Y°"'"', tull pwr, For alt .,. ..W tob -· _,_. ~ ..
BEACH""""· Fam. Pk. 70 All -\ VOLKSWAGEN CHICK IVERSON 1962 BUICK Skyluk (opoc.), &ti-, ,.. tlttt, ~,,..(~ w.."1!0. 2IDo llUl>o. BIYd. -custom 12x33. 2 BR, 1 BA, 1968 MGB-CT. 16,000 ml. lm· V • to -R-lbruonl offtt. Pvt pty, •w -· Ul59 Ford Pickup, Nnl Fl)d ,.. .......... ..,..,. .1---i---maculate IMlde &: cut. 1 __ «-fectfon YW .,,, au . ... .... v c "rl4/897-Ml51. at but offft' Call .,., ~ ......... ..,.., 11!r c:ond. 1V. LJc #GY J .. ~. Chromt A: rubber apotleN. _,,.. ~ ~-radio, A·l thape: wt,tb • l!G-4310 • H•tB, A/C, Good ~
UNITED MOBILE HOMES $201>. u )OU I"' !Ind a 'Of vw ea-rs, 549.3031 Eat. 11(1 "' ., l'OCelpta !or ..... -• $301> CON11NINTA!-np at ' llOO. Alt. I .... -· 645-3140 633-2961 cleaner one, ho'i h. 675-373$ ··T-1970 HARBOR. BLVD. or bnt otttr, phone Terry, aJper Van, auto 'M lMfiUCAN i5M&'iV9:
NICE 8x42' N~ Traller. ..GOW, Clout H-., N.B. ·gg MGB-GT, Llke new. io VClftlt Kombls. COSTA MDA 642-4321 wtekda y1, ot IMt CONTINI NTAL ..,._ ' ~!a..=.· Call !!c_llM •· •
In ''"" ""il,~"100. No ti--· 511).llM mi's, wh t w/blk lniec, All S-, New & Used '67 SUNDIAL CUffR 67>-1312 ati.r 5:!0 p.m. and 2 Dlt. HT -=~de 6?~Y "et ~~.Blvd, UN extru. =o. * 115-'lOOj " lmrwlfat9 O.lfwry wetb•rld·~1 Buick 4-cfr. UKE llHbWROcit.f Nl:W ~ pe/pb, Mrao A· tape. ·a RAiZBl.tJE 4 di' v.,,
SACRIFICE new d<Nble-wlde DA TS PORSCHE CHICK MRSON see ID •-la. CVQlmll xiz1 ;,-i~ :'° Tllle ..!:. ~-• la • ~~· ::'1~ii0 ;::' ::::.-lllO -~ mobll• hom .. '69 OATSlll SEJW!. IJlllll l'ORSCllE..Xlnt oond. YW $1795 . •a 8UiCK -GftDd Wte -In....,. -1'0\INo.Oout Hwy,t.o(tmo
V!u.A "· Bl)'llde vur,... s Sod. $3300. C.U ...., ' -""'· •,. II SOrt bu ....,. -llln't A-IDld!tun browD 1.:lldl:::::.· ~,...,..,. ...... .---1-----..---..i
1.000 ... IL: ... _., , !loo<'. Rodlo, ....... PM. 4ill-l702 ll!D ~ II.VD. ....i. Pvt pe,. ao.!Jlli. = :.:,, "!!if: LINCOLN 1111 T.alrd, •••• k -
choloe loc, "lo .,.._ ew. (XWA !T.ll .,. Poncho 1UI &. llln't COITA lllDA CADILLAC da• ,...,, A•.,,;,.tlc u-, wrtible, 4 ,_ -.
1959 '°"" -Thm. • $1.295 ~-"" by 1/21. '59 vw· IUG ~GTOa; a: ndJo. -.... -· lonk lill(IHWllon = ~.:rr·
$2300, A d u 1 t P • r k • 'M roRSCH:t:sC Sunroof, New Clutch, 'ff CdV OJma• control, beater, JIOftr rt.Ml'llW, pow. 'IT Llneobt 4 dr Alli pr A MJ-11'1 ~9 Whitt. 1 own&, dnt cond . New Tlr•s, N.w e.t-'f1 VW ~'di:! AMIJ'M AM/l'M 1tereo. .l11 pwr. er bnla, JIOwtr w1ndon alr cond. TU~ ~ l'G'llll1·ifT.iii.;;r'i' Clrl:iiiliii~ Tr11 ~r•, utilltY M7 mxi. tM4!!it tery, New O...rator, =:u:, uro~·:ft sm. Extra c1ean. ~-:,.:~ ~ ~ or "'111,..JSnanot. c.u ~ unttm ...,, AID
18711 BEACH 8L 30""435 R.AR.E ·~ SUNROOF" H• .. ;Jlttem, .(.q7.llsr 'ff catltilec Convert. climate control ab-condlfkm. fG SJJJ, ext Ml or IU. -.1. oc.1: Mmt
14· Tandtn\ TrlJltr, all 11ffl, HUNTINGTON.B£.ACH R.EBLT ENG,.. TRANS. . •n vw automatic rutblclr: M'BO. "2-1111 Inc. Ona ownrr trade Oii TIU "Yellow PqN" ., mUt oa.. t71-a17 .....
v.oeldld eonatrucdon. 'i'." 1 -=;....;,;,,,.;~-=-c:-:: $1300 ** NNn1 MJ.2&n after S PM ndlo, 'heftter, BEQ2'71 $1391. '85 CAD Po lb '11 Mark m Z1.JC21. Jotas. dwlfttd ••• DraUy P 11 o t ,
Dock platinr. S4i-Col "' '70 DATSUN ....,,.,, low '" "'·I X COND '67 vw. I XC i LL I NT -A-au .... dk. n~'. ~ "" • ... --~ Dll«kC). a.ct \l All ..... Air, -· MJ..!IW. WlU trade on Pick mlleqe, auto, air cond .• ,,_ • "5-Xll3 Sl0'7I. ITM3l8 Hetbcr Blvd., S.-*1. M-sm C.M. MO-M:iJ. ' & fKt ~)'OU need. UN. a.mi
Up.-Mutt wll. ~ after 'J. -=="'-' ---~--·_..o...;;......;"'-'-'----1 ..:::...::::..:=..:=.~:..;:::::,_ I..:!::.:... ______ '
1.
' '
• l
'
Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
Ht,.., here'• here's
CHARLIE BROWN ••• end LUCY.,, and LINUS ••• and
here's
SCHROEOER ••• ll'ld
lat but not least,
htl'l'I
SNOOPY
Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the
whole Peanuts gang come and visit y ily •
t . I